Ready for a trip around the world from your living room? Check out our internationally themed crossword puzzle; completed grids received by April 15, 2025, will be entered into a contest for a hand-held wifi-free translation device. https://t.co/cmhj5wvlYi. Good luck!
Applications are due Dec. 2 for a once-in-a-lifetime trip this summer to Bayonne, France. Learn more about FRE 329F, the Department of French and Italian's new summer immersion community engagement course here: https://t.co/Dw57FfezQw
Today! India's Historic Elections & After: Hear experts weigh in on how how caste, class, gender and regional politics shaped India's "shock" 2024 election results. 4:30- 6 p.m. Green Hall, 0-S-6
Check out the 2024 cohort of Labouisse Prize winners, whose remarkable post-grad projects span from indigo dying to public health.
https://t.co/QUDBL99DSc
An info session on PIIRS' new undergraduate fellowship is happening today at 4:30 p.m. in the Louis Simpson building, room 144. Scan the code for more details!
"Taliban are afraid of educated women because they know that an educated woman will not raise Taliban,"
wrote one woman who is attempting to live under the oppressive regime. Read more from fellows at Princeton's Afghanistan Lab ... https://t.co/Y1kL5mhfKT
Crime and Punishment: Policing, Race, and Injustice
Today, at noon in room A71, Louis A. Simpson building
Please join Deborah Yashar, professor of politics and International Affairs with professors Laurence Ralph, Patrick Sharkey, and Maria Micaela Sviatschi
Last year, one of the largest earthquakes ever recorded in the Levant struck Turkey and Syria. More than 58,000 people died. A year on. On Feb. 9, we will discuss the longer-term humanitarian, political, and economic impacts of the earthquake.
Princeton grad students: WRI 501, Reading and Writing about the Scientific Literature, still has space. The 6-wk course begins on Jan. 30. This will be the only opportunity to take WRI 501 this semester. More at: https://t.co/duOYrVx4LH
Two Princeton professors have joined forces to bring four Ukrainian students to CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, in France. Since, all four have gone on to study at U.S. universities. Read their stories below.
https://t.co/FlT2Vp88t7
Undergrads traveled to Denmark this summer for Princeton's "Making the Viking Age," a multidisciplinary course that included lessons on shipbuilding, archaeology, art history and more. https://t.co/XhZWNEqoo5