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24706 results for: ‘Department of The History of Art and Film’

  • True of false?

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on February 8, 2013 The Washington Post has produced a checking program, Truth Teller, http://truthteller.washingtonpost.

  • Leicester academics to contribute to historical documentary exploring The Impossible Peace

    An upcoming historical documentary will feature interviews with four academics from our University.

  • Nomination of examiners privacy notice

    Find out more about how your data is handled if you are nominated or hired as an external examiner at the University of Leicester.

  • Plaque to mark Barwell Christmas Eve meteorite unveiled

    A green plaque marking the surprise arrival of a large meteorite in the village of Barwell on Christmas Eve in 1965 has been unveiled at the junction of Chapel Street and Dawson's Lane - close to the site of the meteorite fall.

  • How a technological revolution is helping us to understand the human Y chromosome

    Professor Mark Jobling (pictured) from the Department of Genetics and Genome Biology has published a new review in Nature Reviews Genetics with a colleague from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in Cambridge which examines the properties of the human Y chromosome and...

  • Catherine Sargent - International exhibitions with the V&A

    Museum Studies graduate Catherine Sargent talks about life and her career after getting her degree from the University of Leicester.

  • Feeding the Machine

    Victoria Szafara, University staff member has entered a piece entitled 'Feeding the Machine'.

  • First witness to the Great Fire of London uncovered by University of Leicester academic

    Professor Kate Loveman of the University of Leicester for the Museum of London has identified the first witness of the Great Fire of London.

  • Emoji is the fastest growing language

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on June 19, 2015 Emoji’s are ‘pictographs. Originally used in Japanese electronic messages, many characters have now been incorporated into Unicode  and the launch of Emoj.li.

  • Andrew Dunn: Page 203

    Academic Librarian.

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