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2018-19 Crawford County Community Health Needs Assessment

The 2018-19 Crawford County Community Health Needs Assessment was developed and
administered by a team of undergraduate research students at Allegheny College under the
supervision of Dr. Becky Smullin Dawson, PhD MPH:

Kierstin Faw
Valerie Hurst
Benjamin Marks
Ian McKeown
McClaren Rodriguez
Margaret Zeller

Additionally, the following Allegheny College students were responsible for administering the survey
and digitizing the results:
Catherine Achbach
Hope Albert
Lauren Bodi
Madison Caufield
Alyson Codner
Jevon Cooper
Taylor Davis
Hayley Diemer
Anne DiGregory
Emma Donley
Miranda Farley
Naomy Garcia
Mary Kerner
Emily Kovalesky
Ian McKeown
Jonah Raether
Perry Rusen-Morohovich
Darby Smith
Alexa Vargas
Bryn Wallnau
Sara Waya
Danielle Zehnder

Biology Faculty Prize Winners

HEIDI MUELLER ’19 and ALAN CUEVAS VILLAGOMEZ ’19

HEIDI was a biology major and psychology minor pursing the pre-med track, graduating summa cum laude and being inducted into Phi Beta Kappa. On campus, she worked for the Athletic Training Department and was a member of the service fraternity Alpha Phi Omega. During her time at Allegheny, she was also involved with the Orchesis Dance Company, volunteered at Meadville Medical Center, and was a chemistry teaching assistant. In the fall, Heidi will be attending Medical School at the University of Buffalo.

ALAN is a first generation, minority student born in California, raised in Mexico and residing in Florida. He specifically chose Allegheny College because of its strong pre-health program and liberal arts education. Allegheny helped him gauge his interest and provided him with the resources to pursue internships and shadowing opportunities that helped make the decision to practice medicine as a physician. Activities Alan was involved with include Delta Tau Delta fraternity and the first vice president of the Minority Association of Pre medical Students (MAPS) established this past year. His future plans include enrolling in the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine this fall as an MD candidate.

CONGRATULATIONS to you both!

The Robert E. Bugbee Prize Winners

This year’s winners of the The Robert E. Bugbee Prize are KAYLEE CROSSEN ’19, MEGAN HAZLETT ’19, and KATHARINE HUBERT ’19.

This prize honors the gentleman who served as the chairman of the Biology Department for twenty-seven years and is given to honor students in Biology who have demonstrated the most profound level of scientific achievement as demonstrated by the senior project.

KAYLEE was a biology major and global health minor from Ashland, OH. She served on the honor committee for 3 years and was the chair her senior year. She was also a health coach for the Community Care Network. Last summer, Kaylee was a genetic counseling assistant at Akron Children’s Hospital and plans to attend the University of Cincinnati to pursue a master’s degree in genetic counseling.

MEGAN was a biology and environmental science double major who spent four years studying the fish in small first- and second-order streams in the French Creek watershed. She completed my comp entitled “Identify Potential Brook Trout (Salvelinus Fontinalis) Populations Based on Summer Temperature and Watershed Characteristics” under the supervision of Dr. Scott Wissinger and Chris Shaffer. On campus, she was the Gator Guide supervising intern in the Admissions Office as well as the Historian for Tri-Beta, the biology department honor society. Future plans: Megan will be attending SUNY ESF (State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry) in Syracuse, NY in the fall of 2019 to pursue a master’s degree in the fish and wildlife biology and management program.

KATHARINE was a biology/music double major and psychology minor. In her biology comp, she looked at the multisystemic effects of collagen mutations fruit flies. In her music comp, she created a translational system to convert English to my newly created language, American Music Language. Throughout her time at Allegheny, she was involved in several music ensembles including civic symphony, wind symphony, and percussion ensemble. She also volunteered weekly and worked with cats at the Because You Care animal shelter. In August, Katharine will be moving to Wisconsin to pursue her PhD in genetics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Congratulations ladies!