Amelia Gapin educates students on transgender community
Amelia Gapin shared her story and her experiences as to what it is like to be a transgender woman on Oct. 10 in the Ceddia Union Building multipurpose room.
Amelia Gapin shared her story and her experiences as to what it is like to be a transgender woman on Oct. 10 in the Ceddia Union Building multipurpose room.
During a press conference at Shippensburg University yesterday, the brother of Shippensburg elementary wrestling coach Bill Wolfe Jr. recounted the events that occurred during the mass shooting in Las Vegas that led to the death of Wolfe and 58 others.
Seated in a conference room in the Shippensburg University president’s office, President Laurie Carter discussed her past as well as her professional experiences, and the challenges still facing SU midway through her first semester as the university’s 17th president.
McCune Hall residents charged with underage drinking, possession of marijuana and paraphernalia.
The Shippensburg Area School District’s elementary school wrestling coach died on Oct. 1 in the Las Vegas shooting.
Beginning this winter, Shippensburg University will undergo changes to the electrical and telecommunications wiring in places around campus.
With a little more than two months at the president’s desk, Laurie Carter is setting her sights on Shippensburg University’s major problem — a declining enrollment rate — but this is not going to be an easy beast to take down.
More than 130 organizations filled Shippensburg University’s ShipRec on Thursday afternoon to speak with undergraduate and graduate students about internships and job opportunities at the fall Career Fair.
Amid a transition period within the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education (PASSHE) and its universities, the Association of Pennsylvania State College and University Faculties (APSCUF) is prepared to continue its focus on students and lowering the cost of the state’s tuition.
Shippensburg University students and faculty rallied together to promote peace and equality at the United We Stand rally Thursday evening.
Shippensburg University’s ice hockey club was fined $250 Sept. 21 by Student Government after it was discovered that the team had been hosting a FootballMania fundraiser.
For many college students, a possibly large refund check could be received a few days or weeks into the semester.
Ray M. Ortiz, 20, and a 16-year-old juvenile visitor, both of Lackawaxen, Pennsylvania, were charged with underage drinking in connection with an incident that occurred on Sept. 22.
On Wednesday afternoon, members of the Shippensburg community turned toward South Mountain as a great eruption of smoke boiled high into the sky and left a blanket trail draped across the mountain for miles.
Shippensburg University’s Charles H. Diller Jr. Center for Entrepreneurial Leadership and Innovation hosts its Career and Innovation Hour tonight, allowing students to explore future job opportunities and network with local businesses.
With Puerto Rico in ruin after Hurricane Maria wreaked havoc on the U.S. province, it is questionable if the island will ever be the same again.
Clarion University withdrew a letter of retrenchment Sept. 22, eliminating the possibility of faculty cuts at the end of the academic school year and leaving Cheyney University letter as the last remaining after five letters were submitted during the spring of 2017.
Shippensburg University’s Career and Community Engagement Center (CCEC) is gearing up to host its largest career fair of the year on Thursday.
Two speakers from the University of South Florida (USF), hosted a program titled “Seriously Funny: Disability and the Paradoxical Power of Humor” Thursday, to show how humor can be used by people with disabilities to tell their stories and experiences of living with a disability.
Amanda Domian, of Creekside Apartments, reported to university police on Wednesday that her 26-inch black and blue Huffy bicycle had been stolen from the bike rack in front of McCune Hall.