Haverford Headlines
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.
Philadelphia’s Freedom Side School imagines future intersections between education and anti-carceral movements with a Haverford first-year writing seminar.
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The funding will allow the Haverford chemistry professor and his lab to use new methods to study the structural changes that occur when proteins bind to other proteins. The lab's research could shed light on several common diseases associated with disordered proteins.
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In addition to teaching, Stauffer, who got to know the College community as a Mellon Post-Doctoral Fellow with the Hurford Humanities Center, will help shape a new academic concentration in Peace, Justice and Human Rights.
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Jacobson, a longtime film critic and scholar, has taken over as artistic director of the Philadelphia Film Festival, which runs through October 19.
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How the Haverford College Astrophysics major became "a voice the fans can connect with" as the radio voice of the Adirondack Phantoms on WNYQ-101.7-FM.
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New endowment support has helped the Koshland Integrated Natural Sciences Center fund students pursuing scientific research abroad. A recent presentation for the College's Board of Managers spotlighted their work.
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Talmor is a scholar and filmmaker who explores the art world as an "intercultural zone," where art and objects become global representations of specific cultures.
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Former "rabble-rouser" Jardine now heads Aveng, one of South Africa's leading construction groups. He was recently profiled in the South African <em>Financial Mail</em>.
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Author and scholar Chace, former president of Wesleyan and Emory Universities, offers a historical context for the current dearth of English majors in an essay that originally appeared in <em>The American Scholar</em>.
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The instruments, which include three different kinds of microscopes and a high-tech cell sorting system, will strengthen research capabilities for faculty and students in the biology and physics departments.
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The members of Culinary House, who live together at HCA, will offer cooking demos, community dinners and more, all in an effort to inspire students' inner chefs and show how easy and satisfying good cooking can be.
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Highlighting faculty professional activities, including conferences, exhibitions, performances and publications.
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The actor/writer/director's most recent production, <em>Othello</em>, opened October 1 in Barboursville, Va.
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Look for Haverford College in the closing credits of the new Jane Campion film <em>Bright Star</em>, about poet John Keats' secret love affair with Fanny Brawne. Haverford gets a special thank you for providing access to an 1819 love letter written by Keats that is part of Special Collections at Magill Library.
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Frederic MacDonald-Dennis, a former Director of LGBT Affairs at the University of Michigan, will work with the Haverford community over the coming year to restructure the role of the OMA.
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When cinematographer Jonathan Miller '01 shot an episode of the new History Channel series“Mystery Quest” he didn't expect it to become an international incident and fodder for a Letterman monologue. But that's just what happened.
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