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9871 results for: ‘最新版云喵圈子全开源系统源码兴趣社区交友圈子系统小程序源码 | THINKPHP框架后台✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.ByMaEpyzmLml’

  • Arthur Edward Davis (1882-1916)

    Arthur Edward Davis was educated at Mill Hill School, London. He became a cricketer of distinction and played for Leicestershire. In the great War he joined as a Private the 11th Royal Fusiliers and served in France, where he was killed in 1916.

  • eabbey

    Hello world! Posted by eabbey in IMP – Improving my Pedagogy on November 9, 2018 Welcome to staffblogs.le.ac.uk Sites. This is your first post.

  • Sarah Wood: Page 2

    Assistant Archivist

  • Nigerian Judiciary Workers and the Pursuit of Good Governance

    Posted by awynne in School of Business Blog on June 24, 2015 Senior Lecturer in Public Financial Management at the School, Andrew Wynne , considers the explicitly contested – and implicitly concealed – issue of good governance in Nigeria There have been numerous calls for a...

  • August Book Group: Late Short Stories

    Summary of the Evelyn Waugh Book Group's discussions of the later short stories

  • Carrie Crockett: Page 2

    I am a postgraduate Ph.D. researcher working in connection with the Carceral Archipelago project. My work focuses on the Russian Far East and Sakhalin during the imperial era.

  • The Aesthetics of Authenticity in the Modern Chain Pub – University of Leicester

    Discussion of a book chapter about the "Pub Authenticity-Value Aesthetic" in relation to the JD Wetherspoon pub chain, recently published in an edited volume Biographies of Drink (CSP, 2015)

  • May Book Group: Vile Bodies

    Details of the Waugh Book Group's meeting to disuss Vile Bodies.

  • NarcoData

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on November 13, 2015 A new data visualization tool created by Mexican digital news site Animal Politico and data journalism platform Poderopedia , which aims to provide a visual mapping of drug cartels...

  • How far have we come? Lessons from the 1965 Race relations Act

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on December 22, 2015 Free access to this collection of essays from the Runnymede Trust.

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