Dr Ger Flaherty (left) and third year medicine student Tariq Esmail (right) with John Campion (centre back) and speakers at the TEDMED Live event at NUI Galway

Dr Ger Flaherty (left) and third year medicine student Tariq Esmail (right) with John Campion (centre back) and speakers at the TEDMED Live event at NUI Galway

Students and staff at NUI Galway’s School of Medicine recently collaborated in hosting a major international conference addressing healthcare issues of global significance. TEDMED Live was held at the University on Friday, April 19 as a satellite event of the annual TEDMED conference taking place at the Kennedy Centre in Washington DC, USA.

NUI Galway is one of the first institutions outside the United States to receive permission from TEDMED, a multi-disciplinary community of innovators and leaders working together to address the societal causes of ill health, to stage a local conference.

The NUI Galway TEDMED Live event attracted over 250 delegates, comprising medical students and academic staff, who contributed to the pre-conference discussions using social media.

Organised by Tariq Esmail, a third-year medical student from Canada studying at NUI Galway, the event featured four local NUI Galway speakers, each of whom delivered a short presentation on one of TEDMED’s 20 Great Challenges in Medicine.

Professor Timothy O’Brien, Director of the Regenerative Medicine Institute at NUI Galway, explored innovative approaches to human tissue regeneration.
Professor Laurence Egan, a Consultant in Gastroenterology, tackled the topic of chronic disease management.
Dr Francis Finucance, a Consultant Endocrinologist at University Hospital Galway, gave a captivating perspective on societal approaches to managing the obesity crisis.
Professor Matt Griffin, Professor of Transplant Biology at NUI Galway, highlighted the central role of the patient in healthcare in his engaging talk entitled Patient-centred care has been and always will be a winning philosophy.
All of the local speakers’ presentations were professionally recorded and will be shared with a global audience on http://www.TEDMED.com. TEDMED has committed to inviting the most creative and engaging speakers to next year’s main conference in the USA. The organisation granted permission to NUI Galway to transmit their preferred session from the TEDMED conference in the USA to their local delegates at last Friday’s event. This webcast featured six international speakers, including such luminaries as Dr Francis S. Collins, an American physician-geneticist renowned for his leadership of the International Human Genome Project and currently serving as Director of the National Institutes of Health in the USA.

Reflecting on the success of this international partnership, Dr Gerard Flaherty, Senior Lecturer in Clinical Medicine and Medical Education at NUI Galway and academic adviser for the conference, said: “The School of Medicine at NUI Galway is proud to have been the first Irish institution to host a TEDMED Live satellite conference. The success of this initiative owes much to the vision and diligence of Tariq Esmail, one of our most capable international medical students, to the MedSoc student society, to the enthusiastic student and academic delegates attending the event, and to the powerful impact of the four local speakers, whose presentations have now reached a global audience.

Dr Flaherty added: “We are planning to create a novel special study module, entitled TEDMED, which will give ownership of the event to our students and allow us to stage a TEDMED conference annually and invite a larger audience from the wider University and the general public. TEDMED is a forum for innovative approaches to complex global health problems and NUI Galway is proud to be an active partner in this influential community of thinkers and opinion leaders.”

NUI Galway’s Information Evening for Adult Learners

 Information Evening

Meet with course directors and programme coordinators from our range of Access & Foundation programmes, Certificate, Diploma, Degree and Masters awards in a range of subject areas including:

  • Community & Family Studies
  • Early Childhood Studies & Practice
  • Environmental Sustainability
  • Languages
  • Gemmology
  • Information Technology
  • Innovation Management
  • International Business & Financial Markets
  • Lean & Quality Systems
  • Medical Device Science
  • Psychology of counselling
  • Social Care
  • Software Engineering
  • Training & Education

For a copy of thir prospectus or further event details.
Contact them
Adult and Continuing Education Office
T (091) 495241 or (091) 492144
E adulteducation@nuigalway.ie

Check out there range of programmes here.

27 Apr 13 10:00 | – 14: 00 Hotel Meyrick

Crime Writing Workshop with Stuart Neville

tuart Neville will give a two hour workshop on character and plot: their interconnectivity and dependency.

Stuart Neville’s debut novel, The Twelve (published in the USA as The Ghosts of Belfast), won the Mystery/Thriller category of the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, and was picked as one of the top crime novels of 2009 by both The New York Times and The LA Times.

He has been shortlisted for various awards, including the Barry, Macavity, Dilys awards, as well as the Irish Book Awards Crime Novel of the Year. He has twice been longlisted for the Theakstons Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year.

He has since published two critically acclaimed sequels, Collusion and Stolen Souls.His fourth novel, Ratlines about Nazis harboured by the Irish state following WWII was published by Harvill Secker in January 2013.

[YOU NEEDED TO SUMBITED A CV to be  included

http://snd.sc/ZNxUbK

Andre 3000 x Beyoncé - Back to Black (Radio Rip)

Link  —  Posted: April 27, 2013 in Uncategorized

TONIGHT! (26 April 2013)  half eght – til half ten

Venue: Town Hall Theatre

Join Cuirt for a very special evening when Irish fiction heroine Edna O’Brien will speak to broadcaster Vincent Woods about her recent memoir Country Girl.

Born in Ireland in 1930 and driven into exile after the publication of her controversial first novel, The Country Girls, Edna O’Brien has created a body of work which bears comparison with the very best writers of the twentieth century.

In Country Girl we come face to face with literary life of high drama and contemplation. Along the way there are encounters with Hollywood giants, pop stars and literary titans – all of whom lend this life, so gorgeously, sometimes painfully remembered here, a terrible poignancy. In prose which sparkles with the effortless gifts of a master in her ninth decade, Edna O’Brien has recast her life with the imaginative insight of a poet. It is a book of unfathomable depths and honesty.

‘Edna O’Brien has made of her memories something of both precision and depth, a book that, letting us see her as she was, jumps with an all-consuming curiosity from one lucidly narrated event to another, the scenes of disenchantment and bewilderment mingling with an assortment of surprises, traps, and ventures that are often, but not always, disastrous shocks. Only Colette is her equal as a student of the ardors of an independent woman who is also on her own as a writer.’
-Philip Roth

‘What a banquet indeed. A book of magics, truths, stories, and quiet immensity. No one else could have written it, and no one else could have lived it. The book is a poetic testament to what Scott Fitzgerald called our ‘capacity for wonder’.
-Andrew O’Hagan

Since her debut novel The Country Girls Edna O’Brien has written over twenty works of fiction along with biographies of James Joyce and Lord Byron.

She is the recipient of many awards including the Irish Pen Lifetime Achievement Award, the American National Art’s Gold Medal and the Ulysses Medal. Born and raised in the west of Ireland she has lived in London for many years.

Aside  —  Posted: April 27, 2013 in Cuirt
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Date & Time 28 April 2013 4pm – 6pm

Venue: Cnoic Suain,  Connemara

Join Cuirt 2013 for a special afternoon of music, history and literature in the atmospheric surroundings of Connemara

Contributors to The Atlas of the Great Irish Famine (published by Cork University Press, 2012) will speak and give presentations on their work. They will be joined by singer Áine Ní Dhroighneáin in the wonderful hill village of Cnoic Suain. Attendees on the day will have the opportunity to walk around the village. A bus will leave Galway city from the Cathedral at 3:15pm on the day (transport is included in the ticket price).


William SmythWilliam J. Smyth

William J. Smyth is Professor Emeritus of Geography at University College Cork, where he held the Chair of Geography since 1977. He has lectured at many universities, including Syracuse University, N.Y., California State at San Fernando, Los Angeles and University College Dublin . He was elected a member of The Royal Irish Academy in 1999.

A former editor of Irish Geography and co-editor of Common Ground: Essays on the Historical Geography of Ireland (1988), he has published widely on Ireland’s social and cultural geography. His prize-winning book Mapmaking, Landscape and Memory: A Geography of Colonial and Early Modern Ireland c. 1530-1750 was published in 2006. He is co-editor of The Atlas of the Great Irish Famine (University College Press, Cork) with John Crowley and Mike Murphy.

 

 

Cathal PorterCathal Póirtéir

Cathal Póirtéir is a broadcaster and writer. He was a Senior Radio Producer with RTE Radio 1 and RTE Raidió na Gaeltachta for 30 years, working on a wide range of programmes, including a number of series on the Great Irish Famine. He is the editor of several books in Irish and English on folklore, social history and literary topics. He has produced a number of features, documentaries and radio dramas for RTE, now available on CD.

He holds an MA in Folklore for UCD and now works as an independent researcher and writer on folklore. In 2012 Oireachtas na Gaeilge awarded him their Buaic-ghradam Cumarsáide or Lifetime Achievement Award. He has also won Gold and Silver in the annual PPI Media Awards.

 

 

Áine Ní DhroighneáinÁine Ní Dhroighneáin

Áine Ní Dhroighneáin is from An Spidéal, Co. Galway. She began singing sean-nós from an early age, being taught local songs from local singers such as Pat Phádraig Tom, Máire Pheitir Uí Dhroighneáin and Peaitsí Ó Ceannabháin. At the age of nine, she was asked to sing for the President of Ireland, Mary Robinson, during her visit to the area. She has appeared at many traditional music festivals at home and abroad, including Feile Cois Cuain, Mayo, and the Pan-Celtic Festival in Lorient.

Áine was appointed Sean-Nós singer in residence in NUIG from 2004-2005. She has also performed with other artists, including Máirtín O’Connor, Steve Cooney and The Keane Sisters. She took part in a televised singing contest in 2006, where she sang a variety of songs and styles; she finished second and raised €75,000 for charity.

Video  —  Posted: April 27, 2013 in Cuirt

The Galway Review

Review

Stella Godmet holds BA (Honours) in Communication, Media and Drama.

Currently, she is doing a Masters Degree in Drama and Theatre Studies at the National University of Ireland, Galway.

She lives in Galway City and writes review, fiction and no-fiction.

Jason and the Argonauts 

by Stella GODMET

Once the audience is seated, the house lights switched off, our attention is drawn to a cart, set in the center of the stage where it bathes in a halo of warm gold light. A couple of minutes tick by before an actor finally makes his way to the stage and a journey begins.

Two men stand before us; one is tall and thin while the other is shorter and more muscular. As they both start speaking, one with a squeaky and the other with a deeper voice, we notice that the voices match their physical appearance. They are the traditional caricatures of the…

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The Galway Review

Drew Dunlap is an actor, director, playwright and reviewer from New York, currently living in Galway. He has a BA in Theatre and Psychology from Hofstra University and is in the process of receiving a MA in Drama and Theatre Studies from NUIG. You can see more of his reviews in his blog (The Glawegian New Yorker).

The Abbey Theatre’s The Picture of Dorian Gray

By Drew Dunlap

“All art is quite useless.”

Quite a start to a play adapted from a book about a portrait. Of course, this is a well-known quote from Oscar Wilde, and not the first to be heard in The Abbey’s The Picture of Dorian Gray. It drips with Wilde and his genius, and that’s how any production from his work should be. It can’t be hidden: I am a longtime admirer of Wilde, his work, and his life. This show does him…

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