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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
October 1, 1992

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Planning from an Economic Basis

From Volume 21 Number 1 | Fall 1992

Abstract: Book Review: Economic Challenges in Higher Education, by Charles Clotfedler, Ronald Ehrenburg, Malcolm Getz, and John Siegfried. University of Chicago Press, 1991. 392 pages.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
July 1, 1992

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Morals, Youth, and Higher Education

From Volume 20 Number 4 | Summer 1992

Abstract: Book Review: Moral Values and Higher Education, edited by Dennis Thompson State University of New York Press, 1991. 171 pages.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
July 1, 1992

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Planning for a Research Park

From Volume 20 Number 4 | Summer 1992

Abstract: Book review: Technology in the Garden: Reseach Parks and Regional Economic Development, by Micheal Luger and Harvey Goldstein. University of North Carolina Press, 1991. 242 pages.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
July 1, 1992

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About Campus Lawns

How American colleges came to adopt this feature, and how to preserve it.

From Volume 20 Number 4 | Summer 1992

Abstract: Beginning with the first American colonial colleges, lawns have become a special symbol of the American college. They provide a "green blanket" Upon which tro stroll or study. The history of the lawn probably can be traced to the enclosed graden of the medieval monastry or perhaps to the ancient Roman villas after which they may have served as a model for the monastery. The monastery's enclosed "garth" or yard was divided into quarters and traversed by the monk's in the way undergraduates traverse the quadrangle. When the first English colleges were established at Oxford and Cambridge, they followed the monastic model rather than the model of an urban university such as Bologna or Paris. The English further popularized the idea of the lawn during the Georgian period, when landscape designers like "Capability" Brown were creating the rolling, picturesque, artificial landscapes of the notes, using ideas at Monticello and the University of Virginia. More recently lawns are losing favor. They are sometimes deemed too expensive to maintain, are often easy targets when new space is needed for construction, and in some cases have raised environmental concerns. Schools should therefore consider appointing a chair in landscape design who is aware of the historic and social role of a lawn as well as the horticulture needed to maintain it responsibly. This will insure the lawn remains a valuable aspect of the American college.

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