Haverford Headlines

At the heart of Zeynep Sertbulut’s class is the question of “culture” and its relation to human rights.

With the second-place finish, Eshghi becomes Haverford's sixth first-team All-American in the event.

Ezgi Guner’s class is an anthropological exploration of empire, both as an analytical category and a historical phenomenon.
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The piece, titled "Cornerstone," celebrates the centenary of Christ Church Episcopal in Plymouth, Mass.
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Smith, a biology professor who developed technology to identify specific proteins, teaches at the University of Missouri with his brother, historian A. Mark Smith.
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The John B. Hurford '60 Center for the Arts and Humanities is funding an array of local and national internships and independent research projects for 16 Haverford students.
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Haverford enthusiastically encourages qualified alumni to apply for the Fulbright Scholarship.
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The political science and Russian double major will use the scholarship to enhance her Russian language skills in a program at Saint Petersburg State University.
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He and his co-workers in the Boston Mayor's Office of New Urban Mechanics are profiled for their work using technology, such as mobile phone apps, to revolutionize the way the government interacts with residents.
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The Fulbright funding will allow Goff to spend a year working in a neuroscience lab at the University of Bergen, in Norway.
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The Center for Peace and Global Citizenship will fund 63 bi-co students to do domestic and international internships, and research this summer focusing on education and action around contemporary issues of global significance.
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The associate professor of religion will be funded for two summers and a full academic year of work in a new area of research.
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The physics professor discusses how he uses music to teach the basics of physics.
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Films made by Haverford students took home five of the nine awards given at the Second Annual Tri-Co Film Festival, which took over the Bryn Mawr Film Institute on Wednesday, May 1.
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Kang, who emigrated from Korea to the U.S. when she was 4, will return to her birthplace to teach English next year.
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The sports agent penned an article about his client Jason Collins, who just became the first first man to acknowledge being gay while still active in one of America's four major professional sports.
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If confirmed, Shelanski, current director of the Federal Trade Commission's Bureau of Economics and professor at the Georgetown University Law Center, would serve as administrator of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs.
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The 93-year-old Snipes was nominated by the Morrisville-Yardley Area Rotary Club for representing their ideals, including "service above self."
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