The Senior Class Gift Committee will continue its fund-raising efforts with a flower sale today, the group's chairman said.
Kim Alberter has been flying all her life. As far back as she can remember, her father, a former U.S. Air Force pilot, has owned a plane and taken her on flights.
Graduating seniors still searching for a job can breathe a small sigh of relief because the job market looks good this year, University experts say.
The next editor of The Daily Collegian will be selected from four candidates tonight by the Collegian Inc. Board of Directors.
Janyne Althaus and Bill Novick won the Undergraduate Student Government presidency last night, narrowly defeating Kendall Houk and Jeff Ballou by about 300 votes.
In order to "clear the air" on how regional representatives feel about the long-debated proposal to consolidate area municipalities, Centre Region Council of Government's officials voted yesterday to place a consolidation discussion on COG's May agenda.
The Daily Collegian's Board of Directors last night selected senior sales representative Jennifer Grimm as the manager of The Daily Collegian's business division.
Dormitory students chose their new leaders yesterday in an election characterized by a small pool of candidates and many uncontested races.
Children, sporting juice mustaches and cookie-crumbed outfits, will scurry about the area, searching for hidden eggs.
For the next three days, the men's volleyball team will be in unfamiliar surroundings. It will be at home.
By downing Bucknell 9-0 yesterday at the Penn State Tennis Club, the women's tennis team proved just how much depth it has.
A lack of confidence continued to hurt the women's golf team as it placed seventh out of 13 teams with a total score of 992 at the Peggy Kirk Bell Invitational March 20-21, in Altamonte Springs, Fla.
Collegian Editorial
My Opinion: Mubarak Dahir
Letters to the editor
Armed with only scarfs, hats and blankets, Bryce Edmonds and Dan Feldman became intimately familiar with the landscape of Eisenhower Auditorium early yesterday morning.
This week marks the beginning of spring: the season when snow melts and hearts warm; the time when lovers walk, holding hands, all over the land dotted by dainty flowers.
The room is silent, except for a quiet jangling sound. All eyes focus on the arms, lifting a skinny bar burdened with metal plates, as the rest of the body lies still on a bench. After several moments the rhythmic lifting slows, becomes more labored. Heavy breathing begins, and the prostrate body starts to jiggle. Then, the cheering: