Out of the 32 submissions for the 2025 Dr. Michael N. Compton Public Affairs Essay Contest, the top two winners were students from McQueary College of Health and Human Services.
Open to full-time undergraduate students at Missouri State, this contest is a joint effort among the MSU Sigma Pi Fraternity, its alumni through the Institute for Development of Ethics and Leadership and the office of public affairs support.
This year’s essay theme was based on the annual public affairs theme for 2025-26, “Resilient People, Resilient Future.”

Trinity Tuggle, a freshman biomedical sciences major won first place. She received a $1,500 cash award and a $500 donation to a charity of her choice. She chose KC Pet Project.
Senior biomedical sciences major Shawnewa Dahozy came in second, earning a $300 MSU Bookstore gift card.
Finding hope
According to Tuggle, she decided to participate in the contest during the keynote session of last fall’s Public Affairs Conference.
“I heard David Feherty say, ‘Depression is sadness without hope, and it inspired the idea for my entire essay,” she said. “I focused on how hope is the key to resiliency, what that looked like in the past and why it’s important today.”
For Tuggle, writing this essay helped her better understand the public affairs mission and connect it to her own experiences as a health sciences student.
“I remember I was sitting in class when I saw the email that I had won, and I was so excited,” she said. “I really didn’t think I had a chance at first place because of all the other amazing writers on campus.”






