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CHRISTEN FORNADEL '04 WINS FULBRIGHT
FELLOWSHIP
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Christen Fornadel '04
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On Sunday, May 16, Christen Fornadel walked across
the stage and received her diploma—as did more than 320 of
her classmates. Fornadel and her fellow Fords comprised the largest
graduating class in Haverford College history. Elected to Phi Beta
Kappa during her senior year, Fornadel graduated magna cum laude
with high honors in biology. She also won the Arnold and Mabel Beckman
Foundation Award, recognizing outstanding undergraduate students
in chemistry and biological sciences. The Beckman Foundation award
is part of a nationwide program at selected colleges and universities.
In August, Fornadel will travel to Australia on a
one-year Fulbright Scholarship. She will be studying a disease spread
by the hydatid tapeworm, (Echinococcus granulosus). The tapeworm
infects dingoes and kangaroos in the wild and can spread to sheep
and dogs. The disease, Echinococcosis, can be transferred to humans
via consumption of food or water contaminated with stool from an
infected animal; or by petting or otherwise interacting with infected
dogs or cats. These animals spread the disease by eliminating eggs
in their stool, which can contaminate their fur. Leashes or harnesses
can also become contaminated and transfer the infection. Symptoms
of Echinococcosis in humans are extremely slow-growing cysts (they
can take years to develop) which are usually surgically removed.
A blood test can determine whether a person is infected or not.
Last summer, when Fornadel was thinking about applying
for a Fulbright, she knew she wanted to present a well-planned project,
something that would embrace her interest in both fieldwork and
laboratory work. Her science coursework at Haverford had led her
to molecular epidemiology, how disease spreads at the cellular level.
She wanted to interview people and survey them about the spread
of the disease as well as work in the lab. “I really needed
to find a place geographically where there was an endemic disease,”
she says. Australia fit the bill. Fornadel, a Sayreville, N.J.,
resident, will spend part of her time in Melbourne working with
Marshall Lightowlers on the development of vaccines against tapeworm
diseases, including hydatid and others found around the world. She
also will spend time in the Australian capital of Canberra with
David Jenkins, a researcher who, in Fornadel’s words, “basically
started the work on this disease, researching it from his garage
when funding was low.”
The Fulbright will pay Fornadel’s airfare, housing
allowance, and a monthly stipend. And it’s all been a pleasant
surprise for her. In March, she received a thick envelope from Fulbright
when she wasn’t expecting anything until May. “I saw
how thick it was,” she says, “and I just screamed in
the campus center.”
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