In this AP file photo, people gathered in Foley Square, outside the Manhattan federal court, in support of student activist Mahmoud Khalil, Wednesday, March 12, 2025, in New York. Penn State Faculty Senate voted April 1, 2025, to pass a motion calling on the university administration to clarify its policy on ICE agents on campus.
Stefan Jeremiah / AP Photo
The House Has Voted to Rescind Public Media Funding
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Anne Danahy is a reporter at WPSU. She was a reporter for nearly 12 years at the Centre Daily Times in State College, Pennsylvania, where she earned a number of awards for her coverage of issues including the impact of natural gas development on communities.
She earned a bachelor's degree in communications from Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio, and a master's degree in media studies from Penn State.
Before joining WPSU, she worked as a writer and editor at Strategic Communications at Penn State and with the Earth and Environmental Systems Institute before that.
She hosts a Q&A program for Centre County's government and education access station and teaches a news writing and reporting class at Penn State.
Stefan Jeremiah / AP Photo
In this AP file photo, people gathered in Foley Square, outside the Manhattan federal court, in support of student activist Mahmoud Khalil, Wednesday, March 12, 2025, in New York. Penn State Faculty Senate voted April 1, 2025, to pass a motion calling on the university administration to clarify its policy on ICE agents on campus.
Pointing to the possibility of federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents taking action on Penn State’s campuses, the Faculty Senate passed a motion Tuesday calling on the university to clarify its policy and, if it is not already required, to have a university “peace officer” present if ICE agents interact with students, faculty or staff.
Faculty member Victor Brunsden who made the motion, said the “urgency” of the situation called for quick action.
“We now have a situation nationwide where Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, otherwise known as ICE, are deporting international students for a variety of reasons, often linked to speech which is regarded as un-American,” Brunsden said.
The motion, which calls for a “peace officer” — a Penn State police officer or someone acting as one of their deputies — to be present, passed 140-33.
Faculty member Agnès Kim said people who haven’t committed crimes are getting deported.
“A student could write an op-ed, participate in a protest walk and hold a sign, and other things (are) also grounds for picking them up and sending them home, leaving their studies, belongings, loved ones behind,” Kim said.
After the vote, Penn State President Neeli Bendapudi said large parts of campus are public and federal enforcement agents may enter those areas without a warrant. But, she said, if someone is approached in a non-public setting, federal agents can be referred to the university’s Office of General Counsel.
She said the university would be following up with more information.
A collection of interviews, photos, and music videos, featuring local musicians who have stopped by the WITF performance studio to share a little discussion and sound. Produced by WITF’s Joe Ulrich.