Top Stories
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Trinity College Dublin to re-open as normal on Tuesday
Trinity College Dublin will re-open on Tuesday morning as normal following Monday’s closure.
15 Oct 2017
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Launch of first major Irish exhibition on Oscar Wilde
The highly personal exhibition featuring letters, photographs, theatre programmes and memorabilia maps out the Anglo-Irish playwright's meteoric rise to fame and also his dramatic fall from grace.
12 Oct 2017
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Trinity Centre for Gender Equality and Leadership is launched
The new Centre seeks to deliver sustainable structural and cultural change across all academic disciplines and support areas of Trinity College Dublin and act as a national leader for other Irish higher education institutions.
11 Oct 2017
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Scientists identify new mechanism for the development of schizophrenia
Dysfunctional brain blood vessels may be associated with the development of schizophrenia. There is potential for new treatments via new drugs that target these abnormal blood vessels.
10 Oct 2017
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Innovative education practices improve students’ College-going ambitions
Secondary school students who had direct engagement with a University or its students were more than twice as likely to say they plan to do a degree.
9 Oct 2017
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Ireland’s 3rd National Biodiversity Action Plan launches
A total of 119 specific actions will help government, civil and private sectors come together to achieve Ireland’s vision for biodiversity.
5 Oct 2017
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Tom Murphy: a Celebration at Trinity
Tom Murphy is Ireland’s greatest living playwright, recently elected Saoi of Aosdána, an honour conferred on him by President Michael D. Higgins.
5 Oct 2017
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New use for alcohol aversion drug in treatment of chemo resistant lung cancer
Scientists have had positive results from a laboratory-based study using a well-known alcohol aversion drug to try to combat chemotherapy resistance in the most common type of lung cancer, non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).
4 Oct 2017
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Discovery of rogue messengers that hinder body’s immune response to cancer
Researchers from Trinity College Dublin have made a discovery around treatment-resistant breast cancer that may turn the phrase, 'don't shoot the messenger', on its head. The scientists have found that cell to cell messengers released by cancer cells which are not responding to treatment, can negatively affect the body’s immune system response against the cancer.
3 Oct 2017
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More students from Kuwait to study and research at Trinity
'Memorandums of Understanding signed in Ministry of Education and Kuwait University.
3 Oct 2017