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The masonry arch symbolises Isambard Kingdom Brunel, after whom the university is named; the compass and cogwheel symbolise technology, on which the university initially focussed on and the institution's former status as a College of Advanced Technology; the ermine lozenge is an allusion to the arms of Lord Halsbury, the first Chancellor of the ...
Bristol Business School, University of the West of England [11] Bristol: Brunel Business School, Brunel University London [11] Uxbridge: AMBA, AACSB: Buckingham Business School, University of Buckingham [11] Buckingham: Bloomsbury Institute: London: Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge: Cambridge: EQUIS: 15
People associated with Brunel University London (2 C, 17 P) Pages in category "Brunel University of London" The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total.
The Brunel University lecture centre is a Grade II listed building on the campus of Brunel University of London, Uxbridge. It contains six large lecture halls with capacities of 160 to 200 people each, as well as smaller teaching rooms and lecture halls with capacities of 60 to 80.
The British and Foreign School Society kept an archive and ran a National Religious Education Centre on the Osterley site. The Twickenham site also hosted a ballet school, the Rambert. In 1986 plans were unveiled to merge Ealing Technical College with the Institute from September 1987. [4] The enlarged institution would seek Polytechnic status.
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Robert Duncan Macredie (born 31 July 1968) is a British computer scientist.He served as Professor, Head of department, and Head of the School of Information Systems, Computing and Mathematics at Brunel University, Uxbridge, west London [1] and was, until February 2010, Pro-Vice-Chancellor for Student Experience at Brunel University.
At Brunel, Sterling oversaw the consolidation of the University and a merger with the West London Institute of Higher Education, which produced a multi-sited university with a student body of 12,000. More controversially, he closed the Departments of Physics and Chemistry, and oversaw the award of an honorary doctorate to Dame Margaret Thatcher ...