The Haverford comparative literature major and Yale Divinity School graduate is the new assistant dramaturg and literary associate of the Orange County, Calif., theater.
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The professor emeritus of Stony Brook’s School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences recently published DDT Wars: Rescuing Our National Bird, Preventing Cancer, and Creating the Environmental Defense Fund.
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The housing cooperative marks its 25th anniversary on campus as a place where residents can live their commitment to the environment.
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The chairman and CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald and BGC Partners and former Haverford Board Chair spoke with Adi Ignatius '81 about his belief in liberal arts education and his gratitude to the College.
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The third-year Temple Law student was one of only three people chosen for a 2015 merit distinction award from a public service initiative of the National Association for Law Placement.
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As the men's ultimate team at Haverford prepares to celebrate its 30th anniversary this weekend, we look back at the history of the club sport that defined so many Fords' college experience.
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The co-founder of Philadelphia's Juvenile Law Center was celebrated by Mayor Michael Nutter, actor/singer Gloria Rueben, and CNN's Jeffrey Toobin on the occasion of his retirement.
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The director of the Hutchins Center on Fiscal & Monetary Policy at the Brookings Institution says he learned to speak truth to power at the College.
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During his four years on the team Haverford was undefeated in league play and captured the first Middle Atlantic League championship in College history.
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The co-creator and co-star of Underground Railroad Game, which just premiered at the Philadelphia Fringe Fest, talks to Mary Moss-Coane about the play, which he based on a game he played in 5th grade history class.
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The curator of the Cantor Fitzgerald Gallery's upcoming show, The Past is a Foreign Country, talks to the exhibit's photographer, François-Xavier Gbré, about his work.
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The executive director of GreenLight Fund is part of Billy Penn's list of influential local "givers."
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Maya Barlev and Erin Islo (both '12) have been awarded $25,000 to fund yearlong independent projects abroad.
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Seniors Alissa Aron and Isobel Grad have earned prestigious Watson Fellowships to pursue yearlong projects abroad.
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History major Kreider-Carlson will spend next year exploring women's craft organizations throughout Mexico, Egypt and Indonesia, hoping to learn how they promote sustainability, cultural traditions, and equitable livelihoods.