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17232 results for: ‘students announcements archive 2011 august 2011’

  • Waugh in Italy

    Review of Return to Waugh event hosted by the British Council, Milan, 17 November 2018, by Milena Borden

  • GSC High Achiever's Award

    This scholarship is for international (non-EU) students who have completed a foundation pathway at the Leicester Global Study Centre and are beginning a full-time, campus-based, undergraduate degree at the University of Leicester in September 2021.

  • Book Group: The Ordeal of Gilbert Pinfold

    An account of our Book Group discussion of The Ordeal of Gilbert Pinfold, written up by Ian Truslove.

  • Oil and Gas Transformation Map

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on September 14, 2020 A new interactive tool created by the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University/SIPA  and World Economic Forum to track the changes occurring in these energy...

  • Freedom of the Borough awards

    On Sunday 12 September 2021, the University of Leicester was conferred the Freedom of the Borough by Oadby and Wigston Borough Council (OWBC)

  • Map of French Guiana

    Map of French Guiana from the archives in Aix en Provence. The area encircled in green was where Lý Liễu and his fellow prisoners would have worked in their wood-cutting unit.

  • Getting Lost in Oxford: Dr Rob M Francis’ psychogeographical explorations as David Bradshaw Creative

    Posted by gboland in Waugh and Words on May 29, 2019 Psychogeographer, Dr Robert M.

  • Global Gender Gap report 2012

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on October 26, 2012 The World Economic Forum has just released this annual report.

  • How much is your time really worth

    While a penny doesn't buy much nowadays, Natural Sciences student Osarenkhoe Uwuigbe from the Centre for Interdisciplinary Science has investigated the popular idiom ‘A penny for your thoughts’ by working out how much of a person’s thought could theoretically be...

  • Christmas comes earlier every year!

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on November 17, 2014 The Royal Statistical Society recently published an  essay based on Internet search terms which found that in 2007 people started thinking about Xmas in November however last...

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