Honorary doctorates for Synlait co-founder John Penno and naturalist Hugh Wilson will be among nearly 600 awards
presented at the 2019 Lincoln University Graduation on May 3.
The ceremonies will also feature posthumous awards to two victims of the Christchurch terror attacks, as well as a
student who died in an accident last year.
Acting Vice-Chancellor, Professor Bruce McKenzie said the graduation was a celebration of students’ hard work and
achievements, and that included the posthumous awards.
“This occasion, while recognising the tragic circumstances surrounding the loss of those graduates is also about
acknowledging their efforts and their time here, as well as the students who were their peers.”
Around 570 students will be receiving certificates, diplomas and degrees in morning, (10am) and afternoon (2pm)
ceremonies at the Lincoln Events Centre.
Awards
Honorary Doctorates
• Dr John Penno is a primary sector business leader, co-founding the then dairy farming and now dairy manufacturing
company Synlait Milk in 2000. He was directly responsible for leading Synlait Milk’s strategy development, business
development and financial management. He is the Chair of the Freshwater Leaders Group advising the Government on
implementing policy to achieve its Essential Freshwater goals.
• Hugh Wilson has a national and international reputation as a botanist, naturalist and innovator. For the last three
decades as manager of the 1,250 hectare Hinewai Reserve on Banks Peninsula, he has overseen the transformation of
gorse-infested farmland back to a native flora and fauna reserve. He has also authored numerous botanical publications.
• John Tavendale’s career as a farm advisor spans 50 years. His farm management work has been of considerable benefit to
the agricultural sector and the economy, raising production and profitability, and he was made an Officer of the New
Zealand Order of Merit in the 2013 Queen’s Birthday Honours, for services to agribusiness.
Bledisloe Medal
• Soil scientist Dr Allan Hewitt receives the Bledisloe Medal. He was the author of the New Zealand Soil Classification
that has become the accepted source for naming, characterising, mapping, sampling and reporting for the national
inventory of soils in New Zealand.
Alumni International Medal
• Bruce Jefferies receives the Alumni International Medal, acknowledging outstanding work in a country other than New
Zealand. He is a globally recognised leader in Protected Area Management, and has worked for many of the world’s leading
environmental and park management agencies, including the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN),
UNESCO, UNDP, and the World Bank.
Both Graduation ceremonies will be shown on Lincoln University’s Facebook site as well as the Lincoln University
website, www.lincoln.ac.nz, and updates will be posted on the University’s social media channels.