THE NITTANY CUB VOLUME XIV, No. 1 Behrend Enrollment Hits Record High Mr. Irvin 11. Kochel, director of the Behrend Campus It is a pleasure to welcome you as Freshmen to The Pennsylvania State University and particularly to the Behrend Campus. College can be a challenging and a richly rewarding experience. If approached with the proper attitudes and enthusiasm, I hope you will be challenged; and, you, in turn, will challenge others in the air of academic freedom which exists on this camp us. As a Penn State Freshman, you have an oppor tunity to professionally prepare yourself for the future. Make every effort to get the most out of every class every day so that this preparation may be the best that can be acquired. All of us on the Behrend Campus wish you success this year in your academic undertakings. CAMPUS CALENDAR September 21—Friday—Women's Tea 3:30 p.m., Memorial Room All-College Dance, 8:00 p.m., Erie Hall 24—Monday Fall 1962 Term Classes Begin October 6—Saturday—Homecoming 3.l—Thursday—S.G.A. Elections 13—Saturday Commonwealth Campus League Tourna ment, Erie Hall 21—Sunday—Dedication F. Behrend Building November 20—Tuesday Hanging of the Greens Behrend Chapel. Wintergreen Gorge 24—Saturday—Thanksgiving Ball, Erie Hall December 3—Monday Fall Term Classes End WELCOME A picture of activity - is this group of last year's freshman girls shown here preparing for their end-of-customs variety show. BEJIREND CAMPUS—The Pennsylvania State University Friday, Sept. 21, 1962 More Than 300 Students Swell Campus Roster For the first time since th e founding of the Behrend Campus of the Pennsylvania State Univer sity in 1948, this campus' enroll ment has surpassed the 300 mark. The total number of students ten tatively calculated to attend Behr end his year is 310, thus making the campus enrollment equivalent to approximately one seventy fourth of the entire Penn State student population. Over the years, the enrollment has fluctuated rather unusually, from its original enlistment of 146 to its present record high. At one time during this fourteen year period, registrations even dropped below 100. That was in 1951, when an inventory of 64 students corn prised the entire Behrend Campus. Since its beginning, the campus' enrollment figures have run as follows: 1948-49--146 1949-50-164 1950-51-118 1951-52- 64 1952-53-120 1953-54-138 1954-55-223 1955-56-228 1956-57-211 1957-58-282 1958-59-294 1960-61-290 1961-62-275 1962-63-310 Except for a three-year period from 1949 to 1952, the Engineer ing curriculum has boasted the highest number of entrants, with either Arts and Letters or Edu cation running a close second. According to Mr. Benjamin A. Lane, dean of student affairs, Behrend's enrollment figures are expected to reach 800 by 1972. A University ruling prohibits the number from going any higher than this, he added. Freshmen This Is It! By this time, you have all be come reasonably acquainted with the campus and are eager, no doubt, to begin classes next week. One of the few doubts possibly remaining in your minds is that of customs, or more simply, ini tiation. In order to satisfy your curiosity on that subject, we have had this article printed. Here are the customs` regulations for the coming two weeks: 1. All freshmen must wear a 10" x 14" sign displaying his or her name, curriculum, and home town, and hung con spicuously from about the neck. These cards must be constructed of a comparatively stiff material, and the letter ing on them must be exactly 2" in height. 2. Every freshman must wear a dark blue dink. 3. Frosh women must wear green ribbons in their hair, and white socks. 4. Men must wear a different color or style of shoe and sock on each foot. For example: a shoe and a sneaker and a white sock and a black sock. 5. Men must doff dinks to all persons not wearing a dink (Continued -r,n pagZ 2)