With support from the Center for Peace and Global Citizenship, the psychology major and health studies minor is fighting for civil rights and liberties for the LGBT community in Chile.
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 fall edition of Founders Porch welcomed Fords working at the intersection of sustainability and innovation.
The new app, developed by three recent alums through Haverford's Innovation Program, is being piloted on campus this fall.
With support from the Center for Peace and Global Citizenship, the psychology major and health studies minor is fighting for civil rights and liberties for the LGBT community in Chile.
Hoping to become more familiar with the area surrounding the College, Baroff is interning with the Ardmore Initiative this summer.
The religion major wrote his thesis on the digitization of the Bible—and whether or not that has consequences for Christians’ relationship to its content.
The economics major and music minor is a Whitehead Intern at WIT Strategy.
The political science major, who’s considering running for office himself one day, is currently working for Democratic nominee Chrissy Houlahan’s campaign.
With support from the Center for Career and Professional Advising’s Deborah Lafer-Scher International Internship fund, the prospective anthropology major is unearthing Denmark’s past—literally.
The biology major and neuroscience minor explored “the unknown” in her thesis, conducting research on the cutting edge of the field of glycobiology.
The history major with a concentration in Latin American, Iberian, and Latino Studies is applying quantitative data and analysis to the humanities at DataArts.
As an intern at the Colorado-based Chico Basin Ranch, the biology and anthropology double major is exploring his love for nature.
The physics major is conducting on-campus research on the electrical properties of modified DNA strands.
The economics major and her thesis advisor collaborated to publish a portion of Wetzel’s thesis research in peer-reviewed journal Economics Letters.
The chemistry major and environmental studies minor wrote her thesis on the impact of oil spills on the marine environment.
Worth nearly half a million dollars, the grant will fund new research, conducted on Haverford and Swarthmore’s campuses, into the physics of dark matter and dark energy.
For her thesis, the English major and Spanish minor examined the intersections of blackness and femininity in Alice Walker’s “The Color Purple.”
Sponsored by the Center for Peace and Global Citizenship, the English major and peace, justice, and human rights concentrator is exploring public art in Philadelphia through an oral history lens.
*We have a very tiny magic 8 ball.