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Three women sit at a table facing the audience.

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On Dec. 7, Brandywine Chancellor Marilyn J. Wells (left), Widener University President Stacey Robertson (center) and Delaware County Community College President L. Joy Gates Black served on the panel for the Delaware County Chamber of Commerce program, Women in Leadership: Higher Education. Wells and the other college leaders discussed preparing for leadership, taking chances, balancing professional and personal demands, and mentoring future leaders.

Three women sit at a table facing the audience.

'Women in Leadership: Higher Education' panel

On Dec. 7, Penn State Brandywine Chancellor Marilyn J. Wells, Widener University President Stacey Robertson, and Delaware County Community College President L. Joy Gates Black served on the panel for the Delaware County Chamber of Commerce program, "Women in Leadership: Higher Education." Wells and the other college leaders discussed preparing for leadership, taking chances, balancing professional and personal demands, and mentoring future leaders.
A man sits in a car with a lion mascot standing next to the car.

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For most of his Penn State career, Robert Ginsberg commuted to Brandywine from his home near Washington, D.C. In 1999, the lion mascot was on hand to greet Ginsberg as he reached 500,000 miles of commuting back and forth to campus.

A man and a woman stand on a front porch with several boxes.

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Brandywine Chancellor Marilyn J. Wells visited with Robert Ginsberg, professor emeritus of philosophy and comparative literature, as Ginsberg prepared to donate his academic and historical documents to the campus.

A man and a woman sit at a dining room table look at files.

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Robert Ginsberg, professor emeritus of philosophy and comparative literature, and Brandywine Chancellor Marilyn J. Wells reviewed documents that Ginsberg was donating to the campus.

A man and a woman sit at a dining room table look at files.

Brandywine’s first professor donates academic and historical documents to campus

Robert Ginsberg, the first faculty member hired at Penn State Brandywine, has donated his academic papers and other documents related to the campus’ early years to be housed at Brandywine in partnership with University Libraries. Ginsberg was hired in 1967 as Penn State prepared to open a new campus in Delaware County. He was the first of 11 original faculty members who taught 236 students during the campus’ inaugural year.
A group of people poses for a photo in front of a white wall.

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Brandywine Associate Professor of Communication Arts and Sciences Angela Putman and the 12 students in her public speaking class held at the George W. Hill Correctional Facility were joined by several guests for the closing ceremony.

Two women stand talking to each other.

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Warden Laura K. Williams and Chancellor Marilyn J. Wells discussed the partnership between the George W. Hill Correctional Facility and Penn State Brandywine.