„aill , Sal, . G ..,.....,-.......,,N ~ ' ' ilt'a .^.s 2' i iV ' )g. 'it:7l:::R.t: . z f r 4, A. ~ . „, ..,.. ,•, fLa 2 3 I -!-1-'.4.; seals c,,i v .c• f / 1, 4 4 .4” 48 ...- 4 " ....- Vol. XVIII No. I WELCOME As an official member of the largest school in the common— wealth, the Pennsylvania State University, you will find out what college is really like in comparison to what everyone has been telling you since the seventh grade. Being a freshman can be fun if you know how to keep out of trouble, and even then it isn't tco bad. Speeches to a blade of grass give one good practice for Mrs. Falkenhagen's class, and carrying bowling balls helps develop fine bi ceps. Pushing peanuts with your nose gives you a good fine edge. Outside the classroom, being a freshman is educational, for by the end of Customs Week yourll know such profound tri— via as how many cannon balls there are on the model of the Fiagra in Erie Hall; how many lines there are in the rigging; how many bricks there are in the fireplace of the picnic grove. As the saying goes: A fine mind in a fine body. Show man— ners and citizenship by walking on pavement rather than lawns for at least a week. Be Behr end Campus friendly and say "hello" to everyone you see; show respect by bowing or curtsying to the Behrend Pine. At any rate, welcome to our school. Now it is yours also. September 27, 1966 FROSH