MEDIA, Pa. — For Penn State students across Pennsylvania, one year of fundraising to support children fighting pediatric cancer culminated Feb. 16-18 in a 46-hour no sleeping, no sitting dance marathon at University Park in the Bryce Jordan Center.
The Penn State IFC/Panhellenic Dance Marathon, known as THON, raised a record-breaking $16,955,683.63 for Four Diamonds, an organization at Penn State Health Children’s Hospital that covers 100% of all medical expenses related to cancer care not covered by insurance. Penn State Brandywine raised $20,674, about five times the amount of last year’s total of $3,700.
Students Alyssa Palumbo and Julia Pagano had the honor of representing the campus as dancers during THON Weekend, which included no sleeping, no sitting and a whole lot of dancing for 46 hours straight until the nearly $17 million reveal on Sunday afternoon.
Palumbo, a third-year psychology major, said she wanted to support and dance at THON to bring awareness to pediatric cancer and help find a cure so no child has to go through the pain of cancer treatment. Her younger cousin, Kaylee, was diagnosed with childhood cancer at the age of one.
“Dancing in THON was a life-changing experience for me," Palumbo said. "I was not anticipating it, but I learned a lot about myself and what I’m capable of during the 46 hours of no sleeping or sitting. There were times when I thought my body was going to give up on me, but the memory of why we were there pushed me along. To know that this pain could give at least one child a new chance of life and a potential cure for childhood cancer one day was more than enough to keep me going. It was a tough weekend of emotions, pain and mental hurdles, but after seeing the almost $17 million total at the end, I would do it over and over again.”