Lyric Fest and Mimi Stillman perform as part of Haverford's Guest Artist Series.
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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"Conversations in Paint," a traveling exhibition of 30 works reflecting the diversity of visual language in contemporary painting, will be on display at the Cantor Fitzgerald Gallery Jan. 20 through Feb. 19.
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Nowadays, Tony Petitti '83 enjoys all the football he can handle—as well as golf, tennis, and basketball—as Executive Vice President of CBS Sports. He was promoted in November, after serving as Executive Producer for three years.
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Haverford College will present an exhibit of documentary photography by Sue [Lorenzi] Sojourner,“The Some People of That Place: 1960s Holmes Co. Mississippi—The Local People and Their Civil Rights Movement,” from February 1 through 28, 2006.
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Call for nominations for Alumni Awards
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Michael B. Kim '85, Sheila K. Sachs, and Allan Richard White '81 join the Board.
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HAVERFORD PHYSICS PROFESSOR JERRY GOLLUB CO-AUTHORS ARTICLE IN THE 15 DECEMBER 2005 ISSUE OF THE JOURNAL NATURE
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An insider's look into the Blue Bus
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Darin Hayton and his students are knee-deep in the astrology section of one of Haverford's newest courses: History of the Occult and Witchcraft.
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Professor of History Emma Lapsansky-Werner's new book, "Back to Africa: Benjamin Coates and teh Colonization Movement in America, 1848-1880," explores the ideology of Benjamin Coates, a local Quaker abolitionist.
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Shakespeare in Hollywood is a festival of mistaken identity, unrequited love, chaos, and confusion recalling the days of the great“screwball comedies,” and is the latest work by prolific playwright Ken Ludwig '72, author of the Tony-nominated Lend Me a Tenor, Moon Over Buffalo, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, Twentieth Century, and Crazy for You, which won the 1992 Tony for Best Musical. The rollicking, literate comedy had its Philadelphia premiere at the Wilma Theatre in December.
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Last month, members of Haverford's Under One Sky and Bryn Mawr's Mixed Company organizations—both committed to providing a welcoming environment for multiracial and multiethnic students—delivered over 3,200 comment cards to the Department of Education as the culmination of the“One Box Isn't Enough” (OBIE) effort.
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But while in high school, Haverford freshman Pritika Gupta added one more activity to her list: working as an Emergency Medical Technician (EMT) for Swarthmore's Fire Department.
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Haverford women's soccer, which participated in its first-ever NCAA postseason tournament action, and Haverford men's cross country, which turned in the best-ever performance of any Pennsylvania institution at the NCAA nationals, provided some of the sweetest moments in a season made even more special by the opening of the Douglas B. Gardner '83 Integrated Athletic Center in October.
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A look back on Dr. Stephen J. Lippard '62's career in science and academia, which led to his win of a National Medal of Science.
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