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  • Audiovisual Heritage at the University of Leicester

    Posted by Colin Hyde in Library Special Collections on October 21, 2019   Sunday 27th October 2019 is UNESCO’s World Day for Audiovisual Heritage. To join in the celebrations, this blog post looks at some of the Audiovisual Heritage work done at the University of Leicester.

  • Mr Bevan’s Dream

    Posted by Simon Dixon in Library Special Collections on May 2, 2014 The funeral of Sue Townsend began today with a public celebration of her life at De Montfort Hall.

  • UK Disability History Month 2022: The Mosaic Oral History Collection

    Posted by Lily Skelton in Library and Learning Services on November 18, 2022 16 November to 16 December 2022 is UK Disability History Month , an annual event creating a platform to focus on the history of the rights and dignity of disabled people.

  • Shropshire Archives

    A description of the work the UOSH Midlands Hub did with collections from Shropshire Archives

  • 2020 news

    Browse news relating to the Division of Biomedical Services from 2020.

  • Talking points a range of topics tackled by academics this week

    Despite promises of ‘ultrafast’ broadband services in the latest Budget announcement, Dr Bianca Reisdorf from the Department of Media and Communications and Anne-Marie Oostveen from the University of Oxford reflect on how we have yet to see the results of previous promises of...

  • University researchers show juices from damaged salad leaves massively stimulate Salmonella growth and salad leaf colonisation

    Investigations by Leicester microbiologists have revealed that just a small amount of damage to salad leaves can massively stimulate the presence of the food poisoning bug Salmonella in ready-prepared salad leaves.

  • The baseball cap: a symbol of pathological consumption?

    Read the article The baseball cap: a symbol of pathological consumption? This is part of the Social Worlds project at the University of Leicester.

  • About Arch-I-Scan

    Discover more about Arch-I-Scan Ceramic finewares are the most essential evidence for investigating the socio-cultural practices of eating and drinking across the Roman world and constitute some of the most extensive archaeological remains.

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