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NCAA track and field Jacksonville 2025: Day one report

College World Series; Women’s College World Series; NFL OTAs | 2MD College baseball’s 64-team tournament is set to begin; the Women’s College World Series is down to 8 teams; Dolphins, Jaguars, Bucs OTAs. (This story has been updated to add new information.) The schedule said Jacques Guillaume was supposed to make his Jacksonville return for […]

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(This story has been updated to add new information.)

The schedule said Jacques Guillaume was supposed to make his Jacksonville return for the NCAA Track and Field East First Round preliminaries around 8 p.m. May 28.

The storm clouds replied: Not so fast.

By the time the last times and marks of the day’s track and field action lit up the scoresheet, with former Mandarin High School standout Guillaume now officially a second-round qualifier, Northeast Florida’s longest track day of 2025 had spilled over into May 29.

Hours of lightning left the nation’s top college track and field athletes burning the midnight oil, and beyond, for the first day of the NCAA championships at the University of North Florida’s Hodges Stadium.

Strong thunderstorms halted competition at 5:18 p.m., after the third flight in the men’s javelin and the second flight in the long jump, delaying the action for 4 hours and 42 minutes and bumping several events into the early hours of the morning.

But when the starting gun finally fired past midnight, Mandarin graduate Guillaume was ready. The Navy senior placed fourth in his heat of the 400-meter hurdles in 50.94 to earn one of the at-large berths for the May 30 second round.

Guillaume previously set school records at Mandarin in 2019, competing in both track and cross country with the Mustangs.

Another athlete not fazed by the delay was Georgia’s Moustafa Alsherif, who had begun his warm-up throws around 5 p.m. and then had to place his plans on hold through the evening. The senior finally returned from the long stoppage for a late-night throw of 246 feet, 1 inch to lead the 12 javelin qualifiers for the June 11-14 national championships in Eugene, Ore.

However, host UNF’s two runners both missed out. Aidan O’Gorman finished 24th in 29:43.79 in the 10,000 after entering with the fourth seed, and Robert Pedroza came in 42nd (1:50.53) in the 800.

Former Mandarin runner Gavin Nelson, a Florida sophomore, also exited after a 36th-place 1:49.57 in the 800, while Providence graduate Jocelyn Pringle, now at East Carolina, came in 23rd at 193 feet, 1 inch in the women’s hammer throw on May 29.

Most event favorites progressed comfortably, although not without some surprises.

In the long jump, Albany’s Louis Gordon topped the standings from the third flight with a career-best 25 feet, 8 1/4 inches, while fifth seed Xavier Branker of N.C. State was an early elimination from the 400 hurdles.



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Amid mounting challenges to higher education, incoming F&M leader calls liberal arts colleges ‘essential’ | Local News

Franklin & Marshall College’s incoming president believes liberal arts colleges will weather the many challenges facing higher education and continue their mission of developing well-rounded students. “We’re in a moment in which the future of higher education has never been more important,” said Andrew Rich, whose appointment as the school’s new president was announced earlier […]

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Franklin & Marshall College’s incoming president believes liberal arts colleges will weather the many challenges facing higher education and continue their mission of developing well-rounded students.

“We’re in a moment in which the future of higher education has never been more important,” said Andrew Rich, whose appointment as the school’s new president was announced earlier this year.

“The liberal arts are right at the center of this and how we help prepare young people to be critical thinkers, good communicators, have the ability, resilience, the leadership skills to navigate our world,” he said. “It’s never seemed more important, and I feel like F&M does it well.”

Rich will take the helm officially as F&M’s 17th president on July 7, following the retirement of Barbara Altmann, who has led the college for seven years.

In June, Rich stepped down from his prior role as the Richard J. Henry and Susan L. Davis Dean of the Colin Powell School at the City College of New York. During his six-year tenure there, the student population grew by 40% to 4,000 students.

His ability to grow enrollment at his last job will be tested at F&M, where enrollment dropped from 2,426 in fall 2017 to 1,867 in fall 2024.


FROM APRIL: Franklin & Marshall College lays off 16 staff members








Andrew Rich F&M president

New Franklin & Marshall College President Andrew Rich poses inside Old Main on the F&M campus on Thursday, June 12, 2025.




Enrollment at many colleges and universities across the country is expected to decline even further beginning in fall 2025, as a yearslong decline in birth rates begins to affect the size of the college-aged population.

One way to boost enrollment embraced by many schools has been to recruit larger numbers of international students. Today, roughly 17% of F&M’s student population is international and contributed $19.5 million to Lancaster County’s economy, according to data available through the association of international educators.

But the Trump administration’s hard stance on immigration and recent moves to restrict or screen education visa applicants has created uncertainty surrounding this large pool of potential students.

In a conversation with LNP | LancasterOnline, Rich spoke about these challenges and his hopes for F&M’s future under his leadership.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity:

Why did you throw your hat in the ring to become president of F&M?

If you go all the way back, I grew up in Newark, Delaware, which is only a little more than an hour from here. So, when I was a kid, we used to come to Lancaster, and I’ve been to Dutch Wonderland and I had a real fondness for Lancaster as a kid.

And, when I was looking at colleges, we looked at F&M … my parents actually thought a liberal arts college was a good fit for me, so F&M was the first place we looked at. I’ve always known of F&M, always admired it and really always thought it was an exceptional place.

I ended up going to the University of Richmond, which had all of the elements of a liberal arts experience.

I got intensive mentorship from faculty there. One of my professors – I was a political science major – took me under his wing, and we wrote a paper together that we published, and he let us take it to one of the major political science conferences. I also got to work on campaigns in Delaware, getting in politics and I got academic credit for it. So I felt like I got all this amazing experience thanks to going to a liberal arts college.

My first teaching job after I finished at Yale was at Wake Forest University, which is also a liberal arts college and in many respects over the last 22 years, on and off, what I’ve done at City College was try to bring the very best of the liberal arts to a different kind of institution.

How do you expect public service to influence or be part of your role here as president to F&M?

[Andrew Rich was awarded the Daily Point of Light Award in 2024. Recipients of the award are recognized for making a significant impact in their communities through volunteer service.]

Higher education is public service. Part of what you’re doing in education, and particularly in higher education, is shaping the next generation of folks who are going to make a difference in our world.

And one of the things that is striking to me about F&M that I really love is the history, (founded by) Benjamin Franklin and John Marshall, where it’s always had public service and civic engagements as an essential part of the project.

To me, what we do in the liberal arts, and particularly what I hope and believe we do here, is train folks for the careers of the future and train them for citizenship and how to be engaged in whatever it is they know needs to happen in the communities where they live. So that mission is the mission I feel like I’ve been serving in different ways all the way through my career.


READ: Lancaster County colleges, universities brace for looming dropoff in prospective students


What are your thoughts on the climate facing higher education today?

Some important questions are getting asked on all different sides of the political spectrum about what we do at colleges and universities, and I think it’s creating a moment in which all of us who are involved in this project are thinking hard about why what we do matters.

For me, it’s felt like it’s never more important to be involved in this work and to do it as a leader. … If you want to understand why this country has been so successful over the last two centuries, one place you have to look at is our higher education institutions. Colleges and universities have been the engine of innovation, they’ve been the engine of economic progress. They’ve been the engine of new knowledge.

And they are the ways that young people from all different backgrounds can equip themselves to do well for themselves, for their families, for their communities and for our society. (We’re in a) complicated political moment, but one that’s very exciting, it seems to me, for what higher education has to offer. …

I’m attracted to F&M because from what I can see it’s an institution that is thriving on many, many fronts and has all the kind of DNA of what we want higher education institutions to be doing in this country.

What is your view on the role of diversity, equity inclusion practices in higher education?

My general point of view is that higher education should be for all people. … You want everybody to have the opportunity to take advantage of what it is colleges and universities have to offer in our society. And you also want colleges and universities to be a place where all lived experiences can be represented and where all points of view can be represented.

One of the things that I think is exciting about colleges and important about colleges is that you can bring people from different lived experiences, different backgrounds, different belief systems together and they don’t have to persuade each other. They probably won’t. But they can have civil discussion and constructive dialogue about the things they disagree on in ways that can make it possible for our democracy to succeed. That’s kind of exciting. It works best when everybody gets to be a part of it.

How do you plan to support F&M’s international students or what is your message to these students in the current political climate?

My message is we love them. I mean, honestly, they are welcome here. They are embraced. They are an integral part of the fabric of Franklin & Marshall and of this community, and Lancaster itself is a community that is global in its reach, a place where refugees are welcome, where people from all different backgrounds, nationalities can come.

F&M is a stronger institution because it’s a global institution, and I know the college is doing everything in its power to serve and support our international students and we’re going to do everything we can to make sure they have every system of support that they need to be successful.

What does that look like?

Certainly it is making sure we’re in direct touch with every single one of them in one-on-one conversations to see what their status is in terms of getting their visas approved. If you have a visa, you’re set. If you don’t, you may still be able to find a path to getting one. We’re working with them.

We’re certainly monitoring what comes out of Washington closely and making some contingency plans that if there are students who can’t get to campus, that we’ll make sure that they continue their education at F&M in some kind of remote fashion until we can get them here.

What are your goals and strategies in terms of growing enrollment at F&M?

We would love to have more students, and I think there’s a pathway to doing it. The value proposition of F&M is extremely compelling, and once I get here, it’ll be one of my top priorities to figure out who and how: Who’s going to be part of the project and how we’re going to work together to make it happen quickly.

Why should students choose a liberal arts college today?

Liberal arts colleges are essential. They have been for a long time. They’re even more essential right now because when you think about what’s at the heart of what we have to offer, the ways we have prepare students to be critical thinkers, capable communicators, folks who are able to kind of navigate across disciplines and across ways of thinking – that’s what we need in our society right now.

(Members of) this generation need to have resilience, they need to have leadership skills, they need to have the kind of ways of thinking to be able to navigate that and that’s exactly what a liberal arts education does.

And, in a moment in which there’s also questions about how we can serve and support our democracy, a liberal arts college has so much to offer about how you can look at history, philosophy, how you can look cross-nationally and how you can really prepare yourself intellectually and … succeed as a citizen. That’s an important part of what liberal arts has to offer.

Once you get started, what are the first things you want to do here?

The thing I want to do most is get to know everybody. It’s a tremendous community. I already feel very fortunate how kind folks have been to begin to help me understand the different areas of work.

Right out of the gate, I’m excited to get to know our faculty, our staff. I’m very excited to get to know the leaders and the people in Lancaster and how we are working as a community partner in ways that we can be even more helpful to that project.


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Lancaster Catholic, Elizabethtown College graduate excels on track, in classroom while bettering community


'Disposable lifestyle': F&M encourages students to donate not throw away usable items during move out



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Softball Adds First Team All-ACC Lagi Quiroga

Softball Adds First Team All-ACC Lagi Quiroga Another day, another all-conference performer is joining the National Runners Up as Texas Tech softball signs Lagi Quiroga from Cal. This marks the seventh transfer commitment this offseason for Texas Tech with all seven players coming inside the top 35 of Softball Americas, On3’s portal rankings as Quiroga […]

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Softball Adds First Team All-ACC Lagi Quiroga

Another day, another all-conference performer is joining the National Runners Up as Texas Tech softball signs Lagi Quiroga from Cal. This marks the seventh transfer commitment this offseason for Texas Tech with all seven players coming inside the top 35 of Softball Americas, On3’s portal rankings as Quiroga slots in at No. 25 overall.

Quirogo tied for the Pac-12 lead in home runs as a freshman in 2024 to earn Softball America Freshman All-American honors and then added a more consistent bat at the plate in her sophomore year to be named to the All-ACC First Team. She finished this past season with a .346 batting average to go along with 13 doubles, 12 home runs and 44 RBI.

Her versatility is upper tier, evidence by the fact she played catcher for Cal but also led off at the plate – a combo you don’t often see. She led the team in runs scored (47) and hits (62) while finishing second on the team in total bases, RBI, doubles, home runs, walks and slugging percentage.

A true ATHLETE, the Los Angeles Native was once the No. 54 overall player in the Class of 2023 when she chose Cal over the likes of Texas, Oregon and Mississippi State. She was also a multi-sport athlete growing up, starring in volleyball, water polo as well as tackle football and rugby. Did we mention she is an ATHLETE?!

Quiroga is seen by this coaching staff as a player that has the ability to play any position on the field but pitch (let her cook though), but primarily she will look to work into the lineup as an outfielder and catcher.

Watch her games and you will quickly see a player that isn’t afraid of the big moment or the smoke. Watch her yaaaaboooom one out of the park, and kiss it goodbye as she crosses second base to wave the home run goodbye. She has that about her and more, a competitive fiery nature that will fit right in with a squad ready to compete for a national title in 2026.

Welcome to Lubbock Lagi, Let’s Wreck ‘Em.

Join the conversation with other Red Raiders on the Inside The Double T forum.

Subscribe today to get the most in-depth Texas Tech sports and recruiting coverage.

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Ephrata rising senior shines in discus at New Balance Outdoor Track & Field Nationals | High School Track and Field

Ephrata’s Sophia Rivera was on top of the PIAA world. She’s not too far off the national throne, either. At Friday’s New Balance Nationals Outdoor at Franklin Field in Philadelphia, Rivera placed sixth in the girls discus. The rising senior threw 155 feet, 9 inches to reach the podium and later finished 16th in the […]

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Ephrata’s Sophia Rivera was on top of the PIAA world. She’s not too far off the national throne, either.

At Friday’s New Balance Nationals Outdoor at Franklin Field in Philadelphia, Rivera placed sixth in the girls discus. The rising senior threw 155 feet, 9 inches to reach the podium and later finished 16th in the shot put at 41-7.25.

Recent Lancaster Catholic grad Margaret Bila joined the Mountaineers standout with discus honors, unleashing an eighth-place throw of 149-11. Rivera, who won the PIAA Class 3A discus and shot put titles after sweeping the Lancaster-Lebanon League and District Three contingents, measured 155-9 on her second attempt and faulted on her first, fourth and sixth throws.

Bila, the District Three and state Class 2A discus champion, touched 149-11 after 129-4 and 139-6 marks. She missed on her fifth attempt and concluded with a 138-7 heave.

The Manheim Township boys 3,200-meter relay unit of Ethan Peffley, Andrew Kemper, Adam Kingston and Cole Stevens cruised to 10th place in 7:43.84. Peffley, Kingston and Stevens contributed to the Blue Streaks’ fourth-place laurels in the 6,400 relay on Thursday.

Warwick’s Isabella George was the other local top 20 finisher, snaring 17th in the freshman girls discus in 111-0.

The events continue through Sunday.


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Penn Manor senior reaches 'full potential' in PIAA pole vault after broken leg threatened her season


Ephrata junior runs the table, masters PIAA Class 3A girls discus to cap historical postseason



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Jude Dukes signs with King University | Sports

Cookeville High School graduate Jude Dukes finalized the future of both his athletic and academic careers back on May 23 as he signed a national letter of intent to compete in track and field events for King University amongst his friends, family and coaches at CHS. “This is really exciting, and I feel great about […]

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Cookeville High School graduate Jude Dukes finalized the future of both his athletic and academic careers back on May 23 as he signed a national letter of intent to compete in track and field events for King University amongst his friends, family and coaches at CHS.

“This is really exciting, and I feel great about going to the next chapter in my life,” Dukes said. “The reasons I decided to go with King University are that it’s in state and close to home, I’m a big family guy and I’ll be close to friends in Knoxville. I also love the coaches, the facilities and the school overall. I’m an exercise science major, and they have a really nice program with a great building. They just built a new track, and this will be their first season running meets on it. I went on a visit, and they were super welcoming. It seemed like they really wanted me, and I’m not just another recruit to them.



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2025 All-SHAC Track and Field Teams

The Southern Hills Athletic Conference honored the 2025 boys and girls All-SHAC Track and Field teams during their spring sports banquet.  Pictured are the All-SHAC girls track and field team: (front, l-r) Eden Bosko, North Adams; Bella Gray, North Adams; Caroline Hansel, Fayetteville; Stella Rhonemus, West Union; Christina Murphy, Fayetteville; Madison Dunn, Manchester; and (back, l-r) […]

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The Southern Hills Athletic Conference honored the 2025 boys and girls All-SHAC Track and Field teams during their spring sports banquet. 

Pictured are the All-SHAC girls track and field team: (front, l-r) Eden Bosko, North Adams; Bella Gray, North Adams; Caroline Hansel, Fayetteville; Stella Rhonemus, West Union; Christina Murphy, Fayetteville; Madison Dunn, Manchester; and 
(back, l-r) Remi Moon, Fairfield; Landry Teeters, Fairfield; Madalyn Combs, Fairfield; Audrey Barber, Fayetteville; Ella Wolfer, Fayetteville; Jaida Harrison, North Adams; Kinsley Fogle, North Adams; and McKenna Shelton, North Adams. 

Not pictured: Meri Jackson, Fairfield; Sadie Armstrong, West Union; Lydia Armstrong, West Union; Ella Shupert, West Union; Vivian Henninger, Fairfield; and Emma Hurst, Manchester.

Pictured for the All-SHAC boys track and field team: (front, l-r) Caleb Deatley, North Adams; Jakab Thompson, West Union; Nathaniel Cummings, Peebles; Keegan Eyre, Whiteoak; (second row, l-r) Shane Mitchell-Cox, Whiteoak; Landen Eyre, Whiteoak; Bryce Brooks, Eastern; Beau Hesler, North Adams; (third row, l-r) Elijah Gammon, Peebles; Damian McCann, Peebles; Wyatt Stepp, Peebles; Brandon Rayburn, Peebles; and (back, l-r) Coy Fogle, North Adams; Ian Raines, North Adams; and Dalton Pence, North Adams.

Not pictured: Kaleb Eldridge, North Adams; Tre Lamb, Whiteoak; and Cooper Meade, Peebles.

Publisher’s note: A free press is critical to having well-informed voters and citizens. While some news organizations opt for paid websites or costly paywalls, The Highland County Press has maintained a free newspaper and website for the last 26 years for our community. If you would like to contribute to this service, it would be greatly appreciated. Donations may be made to: The Highland County Press, P.O. Box 849, Hillsboro, Ohio 45133. Please include “for website” on the memo line.

 



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U.S. Wins Silver Medal at U-20 World Championships

U.S. Wins Silver Medal at U-20 World Championships The U.S. men’s junior national team earned the silver medal at the U-20 World Championships in Croatia this week. The U.S. fell to Spain, 14-11, in Saturday’s final in Zagreb. It dropped the first two games of the tournament before winning four straight to reach the finale. […]

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U.S. Wins Silver Medal at U-20 World Championships

The U.S. men’s junior national team earned the silver medal at the U-20 World Championships in Croatia this week.

The U.S. fell to Spain, 14-11, in Saturday’s final in Zagreb. It dropped the first two games of the tournament before winning four straight to reach the finale. The second-place finish is the highest in program history at the tournament.

Ryan Ohl scored three goals in Saturday’s final. Charles Mills made 11 saves in goal. The U.S. went down 3-1 after one quarter before a six-goal second period gave it a 7-5 lead at the break.

But Spain scored six goals in the fourth, led by six goals on the game from Albert Sabadell, to break it open. His goal with 2:28 left put Spain up for good at 12-11.

Ben Liechty, Bode Brinkema and captain Ryder Dodd scored twice each for the U.S. Goals by Brinkema, Corbin Stanley and Liechty put the U.S. ahead three times in the fourth quarter. But Biel Gomila, who scored twice, tied the game at 11 with 4:33 left, before Sabadell’s fifth goal put Spain in front for the last time.

The U.S. had opened the tournament with a 19-10 loss to Croatia last Saturday, despite four goals from Dodd, and a 13-12 setback to Hungary in which Dodd and Jonathan Carcarey each registered hat tricks.

But the U.S. rebounded to top Montenegro, 16-10, behind 11 saves from Mills. William Schneider scored four times in that game, with Dodd and Brinkema adding hat tricks. The U.S. got to the quarterfinals via a 23-5 handling of Iran, powered by Stanley’s four goals and 14 saves from Baxter Chelsom.

The U.S. got revenge on Hungary in the quarters, 18-16, thanks to six goals from Dodd. Dodd tied that game at 13 early in the fourth quarter, the start of a 4-0 U.S. run that included Peter Castillo supplying the game-winner before a Dodd penalty shot and an Ohl goal.

The semifinals brought a 19-18 slugfest with Serbia decided in the shootout. The U.S. led by two with two minutes left before Serbia tied it with 55 seconds left. Chesholm stopped Vuk Kojik on Serbia’s fourth attempt. Max Zelikov and Landon Akerstrom converted their chances to help the U.S. go 5-for-5. Mills made 10 saves in regulation, and Dodd was the only multi-goal scorer with seven tallies plus the first in the shootout.



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