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Living on Campus

[Residence hall room] Living on campus gives you the opportunity to make a lot of new friends. Since freshmen rarely get single rooms, you will probably room with someone you've never met before. It is rare for new room-mates to be incompatible, but with some minor adjustments, you will each get to know a great person. And the others on the floor? Well, they're there as friends if you need them.



[Dining Hall]Your room is only a short walk from everything on campus, especially a support group of other students who can help you with a sticky homework problem. Or the dining room, where your meal is already prepared when you arrive. Or the bathroom, cleaned by someone other than you (except in Regents Hall). Or the laundry room, cleaned and serviced while you sleep.



[Public Safety]

Living on campus provides you with a relatively worry-free environment. There's always someone available if you have problems or just want to talk to someone. How about security? Even though the arrangement may seem inconvenient at times, there is a Public Safety officer on duty at each entrance around the clock.

More information

Is it Required?

All unmarried students under 21 years of age are required to reside in residence halls during their freshman year (0-46 credits earned) and during their sophomore year (47-98 credits earned) unless they reside with a parent or legal guardian.

Residence Hall Linen Program

offered by OCM - the nation's premier campus fundraising company

Residence Hall Linens gives parents the opportunity to purchase the hard-to-find extra-long linens needed to fit specially sized residence hall beds. Through this easy and affordable program, families can have the linens and other bed and room accessories shipped directly to their homes over the summer.