The inauguration of Haverford's 14th president took place on Oct. 26. To read live-tweeted updates from the ceremony, please check the <a href="http://blogs.haverford.edu/haverblog/2013/10/28/haverford-inaugurates-14... Haverblog</a>.
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.
On a beautiful fall weekend, more than 700 friends and family members flocked to Haverford.
The Haverford alum returned to campus to share his most recent research on Black protectionism and the camera as self-defense.
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The Cayman Islands Red Cross Deputy Director and HIV & AIDS Programme Manager is one of five regional finalists for the award, which is being offered for the first time outside of the United Kingdom.
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Eisenberg was chosen for the prize by writer Maile Meloy for her short story "44 True Things About Being Gone," which appears in the current issue of <em>Cutbank</em>.
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Palmer writes about a trip she took with her high school's Eco-Club last year to Ecuador, where she volunteered at a school in the rain forest, and worked on a reforestation project in an Andean dry forest.
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The oldest law journal in the U.S. covered the former Drinker Biddle & Reath corporate partner's move to a newly created position of general counsel at global environmental, health, and safety consulting firm Environ Corp.
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The education researchers (Curl is an instructor in the Bi-Co education department) argue that policymakers own life circumstances affect the way they make school reform decisions for the poor.
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The yoga instructor is praised in the paper's annual roundup of citywide bests, Philly's Favorites 2013.
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The writer talks with Marty Moss-Coane about his latest novel, <em>Traveling Sprinkler</em>. Listen at the link.
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The actor, producer, and teacher discusses his new directing project, <em>Purlie Victorious</em>, a play by Ossie Davis about the struggles of the Civil Rights era that runs through Oct. 12 at the Allens Lane Theater in Mt. Airy.
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Edith Newhall calls Professor William Earle Williams' photography show, <em>A Stirring Song Sung Heroic: African Americans from Slavery to Freedom, 1619 to 1865</em>, "haunting" and "fascinating."
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The associate professor of anthropology's show, <em>Hip Deep Ghana 2: 21st Century Accra from Gospel to Hiplife</em>, is available online, and you can read an interview with him about it <a href="http://www.afropop.org/wp/12243/jesse-shipley-part-1-pan-africanism-and-....
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The author discussed his new short story collection, <em>Stay Up With Me</em>, on Leonard Lopate's show.
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As detailed by this Singapore Press Holdings storey, the Center for Talented Youth welcomed eight students from Singapore to its three-week program on Haverford's campus this past summer.
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Assistant Professor of Chemistry Lou Charkoudian '03, working with colleagues at Stanford and Berkeley, has published a study in the journal Science that could help expand the already important role of fluorine in medicinal chemistry.
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With the help of a $299,998 NSF grant, chemists Joshua Schrier and Alexander Norquist, and computer scientist Sorelle Friedler, will create a database to collect and analyze the results of experimental efforts focused on a class of materials with promising industrial applications.
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