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7138 results for: ‘苹果cmsv10仿西瓜影院电脑手机影视自适应模板✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.RPPuyLsuLFJtBv’

  • Could LCFCs sporting success help kick racism into touch

    Leicester City Football Club’s phenomenal success becoming English Premier League Champions in one of Britain’s most diverse cities has ‘touched the lives’ of people from all walks of life – and could have a positive impact on tackling racism.

  • Publications

    The publications released by The Centre of Landscape and Climate Research for academic purposes.

  • Students to take part in cooking competition using Fairtrade ingredients

    University staff will be giving their best impressions of foodie TV personalities Gregg Wallace and John Torode as they grill students in a Fairtrade-themed MasterChef competition to mark Fairtrade Fortnight, taking place from 23 February to 8 March.

  • Thick Translation of Chin Ping Mei by David Roy: Type, Function and Features

    Find out more about our event: Thick Translation of Chin Ping Mei by David Roy: Type, Function and Features, with speaker Professor Xiuying Wen.

  • ‘Closing the Gender Pay gap would take 95 years’

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on February 24, 2017 Across OECD nations at current rates of progress according to the latest PWC Women in work report.

  • One in three people with Type 2 diabetes fail to take their medication research shows

    More than one in three people with Type 2 diabetes fail to take their medication, according to a new study by researchers from the Leicester Diabetes Centre.

  • Rizwan Patel

    The academic profile of Dr Rizwan Patel, GP Tutor at University of Leicester

  • Richard Baker

    The academic profile of Professor Richard Baker, Professor Emeritus at University of Leicester

  • Book Group: Black Mischief

    Summary of a Evelyn Waugh Book Group discussion about Black Mischief, held at Leicester Central Library on 08/11/2015.

  • Stop the clocks: Brisk walking may slow biological ageing process, study shows

    A new study of genetic data published today (Wednesday) of more than 400,000 UK adults has revealed a clear link between walking pace and a genetic marker of biological age.

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