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.
The new plan aims to elevate the field of play, and not just for student-athletes.
This hands-on class explores Japanese book arts and a wide range of printmaking processes.
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Tal Alter '98 turns a love of baseball into a career devoted to building brighter futures for kids.
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The Audrey A. and John L. Dusseau Professor in Humanities and professor of fine arts is interviewed about his photography exhibit <em>A Stirring Song Sung Heroic</em>, which was up in the Cantor Fitzgerald Gallery in the fall and opens at Lehigh University on Jan. 22
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Michael Paulson '96 interviews Elizabeth Greenspan '99 about her new book, Battle for Ground Zero: Inside the Political Struggle to Rebuild the World Trade Center.
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The late math and physics professor (1927-2013) was one of a recently revealed group of antiwar activists who broke into the F.B.I. offices in Media, Pa., and uncovered documents that exposed extensive spying against dissident groups.
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The former chief labor negotiator under Mayor Edward Koch was appointed to be new Mayor Bill De Blasio's director of labor relations.
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The "Friday Arts" segment aired January 3. Lloyd is the artistic director of the Bucks County Choral Society.
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President Daniel Weiss and senior leadership oppose boycott.
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Our Vice President for Institutional Advancement is pursuing an interest in international affairs. Ann West Figueredo '84 has been appointed Interim VP.
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The denizens of Lloyd Hall have once again festooned each entry with lights in celebration of the season; cast your vote for your favorite entryway!
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Sarah McMane '94 loved her Customs experience at Haverford so much, she used it as a model for a program she created at the high school where she now teaches English.
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Whether doing scholarly research on“ethical loneliness,” interviewing philosophers for the magazine The Believer, or directing the College's peace, justice, and human rights concentration, Assistant Professor of Philosophy Jill Stauffer crosses disciplines and reaches out to audiences beyond the campus.
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Students played an important role in organizing the exhibit Lasting Impressions: Monumental Brass Rubbings, which showcases figures depicted on medieval and early modern brass tomb monuments.
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The visiting assistant professor of religion and Mellon postdoctoral fellow is interviewed about the deep-seated fascination with guns in America, even in the wake of tragedies like the Newtown school shooting.
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The Center for Peace and Global Citizenship is funding the international work of seven seniors over break.
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The University of Virginia astronomy professor shares the 2013 prize with a colleague from Oxford for "their discovery and study of the magnetorotational instability, and for demonstrating that this instability leads to turbulence and is a viable mechanism for angular momentum transport in astrophysical accretion disks."
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