What They Learned: Charlotte Lellman ’15
Charlotte Lellman's archival research for her thesis on policing prostitution in 18th-century Paris helped convince the French major that her future is in archival studies or library science.
Since 2011 College Communications has produced a unique homepage each weekday to spotlight the rich diversity of Haverford's academic programming, extracurricular offerings, campus culture, and community members' accomplishments.
Charlotte Lellman's archival research for her thesis on policing prostitution in 18th-century Paris helped convince the French major that her future is in archival studies or library science.
On Wednesday, August 26, we officially welcomed the newest members of the Haverford community—the Class of 2019—to campus and kicked off Customs, the College’s first-year orientation program.
Working in the lab of Assistant Professor Lou Charkoudian '03, the chemistry major helped create a type II polyketide catalog, which identified 78 polyketides of known producing sequence and structure and indexed key pieces of information about each of these molecules.
"What They Learned" is a blog series exploring the thesis work of recent graduates.
95 students conducted research, either individually or in groups, as part of the KINSC’s summer research program with 28 professors across departments in the natural sciences.
After graduation, more than 12,000 alumni maintain their connections through regional events, such as the first Multicultural Alumni Action Group summer boat party.
Tosin Alliyu ’18 spent her summer studying bias in computer-generated decisions in her KINSC-sponsored research internship with Assistant Professor of Computer Science Sorelle Friedler.
Alison Love ’18 and Safiyah Riddle ’18 encouraged food justice both in the fields and the classroom this summer. With funding from the Center for Peace and Global Citizenship, they worked for Weavers Way Community Programs near Philadelphia.
With funding from the Koshland Integrated Natural Sciences Center, Katie Tsai '16 and Emily Winesett '16 worked for Assistant Professor of Chemistry Lou Charkoudian '03. Their projects focused on how fungi and bacteria create natural antibiotics and how these processes can be replicated.
With funding from the Hurford Center for the Arts and Humanities, Laura Eckstein '16 spent her summer attempting to map Jewish networks along the Mississippi River Delta region prior to the Civil War.
With funding from the Koshland Integrated Natural Sciences Center, Abby Fullem ’16 is spending her summer collecting soil samples at Unionville Serpentine Barrens for her geology thesis research.
*We have a very tiny magic 8 ball.