Search

9823 results for: ‘2024最新流媒体在线音乐系统网站源码| 音乐社区 | 多语言 | 开心版✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.zMihzqseneRr’

  • Happiness research

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on August 1, 2011 This week the Office for National Statistics released the results of a public consultation on indicators which the British public feel should be used to measure happiness National...

  • Sheikha Bodour bint Sultan Al Qasimi

    Publisher | Policy Leader | Higher Education Advocate Sheikha Bodour bint Sultan Al Qasimi is recognised internationally for her leadership in publishing, education and cultural development.

  • Turned off at Execution Dock: Thames Scenery in the City of the Gallows. By Richard Ward

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in The Power of the Criminal Corpse on April 25, 2016   Eighteenth-century London has, with good reason, been called “the city of the gallows”.

  • Collaborations

    Find out more about the collaborations for Geophysics at the University of Leicester.

  • Arch-I-Scan blog symposium Engineering the Past

    Report of attendance symposium Engineering the Past

  • Learning outcomes in higher education: what’s being blogged – University of Leicester

    The 'Learning Outcomes Project' at the University of Leicester. What's being blogged about learning outcomes in higher education?

  • Digging Out the Past – the legacy of Alan McWhirr

    Posted by Colin Hyde in Library Special Collections on June 13, 2019 Alan McWhirr in a field. The first collection we have finished digitising for the Unlocking Our Sound Heritage (UOSH) project is a monthly radio series about archaeology, Digging Out the Past.

  • The Sweet and Twenties

    A review of Beverley Nichols' memoir The Sweet and Twenties

  • A quarter of FTSE 350 companies have only one woman on their board 

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on November 16, 2018 …according to the 2018  report of the Hampton-Alexander review  into increasing the number of women in senior positions in FTSE 350 companies.

  • 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.

Back to top
MENU