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AZ FLAG Cambridgeshire county Blue Flag 3' x 5' - County of Cambridge - England flags 90 x 150 cm - Banner 3x5 ft

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The exceptions for which these data are not used are where the GCSE school/college is: i) one with fewer than 30 GCSE-taking pupils, ii) in the Independent sector and with a low mean ‘sum of best 8 GCSE score’ below 40 out of a possible 64, or iii) an FE or Sixth Form College. These are excluded due to issues with data reliability and/or interpretation.) New Widening Participation Questions via UCAS Rankin, Hugh F. “The Naval Flag of the American Revolution.” The William and Mary Quarterly, vol. 11, no. 3, 1954, pp. 340–53. JSTOR, https://doi.org/10.2307/1943310. Accessed 20 Feb. 2023.

when an applicant declares on their UCAS application that they have spent time in local authority care The design of the Colours is strikingly similar to the flag of the British East India Company (EIC). Indeed, certain EIC designs in use since 1707 (when the canton was changed from the flag of England to that of the flag of Great Britain) were nearly identical. However, the number of stripes varied from 9 to 15. One theory on the origin of the design is that the American colonists would have known and been familiar with the existing EIC flags and that this may have influenced the design. [13] Various statements were shone onto the chapel walls including “not in our names” and “Cambridge students and staff demand a ceasefire”. Cambridgeshire is also the birthplace of bandy, [25] now an IOC accepted sport. [26] According to documents from 1813, Bury Fen Bandy Club was undefeated for 100 years. A member of the club, Charles Goodman Tebbutt, wrote down the first official rules in 1882. [25] Tebbutt was instrumental in spreading the sport to many countries. [27] Great Britain Bandy Association is based in Cambridgeshire. [28] The Master Pippa Rogerson reaffirmed her commitment to “making College a place where everyone feels welcome, and where everyone can thrive” and said “it is incumbent on us all to make changes to improve diversity and eradicate discrimination”.Gonville and Caius College Council has decided that only the College flag will be flown from the flagpole (02/02). This brings an end to the six year tradition of flying the pride flag and more recently the progress flag that was flown during LGBT history month last year. the body that administered the territory until 1837. These were red with three gold ducal coronets and are seen here

The University of Cambridge – second-oldest university in the English-speaking world, and regarded as one of the most prestigious academic institutions in the world Climate data for Cambridge ( NIAB) [b], elevation: 26m (85ft), 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1959–present All the data we use are derived either from publicly available sources, the DfE, UCAS or from information provided by applicants in their application. These three types of contextual data are presented to our academic assessors in the form of several ‘flags’. This system enables us to assess applicants holistically, and may result in ‘flagged’ applications receiving particularly careful attention during the initial application stage. These ‘flags’ are also used during the winter and summer ‘pooling’ stages of our admissions process, where applicant files are examined by other Colleges to ensure that the best applicants receive an offer of a place regardless of the College to which they applied or were allocated. Furthermore, some of these ‘flags’ have been used as part of our eligibility criteria for August Reconsideration Pool.Cambridge American Cemetery | American Battle Monuments Commission". www.abmc.gov. January 1956 . Retrieved 20 February 2022. On 6–7 June 2015, the inaugural Tour of Cambridgeshire cycle race took place on closed roads across the county. The event was an official UCI qualification event, and consisted of a Time Trial on the 6th, and a Gran Fondo event on the 7th. The Gran Fondo event was open to the public, and over 6000 riders took part in the 128km (80mi) race. [30] with the flags of Huntingdonshire and Bedfordshire at the tripoint where Cambridgeshire meets these other two counties. The flag is seen by a signpost here, A white boar (the complete beast, not just the head) was indeed the badge of King Richard III of England. Richard’s wife Anne Neville was the third Queen consort to be patroness of the College. Both Anne and Richard were great benefactors of the College, although their benefactions were subsequently lost to King Henry VII.

Homerton JCR’s LGBT officer told Varsity: “It’s disappointing that Caius College considers displays of support for the LGBT+ community as potentially divisive. What is truly divisive is failing to show solidarity with queer people, a fifth of whom have been the victim of a hate crime in the last twelve months in the UK”. Hamilton, Schuyler (1853). History of the National Flag of the United States of America. Philadelphia: Lippincott, Grambo & Co.

Cambridgeshire County Flag

The original Cambridgeshire County Council, which shared administrative duties in the county’s territory, with an Isle of Ely council, bore arms that were newly created for it in 1914. In addition, Cambridge Regional College and Huntingdonshire Regional College both offer a limited range of higher education courses in conjunction with partner universities. Cambridgeshire contains all its green belt around the city of Cambridge, extending to places such as Waterbeach, Lode, Duxford, Little & Great Abington and other communities a few miles away in nearby districts, to afford a protection from the conurbation. It was first drawn up in the 1950s. formed from the latest set of arms awarded to Cambridgeshire County Council, was commercially marketed as “Cambridgeshire flag”. In fact this banner represents just the county council which is the only body that may use it. It has never represented the county as an entity. In contrast to the geodemographic contextual data we use, which are available for all countries in the UK, we note that the GCSE and A Level performance school/college data we use are only available for schools/colleges in England (from the DfE). Our Admissions Tutors are all aware of this fact, and that as a consequence our ‘lower-performing GCSE school’ contextual data flag cannot be appended to applications from applicants from all parts of the UK. (This is one of the reasons why this flag is not part of our criteria for the August Reconsideration Pool, whereas our flag for applicants from schools/colleges where fewer than five students have been made an offer by Oxford or Cambridge in recent years is, as this data is available regardless of country.) Although this means we are not able to contextualise the GCSE attainment of our applicants from Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland in the same way as we can that of most English applicants, applicants from these countries (unlike English applicants) usually benefit from being able to provide detailed information about their more recent attainment in AS levels or Scottish Highers.

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