Monday, December 29, 2025

Student Life

Student Life provide with the most recently Student Life information’s, including the Dining, Campus Recreation, Residence Life, Student Health Services and Student Counselling, etc…

First research scans performed in BU’s MRI scanner

The first research patient has been scanned in BU’s MRI scanner, as part of a study investigating the effects of cold water on brain activity.

Global eradication of COVID-19 should not be dismissed – new analysis

Eradicating COVID‑19 across the globe is theoretically more feasible than for polio but much less so than it was for smallpox, according to an analysis by New Zealand researchers.

UC graduate conserving our mountains one app at a time

Eagerly using his software engineering skills to keep the snow on the mountains, a University of Canterbury graduate is developing a new app that helps people live more sustainably.

Summer Lab recognised for excellence in global entrepreneur education

A four-week intensive programme run by the University of Auckland Business School during summer break - designed to ignite the entrepreneur within...

Researchers uncover way to harness the power of immunotherapy for advanced prostate cancer

It’s a scientific riddle tangled up in a complex web. How do you turn an immune cold cancer into one that responds to immunotherapy?

Otago study outlines trail-blazing developments in conservation management

Many of us enjoy the familiar surroundings of home, but what if we needed to move to a strange place for our survival?

UWA athletes bring home medals from Tokyo Olympics

The contingent of 16 UWA students, club members and alumni from the University of Western Australia have completed their Olympic campaign, with plenty of highs and lows along the way. Read on for detailed results of each sport.

Bushfire smoke, regional internet access top student concerns

Curtin Global Voices Scholarship recipients Rachael Ryan and Niamh Wilkins are advocating for positive change.

Urgent need for anti-smoking campaigns to continue after pregnancy

Curtin University research has found quit support for smoking mothers should continue even after their first babies are born, given that many of those women will become pregnant again, and that quitting can substantially reduce the risk of future preterm births.

WA Health Hackathon Week 2021 is here

Ready to explore digital and data-driven solutions to real-world healthcare challenges?
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