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Baseball to Play Two at Ashland on Wednesday

LIVE VIDEOLIVE STATS  ERIE, Pa. – The Gannon baseball team will take a break from the PSAC battles with a mid-week non-conference doubleheader. The Golden Knights face a stern test while traveling to the Buckeye State to play at Ashland on Wednesday, April 9. The twinbill gets underway at 2:00 p.m. The Golden Knights face an […]

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Baseball to Play Two at Ashland on Wednesday

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ERIE, Pa. – The Gannon baseball team will take a break from the PSAC battles with a mid-week non-conference doubleheader. The Golden Knights face a stern test while traveling to the Buckeye State to play at Ashland on Wednesday, April 9. The twinbill gets underway at 2:00 p.m.

The Golden Knights face an Ashland team that has run off six straight wins to improve to 23-8. The Eagles are second in the North Division of the Great Midwest Athletic Conference with a 14-2 record. They are among “others receiving votes” in the latest ABCA NCAA Division II Baseball Top 25.

Gannon improved to 12-16 overall and 5-7 in the PSAC West thanks to a sweep of Slippery Rock last Saturday. The Golden Knights rode a three-run walk-off home run by Ian Soto (Florida, Puerto Rico/Academia Cristiana de Manati) for a 6-3 win in the opener then outscored SRU 10-4 in the nightcap.

In the process head coach DJ Cannon‘s team eclipsed its win total from a year ago after the Golden Knights suffered through an 11-34 finish. Cannon has quickly rebuilt the Golden Knights with several transfers and freshmen replenishing the starting lineup. Meanwhile, after numerous injuries a year ago the pitching staff has settled on a solid four-man rotation.

SLUGGER PARKER TOPS HITTERS
Cannon’s lineup now has five hitters at .300-or-better, led by Wes Parker (Venetia, Pa./Peters Township) at .352. The Toledo transfer ranks among the PSAC leaders in home runs with seven and is tied for the team lead with 22 RBIs. Freshman shortstop Hunter Troiano (Pittsburgh, Pa./Seneca Valley) is next at .337.

Soto comes in at .327 with 3 HRs and 21 RBIs. A year ago the redshirt junior was serving as a relief pitcher, now he is hitting cleanup as the designated hitter.

Sophomores Drew Stangelo (Uniontown, Ohio/North Canton Hoover) and Alex Bemis (Monroe, Ohio/Monroe) are hitting .311 and .304, respectively. Stangelo has served as the team’s main catcher. After starting at shortstop a year ago, Bemis began the year in center field and now mans third base. He has a team-high nine doubles with three home runs and is tied with Parker with 22 RBIs. Bemis also has nine stolen bases, second to Frank Kula’s (Uniontown, Pa./Laurel Highlands) team-leading 13 steals.

UP NEXT
Following Wednesday’s doubleheader at Ashland the Golden Knights will play a four-game series against Pitt-Johnstown. The first doubleheader is set for McConnell Family Stadium on Friday, April 11 with first pitch set for 1:00 p.m. On Saturday the teams meet for a second doubleheader at UPJ.


 

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Shedeur Sanders’ huge net worth and girlfriend claims after actress Storm Reid broke silence

Shedeur Sanders was eventually drafted by the Cleveland Browns and there has been plenty of focus on the young quarterback’s life away from the gridiron, including his earnings and love life 15:30, 08 May 2025Updated 15:31, 08 May 2025 Shedeur Sanders was recently drafted by the Cleveland Browns(Image: Dustin Bradford/Getty Images for ONIT) Shedeur Sanders […]

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Shedeur Sanders was eventually drafted by the Cleveland Browns and there has been plenty of focus on the young quarterback’s life away from the gridiron, including his earnings and love life

Shedeur Sanders
Shedeur Sanders was recently drafted by the Cleveland Browns(Image: Dustin Bradford/Getty Images for ONIT)

Shedeur Sanders celebrated being drafted by the Cleveland Browns and has received plenty of attention about his NFL prospects.

The former Colorado Buffaloes star had been tipped by many to be a first-round pick, but he was selected by the Browns in the fifth round at No. 144 overall. And he now faces a battle for his spot on the Cleveland roster as the franchise also drafted Dillon Gabriel in the third round and has more experienced signal-callers Joe Flacco and Kenny Pickett too.

It means that Sanders, son of NFL icon Deion, will have to prove his worth in the Browns’ upcoming preseason games. However, the 23-year-old is already accustomed to the spotlight, and here’s a closer look at his life away from the gridiron.

What is Shedeur Sanders’ net worth?

Celebrity Net Worth lists Sanders’ wealth at $4 million. While Sanders is yet to sign his first professional contract with the Browns, the young quarterback is still reported to be worth seven figures through his Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) deals .

It has been claimed by On3 Sports that Sanders’ endorsements total $6.5M. His portfolio includes deals with Beats by Dre, Google, Mercedes-Benz, and Tom Brady’s BRADY brand. Sanders was also the first college football star to sign an NIL contract with Nike.

On3 Sports lists Sanders as the second-highest-earning NIL athlete, and he remarkably stands to earn less from his potential NFL contract after being selected in the fifth round. Salary projections suggest that as the No. 144 overall draft pick, Sanders will earn around $4.6M over four years.

Shedeur Sanders
Former Colorado Buffaloes quarterback Sanders was named Big 12 Offensive Player of the Year(Image: David Buono/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Has Shedeur Sanders got a girlfriend?

Sanders is not known to be in a relationship, but has been romantically linked with several people in recent years. In early 2023, it was suggested that he was dating actress Storm Reid after accompanying her on the red carpet for the premiere of Reid’s film, Missing.

When asked about Sanders, Reid told Entertainment Tonight: “He’s super sweet, super talented. I’m just glad to have him here supporting me.” The actress attended games during Sanders’ time with the Jackson State Tigers, but it was rumored that their relationship ended at some point in 2023.

The following year, his social media interactions with influencer Jasmine Rae led to fan theories that the pair were dating. The creative director of activewear brand Lova Active boasts more than 800k Instagram followers.

Shedeur Sanders
Sanders has earned huge sums through his NIL deals(Image: Justin Casterline/Getty Images)

Sanders held a party to celebrate being drafted by the Browns at Hyde & Seek in Dallas. During the festivities, he was seen sitting next to Jamaican singer Shenseea, who is five years older than the quarterback.

Although there was no suggestion that the two are romantically involved, fans began to speculate about a possible relationship, and Shenseea was not the only party guest to be linked to Sanders.

Rapper Yung Miami also attended and performed at the event, posing in pictures with Sanders at the party. However, the rapper shut down rumors they were dating in a social media post.

When the topic of relationships was brought up on Sanders’ 2Legendary podcast, he gave a coy response. After being asked if he had a special woman in his life, Sanders replied: “Yes, I have my mom.”



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No regrets, only memories – Massachusetts Daily Collegian

I wasn’t supposed to be at the University of Massachusetts Amherst for all four years. I was going to transfer to Boston University after a year. I came into UMass thinking I would do just one year before taking my guaranteed transfer offer with BU. This all changed for me when I stepped into the […]

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I wasn’t supposed to be at the University of Massachusetts Amherst for all four years. I was going to transfer to Boston University after a year.

I came into UMass thinking I would do just one year before taking my guaranteed transfer offer with BU. This all changed for me when I stepped into the Massachusetts Daily Collegian office in the Student Union.

My one dream going into college was to cover college hockey, which I thought was impossible as a freshman going to a school that was coming off of a National Championship.

After going up to the then-Sports Editor Lulu Kesin and volunteering to be on the field hockey beat and having a lengthy conversation with Colin McCarthy about college hockey, the dream didn’t seem so impossible.

At the first field hockey game I covered, Lulu offered me a spot on the hockey beat alongside Colin and Sophie Weller. While she gave me a few days to think about it, I knew right then and there that I was going to take it.

Over that season I would have new experiences, interviewing top college players and head coaches. I also found new mentors in Colin and Sophie who I still credit for my love and passion for journalism.

One of the people I credit the most for how I conduct myself in press conferences is head coach Greg Carvel. He’s one of the only head coaches I know that has made it a point to challenge student media to be better and push us to ask the best questions.

Hockey Sports Information Director Jillian Jakuba has also been such a large part of my time with the Daily Collegian. Always willing to give the hockey beat media when we need it and supporting us, she’s one of the people I will miss the most.

While covering events like the Hockey East Championship, the NCAA Tournament and going to places like Belfast, Northern Ireland will be some of my fondest memories, the relationships I built will be some of the biggest things I’ll take away from the Daily Collegian.

Walking into the press box and seeing Colin, Sophie, Sydney Ciano, Matt Skillings, Scottie Marro, Caroline Burge, Devin Lippman and Mike Maynard every week was always fun. Win or lose, I knew that after the game, there would not be a dull moment.

Sitting with them shaped my writing and made me a better journalist in my four years. I know that no matter where I go in the world, I have lifelong friends in all of them.

Sitting in the cold Earl Lorden Field stands with Mike and Owen Shelffo or sitting in the heat at Gladchuk Field Complex with Lucy Postera will also be some of my fondest memories.

A majority of my time at UMass was spent in the Daily Collegian office behind the Student Union stairs. Through that, I built friendships with people from other sections and built stronger relationships with the people in the sports section.

Johnny Depin is someone I know I’ll always be friends with, with our friendship dating back to freshman year. Our handshake and trips to the dining hall won’t be forgotten.

I don’t know where my sports career will take me, but no matter what, the Daily Collegian will always be a part of me.

Four years, over 160 stories, six features, four NCAA Tournaments and 18 hockey rinks later (19 if you count Fenway Park), I’m prepared for a career in sports.

While there have been times where I think about what would have happened if I did leave UMass, I know I made the right choice. As my favorite Formula 1 driver Daniel Ricciardo once said, “No regrets. Only memories.”

Kayla Gregoire was an Assistant Sports Editor. She can be reached at [email protected].



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Penn State President receiving medical care | Penn State, State College News

Penn State President Neeli Bendapudi is receiving medical care for acute pancreatitis, according to a university spokesperson. The spokesperson didn’t say how long Bendapudi has been or will be receiving care. She will be participating remotely in the Board of Trustees meetings Thursday and Friday, and will not be attending any commencement ceremonies this weekend […]

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Penn State President Neeli Bendapudi is receiving medical care for acute pancreatitis, according to a university spokesperson.

The spokesperson didn’t say how long Bendapudi has been or will be receiving care.

She will be participating remotely in the Board of Trustees meetings Thursday and Friday, and will not be attending any commencement ceremonies this weekend to focus on her recovery. 

Acute pancreatitis is a condition where the pancreas becomes inflamed in a short period of time. Treatment usually involves admission to a hospital with most people recovering in about a week, according to the National Health Service.

“While she is recovering, her spirits are high and she is grateful for the support of the Penn State community,” DuBois said.

MORE CAMPUS COVERAGE


Campus resources for incoming freshmen, students in need

The beginning of college can be both exciting and overwhelming for some. To help the transit…

 

If you’re interested in submitting a Letter to the Editor, click here.



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University of Arkansas: Spring 2025 graduation schedule

The University of Arkansas in Fayetteville is holding its spring commencement ceremonies this Friday and Saturday.Guest Information:Ceremony doors open 60 minutes before each ceremony. The university encourages guests to be seated 15 minutes prior to the start of the ceremony.Live streaming of all ceremonies will be available on the UofA YouTube channel.Friday, May 9Fulbright College […]

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The University of Arkansas in Fayetteville is holding its spring commencement ceremonies this Friday and Saturday.Guest Information:Ceremony doors open 60 minutes before each ceremony. The university encourages guests to be seated 15 minutes prior to the start of the ceremony.Live streaming of all ceremonies will be available on the UofA YouTube channel.Friday, May 9Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences starts at 3 p.m. inside Bud Walton Arena.Speaker: Nya Kidd, senior pursuing a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Graphic DesignBumpers College of Agricultural, Food & Life Sciences starts at 3:30 p.m. inside Barnhill Arena.Speaker: Sally Abigail Hamm, honors student in the School of Human Development and Family Sciences in Bumpers CollegeSaturday, May 10University Commencement for graduate students starts at 8:30 a.m. inside Bud Walton Arena.Speaker: Coleman Warren, UofA alumnus, Rhodes Scholar, and Public Policy Coordinator with Communities UnlimitedHonorary Degree: Richard “Rick” Massey, Director of Dun & Bradstreet Holdings, Inc., and Alight, Inc.College of Engineering starts at noon inside Barnhill Arena.Speaker: John English, former U of A Vice Chancellor for Research and Innovation, Dean of the College of Engineering and Head of the Department of Industrial EngineeringCollege of Education and Health Professions starts at 12:30 p.m. inside Bud Walton Arena.Speaker: Valorie Kondos Field, former Head Coach of the seven-time NCAA champion UCLA Bruins gymnastics programFay Jones School of Architecture and Design starts at 3 p.m. inside Barnhill Arena.Speaker: David Fitts, U of A alumnus and former NASA Chief of the Habitability and Human Factors Branch of the Johnson Space Center in Houston.Sam M. Walton College of Business has two ceremonies. First ceremony starts at 3:30 p.m. inside Bud Walton Arena.Speaker: Brad Eichler, Chief Operating Officer of Stephens Inc.Second ceremony starts at 6:30 p.m. inside Bud Walton Arena. Speaker: Shelley Simpson, President of the Chief Executive Office of J.B. Hunt Transport Services Inc. School of Law starts at 5:30 p.m. inside Barnhill Arena. Speaker: Carol Dalby, Representative in the Arkansas House of Representatives, a member of the Board of Trustees for the U of A School of Law, and President-Elect of the Arkansas Bar Association (starting June 2025)

The University of Arkansas in Fayetteville is holding its spring commencement ceremonies this Friday and Saturday.

Guest Information:

Ceremony doors open 60 minutes before each ceremony. The university encourages guests to be seated 15 minutes prior to the start of the ceremony.

Live streaming of all ceremonies will be available on the UofA YouTube channel.

Friday, May 9

Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences starts at 3 p.m. inside Bud Walton Arena.
Speaker: Nya Kidd, senior pursuing a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Graphic Design

Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food & Life Sciences starts at 3:30 p.m. inside Barnhill Arena.
Speaker: Sally Abigail Hamm, honors student in the School of Human Development and Family Sciences in Bumpers College

Saturday, May 10

University Commencement for graduate students starts at 8:30 a.m. inside Bud Walton Arena.
Speaker: Coleman Warren, UofA alumnus, Rhodes Scholar, and Public Policy Coordinator with Communities Unlimited
Honorary Degree: Richard “Rick” Massey, Director of Dun & Bradstreet Holdings, Inc., and Alight, Inc.

College of Engineering starts at noon inside Barnhill Arena.
Speaker: John English, former U of A Vice Chancellor for Research and Innovation, Dean of the College of Engineering and Head of the Department of Industrial Engineering

College of Education and Health Professions starts at 12:30 p.m. inside Bud Walton Arena.
Speaker: Valorie Kondos Field, former Head Coach of the seven-time NCAA champion UCLA Bruins gymnastics program

Fay Jones School of Architecture and Design starts at 3 p.m. inside Barnhill Arena.
Speaker: David Fitts, U of A alumnus and former NASA Chief of the Habitability and Human Factors Branch of the Johnson Space Center in Houston.

Sam M. Walton College of Business has two ceremonies.

First ceremony starts at 3:30 p.m. inside Bud Walton Arena.
Speaker: Brad Eichler, Chief Operating Officer of Stephens Inc.

Second ceremony starts at 6:30 p.m. inside Bud Walton Arena. Speaker: Shelley Simpson, President of the Chief Executive Office of J.B. Hunt Transport Services Inc.

School of Law starts at 5:30 p.m. inside Barnhill Arena.
Speaker: Carol Dalby, Representative in the Arkansas House of Representatives, a member of the Board of Trustees for the U of A School of Law, and President-Elect of the Arkansas Bar Association (starting June 2025)



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College Hockey Inc » More Than 60 With NCAA Ties Gear Up for Men’s Worlds

Thursday, May 8, 2025 Tournament Features Last Three Hobey Baker Award Winners 2025 Hobey Baker Award winner Isaac Howard will play for Team USA (Photo: MSU Athletic Communications). Sixty-three current and former NCAA men’s hockey players will compete in the 2025 International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) Men’s World Championship, which begins Friday in Sweden and […]

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Thursday, May 8, 2025

Tournament Features Last Three Hobey Baker Award Winners


More Than 60 With NCAA Ties Gear Up for Men’s Worlds
2025 Hobey Baker Award winner Isaac Howard will play for Team USA (Photo: MSU Athletic Communications).

Sixty-three current and former NCAA men’s hockey players will compete in the 2025 International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) Men’s World Championship, which begins Friday in Sweden and Denmark.

Thirteen of the 16 competing countries will have NCAA representation, led by the United States (25), Latvia (12), Canada (five), Austria (four), and Germany (four).

The rostered players include seven active college hockey standouts, as well as the last three Hobey Baker Memorial Award winners: Isaac Howard (Michigan State, 2025), Macklin Celebrini (Boston University, 2024), and Adam Fantilli (Michigan, 2023).

Thirty-three different NCAA schools will be represented during the tournament. Michigan leads with six players, followed by Boston University (five) and UConn (four). Arizona State, Boston College, Lake Superior State, Michigan State, Minnesota, and St. Cloud State have three each.

The 2025 IIHF Men’s Hockey World Championship takes place May 9-25 in Stockholm, Sweden, and Herning, Denmark. The tournament can be seen on NHL Network in the United States and on TSN in Canada.

For more information, visit IIHF.com.


AUSTRIA (4)

F Brian Lebler, Michigan
D Luis Lindner, New Hampshire
F Peter Schneider, Notre Dame
G Atte Tolvanen, Northern Michigan


CANADA (5)

F Macklin Celebrini, Boston University
F Adam Fantilli, Michigan
F Kent Johnson, Michigan
D Mike Matheson, Boston College
D Brandon Montour, UMass


CZECHIA (1)

F Jáchym Kondelík, UConn


DENMARK (3)

D Nick Jensen, Plattsburgh State*
D Oliver Lauridsen, St. Cloud State
F Patrick Russell, St. Cloud State


FINLAND (1)

F Ahti Oksanen, Boston University


FRANCE (2)

F Louis Boudon, Lake Superior State
F Guillaume Leclerc, UMass Lowell


GERMANY (4)

D Lukas Kälble, Lake Superior State/Clarkson
F Marc Michaelis, Minnesota State
F Wojciech Stachowiak, Michigan State
F Frederik Tiffels, Western Michigan


HUNGARY (1)

F Kristóf Papp, Lindenwood/Northern Mich./Mich. State


LATVIA (12)

F Filips Buncis, Arizona State
F Haralds Egle, Clarkson
D Ralfs Freibergs, Bowling Green
F Felikss Gavars, Minnesota State
G Gustav Grigals, UMass Lowell/Alaska
D Janis Jaks, AIC
D Markuss Komuls, Alaska
F Marty Lavins, New Hampshire
F Dans Ločmelis, UMass
G Mareks Miten, Lake Superior State
F Glebs Prohorenkovs, Niagara
F Eduards Tralmaks, Maine


SLOVAKIA (1)

G Adam Huska, UConn


SLOVENIA (2)

F Filip Sitar, UConn
F Nace Langus, Augustana


SWITZERLAND (2)

G Sandro Aeschlimann, Elmira*
F Tyler Moy, Harvard


UNITED STATES (25)

F Matty Beniers, Michigan
F Brett Berard, Providence
D Zeev Buium, Denver
F Logan Cooley, Minnesota
G Joey Daccord, Arizona State
F Josh Doan, Arizona State
F Mikey Eyssimont, St. Cloud State
F Cutter Gauthier, Boston College
D Cole Hutson, Boston University
F Clayton Keller, Boston University
F Isaac Howard, Michigan State
D Michael Kesselring, Northeastern
D Jackson LaCombe, Minnesota
D Mason Lohrei, Ohio State
F Frank Nazar, Michigan
F Drew O’Connor, Dartmouth
D Andrew Peeke, Notre Dame
F Shane Pinto, North Dakota
D Brady Skjei, Minnesota
G Hampton Slukynsky, Western Michigan
F Will Smith, Boston College
G Jeremy Swayman, Maine
F Tage Thompson, UConn
D Alex Vlasic, Boston University
D Zach Werenski, Michigan

Current NCAA players are italicized
* – indicates Division III



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How Penn State trustees plan to vote on campus closures could run afoul of transparency law

This story was produced by the State College regional bureau of Spotlight PA, an independent, nonpartisan newsroom dedicated to investigative and public-service journalism for Pennsylvania. Sign up for Talk of the Town, a weekly newsletter of local stories that dig deep, events, and more from north-central PA, at spotlightpa.org/newsletters/talkofthetown. The Penn State Board of […]

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This story was produced by the State College regional bureau of Spotlight PA, an independent, nonpartisan newsroom dedicated to investigative and public-service journalism for Pennsylvania. Sign up for Talk of the Town, a weekly newsletter of local stories that dig deep, events, and more from north-central PA, at spotlightpa.org/newsletters/talkofthetown.

The Penn State Board of Trustees plans to meet virtually this month to determine the fate of multiple campuses, a decision that will impact the futures of thousands of students and employees.

However, the online-only nature of the meeting could run afoul of Pennsylvania’s public meetings law, according to legal experts.

“There’s nothing in Pennsylvania law that allows a virtual only public meeting under the Sunshine Act,” said Melissa Melewsky, media counsel for the Pennsylvania NewsMedia Association, of which Spotlight PA is a member.

If the meeting’s legality is challenged in court, a judge could potentially overturn any decision made at the meeting, she added.

Trustees will not consider closures on a campus-by-campus basis when they hold the special meeting, a university spokesperson told Spotlight PA. Instead, they’ll vote on a single plan from President Neeli Bendapudi proposing which campuses to shutter. The plan will require a simple majority to pass.

Trustees will gather at the University Park campus this week for a series of in-person meetings ahead of graduation festivities, but campus closures are not on the agenda.

According to three people with knowledge of the board’s schedule, trustees are instead expected to vote on the president’s proposal when they meet virtually this month. The trustees held a similar, virtual-only meeting last May to pass the $700 million Beaver Stadium renovation plan.

This structure could be problematic, Melewsky told Spotlight PA, as Pennsylvania’s Sunshine Act — the law requiring transparency and public access to the meetings of governing bodies like Penn State’s board — doesn’t expressly allow for virtual-only meetings. However, only a judge can rule whether the law was broken.

“If there’s an issue under the Sunshine Act and someone feels the law has been violated, they have a statutory right to pursue the issue in court,” Melewsky said. “And if a court would find there was a violation, the court could do a number of things, including rescinding any official action taken at that public meeting.”

In recent weeks, some trustees have questioned the university’s stated reasons and goals behind shutting down locations, the first sign of public fractures among leaders over how Penn State is handling the statewide campus system.

Meanwhile, the people whose livelihoods and communities are at risk have grown more vocal.

An open letter to trustees asking Penn State to consider options other than closing locations received hundreds of signatures, though it’s unclear if board leadership will see it. Andrea Adolph, a Penn State New Kensington professor who authored the piece, said the letter is too long for the board’s online public comment portal — the primary way the board gets public input. The website limits submissions to 500 words.

Penn State has not allowed in-person or virtual spoken comments during public meetings since 2021.

Joy Ramsingh, an attorney who specializes in public meetings law, told Spotlight PA a strong legal argument could be made that the board’s conduct exploits loopholes in Pennsylvania transparency statute and is contrary to what the General Assembly intended.

“If you’re going to go and you’re going to have days of back-to-back meetings and then, five days later, you’re doing a virtual meeting just because this is more of a stickier subject, I think you’re in hot water as far as the Sunshine Act is concerned,” Ramsingh said.

Neither Penn State’s Office of Strategic Communications nor its board leaders responded to questions about the public comment procedures or the legality of its virtual meetings.

Trustee and faculty pushback

The details of the president’s proposal to close campuses remain unknown. The university has previously said it will keep at least eight of its locations — Abington, Altoona, Behrend, Berks, Brandywine, Great Valley, Harrisburg, and Lehigh Valley. These campuses have the largest enrollments and are in regions of the state with stable or growing populations.

The remaining locations — Beaver, DuBois, Fayette, Greater Allegheny, Hazleton, Mont Alto, New Kensington, Schuylkill, Scranton, Shenango, Wilkes-Barre, and York — are under review by Bendapudi’s administration and could close after the 2026-27 academic year. The university has said it will retain a presence in Northeast Pennsylvania and the Pittsburgh region.

Until an announcement last month, it was unclear whether the university’s governing body would be involved in the decision. A university spokesperson previously declined to say whether or how trustees would be involved, and the president said publicly that closing campuses was an administrative decision she would make. Board support might not be unanimous.

In April, a group of five current and former university leaders, including current alumni-elected trustees Ted Brown and Jay Paterno, published an op-ed in StateCollege.com calling on the university to delay a decision until other options are considered. The declining commonwealth campus enrollments, often cited in arguments for closure, have flattened in recent years and the statewide system’s budget deficit costs Penn State less than 1% of its total budget, the group argued.

Paterno told Spotlight PA he would like to see more innovative choices for the campuses beyond staying open or closing. Trustees should be more involved with this plan given the potential impact, he said. “I would rather be a year late than a day early on a decision this big,” Paterno said.

Alice Pope, another co-author of the op-ed and an emerita trustee who cannot vote on a proposal, told Spotlight PA she feels the decision is being rushed.

“Before we take the irreversible step of closing any of our campuses, it seems to me we should first come together as a community to reimagine how we should fulfill our land grant mission in the next hundred years,” Pope wrote in a statement. (Brown did not respond to a request for comment for this story.)

The op-ed sparked Adolph, the New Kensington professor, to also write a public letter.

“Until very recently, we were all under the impression that the board was all there, all on board, and perhaps even hired [Bendapudi] to do this work,” she told Spotlight PA.

As of May 6, Adolph’s letter has received more than 600 signatures, including from alumni-elected trustee Barry Fenchak.

The statewide campus system, the letter argues, helps Penn State embody its land grant mission. Closing campuses would backtrack on the promises made to students across the state, the document reads.

Penn State’s commonwealth system enrolls a more racially diverse group of people, a greater percentage of Pennsylvania residents, and more first-generation college students than University Park, according to data reviewed by Spotlight PA.

One signatory of Adolph’s letter, Victor Brunsden, told Spotlight PA he wants trustees to reject Bendapudi’s closure plan. The administration has not been transparent about how it’s making decisions, including the criteria that will determine which locations survive, the Penn State Altoona professor said. First, the university said closures were a financial decision, he said, then the administration said some campuses were not providing students with the “Penn State experience.”

“That statement implies to me that unless students are able to go to every home football game, unless they are able to be in classes with 1,000 other students at the same time, they are not getting the ‘Penn State experience,’” Brunsden said. “It’s insulting to the work that a lot of my colleagues, both faculty and staff, do at the campuses. I think it’s insulting to the students, too.”

Last week, Nicholas Rowland, the academic trustee on Penn State’s board, wrote in StateCollege.com that Penn State should not operate like a business. “Our campuses are not line items to cut or assets to liquidate; they are integral parts of the whole,” Rowland said. “They are family. And while every family faces difficult seasons, we do not abandon one another when times are hard. We come together.” (Rowland did not respond to a request for comment for this story.)

Public comment

While these critiques from sitting trustees are notable, Penn State’s board has 36 voting members. Dissent from even a dozen trustees would not stop or delay a closure plan. Rejection would be historic.

A previous Spotlight PA analysis of trustee voting data between 2019 and 2024 found that the trustees passed nearly 85% of measures without a single oppositional vote. The board voted down just four of the 328 measures it considered during this period, three of which were motions a trustee proposed mid-meeting. The other, in July, was an option for how trustees should be elected to the board.

Apart from those votes, most trustees had not recorded a single dissenting vote, the analysis showed.

A university spokesperson said the public can provide written comments online ahead of the meeting. Penn State has not allowed in-person or virtual spoken comments during public meetings since 2021.

Restricting public comment — through moves such as requiring submission deadlines or not allowing in-person statements — raises free speech questions, Ramsingh said. Limiting speech generally backfires, she said, and draws more attention to the topic.

“The board doesn’t have to agree with what the public says,” Ramsingh said. “But that’s the piece that I think a lot of them don’t understand: It’s that hearing an opinion that is contrary to yours is not an attack. It’s this idea that we can come together when we have different opinions. We can disagree. … We’re going to do all this together in the same room. But if you try to suppress that, this is like trying to drown a fire out with kerosene.”

Adolph said her open letter is exactly the kind of statement that the trustees should hear in person. Otherwise, there’s no way to ensure the trustees receive that perspective, she said.

Spotlight PA, in partnership with the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, sued the trustees in December 2023 for alleged violations of the Sunshine Act. The suit — which was amended to include additional allegations following the board’s February and May 2024 meetings — argues the trustees illegally conducted public business in private. The case is ongoing in the Centre County Court of Common Pleas.

SUPPORT THIS JOURNALISM and help us reinvigorate local news in north-central Pennsylvania at spotlightpa.org/donate. Spotlight PA is funded by foundations and readers like you who are committed to accountability and public-service journalism that gets results.



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