VOLUME No. 2 Parking Lots -V : -v-s ' t ;^'v'J Workers put the final touches on the new parking lot. Mock Election Picks Nixon By PAT NARDUCCI If the mock election held at Behrend Campus on October 11 is any indication of the country as a whole, Eichard Milhous Nixon will succeed Dwight Eisenhower as the next president by capturing'6l.2% of the ballots cast. However, if Behrend again is to be. used as a gauge of the tempera ment of the American voter we have cause for alarm. Only 41.6% of the campus population bothered voting at all. You may say, “So what.” But when just 48% of eli gible voters turned out for the Erie primaries it is indicative of the apathy of the so-called average American. Nevertheless, the mock election was not without its humor. Those who found fault with both Mr. Kennedy and Mr. Nixon found some degree of comfort by voting for Nixol, Nixion, Kenady, Nixson, Kendy, Nixen, Kendey, Kenedy, Nixton, and Nickson. Students backing either candi date will wait with the nation for November 8 to see whether or not this campus qualifies as an accu rate cross-section of the American public. OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION BEHREND CAMPUS—Pennsylvania State University Help make the "PRESIDENTIAL PRANCE" a stomping success November 5? Ecstasy His toes curled in the black soil. It was marvelous to feel the good, cool earth beneath his feet again. He bent down and tenderly crumbled a piece of sod between his fingers. A man was a fool to leave the land. He thought of the city with loathing. All it had brought him was unhappiness and sorrow, but that was over. He was back to his first love —the earth. For a while he was motionless then in silent contemplation; a prayer of thanksgiving rose from his heart. Once more he was a part of nature and not just a shadow in the city. A voice called, “Dinner’s ready.” Slowly and reluctantly, he took his foot out of the flower pot. Of Problems The Sea Of Macadam Receives Its Tide Of Cars The new parking lot opens next week and, as usual, students will be handed the proverbial set of provisions and regulations without which no facility could be properly maintained. The main provisions define eligibility as being any student who possesses, maintains or operates a motor vehicle, including motorcycles, motor bikes, motor scooters, and any other motor driven vehicle (they have you any way you look at it unless you plan to bicycle), on the Behrend Campus. If you fall into this category, you are obliged to register such vehicle with the Business Office in the Main Building where you will be issued either a parking permit allowing the ve hicle to be parked in a legal park ing area Monday through Thurs day and Sundays from 7 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. and on Friday and Sat urday from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. or a registration sticker to students who are not issued a permit but who drive on campus for dances and/or other activities. A legal parking area is defined (the document is virtually a The saurus of definitions) as either the macadam lot to the north or the gravel lot to the south of Erie Hall and in arriving at these lots the speed of any given vehicle is lim ited to 15 m.pJi. (for those who can’t read, there are signs). Because of the delay while they built the parking lot, the fee for this semester will begin with the seventh week and will be at the rate of 50d a week for the remain ing 11 weeks (for those who can’t multiply, that would be ... aah ... approximately... $5.50 or so). Four-Term Year Begins June 15 A four-term academic year has been adopted by the University foreseeing the need of an acceler ated educational program commen surate with the times. The new system will be effective June 15, 1961 for the Summer session. The new plan will eliminate the present academic year of two 15- week semesters and replace them with four terms of ten weeks each. This will also mean a reorga nization of a three-credit class into thirty 75-minute periods rather than the present 45 to 50- minute periods. The principal rea sons for a change in the academic calendar are (1) to provide a more flexible program of studies and one more readily adaptable to the needs of the rapidly increasing number of students, and (2) to in crease the year-round utilization of the resources of the University. ■The new system will necessitate no change in the present tuition fees. The cost of $4BO for the present semester plan will be spread over the four terms, making each term $l6O. The present sched ule, course organization, credit structure and credit cost will re main the same. A typical calendar year, there fore, will consist of the Fall Term which will extend from October 2 to December 12, preceded by the traditional one-week, orientation registration period and including a one-day Thanksgiving vacation; the Winter Term from January 3 to March- 13; the Spring Term from March 21 to May 31, includ- Continued on Page 4 By GENE NUTTER LAST DAY TO REGISTER Also, be it known that $1 registra tion fee will be charged. (Oh, come on, now, there has to be a registra tion fee. Where do you think they get the-paper?) The last portion of the regula tions is just chock full of little fi nancial threats like failure to register a vehicle will cost a fine of $25 per offense, failure to dis play permit or sticker will cost a fine of $5 per offense, operation of unregistered vehicle on Campus after announced registration dates (you must sign your car up; after all, your car is going to college too, Continued on Page 3 Friday, October 28, 1960