Thursday, December 18, 2014

Alcorn State offers scholarship to Pascagoula football player

PASCAGOULA, Mississippi  -- Pascagoula senior linebacker Randy Hogan recently received a scholarship offer from Alcorn State, his first from a four-year school.

Hogan had 90 tackles this season as part of a talented Panthers defense that featured a pair of FBS commitments - defensive tackle Jauan Collins (Southern Miss) and defensive end Keith Joseph Jr. (Mississippi State).

Hogan already had three scholarship offers from Pearl River Community College, Jones Junior College and Southwest CC, but it was a relief to get his first offer from a four-year school.

"It feels great," Hogan said. "Back at the beginning of the season, I had a couple of schools looking at me but they weren't sure how I would do against the pass. They knew I could stop the run. Now schools see I can defend the pass. I can be versatile on both sides of the ball (playing fullback also)."

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Lack of discipline main reason ASU didn't win SWAC under Barlow


MONTGOMERY, Alabama  --  One player is a three-year starter on the offensive line. The other had just three carries last season.

Seniors Damian Love and Rodney Cross are on opposite ends of the spectrum when it comes to playing time, but both say the main reason the Hornets failed to win the SWAC under Reggie Barlow was lack of discipline.

The two believe new head coach Brian Jenkins can bring that ingredient to the Hornets and win a conference title.

"It's really discipline and that's what Coach Jenkins said in his speech," said Love, a Stanhope Elmore graduate who was a 2014 first-team All-SWAC selection. "He's going to bring discipline and we really need that. Once we have discipline, I feel like nobody in the conference, FBS, FCS level; they can't play with us."

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Lady Seahawks give Nuggets their 2nd straight defeat

WEST PALM BEACH, Florida -- Lakeisha Blanson made 4-of-4 free throws in the final seven seconds Thursday to help Northwood (Fla.) preserve a 67-64 women's basketball victory against NAIA No. 19 Xavier University of Louisiana in the Cruzin Classic.

Mallory Burton scored 20 points, Blanson 14, Emily May 11 and Stephanie Granada 10 for the Lady Seahawks (2-4), who never trailed in the final 36 minutes.

Whitney Gathright scored 20 points for the Gold Nuggets (7-6) -- who lost a close game to an NAIA Division II opponent for the second consecutive day in this event -- and Alesha Smith had 12. Vinnie Briggs and Ireyon Keith scored eight points apiece.

Northwood led for the final 16:54 after Granada made 1-of-2 free throws to break a tie at 33. Four times thereafter the Gold Nuggets cut the lead to one point, the last at 65-64 on two Gathright free throws with four seconds remaining.

Blanson made a pair of free throws with seven seconds to play and with three seconds remaining. Xavier missed three free throws in the final 39 seconds.

Xavier led for nearly two of the first four minutes, but never led again after Blanson's 3-pointer gave the Lady Seahawks a 9-7 lead at 16:06. Burton's basket at 10:40 increased the margin to 21-12, and Northwood led 32-27 at halftime.

Northwood shot 47.9 percent from the floor, the best this season by an XU opponent. The Gold Nuggets shot 35.6 percent.

Gatrhright made three of the Gold Nuggets' five 3-pointers and produced career highs of 11 free throws and 14 attempts. Briggs had a career-high-tying five steals. Briggs and Smith grabbed six rebounds apiece, with Smith reaching a career best. Amara Person-Hampton grabbed a career-high-tying five rebounds.

Xavier is 2-6 on the road this season. It was the Gold Nuggets' first-ever meeting with Northwood.

The Gold Nuggets will break for Christmas, then play LSU-Shreveport at 7 p.m. Dec. 29 in the Xavier Holiday Classic at the Convocation Center.

Ed Cassiere, Sports Information Director

Florida A&M's Townsend: No new coach by Friday

TALLAHASSEE, Florida  -- Nelson Townsend, Florida A&M’s interim athletic director, said although the search is going well, he will not name a new head football coach by Friday.

Townsend said Tuesday he wanted to name the Rattlers’ new head coach by Friday. Now he’s looking to hit a Christmas deadline, and said he’ll have candidates in after the weekend.

“We’re in a bit of a holding pattern,” he said.

“The search is moving along ...

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Pa.'s Auditor General DePasquale Says Future of Nation’s First Historically Black University (Cheyney U.) is Dire Without Swift, Decisive Action at State Level

“We cannot sit idly by as this historic and prestigious university fights for survival,”  DePasquale said.

HARRISBURG, Pennsylvania (12/17/14)  -- Auditor General Eugene DePasquale today said that the future of historic Cheyney University in Chester County is bleak and projected to worsen, unless drastic action is taken at the state level to address escalating debt, falling revenues, and declining enrollments.

Cheyney University’s financial position has consistently deteriorated since 2009 and continues to get worse, said DePasquale, citing a financial analysis of the university’s financial data from July 1, 2008 to June 30, 2013.

DePasquale said that while Cheyney University has troublesome finances it is clearly not the only one struggling among the 14 state-owned universities within the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education. A financial review will be included in future audits of state-owned universities.

“The situation at Cheyney University should be a warning to the systemic financial issues facing state universities. Our best and brightest state leaders and stakeholders must work together to develop a long-term plan to ensure the stability of these public universities to provide affordable college education for families across the state,” DePasquale said. “The consequences of inaction are dire.”

Cheyney was founded in 1837 as the Institute for Colored Youth to provide free classical education for qualified young people. Nearly 80 percent of its students are from Pennsylvania. It is the nation’s first historically black university.

“We cannot sit idly by as this historic and prestigious university fights for survival,” DePasquale said.

According to the audit:
Expenses exceeded revenue in four of the past five years.
o Cheyney’s deficit increased by $4.5 million in 2013 to a cumulative deficit of $12.3 million. Cheyney officials project another $5.5 million shortfall in 2014-15.
o Increased expenses include bad debt which grew from $1 million in 2012 to $1.5 million in 2013.

Enrollments are declining. The number of full-time equivalent students is expected to decrease to 1,053 in 2014-15, a 28 percent decrease from 2008-2009 when there were 1,471 full-time equivalent students.

Declining revenue from state appropriations, tuition, and fees.
o Over the past five years, the state decreased its appropriation to the State System which, in turn, reduced funding to Cheyney and the 13 other universities in the system.
o Cheyney’s allotment from the State System dropped from $15.6 million in 2009 to $12.8 million in 2013.
o The amount collected in tuition and fees dropped from $12.1 million in 2009 to $11.55 million in 2013.
o Overall, revenue is down from $27.8 million in 2009 to $24.4 million in 2013, a negative 12.2 percent.

“It is a losing proposition. When you have fewer state dollars and fewer students, then you have less money to invest into the university to attract more students. It is a vicious and destructive cycle that must be stopped,” DePasquale said.

Officials at Cheyney University agreed with, and have started to implement, several recommendations in the audit, including:
  •  develop a plan to systematically reduce the deficit and restore a positive net position;
  •  evaluate sources of revenue to determine if funds could be obtained through such efforts as a third-party collection agency for student accounts; and
  •  work closely with the State System to increase enrollment and seek revenue sources for needy students, who otherwise won’t be able to attend college.
The audit report also recommends that the State System immediately perform a comprehensive financial analysis of Cheyney’s operations.

“It is clear that Cheyney University and State System officials recognize the fiscal challenges and they are working on solutions, but it is also clear that they cannot do it alone,” DePasquale said, noting a couple of cost-cutting measures Cheyney is already taking, including:

  •  decreasing its workforce by 23 percent through reductions in administrative and facility staff; and
  •  decreasing non-personnel expenses by 22 percent by requiring offices to reduce discretionary spending by 50 percent.
Administrative leaders at Cheyney University say they are in the process of more aggressively recruiting students to increase tuition revenue. They also plan to target more high ability students and improve student retention and graduation rates, according to the audit.

The State System will continue to monitor the university’s financial position, including weekly reviews of cash levels.

The audit also found Cheyney University was not following established policies and practices for obtaining background checks for employees, volunteers, and contractors involved in youth athletic and academic camps on campus.

Cheyney officials acknowledged the shortcomings and stated in the audit report that a new policy would be presented to the university cabinet this month for implementation in January.

The Cheyney University audit report is available online here.

PERFORMANCE AUDIT: CHEYNEY UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, PENNSYLVANIA STATE SYSTEM OF HIGHER EDUCATION



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READ RELATED ARTICLES:
Pennsylvania-owned universities, Pitt seek sharply higher state funding
Cost of public colleges in Pennsylvania continues to soar, report finds
Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education hopeful enrollment drop is abating
Pa. state-owned universities seek to avoid tuition hike

Southern women hold off FAMU

BATON ROUGE, Louisiana -- The Southern women’s basketball team got just what it needed Wednesday night in the F.G. Clark Activity Center.

After losing six straight games on the road, mostly against teams from power conferences, the Jaguars came home and never trailed during an 80-69 victory against Florida A&M.

Five players scored in double figures and the defense helped get the fast-break going by making a dozen steals.

“I thought we did a good job of sharing the basketball and hitting the open guy,” Southern coach Sandy Pugh said. “The offense looked fluid. We were hitting shots. We seemed really comfortable and I was really pleased to see that.

“Defensively we had some communication breakdowns that happened, but we did a good job of getting out in transition. That was good to see.”

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Commentary: Christmas comes early for ASU in hiring Jenkins

MONTGOMERY, Alabama -- Alabama State got its Christmas wish for a new head football coach.

The university believes Brian Jenkins can bring it some things Reggie Barlow couldn't — SWAC championships, sellout crowds at its $62 million stadium and much fanfare.

"You look at all the things he's done and he's accomplished, it gets you excited," Alabama State interim athletic director Melvin Hines said. "It makes you want to come out and see what this guy going to bring to the table? What type of team is he going to put on the field? Because if he does just a little bit of what he did at Bethune-Cookman, the sky is the limit here at Alabama State."



Hines made a list of people to contact about the 43-year-old Jenkins, checked it twice and decided to go full bore after the three-time Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference coach of the year.

"We went through a very, very detailed process," Hines said. "Not just me, but the university in doing our research on Brian Jenkins. I talked to so many people, a lot of people."

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