Search

7913 results for: ‘线下交友,陪逛街陪吃饭陪看电影,圈子,商家入驻✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.aarXJdDscafcAT’

  • Happy International Archives Day 2018!

    Posted by vholmes in Library Special Collections on June 8, 2018 The University records manager, David Jenkins, and I (Vicky Holmes, University Archivist) thought we’d take the opportunity to flag up IAD18 and explain a bit about what we do all day!   On the 9th of...

  • 'No PO, No Pay' policy

    We follow a 'No PO, No Pay' policy for our Purchase Orders. Learn more about this policy and what it means when submitting a Purchase Order.

  • Newsletter

    Sign-up here to receive updates on CELI events and research

  • Revisiting Holst’s Jupiter a hundred years later

    Reworking of Jupiter from Holst’s Planets suite benefits from insights from a University of Leicester planetary scientist.

  • LeCTIS Seminar Series 2018-19

    See the programme for the LeCTIS Seminar Series for the 2018-19 academic year.

  • Phage biology

    Phage biology is the study of all aspects of bacteriophages (phages). Martha Clokie and colleagues have specifically worked with bacteriophages that target Clostridium difficile. Bacteriophage are studied with respect to therapy and diagnosis.

  • Research staff

    Browse the research staff (including research nurses) currently working in Cardiovascular Sciences at Leicester. Get in touch via telephone and email.

  • Project exploring Stonehenge’s elusive relationship with the Moon nominated for Museums + Heritage Award

    A project exploring Stonehenge’s little-known relationship with the Moon has been nominated for a Museums + Heritage Award.

  • Britains biggest Classics conference heads for Leicester

    The largest annual gathering of classicists in the UK is to take place at Leicester.

  • Internationally renowned novelist joins Leicester’s top academics to discuss why climate change has been banished from fiction books

    Distinguished author and Booker prize nominee, Dr Amitav Ghosh, will join top scientists and a world-leading historian to explore how the arts and humanities, social sciences, and sciences have shaped, and can shape, our thinking about the climate emergency.

Back to top
MENU