Emeritus Professor of Psychology Doug Davis went on the road in 2014 with pioneering human rights attorney Bob Swift ’68 as he distributed some of the $19 million won in a landmark case brought on behalf of thousands of victims of the Ferdinand Marcos regime’s reign of terror.
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.
Schoneveld, a two-time national championship rower, is the College's Faculty Athletics Representative.
In Hee Sook Kim’s class, students explore the foundation of offset printing, the standard before the dawn of digital printing.
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The comprehensive gift will support operating needs, endowed scholarships, and a presidential discretionary fund for strategic initiatives such as diversity and sustainability.
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As the men's ultimate team at Haverford prepares to celebrate its 30th anniversary this weekend, we look back at the history of the club sport that defined so many Fords' college experience.
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Family & Friends Weekend: October 30–November 1
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The co-founder of Philadelphia's Juvenile Law Center was celebrated by Mayor Michael Nutter, actor/singer Gloria Rueben, and CNN's Jeffrey Toobin on the occasion of his retirement.
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A new exhibit in Magill Library, curated by J. Ashley Foster and the students from her writing seminar, uses visual and literary art, historical documents, and digital technology to explore the Spanish Civil War.
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The director of the Hutchins Center on Fiscal & Monetary Policy at the Brookings Institution says he learned to speak truth to power at the College.
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The visiting assistant professor of peace, justice, and human rights discusses his new book, Digging for the Disappeared: Forensic Science After Atrocity, and whether or not dead bodies have human rights.
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The writer and cultural critic, who gave a reading and book signing on Friday, was the first Speakers Series invitee of the year.
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Haverford is one of more than 80 colleges and universities in the inaugural cohort in the Coalition for Access, Affordability, and Success, which aims to make it easier for high schoolers to research and apply to college.
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Qwajarik Sims '19 and Talia Scott '19 were among the 140 college-bound students invited to the Reach Higher “Beating the Odds” Summit at the White House in late July.
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The English and creative writing professor draws on her own family's story for her acclaimed debut novel Disgruntled, which explores race and class, and "the mythologies of childhood."
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In a new paper for Nature the assistant professor of astronomy and his collaborators unveilled the first viable model for how submillimetre galaxies form.
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Register for Family & Friends Weekend (Oct. 30–Nov. 1) and Young Alumni Homecoming (Oct. 31)
Visit your Ford, meet members of the College community, and engage in the unique Haverford experience. Young Alumni: celebrate the Classes of 2006–2015 with food, drinks, lawn games, and athletic competitions. Bring your Haverford pride and appetite! Registration is now open.
Nominate candidates for The Alumni Association Achievement Awards
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The anthropology major, who had never taken a political science course, taught herself about representative democracy to write the winning 6000-word essay while studying abroad at the University of Cambridge last year.
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