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Found 1000 results from all University websites.
Hamish Halls | Alumni Services | Alumni
Hamish Halls' decision to switch from Chemistry to Philosophy after his first year proved to be a very wise one. He explains why and vividly recounts life as an Edinburgh student in the 1960s.
Beth Hurrell | Alumni Services | Alumni
Beth Hurrell talks to us about her eye-opening Edinburgh experience and what it means to do more than just say "yes".
October 2020 | Alumni Services | Alumni
Writing, travel, digital creators, artificial intelligence and the Restoration are the topics covered in this month's selection alumni authored books.
Susan Jackson | Alumni Services | Alumni
When Susan Jackson isn't thinking about sports, the chartered accountant and three-time Commonwealth Games athlete is helping to run a homes developer in Fife.
Luke Simpson | Alumni Services | Alumni
Religious Studies graduate Luke Simpson recalls the dilemma of what to do after university, and the difficulties of graduating during the financial crisis of the late 2000s.
Gemma Sandie | Alumni Services | Alumni
Gemma Sandie's two Edinburgh degrees represent her passions for both governance and climate, and she's putting that to good use as a Scottish government researcher for Scotland's Climate Assembly.
BMTO Undergraduate Students | Biomedical Teaching Organisation | Biomedical Sciences
Information for undergraduate students in the Biomedical Teaching Organisation
RCOG/Blair Bell success for CRH researchers | Centre for Reproductive Health | Centre for Reproductive Health
The CRH enjoyed a strong presence and great success at the RCOG Annual Academic Meeting on 09 and 10 February, 2023.
3 Minute Thesis – success for CRH | Centre for Reproductive Health | Centre for Reproductive Health
Huge congratulations to Niamh McNamara from the Miron lab at CRH. She won both the second place prize and the People’s Choice award with her presentation ‘The Brain as an Orchestra: The Role of Conductors’.
Mining the past | Alumni Services | Alumni
Photographs of a long-lost degree programme sent in by an alumnus prompts a trip down memory lane.
