Viking_Yearbook_69
City apartments are often too expensive for a student to handle without cutting back on classes, Without getting a time-consuming job. And local living quarters are marked for demolition teams. An Urban Studies seminar pro– duced a housing questionnaire which was distributed to 1,000 students. The results , a case argu– ment for student needs , will go to the Chancellor's Office. The Student Housing Com– mittee hopes to begin providing some housing by next fall. Long– range plans include forming a corporation to purchase residen– tial housing areas for students. The university has offered free shuttle bus service for the proj– ect; promising devices for col– lege-community integration. And the "hard line" campus architecture which drewWolfe's disdain . is being re-evaluated in terms of softer future designs. 97
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