22 Aug 2016

JOOT Theatre Company are London bound

The University of Dundee’s JOOT Theatre Company will be taking their latest production to London, after a series of performances at the University of Dundee. The group of performers will be heading to London to perform ‘Bob-Up-A-Down’ at Greenwood Theatre, part of King’s College London, on Friday, October 21st. The play is set in the middle ages, in a dystopian rural England and involves a love triangle between Prophesy, a young, idealistic girl, Rollo, the arrogant village blacksmith and Bob-Up-A-Down, the anti-hero. This will be a debut performance of Ian Low’s stage adap...

JOOT Theatre Company are London bound

19 Aug 2016

Graduates "Tay" give birthday Bridge mural makeover

As the Tay Road Bridge enters its 50th year, it is being given a colourful mural makeover by renowned urban artists and graduates of the University of Dundee. Fraser Gray and Martin McGuiness have spent a month, largely under the cover of darkness, transforming the forgotten space under the bridge with bright colours and visually striking murals, having being awarded a £20,000 grant back in July. Choosing a vivid colour palette derived from the primary and secondary colour scale – CYMK – their mural ties in both the City of Design movement as well as acknowledging Dundee’s histo...

Graduates

19 Aug 2016

Diabetes drug could help reduce cardiovascular disease.

The world’s most commonly used Type 2 diabetes drug, Metformin, may be ‘repurposed’ to treat non-diabetic conditions according to researchers from the University of Dundee. The international study led by Professor Chim Lang and Dr Graham Rena at the Division of Molecular and Clinical Medicine at Dundee suggests that there is now strong evidence that the drug exhibits an anti-inflammatory action which may prove significant in non-diabetic cardiovascular disease. Inflammation is understood to contribute to cardiovascular disease (CVD) but existing nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSA...

Diabetes drug could help reduce cardiovascular disease.

19 Aug 2016

Diabetes drug could help reduce cardiovascular disease.

The world’s most commonly used Type 2 diabetes drug, Metformin, may be ‘repurposed’ to treat non-diabetic conditions according to researchers from the University of Dundee. The international study led by Professor Chim Lang and Dr Graham Rena at the Division of Molecular and Clinical Medicine at Dundee suggests that there is now strong evidence that the drug exhibits an anti-inflammatory action which may prove significant in non-diabetic cardiovascular disease. Inflammation is understood to contribute to cardiovascular disease (CVD) but existing nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSA...

Diabetes drug could help reduce cardiovascular disease.

18 Aug 2016

Martian to be autopsied as part of Being Human

An alien autopsy is among the events that will be taking place when the University of Dundee marks the 150th anniversary of H.G. Wells’ birth later this year. ‘H.G. Wells at 150: Hope and Fear’ will celebrate his life and work as part of Being Human 2016, a national festival of the humanities. Being Human will see events take place at more than 70 universities and other organisations across the UK from 17th to 25th November, with Dundee serving as Scotland’s festival hub. Wells, who found fame as the author of The Time Machine, The War of the Worlds and other stories, has come to ...

Martian to be autopsied as part of Being Human