The visible impacts of the two campaigns were buildings being made, more scholarships offered and the building of more posts. A sample of these are listed below. • The
Saïd Business School, founded by
Wafic Saïd, who has donated £70m. This has subsequently been enhanced by the Thatcher Business Education Centre, opened by
The Prince of Wales in 2013 and named by Prime Minister
David Cameron in 2014. • The Moritz-Heyman Scholarship Programme, providing support to students at a socio-economic or educational disadvantage. This was created with a £75m gift from the venture capitalist
Sir Michael Moritz and his wife, the writer Harriet Heyman. It was the biggest philanthropic gift for undergraduate financial support in European history. • The Li Ka Shing Centre for Health Information and Discovery, where more than 600 scientists will use big data research and advances in genomics to transform our understanding of disease. This was funded by £20m from the charitable foundations of Hong Kong entrepreneur,
Sir Ka-shing Li. • The Mica and
Ahmet Ertegun Graduate Scholarship Programme in the Humanities, endowed by a £26m gift from Mica Ertegun. • The
Blavatnik School of Government, founded with a £75m donation from
Leonard Blavatnik. • The redevelopment of the
Ashmolean Museum The central Campaign also meant the Vice-Chancellor could gain new funds independently of the colleges. This was part of a trend that in 2004 led to the appointment of the first Vice-Chancellor to be elected from outside Oxford's academic body in 900 years,
Sir John Hood. ==Notable people associated with the Campaign for Oxford==