Residents of University Towers, 458 E. College Ave., held a press conference/rally yesterday afternoon to protest a month-long shortage of hot water that has affected the entire building.
Charles A. "Charley" Way, Penn State's oldest football alumnus and the nation's oldest All-American, died late Sunday night in Honey Brook after suffering a stroke on New Year's Eve. He was 90.
A new campus group is taking the conservative approach to activism.
Paul Ruskin said he had an eerie feeling when he sat down to write a letter to the dean of the College of Agriculture, because the dean probably will not be born for another 40 years.
University and legislative officials nationwide are lining up to oppose the U.S.Secretary of Education's proposal to hold universities responsible for student defaults on Guaranteed Student Loans.
Women are not seen as those entrusted with civilization -- they are seen as objects of destruction and sensuality, said poet and activist Sonia Sanchez last night in the Paul Robeson Cultural Center.
The Centre County commissioners have tentatively passed a new budget for the county, and final approval should be received Feb.11, commissioners said.
If your interests include boomerang demonstrations, spelunking, or just finding a quiet place to study, you might think it difficult to find people with the same interests.
The Patt Organization of Holidaysburg will appeal a recent State College Zoning Hearing Board denial of a sign slated for a State College hotel owned by the organization.
Penn State freshmen are following national trends in career interests and political views, according to a recent survey by the American Council of Education.
University students rarely have difficulty finding a bite to eat in downtown State College, where restaurants and fast-food outlets abound.
A Graduate Student Association executive said she expects a big turnout for tonight's open forum at 7:15 in 101 Kern. Availability of University facilities, health insurance difficulties and the taxation of assistantships are expected to be the big issues for the night, said Irene Meglis, head of GSA programming and services.
State College's Centre House will receive more than $15,000 from the state to aid in the housing of the homeless in State College, and help from student organizations is also in the shelter's future.
Charles A. "Charley" Way, Penn State's oldest football alumnus and the nation's oldest All-American, died late Sunday night in Honey Brook after suffering a stroke on New Year's Eve. He was 90.
Former Penn State employee Andrew Winters would have been out on the street yesterday under a University eviction. But Winters, who was fired by the University in August, obtained a security bond and stayed his eviction.
All-American setter Javier Gaspar was a major contributor to the men's volleyball team's win in the Nittany Lion-Mizuno Invitational this past weekend.
Junior guard Tom Hovasse was named the Atlantic 10 Player of the Week -- becoming the first Penn State player to win the award this season -- after he sparked the men's basketball team to a pair of road victories.
To so many, he is an enigma.
According to Amateur Wrestling News, they're two of the best in collegiate wrestling.
Collegian Editorial
My Opinion: Rick Woodward
Letters to the editor
Ferry examines the decadent rich
When Oscar Hammerstein died on August 23, 1960 at the age of 65, one person obviously affected by his death was composer Richard Rodgers, his partner of 18 years. The pair has been called the most influential and financially successful team in the entire history of the theatre.
Tonight six of Austria's finest string players will bring a taste of Vienna to Schwab Auditorium. The Vienna String Sextet will be performing at 8p.m.
The intrigue of the Far East met with the music of West when the curtain opened for The King and I at Eisenhower Auditorium this weekend.
Next to the first-floor exhibit at the Palmer Museum of Art sits a small sign that reads "Please Enter." The placard refers to New York artist Esther Grillo's Meltdown, a shocking installation depicting the possible results of a nuclear catastrophe.
The Nuclear Energy Symposium taking place on Wed., Feb. 3 and Thurs., Feb. 4 at the Museum of Art will feature a diversity of speakers and their thoughts concerning nuclear energy.
