Mount Nittany Newsletter
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A newsletter for all those who love Mount Nittany and dwell at heart in her gentle shade.
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The Origins of ‘Happy Valley’
Most of have heard at least one theory on the origins of our “Happy Valley” nickname. Did it arise during the Great Depression, an expression of area’s economic resiliency? Or perhaps it was the tongue-in-cheek lament of would-be 1960s activists, frustrated by a stubbornly docile pace of life. We are pleased to present this thorough examination of the question, written nearly 15 years ago by long-time local Nadine Kofman, widow of Mayor Bill Welch:
Happy Valley is a well-known place that isn’t on any local road map. It has been around for only 50 years, but it’s very well established. Unlike most places, its population includes both residents and visitors. Geographically—depending on your perspective—it is Nittany Valley, Centre County or a Beaver Stadium football Saturday.
Looking at it from the viewpoint of the fellow who is credited with coining it, Happy Valley is a positive state of mind.
It was late 1949 or early 1950. In their circa 1937 Plymouth sedan, Pat and Harriet O’Brien and children Patty and Danny were regularly spending weekday afternoons or Saturday mornings on the road – motoring around Centre County and beyond.
“We were just enamored with the lovely countryside, in contrast to the city,” says Harriet. She and her husband, who were both natives of Pennsylvania’s hard-coal region, lived in Washington, D.C., after the war. Harold James “Pat” O’Brien then taught briefly at Clearfield High School, after which – in order to allow him to finish his PhD in speech communication – the family relocated to Centre County. Penn State hired him as a speech instructor and he later became the men’s debate team coach.
The second-hand Plymouth was their first post-World War II auto. Living in Boalsburg at the time, they needed one, to get back and forth.
“It was just a ritual to take a drive somewhere,” says Harriet “We drove around the farmlands of Spring Mills, Centre Hall, Pleasant Gap, Belleville, Allensville. Pat got to know the farmers. He especially liked the Amish.”
They had moved, says Harriet, “from city life, to bucolic life” and found it peaceful and beautiful.
The O’Briens, like the rest of the country, had come through much, to reach a happier place and time. “This whole generation went through a Depression and war, before they could land on their feet,” says Harriet.
Sgt. O’Brien had been a tank commander on Saipan, in the South Pacific. He came home with war memories, shrapnel wounds and a purple heart.
In the late 1950s, at a conference on one of the Penn State campuses, he met Ross Lehman, another coal-cracker and wounded World War II veteran who also came home with a purple heart. A member of a bomber crew, he had lost a leg when his plane was shot down near Vienna, Austria.
“From then on,” says Harriet, “they saw each other all the time.” Both were witty raconteurs and enjoyed breaking into song. “They loved to sing Penn State songs and other songs,” she says.
The two couples became close friends, and Ross and Katey Lehman heard, many times, Pat’s reference to this “happy valley” where he and his family had relocated.
That friendship, research shows, gave birth to Happy Valley, the geographical euphemism.
Ross, executive director of the Penn State Alumni Association, and writer/homemaker Katey wrote a Monday through Friday hearth & fireside column for the Centre Daily Times. A prominent CDT column, it was printed on page four, the editorial page, and just about everybody read it.
From spring of 1954 to autumn of 1980, their somewhat alternating “Open House” columns (Katey wrote most of them) shared warm and often wry snapshots of family life with musings on their small-town landscape. A Happy Valley reference therein was a perfect fit, and Katey fitted it into several of her columns.
In one such mention, her November 27, 1963, “letter” to her out-of-town husband, she wrote:
“My dear old hitch-hiker, your dog Sam, even though he loves Happy Valley, is apparently not completely housebroken. Therefore, please hitch-hike home soon. Sam listens to you better than he does to me. Please remember to look respectable but fairly pathetic when you’re hitching that ride home. I’ve spent most of your money — except a little for soup and our Thanksgiving dinner.”
In a spring column – June 25, 1962 – she tells us, in a contemplative piece headlined “Happy Valley And Jet Age,” that Ross mistook a clap of thunder for the sound of an overhead jet. Questioning his hearing ability, Katey continues on and informs readers that, as a child, “The first time I heard a jet breaking the sound barrier over Hort Woods, I knew very well that it wasn’t thunder, but having never heard it before, I had to think for a minute before I realized that even our happy little valley is subject to the jet age.”
No one knows how many readers Katey taught to say “Happy Valley.” Other opportunities would come along.
“It was such a subtle thing – probably something said on the radio” – stimulating people to think, “‘That was cool,’ and it caught on like a leaky kitchen sink,” suggests Donna Clemson, former CDT reporter and retired Penn Stater magazine editor. For a publication mentioning Happy Valley, “There was a time when it couldn’t be used except in quotes (as though it weren’t a real place), and now it’s an acceptable term,” she says.
“It seems appropriate in so many ways,” Clemson adds. “For kids going to college here, it’s kind of like going to Oz.” It’s a “magic time” in their lives. “You have to live in a happy valley to be in a magic time.” For herself, as a Bellefonte resident, “I wouldn’t want to rear my children anywhere else. It’s beautiful here. Why not call it Happy Valley?”
Not all of the Penn State students who picked up the term viewed it with a smile. Some were heard to use it sarcastically, as an isolated place away from the real world. Between 1965 and 1973, the real world meant the draft; young men were being sent off to fight in Vietnam. Staying in school, kept them from it yet, “Happy Valley is a joke” was in the air.
But use of Happy Valley was spreading, as an affirmative.
Gil Aberg, retired PSU Public Information writer, moved to State College from Chicago in 1955. “I heard the expression shortly after I came here,” he says, positing that it was probably “from my first boss, Frank Neusbaum,” under whom Aberg wrote for the Penn State film school’s motion-picture studio. It seemed to him that the usage was a “common currency. I thought it went back to forever,” he says.
Wendy Williams says he didn’t use the term, himself, during his early years as a local radio announcer, but did hear it used on the air. “I don’t ever recall hearing that term when I was at WMAJ (1961 to 1966). My earliest recollection would have been when I was at WRSC in the late 1960s.”
Fran Fisher, long-time radio voice for Penn State football, associates Happy Valley with the game. “I don’t ever remember hearing that before the Paterno era,” he says. He didn’t use it on the air until 1966. “I think the reason I started to use it was that everybody else was using it.”
According to Penn State Sports Information, the first televised football game at Beaver Stadium was on November 5, 1966. That football year was JoPa’s first as head coach.
It was these national football broadcasts that put “Happy Valley” on the U.S. map, says retired Sports Information director Jim Tarman. “It was the success in football, all those golden years, that triggered it,” he says.
“That’s when it got the wider recognition,” says CDT sports editor Ron Bracken. “Back in those days (late 1960s, early 1970s), it was a big deal to get on TV.”
How did national broadcasters pick it up in the first place?
Art Stober, who produced award-winning 60-second, then 30-second videos about Penn State for football telecasts in the mid 1970s, guesses that TV broadcasters “just heard people using it and thought it was a very appropriate term.”
Panning around to show the stadium’s picturesque mountain setting, the tailgating parties – as network cameras are wont to do – the place “looked idyllic. It was only natural to use the term.”
Former Sports Information director Dave Baker agrees with that. “On an October broadcast day,” the cameras would show beautiful foliage amid a “serene” farming area. For the TV audience, “It made a nice little story to start the game,” he says.
Here in Happy Valley, not everybody knows today where the name originated; there would have been far fewer seven years ago.
Jan Gibeling, who, with her husband, Howard, moved to State College from Connecticut in 1997, was curious. “We heard the expression used so many times,” she says, but most people, when asked, “would say they didn’t know where it came from.”
Deciding in 2000 to audit a Penn State course on Pennsylvania history (History 12), she took the opportunity to answer her own question; she did a history paper on Happy Valley. Her research sources included State College old-timers, as well as old CDTs. The latter yielded a couple of crucial Katey columns.
Katey had died in January of 1981. Talking to Ross, Gibeling was directed to Harriet O’Brien, because Pat, who retired in 1976 as Penn State associate dean emeritus of Liberal Arts for the Commonwealth Campuses, had died in 1997.
Gibeling concludes her history paper with:
“From an innocuous beginning, the expression ‘Happy Valley’ has gradually gained in popularity. It is now used nationwide by major network sports announcers when broadcasting college sports, by weathermen when reporting the weather for our area, and by The Weather Channel, to name a few.
“As reported in the New York Times in an article dated July 22, 1981, when the federal government added State College to its classification of Federal Metropolitan Statistical Areas (as a result of the 1980 census), ‘many of the people who can live anywhere prefer the unhurried life of a college town. Even traveling salesmen, tired of cities and suburbs, have been settling in what they call ‘the happy valley,’ where rolling farmland and villages are surrounded by forest-covered Appalachian ridges.”
As a submission for an audited course, the paper wasn’t given a grade, but “I had fun doing this,” Gibeling says, and she also developed an interest in doing research.
There was a third reward: she – though not her name – has gone down in history. She got a mention in the Oral History Project interview which Ross gave before his death a year ago. The interview, conducted by Bill Jaffe, was part of a Community Academy of Lifelong Learning project, sponsored by the Centre County Historical Society.
For the record, Ross said he hadn’t recognized the Pat O’Brien-Katey Lehman legacy until “a woman” contacted him about it. “She said that the first mention of Happy Valley that she found in her research was in Katey’s column,” said Ross.
Unlike the Open House co-author, Pat O’Brien had an inkling of his role.
Patty O’Brien Mutzeck recalls her father telling her one day, in bemused tones, “’I think I may be the one responsible for this phrase’.”
To his mind, “happy valley” had to do with beauty and intangible positive qualities. “‘We’re blessed here’,” Patty often heard him say.
“In those days,” she says, “life was filled with spirit and optimism and enthusiasm” and, she adds, “he was all that.”
“He liked words, language – the written word, the spoken word,” says Harriet, who is pleased her husband “came up with something everybody likes and uses.” Although she hears from neighbors that the O’Brien coinage of “happy valley” makes the family famous, she prefers to think otherwise.
“After all,” says Harriet, “it’s just a little phrase that caught fire.”
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Our Street Names Are Memorials

It’s always great when we come into deeper contact with the life and history of the place we live. That happened last year with a column for Town & Gown about a project cataloging the CBICC historical archive:
Vince Verbeke, immediate past president of the Mount Nittany Conservancy, left a comment on the article that included some pretty cool information on the origins of State College’s many unique street names. I think it’s great to have that knowledge in the back of your head as you’re out navigating around town, because it helps remind of its unique character and history and enhances the experience of the place. It’s a little thing, of course; but those often are the very details that enrich our lives, no?
Vince comments: “Did you know that Fairmount Ave is so named because of its higher location gave it the best view of Mt. Nittany from town?”
He then adds the following, which is drawn from the History of State College, 1896-1946:
“Our Street Names Are Memorials”
Frequently asked by newcomers to the town, and occasionally by “oldtimers,” is the question, “From what source were such unusual street names derived?” State College streets are in a sense memorials to outstanding residents and faculty members. For instance, the name “Foster” has always been prominent in the history of the town. At one time, there were nine Mrs. Fosters in the village! Today there are seven telephones listed under that name. The inclusion, here, of a list of street names and their sources may prove interesting. Several of those listed are not yet within the borough limits. A part of this list is included in Mr. Ferree’s thesis. (Name of street is given first and for whom named follows.)
Allen street – Dr. William Allen, president of the College, 1864 – 1866.
Atherton street – Dr. George W. Atherton, pres. f the College, 1882 – 1906.
Barnard street – Prof. L. H. Barnard, professor of civil engineering.
Beaver Ave – Gen. James A. Beaver, early landowner, influential in gaining aid for College; president of Board of Trustees, 1873 – 1881 and 1897 – 1915.
Buckhout street – W. A. Buckhout, professor of botany and a prominent citizen.
Burrowes street – Dr. T. H. Burrowes, president of the College, 1868 – 1871.
Butz street – George C. Butz, professor of horticulture, first president of borough council.
Calder Alley – Dr. James Calder, president, 1871 – 1880.
College Ave – Proximity to College.
Corl street – Several Corl families of the town.
Fairmount Ave – View of Mount Nittany.
Fairway Road – Named for J. T. McCormick’s first wife, Anna Maria Fair.
Foster Ave – Named for many Foster families who featured in the town’s history.
Frazier street – Gen. John Fraser, president of the College, 1866 – 1868.
Garner street – Samuel Garner, former landowner and farmer of State College.
Gill street – Rev. Benjamin Gill, D.D., chaplain for many years.
Glenn Road – For the Dr. W. S. Glenn Sr. family.
Hamilton Ave – John Hamilton, former landowner and for 37 years treasurer of the College.
Hartswick Ave – Henry Hartswick, son – in – law of John Neidigh, early settler.
Heister street – Gabriel Heister, one of the first trustees of the College.
Hetzel Place – Ralph Dorn Hetzel, president of the College, 1927 – 1947.
High street – Because of its location on high ground.
Highland Ave – Named for home of Prof. John Hamilton, “The Highlands.”
Hillcrest Ave – Named for its location on a ridge.
Holmes street – Holmes family, active in the borough organization.
Hoy street – W. A. Hoy, fourth burgess of the borough.
Irvin Ave – Gen. James Irvin, once part owner of Centre Furnace Lands, and donor of 200 acres of land for College.
Jackson street and Ave – Josiah P. Jackson, professor of mathematics, 1880 – 1893; and his son, John Price Jackson, dean of the School of Engineering, 1909 – 1915.
James Place – James T. Aikens estate.
Keller street – The Keller family of State College.
Krumrine Ave – Fred and John C. Krumrine families.
Locust Lane – Named from trees bordering the street.
Lytle street – Andrew Lytle, supervisor of roads in College township at time borough was formed.
Markle street – “Abe” Markle, early landowner and town’s first butcher.
McAllister street – Hugh N. McAllister, promoter of the College and designer of the original Old Main.
McCormick Ave – John T. McCormick, who helped organize the First National Bank.
McKee street – James Y. McKee, acting president, 1881 – 1882. Also vice – president for many years.
Miles street – Col. Samuel Miles, part owner of Centre Furnace ore furnace until 1832.
Mitchell Ave – Judge H. Walton Mitchell, president of the Board of Trustees, 1915 – 1930.
Nittany Ave – Nittany Valley and mountain.
Osman street – David Ozman, first blacksmith.
Park Ave – Formerly called “Lovers Lane,” changed to Park because its many trees resembled a park.
Patterson street – W. C. Patterson, the second burgess of State College.
Pugh street – Dr. Evan Pugh, first president of the College, 1859 – 1864.
Ridge Ave – Because it is higher than Park Ave.
Sauers street – John Sauers, first shoemaker.
Shattuck Drive – Professor Shattuck, first borough engineer, appointed 1907.
Sparks street – Dr. Edwin E. Sparks, president of the College, 1907 – 1920.
Sunset Road – Because it runs directly toward the sunset.
Thomas street – Dr. John M. Thomas, president of the College, 1920 – 1925.
Thompson street – Named for Moses Thompson whose early aid helped establish the College here.
Waring Ave – William G. Waring, first agricultural superintendent of the Farm School.
Woodland Drive – Location in a natural woodlot. -
Newsletters, 2007-14
Archives of our annual newsletters that ran from 2007-14.
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Elliot Abrams: The More Things Change…
To even the most casual radio listeners here in the Valley (and in many other markets throughout the country), Accuweather meteorologist Elliot Abrams is the familiar voice of the morning weather forecast. Abrams has been with Accuweather since its early days; even as he has become a fixture of an expanding international corporation, for residents of Patton Township, he has also been a constant presence in their local government.
Today, Elliot Abrams has the distinction of being the longest-tenured elected official in the Nittany Valley, having served on Patton’s Board of Supervisors for 32 out of the 34 years since being elected to his first six-year term in 1981 (with a brief interruption from 2000 to 2002). He has enjoyed a unique insider’s perspective on decades of slow, yet inexorable change, as the University and region around it have been transformed.
“There’s been a great amount of growth of all kinds, and at each stage, there were people who wanted the government to stop allowing it, and you had forces who wanted it to grow even faster,” he said.
A native Philadelphian who arrived here as a Penn State undergrad, Abrams was first drawn into the realm of local government through an early, but critical driver in the area’s shifting complexion – the push to bring regional airport service from the Philipsburg area to State College.
“Back in the Seventies, as Accuweather was getting started, I thought that we should be represented in the community, and so I joined the chamber of commerce, and became active on its transportation committees and government affairs committees,” recalled Abrams. “It struck me that everybody was complaining and not getting anything done.”
That revelation led to deeper scrutiny of the opportunities and challenges facing the region, and soon after, his concerns about snow plowing for local school bus routes found him in front of the township supervisors. In a classic case of the “squeaky wheel” effect, Abrams ended up being recruited to get more involved, first through the township’s sign review board, then an appointment to the planning commission.
“You become very knowledgeable about the community on the planning commission. I felt I was more aware of what was going on on the planning commission than at the supervisor level. All developers come in with their plans, and they’re vetted very carefully.”
After a stint on the planning commission, handling nuts and bolts issues like ensuring that planned parking for a new building matched the number of actual spaces, Abrams was encouraged to run for a supervisor position and elected in 1981.
“I found that things change very slowly. But I liked the idea of people being able to come in and actually tell us about problems that were occurring,” he said. “It’s not a glamourous thing, but the roads have to be maintained; you have to have a police department, and if people have problems, they have to know some place they can go where someone is actually going to listen to them and hopefully fix them. That’s all the job really is.”
In his years serving as a supervisor, pay for that job has risen from $600 in ’81 to $4,000 today. “The state has slowly raised it over the years. It still comes out to double-digit cents per hour. You’re not doing it to get rich.”
It is a fact of American life that we tend to pay the least amount of attention to the public offices whose authority most directly affects our daily lives. Township supervisor labor in relative obscurity, tackling important, if mundane, issues like zoning, sidewalk installation, and management of the regional growth boundary. Abrams finds fulfillment in the chance to solve problems. He appreciates opportunities to serve as an advocate for Penn State students on local issues and points to recent passage of a referendum authorizing a tax increase to fund more public open space as an example of democracy at work. Plus, “it’s something different to do. I’m (at Accuweather) all morning fussing over the weather, so it’s a change of pace.”
For a career spanning such a long period of time, including so many changes to the area, there have been relatively few speed bumps along the way. Abrams says that the rare moments of contention have typically involved disagreements over growth and development, including a controversy over development of the Gray’s Woods community that culminated in an unsuccessful ballot initiative to split the township. Naturally, there has been some griping about money too.
“There was one time when we were doing a budget hearing, and several people came who were upset that we were spending too much money. I’d learned that, actually, if you put the people that are most upset on your committees, you get them involved, they may still be upset about what’s going on, but if you’re doing something that’s legitimate, that’s good for the community basically, they will actually come along and get a greater appreciation that maybe what is happening should be done this way. So we had several meetings where we deliberately invited people who had come to complain to us to come a meeting and air this stuff out.”
During that meeting, the supervisors reviewed each expenditure with the concerned citizens, things like police services, road paving, and snow removal. “The township does very basic things, and they came away agreeing that probably what we were spending was reasonable. Now the next morning in the paper, the headline is ‘Residents rail against township budget.’”
Abrams has been at this unglamorous job for over three decades, nearing the end of that journey and looking back, and may be ready to finally call it quits when his current term expires in 2019. Time may move more slowly here in the Nittany Valley, but it never stops. “Since I’ll be 72 then, this might be the last one. I think it has been worthwhile.”
Elliot Abrams left Philadelphia to attend Penn State, and ended up enmeshed in the growth of an international company and globally-recognized brand, all the while remaining intimately involved in the growth and life of this community for over 30 years. He has led a life rooted in shaping the direction and character of the Nittany Valley in lasting, meaningful ways.
“You don’t live all those things in an individual day. You take things as they come. I’ve seen everything unfold in a gradual way, and it hasn’t been anything that different. The more things change, the more they stay the same. It’s always been a place where you’re sort of isolated from the rest of the world, in a way. That’s why it’s been Happy Valley.”
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A Penn State Veterans Day Address
The Mount Nittany Conservancy’s “Ben Novak Fellowship” provides Penn Staters and Nittany Valley residents an opportunity to encounter the Nittany Valley’s legendary spirit through cultural and environmental experiences meant to enhance appreciation for our distinctive community and encourage friendships for the future. The Mount Nittany Conservancy’s Ben Novak Archives are intended to help new generations encounter the Ben Novak Fellowship’s namesake.
The following speech was delivered by Dr. Ben Novak on the steps of Old Main at The Pennsylvania State University on November 11, 2009 at the invitation of the Penn State Office of Veterans.
Colonel Switzer has just spoken to you on the meaning and importance of honoring Veterans Day. It is given to me to tell you about another time, when things were different, a time that to you may seem very far in the past, but to me and the others who lived it, remains as vivid, and in some ways as terrifying as the wars, we fought in. It is about how soldiers and veterans were treated during the Viet Nam war.

I come from a family of immigrants from Central Europe. At that time, all that such immigrants wanted to prove was that they were Americans. So, when I was growing up in the 1950s, Veterans Day—which was still called “Armistice Day”—was a very special day, on which my family trekked to the cemeteries in the morning to decorate the soldier’s graves and hear “Taps” played, and then drove downtown to Main Street to watch the parades and hear the speeches. The entire town was there, and all the veterans put on their old uniforms—even when their uniforms bulged and their buttons popped off due to their later-acquired beer and sausage bellies. But, God, were they proud to be veterans and Americans.
When I arrived at Penn State in 1961, the first thing I did was report to Army ROTC. We had the universal draft then, requiring every able bodied male in the country to serve in the military forces. At Penn State, every male student had to be in ROTC for at least two years. But I wanted to be an officer, so I signed up for all four years. The highest glory one could achieve in life, I thought, was to be an officer in the United States Army.
Back then, in the early 60s, we were preparing for a different kind of war. Not one in which we might lose five thousand men over eight years, but one in which we would likely lose twice that number in a single day. If the Russians ever poured through the Fulda Gap, the order to our troops in Germany consisted on only five words, “Two weeks to the Rhine.” Which meant that our entire army of tens of thousands in Germany at that time, was to hold to the death—almost certain death—wherever they were, in order to slow down the Russians to buy enough time for the US to send reinforcements to France and whatever we still held of Belgium. And if either side dared to use a nuclear weapon, or even fire a missile, our strategy was expressed in three words, “Mutual Assured Destruction”—MAD—which meant that there would be no Pittsburgh or Philadelphia or even State College to return to; they would be under mushroom clouds, and it would be raining radiation.
That war almost came in 1962, when we faced down the Russian fleet bringing missiles to Cuba. You cannot imagine the fear of war that gripped this campus, as every ROTC student followed the news on the radio, expecting mobilization orders any minute. But President Kennedy stared down Khruschev, and Khruschev blinked. That happened many times as I was growing up. Over the Berlin Blockade, the Hungarian Revolution, the building of the Berlin Wall, Czechoslovakia, and many other occasions. Air raid drills were held several times a year in every school I attended growing up.
But that kind of war was avoided. Wise leaders devised a strategy to fight the enemy, not in the heartland of Europe, but around the fringes of the Communist empire—what Ronald Reagan later called the “Evil Empire.” And that called for a lot of small wars instead.
So, we got Viet Nam. The Tonkin Gulf Resolution was passed in 64. The first combat troops landed at Danang on March 8, 1965. I graduated a week later, at the end of the Winter Term. Two weeks after that, on April 1st, 1965, the first Antiwar demonstration was held in Washington, and that is when the hate began.
I received a deferment to go to Georgetown Law School, and was living in Washington during all the major demonstrations in the capital over the next four years. Further, my brother had become a well known opponent of the War; and a priest who taught me in high school was now one of the prominent antiwar organizers in Washington. So, through them, I met many of the antiwar leaders, and had entrée to many of the antiwar planning sessions. This never affected me—I knew I would be in that war as soon as I graduated from law school. Nor was I a spy in the “movement.” There was nothing secret about it, and the major problem discussed was usually how to get more publicity for what they wanted to do.
But I said that was when the hatred began, and I saw it happen. The movement wanted to split the county into those who supported the military, and those who opposed it. I watched draft cards being burned in DuPont Circle, saw soldiers spit at on the streets of Washington, DC. Heard hundreds of thousands of demonstrators on the Mall shout, “Hey, hey, L-B-J, how many kids have you killed today?”
After I graduated from Law School, and went to Officers Basic in the fall of ‘68, I was not immediately sent to Viet Nam, but was sent back to Washington, and stationed at Fort McNair not far from the capitol building. I lived in the District, and had to commute to Fort McNair each day in uniform. Believe me, that was not fun. One never knew when one would be insulted, or spat at.
Finally, after only about sixty days of that, I walked over to headquarters and asked to be sent to Viet Nam. It was simple: I decided I would rather be among the spat upon than the spitters. And, if those who served were “guilty” in the eyes of these people, I wanted to be in the dock with them —I wanted to be just as “guilty.” And I became so. On my way to board the military flight to Viet Nam, demonstrators shouted “Murderer!” at me in the streets of San Francisco, because I wore the uniform of my country.
It was not a fun time for soldiers. And when I returned from Viet Nam, I found it was not a fun time for veterans either. While in Viet Nam, the Dean of Students, Raymond O. Murphy, wrote me a letter offering me a job as Assistant Dean of Students at Penn State. So, by the end of August 1970, I was back at my Alma Mater, with an office in Old Main—right behind where I am standing now— first floor third window from your left.
And that is where one really learned the depths of hatred. Because I was a veteran, there were those who would not talk to me, people who refused to shake my hand when introduced. I was told I was not welcome at some social gatherings, and when I was invited, there were always those who slighted me, or made disparaging remarks about having been in that war. Veterans were made to feel pretty low. I was glad I had decided to be “guilty,” because their “innocence” was insufferable.
Just a little before, in ’68 I believe, the Penn State Veterans Club was formed. Not to celebrate their service to their country, but just to find a place where they were not put down. As an attorney, I helped them buy a house on Nittany Avenue in ‘71, and was often there myself on Friday evenings. It was a lot better to be among them. In the early 70s, there were as many stories of slights and insults received on campus as there were war stories. And, frankly, those stories were harder to tell than those of being in the war itself.
Well, that was then, and this is now. I am so happy that those days are gone. Now all of us can stand on the Penn State campus, here on the very steps of Old Main, and be among those who honor Veterans and celebrate America again.
Thank God that so many of you are here today, to do what ought to be done on this day.
And thank you, each of you, for being here. It means a lot.
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Work Party Nov 1, 2015 (Lion Ambassadors)

On Sunday, November 1, 2015 a volunteer group from the Penn State Lion Ambassadors assisted the Conservancy with some trail maintenance. The group was led by Mt. Ambassador Steve Lyncha. MNC Director Chad Bell and Mt. Ambassador Troy Weston also went up with the work party.
The small but energetic group cleared brush/limbs along trails. They also removed several dead trees near the trail (widow makers).
- Jordan, Alex, Erin, Aubrey, Taylor, and Morgan (Lion Ambassadors)
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Work Party Oct 24, 2015 (Omega Phi Alpha)

Saturday, October 24, 2015 saw the Omega Phi Alpha national service sorority assist the Conservancy with much needed trail maintenance.
Photo #1 shows the entire team that worked cutting back brush and installing barriers to “erosion risk” areas on the Blue Trail.
Photos #2 and #3 shows the smaller group that helped to install a new log seating bench on the Blue Trail.

Omega Phi Alpha Service Sorority

Packing in the chain saw!

New log seat added along the Blue Trail
