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  1. Bishop's University in Quebec, Canada est. 1843, formerly known as the University of Bishop's College; Bishop's College School in Lennoxville, Quebec, Canada est. 1836; Diocesan College (more commonly known as Bishops College) in Cape Town, South Africa; Bishops' College, Cheshunt, a former Anglican theological college

  2. The Bishop's University Students' Representative Council is a non-profit student-run organization to which all full-time students at Bishop's automatically belong. "The SRC is responsible for a number of services offered to students and provides a variety of both academic and non-academic clubs through which students may become directly involved in Bishop's life.

  3. Bishop's College in Colombo, Sri Lanka, is a private girls' school founded by the Anglican Church of Ceylon in February 1875. Description [ edit ] Bishop's College is a private fee-levying Anglican girls' school in Sri Lanka with about 1900 students in all grades from kindergarten to Grade 14.

  4. The Bishop's Gaiters women's basketball team represents Bishop's University in the RSEQ Conference of U Sports women's basketball. The program has captured the Bronze Baby twice, achieving the feat in back-to-back years (1983–84).

  5. BSU is named after Cyril Stuart who was the Anglican Bishop of Uganda in the middle of the 20th Century. [5] BSU started operations in 2003 at the campus of then Kakoba National Teacher's College (KNTC) in the western Ugandan city of Mbarara. [6] KNTC ceased operations at the end of 2005, and in 2006, BSU took over the premises and grounds ...

  6. Perpetrator. Amy Bishop. On February 12, 2010, three people were killed and three others wounded in a shooting at the University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH) in Huntsville, Alabama, United States. During a routine meeting of the biology department attended by approximately 12 people, Amy Bishop, a biology professor at the university, began ...

  7. Bishop College was a historically black college, founded in Marshall, Texas, United States, in 1881 by the Baptist Home Mission Society. It was intended to serve students in east Texas, where the majority of the black population lived at the time. In 1961 the administration moved the college into Dallas, Texas.

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