The associate professor of anthropology writes about the Nigerian novelist, poet and critic, who died March 21, on the blog Africa is a Country.
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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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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The 2013 Mellon Symposium, organized by Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow and Visiting Assistant Professor of Anthropology Zainab Saleh, will be held<br />
Friday, March 29. -
The emeritus professor of astronomy is interviewed about the results of the European Space Agency's Planck satellite mission on the program <em>Space</em>.
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In the wake of a particularly bad flu season, the clinical microbiology graduate student wrote an article about solving the "influenza guessing game."
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The counterterrorism associate at Human Rights Watch writes about the shortcomings of military commissions.
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Highlighting faculty professional activities, including conferences, exhibitions, performances and publications.
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A new book by Adam Lankford '02 challenges the conventional wisdom about terrorists who carry out suicide bombings.
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The paper calls <em>Bonhoeffer</em>, the associate professor of music's opus about a German pastor and theologian who battled Nazism and died for it, "significant" and "rich in musical substance."
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A member of Haverford's cross country and track teams, Kissin is the 10th athlete from those programs to be selected for the scholarship, which helps fund graduate studies for outstanding student-athletes.
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The associate professor of allergies and immunology at Stanford University School of Medicine and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital is featured in The New York Times Magazine cover story on new treatments for children with food allergies.
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The owner of Viva Video in Ardmore talks about opening a brick-and-mortar video rental store in a Netflix era.
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