The university will no longer be required to pay a $17.6 million subsidy to WHYY as financial supporters are expected to step up to save the central Pennsylvania station.
The central Pennsylvania station that serves 1.5 million people was slated to shut down after an earlier agreement was rejected by Penn State.
The plan still requires approval from WHYY’s board, as well as the Federal Communications Commission, but is expected to be ...
The finance and investment committee last month unanimously voted against moving forward with a proposal for WHYY to acquire ...
The Penn State Board of Trustees on Monday unanimously approved a new agreement to transfer the operations of WPSU, the ...
A month after voting down an earlier proposal, Penn State University’s board of trustees approved a plan to transfer WPSU-TV ...
A new deal to help save Penn State’s public radio and television station has been approved following a Board of Trustees vote ...
The Board of Trustees at Penn State University has approved the sale of its college-run public broadcast outlet to its larger ...
Penn State University’s Board of Trustees unanimously approved the sale of university-owned public broadcaster WPSU’s operating assets to Philadelphia-based WHYY. The vote Monday follows the board’s ...
WPSU-TV and radio will become part of Philadelphia-based WHYY, under a plan Penn State trustees unanimously approved Monday, ...