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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
February 1, 1974

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Campus Theaters in Found Space

From Volume 3 Number 1 | February 1974

Abstract: In an article in its April 1973 issue, Planning for Higher Education offered a technical discussion of the problems in converting campus chapels for use by the performing arts. Now, two private institutions--Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, New York, and the University of Dallas in Texas--have been successful in converting found space in other building types into imaginative small theaters. Their experiences are outlined in the following article.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
February 1, 1974

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Lifelong Learning Comes of Age

From Volume 3 Number 1 | February 1974

Abstract: In late November, 1973, the Society for College and University Planning convened a workshop, entitled "New Approaches to Planning for the Adult Student," at the Hyatt Regency in Atlanta. The ninety-one participants in the workshop attended from seventy colleges and universities and eight agencies or private organizations throughout the United States and Canada. the following is a report on the workshop and the questions raised by participants.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
February 1, 1974

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Report on Campus Transportation Systems

From Volume 3 Number 1 | February 1974

Abstract: Educational Facilities Laoratories has received numerous requests for information on campus transportation planning. There is no definitive study of campus systems, their efficiency and net energy consumption, and there exists no national or state source of information on the subject. This report of scattered innovations in the field was complied by Larry Molloy, an EFL Project Director, in order to stimulate the flow of data from other informations. Communications received by EFL may be used in a future special report on college and university transportation issues. Addresses for further information on projects described here are listed in an appendix and keyed by number through the report.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
February 1, 1974

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Year-Round Operation

Mixed Blessing

From Volume 3 Number 1 | February 1974

Abstract: Recent announcements that several prominent colleges and universities would embark on year-round operation have revived interest in this concept. In the past 15 years, there have been numerous publications containing theoretical arguments for or against YRO, or reporting empirical research at the University of Calgary, and A. Paul Bradley, Jr., director of institutional research at New York's Empire State College, reviewed 55 of these works written before summer, 1972, and report here on their findings.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
February 1, 1974

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Legislative Master Planning

The California Experience

From Volume 3 Number 1 | February 1974

Abstract: The California Legislature's Joint Committee on the Master Plan for Higher Education has released its final report. The culmination of more than two and one half years of intensive study, discussion, and public hearings, the report contains recommendations on the purposes, structure, coordination and planning, and financing of California post-secondary education. It is signed by the eleven legislators, Republican and Democrat, liberal and conservative, who served on the committee. Several of the recommendations have already been adopted by the legislature based on a draft report issued earlier this year. The article which follows was written by Jon Vasconcellos, California State Assemblyman and Chairman of the Joint Committee, and by Patrick M. Callank Staff Director of the Joint Committee, who is currently directing a similar study for the State of Montana.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
December 1, 1973

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Campus Buildings and the Energy Crisis

From Volume 2 Number 6 | December 1973

Abstract: Heating fuel will be in short supply this winter. If our universal pessimism is correct, we may have to shut down some public places, such as schools and campus buildings. It is possible, of course, for us to avert a crisis if we cut down on the use of fuel. The ideas that follow were adapted by Larry Kramer, SCUP's editorial assistant, from an article in Schoolhouse (No. 13, November 1973), published by Educational Facilities Laboratories. Although intended for a readership of primary and secondary school administrators, the suggestions have equal import for physical plant administrators at colleges and universities. Not all of the suggestions will be usable in any one building, but there are more than enough to offer a number of alternative responses for any institution.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
December 1, 1973

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Stockton

Campus Planning by Increments

From Volume 1 Number 3 | December 1972

Abstract: The architects and planners of a new college or university enjoy a singular opportunity: the ability to start from scratch, unencumbered by existing buildings, entrenched administrative and faculty empires, or the traditions and prejudices normally encountered in an existing institution. Conversely, there are handicaps. Speed usually is mandatory. Classroom seats and/or dormitory beds must be provided immediately for initial enrollment levels. But specialized facilities must be planned with ultimate enrollments in mind. Even more than in existing institutions, change in the uses to which the new facilities will be put must be assumed. In perhaps the most sophisticated repsonse to these challenges to date, the planners of Stockton State College in New Jersey turned to the use of systems building, fast-track planning, and construction management to produce a 1,000-student, first phase campus in 20 months. More significantly, an elaborate set of phased or incremental plans was developed to permit orderly growth to an ultimate enrollment of 7,500. The resulting facilities described in this article emerged with a chameleon-like ability to change in function as, phase by phase, the new campus was developed.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
December 1, 1973

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For Students

A Model Courtroom

From Volume 2 Number 6 | December 1973

Abstract: As courthouse violence in California has demonstrated, courtrooms of traditional design are far from being as efficient and as secure as they might be. At the same time, the law schools have been criticized for their lack of effectiveness in training trial lawyers. In an attempt to meet both of these problems, the McGeorge School of Law of the University of the Pacific in Sacramento, California, has opened what it terms the "courtroom of the future" and a prototype for courts and schools of law across the nation. The model courtroom and its evolution are described in this article.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
December 1, 1973

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Community Colleges: The Union County Plan

From Volume 2 Number 6 | December 1973

Abstract: In its August 1973 issue, Planning for Higher Education reported on the plans of Rio Grande College, a small, private, liberal arts institution in southeastern Ohio, to operate a new community college under contract with the four-county Rio Grande Community College District. The story suggested that, as far as could be determined, the Rio Grande plan was a first. Not so, according to Kenneth W. Iversen, president of Union College, a private , two-year institution that since 1969 has been operating a community college under contract with the Union County Agency for Higher Education in New Jersey. Details of the Union operation are outlined in this article.

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