College
This Week, Cut the Rent Blinked Under Pressure. Its Movement Could be Over
In kicking rent strikes down the road, Cut the Rent forgot that a small group striking is far better than no striking at all, writes Aoife Kearins.
A Spellbound Audience Watches the Launch of a New Trinity Publication
Moving, launched by Grace Farrell and Ellie O'Neill, is a new publication concerned with the idea of 'art moving towards something'.
A Risograph Print Showcase in Aid of the Homelessness Crisis
Art collective Epoch will return to Lucky's today with Riso City Returns – tackling Dublin's homelessness emergency.
At March, Students Call Again for Radical Climate Action
A small cohort of students marched to Kildare Place today, in the latest climate protest to hit Dublin.
Trinity Needs a Drug Policy – And Badly
Students need – and deserve – to know that support services exist if they have issues relating to their drug use, writes Eolann Davis.
Pan Pan Theatre Company Takes On the Play Beckett Disliked Least
Endgame, a play that follows a story of familial dysfunction, is set to show at Project Arts Centre from this Saturday.
Trinity Students in Hong Kong Describe ‘War’ on Campuses
Students who spent time in Hong Kong have described their experiences of the pro-democracy protests that have rocked the region's universities.
Students Blast College Over Jumbled Erasmus Structures
Many students say they've been left without the knowledge they need to organise Erasmus or Study Abroad programmes.
In Old Library, a Cultural Campaign for Women Figureheads Comes to a Head
Some are in favour of Trinity's new move to place female sculptures in the Long Room. But to others, it doesn't go far enough.
The Trinity Sport Ambassador Who Boycotted Apartheid South Africa
Former Irish rugby international Hugo MacNeill talks Trinity, rugby – and firing Trinity's soccer team to victory in the 1979 Collingwood Cup.