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.
-
Pancoast will pursue a Ph.D. in physics at UC Santa Barbara with the help of a National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship.
-
A Georgetown Law professor, he is named Deputy Director for Antitrust of the Bureau of Economics.
-
With funding from the Davis United World College Scholars Program, Schlefer hopes to use Indonesia's past turmoil in promoting future peace.
-
For the first time in 26 years, Haverford's commencement moved indoors. Visit the <a href="http://news.haverford.edu/blogs/haverblog/">Haverblog</a> for details. <a href="http://www.haverford.edu/ns/commencement/2009">Watch the video!</a>
-
An infectious disease expert who directs Tulane University's Department of Community Health Sciences, Farley joins the health department just as the city is contending with a swine flu outbreak.
-
Tony Petitti '83 Delivered the Commencement Address at Delaware Valley College.
-
Listen: Life with Classical Music, of which Finane is editor-in-chief, is the first American lifestyle magazine geared specifically towards fans of the genre.
-
Political scientist Anita Isaacs, an authority on the history of civil war and reconciliation in Guatemala, just returned from a visit to the country. In this Q&A she discusses the recent assassination of a lawyer who had taped a video blaming the country's president should he be murdered, and the growing strife that has resulted.
-
Leonardo da Vinci expert Jonathan Pevsner '83 is the resident scholar on a six-week Discovery Channel series that has him working with a team of architects, carpenters and engineers to construct some of da Vinci's inventions.
-
Students in assistant professor of Classics Robert Germany's Latin 102 class got to do more than just focus on grammar and vocabulary this term. Also part of the course: a semester-ending, script-in-hand performance of Germany's original translation of one of the masterworks of Roman comedy.
-
Students past and present both contributed to and gave several research presentations along with physics faculty members at the Society's 2009 Meeting in March.
-
This summer, Katz will spend a week exploring Abraham Lincoln's ties to New York City through research and field trips.
-
Bruce Partridge, who has been working on Planck for nearly two decades, was watching the May 14 launch live in French Guiana.
-
Joel Warner '01 was surprised to find that a web page he created on "Swine Flu Epidemics" for a course he took at Haverford in 1999 has become a much-referenced source on the Web. Warner, a writer for Denver Westword, wrote a blog post about that long-ago course and his sudden notoriety.
-
The former Haverford College professor, an expert in Habsburg history, died April 25. A campus memorial service will be held on September 26.
Pages
Haverford in the News
- ‹ previous
- 21 of 67
- next ›
Get in Touch
- Questions and comments? Email hcnews [at] haverford.edu.
- Sign up to get enews and events newsletters right in your inbox.
- Join our admissions mailing list.
College Communications
- Meet the team behind the scenes, College Communications.
- Policies and Guides
- Media Guide
- Need additional help?