Teamwork in action Shimmering with athleticism and energy ... ... and earning the spotlight ... ... the Wildcat Dance Team delivers a winning performance. Penn College’s Wildcat Dance Team held a spring “Take the Stage” benefit Saturday afternoon in the Klump Academic Center Auditorium, the first of two performances within the week.
Helpful employees from student-focused offices were on hand to shepherd tomorrow's grads through today's task list. Building construction technology students Logan L. Bathurst (left), of Lock Haven, and Jason M. Zucco, of Bellefonte, stand ready to graduate in the May 18 morning ceremony.
Representing PC Alliance are (from left) Victor M. Marino; Brianna E. Milden, the organization's president; Kai F. Marshall; and adviser Cathy E. Gamez. With the rainbow flag about to be raised, Elliott Strickland, vice president for student affairs, offers remarks. Also participating are Milden (center) and Sammie L. Davis, coordinator of diversity and cultural life.
An artistic angle is the focus for Hunter M. Zill, an automated manufacturing technology major from Hanover ... ... who got just the image he sought. The artist's arrows provide a literal point of view for Brianna M. Farmer, a baking and pastry arts student from McKean. “Every Which Way” is more than an exhibit title! Mahoney (right) assists Yvette B. Moore with camera settings.
Student managers for the event, Gray and Jordan, plate the dessert: key lime pie with coconut panna cotta. Students Jordan, Showers and Meszaros look over the main course before serving: an herb-and-garlic-crusted loin of beef with classic au jus lié and potato cake. Callahan prepares seared scallops. Shannon and Gray plate an intermezzo of tropical citrus sorbet.
The college's exercise mentorship program is designed to pair structured physical activity with on-campus counseling sessions to help students cope with anxiety, depression or other issues. Illustration by Kennedy L. Englert, graphic design student From the Spring 2019 Penn College Magazine: Exercise nourishes mental health.
Less than 24 hours after freezing April showers and overhead gloom shrouded the area, far more seasonal conditions prevailed for a Spring Open House that more than lived up to its name. Rising temperatures were matched by warm smiles and abundant goodwill in every corner of Penn College's campuses, where students, employees and alumni helped inquisitive visitors spend a Saturday to remember.
Thirty-two graduates of Williamsport Technical Institute, a precursor to Pennsylvania College of Technology, were among the 70 attendees at Friday's 19th annual reunion.
Students in building science and sustainable design (or its architectural technology concentration) present their diverse "cardboard chair" projects in the LEC on Friday morning. Front row (seated, from left): Kyle L. Bromwell, Cambridge, Md.; Tomas N. Brooks, West Chester, Melissa A. Tarhovicky, East Stroudsburg; and Jeffrey L.
A Pennsylvania College of Technology student will spend his summer engaging in a National Science Foundation research program devoted to high performance computing. Nichalus S.
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