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  • Locating the mortal remains of Richard III within the choir

    Finding the grave and realising was an interesting and important skeleton buried there.

  • Ever thought about donating your body?

    “Donating your body for medical education isn’t everyone’s cup of tea but you’d be surprised how many people consider it."

  • Leading Leicester lawyer who switched careers at 40 gains University honour

    A businesswoman and lawyer who made a career U-turn at the age of 40 has been honoured by the University of Leicester.

  • Ground-breaking research celebrates 10 years

    Some of the 11,000 people who’ve taken part in the ground-breaking Leicester research study, EXCEED, gathered at the University of Leicester’s Sir Bob Burgess building last week to celebrate 10 years of the study

  • Final stage reached for space missions powered by University of Leicester expertise

    Two space missions that involve the University of Leicester are in the final stages of the selection process that will see one successful mission taken forward by the European Space Agency for launch.

  • Our environment over a billion years: travel through time into Leicester’s deep past

    Experts at the University of Leicester host an evening exploring landscape change and biodiversity in the city and county on Thursday 23 March

  • Dr Roger James

    We have learned, with sadness, of the death of Dr Roger James, a former Reader in Immunology in the Department of Respiratory Sciences (previously Infection, Immunity and Inflammation). Roger was born on 8 September 1949.

  • Oral history archives in the East Midlands

    Please note that this list is selective. Derbyshire Chesterfield Library accept any relevant donations of oral history recordings.

  • Jim Roberts

    A Life Lived Well: Jim Roberts (1947-2023) Professor Suzanne MacLeod writes: James (Jim) Roberts was born into a working class-family in Liverpool in 1947.

  • Astronomers see “warm” glow of Uranus’s rings

    The rings of Uranus are invisible to all but the largest telescopes — they weren’t even discovered until 1977 — and they stand out as surprisingly bright in new heat images of the planet taken by two large telescopes in the high deserts of Chile.

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