Woman who was hit by a car in the South Side of Pittsburgh dies at a Pittsburgh area hospital

(File Photo: Caption for Photo: police car lights at night in city with selective focus and bokeh background blur) Credit for Photo: Courtesy of Getty Images/iStockphoto/z1b)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) According to Pittsburgh Public Safety, an unidentified woman in her late seventies has died at a Pittsburgh area hospital on Wednesday. This woman got hit by a car on the South Side of Pittsburgh on Tuesday and was taken to a Pittsburgh area hospital in critical condition with head trauma. According to a spokesperson from Pittsburgh Public Safety, this incident happened just before 1 p.m. on Tuesday as a couple was crossing S 28th Street after leaving a restaurant in the area. The woman was hit by a vehicle turning off of Sidney Street to S 28th Street. This incident is being investigated by the Collision Investigation Unit of Pittsburgh. Authorities also confirmed that the driver cooperated fully with investigators while that driver stayed on the scene of this incident.

Pittsburgh Symphony extends Byron Stripling’s contract as Principal Pops conductor

By Scott Tady

PITTSBURGH — The Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra (PSO) announced today that it has extended the contract of Byron Stripling as Principal Pops conductor through the 2028-2029 season.

A charismatic trumpeter, conductor and vocalist, Stripling has led the PSO’s PNC Pops series as Principal Pops conductor since 2020, bringing energy, joy and artistry to Heinz Hall concertgoers.

Pittsburgh Symphony Pops Conductor Byron Stripling has received a contract extension. (Image provided by Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra)
“Byron has an extraordinary gift for connecting with audiences of all ages,” Melia Tourangeau, president and CEO of the PSO, said. “His impact goes far beyond the PNC Pops series. Whether he’s leading Fiddlesticks, a Pops concert, or inspiring students at rehearsals and in local classrooms, Byron embodies the PSO’s mission to share music as a transformative force. I am thrilled to continue this partnership with him.”
Under the contract extension, Stripling will continue to conduct three subscription weeks of the PNC Pops each season and remain an integral part of the Symphony’s artistic and community life. Beyond his Pops leadership, Stripling also has conducted special concerts, led PSO’s Fiddlesticks Family Concerts, and visited Pittsburgh schools, engaging young audiences with his warmth and passion for music.
“I am deeply honored to extend my time as Principal Pops Conductor with this incredible orchestra,” Stripling said. “The musicians of the Pittsburgh Symphony are second to none, and together we’ve been able to create concerts that uplift, celebrate, and bring people together. I can’t wait to make even more joyful music with this community.”
The PSO’s ’25/26 PNC Pops season launches this weekend with “Come Swing with Me,” a high-energy tribute to the hits of the 1950s led by Stripling and featuring vocalist Paul Loren. In February, Stripling leads “America the Beautiful,” an original program tracing the evolution of American music in honor of the nation’s 250th anniversary. The season also brings the return of “Bugs Bunny at the Symphony” in celebration of the cartoon icon’s 85th anniversary, December’s beloved Highmark Holiday Pops, and a special collaboration with Pittsburgh CLO for Rodgers & Hammerstein’s “South Pacific in Concert. The season closes out with “Tropical Rock” in April and “Disco Divas” in June conducted by Stripling.

President Donald Trump asks nine colleges, which includes the University of Pennsylvania, to commit to his political agenda and get favorable access to federal money

(File Photo: Source for Photo: FILE – Passers-by walk and ride along a path on the campus of Brown University, in Providence, R.I., Monday, Oct. 12, 2020. (AP Photo/Steven Senne, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House is asking nine major universities to commit to President Donald Trump’s political priorities in exchange for more favorable access to federal money.

Universities were asked to sign a “Compact for Academic Excellence in Higher Education” committing them to adopt the White House’s vision for America’s campuses. It asks the schools to accept the government’s priorities on admissions, women’s sports, free speech, student discipline and college affordability, among other topics.

Signing on would give universities priority access to some federal grants, but government money would not be limited solely to those schools, according to a White House official who was not authorized to publicly discuss the plan and spoke on condition of anonymity. Colleges that agree would also have priority access to White House events and discussions with officials.

The compact, obtained Thursday by The Associated Press, asks universities to accept the government’s definition of gender and apply it to campus bathrooms, locker rooms and women’s sports teams. It asks colleges to stop considering race, gender and a wide range of other student demographics in the admissions process and to require undergraduate applicants to take the SAT or ACT.

The 10-page proposed agreement was sent Wednesday to some of the most selective public and private universities: Vanderbilt, the University of Pennsylvania, Dartmouth College, the University of Southern California, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the University of Texas, the University of Arizona, Brown University and the University of Virginia. It was not clear how these schools were selected or why, and whether similar offers might go out to other colleges.

Leaders of the Texas system were “honored” that the Austin campus was chosen to be a part of the compact and its “potential funding advantages,” according to a statement from Kevin Eltife, chair of the Board of Regents. “Today we welcome the new opportunity presented to us and we look forward to working with the Trump Administration on it,” Eltife said.

Representatives from the other colleges did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The administration has used its control of federal funding as leverage at several other colleges, cutting off research money at schools including Harvard and Columbia as it has sought changes to the schools’ governance and policies.

Under the compact, international enrollment would have to be capped at 15% of a college’s undergraduate student body — many elite schools are now above that — and no more than 5% could come from a single country.

Schools that sign on would have to cap tuition for U.S. students for five years and the wealthiest campuses would not charge tuition at all for students pursuing “hard science programs.”

On free speech, schools would have to commit to promoting a wide range of views on campus. That includes “transforming or abolishing institutional units that purposefully punish, belittle, and even spark violence against conservative ideas,” according to the compact.

Each school would have to commission an annual poll of students and faculty to evaluate the campuses’ adherence to the pact. The terms would be enforced by the Justice Department, with violators losing access to the compact’s benefits for no less than a year. Following violations bump the penalty to two years.

“Institutions of higher education are free to develop models and values other than those below,” the compact said, “if the institution elects to forego federal benefits.”

Ambridge man in custody for being the suspect of a shooting in Ambridge that causes the male victim of it to later show up at Heritage Valley Sewickley Hospital

(File Photo of an Ambridge Police Patch)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Ambridge, PA) Twenty-five-year-old Jordan M. Taylor of Ambridge is now in police custody and an unidentified thirty-three-year-old man got injured because of a shooting that occurred in Ambridge on Wednesday morning. According to the Ambridge Police Department, officers were called to the 600 block of Glenwood Avenue for reports of shots fired at 8:45 a.m. on Wednesday. The shooter and the victim were missing when police officers arrived. According to police, this shooting was the result of an argument that escalated. The male victim, who had a gunshot wound in his leg, later arrived at Heritage Valley Sewickley Hospital in Sewickley. Police identified Taylor and Taylor is the suspect of this incident. Taylor got arrested on the 700 block of 23rd Street in a house in Ambridge and Taylor is expected to get charged.

Aliquippa man faces charges of two counts of aggravated assault after police say he stabbed another man in the face in Aliquippa; suspect of this incident arrested

(File Photo of a City of Aliquippa Police Car)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Aliquippa, PA) Twenty-six-year-old Javen Jajuan Alford of Aliquippa recently got charged with two counts of aggravated assault after according to police, he stabbed another man in the face in Aliquippa. This incident occurred early Wednesday morning at around the 12 a.m. hour at the 300 block of Superior Avenue. Reports early that morning were about a fight in an apartment building that occurred and someone possibly getting stabbed. A man whose face was bleeding spoke with police when they arrived. That man stated that Alford and another person had been fighting in the hallway of the Aliquippa apartment where they were and that man said to Alford to quit yelling because his kids were sleeping, before he started arguing with Alford and punching Alford in the face. That man claimed Alford then leaved and then returned and started yelling again. According to records, when the man opened his door, he saw Alford holding a steak knife and saying, “I am going to kill you.” That man also stated that he got stabbed in the face by Alford before Alford left. Police confirm that the man had a stab wound under his bottom lip that was one inch long. According to records, police found Alford at his apartment and arrested him.

A crash involving a motorcycle and another vehicle in New Sewickley Township which caused the Beaver County Coroner to make an appearance kills the motorcyclist

(File Photo of a New Sewickley Township Police Car)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(New Sewickley Township, PA) A crash that occurred in New Sewickley Township on Wednesday that involved two vehicles, one being a motorcycle, killed the motorcyclist, forty-three-year-old Jared Schmidt of Seven Fields that afternoon. The 300 block of Crows Run Road in New Sewickley Township is where this crash occurred and the time of this crash was at about 3:59 p.m. on Wednesday. Schmidt was hit by another vehicle driven by sixty-four-year-old Carol Cary of Monaca. Cary did not get injured, but Schmidt got pronounced dead at the scene. According to police in a release, their preliminary investigation shows that Schmidt was driving eastbound while the other driver was driving westbound. The eastbound lane is where the motorcycle of Schmidt and the vehicle of Cary collided. This crash also caused an about five hour closure of Crows Run Road between State Route 65 and Freedom Crider Road in New Sewickley Township. It is not known at this time if charges will be filed against Cary. This crash also caused the Beaver County Coroner, David J. Gabauer, to make an appearance and the crash is continuing to be investigated by both the New Sewickley Police Department and the Pennsylvania State Police Collision, Analysis and Reconstruction Unit.

The Beaver County Coroner gets called to a crash in New Sewickley Township involving two vehicles, one being a motorcycle

(File Photo of a Police Siren Light)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(New Sewickley Township, PA) Yesterday, Beaver County Coroner David J. Gabauer was called to a crash in New Sewickley Township. According to emergency dispatchers, two vehicles, one being a motorcycle, got involved in a crash on Crows Run Road. 4:40 p.m. yesterday was when this crash was reported. Police also confirmed that Crows Run Road between Route 65 and Freedom Crider Road closed temporarily. No other details about this crash have been released and an investigation into this incident continued last night.

Idaho judge blocks the release of graphic photos from the crime scene where in 2022, Bryan Kohberger killed four University of Idaho students

(File Photo: Source for Photo: FILE – A statement is made after the Bryan Kohberger sentencing July 23, 2025, outside of the Ada County Courthouse in Boise, Idaho. (AP Photo/Drew Nash, File)

BOISE, Idaho (AP) — An Idaho judge is blocking the release of some graphic photos taken by investigators after Bryan Kohberger killed four University of Idaho students in 2022.

Second District Judge Megan Marshall made the ruling Wednesday, saying the dissemination of “incredibly disturbing” photos across the internet — where the victims’ families might inadvertently see them — is an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.

She ordered the city of Moscow to black out portions of the images that show any portion of the victims’ bodies or the blood immediately surrounding them.

But the judge said the public also has an interest in seeing investigation records, and so other photos, videos and documents connected to the case can be released, including videos showing distraught friends of the victims on the morning their bodies were found.

Kohberger was sentenced to life without parole in July for the stabbing murders of Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle, Madison Mogen and Ethan Chapin at an off-campus rental home in Moscow, Idaho.

Family members of two of the victims, Mogen and Chapin, had asked the judge to keep parts of the crime scene photos and videos hidden from public view, saying the images are invasive and traumatizing.

The criminal case drew worldwide attention, and the Moscow Police Department received hundreds of requests to release investigatory records. Idaho law generally allows for the sealing of investigation records to be lifted once a criminal investigation is complete.

After Kohberger’s sentencing, the city of Moscow responded to one such request for public records by releasing some of the photos and videos taken by law enforcement at the crime scene, blurring out the bodies of the killed students as well as the faces of other victims and witnesses who talked to police outside the home.

“There is little to be gained by the public in seeing the decedents’ bodies, the blood soaked sheets, blood spatter or other death-scene depictions,” Marshall wrote, and she noted that those images have already caused the families “extreme emotional distress.”

“The fact remains: the murder investigation and the criminal case are closed,” Marshall wrote. “Releasing these records will have minor effect upon those who continue to be perplexed by the facts or fixated on unfounded conspiracies whereas it has and will continue to have profound effect upon the decedents’ loved ones.”

TRAILS Ministries INC. of Beaver Falls hires Tamara L. Collier as their new Executive Director

(Photo of Tamara L. Collier Provided with Release Courtesy of TRAILS Ministries)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Beaver Falls, PA) According to a release today from TRAILS Ministries INC., TRAILS Ministries INC. of Beaver Falls has hired a new Executive Director who began with the
organization in August of 2025, Tamara L. Collier. Collier served for fourteen and a half years as the Community Outreach Specialist, Reentry Coordinator
and Diversity Coordinator with the U. S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of
Pennsylvania. Collier also served as a life coach during that tenure with the U.S. Attorney’s Office and she assists in facilitating the Beaver County Community and Law Enforcement Coalition. Collier is also both the coordinator and co-creator of Tiger Talk at Beaver Falls High School in Beaver Falls, which brings alumni of that school from different career paths who lived experiences to both mentor and engage students several times during their freshman year of high school, which is in 9th grade. Collier is also a member of several teams and councils, including the Western Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic League’s (WPIAL’s) Equity Advisory Council. Collier convened the Trauma-Informed Care Group, now known as the Trauma Liberation Collective (TLC) to bring together local trauma experts and supporters to lead the efforts of establishing a trauma-informed initiative in Allegheny County in August of 2020. The TLC has a focus primarily of education regarding the trauma that is unaddressed within the Black communities of Allegheny County, reducing the stigma of seeking help for this trauma and to promote the heaing of this trauma. Collier also included facilitating both the Downtown Safety Coalition and the Western District of Pennsylvania’s Community Police Relations Groups in both Pittsburgh and Erie. Collier is also a mother of three young men who have all graduated from college and a grandmother of five grandchildren. The reentry project for TRAILS Ministries INC. of Beaver Falls, which is now where Collier will serve as their executive director, is a faith-based, holistic approach to helping those impacted by the trauma of incarceration directly or indirectly.

Michigan-based grocery store chain Meijer submits formal plans for a new location in Cranberry Township, its first location in Western Pennsylvania

(File Photo of an Open for Business Sign)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Cranberry Township, PA) Meijer, a grocery store chain based in Michigan, has recently announced that its first location in Western Pennsylvania will be in Cranberry Township after Meijer submitted plans formally for that new location. According to a recent report from the Butler Eagle, Meijer is planning to buld a 159,000-square-foot supercenter in the northeast corner of Route 228 and Franklin Road near North Catholic High School. Meijer will sell their grocery store products in that location in the future and these submission plans for their new location in Cranberry Township come not too long after Meijer announced that they will expand their businesses into Western Pennsylvania. Meijer has over 500 stores in Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin.