Cambridge graduate wins Nobel Prize for Chemistry
08 October 2008A University of Cambridge graduate is one of three winners of the 2008 Nobel Prize for Chemistry.
A University of Cambridge graduate is one of three winners of the 2008 Nobel Prize for Chemistry.
Six months after closing, actors will once again tread the boards at the ADC Theatre tomorrow following £1m of renovation works.
The Faculty of History is bringing its subject bang up to date with the launch of a new website - complete with interactive virtual classroom.
Gates scholars headed for the hills this week as the 2008 intake began an orientation course.
The endowment of a prestigious chair in the Department of East Asian Studies has been marked by a landmark public lecture at the University of Cambridge, now available to view online.
A stunning display of 2000-year-old tomb treasures from Ancient Georgia has opened at the Fitzwilliam Museum for its only UK showing.
As part of a unique collaborative agreement, the Japanese government has located a new research satellite at The Nanoscience Centre, University of Cambridge.
Professor Nigel Slater, from the Department of Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology, describes how the influx of ideas and principles from non-biological disciplines is shaping a new biology.
A Cambridge Engineer has been awarded a prestigious fellowship as a mark of his achievements researching metal forming processes.
The Vice-Chancellor has marked the start of the new academic year by giving her annual 1st October address to the University prior to the first Congregation of the year in the Senate-House. Her address is entitled Masters and Scholars: Cambridge, community and the evolving role of former students.