CENTER VALLEY, Pa. — The last of the confetti has been swept up. The lights in the Bryce Jordan Center (BJC) have dimmed. The energetic group of dancers and their cheering crowd of supporters have left the building. Penn State THON 2024 may be over, but its impact is just beginning.
After all the monies have been tallied, this year’s THON raised a record-setting $16,955,683.63 for Four Diamonds at Penn State Children’s Hospital. This surpasses THON 2023’s record-breaking total of $15,006,132.45 by nearly $2 million.
Penn State Lehigh Valley came in as the third largest fundraiser among the 19 Penn State Commonwealth Campuses, raising $69,563 this year and sending four dancers — Tara Fogle, Maeve Yanes, Sahiba Kathuria, and Arica Wieder — to represent the campus at the BJC.
“Our students worked really hard to fundraise,” said Pam Fleck, PSU-LV assistant director of student affairs. “We were able to make it so close to the top thanks to the generosity of our alumni, especially Lost Tavern’s Hops 4 Hope event which raised $30,000 for THON this year, bringing the brewery’s total contribution to over $100,000 since the creation of their event; the 2024 Dance for a Cure, a perennial favorite among our alumni groups which brought in approximately $19,000; and PSU-LV donor, former advisory board chair and current executive committee member, Mr. Howard Kulp, who generously matches funds raised by our campus book drive for THON — this year $5,000.”
The four students danced and stood without sleep for 46 hours — from 6 p.m. Feb. 16 to 4 p.m. Feb. 18 — at the BJC, all in the name of supporting patients and families affected by childhood cancer.
Sahiba Kathuria, a second-year finance major from India, is the first international student dancer to participate from PSU-LV. The THON experience is not easy to put into words, she said.
“It was magical, it was spectacular, it was hard, it was rough,” she said. “Sometimes I was on cloud nine; sometimes I felt like giving up. We had kids on the floor with us, and I wanted to do every possible thing I could do for those pure souls. Kids are supposed to be confused about what candy they want or if they should go to school tomorrow instead of wondering if they would beat cancer. If dancing for 46 hours made even one of them smile, I would do it all over again in a heartbeat.”
For Fogle, a second-year veterinary medicine major, THON’s mission hits close to home and she wanted to participate, she said.
“My main reason [for getting involved as a student dancer] was to help others because this money goes to a really good cause. The second reason is because when I was younger, my mom passed away from cancer, and it hit me really hard," said Fogle. "I don’t want other families to have to worry about things like financial hardship when they’re going through so much already.”