By Sophie Webb, Co-Editor-In-Chief Women make up just around half of the population of the United States, yet decision making spaces and spaces that hold
Author: The Bi-College News
What Can the Humanities Do for You?
By Gwynne Dulaney, Staff Editor In recent years, skepticism towards the liberal arts has risen amongst students and adults throughout the country. Liberal arts students
A Response to the College Admissions Scandal
By Gwynne Dulaney, Staff Editor On March 12, a scandal broke out that was somehow both surprising yet expected: 50 people, including high-profile celebrities, had
Study Abroad: More than Traveling and Instagram Posts
By Jo Mikula, Staff Writer It wasn’t until the spring of my sophomore year that I began to feel comfortable in the Bi-Co community. I
Frustrations Arise at Haverford Plenary
By Charlie Lynn, Staff Editor “Both Plenaries were bullshit. Quote this. Quote this. Quote this. Both plenaries were utter bullshit.” That was the response of
Haverford Customs in Crisis
By Ethan Lyne, Co-Editor-In-Chief At Haverford, the process of putting Customs, a long-standing tradition that resembles an intensive first-year orientation program that lasts all year
Haverford Hires New Computer Science Professor from Swarthmore
By Saif Kureishi, Staff Writer Amidst complaints and requests concerning the lack of sufficient faculty in Haverford’s Computer Science Department, Haverford College began the process
Smooth Sailing at Bryn Mawr Plenary
By Sophie Webb, Co-Editor-In-Chief Bryn Mawr students gathered in Goodhart Hall on Sunday, March 24 at 7:00 p.m. to ring in another successful Plenary where
Anne Carson States the Obvious
By Gwynne Dulaney, Staff Writer On February 12, classicist, poet, essayist, and translator Anne Carson gave a phenomenal reading of a selection of her work
Syria in Ink: Images from the Syrian Civil War
By Claire Blood-Cheney, Staff Writer In times of war, specific narratives tend to emerge from the turmoil while others are buried under the rubble. The