The student-run dance concert drew hundreds of Bi-Co students and performers.
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Headline Archive for Zhao Gu Gammage
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This semester, an exhibit in Lutnick library maps migrants who died trying to cross the US-Mexico border.
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The Princeton professor came to campus to discuss her latest book, which served as Haverford’s first ever “Campus Read.”
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Philadelphia-area photographer David Freese’s exhibition, “The Geography of Climate Change,” gathers 39 black-and-white photographs in the Atrium Gallery of the Jane Lutnick Fine Arts Center.
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The student worker in the Center for Gender Resources and Sexual Education collaborated with Haverford College Libraries to create “These Are My Roots: A Journey Through Co-Education at Haverford,” an exhibit focused on the history of women, particularly women of color, at Haverford.
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First-years Yehyun Song and Heewon Yang have restarted the Korean Culture club to create a safe space for the Asian community.
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This fall, Bria Nixon BMC ’22 and Becca Zaletofsky BMC ’24 revamped a dormant Latin dance group for the Bi-Co.
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The history and English double major’s exhibit, “The Hundred Tongues of Rumor,” explores the use of misinformation and truth in times of crisis in Lutnick Library’s Rebecca and Rick White Gallery.
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The Haverford English alum, now political science professor at the University of Albany’s Rockefeller College of Public Affairs and Policy, returns to campus (virtually) to share her research.
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Haverford’s first STEM magazine, “Jolt,” promotes science news and journalism.
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Student ensembles’ annual end-of-semester concerts looked and sounded great, thanks to the new Jaharis Recital Hall.
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The Change Finance President and COO has created the first carbon-neutral exchange traded fund (ETF) on the New York Stock Exchange.
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The Haverford Department of Philosophy’s first event of the semester focused on undergraduate papers and undergraduate ideas.
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The celebrated new novel by the associate professor of English and director of creative writing addresses Black feminism and features Bryn Mawr attendees as its main characters.
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This student-run club gives Fords and Mawrters an opportunity to play jazz together.