Vishy karri biography of nancy
•
Josef Čapek - 09. 01. 2015 22:20
to Josef Čapek - 09. 01. 2015 23:53
Keldryday - 18. 06. 2017 09:17
•
Our commitment and gratitude to donors
We are extremely grateful to all our donors and value the relationships we have formed. Our aim is to find ways to match a donor’s interests with University priorities and to engage our donors as partners in philanthropy to further the mission of the University. We ascribe to the highest standards of fiduciary integrity and honest communications.
Our commitment to our donors
The University strives to have positive and engaging experiences with donors and community members. Any concerns or complaints related to fundraising may be reported through the University’s Safe and Fair Community Unit for further resolution.
Recognising the impact of your giving
The University of Tasmania would like to thank our generous donors, including those who wish to remain anonymous.
The following have given $200 or more between 1 January and 31 December 2023:
Giving membership
We recognise donors within nine University of Tasmania Giving Membership categories, based on cumulative giving of $1,000 or more.
Recognition societies
Named in honour of Domain House, The Domain Society recognises donors who have supported the University for five consecutive years or more.
Domain House became the inaugural home of the University of
•
The Honorable Frank Iacobucci
Cape Breton University is proud to honour The Honourable Frank Iacobucci, CC, QC for his accomplished legal career, selfless service to the public sector as well as his personal dedication to Aboriginal rights and First Nations reconciliation.
Mr. Iacobucci was born to Italian immigrants in Vancouver just prior to the outbreak of the Second World War. His parents were considered enemy aliens when he was a young child, which posed many significant challenges for the family. The son of a steel foundry worker, Mr. Iacobucci was discouraged from speaking his mother tongue but learned a great deal about the values of hard work and frugality from his father and mother. Those lessons stuck with Mr. Iacobucci throughout his lengthy and distinguished career in law, academia and public service.
However, those early difficulties with race and heritage, experienced before Canada officially embraced multiculturalism, played an undeniable role in Mr. Iacobucci’s later interest in trying to help solve the many societal challenges facing Canada’s Aboriginal peoples.
Mr. Iacobucci earned degrees from the University of British Columbia and Cambridge University.
He started working in 1964 as a Wall Street lawyer with a New York firm. He took a professorship wit