Source: Alamy
Festive fare: Newcastle University is laying on holiday food and entertainment
As universities empty of staff and students for the Christmas break, one group is often left behind.
For some international students, the festival has little traditional relevance, and flight costs mean they often stay in university accommodation over the holiday.
To make them feel more welcome at a time when their families might be thousands of miles away, Chris Brink, vice-chancellor of Newcastle University, hosts a turkey lunch for about 100 international students every Christmas Day.
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āI was an international student and, particularly if you come from the southern hemisphere, it can be a bit bleak [being here over Christmas],ā said Professor Brink.
āIf you have students who canāt go home ā China is a long way away ā it seems a reasonable thing to do,ā he added. āFree food is always a wonderful thing for students.ā
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Professor Brinkās house being too small for such an occasion, the lunch, as in previous years, will be held in a local church hall.
The food is cooked and served largely by Newcastle staff volunteers, some retired, as Professor Brink said he was ānot sureā that he was ācompetent to carve a turkey for 100 peopleā.
The lunch is one way in which universities can keep their international students happy during the Christmas period. Newcastle and Northumbria universities have produced a guide to Christmas for overseas (and home) students who will spend the holiday period in Newcastle.
Through the two institutions, students can arrange to see a ātraditional British pantomimeā, Jack and the Beanstalk, and can learn how to āwrap like a professionalā at a gift-wrapping session.
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Also on offer is entertainment not specific to the holidays: students can buy tickets to see Newcastle United Football Club play Stoke City and Arsenal on 26 and 29 December, respectively.
And the studentsā union is hosting a four-hour āXmas Movie Marathonā of back-to-back Christmas films on 2 January.
The guide also explains certain traditions, such as the Queenās Christmas Day address to the nation, which will be screened at Professor Brinkās lunch.
āIn the past, many families would sit down together to hear what she had to say, but this tradition has decreased over the years,ā it says.
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The guide directs students to carol services and a Pagan Yule festival. But it also offers a final page of insurance warnings, including, āif, as a student, you choose to take your spouse or children to an event, you do so at your own riskā.
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