

Here is a close up of Mt. Nittany from much closer to town. Even this close, the houses and subdivisions are barely visible. Trust me, they are there.

This is a site you don't see very often in State College - bumper to bumper traffic. This picture was taken during rush hour in Pittsburgh along the Parkway East while driving back home to central PA on Monday.

This is a more common site. Expansion plans often outpace reality and you may just find yourself near the entrance to a bypass not yet built.

Take any suburb of a large city and you have State College. But with State College, you don't actually have the large city nearby. What you do have is a major university that brings in 40,000 students for most of the year to support all of your favorite stores, eateries, concerts, etc. A big, small town. Here we see that Lynyrd Skynyrd will be in town at the Bryce Jordan Center which is an 18,000 seat arena named after the president of Penn State University (1983-1990)

On any given day, you will see individuals expressing their right to free speech on causes from both ends of the political spectrum. Ironically, this group is from the local chapter of the young-at-heart Republicans.
Parking around the university is always a challenge. Pretty much any open space on university grounds has some type of restriction on parking availability. You better have one of these stickers or you'll be visiting one of the local towing operators with an open wallet. Around the town of State College, there are plenty of spaces when the students aren't in class and even a few parking garages. During an event weekend, all of those spaces are gone and people try to get creative. It is a heyday for the local towing operators who can't tow 'em fast enough.

Penn State was founded as an agricultural university and that is still prevalent all around the area. Established right in the middle of Pennsylvania farm country, State College has all the agriculture you can handle within a few miles of the town center. These cows are affectionately called "Hospital Cows" as this field is adjacent to the Mt. Nittany Medical Center.
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