A panel of gay men and lesbians shared their personal experiences as they spoke on the various aspects of "Healthy Same Sex Relationships" during a discussion held Wednesday evening.
University couples want more than romance in their relationships.
This year's leaders in the Panhellenic Council hope to transfer more than just positions to incoming officers at an induction banquet Sunday at the Penn State Sheraton, 240 S. Pugh St.
The Department of Environmental Resources and the Department of Military Affairs are closing in on an agreement about the terms of the National Guard's relocation to Philipsburg's Midstate Regional Airport, a military official said.
Students seeking a roof to put over their heads in fall might find shelter in the Housing Fair today and tomorrow in the HUB Ballroom.
Although no one knows for sure how many people living in Centre County have AIDS, seven documented cases have been reported here since the Center for Disease Control began recording full-blown AIDS cases.
A student infected with the HIV virus or has AIDS has access to all University facilities and services.
Nearly a decade after the Iranian revolution, the "superpowers" of the United States and Russia still feel the impact the Islamic faith made on the world, a speaker from the Muslim Institute of London said last night.
Fraternity pledge education and levels of hazing were topics discussed at "The End of Pledge Education . . . At Least as We Know It," a program held last night.
The University student trustee announced her early resignation last night to a University Student Advisory Board that had no comment.
The University Hearing Board reached a decision last night on the disciplinary status of the third person charged in connection with last November's anti-CIA recruitment protest.
Drivers who use State College's street parking meters will continue to pay 40 cents per hour until the borough can contract maintenance personnel to upgrade the meters with a 10-cent fee hike, officials say.
Legislators sponsoring the Student-Athlete Right to Know Act are waiting to see if recently proposed NCAA legislation will end their push to make student athletes' graduation rates available to the public.
Finding off-campus housing is a big concern for many students coming to University Park from the Commonwealth campuses, but the "OTIS on Tour" program is designed to ease those worries.
Graduate students can compete for a total of $10,000 in prize money and show off their research at the same time during the fourth annual Graduate Research Exhibition.
University administrators met for the first time last week to discuss the possibility of a mandatory health insurance plan for graduate and international students.
A retired coal operator said he was defending the rights of all Americans when he pulled a loaded pistol on a senior Clearfield County judge at the courthouse Wednesday, authorities said yesterday.
Courses concentrating on cultural diversity could become a General Education Requirement by Fall 1990 as part of the University's drive to create a pluralistic society.
Chainsaws will buzz tomorrow afternoon when Tau Phi Delta fraternity restores a trail at Shaver's Creek Environmental Center in Stone Valley.
Phi Kappa Tau members from more than 15 northeast chapters will converge on State College tomorrow for crash courses on rush, membership, orientation and liability, said Bill Keller, vice president of Penn State's chapter.
State College Borough Council members Ruth Lavin and Dan Winand, who three years ago swept local elections on a ticket with the late John Dombroski, yesterday officially announced their candidacy for a second term.
A Campus Loop bus crashed into a pick-up truck on East College Avenue near Pugh Street last night. No one was injured in the collision.
Hopes of keeping its winning ways alive accompany the women's gymnastics team tonight as it heads to Ohio State to battle the Buckeyes.
The women's swimming and diving team (11-3) will face a new challenge at 7 tonight when it takes on Colorado State (8-2) at Princeton, N.J.
Things could get a little heated this weekend when the men's volleyball team travels to Newark, N.J., for the four-team Golden Dome Classic.
The men's indoor track team will travel to Gainesville, Fla., on Sunday to compete against some of the nation's top athletes in the Barnett-Bankers track meet.
With the end of indoor track season only two weeks away, the women's indoor team is setting its sights on qualifying more individuals for the ECAC and NCAA championships at the end of the regular season.
The third-ranked wrestling team looks to add two more wins to its record of 49 consecutive Eastern Wrestling League dual meet victories when it faces Pittsburgh at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow and West Virginia at 2 p.m. Sunday.
The ice hockey team left a strong impression on Navy when it beat the Midshipmen, 10-4, last season. As a result, Navy has used this weekend's pair of games against Penn State as a motivating factor its entire season.
The biggest showdown in collegiate fencing this season will take place tomorrow when powerhouses Penn State and Columbia University engage in a battle of the unbeatens.
Although it has a bit of a cushion, the men's gymnastics team still has at least one more meet to concern itself with before buying its plane tickets for Nebraska, site of the 1989 NCAAs.
After the women's basketball team lost in double overtime, 86-78, Monday night to James Madison, it was down right hurt.
Back in October, the football team travelled to Morgantown to play highly-ranked and highly-talented West Virginia. Tomorrow, Penn State will once again find itself an underdog to the Mountaineers - this time on the basketball court.
Penn State landed two of the most highly sought football prospects in the country yesterday, vaulting this year's recruiting class into the top 10 nationwide, according to one national recruiting publication.
While launching a double attack on St. Bonaventure and host West Virginia at 1 p.m. tomorrow, the men's swimming and diving team will also have its last chance to compete for qualifying times for the Eastern Seaboard Championships, which are only three weeks away.
Collegian Editorial
My Opinion: Wendy Goldstein
My Opinion: Rich Zimmerman
My Opinion: Thomas G. Poole
My Opinion:Jeff Kochan
Letters to the editor
If you need a good cry, go see Beaches.
A photograph is not always a photograph, especially if it's a photograph taken by a master. Until March 5, Retrospective 1946-1988, an exhibit by New York-based photographer Harold Feinstein, can be awed in the Zoller Gallery.
Hey Mon. At 8 p.m. this Sunday in Rec Hall, Ziggy Marley and the Melody Makers will bring their award-winning reggae to the University.
The adage that art imitates life is certainly true in Dr. Endesha Ida Mae Holland's case. Her semi-autobiographical From the Mississippi Delta reflects her coming of age as a poor Afro-American woman during the American civil rights movement of the early 60s.
PINK FLOYD - The Delicate Sound of Thunder (Columbia Records)
MIDGE URE -- Answers to Nothing (Chrysalis)





