Cambridge University received a “generous gift” from a Chinese software company with links to the communist regime to fund an engineering fellowship, The Times has learnt.
Read MoreWomen's long struggle to gain fair access to university is commemorated in an exhibition opening next week at the University of Cambridge library.
What's most shocking, perhaps, is that it's all so relatively recent - with women not allowed to graduate from Cambridge on equal terms until 1948.
For teenagers currently filling in their university applications, it would be hard to imagine that within living memory at Cambridge there was such blunt discrimination.
The "Rising Tide" exhibition shows the level of resistance, including violence, against women wanting to study at Cambridge with equal rights to men.
This includes the remnants of a firework thrown by protesters in 1897 as they rioted against the revolutionary idea of women getting degrees.
But in the end it was the women who put a rocket up Cambridge, rather than the other way round.
Read MoreThe “Stormzy effect” has contributed to more black students being admitted to Cambridge University, the prestigious institution has said.
For the first time, black students made up more than 3 per cent of the undergraduate intake, reflective of wider UK society, according to the university.
It said the rise was due to a number of factors, including the "Stormzy effect".
The grime artist is funding the tuition fees and living costs for two students each year.
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