Pyne Prize awarded to Princeton Class of 2025 members Jennifer Nwokeji and Avi Attar

Written by
Rebekah Schroeder, Office of Communications
March 20, 2025

Princeton University seniors Avi Attar and Jennifer Nwokeji are the recipients of the 2025 Moses Taylor Pyne Honor Prize, the highest general distinction conferred on an undergraduate. They were recognized at Alumni Day on campus Saturday, Feb. 22.

The Pyne Honor Prize, established in 1921, is awarded to the senior who has most clearly manifested excellent scholarship, strength of character and effective leadership. Previous recipients include U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor and the late Princeton President Emeritus Robert F. Goheen.

Nwokeji, from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, is majoring in molecular biology and minoring in bioengineering and African studies. She hopes to enter an M.D./Ph.D. program after graduation.

She is a recipient of the Shapiro Prize for Academic Excellence and the Department of Molecular Biology’s Evnin ’62 Senior Thesis Fund, which supports her research on a model system for malaria in the lab of John Jimah, assistant professor of molecular biology and the James A. Elkins, Jr. ’41 Preceptor in Molecular Biology.

Upon learning she had received the Pyne Prize, Nwokeji said she “almost cried” and immediately thought of her Nigerian immigrant parents. Being honored with the Pyne Prize, Nwokeji added, “felt like I was sort of being awarded and recognized just for being me.”

Not knowing anyone from her high school who had attended Princeton, Nwokeji said she was initially nervous about coming to campus.

“I just went in thinking I’m going to do the best that I can, both academically and with my volunteering and community work,” she said.

Jimah called Nwokeji “a true joy to work with — a brilliant mind and a natural leader.”

Jennifer Nwokeji headshot

“She embodies the traits associated with Pyne Prize recipients through her outstanding academic performance, character, and commitment to global health and biomedical science,” Jimah wrote in a letter of recommendation. She has “demonstrated not only remarkable intellectual curiosity, creativity, and scientific insight but also the resilience and dedication required for groundbreaking research,” he added.

Nwokeji joined the Jimah Lab, which analyzes the structural biology of parasitic and human cells, as a first-year student through the Office of Undergraduate Research Student Initiated Internship Program and has worked there every academic year since.

Her senior thesis is an evolution of her junior paper. Nwokeji works with Jimah and Amari Tankard, a fifth-year graduate student in molecular biology, using cryo-electron microscopes and biochemical tools to study the structure and function of proteins and “understand how parasitic infection works.”

Ultimately, Nwokeji said, she hopes to develop new therapeutics for diseases disproportionately affecting marginalized communities around the world.

“Jenny has immense potential to become a leading physician and biomedical scientist,” Jimah said in his recommendation, noting he “fully expects” her undergraduate research findings to “be published in a scientific journal.”

Nwokeji has expanded her interest in public health as an intern with the Florida Department of Health, where she tracked the spread of enteric disease in Palm Beach County, translated for Spanish-speaking clinic patients and helped organize health fairs with support from the Center for Career Development’s Summer Social Impact Internship Fund. She also had a Princeternship at the biopharmaceutical company RAPT Therapeutics, and has volunteered at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center’s Community Osteopathic Hospital in Harrisburg every winter break.

Matthew Lazen, the assistant dean of studies for Butler College, described her as a student who truly embodies the Pyne Prize spirit of service and achievement.

“After twenty years at Princeton, I know well how exceptional Pyne Prize winners must be — in academics, character and service to Princeton,” he wrote in a letter of recommendation. “Not only is she a consummate scholar, but she always goes the extra mile for others.”

In addition to her academic achievements, Nwokeji holds various leadership, mentoring and service roles on campus. She is an advanced peer tutor in chemistry and biology at the McGraw Center for Teaching and Learning, a peer academic adviser in Butler College, a Health Professions Advising peer adviser and a mentor in the Carl A. Fields Center’s Princeton University Mentorship Program.

Nwokeji has served as president of the Princeton Black Premedical Society, treasurer of the Scully Co-Operative student-run food cooperative, and treasurer and founding board member of the Princeton Nigerian Students Association.

Nwokeji was a stylist for the student-run TigerTrends fashion magazine, and a gallery attendant at the Princeton University Art Museum’s Art@Bainbridge and Art on Hulfish galleries in downtown Princeton. She has been a volunteer with the Trenton Area Soup Kitchen and plans to resume that work this spring.

Attar, from Newton, Massachusetts, is majoring in the School of Public and International Affairs (SPIA) and minoring in computer science.