Search

7210 results for: ‘响应式在线教育培训类网站织梦dedecms模板(自适应手机端)✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.CSDMiqAkDT’

  • Mr Emmanuel Katsogridakis

    MD, MSc, PhD, MRCS British Heart Foundation Academic Clinical Lecturer Email  ek311@le.ac.

  • Collections and Research

    Read about the collections and research associated with the Botanic Garden.

  • Cerebral Autoregulation

    Impaired regulation of cerebral blood flow is implicated in a number of clinical conditions, such as ischaemic stroke, severe head injury, liver failure, diabetes, autonomic nervous system failure, carotid artery disease, dementia, pre-eclampsia and neonatal prematurity.

  • Events

    Find out about the upcoming events hosted by and related to Museum Studies at the University of Leicester.

  • How to Sell Success, Failure and Fanaticism? Understand the Customer!

    Posted by Georgios Patsiaouras in School of Business Blog on June 2, 2014 Georgios Patsiaouras, Lecturer in Marketing and Consumption at the School, draws sobering lessons from the popularity of the recent Hollywood Blockbuster, The Wolf of Wall Street.

  • Garden preview

    Discover all there is to see at the Botanic Garden at the University of Leicester.

  • Transformative custom programmes

    As the pace and scope of global change advances, your organisation and employees are faced with complex challenges, significant uncertainties and novel opportunities.

  • The Sense of Touch for Archaeological Knowing

    Posted by kpijpers in School of Business Blog on March 20, 2018   In this post, Dr Kevin Pijpers discusses his recently completed doctoral research on how archaeologists use their senses, in particular their sense of touch and the relationship between archaeological...

  • Lifting: An Easter Custom

    Posted by Simon Dixon in Library Special Collections on March 21, 2016 Lifting – an Easter Custom from William Hone, The Every-Day Book (London, 1826), vol. 1, p.

  • 9th Dec. 2013 Sol 478

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on December 9, 2013 Today is when the first set of papers about Yellowknife Bay are published.

Back to top
MENU