Undergraduate prizes awarded to seven students for academic achievement




Freshman First Honor Prize

This year’s Freshman First Honor Prize is shared by Yonit Krebs and Steven Wang. The prize is awarded to members of the sophomore class in recognition of exceptional achievement during the first year.

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Krebs, of St. Louis Park, Minnesota, attended St. Louis Park High School. As a student whose first year at Princeton was fully virtual, she is excited about experiencing Princeton in-person this fall. She is a member of First College.


This summer, funded by the Bogle Fellowship, Krebs conducted research for the ICWA Law Center, a non-profit legal service center in Minneapolis that works with Native American families, specializing in the Indian Child Welfare Act. She investigated the impact of a child’s initial placement in cases where the primary presenting allegation was of prenatal exposure to controlled substances.

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Wang, of Ningbo, Zhejiang, China, attended Williston Northampton School in Easthampton, Massachusetts. He is considering concentrating in mathematics and with the return to in-person residential learning, he is looking forward to studying in the math department common room with his friends. He is a member of First College.


This summer, he worked virtually as a research assistant for Daniel Marlow, the Evans Crawford 1911 Professor of Physics, performing analysis on data on eta decays from CERN.


The George B. Wood Legacy Sophomore Prize

This year’s George B. Wood Legacy Sophomore Prize is shared by André Koch Liston and Frederick Qiu. The prize is awarded each year to members of the junior class in recognition of exceptional academic achievement during sophomore year.


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Liston is from Curitiba, Paraná, Brazil, where he attended high school at Bom Jesus Centro. He is a concentrator in chemistry and is pursuing certificates in materials science and engineering.


Liston conducts research in the lab of Gregory Scholes, the William S. Tod Professor of Chemistry, and is treasurer of the Princeton University Chemical Society. He has served on the Princeton University Energy Association (PUEA) Fall Conference Finance Committee and as a volunteer for Scientia Prima, the Brazilian pre-undergraduate research journal. He is a member of First College, where he is a residential college adviser.


This summer, he completed a virtual internship at the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics.


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Qiu, of Doylestown, Pennsylvania, attended Central Bucks High School East. He is a computer science concentrator and is also pursuing a certificate in applied and computational mathematics.


A member of First College, he has served as a lab TA in the computer science department, as a tutor and as a contributor to an open source plugin for a Minecraft server.


This summer, he did research virtually on negatively dependent probability distributions and their applications to combinatorial optimization with Sahil Singla, a former postdoc at Princeton and currently an assistant professor at Georgia Tech.


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The George B. Wood Legacy Junior Prize

This year’s George B. Wood Legacy Junior Prize is shared by Silma Berrada and Michelle Woo. The prize is awarded to members of the senior class in recognition of exceptional academic achievement during junior year.


Berrada, of Mequon, Wisconsin, attended Homestead High School. A member of First College, she is an English concentrator and is pursuing certificates in African American studies, creative writing, theater and visual arts.


For her senior thesis, she is creating a mixed media project to confront how white supremacy has impacted the subject of Black love alongside her own experiences in a family with three generations of divorce.


Outside of the classroom, she has served on the English department’s anti-racist pedagogy advisory committee and was a creator and presenter for the Lewis Center for the Arts’ Arts Climate and Inclusion Faculty-Staff Teach-In.


This summer, as a recipient of the Alex Adam ’07 Award — which provides support to three undergraduates to spend a summer pursuing a project that will result in the creation of new artistic work — Berrada has been creating art as a playwright, poet, photographer and painter in an art studio.


Woo, of Riverside, Connecticut, attended Greenwich High School. A member of Rockefeller College, she is a computer science concentrator (B.S.E.) and is pursuing certificates in applied and computational mathematics, finance, cognitive science and entrepreneurship.


Her junior independent work included looking at miner incentives in a specific model of blockchain consensus mechanisms (called proof of stake with trusted external randomness), and analyzing Twitter data to understand COVID-19’s impact on eating disorders and eating disorder discourse on social media.


She has served as an engineering interactor and academic chair of the Computer Science Council. Outside the classroom, she is president of Princeton Women in Computer Science, co-captain of the synchronized skating team and a leader trainer for Outdoor Action. She served as director of participant outreach for the 2019 Envision Conference.


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Class of 1939 Scholar Prize

Anthony Hein received the Class of 1939 Princeton Scholar Award, which is awarded each year to the undergraduate who, at the end of junior year, has achieved the highest academic standing for all preceding college work at the University.


Hein, of Colonia, New Jersey, attended John F. Kennedy Memorial High School. He is a computer science concentrator and is pursuing a certificate in applied and computational mathematics.


In lieu of a senior thesis, he is enrolled in independent work seminars as part of the computer science B.S.E. program.


Hein has served as a lab TA course assistant in the computer science department. He has had software engineering internships with Pratt & Whitney, the United States Air Force, Five Rings Capital and Capital One.


Outside the classroom, he has served as the inaugural chief technology officer of the Daily Princetonian.


A member of First College, Hein is inspired by Matthew Weinberg, assistant professor of computer science, and his dedication to his teaching and to his students. Hein said that during the tumultuous spring 2021 semester, Weinberg demonstrated extreme empathy when he revised policies to promote quality learning and reduce stress on his students. 


“We are delighted to honor this year’s prize winners,” Dean of the College Jill Dolan said. “They are model scholars who have achieved great academic success and they are model citizens who have made important contributions to the Princeton community and beyond. These students’ transcripts include an abundance of extra courses and A+ grades, and evidence of wide-ranging intellectual interests. We are proud of their deep commitment to their educational programs at Princeton.”


Freshman First Honor Prize

Devon Wood-Thomas received this year’s Freshman First Honor Prize, which is awarded each year to sophomores in recognition of exceptional achievement during their first year.


Wood-Thomas, of McLean, Virginia, attended Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology. He plans to pursue a major in physics and is also considering earning certificates in applied and computational mathematics and statistics and machine learning.


Wood-Thomas is a member of Rockefeller College. Outside the classroom, he enjoys singing and acting as a member of the William Trego Singers, Princeton University Players and Princeton Opera Company.


He spent this summer working in Princeton’s Department of Astrophysical Sciences conducting research on cosmology, specifically gravitational lensing of the cosmic microwave background to better map the distribution of dark matter halos.


George B. Wood Legacy Sophomore Prize

This year’s George B. Wood Legacy Sophomore Prize is shared by Markos Markakis and Grace Sommers. The prize is awarded each year to members of the junior class in recognition of exceptional academic achievement during sophomore year.


Markakis, of Thessaloniki, Greece, attended the high school there at Anatolia College. He is majoring in electrical engineering and pursuing certificates in applications of computing, robotics and intelligent systems, and statistics and machine learning.


He was a member of Forbes College his first two years at Princeton and served as a student technology consultant. He will be a member of Whitman College this academic year. He is an undergraduate grader for the Department of Computer Science.


Markakis is president of the Orange Panhellenic Association, the student-led Greek cultural group; and a member of Princeton Triangle Club.


He spent this past summer as a performance improvement intern in the advisory services division of Ernst & Young in Athens, Greece.


Sommers, of Bridgewater, New Jersey, attended Bridgewater-Raritan High School. A physics major, she is also pursuing certificates in applications of computing and Roman language and culture. Last year she was one of two recipients of the Freshman First Honor Prize.


Sommers was a member of Wilson College her first two years at Princeton and will be a member of Butler College this academic year. She has a passion for tutoring and mentorship and has worked as a physics tutor in the McGraw Center for Teaching and Learning and as an undergraduate grader for the Department of Computer Science. She has volunteered at Princeton’s climbing wall to help children with special needs. As a first-year student, she mentored an underprivileged sixth-grader from Princeton’s public middle school.


Sommers is a peer reviewer and copyeditor for the Princeton Undergraduate Research Journal. She has written for the space and physics section of the student-led science publication Innovation Magazine. Last fall, she was a “problem czar” for the Princeton University Physics Competition, held annually for high school students; this year she will serve as judging chair.


She spent summer 2017 on campus, programming a database of historic materials in the civil and environmental engineering department. Her work was part of the ReMatch program, which pairs undergraduate students with graduate student mentors.


This summer, she remained on campus, conducting research with Mariangela Lisanti, an assistant professor of physics. Sommers’ time was spent coding and studying a simulation of a Milky Way-type galaxy to quantify the kinematics of its stars and dark matter. She plans to build on this research during this academic year.


George B. Wood Legacy Junior Prize

This year’s George B. Wood Legacy Junior Prize is shared by Annabel Barry and Trisha Datta. The prize is awarded to members of the senior class in recognition of exceptional academic achievement during junior year.


Barry, of Southport, Connecticut, attended Stanford Online High School. She is an English major who is also pursuing certificates in European cultural studies, humanistic studies and theater.


She is a member of Whitman College, where she is a peer academic adviser. She is co-editor-in-chief of The Nassau Literary Review, a fellow in the Writing Center and the undergraduate coordinator of the Princeton chapter of Minorities and Philosophy. She is a member of the Undergraduate Advisory Committee to the Department of English and a member of the Behrman Undergraduate Society of Fellows, a group of juniors and seniors who are committed to the study of humanistic inquiry and meet formally once a month during the academic year to discuss and debate matters of common interest in the company of faculty members and distinguished guests.


As a set designer, Barry has worked on productions with the Lewis Center for the Arts and with the student-led troupes Theatre Intime and Princeton Shakespeare Company.


In summer 2016, she interned at the Montefiore-Einstein Center for Bioethics through Princeton Internships in Civic Service. In summer 2017, with a Tim K. Vasen Summer Research Award from the Lewis Center for the Arts, she traveled along the border between Ireland and Northern Ireland, researching and writing a collection of creative nonfiction. This led to a junior independent paper on postcolonial critiques of cartography in contemporary Irish literature.


This past summer, Barry was a Princeton Bread Loaf Fellow at Oxford University, where she took a class on James Joyce and conducted senior thesis research on feminist philosopher and writer Mary Wollstonecraft in the Abinger Papers of the Bodleian Library.


After graduation, she plans to pursue a Ph.D. in literature and a career in literary criticism or the arts.


Datta, of Hillsborough, New Jersey, attended Hillsborough High School. She is concentrating in computer science. She serves as a lab TA for the computer science course “Reasoning About Computation.”


A member of Wilson College her first two years at Princeton, she will be a member of Butler College this academic year. She received the Shapiro Prize for Academic Excellence in 2016 and 2017, and the 2017 Lewis Center for the Arts Outstanding Work by a Sophomore Award for creative writing. At Princeton Research Day 2018 last spring, she received the Silver Undergraduate Talk Award for “Privacy-Preserving Traffic Obfuscation for Smart Home IoT Devices” and has presented results of her research at conferences in Budapest, Hungary; Washington, D.C.; Cambridge, Massachusetts; and Philadelphia.


Datta has served as president of Princeton South Asian Theatrics and as an engineering school tour guide.


This summer, she was a software engineering intern at Flatiron Health in New York City. Previous summer internships include Google in New York City; Microsoft in Redmond, Washington; and Applied Communication Sciences in Basking Ridge, New Jersey. After graduation, she is considering pursuing a Ph.D. in computer science or returning to Flatiron Health.


Class of 1939 Princeton Scholar Award

Matthew Tyler received the Class of 1939 Princeton Scholar Award, which is awarded each year to the undergraduate who, at the end of junior year, has achieved the highest academic standing for all preceding college work at the University. Last year, he was awarded the George B. Wood Legacy Sophomore Prize, and in 2016 he was a co-recipient of the Freshman First Honor Prize.


Tyler, of Spencerport, New York, attended Spencerport High School. He is a mathematics major and is pursuing certificates in applications of computing, and applied and computational mathematics.


Tyler is a member of Mathey College. He is president of the math club and a “problem czar” for the Princeton University Mathematics Competition, held annually for high school students. He also is a member of the juggling club.


He participated in the Princeton-in-Munich program in summer 2016.


In summer 2017, he worked at Princeton with Richard Taylor, a visiting lecturer with the rank of professor in mathematics, on learning commutative algebra and algebraic geometry.


This past summer, he participated in the Research Experiences for Undergraduates program at Emory University, researching p-adic modular forms and monstrous moonshine. After graduation, he plans to pursue a Ph.D. in mathematics.


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