I just wanted to clarify:
Does humoral and cellular immunity occur separately, or in conjunction?
I'm pretty sure it's in conjunction seeing that you need the Th cell to allow for clonal expansion in B cells, but I just wanted to check if these processes could ever occur separately...
Also, I have read that NK cells act like Tc cells in which they release perforin to allow for virally infected cells to lyse. The thing is - by causing lysis in the virally infected cell, wouldn't that just allow for the replication of viruses and allow them to "live"? I could see how this could be effective for preventing tumour growth and infection of other pathogens, but not viruses...
Thanks in advance 
In conjunction. Basically, everything you've learned about in immunology occurs at the same time. Perhaps the biggest failure of the VCE course is the fact that it doesn't make it clear that, in fact, they're all interconnected. For instance, without innate immunity, you simply wouldn't have adaptive. Also, adaptive immunity helps to enhance innate immunity and may actually work with it in some cases. They're not separate process. The body's not that simple!
Viruses leave cells when they've been properly assembled and are ready to leave. NK cells and Tc cells kill them before they've prepared for the journey, as it were. Think about what viruses need to grow and get around and it should make sense to you.