Tuesday, November 29, 2011

We Are Penn State

I feel like I should start this off by admitting that coming to Penn State in the fall was not my first choice in schools. I had wanted to go to the University of Delaware, but the extra cost was a deterrent as well as an inhibition for me and my family. That being said, after the events concerning Sandusky, Paterno, the victims, and this university as a whole occurred, my feelings toward the idea of myself being a student here greatly changed. I found myself downtown during the riot. I sat in class with hundreds of others and discussed what had happened with my professors. I watched with disdain and awe as television programs like South Park and The Daily Show insulted the name of a great institution. With all of this, it did not only feel as if we were talking about the university alone. It seemed to me, and I'm sure to many others as well, that all of this speculation, these insults, and these discussions were about the students as individuals. All 40,000 of us have our own opinions, our own views, our own pride regarding the fact that we go to school here. The point that I am trying to make is that because of these unfortunate events and the way in which I reacted to them, this marked the first time that I really experienced the pride of being a Penn Stater. I now feel as if attending this institution is a part of me and I will always keep close to my heart. I'm certain many of my other fellow students and alumni can agree that they have the same notion.
It was interesting to read and watch the articles and videos posted in the main Blog. Between re-watching Jon Stewart and the candlelight vigil, and seeing the words that were given to describe the emotion students and faculty feel at this time found in the article by Lori Shontz, I had somewhat mixed reactions. The disgust I experienced a few weeks ago flooded back, but the pride I mentioned a few moments ago remained. Overall, I especially enjoyed Dave Housley's article the most, as I found it the most relevant to my own thoughts and ideas. There was a quote that I found in his writing which really grabbed me and made me think. It reads like this, "This is how it goes around here. These kids puke in our streets and urinate in the bushes. They are terrible pedestrians and can be worse neighbors. Then they go and do something like raise 10 million dollars (last year alone) to support pediatric cancer patients." The reason as to why this most stuck out to me is because I believe this is how many of the people that live in State College feel about the students living both on and off of campus. It is a testament to my hope that for every evil action or occurrence, there will be with it people who choose to believe in the good of this world. So while Sandusky may puke in the streets and urinate in the bushes, I have hope that both the people in State College and the students of Penn State will band together in a time of trial and turn his evil into a candlelight vigil filled with goodness. And for that reason, We Are!...

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