Leadership: Events, Classes, and Conferences
Fall 2011 Foundational Component Offerings
This semester, you may work to complete the Foundational Components of the Rufus M. Jones Institute for Leadership in the following ways:
- Speakers, Discussions, and Workshops on Leadership
- Dr. Shetty, Yoga Institute of Santa Cruz East, Mumbai, India, September 7, 4:30PM Gest Center 101
- "Field Guide" Gallery Talk with Markus Baenziger, Helen White, & John Muse, September 8, 4:30PM, WCC Art Gallery
Using plastic resins, found objects, and various casting and carving techniques, artist Markus Baenziger invents floridly beautiful flora that often merge with or emerge from technological debris. Field Guide, Baenziger's first exhibition at Haverford College, maps his ecologies of cultured waste and natural hybridity, inviting viewers to reconsider the troubles and wonders of our contemporary landscape. - James Petersson, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, University of Pennsylvania, September 9, 3:00PM, KINSC Hilles 109
Communication between nerve cells that allows us to sense, to learn, and to feel emotion is made possible by receptor proteins in the nerve cell membrane. Receptor proteins transmit signals by switching from a resting state structure to an activated structure. Studying these protein motions not only aids our understanding of diverse neurological phenomena, it also contributes to an important fundamental problem in biochemistry: understanding how motions propagate from one end of a protein to another. The Petersson lab is developing tools to address questions of how dynamic proteins mediate communication, from in vitro studies in atomic detail to mapping signals in complex cellular systems. To do so, we make use of the techniques of organic synthesis, molecular biology, physical chemistry, computational modeling, and cell biology. - Math Colloquium: "The Use of Statistical Tests in Discrimination Cases", September 12, 4:00PM, KINSC E309
In discrimination cases concerning promotion or hiring, courts need to decide whether an employment practice, typically an exam or educational requirement, has disparate impact on applicants from a protected group. Courts usually compare the pass rates for the protected and majority groups, using either the four-fifths rule or formal statistical tests. Not everyone who passes the exam is promoted or hired as the eligibility list often expires in two or three years and promotions or hires are made in rank-order of the exam scores. Hence, in addition to comparing the pass rates, courts have also compared promotion rates of those appointed the first time the list is used, or the distributions of the ranks of the exam scores, or tested whether the average scores of the applicants from the protected and majority groups are equal. When the courts examine the exam scores with several statistical tests, the problem of multiple comparisons arises. Now the probability of “at least one of the statistical tests finding a significant difference” exceeds the nominal level. Furthermore, different tests may give different conclusions in terms of disparate impact, and different courts interpret those results differently. To avoid the multiple comparison problem, we study a two-test procedure that keeps its size at the nominal level. Simulation results indicate that the two-test procedure keeps the size at their nominal level, and in certain situations, have a higher power of detecting disparate impact than currently used methods. - Patriot Acts: Narratives of Post-9/11 Injustice, September 14, 4:15PM, KINSC Sharpless Auditorium
Alia Malek is an author (A Country Called Amreeka, Free Press 2009) and a civil rights lawyer. Born in Baltimore to Syrian immigrant parents, she began her legal career as a trial attorney at the U.S. Department of Justice's Civil RIghts Division. After 9/11, in addition to her regular duties at the Department of Justice, which focused on Americans' civil rights in educational contexts, Alia's responsibilities came to also include reaching out to and serving the needs of vulnerable groups targeted by backlash discrimination and hate crimes.
After working in the legal field in the U.S., Lebanon, and the West Bank, Malek, who has degrees with Johns Hopkins and Georgetown Universities, earned her master's degree in journalism from Columbia University. Her reportage has appeared in Salon, The Columbia Journalism Review, the Christian Science Monitor, theNew York Times, and The Nation.
Alia will be discussing her new book, Patriot Acts: Narratives of Post-9/11 Backlash. A groundbreaking collection of oral histories, Patriot Acts tells the stories of men and women who have been needlessly swept up in the War on Terror. In their own words, narrators recount personal experiences of the post-9/11 backlash that have deeply altered their lives and communities. The eighth book in the Voice of Witness series, Patriot Acts illuminates these experiences in a compelling collection of eighteen oral histories from men and women who have found themselves subject to a wide range of human and civil rights abuses—from rendition and torture, to workplace discrimination, bullying, FBI surveillance and harassment. Included in this collection are narratives from:
ADAMA, a sixteen-year-old Muslim American who was abruptly seized from her home by the FBI on suspicion of being a suicide bomber. Even after her release from detention, she was forced to wear a tracking bracelet for the next three years.
TALAT, the mother of 9/11 first responder Salman Hamdani, who went missing after the attacks. As Talat and her husband searched desperately for their son, they were hounded by the media, who portrayed Salman as a possible terrorist in hiding.
RANA, a Sikh man whose brother Balbir was gunned down outside the gas station where he worked. Balbir's death was the first reported hate murder after 9/11. - Issues in Action seminar, September 16, 12:00PM, Stokes Multicultural Center
Passionate about a cause, but don’t know how to get involved? Active in an organization, but don’t know how to help others become active? Always wanted to learn about activism and organizing?
Issues in Action is a seminar designed to help students become more adept at organizing and activism on Haverford’s campus. Students will learn how to focus their interests and ideas, what resources are available on campus, and how to reach their peers, all with goal of creating sustainable action on Haverford’s campus.
The workshop will be facilitated by Caila Heyison ’11. She is a current Haverford House Fellow, working as a Paralegal at Community Legal Services in Philadelphia. As a former staff member and student co-head of Eighth Dimension, she worked with student groups on campus to identify needs in the surrounding community, and organize service events and ongoing projects to address those needs. - Why choose an academic career? A Distinguished Visitor talk by Dr. Barbara Ryder, Head, Department of Science, Virginia Tech, September 21, 4:45PM, KINSC Hilles 109
Students encounter professors in class, in office hours, in co-curricular activities and sometimes on campus at the coffee shop, but what is the totality of a professor’s job at university? IDr. Ryder will address the different aspects of life as an academic, its rewards and its shortcomings, from the perspective of having taught almost 30 years at large state universities (i.e., Rutgers University, Virginia Tech). Discussion and questions welcome. - Larissa Swedell, Associate Professor of Anthropology, Queens College, CUNY, September 22, 4:30PM, Chase Auditorium
Larissa Swedell’s interests center on the interacting social and reproductive strategies of males and females in complex social systems. More broadly, she is interested in the behavior, ecology, and evolution of nonhuman primates and what they can tell us about human biology, evolution, and behavior. Her research so far has focused mainly on hamadryas baboons in Ethiopia, and she is currently broadening her scope to include chacma baboons of the Western Cape Peninsula of South Africa, where her PhD student Shahrina Chowdhury is conducting her dissertation fieldwork. In the wake of increasing habitat loss and concomitant threats to all wildlife, including baboons, she is actively involved in conservation strategies, mainly via conservation education and public outreach. Swedell is currently directing her resources towards the Save Awash National Park conservation project in Ethiopia (founded and operated by Mathew Pines) and the Imfene Baboon Conservation and Education Initiative (a collaborative public outreach effort that she co-founded and operate with Julian Saunders).
Swedell's current research focuses on hamadryas baboons (Papio hamadryas hamadryas), which have been characterized as the most male-dominated primate species, one in which social organization is largely if not exclusively controlled by males. Such a social system lies at the far extreme of known variation in sex roles among primates, and begs explanation. As a means to elucidate the role of female behavior in hamadryas social organization, she has focused her research over the past 12 years on the behavior and ecology of wild hamadryas baboons in Ethiopia. - Distinguished Visitor, Iain Haley Pollock '00, Award Winning Poet, September 23, 4:30PM, Chase Auditorium
Iain Pollock’s acclaimed collection of poetry was published by The University of Georgia Press this year, and won the Cave Canem Poetry Prize in 2010. An English teacher at Springside-Chestnut Hill Academy in Philadelphia, Iain graduated with an English major from Haverford and went on to earn an MFA from Syracuse University. His poetry weaves together historical and personal, collective and private experiences to offer layered glimpses of moments of being.
Iain's work has previously appeared in publications including AGNI, American Poetry Review, Boston Review,Callaloo, Drunken Boat, and Indiana Review. - Speaker's Committee Presents: An Evening with Terry Gross, September 23, 7:30PM, Roberts Marshall Auditorium
Terry discussed some of the nuances of some her most successful and challenging interviews throughout her time hosting NPR’s Fresh Air. - Queer Life in the Corporate World, October 2, 12:00PM, Stokes Multicultural Center
Join Theo Posselt, '94, the Director of Deloitte Consulting and a member of the Alumni Association Executive Council for a discussion of being out in the corporate world. Sponsored by SAGA - Design Philadelphia, October 13-23, Center City Philadelphia
DesignPhiladelphia, a city-wide celebration honoring the historic role of design in the region while showcasing the creative innovation yet to come, returns on October 13. Once again, the cultural initiative will partner with The University of the Arts for the nation’s largest festival of its kind.
From October 13-23, approximately 200,000 people are estimated to explore the world of design during over 150 events held throughout the city. DesignPhiladelphia aims to celebrate and promote Philadelphia a design capital and destination. Nearly 500 artists, professionals and students alike, will be represented in practically every design discipline, including automotive, product and interior design, graphic design, architecture, multi-media and urban planning. Events included exhibitions, lectures, workshops and demonstrations to help shine a light on the city’s design scene and history.
Most events are free and open to the public. Just follow the link below for more details! For more information, visit www.designphiladelphia.org - Rising Income Inequality: Causes and Consequences, October 20, 5:00 pm, Sharpless
The Department of Economics and the Center for Peace and Global Citizenship invite you to our fourth annual economics alumni forum, a panel discussion on Rising Income Inequality: Causes and Consequences. Since 1980, the richest 20% of American families have experienced a growth rate in income three times the growth rate of the second richest 20% and 6 times the growth rate of the bottom 20%. Panelists Tim Taylor '82, managing editor of the Journal of Economic Perspectives and author of Principles of Economics: Economics and the Economy, and Jane Dokko '98, economist at the Federal Reserve Board, will serve as panelists discussing the causes and consequences of this alarming trend. Rebecca Saxton-Fox ’06, a student in International Affairs at Columbia University, will serve as moderator. - Distinguished Visitor Johnathan D. Moreno, November 3, 1:00 pm, Zubrow Commons
Jonathan D. Moreno is one of thirteen Penn Integrates Knowledge university professors. He is also Professor of Medical Ethics and Health Policy, of History and Sociology of Science, and of Philosophy. In 2008-09 he served as a member of President Barack Obama’s transition team. Moreno is an elected member of the Institute of Medicine/National Academy of Sciences and is a National Associate of the National Research Council. He has served as a senior staff member for three presidential advisory commissions, including the current bioethics commission under President Obama, and has given invited testimony for both houses of congress. He was an Andrew W. Mellon post doctoral fellow, holds an honorary doctorate from Hofstra University, and is a recipient of the Benjamin Rush Medal from the College of William and Mary Law School.
Moreno is a Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress in Washington, DC, where he edits the magazine Science Progress. Moreno has served as adviser to many non-governmental organizations, including the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. He is a member of the Governing Board of the International Neuroethics Society, a Faculty Affiliate of the Kennedy Institute of Ethics at Georgetown University, a Fellow of the Hastings Center and the New York Academy of Medicine, and a past president of the American Society for Bioethics and Humanities. He advises various science, health, and national security agencies and serves as a member of the Defense Intelligence Agency’s TIGER committee on potentially disruptive novel technologies. - Practice Areas in Medicine Panel, November 6, 7:00 pm, Stokes CPGC Cafe
Alumni Relations, in conjunction with the Pre-Health Office and Haverford’s Pre-Health Society, invite interested students to meet with Haverford alumni who are physicians practicing in the areas of pathology, radiology, and bariatric surgery. Each alumnus will share his experiences of working in his particular field of medicine and take questions from the audience. (This is part of an occasional series to introduce Haverford students to different practice areas in medicine.)
Doug Flieder '87 completed his residency in Anatomic Pathology at Massachusetts General Hospital and a fellowship in Pulmonary and Mediastinal Pathology at the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology and National Cancer Institute in Washington, DC. He came to the Fox Chase Cancer Center in 2004 from New York-Presbyterian Hospital in New York City to join the department of anatomic pathology and leads the division of surgical pathology.
Jonathan Morgan '90 completed his residency in Diagnostic Radiology at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital in 2002 and a fellowship in Neuroradiology at Massachusetts General Hospital in 2004. He is currently a Radiologist with Southeast Radiology Ltd in Upland, PA. Marc Neff '92, a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons, he is a 1996 graduate of the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. He completed a five-year General Surgery residency at York Hospital in York, PA, in 2001, and a two-year Fellowship in Minimally Invasive Surgery at St. Peter's University Hospital in New Brunswick, NJ. Marc is Medical Director of the Kennedy University Hospital Bariatric Surgery Program. - Career in Sports Day, November 13, 9:30 am, Chase Auditorium
SAAC Sponsored Event - "The Commercialization of Microfinance:The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly.", November 15, 6:00 pm, Sharpless Auditorium
Can Microfinance and its Social Development Focus survive association with Wall Street?, Ira Lieberman, Ph.D. , Political Economy, Oxford University, Founder & 1st CEO of CGAP (Consultative Group to Assist the Poorest, part of The World Bank Group), Tuesday, 15 November 2011 Tea at 5:30 PM; Talk at 6:00 PM, KINSC Sharpless Auditorium jointly sponsored by The Haverford Microfinance Program, Center for Peace and Global Citizenship, Department of Economics
Ira Lieberman as CEO of CGAP, was one of the leaders of the industry’s efforts to “commercialize” in order to expand its funding base beyond the limited pool of donor funds. The additional funding enabled huge growth over the last two decades and extended its reach in serving those living under $2/day. But has is relationship with private investors affected how it deals with its clients to their detriment? Lieberman will address this question reflecting on the developments of the industry since inception and particularly in the last few years when it has been rocked by criticism derived from high interest rates, high profits, political interference and even deaths. - "Smells Like Translation: Pedagogies of Human Rights and Transnational Standardization in Turkey", November 28, 4:30 pm, Gest Center 101
Elif Babul, Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Fellow at Stanford University
This paper focuses on the form and content of human rights training programs for state officials and government workers in Turkey. Eager to prove its commitment to human rights as part of the EU accession process, the Turkish government has, since 2002, been cooperating with nongovernmental organizations to give human rights training to its employees (security forces, judiciary, prison personnel), many of whom have formerly been associated with rights violations in the country.
Exploring the daily enactments of international relations, legal processes, and global ethics in this unique fieldsite, the paper analyzes the politics of simultaneous translation in human rights seminars for state officials and government workers. Translation processes, Babul suggests, serve as mediums through which human rights and their foreign origin are both mediated and managed in highly nationalist training environments. - "Debt, Money, and Justice", November 29, 4:30 pm, Stokes Auditorium
The Department of Economics and the Gest Program in conjunction with the Distinguished Visitors Program present a talk by Philip Goodchild, Professor of Religion and Philosophy, University of Nottingham.
About Philip Goodchild:
Reading Einstein on relativity at the age of 13 gave me a passion for purely speculative questions, and I later went up to Churchill College, Cambridge to read Mathematics in the hope of becoming a theoretical physicist. But time spent in an inner city area of Walsall through the 'Time for God' voluntary work scheme between school and university had brought to my attention more significant questions about the nature of life than purely physical ones, and so I changed subject after my first year to read Theology and Religious Studies. Here I was most influenced by Kosuke Koyama's Lutheran theology of inter-faith humility, Dietrich Bonhoeffer's 'religionless Christianity', John Howard Yoder's radical politics of Jesus, and Carl Jung's depth psychology. Having decided I needed to spend time studying and rethinking my direction in life, I went to Lancaster University where I could study the range of religious issues that now interested me. These included a course on Nietzsche and his successors taught by John Milbank. I was gripped: instead of spending one year in Lancaster, I spent eleven. I wrote a PhD dissertation entitled 'Chaos and Eternity: Gilles Deleuze and the Question of Philosophy'. Gilles Deleuze (1925-1995) was among the most difficult and profound French philosophers of the twentieth century, although he has only recently become one of the most influential. Most of my dissertation was later published as Gilles Deleuze and the Question of Philosophy (Associated University Presses, 1996). I was then asked to write Deleuze and Guattari: An Introduction to the Politics of Desire (London: Sage, 1996), for the Theory, Culture and Society book series, which I completed as a postdoctoral research fellow at St Martin's College, Lancaster. In 1996 I was appointed as Lecturer in Christian Theology at St Martin's, and soon found myself invited to international conferences on Deleuze in Australia and Canada. Teaching and research were moving in different directions, so I decided to organise a conference on Continental philosophy of religion in order to contribute some shape and coherence to a developing field. This took place at St Martin's College, Lancaster, in July 2000. I was appointed as Lecturer in Religious Studies at the University of Nottingham in January 2000, where my teaching shifted to include Buddhism, theories of religion, religious pluralism, philosophy of religion and critical theory. Within a year I had completed my major work, Capitalism and Religion: The Price of Piety (Routledge, 2002) - an attempt to construct a Continental philosophy of religion through the encounter between questions of truth, ethics, and piety and readings of key thinkers in the tradition of Continental thought and critical theory. Since then, I have become interested in the implications for philosophical and religious thought of the collision between ecology and economy in the contemporary world, and I am in the process of developing a political theology through a critique of the 'theology of money' that determines contemporary life. - Howard Lutnick '83, October 29th, GIAC
Chairman and CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald, Howard shared his story and the Cantor story of resilience, rebuilding and triumph after losing 658 of his employees in the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center.
- Conferences
- Captain’s Leadership Program - Offered for all of the Captains for Sports Teams Must attend the a majority of the classes and the Longer workshop on Labor Day. September 5th
- Fall NECOME Conference 2011, September 23, 2:00PM, WCC 313
Northeast Consortium of Medical Education Fall 2011 Conference
- Retreats
- MLK Day Retreat
- Ropes Course
- Leadership Class
Offered Second Semester- Exploring Leadership: Linking Theory to Practice
If juxtaposing leadership development theories, understanding the role of self development, and learning with people who have a wide-range of experiences and perspectives is enticing to you, then this is the ex-co course you'll want to take. In the most basic form, we'll explore the answers to the following two questions: 1) What is leadership? and 2) How do we "do" leadership? The non-credit course will be held for one hour once a week for six weeks. The discussion will be lead by Jason McGraw and Alison Castel, and topics will include:
Week 1: Welcome, intro to course, and exploring various successful business models (Google, Ben & Jerry's, Southwest Airlines, Elon College, Starbucks, and The Body Shop).
Week 2: Discovering, Understanding, and Utilizing Your Strengths
Week 3: Leadership Theories
Week 4: Negotiation, Facilitation, and Interpersonal Communication
Week 5: Leadership Styles & Perspectives
Week 6: Applying Theory to Practice
Email jmcgraw@haverford.edu for more information.
- Exploring Leadership: Linking Theory to Practice
- Curriculum
- Pre-Health Panel
- Wendy Newell
- Education group screenings
- Post 9/11 Narratives
- Andrea Butler
Spring 2012 Foundational Component Offerings
This semester, you may work to complete the Foundational Components of the Rufus M. Jones Institute for Leadership in the following ways:
- Speakers, Discussions, and Workshops on Leadership
- Think, Care, Act. Teaching for a Peaceful Future
Lecture by author, Susan Gelber Cannon- January 26th
Susan Gelber Cannon, Episcopal Academy teacher and author, will speak about her book: Think, Care, Act: Teaching for a Peaceful Future. Cannon will connect ideas from the classroom to the living room as she invites teachers, parents, and community members to consider varied and effective ways to empower children to think, care, and act for peace and justice. - Our Evolution Towards Global Spirituality: Quest for Global Sacred Space
Professor Ashok Gangadean will speak about globalizing sacred spiritual space and the role of Quaker meeting for worship in this continuing "holy experiment" as a part of Religion and Spirituality Week. - Alternatives to Violence Project Workshop
February 11-12, 2012
Founded in 1975 by Quaker working in Green Haven Prison (NY), the Alternatives to Violence Project (AVP) is an international model offering experiential workshops that develop conflict resolution skills, nonviolent responses to conflict, deescalation strategies, and encourages every person's innate power to positively transform themselves and the world. - Etiquette Dinner
March 29, 2012
The Rufus M. Jones Institute for Leadership knows that everyone could use a lesson in professional etiquette, especially since it's interview season. Join us as Mr. Manners, Greg Victory, walks us through the do's and don't's of a dinner interview. - Life after Life: Reflections on Justice
February 22, 2012
Tyrone A. Werts was born in 1951 and raised in North Philadelphia. In 1975 he was convicted as an accomplice to a second-degree murder and sentenced to life without parole. Werts spent the next 36 years at the Pennsylvania State Correctional Institution at Graterford, a maximum security prison housing approximately 3,500 men. While at SCI-Graterford, Werts earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Villanova University, while working as a tutor to help others earn their GEDs. He was heavily involved with Temple University's nationally renowned Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program and a founding member of its affiliated Think Tank group. On December 30, 2010, after serving 36 years at SCI-Graterford, Werts' life sentence was commuted by former Governor Ed Rendell, a testament to this former lifer's immense personal growth in the face of adversity and his longstanding dedication to justice reform and developing solutions to criminal justice concerns in the US. - The 99: Superheroes Inspired By Islam
February 15, 2012
Created by the Kuwaiti psychologist, Dr. Naif Al-Mutawa, The 99 is a comic book series (first published in 2006) that tells the tales of superheroes inspired by the 99 attributes of Allah. As they fight crime, these superheroes smash stereotypes and reinforce positive messages of Islam. Crossing cultures to promote peace and positive role models for children in the Islamic world, The 99 was identified by Forbes as one of the “Top 20 Trends Sweeping the Globe.” After his Egyptian speech, President Obama singled out Dr. Al-Mutawa as an example of someone who is working in a creative way to advance productive understanding of the Islamic world. - "Are Economies Resulting in the Decline of Earth's Life Support System: Can Science, History, and Ethics Help Find a Way Forward?"
March 22, 2012 - "Recovering the Sacred: Religion, Faith and the Land from a Native Perspective" a talk by Winona LaDuke
March 30, 2012
Ms. LaDuke is the founder and co-Director of Honor the Earth, a national advocacy group encouraging public support and funding for Native environmental groups. She is also the founder of the White Earth Land Recovery Project, one of the largest reservation based non-profit organizations in the country. Ms. LaDuke served as Ralph Nader's vice-presidential running mate on the Green Party ticket in the 1996 and 2000 presidential elections. In 2007, she was inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame. - FORDS & the ENTREPRENEURIAL SPIRIT: a day long conference
March 17, 2012
This one-day conference, presenting alumni panelists and luncheon speaker, will engage students and Haverford alumni in discussions and shared experiences of launching and sustaining new initiatives across all sectors. - Bitter Pills: A Conversation about Film, History, Politics, and AIDS with John Greyson, Neville Hoad, and Jesse Weaver Shipley
March 15, 7:00PM- Stokes CPGC Cafe - "Confronting Major Public Health Issues in the 21st Century"
April 6, 9:00AM- DC Bryn Mawr Room
Tom Farley, MD, MPHHealth Commissioner of New York City - "The Politics of 'Global Justice' at the International Criminal Court" Presidential Social Justice Speaker Series
April 17, 4:30PM- Chase Auditorium
- Think, Care, Act. Teaching for a Peaceful Future
- Conferences
- Snell Symposium - Coaching Symposium
- Retreats
- Pendle Hill Retreat
- Leadership Class
- Exploring Leadership: Linking Theory to Practice
If juxtaposing leadership development theories, understanding the role of self development, and learning with people who have a wide-range of experiences and perspectives is enticing to you, then this is the ex-co course you'll want to take. In the most basic form, we'll explore the answers to the following two questions: 1) What is leadership? and 2) How do we "do" leadership? The non-credit course will be held for one hour once a week for six weeks. The discussion will be lead by Jason McGraw and Alison Castel, and topics will include:
Week 1: Welcome, intro to course, and exploring various successful business models (Google, Ben & Jerry's, Southwest Airlines, Elon College, Starbucks, and The Body Shop).
Week 2: Discovering, Understanding, and Utilizing Your Strengths
Week 3: Leadership Theories
Week 4: Negotiation, Facilitation, and Interpersonal Communication
Week 5: Leadership Styles & Perspectives
Week 6: Applying Theory to Practice
Email jmcgraw@haverford.edu for more information.
- Exploring Leadership: Linking Theory to Practice
View Past Curriculum Offerings:
Student Activities & Leadership
610-896-1228
llavner@haverford.edu