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Professionals share how to be an ally in pride month | University Park Campus News

Throughout June, allies show their support for the LGBTQ+ community through social media campaigns, statements of solidarity and rainbow themed merchandise. However, some advocates are calling for this support to extend beyond Pride month and manifest in different ways. Penn State’s Center for Gender and Sexual Diversity (CGSD) is a group composed of students and […]

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Throughout June, allies show their support for the LGBTQ+ community through social media campaigns, statements of solidarity and rainbow themed merchandise. However, some advocates are calling for this support to extend beyond Pride month and manifest in different ways.

Penn State’s Center for Gender and Sexual Diversity (CGSD) is a group composed of students and staff that are asking: “What does it mean to be an ally when no one is watching?”

“Genuine allyship shows up in how people act,”Kate Rawson, assistant director of CGSD said. “Come to Pride events. Use inclusive language. Talk to your lawmakers.”

While suggesting ways for people to engage in allyship through more public means, she also mentioned how to be an ally on a personal level.

“Ask the people in your life what support actually looks like for them,” Rawson said. “Every person needs something different.”

Rawson is among a group of educators and students calling for a more consistent form of support that doesn’t vanish when the month ends or the parades are over. Alongside her colleagues, she works to equip allies with the language, resources and context to move beyond symbolic gestures.

Small shifts in language can also signal large changes in mindset, according to Rawson. One example she suggested was using phrases like “everyone,” “friends” or “colleagues” as opposed to “ladies and gentlemen.”







State College Pride, board sign

A woman writes a response on a question board during State College Pride on Saturday, June 7, 2025 in State College, Pa.




“To be an ally to the community, I specifically look for active engagement.” Sam Brooks, a fourth year student studying digital art and media design said. “A rainbow sticker is nice, but it’s also understanding, actively trying to understand why these symbols even matter. Allyship isn’t a passive label, it’s an active pursuit of celebration, education and community.”

Brooks said allyship often begins with curiosity and humility.

“Understanding builds empathy, and empathy creates tight knit community bonds,” Brooks said. “Don’t be afraid to learn. Don’t be afraid to engage.”

To help foster learning, the Center offers year-round programming, including its “Queer Voices” peer-education group and “Safer People, Safer Places” workshops. These sessions give participants the opportunity to hear personal stories, discuss inclusive practices and reflect on how to better support LGBTQ+ people in their workplaces, classrooms and communities.

One foundational practice Brooks said is sharing pronouns, something which he models in both professional and social settings.

“I’ll introduce myself and say, ‘Hi, I’m Sam, I use he/him pronouns,’ to model that it’s okay to share,” Brooks said. “It signals that this is a safe space.”

That kind of modeling, Rawson added, helps normalize inclusion.

“Even just coming to Pride events and being visibly present as an ally sends a message,” Rawson said. “We always tell folks on campus, come to our events even if you’re straight. We need our allies in the room to keep this work going.”

Outside of campus, LGBTQ+ organizations across the state are making similar appeals. Michel Lee Garrett, a board member of Centre LGBT+, an organization serving central Pennsylvania, said the stakes are especially high this year.

“We, the queer community, are currently in a moment of profound difficulty, profound challenge and profound fear,” Garrett said. “Anti-LGBT forces are working tirelessly to put policies and legislation into place that would rip away life-saving gender-affirming medical treatment and undo much — if not all — of the progress that the queer community has made over the last number of decades.”

She called for a more courageous and public form of allyship, saying people who are willing to show up, be visible and push back anti-LGBT speech and actions are needed.

“Passive allyship, allyship that will listen to others spout anti-LGBT rhetoric and not push back against it, is not allyship. It is complicity,” Garrett said.

Garrett urged supporters to speak up, whether in private conversations or public spaces.

“We need people who speak up in their families, in their workplaces, in their places of faith,” Garrett said. “We need people who are calling their elected officials. We need people who are showing up to public meetings. We have gotten to where we are as a community by being loud and proud and visible, and in this moment, perhaps more than ever before, we need our allies to be loud and proud and visible.”







State College Pride, flag

A man holds a pride flag during the State College Pride parade on Saturday, June 7, 2025 in State College, Pa.




She also emphasized the importance of respectful language and the willingness to learn, while also saying it’s okay for people to have questions and make mistakes. Garrett said the goal of inclusive language isn’t to make people fear saying the wrong thing, but to support and uplift marginalized people.

When it comes to terminology, Garrett acknowledged the complicated legacy of the word “queer.”

“Some people have a visceral reaction to it because of its history, but many queer people have reclaimed the term and use it very, very proudly,” Garrett said. “Queer encompasses everybody. We are all part of the queer family, and that sort of openness — that sort of ‘open-armed-ness’ of the term — is something that I think a lot of us respond to.”

Still, Garrett cautioned allies to be mindful.

“Some people don’t necessarily love it when allies use the term ‘queer’ because of its history,” Garrett said. “But it has become a term of pride and endearment (for some).”

Garrett also spoke about newer, inclusive terms like “gender-expansive”, which she described as a broad umbrella term for identities that move beyond the traditional gender binary.

“Gender-expansive people have existed throughout history, across cultures, across time,” Garrett said, noting that they always have and always will.

For allies looking to educate themselves without placing additional emotional labor on LGBTQ+ friends or colleagues, Garrett recommends engaging with queer media.

“We’re exhausted,” she said. “We appreciate being asked, but self-education is key. Read books by queer authors. Watch films by queer creators. Learn from the voices already doing the work.”

She named Centre LGBT+ as a local resource for education and advocacy and pointed to other organizations doing similar work, including the Pennsylvania Youth Congress, the Eastern PA Trans Equity Project, the ACLU, and the Human Rights Campaign.

Garrett noted there are so many resources already in the community.

As Pride Month draws to a close, the message from advocates across Penn State and Central Pennsylvania is clear: allyship is a commitment.

“Pride is about joy and celebration,” Brooks said. “But it’s also about history, resilience and community. Community means everyone is welcome, but you have to show up.”

Garrett put it even more directly: “Don’t just celebrate Pride. Live it through action, compassion and courage every day.”

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No. 3 Ohio State still doing some shuffling along the offensive line ahead of opener vs. No. 1 Texas

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio State coach Ryan Day says there’s still some shuffling along the Buckeyes’ offensive line ahead of their Aug. 30 season-opener. Some of that the coaches credited to a new emphasis this preseason: players learning primary and secondary positions. But as the third-ranked Buckeyes get closer to their matchup with top-ranked […]

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio State coach Ryan Day says there’s still some shuffling along the Buckeyes’ offensive line ahead of their Aug. 30 season-opener.

Some of that the coaches credited to a new emphasis this preseason: players learning primary and secondary positions. But as the third-ranked Buckeyes get closer to their matchup with top-ranked Texas, Day is hoping to lock in his frontline sooner rather than later.

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“It’s important as we get closer to this first game for guys to really dig in and get the majority of the snaps at where they’re going to play,” Day said this week.

Austin Siereveld, a third-year sophomore who entered preseason as the presumed starter at right tackle, has been working at left tackle over the past week. That’s because Phillip Daniels, who transferred in January after two years at Minnesota, is in the running to start on the right side.

Rice transfer Ethan Onianwa is the potential backup at either spot. He is also getting a look at guard, where Tegra Tshabola and Luke Montgomery finished last season as starters flanking Carson Hinzman at center.

“We’ll see,” Day said. “By the end of this week, we’ll have more and more snaps, more and more information, and go from there.”

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Onianwa started 25 games at right tackle and nine at left tackle for Rice.

“I feel like it’s kind of important for all the O-linemen to have experience in these positions because you never know how the season’s going to progress, and that’s just been kind of like the plan,” Onianwa said Tuesday. “I’ve been playing guard, I’ve been playing tackle on both sides, and it’s just a learning experience, and I’m enjoying every second of it.”

Daniels redshirted in 2023 and played in 12 games last season for the Golden Gophers.

If outsiders were surprised at his ascension, he indicated he is not.

“I know the plays now, so everything’s just clicking,” Daniels said. “Once I know the plays, I feel like I can kill anybody.”

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Offensive line coach Tyler Bowen, who is in his first season in Columbus after spending three at Virginia Tech, downplayed the significance of the movement to a certain degree, but he confirmed the staff is putting an emphasis on learning multiple positions.

“It’s something we believe in, and that’s a good example of it,” Bowen said of Siereveld’s moving around. “He’s bounced to tackle. He’s played guard. I think what you see up front, we do that a lot. Nothing’s set in stone. We have a lot of versatility. We have some depth, but we’ve got to be able to perform at a high level on the spot we settle into, and that’s what we’ve got to figure out this week. And we’ve got to figure it out fast.”

While the starting lineup is still being determined, Day said he is happy about the depth up front with redshirt freshmen Gabe Van Sickle and Ian Moore making progress this month.

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LEC Announces 2025-2026 FloCollege Subscription Options

Story Links PROVIDENCE, R.I. – Beginning with the 2025-26 academic year, all regular season and Little East Conference (LEC) Championship broadcast at LEC member institutions will be available on FloCollege. Alumni, parents, students and fans wishing to watch their favorite teams have a variety of options to subscribe – regular pricing for […]

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PROVIDENCE, R.I. – Beginning with the 2025-26 academic year, all regular season and Little East Conference (LEC) Championship broadcast at LEC member institutions will be available on FloCollege.

Alumni, parents, students and fans wishing to watch their favorite teams have a variety of options to subscribe – regular pricing for FloCollege is $19.99 per month or $107.88 per year ($8.99/month). Customers from FloCollege partner conference schools that sign up using their institution’s .edu email address will be able to subscribe for $9.99 per month or $71.88 per year ($5.99/month). As with all other streaming services (ESPN+, Netflix, Hulu, etc.) subscriptions can be canceled at any time.

LEC fans can sign up for FloSports by CLICKING HERE, or by clicking on the links on our member institution’s websites. To watch FloCollege broadcasted events on your smart TV or mobile devices by downloading the FloSports app available on Amazon Fire TV, Roku, Apple TV, Chromecast, as well as the Apple App Store and Google Play Store.



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NCAA Women’s Hockey Grads Continue Careers on International Stage

Story Links ADRIAN, Mich. – Three Adrian College women’s hockey alumni have recently signed professional contracts to continue their careers overseas. Maya Roy ’23 and Aileena Dopheide ’24 signed with ERC Ingolstadt of the German Women’s Ice Hockey League (DFEL), while Maya Tupper ’22 signed with Sapporo Infinity of the Japan Women’s […]

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ADRIAN, Mich. – Three Adrian College women’s hockey alumni have recently signed professional contracts to continue their careers overseas.

Maya Roy ’23 and Aileena Dopheide ’24 signed with ERC Ingolstadt of the German Women’s Ice Hockey League (DFEL), while Maya Tupper ’22 signed with Sapporo Infinity of the Japan Women’s Hockey League (JWHL).

After graduating, Tupper began her professional journey in Austria with Lakers Kärnten of the European Women’s Hockey League (EWHL), appearing in six regular-season games and recording one goal and one assist. She added three more assists in four playoff games. Tupper then played two seasons in Australia for the Adelaide Rush of the Australian Women’s Ice Hockey League (AWIHL), tallying five goals and 16 assists in 32 games. During her time at Adrian, Tupper played in 43 games, recording two goals and 10 assists.

Roy had an outstanding five-year career at Adrian, appearing in 118 games and recording 28 goals and 94 assists. She was a four-time All-Conference selection and earned First Team AHCA All-American honors in 2024, followed by Second Team recognition in 2025. In her final season, Roy set a new single-season record for assists at Adrian, finishing with 35.

Dopheide was another key contributor for the Bulldogs, skating in 112 games over her career and posting 26 goals and 58 assists for 84 points. Her senior season was her most productive, notching 13 goals and 25 assists for 38 points—ranking fourth on the team in both points and assists, and fifth in goals.

Adrian College has now seen 12 women’s hockey alumni advance to professional leagues around the world. Congratulations to these Bulldog alums on the next step in their hockey careers!



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West Virginia now has an NIL policy for high school athletes | High School Sports

CHARLESTON —West Virginia high school and middle school athletes are now able to get paid for name, image and likeness deals. The state school board in July approved the first NIL policy for student athletes, and the policy went into effect Friday. × This page requires Javascript. Javascript is required for you to be […]

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CHARLESTON —West Virginia high school and middle school athletes are now able to get paid for name, image and likeness deals.

The state school board in July approved the first NIL policy for student athletes, and the policy went into effect Friday.


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South Carolina’s Rahsul Faison releases NIL apparel while awaiting eligibility decision

As he awaits an eligibility decision from the NCAA, Rahsul Faison released NIL apparel. Through a partnership with Fan Arch, the South Carolina running back launched #FreeSul apparel Tuesday. Faison released T-shirts and sweatshirts on Fan Arch’s website Tuesday. The T-shirts start at $29.99 and sweatshirts are listed at $49.99. Advertisement Faison is still seeking […]

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As he awaits an eligibility decision from the NCAA, Rahsul Faison released NIL apparel. Through a partnership with Fan Arch, the South Carolina running back launched #FreeSul apparel Tuesday.

Faison released T-shirts and sweatshirts on Fan Arch’s website Tuesday. The T-shirts start at $29.99 and sweatshirts are listed at $49.99.

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Faison is still seeking another year of eligibility from the NCAA after applying for a waiver. He’s still waiting on a response, and Shane Beamer said the program still had not heard anything as of Tuesday.

Beamer also confirmed Faison did not practice Sunday, though it was not due to the eligibility situation. Instead, he has a bruised shoulder, which is why he wasn’t on the field.

“I know I’m going to get asked about Rahsul,” Beamer told reporters. “I don’t have an update for you right now. He wasn’t at practice Sunday. That wasn’t because of his situation with the NCAA, he just got hit a little bit on the shoulder in our scrimmage on Saturday night. It’s nothing serious, just a bruise. But he was in the training room or actually getting some extra work done on that Sunday night when you guys were at practice.”

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Beamer also said the hope is Faison and South Carolina get an answer “soon” on the former Utah State running back’s situation. The head coach also said the program is respecting the NCAA’s process.

“He was back out there today in good spirits,” Beamer said. “Hope to get some good news on that soon. But we’ll see. But again, extremely respectful of the NCAA and the job they have. I know they’re analyzing other cases besides Sul’s. And appreciate them taking it under consideration or into consideration and optimistic that we’ll get some good news hopefully soon.”

More on Rahsul Faison’s waiting game

Rahsul Faison spent the last two years at Utah State and put up the best numbers of his career in 2024. He ran for 1,109 yards and eight touchdowns while adding 99 receiving yards. He graduated high school in 2019 and enrolled at Marshall, though he didn’t play a snap with the Thundering Herd. Faison then took online classes at Lackawanna College in 2020, though he didn’t play football.

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In 2021, Faison enrolled at Snow College and didn’t get onto the field until 2022. A year later, he transferred to Utah State, and he’s seeking another year of eligibility in light of Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia’s legal victory last year.

Pavia’s motion for a preliminary injunction was granted in the U.S. District Court of Middle Tennessee in December. The NCAA released guidance in March to its membership, issuing a blanket waiver to former junior college players.



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Carroll Soccer Teams Host Pair of Scrimmages to Open 2025

Story Links HELENA, Mont. – The Carroll College Men’s and Women’s Soccer teams will see their first on-field action of the 2025 season this afternoon, as they host a pair of exhibition contests against Casper College and the University of Calgary at 12 p.m. and 2 p.m. The Carroll Men, fresh off of the program’s […]

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Carroll Soccer Teams Host Pair of Scrimmages to Open 2025

HELENA, Mont. – The Carroll College Men’s and Women’s Soccer teams will see their first on-field action of the 2025 season this afternoon, as they host a pair of exhibition contests against Casper College and the University of Calgary at 12 p.m. and 2 p.m.

The Carroll Men, fresh off of the program’s first Cascade Collegiate Conference Championship and NAIA National Tournament appearance, will look to set the tone with today’s early-season tune-up against the Thunderbirds of Casper College (Wy.) at 12 p.m. 

Featuring a mix of up-and-coming young talent, as well as a bevy of All-Conference talent from the 2024 season, the Fighting Saints will look to retain their spot at head of the CCC table this Fall.

Following the Men’s opener, the Carroll Women will host Calgary at 2 p.m. to kick-off their ’25 campaign. 

A trio of First Team All-CCC performers from last season (Maria Ackerman, Avery Lambourne, Delaney Moczan) will look to lead the Saints back to the top of the conference this Fall, and the Dinos are the first taste of action for the the hungry team this Fall.

Stats will not be recorded for the pair of exhibitions, but a livestream for each game can be viewed free of charge, HERE.
 

Visit www.carrollathletics.com to continue to stay up to date with everything going on in Carroll Athletics.
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