An occasional correspondence with Haverford faculty doing research around the world.
Haverford Headlines
At a time of conflict and divide, the College is working to bring students, faculty, and staff together to support one another and engage these important issues through peaceful and constructive dialogue.
On a beautiful fall weekend, more than 700 friends and family members flocked to Haverford.
The Haverford alum returned to campus to share his most recent research on Black protectionism and the camera as self-defense.
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Bourne and fellow Haverford students, junior Shira Ovide and seniors César Rosado Marzán and Carlos RodrÃguez, spent their spring break visiting Cuba as part of the annual Peace Studies Mission.
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Four groups of Haverford students are spending their spring break from March 7 to 16 helping others.
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What does forgotten African-American history look like through the lens of a camera?
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Two men with vastly different backgrounds but a unifying spiritual vision came to campus on February 25 to share with the Haverford community how nonviolence shaped and reformed their lives.
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When new assistant professor of chemistry Charles Miller arrived on campus this fall he brought with him not only a distinguished research background in atmospheric chemistry, but a prestigious Camille and Henry Dreyfus Faculty Start-up Grant for Undergraduate Institutions.
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A web index is broadening horizons for medieval feminist scholars.
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Roger Lane chronicles the history of murder in America in his new book.
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Curt Cacioppo was honored recently with a lifetime achievement award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters for his prolific career as a composer of music that resonates with a love of Native-American cultures and concern for the plight of Native-Americans.
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In the following interview, Tom Tritton speaks about some of his personal and professional experiences before coming to Haverford and his impressions of and plans for the college in the upcoming year.
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With support from a $1 million grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, language students and professors at Haverford, Bryn Mawr and Swarthmore will be a lot more conversant with one another in the years to come.
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Senior Beth Cooper Benjamin has created a mentoring program for Haverford women with female professors.
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Michael Sells has received a prestigious Guggenheim Fellowship to study the poetics of the classical Arabic Qasida - an ancient set of poems from the pre-Islamic period, that, along with the Qur'an, is one of the two major sources of Arabic literature and civilization.
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Alumni of color shared advice with aspiring Haverford doctors and scientists at the Minority Science Scholars Panel in November.
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The six-year-old Bryn Mawr-Haverford Teacher Education Program gained re-accreditation this fall from the state of Pennsylvania, enabling students from both campuses to continue to gain certification as middle and high school teachers for public schools.
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