Students pulling up their socks in area with lowest Covid rate They now want it to be over and get back to their studies
04:00, 9 JAN 2021
Updated
Casper Alixander and Liam Bradbury believe students have been given a rough ride during the pandemic (Image: Nottingham Post/Marie Wilson)
Never miss another Nottinghamshire story by signing up to our free email updatesInvalid EmailSomething went wrong, please try again later.
Subscribe
When you subscribe we will use the information you provide to send you these newsletters. Your information will be used in accordance with ourPrivacy Notice.
Thank you for subscribingWe have more newslettersShow meSee ourprivacy notice
Cats with round faces and big eyes might be cute, but you can t tell how they re feeling stokesentinel.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from stokesentinel.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A NIFTY student from Oxford created her own sustainable sportswear brand over lockdown. Shannon Ladhani, 24, from Summertown, studies Fashion Design at Nottingham Trent University, and decided over the spring lockdown to put her skills to good use and create her online sports apparel shop Daisies and Dumbells . Miss Ladhani said: I have always been interested in art. I studied textiles and fine art when at school in Oxford and now I am studying Fashion Design at university. “Over the March lockdown, I was at home and doing a lot self-driven projects for my second-year assessments, and I started getting into making a lot of marble prints.
Light Science Technologies works with growers involved in vertical farming to provide solutions for controlled environment agriculture EFFORTS to develop vertical farming technology are to get a share in £90million of UK Government funding allocated as part of its drive to get agriculture to net zero carbon emissions by 2040. Derby-based company Light Science Technologies is one of just 23 feasibility projects which will benefit from this cash pot from the UK’s innovation agency, Innovate UK, as part of its Transforming Food Production challenge. In partnership with Nottingham Trent University, LST will be leading the project to develop a growing sensor and transmission node for vertical farms over the next six months.