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| "The Nittany Lion" | |
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| Song | 
"The Nittany Lion" is a traditional fight song played by the Penn State Blue Band at football games and other sporting events. During the pre-game show of home football games at Beaver Stadium, it is part of the traditional Lion Fanfare and Downfield. While it is not the official fight song of Penn State, it is one of the songs most widely associated with the university, and is also incorrectly referred to as "Hail to the Lion" (or Lions). On Fridays and Saturdays, the clock tower in Penn State's Old Main plays a line of the chorus music at the fifteen-minute mark of each hour, and adds a line every 15 minutes until the whole chorus is played on the completion of the hour.
The original lyrics were written by Penn State alumnus James Leyden between 1922 and 1924. [1]
Today, only the first verse and chorus are commonly used:
Every college has a legend 
Passed on from year to year 
To which they pledge allegiance 
And always cherish dear 
But of all the honored idols 
There's but one that stands the test 
It's the stately Nittany Lion 
The symbol of our best
[Chorus] Hail to the Lion 
Loyal and true 
Hail, Alma Mater 
With your White and Blue 
Penn State forever 
Molder of men (and women) 
Fight for her honor 
And victory again
"The Nittany Lion" was written by Penn State graduate and former Glee Club member James Leyden between 1922 and 1924. Professor Hummel Fishburn and Blue Band Bandmaster Tommy Thompson assisted Leyden in finishing the song, which was premiered at a pep rally the night before a football game to instant popularity.
The second verse was used prior to 1993, when Penn State was an IA Independent school. When it joined the Big Ten athletically in 1993, the third verse, The Big Ten verse, was written by a student who won a contest run around the University Renee Borusky. Currently the Blue Band performs the first and third verse of The Nittany Lion.