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7474 results for: ‘马克斯maxcms手机模版源码 仿未来影院源码手机影院✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.JaUesnwMlWVwFi’

  • Learning outcomes taken to the extreme: what not to hope for in HE – University of Leicester

    The 'Learning Outcomes Project' at the University of Leicester. Learning outcomes taken to the extreme: what not to hope for in HE.

  • Funding

    Details on the alternative sources of funding available for research projects.

  • Physiology, Pharmacology and Neuroscience

    Module code: NT2005 This module will provide an introduction to cellular and systems physiology of the human body with an emphasis on homeostatic mechanisms.

  • Advanced Topics in Cancer Biology

    Module code: BS4004 This module comprises a series of lectures which provide a background to the molecular and cellular basis of cancer.

  • Summer schools

    Ninth ECORD Summer School: Downhole Logging for Marine Geoscience Location: University of Leicester campus Dates: 30 August to 5 September 2025  Our Summer School introduces the interpretation and applications of downhole logs and physical property data...

  • Preview four new exhibitions at Attenborough Arts Centre

    The University’s Attenborough Arts Centre will be hosting four exhibitions by local and international artists, in their new award winning gallery spaces at a free preview evening on Friday 6 May.

  • College of Life Sciences

    Explore the archives of lectures delivered by the College of Life Sciences researchers from the University of Leicester.

  • Law (Graduate Entry) LLB

    This two-year course at Leicester Law School is an intensive qualifying law degree for those who have already completed a degree in another subject.

  • The Diary of a Dissection: Jane Jamieson and the Newcastle Barber Surgeons. By Patrick Low

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in The Power of the Criminal Corpse on September 19, 2016   The recent furore in France, over the wearing of Burkinis, has shone a new light on an age-old societal problem; the female body.

  • New scientific technique helps catch wildlife criminals

    DNA tests co-developed by scientists from the University of Leicester and Scotland’s wildlife forensic lab are helping to catch criminals involved in the illegal sale of protected bird species.

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