William Zachs took a hands-on approach in his lecture, which was a part of Haverford College Libraries’ Texts and Technology series.
-
-
The research that the chemistry major conducted for her thesis contributed to a paper she co-authored with her advisor and other Fords that was recently published in the American Chemical Society journal Biochemistry.
-
Students and faculty from the departments of astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science, engineering, geology, mathematics, physics, and psychology from the Tri-Co and beyond were invited to present posters and give talks about their summer research work.
-
Fords Against Boredom’s first off-campus event of the year was the annual trip to Linvilla Orchards for apple picking.
-
A student-curated exhibit drawn from the archives of Phialdelphia’s Friend’s Asylum explores Quakerism and the “curability” of mental illness.
-
Thanks to the successful Lives That Speak campaign, the VCAM building now offers new opportunities for hands-on learning that build visual literacy across the liberal arts.
-
The CPGC-sponsored Migration Field Study program, now in its eighth year, brings students to the U.S.-Mexico border and to Mexico City to glimpse the human face of immigration.
-
This year’s student-run first-year orientation program introduced the 352 members of the Class of 2021 to campus life and resources.
-
On Wednesday, Aug. 30, we welcomed the newest class of Fords to their on-campus homes and began their introduction to life at Haverford via Customs.
-
Just across the Delaware River, the sociology major shares a family practice he’s known for over a decade.
-
The comparative literature major is in Los Angeles interning at the largest archive of gay and lesbian materials in the world.
-
The rising junior fine arts major spent her summer helping to produce the guide to the Philadelphia Fringe Festival, among other things, at local arts nonprofit FringeArts.
-
The computer science and mathematics double major is at the University of Maryland this summer, working on finding kidney donor-recipient matches using neural networks, as part of the National Science Foundation’s Research Experiences for Undergraduates program.
-
The economics major is working with San Francisco company Chirps Chips, which makes chips out of sustainable and protein-rich cricket powder.
-
The prospective political science major is immersing himself as a volunteer in Mexico City.