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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 lecture centre was finished in 1966 or 1967: surprising that Historic England has not been able to pin down the completion date, but I have checked the listing particulars and other sources and it is indeed the case.
The Brunel Times is Brunel University's official student newspaper. Before 2019, it was called Le Nurb , [ 51 ] which has Brunel spelt backwards. Before that, it was a magazine called Route 66, named after the different campus locations Runneymede, Osterley, Uxbridge and Twickenham, not after a bus route which supposedly ran through Brunel's ...
Brunel University Barbarians Rugby League; Brunel University lecture centre; C. Centre for the Study of Human Learning; CLEAPSS; R. Royal Indian Engineering College;
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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 ...
[17] [6] Hamer gives regular lectures at Centre Place (the Toronto congregation of Community of Christ) on the topics of history, theology, and philosophy. Over 100 of his lectures are available on the Centre Place YouTube channel. [18] Semiweekly on weekdays, Hamer teaches sitting meditation from the Zen tradition. [19]
Brunel University Lecture Centre, Uxbridge, Richard Sheppard, Robson and Partners (1965–66); grade II listed [33] Churchill College, Cambridge, Sheppard Robson and Partners (1961–1968); grade II listed [34] The 'ziggurats' at the University of East Anglia, Norwich, Sir Denys Lasdun (1964–68); grade II* listed [35]