The 2010 ”Women in Theory” workshop was hosted by Princeton's Center for Computational Intractability and is intended for graduate and undergraduate students working in theoretical computer science. It features technical talks and tutorials by senior and junior women in the field.
The motivation for the workshop was two-fold: to deliver an invigorating educational program and to bring together women from different departments in order to foster a sense of kinship and camarad
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Princeton University President Shirley M. Tilghman, a distinguished molecular biologist, discusses the role of women in science -- past, present and future.
The 2010 ”Women in Theory” workshop was hosted by Princeton's Center for Computational Intractability and is intended for graduate and undergraduate students working in theoretical computer science. It features technical talks and tutorials by senior and junior women in the field.
The motivation for the workshop was two-fold: to deliver an invigorating educational program and to bring together women from different departments in order to foster a sense of kinship and ca
The 2010 ”Women in Theory” workshop was hosted by Princeton's Center for Computational Intractability and is intended for graduate and undergraduate students working in theoretical computer science. It features technical talks and tutorials by senior and junior women in the field.
The motivation for the workshop was two-fold: to deliver an invigorating educational program and to bring together women from different departments in order to foster a sense of kinship and ca
The 2010 ”Women in Theory” workshop was hosted by Princeton's Center for Computational Intractability and is intended for graduate and undergraduate students working in theoretical computer science. It features technical talks and tutorials by senior and junior women in the field.
The motivation for the workshop was two-fold: to deliver an invigorating educational program and to bring together women from different departments in order to foster a sense of kinship and ca
The 2010 ”Women in Theory” workshop was hosted by Princeton's Center for Computational Intractability and is intended for graduate and undergraduate students working in theoretical computer science. It features technical talks and tutorials by senior and junior women in the field.
The motivation for the workshop was two-fold: to deliver an invigorating educational program and to bring together women from different departments in order to foster a sense of kinship
The 2010 ”Women in Theory” workshop was hosted by Princeton's Center for Computational Intractability and is intended for graduate and undergraduate students working in theoretical computer science. It features technical talks and tutorials by senior and junior women in the field.
The motivation for the workshop was two-fold: to deliver an invigorating educational program and to bring together women from different departments in order to foster a sense of kinship and ca
The 2010 ”Women in Theory” workshop was hosted by Princeton's Center for Computational Intractability and is intended for graduate and undergraduate students working in theoretical computer science. It features technical talks and tutorials by senior and junior women in the field.
The motivation for the workshop was two-fold: to deliver an invigorating educational program and to bring together women from different departments in order to foster a sense of kinship and camarad
The 2010 ”Women in Theory” workshop was hosted by Princeton's Center for Computational Intractability and is intended for graduate and undergraduate students working in theoretical computer science. It features technical talks and tutorials by senior and junior women in the field.
The motivation for the workshop was two-fold: to deliver an invigorating educational program and to bring together women from different departments in order to foster a sense of kinship and ca
The 2010 ”Women in Theory” workshop was hosted by Princeton's Center for Computational Intractability and is intended for graduate and undergraduate students working in theoretical computer science. It features technical talks and tutorials by senior and junior women in the field.
The motivation for the workshop was two-fold: to deliver an invigorating educational program and to bring together women from different departments in order to foster a sense of kinship and camarad
The 2010 ”Women in Theory” workshop was hosted by Princeton's Center for Computational Intractability and is intended for graduate and undergraduate students working in theoretical computer science. It features technical talks and tutorials by senior and junior women in the field.
The motivation for the workshop was two-fold: to deliver an invigorating educational program and to bring together women from different departments in order to foster a sense of kinship and camarad
Three recent Princeton graduates took part this summer in a "young filmmakers" program in the School of Engineering and Applied Science.
The filmmakers, who majored in engineering as undergraduates, produced six short videos that were shown in a campus-wide screening in July and are now available for viewing on the Internet.
Michael E. Wood created videos about the Center for Information Technology Policy and about a new technology that is assisting archaeologists who are
