FRIDAY. JULY 1, 1960 —Collegian Photo by Rae Hoopes CONTRAST—New apartment buildings for. married graduate students going up behind old tempo rary units built right after World War IL The new !Musing development, being constructed on East Campus along University Dr., contains 43 buildings with a total of 216 apartMents. First Of Graduate Apartments To. Be Completed By July 15 The first group of 216 apartments for Married graduate students will be completed 'about July 15, John_D. Miller, head of the Division of Building Construction, said yesterday. The 43 buildings in the housing project, located on the East Campus across University Dr. from the home management houses, are being built in units of two, three and four IThe units surround small muft i yards. -urn Soho®l 1 The apartments will be avail able to both graduate and under- !graduate married students but the Starts- Program ,graduate , students here because of ;assistantships or for research The School of Journalism hasi work will have priority, according adopted a three-year general read-'to Otto E. Mueller, director of ing program designed to acquaint;housing. journalism students with Mora- Mueller explained that the - lure concerning their field. University was trying to fill the The program consists of a series, apartments with gradaute stu of book lists, one for each course,: dents "who help themselves and from which students may select, the University." books for reading in the basic' One of the reasons for provid required courses. ing housing for graduate students H. Eugene Goodwin, director of : is to attract them to the campus. the school, said the object of the Mueller said housing was a prob program is to interest studentOem to large-universities not near in the broad literature of jour-;cities because graduate students nalism and to help them choose were reluctant to attend universi books for their own libraries. !ties where they cannot write "A deep understanding of one'.sahead and be sure of finding a profession requires a long fore- place to stay. ground of varied experience and Of the University's 2050 on of association with fellow work-'campus graduate students, 1100 ers." Goodwin Said. are married. About one third of He explained, "It is in the litera-S the new apartments have two bed ture of a profession that you will rooms and will go to married find best expresses its ideals,' graduate students with children. ethics, tradition and practices. Approximately 650 of the students The lists are not intended tohave children. be a selection of the "best" books Immediately after World War on journalism but they represent, 11, many of the undergraduate cross section of journalism lit-: students were married and a (Tatum. (Continued on page five) University Creamery Sales Room 42)airy Producb Ice Cream Creamery Butter Pasteurized Milk Cheddar Cheese Chocolate Milk Cottage Cheese Buttermilk Brick Cheese Grade A Large Eggs Trappist Cheese SUMMER COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA 6:20 Marks Finale Of inter-Session The first segment of the Sum mer Sessions program at the Uni versity will conclude today when the Inter-Session ends at 6:20 p.m. Registration for Mid-Session. which is expected to have the largest enrollment of the five summer programs, begins Tues day. July 5, at 8 a.m. Mid-Session classes will begin at 8 a.m. The first Six• Weeks session. which started June 13, will con tinue until July 22. Enrollment figures for Inter- Session showed 1.123 graduate. 766 undergraduate and 269 speciali students among the 2,178 regis trants. L4nitua/ $50,000 StunitteP L-toiC/? }ate. IS STILL GOING ON Blouses • Skirts a Cotton Dresses Jewelry • Coats es Suits Bathing Suits • Bermuda Shorts SAVE UP TO 50% eliat& 124 S. Allen Street They're In the Arm Now Cadets March Off To Summer Camp By KAREN HYNECKEAL Collegian Staff Writer FORT MEADE, Maryland, June 30—No sooner had 113 Penn !Staters arrived home after June finals when they were off again. This time to Fort George. G. Meade, Maryland and six weeks of Army ROTC summer camp. The boys, or we should say "ca dets," had company, though, as over 1.000 representatives from 'schools in five states invaded Ft. ,Meade on June 18. The cadets are :all members of the advanced ROTC program at their schools ..and Nv 1 1 all be seniors in the fall. The six-week program at Ft. Meade began with the usual Ar my "processing -in.!' It included trading khakis and sports shirts for Army greens as well as re ceiving physicals and shots and being assigned to companies, The companies. in traditional Army fashion, range from A to F and the boys who are Gamma Gamnia Gatniyias during the win ter become either Alpha, Bravo Delta. Echo or Fox Trot at Meade. The breakdown into companies gives the cadets a chance to meet and live with boys, from all the different schools . . . perhaps even, the ones who beat them in football last fall. The first three weeks of sum mer camp consists mainly of morning classes and afternoon field maneuvers. Afternoons find the cadets stretched out on the rifle-range trying to put their lessons, into practice. They will even get a chance to enter the gas chamber, properly equipped, of course, with gas masks. ' On July 9 the cadets and their commanders will journey to A.P. Hill, Virginia and two weeks of real Army living. The Hill, SOUTHWEST TEACHERS AGENCY 1303 Central N.E. Albuquerque, New Mexico SERVING SOUTHWEST, ENTIRE WEST. & ALASKA FREE REGISTRATION SALARIES $4200 UP MEMBER: NATA nicknamed "Ape Hill." is a dusty humid stretch of land the cadets will live in tents and engage in mock battles. .A daily. highlight of the two week stay will be shaving from their helmets. As one cadet put it last year, "Al'. Hill is the endur ance test." Then it xvill be back to Ft. Meade and the last week of camp. Closing the six-week sta}• will be the Awards. Ceremony. Since oth letic and military intramural:: are played throughout camp, the best tennis player will be receiving his prize along with the sharpest shooter. And ,of course, for those who are qualified and who want. those 2nd Lt. bars, there will be the Commissioning Ceremony. It's an old Army custom that a newly-commissioned officer must give a dollar to the first man who salutes him. We'll bet that's one dollar the cadets won't mind part ing with. , Rose Conducts Studies • Dr. Arthur Rose, professor of chemical engineering, is engaged in a research study to learn more about the principles of chroma tography as it is used to obtain very thin pure fatty materials. TAKE ME NOME BARBECUED'? OPEN 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Delivery Service 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. INCLUDES: ALL NAPKINS and UTENSILS WHIPPLE KIT BARBECUED CHICKEN Picnic Lunch $1139 phis tax 1 , 4 2 Barbecued Chicken Potato Salad Pepper Cabbage Roll & Butter Dill Pickle Strip Cookie Herlocher's 227 L Beaver Ave. Call AD 8-1016 PAGE THREE