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24098 results for: ‘Department of The History of Art and Film’

  • Richard III discovery at the Royal Society Summer Exhibition

    The team behind the scientific detective story of the decade, the discovery of King Richard III, has been selected as one of 22 exhibitors at the Royal Society’s annual display of the most exciting cutting-edge science and technology in the UK.

  • University involved in launch of new earthquake display

    Visitors to museums in Leicester and Rutland will be able to jump and make their own earthquakes - when The Rt. Hon. Nicky Morgan, MP,  Secretary of State for Education launched a new earthquake display at the New Walk Museum in Leicester on 12 February.

  • Tan Yue: Three years after graduation, I found my way home

    Tan Yue graduated with an MA in Art Museum and Gallery Studies in 2013 and has taken her experience and knowledge back to her home country and started her career in Guangdong Times Museum.

  • Scientists discover one of the most luminous new stars ever

    Astronomers have today announced that they have discovered possibly the most luminous ‘new star’ ever – a nova discovered in the direction of one of our closest neighboring galaxies: The Small Magellanic Cloud.

  • Study finds plastic is changing the behaviour of the world’s river sediment

    A Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ expert has led a study which has found plastic pollution is changing the way riverbeds behave.

  • Return of Title IV aid policy

    Overview This policy applies only to eligible US and non-US citizens receiving Title IV Financial Aid who began attending for a payment period (term or semester) and then withdrew or temporarily suspended during the payment period (term or semester).

  • Stephanie Bowry

    Museum Studies PhD graduate Stephanie Bowry discusses her three-year Leverhulme Early Career Fellowship, which investigates the spatial, conceptual and experimental relationships between gardens and galleries in England from 1500-1750.

  • Posted by Chris Grocott in School of Business Blog on December 18, 2013   Dr.

  • Expert opinions cover Zuma masculinity Facebook data railway reforms the NHS and social media

    James Hamill from our School of History, Politics and International Relations wrote an article for The Conversation discussing how Zuma’s presidency may be over, but his toxic legacy seems likely to haunt the ANC.

  • Like father like son most European men descend from a handful of Bronze Age forefathers

    A team of researchers from the Department of Genetics led by Professor Mark Jobling and Dr Chiara Batini have discovered that most European men descend from just a handful of Bronze Age forefathers, due to a ‘population explosion’ that took place several...

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