HOUSING /29 are given priority; however, there sometimes is a waiting list for graduate students as well as upper-division students. APPLICATIONS Each student must make personal arrangements for hous- ing, either by applying to the Division of Housing Office for assignment to University housing facilities or by obtaining accommodations in private housing. Inquiries concerning University family housing facilities should be addressed to the Family Housing Office, Division of Housing, University of Florida, (904)392-2161. Inquiries about private housing accommodations should be addressed to the Off-Campus Housing Office, Division of Housing, University of Florida. An application for on-campus housing may be filed at any time after a student is admitted to the University. Students are urged to apply as early as possible because of the demand for housing. Graduate students living in University housing are re- quired to qualify as full-time students as defined by the University, and they mustcontinueto make normal progress toward a degree as determined by their supervisory com- mittees. RESIDENCE HALLS FOR SINGLE STUDENTS Various types of accommodations are provided by the University. The double room for two students is the most common type. Several of the larger rooms or suites are designated as triple rooms. Suites for two students consist of two connected rooms-a bedroom and a study room. Carpeted and air-conditioned suites for four, available in Beaty Towers, include two bedrooms, a private bath, and a study-kitchenette. Carpeted and air-conditioned apartments for four are available in the New Residence Facility and include four single bedrooms, two baths, a kitchen, and a living room. Yulee Scholarship Hall contains air-conditioned single rooms. For information on rental rates, contact the Assign- ments Section, Division of Housing, University of Florida, (904)392-2161. COOPERATIVE LIVING ARRANGEMENTS There are four different cooperative living groups at the University of Florida. Two of these groups are located on campus and are operated by the University of Florida, Division of Housing. Among the qualifications for membership are scholastic ability and reference of good character. These cooperative living groups are specifically operated by and for students with limited financial means for attending the University. Inquiries pertaining to cooperative living on campus are made to the Division of Housing, Assignments Section, University of Florida, (904)392-2161. The cooperative living organizations on campus currently are the North Hall Co-op and the Buckman Co-op. Off-campus co-ops are the Collegiate Living Organization (coed), 117 N.W. 15th Street, and Georgia Seagle Hall (men), 1002 West Univer- sity Avenue. Inquiries should be made to these addresses. FAMILY STUDENT HOUSING The University operates five apartment villages for eli- gible students. To be eligibleto apply for apartment housing on campus, the following qualifications must be met: A married student or student parent without spouse who has legal custody of minor children must meet the require- ments for admission to the University of Florida, qualify as a full-time student as defined by the University, and con- tinue to make normal progress toward a degree as deter- mined by the supervisory committee. The student must be a part of a family unit defined as (1) husband and wife with or without one or more children or (2) single parentwho has legal custody of one or more minor children who reside with the parent on an ongoing basis. Residents in all villages must furnish their own linens, dishes, rugs, curtains, or other similar items. Utilities are an additional expense and are billed with the rent. Corry Memorial Village (216 units) of brick, concrete, and wood construction contains almost an equal numberof one- and two-bedroom apartments, with a few three- bedroom units. Some apartments are furnished. Commu- nity facilities include a meeting room and a laundry. Diamond Memorial Village consists of 208 apartments similar in construction to those in Corry Village. All Dia- mond apartments are unfurnished. Special features include a community building and air-conditioned study-meeting room, laundry facilities, and a study cubicle in each two- bedroom apartment. Tanglewood Village Apartments, located approximately 1.3 miles south of the central campus, consist of 208 unfurnished efficiency, one- and two-bedroom townhouse units. All units have disposals and two-bedroom units have dishwashers. All one-and two-bedroom units have 1-1/2 baths. Community facilities include a large recreation hall, laundry facilities, and two swimming pools. University Village South and Maguire Village consist of 348 centrally heated and air-conditioned one-and two- bedroom unfurnished apartments. Community facilities include a pool, laundry, and meeting room. The kitchens are equipped with stoves and refrigerators. For Maguire Village Only, the student must be part of a family with a combined gross annual income (including grants-in-aid, VA benefits, scholarships, fellowships, and child support payments) which does not exceed, during the period of occupancy, the following maximum income limitations: two persons, $26,700; three persons, $30,050; four persons, $33,350; five persons, $36,050; and six persons, $38,700. OFF-CAMPUS HOUSING The purpose of the Off-Campus Housing Office is to assist University of Florida students, faculty, and staff in obtaining adequate off-campus housing accommodations. The Off-Campus Housing Office is a listing and referral agency for rental housing of all types. It is not an enforce- ment agency. It does not make rental reservations. Persons who desire to use these services should request by mail or pick up in person at the Housing Office an off- campus housing packet. This packet contains a list of major apartment housing developments in the Gainesville area with a zone locator map. Also in the packet is an information brochureon rental