« Paterno press conference notes | Main | Dating Tips »

It's a beautiful day in the neighborhood

The scene at Paternoville Tuesday afternoon was relatively quiet and calm compared to the boisterous, singing crowd last night.
People are napping in their tents, doing homework, using laptops, texting and listening to their iPods.
"I've been here during the middle of the day, and there aren't too many people here so I've just been doing homework. It's a little boring right now," Jimmy Hankins (freshman-civil engineering) said Tuesday afternoon.
Emilie Church was repairing her tent with the help of her father, Craig Church, who works as a cook in the east commons.
"We're rebuilding. We did it last night at 12:01, and it was wrong, so we're trying to fix the poles," Church (sophomore-marketing) said.
- Caitlin

Share this: digg | Facebook | del.icio.us

to leave a comment

Thank you for commenting!

About

This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on September 23, 2008 4:33 PM.

The previous post in this blog was Paterno press conference notes.

The next post in this blog is Dating Tips.

The Daily Collegian Online

80

The Roster

Mug

Matt Fortuna is a sophomore majoring in journalism and a football reporter for the Collegian. He has previously covered the men's tennis, soccer and basketball teams. A traditionalist, he would like nothing more than to see Joe Paterno throw it back to his Brooklyn days and install the single-wing offense this season.

Mug

Nate Mink is a sophomore majoring in journalism and a football reporter for the Daily Collegian and a 5-foot-10 sesquipedalian from Allentown who has tried to grow facial hair for 20 years. Sadly, he has been unsuccessful thus far. He is anxious to get a new driver's license in September and hopes the bartenders at Zanzibar in Ann Arbor believe he's 21.

Mug

Wayne Staats is a junior majoring in journalism and history and is a football reporter for the Collegian. He previously covered the baseball and women's basketball teams. He never made it far playing competitive football, unless Nerf football in grade school counts.

Powered by
Movable Type 4.1