Search

8082 results for: ‘苹果手机IPHONE通话聊天记录图片生成器✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.vWGGkfcyfBiZg’

  • Bioscience departments receive recognition for tackling gender inequality

    Our University has been further recognised for our commitment to tackling gender inequality in higher education with the announcement that two of our biosciences departments have received Athena SWAN awards.

  • Leicester rehabilitation programmes highlighted by national charity

    Two initiatives developed at Leicester’s Hospitals have been cited in the British Heart Foundation’s (BHF) new five-point plan to achieve the biggest impact for people with, or at risk of, heart and circulatory diseases.

  • University of Leicester helps bring justice after 30 years

    Double helix of DNA 2050|Reviving the original technology of DNA fingerprinting helps bring justice after 30 years to convict rapist DNA fingerprinting tests performed at the University of Leicester has this week helped to convict Benjamin Whitehead for a rape he committed...

  • Genetics for schools and colleges

    Resources Resources a student filling in a form|Genomes and genomics The complete package of genetic information needed to make a living thing - in the form of all its DNA, genes and chromosomes - is known as a genome.

  • Professor Melanie Davies

    Learn more about Melanie Davies, a Professor of Diabetes Medicine in the College of Life Sciences.

  • Trauma-informed ESOL for refugees: self-access training and workshop

    Access free trauma informed pedagogy training for ESOL and EAP practitioners who teach English to people from refugee backgrounds

  • Polish Post-beginners (Level 2)

    Polish course for post-beginners at Leicester University

  • Sludge in Healthcare

    Posted by Nate in Medical Leadership in the Foundations on October 18, 2018   This week Richard Thaler, who wrote ‘Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness  ’, published “Nudge, Not Sludge” in Science .

  • Ancient History and Archaeology BA

    Delve into the past and gain practical and intellectual skills with the University of Leicester’s Ancient History and Archaeology degree.

  • The double-minded revolutionary

    Posted by Carrie Crockett in Carceral Archipelago on February 22, 2017 In 1884, a Russian woman by the name of Liudmila Volkenshtein was found guilty of anti-tsarist “terrorism” by a military court in St Petersburg.

Back to top
MENU