Fall 2025 SGA senator election results
By / News EditorThe results for the fall 2025 Shippensburg University Student Government Association (SGA) senator elections were announced on Friday, Sept. 26. Voting ran from Sept. 22-25.
The results for the fall 2025 Shippensburg University Student Government Association (SGA) senator elections were announced on Friday, Sept. 26. Voting ran from Sept. 22-25.
Shippensburg University’s Student Government Association (SGA) held its second Fall 2025 public meeting in CUB 119 on Thursday, Oct. 2.
History was shown in a different lens during Peter Miele’s “History Where it Happened” lecture at Stewart Hall on Sept. 30.
SU’s Pride and Gender Equity (PAGE) Center hosted speaker Bonny Shade for its “But What Can I Do” talk in Memorial Auditorium on Sept. 24. Shade held a conversation on how to collectively stop sexual violence on campus.
SU’s Major-Minor Fair was held in the CUB MPR on Thursday, Sept. 25, hosting over 250 students at the event.
Multiple calls were made to local law enforcement agencies which led to the evacuation of the Ezra Lehman Library on Sunday afternoon, according to Shippensburg University News.
In a meeting on Thursday, Sept. 11, Malu Takahashi from the Global Education Office went over important information about the study abroad program at Shippensburg University.
On Friday, Sept. 12, history was made as walls were broken to launch the renovation of Kriner Hall. President Patterson hosted a ceremony to mark this momentous occasion with key contributors in attendance.
Shippensburg University’s Student Government Association (SGA) hosted its final meeting for the 2024-2025 academic year in the CUB MPR on May 1. On the agenda for Thursday’s meeting was the swearing-in of officers and senators for the 2025-2026 academic year and the approval of four new student groups. Noted for this meeting is the unprecedented situation regarding the new SGA President Nathan Garber, who will only be serving as president for the fall 2025 semester. For Garber to be able to run for president, previously set rules in the SGA Constitution had to be reevaluated.
For many female presenting students on campus, fashion is a major part of their lives because it allows them to express who they are and what they believe in.
As Shippensburg University nears the end of the fall 2024 semester, some students are still waiting for their financial aid to come through. The PA State Grant, administered by the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency (PHEAA), has seen several rounds of delays. As of Monday morning, 456 students have yet to receive their grant money.
It is safe to say that the 2024 presidential election has come and gone. But dozens of Shippensburg University students are not quite done with the political process. Members of the Political Science and Communications, Journalism and Media departments have spent the last few weeks acting as candidates, campaign staffers and political consultants in the 10th biennial Simuelection.
Five students presented their work in various business and entrepreneurial organizations before the Shippensburg University Council of Trustees at its second meeting of the semester on Nov. 17. Don Nori, who serves as the director for the Diller Center for Entrepreneurial Leadership and Innovation, introduced the speakers.
“Do you hate poverty? We do, too!” was the subject line of an email inviting members of the university community to explore their own risks of poverty at an Interactive Inequality Experience presented by the Department of Sociology and Anthropology and the Connors Institute last Tuesday.
Ezra Lehman Memorial Library hosted the official opening of the international traveling exhibition “Names Instead of Numbers” to honor and remember the victims of the Holocaust on Nov. 14. Action Reconciliation Service for Peace (ARSP) displays the names and stories of victims who were part of the 202,000 prisoners taken into the Dachau concentration camp between 1933 and 1945. Through these exhibitions, ARSP shares biographies of the victims.
Shippensburg University truly has a diverse array of student organizations, programs and engaging events that can provide engaging experiences for almost any student.
There is nothing funnier than a comedy of errors, and there are plenty of errors to be found in the recent production of “The Play That Goes Wrong.” Let it be known that when it comes to this show, I mean that in the best way possible.
As the crowning of the 2022 Shippensburg Homecoming Court came closer, students enjoyed a “Night on the Ship” in a Vegas-style trivia match.
On Thursday, Sept. 29, Shippensburg University’s Director of Social Inclusion, Manuel Ruiz, and Residence Director Steven Lopez hosted an open discussion on personal identity and intersectionality.