Search

9555 results for: ‘新随梦小说-杰奇1.7-1.8静态版✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.erWrPJsGflaDOY’

  • Chile

    We welcome students from Chile. Find out about entry requirements, the Chilean student community and other country-specific information.

  • German Advanced (Level 5)

    Advanced German Course at Leicester University

  • Nuclear Graphite

    Preparation of free-standing pillar  Nuclear Graphite Graphite is hugely important for the construction of both historical and modern nuclear reactors [1], acting as a neutron moderator.

  • 17th Century Adventures in Travel Writing

    Posted by Margaret Maclean in Library Special Collections on January 7, 2015 In 1627, at the age of only 21, Sir Thomas Herbert travelled to Persia and India as a low-ranking member of Charles I’s embassy to Shah Abbas I.

  • Russian Post-beginners (Level 2)

    Russian course for post-beginners at Leicester University

  • The Two Fredericks: A snapshot of male intimacy in prison

    Posted by Katy Roscoe in Carceral Archipelago on September 30, 2016 In the 1840s, campaigners for the abolition of convict transportation engaged in a campaign of scare-mongering about the prevalence of sexual acts between male convicts (dubbed “unnatural acts”).

  • Attenborough Arts Centre launches exciting Spring programme

    In Gallery 2 from 7 February to 6 April, artist Sabrina Tirvengadum will exhibit a range of her work which delves into the complexities of her Mauritian family history, deeply influenced by the legacies of colonialism.

  • Students film breathtaking images of Earth using high altitude weather balloon

    Physics students have captured breathtaking images of the Earth’s stratosphere using a high altitude weather balloon. The unmanned balloon and sensor payload reached an altitude of 23.6km, putting it at 1.7 times the altitude ceiling of a 747 airliner.

  • Moonstruck Exhibition eclipses expectations

    Record numbers of visitors attended Leicester Cathedral for a University-sponsored British Science Week Festival event in the city.

  • Study shows large gender imbalance in funding given for cancer research

    Male researchers receive far greater funding for cancer research than their female equivalents, suggests a study involving University of Leicester research and published in the journal BMJ Open.

Back to top
MENU