Haverford’s first STEM magazine, “Jolt,” promotes science news and journalism.
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Haverford’s monthly tournament, Haverclash, has become an exciting challenge for Super Smash Bros. Ultimate fans of all skill levels.
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This environmental studies course examines environmental and social histories of Black and Asian foods and food cultures in the U.S.
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The student fashion start-up from Haverford Innovations Program’s Summer Incubator hosted a fashion show in the VCAM lounge featuring student models in the latest sustainable fashion pieces created by up-and-coming designers.
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This course explores the religious origins of the modern penitentiary and religious approaches to incarceration, abolition, and social justice.
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Student ensembles’ annual end-of-semester concerts looked and sounded great, thanks to the new Jaharis Recital Hall.
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The astrophysics major and film and media studies minor shared the highlights of his summer with a new photography exhibition on the VCAM exhibition wall.
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The political science major photographed murals and artwork in Minneapolis last summer, then curated an exhibit of them on campus this fall.
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In this visual studies course students learn the craft of digital video production and post-production through the creation of short video projects focused on the genres of speculation, especially about the future of humans and human societies, as a creative framework.
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In this first-year writing seminar, students learn to read and write, critically and purposefully, on what has become a new and highly populated public space: the internet.
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The Haverford Department of Philosophy’s first event of the semester focused on undergraduate papers and undergraduate ideas.
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This co-taught seminar explores what it means to “do math ethically,” to emphasize the ways in which mathematics is inherently political, and to think about antiracism in mathematical disciplines.
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The campus home for entrepreneurship and innovation, which sponsors an annual summer incubator for student projects, has launched a year-round program to fund two student ventures each semester.
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Michelle Tran ‘23 forged a connection to land, food, and people by working at the campus farm, where they’ve discovered that they are, in fact, a farmer.
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This visual studies course examines a series of problems that beauty and other sensuous pleasures make for philosophy, film, and contemporary art.