Celebrate the class of 2026 Studio Art majors at their opening reception today.
Category: Today’s Events
Today: The Alembic Release Party at 6pm
Join us today at 6 p.m. in the Ruane Great Room for The Alembic Release Party celebrating 105 years of student writing and creativity. Enjoy the award ceremony, winners’ readings, open mic, coffee, donuts, and poetry prompts from the library.
Six Gents: The Senior Show
Our final show of the semester tonight, and 80% of our current exec’s last show ever, is tomorrow! Catch Claire, Mari, Jack, and and the other Jack on the gent stage for their final time as Providence College students.
Exhibit Opening- Today at 4:30 p.m. in Library, Main Floor
Join us this afternoon for an exhibit opening at the Philips Memorial Library at 4:30 p.m.
Last Open Table of the Year – Tonight at 7pm
Join us in Campus Ministry for the last Open Table of the year with a talk by Fr. Daniel Mallam on maintaining hope in the midst of fear. Come for dinner, stay for Wisdom!
Join us Tonight at 7:00pm in Campus Ministry (Lower Level) for the Christie Lecture!
Join us tonight for the William J. and Maryann M. Christie Distinguished Catholic Faith Lecture Series. This evening marks the final lecture of the 2025–2026 academic year and will feature Rev. Daniel Mallam, O.P., a Catholic priest and graduate student in theology at Providence College.
Snacks with Students: RI State Government Internship Program Today from 11am-2pm in Ray
Stop by today’s Snacks with Students session with the Rhode Island State Government Internship Program. The program will be recruiting students for fall 2026 internships through which you can meet important stakeholders of public policy and learn all facets of government, state, and municipal—or intern within the non-profit sector.
Humanities Forum on Hitler and The Modern World Today at 3:30pm in Ruane 105
For the last 80 years, we’ve shared a universal standard of evil: Hitler and the Nazis. Our guest, historian Alec Ryrie, thinks that shared moral consensus is breaking down . . . and that might not be all bad.