The College will honor a Class of '64 alumnus and an education and civil rights icon for service to humanity.
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The Quaker palliative care specialist and environmental activist will share his knowledge and experience with the Haverford community during a week-long virtual visit.
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The Tokyo-based multidisciplinary artist hosted a collaborative workshop in preparation for a Lutnick Library exhibition, opening March 20.
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The exhibit by Emma Scharff ‘25 displays photographs and documents, showing how aspects of the campus have changed and stayed the same over the years.
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In 2013, Texas executed the 500th person since capital punishment was instituted by the state in 1976. That was the moment that moved artist Mark Menjívar, a San…
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The second annual THRIVE Conference focused on the theme “Reclaiming Our Stories,” inviting attendees to reclaim their own narratives.
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Boba, rice crackers, and red envelopes filled with candy welcomed visitors attending the Asian American studies panel in Zubrow Commons.
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A full week of thoughtfully curated events on campus celebrated the impact of Martin Luther King, Jr.
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Following years of discussion, the Haverford College Corporation amends its bylaws to admit non-Quakers as members.
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A new incarnation and expansion of the former Haverford Law Review, the The Tri-Co Law Review aims to publish law-related articles by writers from all three campuses.
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The Center for Peace and Global Citizenship hosts their first networking event for students and community organizers who are part of the Philadelphia Justice and Equity Fellowship.
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The first-ever Innovations Week showcased the creative entrepreneurial efforts of Haverford students.
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The traveling exhibit, which was on display this fall in the Cantor Fitzgerald Gallery, explores complex histories of colonialism and identity.
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With the plan formally adopted, Haverford pivots toward beginning the work, and the comprehensive fundraising campaign that will fund it.
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In the wake of recent LGBTQIA+ attacks, members of the Haverford community gathered for a Peace Circle on Founders Green to remember Americans victimized by violence against queer and trans folks.