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I am a college sophomore. My college says that all freshmen and sophomores must live on campus. I am planning on moving out at semester, but will still be a sophomore. Why is is that they won't allow sophomores to move out, but if you do something wrong or don't pay, you get evicted? Are those my only options or do I have legal rights to living off campus?

2007-11-08 08:54:17 · 4 answers · asked by college freshie! 1 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

4 answers

Talk to your housing officer to see why this rule is in effect. Chances are, they won't let you break your contract with them. However, there is nothing stopping you from having both a dorm room and an off-campus residency. My roommate my sophomore year did that.

2007-11-08 08:58:54 · answer #1 · answered by alaisin13 3 · 0 0

You can live off campus anywhere in the world. But if that is a precondition of being a student, then you won't be a student until you can come back with credits from elsewhere as a sophomore.

If your situation is extraordinary, then there may be exceptions, but you didn't say that so I doubt it is the case.

What you should do is simply wait it out a few more months. it will go by quickly

If you have roommate issues, I am sure there is an office that can assist with that and maybe switch you.

2007-11-08 09:08:01 · answer #2 · answered by Barry C 6 · 0 0

If they have a rule that you must live on campus and you don't they can drop you as a student. You can live off campus if you want, however not as a student.

2007-11-08 08:58:56 · answer #3 · answered by davidmi711 7 · 0 0

Pay for the upkeep then sue the broking in small claims court. you're able to have caught those mess united statesat the final walk with the aid of finished proper earlier the ultimate. that's what we do in long island.

2016-11-10 20:40:40 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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