Haverford Headlines
The professor of environmental studies gives us a tour of his office.
Dali Pomfret '25 started out wanting to play professional baseball. After an eye-opening internship, he’s now got his mind set on an even loftier goal.
Through Brooklyn Woods, Scott Peltzer ’82 teaches job hunters a lost art and self-sustaining skills for life.
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Fellowship winners Anna Brockway '12, Jamie DeNizio '11, Lydia Fiske Emery '12, Heather Harden '11, Sam Rodriques '13, and Marta Wolfshorndl '13 will pursue a variety of projects with support from the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program.
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This assistant professor of physics is the lead author on a new study in <em>Nature</em> on a mysterious X-ray haze at the center of the Milky Way that she and her colleagues suggest may come from dead stars.
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The visiting assistant professor in anthropology for the fall is one of two authors to receive the 2015 Dr. Betty Berzon Emerging Writer Award from Lambda Literary, a nonprofit arts organization promoting LGBTQ literature and writers.
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The stand-alone, inquiry-based lab course for junior science majors at Haverford was at its founding quite revolutionary. Students find it one of the most challenging courses they take.
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The English and Russian double major will teach at a university in Russia and start an English conversation club.
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Waldman talks about his two new books—"The God in Us" and "What Is God in Us?"—that were sparked in part by an "experience of the divine" he had as a young man.
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The assistant professor of history took the 2015 Spiro Kostof Book Award honorable mention for Covert Capital: Landscapes of Denial and the Making of U.S. Empire in the Suburbs of Northern Virginia.
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Grant was awarded a Donald A. King Summer Fellowship by the Huntington's Disease Society of America to work with a researcher on a project that is developing a promising genome engineering tool.
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Playwright and author Smith's new play is a comedy about a young journalist involved in a love triangle and navigating sincere and not-so-sincere actions.
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Bloszies, a chemistry major and Haverford baseball player, helped conduct research on an amphetamine-like substance found in popular dietary supplements. The work was published in the journal "Drug Testing and Analysis."
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The founder and director of the Urban Death Project talks about human composting, part of the natural burial movement.
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The growth and structure of cities major will work in a New York City agency as part of the nine-month fellowship.
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The associate professor of political science joined leading scholars from North America and Europe to discuss ways to counter violent extremism. A report on the event was published on Post-Gazette.com.
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The associate professor of physics and astronomy talks about her research on how goshawks pursue their prey.
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The English major will teach in Turkey and play Ultimate Frisbee.
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