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15599 results for: ‘students announcements summer graduation ceremonies and celebration event update’

  • Software Lifecycle and Quality

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  • Rethinking nuclear weapons strategies

    Our research has been influential in raising international awareness of nuclear threats, encouraging governments and policymakers to modernise their thinking.

  • New hope for patients with aggressive asbestos-linked cancer as trial shows a targeted cancer treatment can improve survival

    Leicester researchers have shown for the first time that a drug that prevents cancer cells from repairing can control the growth of mesothelioma, a rare and aggressive form of cancer caused by asbestos

  • New book explores life in Roman and Medieval Leicester

    Roman curse tablets Intriguing evidence relates to two lead curse tablets, from the town house at Vine Street, which have transformed our understanding of who lived in the Roman town and their links to the wider Empire.

  • Hubble captures vivid auroras in Jupiter’s atmosphere

    Posted by Physics & Astronomy in Leicester to Jupiter: The Juno Mission on June 30, 2016 Astronomers are using the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope to study auroras — stunning light shows in a planet’s atmosphere — on the poles of the largest planet in the Solar System,...

  • Leicester receives world-class bioscience investment

    Our University has been awarded over £1.5million in order to advance knowledge and understanding in three key areas that impact on health.

  • Taking to new heights to help beat cancer

    A Leicester man is taking fundraising to new heights – 15,000ft, to be precise. on Saturday 8 August 2015 at Hibaldstow Airfield in Lincolnshire.

  • Report suggests delaying school entry for preterm babies may not be the answer

    A new report launched today suggests that prematurely born babies are more likely to have learning difficulties at school age, and the risk increases the earlier they are born.

  • Study suggests physical activity and functional ability increase after weight loss surgery

    People who have their stomach size surgically reduced move around more and easier after weight loss surgery, a study led by Leicester researchers has found.

  • Cases

    Learn about cases associated with the Crossing Boundaries project and explore further resources.

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