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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Eugenia Machado '10 discusses her time at the United World College.
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Unity Fest and the John B. Hurford '60Humanities Center's Student Seminar "Seen and Unseen Seen and Not Seen: Twentieth Century U.S. Working Class Narratives, Representations and the American Dream" invite you to attend a talk: "The Making of American Working-Class Literature" given by Janet Zandy on Thursday, Nov. 30 at 6:30 p.m., Stokes 102. A reception will follow the presentation.
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George Parker, the Dean Witter Professor of Finance and Management, Emeritus, who has taught at the Stanford Graduate School of Business for 33 years, was honored with the 2006 Distinguished Teaching Award.
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Tom King's Daily Rounds (in which the Director of Safety and Security teaches Education Law; second of a series.)
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The Haverford Fund Leadership Challenge was established through the generosity of Board members and leadership level donors and was officially announced on September 30, 2006. The Challenge will match all NEW and INCREASED gifts to the Haverford Fund which are made before June 30, 2007.
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The game is both very British and, to Americans, very confusing. But it was once our national pastime, and its gaining fans on these shores.
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Haverford Professor Ruth Guyer talks about the power of a waning sun on NPR's "All Things Considered"
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About a year after Sept. 11, 2001, Professor of Astronomy Bruce Partridge was meeting with close friend and Haverford alumnus Jim Kinsella ‘82 in London. Both bemoaned the poor relations between the Islamic and Western worlds—particularly the United States—and wondered what Haverford might do to help counteract the growing hostilities. They came up with the idea of a scholarship that would bring Islamic students to Haverford, where they would see a different, more positive side of America.
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“Four Printmakers” will exhibit their works in Haverford's Cantor Fitzgerald Gallery, Oct. 27-Nov. 22, 2006. The exhibit will be curated by painter and printmaker Hee Sook Kim, assistant professor of fine arts.
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Gilbert F. White, known worldwide as the "father of floodplain management" and one of the most distinguished and internationally recognized faculty members at the University of Colorado at Boulder, died on Oct. 5 at his home in Boulder. He was 94.
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Allyn Gaestel '09 shares travels in Taiwan.
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Let's drop the modesty right from the start. Peter Hochman '75 says the food in his restaurant, the inventive and funky Alberta Street Oyster Bar & Grill, in Portland, Ore., is better than sex.
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Tom King, Director of Safety and Security, ensures law and order on Haverford's campus.
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Out of the 15,000 singers participating in this year's MNBA America Collegiate Barbershop Quartet Contest in Indianapolis, Ind., only one of them performed while wearing a banana costume. He was from Haverford College.
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This fall, the Haverford community discovered something different—actually, several somethings—about the familiar eatery known as the Coop. During the summer, Facilities Management and the Coop staff were hard at work renovating and updating the popular 13-year-old Campus Center hangout.
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Haverford 2030 Updates
More About the Plan
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