UFHC 58 Page 10 S: You said when you first got here in 1967 you were in the farmhouse? P: Farmhouse Long Rain, yes. S: And that originally had been part of the school? P: The Milton Hershey school, yes. It housed the students. S: How long were you there? P: Not long. I came in September and, I'm trying to think when we came down here, [it may] have been a year later. S: Where did they house the medical students at first? P: Medical students were housed... There was another red farmhouse when you entered on here to University Five, there was another red farmhouse there called Eastmoore. A lot of the students lived there in rooms. There was a little house right next to it that they tore down. We had a married couple with children [who] lived there. Across the street from the medical center where the Hershey Motor Lodge is, we had another Milton Hershey school, and they lived there. The others just lived off campus wherever they could. S: Is there a student dormitory now? P: Yes, we have student housing apartments. Two and three bedroom apartments on either side of the medical center, east and west. But then, of course a lot of students live off campus too because we can't house everyone. We're running out of space there too. S: The limiting factor seems to be space. When you started out, you were doing transcribing. Was that pretty much your position during the time that Dr. Harrell was here? P: General office work, yes. Setting up interviews for the prospective chairs and that kind of thing. S: How many years did it take before, I mean honestly you're always hiring new faculty and people are retiring, but certainly at the beginning there was a big push to get all the departments filled and things. How long did that take? P: I just don't remember. It seems like we're always looking for somebody. We're still looking for people today. I just don't remember.