Sports
Take a Trip


[Kohlsdorf] The Lincoln Highway brings motorists into the heart of Mount Vernon’s historic uptown neighborhood, which is filled with inviting restaurants and unique shops.
Let’s visit Iron Leaf Press where antique printmaking meets contemporary stationary design.
(typewriter sounds) ♪♪ [Kohlsdorf] Danielle, we are in your storefront in beautiful Mount Vernon.
Tell us a little bit about it.
[Danielle Chargo] Sure, so this is Iron Leaf Press.
It’s a letter press and stationary store.
We’ve been in business since 2012 and we moved down to this location in 2022.
[Kohlsdorf] What do people come in here for?
[Danielle Chargo] Right, well a lot of people come in here for greeting cards and stationery, but we also sell a ton of pens and pencils.
[Kohlsdorf] Yes, you do, walls of pens here.
[Danielle Chargo] Exactly.
We’ve added a lot of that retail stuff over the years, but we’ve also kind of done our own greeting cards and that’s really where it started.
We’ve got lots of cards that we have designed here.
We design them and then they go on one of our printing presses.
[Kohlsdorf] Danielle, I’d love to hear what inspired you to open this shop and get started in the printing business in the first place.
[Danielle Chargo] Sure.
So, when I was in college, I did some printmaking and that’s kind of where the love started.
I actually bought a press while I was still in college and then it kind of grew from there and I got another one and I got another one and I was like maybe I should start printing for other people and doing more greeting cards.
It’s a really fun way to be a part of people’s connections to other people.
You know, you sit down to write a greeting card to your friends or your family, you really think about that person and how they’re going to receive it.
Same thing for like we do a lot of personal stationary.
It’s that extra touch for you send a note to your friend and they know how much you thought about them.
[Kohlsdorf] Yeah, I love that note writing and letter writing isn’t dead.
Right?
It’s still alive and well.
[Danielle Chargo] Yes, it’s still alive and well.
[Kohlsdorf] I would love to see how you make your products on the printing press.
[Danielle Chargo] Oh, absolutely, let’s go take a look and we’ll run one of the presses.
[Kohlsdorf] Okay.
♪♪ [Kohlsdorf] All right, so this is where the magic happens.
And this machine looks old.
Tell me about it.
[Danielle Chargo] It is.
Yeah, so this machine is a Chandler & Price platen press.
It was made in 1919.
These types of presses were primarily made for job printing, so flyers and business cards and things like that.
♪♪ [Danielle Chargo] Okay, so Brooke, what we’re doing here is we’re doing blind embossing.
These notecards we’re printing on this press here.
Just roll it in.
We really love this machine.
I’ve spent a lot of time printing on this machine.
With our notecards we do a lot of embossing and it’s really something that our customers love.
[Kohlsdorf] Why 100 years later are people still trying to find machines like this?
What makes them so special?
[Danielle Chargo] These presses can do ink, they can do blind embossing and it really adds a tactile feel to these notecards.
[Kohlsdorf] So, it gives you a kind of look that maybe some of the newer machines or technologies can’t give you?
[Danielle Chargo] Right, so embossing it requires specialty embossing dyes and yeah, if you’re running your copy machine at home it’s not going to have the same effect.
This raises the name up out of the paper and we run these thick cotton stocks, which you can’t necessarily run through a laser copier machine.
So, that’s why we use this press here.
♪♪ [Kohlsdorf] Danielle has built her business around making paper goods the old-fashioned way, adding a special touch to every greeting card and custom piece of stationary she creates.
Her shop doubles as a print studio where customers might catch her in action on one of her four antique presses.
[Kohlsdorf] So, this is a different press.
Tell us about this one.
[Danielle Chargo] Right, so this is a Vandercook.
It’s a proofing press.
It was built to proof type.
So, you’d set your type, all the individuals letters, take a pull of the press and then you study your sheet and make any corrections if you spelled something incorrectly, the original spell checker.
I have something special set up for you.
So, I’m going to have you pull the first press, or pull the first proof.
So, you put your right hand on the crank here, your left hand here on the paper and then just turn the crank and you’ll see the print at the end.
[Kohlsdorf] Okay, I’m going to give it a try, give it a whirl.
Here we go!
♪♪ [Kohlsdorf] Oh, well imagine that!
Road Trip Iowa.
Danielle, I love this.
It’s beautiful!
Thanks so much for teaching us a little bit about printmaking and showing us around your store, a great stop on the Lincoln Highway.
[Danielle Chargo] Absolutely, thank you so much for coming.
♪♪ [Kohlsdorf] Iron Leaf Press is open Wednesday through Saturday in uptown Mount Vernon.
Sports
Jordan Anthony named The Bowerman winner for 2025
GRAPEVINE, Texas – An extraordinary season produced by Arkansas sprinter Jordan Anthony was deemed worthy of The Bowerman, collegiate track & field’s highest individual honor, as announced by USTFCCCA on Thursday evening at the Gaylord Texan Resort.
Anthony becomes the third Razorback to achieve the prestigious honor as he joins Jarrion Lawson (2016) and Jaydon Hibbert (2023) as previous Arkansas winners of The Bowerman. Three other men’s programs – Florida, Florida State, and Oregon – have had a pair of winners each since the award was first presented in 2009.
The Bowerman 2025 men’s finalist included Auburn’s Ja’Kobe Tharp and Baylor’s Nathaniel Ezekiel, who would have been the first recipient of the honor for their respective schools.
In becoming the first sprinter to claim NCAA titles in the 60m indoors and 100m outdoors during the same season since 2017, Anthony generated UA records in both events. His remarkable campaign included a pair of national sprint titles and three SEC titles while claiming high point honors at both SEC Outdoor and NCAA Outdoor Championship meets.
Anthony ran 6.47 in the NCAA Indoor 60m prelims before winning the final in 6.49. The 6.47 performance was just off the collegiate record of 6.45 shared by three sprinters.
Outdoors, Anthony improved the UA record in the 100m to 9.95 as he swept the 100m and 200m at the SEC Outdoor Championships, producing a 19.93 in the 200m as the second fastest time in Arkansas history behind a 19.89 by Wallace Spearmon Jr.
Anchoring the Razorbacks to a SEC third-place finish in the 4 x 100m relay, Anthony totaled 21.5 points and earned the Commissioner’s Trophy as the men’s high point scorer in the conference meet.
Anthony was named SEC Outdoor Runner of the Year via voting by league coaches and became the first Razorback to earn the honor since 2012. An additional honor for Anthony during the 2025 season included South Central Indoor Track Athlete of the Year.
Under all-conditions, Anthony blazed to an equal second fastest time ever by a collegian in the 100m with a 9.75w (2.1 wind) during the NCAA West First Round. That time equaled the world-leading mark for the 2025 season under all-conditions.
Multiple Winners | Men’s Programs
| 3 | Arkansas | Jarrion Lawson (2016), Jaydon Hibbert (2023), Jordan Anthony (2025) |
| 2 | Oregon | Galen Rupp (2009), Ashton Eaton (2010) |
| 2 | Florida | Marquis Dendy (2015), Grant Holloway (2019) |
| 2 | Florida State | Ngoni Makusha (2011), Trey Cunningham (2022) |
Sports
Conway Selected for Philly-SIDA Academic All-Area Men’s Cross Country Team
GLASSBORO, NJ — For the fifth year in a row, Rowan was represented by Matthew Conway on the Philly-SIDA Academic All-Area Men’s Cross Country Team.
The Philly-SIDA Academic All-Area teams are nominated for, and voted on, by the sports information directors at 30 institutions in the Philadelphia region. Student-athletes must be in at least their second year at their current institution and hold a cumulative grade point average (GPA) of 3.30 or higher to be considered for nomination.
Conway, a chemical engineering major, capped his final cross country season with a second-straight appearance in the NCAA Division III Championship, where he placed 94th in this year’s nationals. He was a seventh-place finisher at the NCAA Metro Regional to help the Profs place fifth overall. A first-team All-NJAC selection after runner-up finish at the conference championships where Rowan was second.
Conway was joined on the team with Owen Bluman, Micah Lachman, and Torin Pelton-Flavin from Haverford, Sebastian DeSimone from Gwynedd Mercy, Jacob Dinerman from Rutgers-Camden, Bryan Hernandez from Williamson College of the Trades, Cohen Manges from Swarthmore, and Ryle Mellinger of Eastern. Dinerman was voted the performer of the year.
Sports
Alabama track star becomes first in school history to win Bowerman Award
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (WAFF) – University of Alabama track and field athlete Doris Lemngole won the Bowerman Award, becoming the first UA student to receive collegiate track and field’s highest individual honor.
The 23-year-old claimed the prestigious award Thursday night after being named a semifinalist last year.

Lemngole is a four-time national champion and five-time SEC champion.
The Bowerman Award recognizes the top collegiate track and field athlete in the country.
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Sports
Texas A&M volleyball takes out another titan, sweeping No. 1 Pitt to reach national championship
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Texas A&M volleyball program had never appeared on a stage like the one it graced Thursday night at T-Mobile Arena, playing for a spot in the national championship match.
Pitt, meanwhile, had been here in a semifinal four times in the past four seasons.
So much for the importance of big-match experience.
The upstart Aggies rolled past the battle-tested Panthers, 29-27, 25-21, 25-20. Four days after Texas A&M upset No. 1-ranked Nebraska on its home court, coach Jamie Morrison’s team took its game up a notch.
It will face Kentucky on Sunday in an all-SEC final. The Wildcats (30-2) outlasted Wisconsin in five sets, winning the fifth 15-13 in the second semifinal.
A&M (28-4) earned a No. 3 regional seed in the 64-team tournament and needed five sets against Louisville in the regional semifinal — and five more to dispatch the previously unbeaten Huskers.
On Thursday, the Aggies swept the Panthers, one of four top seeds in regional play, behind the relentless attack of Ifenna Cos-Okpalla in the middle, Kyndal Stowers on the left pin and Logan Lednicky on the right.
“Literally, why not us?” Lednicky said. “We are considered the underdog in a lot of these moments, just because we haven’t been here before. But we know we have all the right pieces.”
Cos-Okpalla slammed the final kill against the Panthers on Thursday to secure a fifth loss in the national semifinal round since 2021 for Pitt (30-5). Cos-Okpalla, a first-team All-American, finished with eight terminations on a lethal .538 hitting efficiency.
Lednicky recorded 14 kills. Stowers had 16, including nine on .750 hitting in the marathon first set.
Stowers notched two kills among the clinching 3-0 run for the Aggies after Pitt took a 27-26 lead on a kill by Olivia Babcock, the reigning AVCA player of the year, in that tone-setting first set.
So, how was Stowers feeling?
“Every time someone asks me, genuinely, I have no idea,” the sophomore transfer from Baylor said. “I have no idea. Pure gratitude. This is crazy. This is an absolutely crazy experience. We have had faith in ourselves all year. From the first game of the season, we knew we were capable of this.
“Now living it, it’s like, ‘Wow, this is insane.’ It’s really cool.”
The Aggies split two matches this season against Texas, a No. 1 regional seed. Another top seed, Kentucky, beat Texas A&M in their only matchup. Morrison has encouraged the Aggies simply to be themselves on the big stage.
They’ve had practice.
“The more we’re in it,” he said, “the more we get comfortable (and) the more we’re used to being ourselves.”
It works.
“Just be us,” Cos-Okpalla said. “Not only just us as a team, us as individuals.”
Morrison, 45, took over the Aggies in 2023 after he spent much of his coaching career as an assistant with the U.S. men’s and women’s national teams.
He directed A&M to the NCAA Tournament in his first year, then to the Sweet 16 last season.
It’s in position to win a national championship, Morrison said, because his players bought into what he teaches.
They didn’t pick A&M for the promise of name, image and likeness riches. In addition to Cos-Okpalla, Stowers and Lednicky received second-team All-America recognition this week. Setter Maddie Waak was a third-team selection.
“These girls came here for nothing,” said Morrison, named Wednesday as the AVCA coach of the year. “Really, they came here because they love the school, they love the institution. They wanted to be developed.”
Before this fifth semifinal loss in five years, Pitt lost twice in this round against ACC rival Louisville and twice against Nebraska.
The Panthers mounted an 8-0 run in the second set to take a 15-11 lead before A&M responded with a 9-2 run. In the third set, the Aggies scored the final 4 points after the last of Babcock’s match-high 22 kills brought Pitt to within 1 point.
Sports
Iowa State Honors Fall Graduates
AMES, Iowa – The Iowa State athletics department recognized 29 student-athletes who have earned their degrees from the school.
Also recognized were 25 spring graduates from the softball and track and field programs, who because of their athletic schedules will likely be unable to attend next semester’s event.
The group was recognized at the fall graduation ceremony Friday afternoon at the Sukup End Zone Club.
Congratulations to the 2025 Cyclone student-athlete fall graduates.
2025 Fall Graduates
Reagan Bartholomew, Softball
Rocco Becht, Football
Kai Black, Football
Cannon Butler, Football
Drew Clausen, Football
Kiersten Fisher, Track and Field
Jace T. Gilbert, Football
Kailynn Gubbels, Track and Field
Eli Green, Football
Deylin Hasert, Football
Caleb Helgeson, Wrestling
Amiree Hendricks-Walker, Volleyball
Jenna James, Track and Field
Rachel Joseph, Track and Field
Lauren Kimball, Swimming and Diving
Kaia Holtkamp, Track and Field/Cross Country
Paula Krzeslak, Volleyball
Zachary Lovett, Football
Tyler Maro, Football
Tamatoa McDonough, Football
Will McLaughlin, Football
Tyler Moore, Football=
James Neal, Football
Domonique Orange, Football
Ana Irene Palacios, Gymnastics
Tyler Perkins, Football
Kaylee Tobaben, Track and Field/Cross Country
Xavier Townsend, Football
Sydney Willits, Track and Field
2026 Spring and Summer Graduates
McKenna Andrews, Softball
Hannah Baier, Track and Field
Riley Beach, Track and Field/Cross Country
Jadan Brumbaugh, Track and Field
Kinsey Christianson, Track and Field
Ava Cinnamo, Track and Field
Makayla Clark, Track and Field
Emanuel Galdino, Track and Field/Cross Country
Bella Heikes, Track and Field/Cross Country
Tatum Johnson, Softball
Ashlyn Keeney, Track and Field/Cross Country
Sydney Malott, Softball
Sanele Masondo, Track and Field/Cross Country
Ashley Minor, Softball
Paige Nakashima, Softball
Brooke Naughton, Track and Field
Quinton Orr, Track and Field/Cross Country
Tiana Poole, Softball
Maelle Porcher, Track and Field/Cross Country
Jaiden Ralston, Softball
Daniel Romary, Track and Field
Rodgers Rotich, Track and Field/Cross Country
Riley Simpson, Track and Field/Cross Country
Mya Trober, Track and Field/Cross Country
Ryan Watts, Track and Field/Cross Country
Sports
Dan Fisher: Defense not good enough in NCAA volleyball loss
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Pittsburgh volleyball coach Dan Fisher said he’s to blame after the Panthers lost in the NCAA tournament semifinals for a record fifth straight season Thursday night.
Top-seeded Pitt was swept by No. 3 Texas A&M 29-27, 25-21, 25-20 and failed to advance to the program’s first national championship game.
The Aggies finished the three sets with a .382 hitting percentage and 52 kills; the Panthers hit .344 with 45 kills.
In Sunday’s championship match, Texas A&M will face Kentucky, a five-set winner over Wisconsin in the other semifinal.
“I guess the main story from a coaching standpoint is, we hit for a high-enough percentage, that’s for sure,” said Fisher, the 13th-year Panthers coach. “If you would have told me we would hit .350, I would have been pretty pleased with that.
“We were nowhere near as good as we needed to be defensively. … I thought we were ready. It’s on me and on us as coaches. We just weren’t good enough defensively.”
Pitt was eliminated in the national semifinals by Nebraska in 2021 and 2023, and by Louisville in 2022 and 2024.
“I’m proud of being consistently good and consistently in the hunt. But I’m pretty pissed off about it right now,” Fisher said.
On Thursday, Pitt junior and 2024 American Volleyball Coaches Association National Player of the Year Olivia Babcock had a game-high 22 kills. The 6-foot-4 right-side hitter, who is a finalist for the prestigious award again, fought back tears after the loss.
“Obviously, losing sucks, but I don’t think there’s anything shameful or bad about losing in a final four,” Babcock said. “I mean only four teams got to play today. We were grateful enough to be one of them. Losing is always hard.”
She echoed Fisher’s comments on the defensive play.
“Offensively, we were great the entire night,” she said. “Normally, we’re better at getting block touches and we are making more digs. Today, I feel that we just weren’t up to our standard.”
Pitt beat Purdue in the regional finals to become the first team since Texas (2012-16) to make five straight final four appearances. The Longhorns won the national championship in 2012 and were the runners-up in 2015 and 2016.
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