ministry
Members of the United Campus Ministry seek more students.
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Members of the United Campus Ministry seek more students.
Bags are unpacked, rooms are decorated and parents are long gone. The Shippensburg University Class of 2020 has arrived.
Students participate on stage in the roommate challenge with modern language Professor José Ricardo Osorio.
Ricardo shows first-year volunteers the three different boxes that contain prizes for them to win.
As first-year and transfer students trickled onto Shippensburg University’s campus for move-in on Wednesday, students of the Martin Luther King (MLK) Academic Retention Program were finishing up the last of their workshops of their three-day early orientation.
Students gain a head start in college through MLK program
MLK mentees work together during team building exercises, learning to communicate with each other, build trust and positive budgeting habits.
College is an exciting and unique environment in which individuals can be whoever they want to be and do whatever they please. As students finally reach the end of their high school years and receive their diplomas, the next step for some is pursuing a college career.
As first-year students looked through the list of events to attend, many decided the Career and Community Engagement Center’s (CCEC) Craft for a Cause was worth attending.
Students gather to make crafts for non-profit organizations in need.
Students gather to make crafts for non-profit organizations in need.
Students gather to make crafts for non-profit organizations in need.
Thousands of visitors filled King Street on Saturday at one of Shippensburg’s most iconic events — Corn Festival. Many locals and Shippensburg University students helped with or attended the festival. As for the vendors, they were thrilled with the turnout.
Shippensburg residents enjoy fresh lemonade on a hot summer day at the annual CornFest.
It is the same campus but with new people. It is reused pens and old, half-scribbled notebooks. It is a stack of textbooks that may or may not get read. It is the adventure that has not yet unfolded; the late nights that will surely pile up like fried food stacked onto Reisner plates. It is the final exam; it is the final year for many; it is the final first college semester for others. But mostly — it is the beginning of a fall semester at Shippensburg University, one that will be unlike any other simply because no two could ever be the same.