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16030 results for: ‘E4A仿安卓网易云音乐播放器源码✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.DRbqFNPTAta’

  • Close your eyes and pull like a dog.

    Posted by Martin Coffey in Postgraduate Researcher Careers on August 18, 2016 As I write this Olympics 2016, in Rio de Janeiro, are in their final days. Once again the four-yearly sports fest has produced a blend of the good, the bad and the ugly.

  • Close your eyes and pull like a dog.

    Posted by Martin Coffey in Postgraduate Researcher Careers on September 22, 2016 Now that the Olympics and Paralympics are all done, it appears that once again the four-yearly sports fest has produced a blend of the good, the bad and the ugly.

  • Publications

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

  • Guide Dog calendar to raise money for charity

    The Students’ Union resident Guide Dog puppy, Vinnie, will be at the launch of a new Guide Dog 2016 calendar, featuring Vinnie himself and two of his puppy friends from 2pm to 4pm in Queen’s Hall Foyer on Wednesday 2 December.

  • French Conversation Elementary A2+

    Spanish Conversational Course at Leicester University

  • Ahmed Mahdee Salih

    The academic profile of Dr Ahmed Mahdee Salih, Research Associate at University of Leicester

  • We’ve moved to a new website!

    Posted by Sarah Wood in Library Special Collections on July 31, 2025 If you’ve been wondering why this site has been a little quiet over the years then it’s because we have moved to a new website! Keep up to date on all things Library related by visiting our new site:...

  • Who was Richard III?

    A brief primer on the last Plantagenet king of England and his links with Leicester.

  • Friday 10th August Sol 4

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on August 10, 2012 The first full resolution Mastcam panorama is coming through.  It will take a few sols for it to fully download from Mars.  Fantastic detail of Mt. Sharp and ground surface leading up to it.

  • New way to kill the malaria parasite identified

    Scientists have discovered new ways in which the malaria parasite survives in the blood stream of its victims - a discovery that could pave the way to new treatments for the disease.

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