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Nittany Lion Legend
Penn State's athletic symbol, chosen by the student body in 1906, is the
mountain lion which once roamed central Pennsylvania. H.D. "Joe" Mason,
a member of the Class of 1907, conducted a one-man campaign to choose a
school mascot after seeing the Princeton tiger on a trip with the Penn
State baseball team to that New Jersey campus. A student publication
sponsored the campaign to select a mascot and Penn State is believed to
be the first college to
adopt the lion as a mascot.
Since Penn State is located in the Nittany Valley at the foot of Mount
Nittany, the lion was designated as a Nittany Lion. In regional
folklore, Nittany (or Nita-Nee) was a valorous Indian princess in whose
honor the Great Spirit caused Mount Nittany to be formed. A later
namesake, daughter of chief O-Ko-Cho, who lived near the mouth of Penn's
Creek, fell in love with Malachi Boyer, a trader. The tearful maiden and
her lost lover became legend and her name was given to the stately
mountain.
Nittany Lion Shrine
Penn State's Nittany Lion shrine was dedicated on Oct. 24, 1942, during
Homecoming Weekend.
Animal sculptor Heinz Warneke and stonecutter Joseph Garatti molded a
13-ton block of Indiana limestone into the most recognizable symbol of
Penn State. The shrine was chosen from six models submitted by Warneke.
The shrine is a gift of the Class of 1940 and rests in a natural setting
of trees near Recreation Building. The site was chosen because of its
accessibility, the surrounding trees and the fact that the sculpture
would not be dwarfed by nearby buildings.
Blue and White
Penn State's student-athletes are instantly identified by their blue and
white uniforms - but those weren't the original school colors. A
three-member committee representing the sophomore, junior and senior
classes was appointed in October of 1887 to develop color options from
which the student body would select the school's official colors. Dark
pink and black was the unanimous choice of the student body after
considering the color combinations presented by the committee.
Soon many students and the baseball team were sporting pink and black
striped blazers and caps. However, problems arose when the pink faded to
white after several weeks of exposure to the sun. The students then
opted for blue, rather than black, and white. The official announcement
of the new choice was made on March 18, 1890.
Alma Mater
For the Glory of Old State
For her founders strong and great,
For the future that we wait,
Raise the song, raise the song.
Sing our love and loyalty
Sing our hopes that bright and free
Rest, O Mother dear, with thee,
All with thee, all with thee.
When we stood at childhood's gate,
Shapeless in the hands of fate,
Thou didst mold us, dear old State
Dear old State, dear old State.
May no act of ours bring shame
To one heart that loves thy name,
May our lives but swell thy fame
Dear old State, dear old State.
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