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16789 results for: ‘Java 英语测试系统 源码GUI 文件IO eclipse工程✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.oKgtIBIDzVbbS’

  • Annabelle Sreberny

    The University has learned, with sadness, of the death of Professor Annabelle Sreberny, former Director of the Centre for Mass Communication Research. Annabelle Sreberny was born on 5 September 1949 to parents who had come to Britain as Jewish refugees.

  • Affective Digital Histories: An AHRC-funded research project

    Learn more about the Centre for New Writing's eight commissioned pieces exploring the afterlife of industrial buildings in Leicester and Glossop, as well as relationships between people who might have used them.

  • Recent actions from UCU: statement

    In response to recent actions from UCU, the University of Leicester is today releasing the following statement.

  • Holiday Memories

    Posted by Colin Hyde in Library Special Collections on April 5, 2019 As part of the Unlocking Our Sound Heritage (UOSH) project we have been training volunteers in how to archive and use sound recordings.

  • Andrew Dunn: Page 216

    Academic Librarian.

  • Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog: Academic and staff blogs from the University of Lei

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • Accessibility statement

    Read the University of Leicester's statement relating to accessibility.

  • Bibliotherapy: Engaging with Asylum Seekers and Refugees

    Posted by Alberto Fernández Carbajal in School of English Blog on October 28, 2013 I was recently invited by my friend and former colleague Christine Chettle, a PhD candidate at the University of Leeds, to lead a guest workshop for STAR (Student Action for Refugees) in...

  • Will the government’s AI action plan be a success?

    University of Leicester expert comments on the UK government's action plan to boost its role in developing and deploying artificial intelligence.

  • Penny Bloods on display in the Library

    Posted by Margaret Maclean in Library Special Collections on May 9, 2014 Penny Bloods, popular from the 1840s to the 1860s, were so named because of their preoccupation with the gory and sensational.

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