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9559 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’

  • Fitness taster sessions delivered to Leicestershires Traveller Community

    NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands, a regional health research organisation tasked with speeding up the adoption of science to the frontline of the NHS, organised a series of events during Gypsy Roma and Traveller History Month, which takes place each year throughout June.

  • Survey to probe business Brexit plans

    Businesses are being probed over their plans for managing Brexit. With the deadline for Britain to leave the European Union now only ten months away, East Midlands Chamber and its Brexit Advisory Group have been urging businesses to begin planning for different scenarios.

  • Project to help refugees asylum seekers and other marginalised communities represent their experiences through games

    New research led by Dr Alison Harvey (pictured) from our School of Media, Communication and Sociology will help refugees, asylum seekers and other marginalised groups in society to voice their experiences and stories of migration in Europe - through...

  • Cat-ching criminals with DNA from pet hairs

    Cat hair could be the purr-fect way to catch criminals, according to researchers from the University of Leicester.

  • Centre aims

    Learn more about the aims of the Stoneygate Centre for Empathic Healthcare.

  • Student carers

    If you have caring responsibilities at home and want to attend Leicester, our Student Welfare Service can help with managing the challenges you may face.

  • Dont try this at home How to make fireworks 17thcentury style

    With Guy Fawkes night (5 November) and Diwali (11 November) on the horizon, the skies of Leicester will be lit up over the next few weeks by firework displays - and a rare book held within the University's Library sheds light on how 17th century fireworks were made.

  • Conference explores how death can be the beginning - not the end

    A three day international and interdisciplinary conference took place between 16-18 April which explored themes around death and dying and how our departure from this life may not be as set in stone as may be assumed.

  • Archaeological fieldschool launched at Bradgate Park

    The many mysteries of Leicestershire’s 850-acre deer park are set to be explored by University archaeologists over the next five years with the launch of a fieldschool at Bradgate Park.

  • Unravelling the Minion genome

    Based on what we know of the minions from the popular Despicable Me films – and the Minions movie current playing at cinemas – they could, in theory, have a complex genetic make-up similar to humans, according to Natural Sciences students Krisho Manoharan and Ruth Sang Jones.

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