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.
The Haverford Outdoors Club offers meaningful positive outdoors experience, no matter a student’s experience or financial circumstances.
As Election Day nears, Fords embrace their role as a critical voting bloc.
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Jeanna (Braun) Velonis '94 works for three-time Grammy Award-winning Classical Producer of the Year Judith Sherman.
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More than two decades after he completed a senior thesis that combined art history and physics, Ralph Shayne '89 took a trip to see the French cathedral his capstone project was focused on.
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A new book by musicologist Richard Freedman explores Music in the Renaissance.
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The Benjamin R. Collins Professor of Social Sciences is interviewed about the U.S.'s role in the Guatemalan genocide trial of Efrain Rios Montt.
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The associate professor of history, who served as the historical consultant on SMYRNA: The Destruction of a Cosmopolitan City, discusses the making of the film with the local Greek-American media network.
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Owen Newkirk '02 has found thrills, challenges and a livelihood in sports broadcasting.
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Some famed fords have never stepped foot on campus or even existed, but they have been appearing in fiction for years!
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The former anthropology major is profiled on the heels of being named named deputy press secretary at the Republican National Committee.
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In a move designed to better integrate career planning with the larger academic experience, Haverford is reorganizing and expanding its career development effort through the creation of The Center for Career and Professional Advising.
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Marine officer Colleen Farrell '08 joined a lawsuit against the Department of Defense over its ban on women in combat. In January that ban was lifted.
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The associate professor of anthropology writes about the Nigerian novelist, poet and critic, who died March 21, on the blog Africa is a Country.
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On May 19, the College will award honorary degrees to AIDS researcher Max Essex, documentary filmmaker Stanley Nelson, President of the Association of American Universities Hunter Rawlings ‘66, and women's leadership and advancement advocate Sheila Wellington.
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The growth and structure of cities major secured $27,000 in private grant money to fund a project she will launch this summer following her Haverford graduation.
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The former psychology major who opened Ardmore's Viva Video last year tells the paper why, contrary to popular opinion, video stores aren't dead
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The Russian major has earned the Kathryn Davis Fellowships for Peace, which will fund her summer language program at Middlebury Language School, and the ROSSICA Young Translators Award, a £500 prize for her work on Marina Stepnova's The Women of Lazarus.
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