Strictly Come Cambridge
06 March 2009The University’s ballroom dancers were the toast of the Empire Ballroom in Blackpool last weekend when they won the national universities competition there for an unprecedented fourth year in a row.
The University’s ballroom dancers were the toast of the Empire Ballroom in Blackpool last weekend when they won the national universities competition there for an unprecedented fourth year in a row.
The winners of the 2009 Dow Sustainability Innovation Student Challenge were announced this week by the University of Cambridge Programme for Sustainability Leadership.
Scientists from Cambridge University have discovered four rare mutations of a gene associated with type 1 diabetes (T1D) that reduce the risk of developing the disease. Their findings, published today in the journal Science, suggest a link between T1D and the enterovirus (a common virus that enters via the gastrointestinal tract but is often non-symptomatic).
For the first time, Northern Ireland and Wales have been formally included as venues on the regular round of regional Cambridge and Oxford Conferences which take place annually in Spring. The Lagan Valley Island Centre in Lisburn will be the venue for the Northern Ireland Event on 2 April, while the International Arena in Cardiff is the venue for the event in Wales on 25 March..
Cambridge and Oxford Boat Clubs have unveiled the crew line-ups to contest this year’s Boat Race, sponsored by Xchanging, which will take place on Sunday 29 March at 15:40.
Pupils on a nationwide programme designed to raise aspirations among groups under-represented at Russell Group universities spent the day at Cambridge yesterday, getting a feel for the college structure.
This year’s Lent Lecture series at the Michaelhouse, University of Cambridge, will focus on how the media depicts faith and supplies information both about our own faiths and those of others.
The topic of ‘infant sorrow’ was addressed at a one-day interdisciplinary conference at Lucy Cavendish College on Saturday 28 February, with papers on infant death from the eighteenth to twenty-first centuries presented.
Want to know what we can do to get out of the recession? Want to find out what medieval people had for breakfast? Why the British have a love hate relationship with the French? Will there ever be peace in the Middle East? Where creativity comes from?
Jane Cocking, Humanitarian Director for Oxfam, will deliver this year’s Humanitarian Centre’s Annual lecture on Monday 2 March to an audience of senior figures in humanitarian aid, academics, students and the local community.