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Woodycrest, Pennsylvania

Nittany ValleyUnincorporated communities in Centre County, PennsylvaniaUnincorporated communities in PennsylvaniaUse American English from July 2025Use mdy dates from July 2023
Interstate 99 exist 71 Woody Crest and Toftrees
Interstate 99 exist 71 Woody Crest and Toftrees

Woodycrest (also Woody Crest) is a neighborhood and an unincorporated community in Patton Township, Centre County, Pennsylvania, United States. It is part of Happy Valley and the larger Nittany Valley. Woodycrest borders Park Forest to the south of North Atherton Street, Toftrees to the north, and Oakwood to the east. The neighborhood is home to the Colonnade at State College shopping mall, Woodycrest Park, and Woodycrest United Methodist Church, which partially collapsed in a fire.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Woodycrest, Pennsylvania (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Woodycrest, Pennsylvania
Mary Ellen Lane, State College

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Wikipedia: Woodycrest, PennsylvaniaContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.813116666667 ° E -77.902502777778 °
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Address

Mary Ellen Lane 2051
16803 State College
Pennsylvania, United States
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Interstate 99 exist 71 Woody Crest and Toftrees
Interstate 99 exist 71 Woody Crest and Toftrees
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Penn State Law

Penn State Law, located in University Park, Pennsylvania, is one of two separately accredited law schools of the Pennsylvania State University. Penn State Law offers J.D., LL.M., and S.J.D. degrees. The school also offers a joint J.D./M.B.A. with the Smeal College of Business, a joint J.D./M.I.A. degree with the School of International Affairs, which is also located in the Lewis Katz Building, as well as joint degrees with other graduate programs at Penn State. Penn State Law traces its roots to the founding of The Dickinson School of Law in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. Penn State and The Dickinson School of Law merged in 2000, and, until fall 2014, Penn State's Dickinson School of Law operated as a single law school with two campuses—one in Carlisle and one on Penn State's University Park campus in State College, Pennsylvania. The first class to attend the University Park campus was during the 2006-2007 academic year. In the summer of 2014, Penn State received approval from the American Bar Association to operate the two campuses as two separate and distinct law schools, both of which share the history of The Dickinson School of Law: Dickinson Law, in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, and Penn State Law, in University Park, Pennsylvania. In November 2022, Penn State President Neeli Bendapudi announced a task force to implement the recommendation that the two schools be merged into a single entity, with the preferred location to be at the Dickinson campus. U.S. News & World Report, in its 2021 rankings of Best Graduate Schools, ranked Penn State Law 60th among 194 law schools fully accredited by the American Bar Association.