Four engineering students named Goldwater Scholars

By

Liz Fuller-Wright, Office of Communications

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Princeton undergraduates Victoria Graf, Amélie Lemay, Arya Maheshwari and Reha Mathur – all engineering majors – have been awarded Goldwater Scholarships, an annual award for outstanding undergraduates interested in careers in mathematics, the natural sciences and engineering. The four are among the 413 scholarship recipients selected across the United States.

One- and two-year Goldwater Scholarships cover tuition, fees, room and board up to a maximum of $7,500 per year.

The scholarship program honoring Sen. Barry Goldwater was created as part of the Barry Goldwater Scholarship and Excellence in Education Foundation, a federally endowed agency instituted by an act of Congress in 1986. Counting this year’s awards, the Goldwater Foundation has awarded more than 10,000 scholarships.

Victoria Graf

Victoria Graf portrait
Victoria Graf. Photo by Meryl Liu.

Princeton junior Victoria Graf is a computer science major from Arlington, Virginia. She has previously won the Shapiro Prize for Academic Excellence, awarded for “outstanding academic achievement by Princeton undergraduates in their first or second years of study,” and she is a member of the Princeton chapter of the Tau Beta Pi Engineering Honor Society, which “recognizes exceptional engineers and students demonstrating exemplary character” among the top eighth of the junior engineering class.

She plans to complete a Ph.D. in machine learning and become a tenured research professor focusing on natural language processing, with the goal of making language models “more helpful, honest and harmless,” she said.

“As a half-white, half-Asian female, I have always moved between cultures,” she wrote in her application. “Representation of those who are mixed-race is sparse and often emphasizes one race or the other.”

“Ultimately, I want to become a professor and mentor who empowers young women to be researchers and leaders in computer science,” she wrote.

She identified three of her own mentors who have had a meaningful role in her intellectual journey: Karthik Narasimhan, assistant professor of computer science and co-director of Princeton Natural Language Processing; Danqi Chen, assistant professor of computer science; and Dr. Amanda Staudt, principal investigator and epidemiologist at the U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research.

Amélie Lemay

Amalie Lemay portrait.
Amélie Lemay.
Photo by Denise Applewhite, Office of Communications

Junior Amélie Lemay is a civil and environmental engineering concentrator from Wynnewood, Pennsylvania, pursuing certificates in statistics and machine learning and sustainable energy.

She won the Shapiro Prize in both her freshman and sophomore years, received the 2022 New Jersey Water Environment Association Award for research “with a strong component [in] water quality control and environmental protection,” and she is a member of the Princeton chapter of the Tau Beta Pi Engineering Honor Society.

Lemay is planning to complete a Ph.D. in civil and environmental engineering with the goal of tackling environmental challenges, such as pollution mitigation or sustainable energy development, through teaching and research.

“What environmental engineers are fighting for is more than just the preservation of the planet as a whole,” she wrote in her Goldwater application. “They are fighting to eliminate the social and racial inequality associated with ecological damage.”

Her mentors are Ian Bourg, associate professor of civil and environmental engineering and the High Meadows Environmental Institute, and Barry Rand, professor of electrical and computer engineering and the Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environment.

Arya Maheshwari

Arya Maheshwari portrait.
Arya Maheshwari.
Photo by Ashwin Pazhetam.

Sophomore Arya Maheshwari, a computer science major and mathematics minor from Los Altos, California, previously won the Shapiro Prize for Academic Excellence and the Freshman First Honor Prize, awarded to the two members of the sophomore class with highest academic standing for “exceptional achievement during the first year.”

He plans to pursue a Ph.D. and research career in quantum computing. “Research in this area excites me because it has the elegance of abstract mathematical ideas while also offering significant concrete applications,” he wrote in his application. “It’s that duality that I want to contribute to in my career, discovering insights and solutions that are beautiful in their own right while having a meaningful impact on real-world problems.”

Maheshwari is also interested in closing the gap between those who have early access to programming instruction and other STEM education and those who do not. To that end, he helped lead Princeton’s Association for Computing Machinery chapter, a computer science club, and he will serve as the chair of ACM next year.

As mentors, Maheshwari identified Renyue Cen, an emeritus senior research astronomer; Matthew Weinberg, an assistant professor of computer science; and Esin Tureci, an associate research scholar in computer science.

Reha Mathur 

Reha Mathur
Reha Mathur
Photo by Jessica Cui

Junior Reha Mathur, a chemical and biological engineering major from Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, plans to get a Ph.D. in computational biology or bioengineering with the ultimate goal of leading a team at a biotech company or starting her own, to translate her research into tangible products.

“My lifelong goal is to improve the quality and accessibility of healthcare around the world by parsing the complexity of biology,” she wrote in her application. “Pursuing translational research at the intersection of computation and biology is the most effective way to accomplish this goal.”

Mathur is the current director of Tigerlaunch, one of the world’s largest student-run entrepreneurship competitions, and the founder of the Princeton Biotech Group, a group of 80 undergraduates interested in biotech. She also received the Shapiro Prize in both her freshman and sophomore years.

Her mentors include Athanassios Z. Panagiotopoulos, Princeton’s Susan Dod Brown Professor of Chemical and Biological Engineering; Joshua Rabinowitz, a professor of chemistry and the Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics; graduate student Maria Carolina Nicola Barbosa Muniz; and postdoctoral research associate Daniel Weilandt.

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