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The PAW Center and the Lion Shrine on the campus of Penn State DuBois.

Penn State DuBois announces fall 2024 dean’s list and part-time dean’s list

Penn State DuBois has announced the campus dean’s list and part-time dean’s list for the fall 2024 semester. In recognition of academic excellence, students who achieved a one-semester grade-point average of 3.50 or above and who earned 12 or more credits toward GPA are named to the dean’s list, while students who achieved a one-semester grade-point average of 3.50 or above and who earned six through 11.9 credits toward GPA are named to the part-time dean’s list.
Penn State DuBois senior guard Jordin Sommers dribbles and protects the basketball as he drives in the lane during a recent basketball game at the PAW Center, on the campus of Penn State DuBois.

Penn State DuBois basketball teams pick up wins in PSUAC play

For the men’s and women’s basketball teams at Penn State DuBois, the month of January typically means that games within the Pennsylvania State University Athletic Conference (PSUAC) come quickly and often. This means momentum is important to keep moving up the standings within the conference. Entering last week, both the Nittany Lions and Lady Lions were looking to pick up some wins that would help them improve their position in the PSUAC.
Fire Through Dry Grass promotional poster showing four men in assisted chairs

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Penn State Sustainability and WPSU are hosting this online film screening of “Fire Through Dry Grass” at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 12, online via Zoom. The film details the experience of disabled African American artists in a New York City nursing home trying to survive during the COVID-19 pandemic and highlighting the disproportionate impacts the pandemic had on communities of color and those with health preconditions. A panel discussion will follow featuring experts from Penn State about lessons from COVID-19 about the social determinants of health and how we can better support community health for all. Free and open to all campuses to attend. Pre-registration is required at this link.

Adrian Miller and text that reads Black Chefs in the White House

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American culinary historian, lawyer and public policy adviser Adrian Miller will offer an engaging and educational journey through the lives of African Americans who have served as cooks for U.S. presidents, "Black Chefs in the White House," at 7-8 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 26, via Zoom and also in-person at the Paul Robeson Cultural Center Library in the HUB. More information and registration is available at this link.

A white woman sits straight on a floor stage next to a Black woman sitting in a chair.

Sydnie Mosley Dances

The Center for the Performing Arts at Penn State has been approved by the National Endowment for the Arts for a Grants for Arts Projects award to support “What Does PURPLE Sound Like?” by Sydnie L. Mosley Dances.