My perspective on how being in a European School affects us and our place in society
By Lily Collin We are all people with different origins, born in different places, raised in different environments, with different…
Student-run independent newspaper of the 13 European Schools. A CoSup project.
By Lily Collin We are all people with different origins, born in different places, raised in different environments, with different…
By Petra Lindholm Multilingualism, the ability to speak more than two languages fluently, is widespread in the European School System….
By: Laura Somma I was idly walking the streets when I was stopped by a beggar. He had taken hold…
By Eimantas Petraitis and Sara Winship Lake Victoria is the world’s largest tropical lake and second-largest freshwater lake. It is…
This article, by Beatrise Prince, is a thought-provoking article that explores the potential of technology and its possible implications on humanity. The author discusses both the bright and dark sides of technological advancements, highlighting the benefits of innovation, such as energy-storing bricks and virtual realities, as well as the risks, including the possibility of trapping consciousness in computers and the vulnerability of our personal data. Despite these concerns, the author ultimately encourages readers not to be afraid of technology but to embrace it, acknowledging that innovation is inevitable and that it is up to us to use technology for the greater good.
The article describes the success of the Model European Council (MEC), an event that brings together students from different European Schools to simulate the proceedings of the European Council. This year, about 250 pupils participated in the event, hosted by EEB2 at Eurocontrol. The student organizers did an excellent job of ensuring that the event ran smoothly, and the students showed a remarkable level of engagement and knowledge.
By Anda Purina S5ENA at EEB2 James Baldwin (1924-1987) was a queer, black American, who wrote many novels, essays, short…
The war in Ukraine is bad; the State of Russia has always been bad; Russian expansionism is bad; don’t be mean to Russians just because of Putin; let’s cooperate and coexist instead (brief summary omitting examples)
For centuries, the yakuza have lurked in the shadows of Japan, their origins shrouded in legend and myth. Some say they started as a band of gamblers who banded together for protection, while others claim they were born from the samurai tradition, rising to prominence in the Edo period. Still prominent in today’s Japan, and idolized internationally for their brutal initiation rituals, strict codes of honor, their beautiful inkwork, the yakuza have a cultural significance that cannot be ignored. To peer deeper, past this superficial enshrouding of their true characters, to really understand them, we must start at the beginning and ask ourselves: where did they come from?
By: Sia Shah S3FR Nowadays, students are getting much more addicted to the Internet. The usage of the Internet has…