COLLEGES essary courses as directed by their respective college for a degree and complete or receive credit for the following Army ROTC courses. FRESHMAN YEAR Semester 1 Fall Credits MIS 1000C Organization of the Army and ROTC .................................... .................. MIS 1490 Freshmen Leadership Laboratory ......0 Semester 2 Spring MIS 1020C Fundamental Leadership Developm ent.................................... .............. 2 MIS 1492 Freshmen Leadership Laboratory........... ........ .......................... 0 SOPHOMORE YEAR Semester 3 Fall Credits MIS 2400C Basic Leadership and M military Skills .................................... ............. 2 MIS 2493 Sophomore Leadership Laboratory.......................................................... Semester 4 Spring MIS 2621C Small Unit Operations and Field Survival Skills........................... ..............2 MIS 2495 Sophomore Leadership Laboratory........... ...................................0 JUNIOR YEAR Semester 5- Fall Credits MIS 3300C Leadership Fundamentals- Small Unit Operations.............................. ..3 MIS 3393 Junior Leadership Lab......................... Semester 6 Spring MIS 3404 Leadership Fundamentals-Tactics and Camp Preparation.................................... 3 MIS 3395 Junior Leadership Lab......................... SENIOR YEAR Semester 7 Fall Credits MIS 4002 The Army as a Profession .............3. MIS 4493 Senior Leadership Lab......................... Semester 8 Spring MIS 4421 Seminar in Military Leadership .........3 MIS 4495 Senior Leadership Lab......................... There are no prerequisites for any course. Students not attending UF on an Army ROTC scholarship may take the 1000 and 2000 level courses as nonobligation electives. ROTC schol- arships and military service options are dis- cussed in class. All 3000 and 4000 level courses are intended for advanced ROTC cadets and students having prior military training. Acceptance into these courses requires the approval of the Professor of Military Science. Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps The NROTC unit was established at the University of Florida in 1972 to develop quali- fied men and women officers for the Navy and Marine Corps. Students who complete the pro- gram are tendered commissions in either the Naval Reserve or the Marine Corps Reserve and are immediately placed on active duty. The program consists of a naval science course and a non-credit two-hour leadership laboratory each semester for four academic years. Shipboard engineering and naval weapons systems, seapower and maritime sym- posia, terrestrial and celestial navigation, and management and leadership are included in the curriculum. Training cruises, usually of four-to- six weeks duration with pay during the sum- mer, also are part of the program. Students may participate with or without a scholarship. Those who have scholarships have their tuition, books and fees paid by the Navy. They also receive $150 per month for a maxi- mum of eight semesters during the academic years. Nonscholarship college program students do not receive these emoluments. However, they do receive naval science textbooks and uni- forms free and, in the junior and senior years, receive $150 per month during the academic year (up-to-four semesters). Scholarships are usually awarded after national competition among high school seniors. However, college program students can be awarded scholarships for a period of fewer than four years and they actually have an advantage over high school students. Scholarship students participate in three summer cruises; college program students become involved in only one cruise, between their junior and senior years. There are also a Two-Year Scholarship Program and a Two-Year College Program. Application to these programs should be made by spring semester of the sophomore year; if in a five-year curriculum, by spring semester of the junior year. During the first year of the scholarship pro- gram, there is no obligation to serve on active duty. After students begin the sophomore year, they are obligated to serve on active duty after completing the program and receiving their bac- calaureate degree. Eight-semester scholarship students incur an eight-year service obligation; four years must be active duty. Navy option graduates of the NROTC pro- gram will be assigned to one of the following areas: nuclear propulsion, naval aviation, sur- face warfare or nursing. Marine Corps option graduates receive a six-month professional course before further assignment. NAVY ROTC Course Requirements Ian addition to the course curriculum assigned by each respective college, all students will complete the course requirements directed below in order to be eligible for a commission in the Navy or Marine Corps. FRESHMAN YEAR Semester I Fall Credits NSC 1110 Introduction to Naval Science............2 NSC 1101L Naval Science Laboratory ................0 Semester 2 Spring NSC 1140 Seapower and Maritime Affairs.........3 NSC 1101L Naval Science Laboratory ................0 SOPHOMORE YEAR Semester 3 Fall Credits NSC 3221 Evolution of Warfare........................3 NSC 2122 Naval Ships Systems 2 (W weapons) ..................................... ............... 3 NSC 2102L Naval Science Laboratory ................0 Semester 4 Spring NSC 2121 Naval Ships Systems 1 (Engineering).................................... ................ NSC 2102L Naval Science Laboratory ................0 JUNIOR YEAR Semester 5 Fall Credits NSC 4224 Amphibious Warfare.......................3 NSC 3214C Navigation and Naval Operations 1.................................... ...... ..3 NSC 3103L Naval Science Laboratory ................0 Semester 6 Spring NSC 3215C Navigation and Naval Operations 2.................................... .............. 3 NSC 3103 Naval Science Laboratory...................0 SENIOR YEAR Semester 7 Fall Credits NSC 4230 Leadership & Management................2 NSC 4104L Naval Science Laboratory ................0 Semester 8 Spring NSC 4233 Junior Naval Officer .........................2 NSC 4104L Naval Science Laboratory ................0 Air Force Officer Training Corps The Department of Air Force Aerospace Studies was established in September 1946 to select and prepare students, through a perma- nent program of instruction, to serve as active duty officers in the United States Air Force. The curriculum emphasizes the uniformly high level of military understanding and knowledge required of Air Force officers. AFROTC training is divided into two phases: the first two years constitute the General Military Course (GMC), the last two the Professional Officer Course (POC). The depart- ment offers a four-year and a two-year program. A one-year program is offered for selected acad- emic majors. Each of these options leads to a commission as a second lieutenant in the United States Air Force. The four-year program requires completion of the GMC, a four-week field training course and the POC. Students with prior active military service or previous training at military schools may, on the basis of their experience, receive a waiver for portions of the GMC. The two-year program requires, as a substitute for the GMC, completion of a six- week field training course at an Air Force base prior to formal enrollment in the POC. Junior college and other non-ROTC transfer students with no previous ROTC training, who qualify academically, are eligible for the two-year pro-