SPECIAL FACILITIES / 59 credentials acceptable for admission to the Graduate School of the Uni- versity of Florida, and (c) a stated plan for teaching or leadership positions in the allied health fields in two-year or four-year colleges or universities. Students accepted for admission to any advanced degree program will fulfill the basic requirements of that program and such other courses of study relating to allied health as may be appropriate for their stated goals. Each individual's program is planned, insofar as possible, according to his objectives. Applicants who desire to assume teaching responsibilities should have a minimum of two years of employment experience in a clinical field, and should possess appropriate licensure, registration, or certification in that field. Examples of a few of the clinical fields from which students will be con- sidered include (but are not limited to): Medical Technology, Nursing, Occupational Therapy, and Physical Therapy. Persons who lack clinical backgrounds but who desire to prepare themselves for positions of leader- ship in the allied health professions may also apply. A limited number of students may receive financial aid from CAHIP. Inquiries regarding financial aid and requests for further information should be directed to the Director, Center for Allied Health Instructional Per- sonnel, Norman Hall, University of Florida, Gainesville 32601. NUCLEAR SCIENCES The program in Nuclear Sciences is organized along the line usually characteristic of an institute. Like an institute the program in Nuclear Sciences cuts across college and departmental lines in order to facilitate interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary approaches to problems in the nu- clear field and to enable the application of nuclear techniques to research problems of other disciplines in the physical and life sciences. The program was organized in 1957 and was designed to make it possible for the University to have specialized nuclear equipment and laboratories which would be useful to many departments but which are too large and expensive for any single college or department to justify. The program in Nuclear Sciences is organized to facilitate cooperative work and to strengthen and encourage the nuclear specialties in agriculture, biology, chemistry, dentistry, engineering, medicine, and physics. A majority of the disciplines represented in the Nuclear Sciences Pro- gram are housed in the Nuclear Sciences Building, the Reactor Building, the Reactor Building Annex, or the Nuclear Field Building. Exceptions are the radiation biophysics and whole-body counter programs and portions of the radiation biology program which are in the J. Hillis Miller Health Center. SPECIAL FACILITIES UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA LIBRARIES The library system consists of two central units, Library West and Library East, and branch libraries in the Colleges of Architecture and Fine Arts,