A short essay of recollections and two historical publications regarding the Brixton School of Building.
Sans titreIssues of the Brixton School of Building in-house magazine. February 1955 and January 1958 are both duplicated, BSB/4/3 onwards came from a later addition to the collection from the records of Lambeth College.
Sans titreComprises syllabus information for National Certificate and Higher National Certificate courses in Public Health Engineering, course notes for teachers on a variety of topics and subjects and exam papers for end of year, National Certificate and Higher National Certificate exams.
Sans titreA booklet designed for staff and students of Brixton School of Building to assist them in the process of metrication of the UK Construction Industry and two journal articles by one of the School's lecturers in Public Health Engineering.
Sans titreComprises minutes of the Governing Body.
Sans titreComprises issues 1-17 of Unicorn, with the exception of issue 12 and issue 15.
Sans titreComprises photographs of the library
Sans titreContains records concerned with academic delivery at the Charles West School of Nursing comprising:
CWSN/1/1 - Course syllabus booklets (1989-c.1995)
CWSN/1/2 - Enrolment and student progress records (1987-1990)
CWSN/1/3 - Assessments (1969-1991)
CWSN/1/4 - Course planning and administration (1962-1993)
CWSN/1/5 - Course badges (1980s-c.2000)
Sans titreContains publications produced by the Hospital including promotional material, historical publications and a staff handbook.
Comprises reports, periodicals and other publications produced by external bodies. Many of the publications were originally house in the Charles West School of Nursing Library.
Sans titreThe most popular method for solving the Rubik Cube was developed by David Singmaster and published in the book Notes on Rubik's "Magic Cube" in 1981. This solution involves solving the Cube layer by layer, in which one layer (designated the top) is solved first, followed by the middle layer, and then the final and bottom layer. After practice, solving the Cube layer by layer can be done in under one minute. Other general solutions include "corners first" methods or combinations of several other methods. In 1982, David Singmaster and Alexander Frey hypothesised that the number of moves needed to solve the Rubik's Cube, given an ideal algorithm, might be in "the low twenties".
Written by David Singmaster whilst working in the School of Computing, Information Systems and Mathematics at South Bank University.
Sans titreReports, circulars, speeches and papers from the Home Office regarding emergency planning and civil defence in local authorities.
Sans titre