Search

11643 results for: ‘discuz模板 克米设计APP手机版✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.QZUwqKHCDTZ’

  • Mary Gee (1875-1962)

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

  • Spooky flower will bloom in time for Hallowe’en

    The spookily-named Corpse Flower is about to bloom in the University’s Botanic Garden – just in time for Hallowe’en.

  • 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.

  • New investment in seismic monitoring facility at University of Leicester

    Leicester-based SEIS-UK is to benefit from new funding from Natural Environmental Research Council, as will two facilities led by the National Centre for Earth Observation (NCEO), which is based at Space Park Leicester, the University of Leicester’s space hub

  • Goal 3: Health and Wellbeing

    The third Sustainable Development Goal is to ensure healthy lives and promote wellbeing for all at all ages.

  • General Engineering BEng

    From prosthetic limbs to exploratory spacecraft, engineers design and build extraordinary machines, products and systems. But doing so often takes more than specialist expertise.

  • Seminar to examine how the media represents tween girls

    The controversial way in which ‘tween’ girls are represented in the media will be explored at a free public event at our University taking place on Friday 26 May.

  • Report suggests public participation should be at the heart of big data projects

    Public participation should be at the heart of big data projects in health care and biomedical research, according to the findings of a new report by the Nuffield Council on Bioethics.

  • Jewry Wall Museum improvements to be made

    The archaeologist who led the project to discover King Richard III’s remains will be leading investigations in a project to improve Leicester’s finest Roman site.

  • Using DNA fingerprinting to catch a killer

    This summer marks 30 years since DNA fingerprinting - discovered by Professor Sir Alec Jeffreys right here in the University's Department of Genetics in 1984 - was first used in a criminal investigation.

Back to top
MENU