Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Happy Valley, Pennsylvania is a region of Centre County that contains the borough of State College, and the townships of College, Harris, Patton, and Ferguson. Collectively, these municipalities comprise the Centre Region Council of Governments.
Until 1893, Penn State teams participated in sporting events on Old Main lawn, a large grassy area in front of the primary classroom building of the time. Beaver Field, a 500-seat structure located behind the current site of the Osmond Building, was the first permanent home for Penn State's football team, and the first game played there was a Penn State victory over Western University of ...
As the legend goes, Penn State's White Out game debuted in the 2004 season vs. Purdue because the athletic department was looking for a way to boost the fans' experience. The brains behind the ...
State College is a borough and home rule municipality in Centre County, Pennsylvania, United States.It is a college town, dominated economically, culturally, and demographically by the presence of the University Park campus of The Pennsylvania State University.
Depending on how you measure it, Penn State’s latest College Football Playoff destination was more than 2,000 miles away from Happy Valley in central Pennsylvania. But that still didn’t stop ...
It is part of Happy Valley and the larger Nittany Valley. The hamlet is at the foothills of Tussey Mountain just south of Ramblewood. Pennsylvania Route 45, locally known as Pine Grove Road, runs along Rock Springs. Rock Springs was first settled in about 1812 by David Mitchell. [2]
Since the early days of his time in Happy Valley, Penn State's James Franklin has adhered to the philosophy of 1-0. Franklin's players have bought into it wholeheartedly, pushing the program to ...
Penn State then shut out the Illinois 39–0 in the second to last home game of the 2015 season. They then lost to Michigan in Happy Valley 28–16 and to Michigan State 55–16 at MSU. The win–loss record for Penn State in the 2015 regular season was 7–5, and 7–6 after a loss to Georgia in the Taxslayer Bowl in Jacksonville.