Other traditions include the election of a Homecoming queen, once known as “Penn State’s Perfect Coed.” Started in 1940, the selection was suspended during World War II and did not return until 1952, when photos of the Homecoming queen were sent to Penn Staters serving in the Korean War to remind them of the girls back home. In 1973, following a two-year protest by feminists, a Homecoming king joined the royal court. The court presides over numerous social events during Homecoming week and is prominently featured in the parade lineup of celebrities.
Notable Homecoming celebrations have included the 1920 inauguration of Penn State President John Martin Thomas, the 1930 dedication of the new Old Main building, the 1986 “Fan of the Century” grand marshal contest, and the 2005 sesquicentennial theme recognizing the 150th anniversary of the University's founding.
In 1942, the ceremonies featured the dedication of the Nittany Lion shrine and related speeches by prominent Penn Staters including Joe Mason, the Penn State baseball player credited with giving rise to the idea of a Nittany Lion mascot. Fifty-five years later, in 1997, football game halftime ceremonies featured the unveiling of the University Libraries’ 4,000,000th volume — appropriately enough, "The Nittany Lion: An Illustrated Tale," authored by Penn State librarians Jackie Esposito and Steven Herb.
Dances and musical performances have always captured plenty of attention during Homecoming. Talent has ranged from jazz great Duke Ellington to rock’s Three Dog Night, from rhythm and blues legend Roberta Flack to the University’s own Fred Waring and his Pennsylvanians. Waring dedicated the song “Mighty as the Mountain” to his alma mater at the 1940 Homecoming dance.
Today’s Penn State Glee Club concerts continue this musical heritage, and the football game itself features the musical renderings of the Alumni Blue Band during the halftime show.
During the 1950s and early 1960s, freshmen — who were required to wear “dinks” to football games — routinely tossed their beanies into the air during the halftime show. Tailgating became a famed Homecoming tradition when games were moved from New Beaver Field to Beaver Stadium following the 1959 season. In a 1975 Daily Collegian article about Homecoming, the legendary Ridge Riley affirmed, “We’re probably one of the tailgate champions of the world.” Some traditions never change.