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  2. George Brown College - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Brown_College

    Website. georgebrown .ca. The George Brown College of Applied Arts and Technology is a public, fully accredited college of applied arts and technology with three campuses in downtown Toronto (Ontario, Canada). Like many other colleges in Ontario, George Brown College was chartered in 1966 by the government of Ontario and opened the next year.

  3. Sanford–Brown - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanford–Brown

    Sanford–Brown (also known as the Sanford–Brown College or Sanford–Brown Institute) was a division of the Career Education Corporation, a proprietary, for-profit higher education organization. The school traced its history back to the 1860s as a successor to a St. Louis location of Brown's Business College owned by George W. Brown (1845-1918).

  4. Georgian College - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georgian_College

    Blue & green. Nickname. Grizzlies. Mascot. Grizzly Growler. Website. georgiancollege .ca. Georgian College is a College of Applied Arts and Technology in Ontario, Canada. It has 13,000 full-time students, including 4,500 international students from 85 countries, across seven campuses, the largest being in Barrie.

  5. John Brown University - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Brown_University

    Website. www .jbu .edu. John Brown University ( JBU) is a private, interdenominational, Christian university in Siloam Springs, Arkansas. Founded in 1919, JBU enrolls 2,343 students from 33 states and 45 countries in its traditional undergraduate, graduate, online, and concurrent education programs. [2]

  6. George Washington University - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Washington_University

    Website. www .gwu .edu. The George Washington University ( GW or GWU) is a private federally-chartered research university in Washington, D.C. Originally named Columbian College, it was chartered in 1821 as Washington, D.C.'s first university by the United States Congress. GW is one of nation's six federally chartered universities.

  7. George Mason University - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Mason_University

    History 20th century George Mason, a Founding Father of the United States and the university's namesake. In 1949, the University of Virginia created an extension center to serve mid-career working professionals and non-traditional students near urban centers in the Northern Virginia suburbs of Washington, D.C. The extension center offered both for credit and non-credit informal classes in the ...

  8. Blackboard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackboard

    Uses. Reusable writing surface on which text or drawings are made. A blackboard or a chalkboard is a reusable writing surface on which text or drawings are made with sticks of calcium sulphate or calcium carbonate, known, when used for this purpose, as chalk. Blackboards were originally made of smooth, thin sheets of black or dark grey slate stone.

  9. Blackboard bold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackboard_bold

    Blackboard bold is a style of writing bold symbols on a blackboard by doubling certain strokes, commonly used in mathematical lectures, and the derived style of typeface used in printed mathematical texts. The style is most commonly used to represent the number sets ( natural numbers ), ( integers ), ( rational numbers ), ( real numbers ), and ...