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A portrait of the poet Henrietta Goodman

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Henrietta Goodman will read from her poetry when she visits Penn State Behrend on Thursday, Oct. 3, as part of the Smith Creative Writers Reading Series.

A student talks with a recruiter at Penn State Behrend's fall Career and Internship Fair.

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Penn State Behrend hosts career fairs in the fall and spring of each year. "It's never too early to look for opportunities," said Michelle Hartmann, associate director of corporate engagement.

 

 

Two recruiters smile while talking with students at Penn State Behrend's career fair.

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"Attending a career fair prepares students to be professional and comfortable talking with potential employers," said Michelle Hartmann, associate director of corporate engagement at Penn State Behrend.

Students talk with recruiters at the Penn State Behrend career fair.

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More than 1,400 students attended Penn State Behrend's fall Career and Internship Fair. The program was open to students at any college in Erie County and to students and alumni of any Penn State campus.

A student poses for a LinkedIn headshot at the Penn State Behrend Career and Internship Fair.

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The fall Career and Internship Fair at Penn State Behrend included a photo booth, where students posed for photos for their LinkedIn accounts.

Darren Williams, an astronomer at Penn State Behrend, holds models of the Earth and the moon.

Darren Williams, and a new hypothesis about the moon

New research by Darren Williams, a professor of astronomy and astrophysics at Penn State Behrend, pictured here, and Michael Zugger, a senior research engineer at the Applied Research Lab at Penn State, offers a new possibility for how the moon formed: a binary-exchange capture as two objects passed near a much-younger Earth.

Darren Williams, an astronomer at Penn State Behrend, holds models of the Earth and the moon.

Darren Williams, and a new hypothesis about the moon

New research by Darren Williams, a professor of astronomy and astrophysics at Penn State Behrend, pictured here, and Michael Zugger, a senior research engineer at the Applied Research Lab at Penn State, offers a new possibility for how the moon formed: a binary-exchange capture as two objects passed near a much-younger Earth.