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13461 results for: ‘毕设ssm382航帆学院网站 vue毕业设计✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.IOCUgvALjoKeUJR’

  • Researchers recognised for public engagement skills

    Winners of a competition that challenged our researchers to summarise their research in a mere three minutes have been announced.

  • Person-Job Fit: Some Questions

    Posted by Martin Coffey in Postgraduate Researcher Careers on February 14, 2017 So the media appears to be full of stories about Donald J Trump these days, and how he has started in his new job.

  • Legal drugs: all the pros and none of the cons?

    Read the article "Legal drugs: all the pros and none of the cons?" This is part of the Social Worlds project at the University of Leicester.

  • Expedition 330: Louisville Seamount Trail

    December 2010 – February 2011 In December 2010, an international team of scientists set sail on the scientific drilling vessel JOIDES Resolution for an eight-week IODP expedition to the Louisville Seamount chain.

  • Resources

    Click here for links to resources designed for higher education students. Our university has the relevant resources and equipment to help you acheive academic success.

  • Mary Gee (1875-1962)

    Mary Gee was the daughter of an Archdeacon and her family were highly successful academics and sportsmen.

  • Expert opinion Changes under Gove have brought about STEM teacher shortage

    Schools face a “looming disaster” over a severe shortage of teachers in science, technology, engineering and mathematics subjects, education and science experts at Leicester have warned.

  • Dismemberment in Victorian London: The Thames Torso Murders. By Shane McCorristine

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in The Power of the Criminal Corpse on May 31, 2016   Battersea, London. Source: The A to Z of Victorian London. Harry Margary, Lympne Castle, Kent, 1987.

  • What is history for?

    University of Leicester staff blogs convicts penal colonies slavery migration

  • Awful Things Began to Happen: Rapid Change of Ainu Homeland and Convict Labour as Seen by the Ainu,

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in Carceral Archipelago on January 27, 2015 The Kamikawa region is one of areas that today still has relatively a large population of the Ainu.

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