LaGuardia Community College explained

LaGuardia Community College
President:Kenneth Adams[1]
Students:17,569
Country:United States

LaGuardia Community College is a public community college in New York City. It is in the Long Island City neighborhood of Queens in and part of the City University of New York. LaGuardia is named after former congressman and New York City mayor Fiorello H. LaGuardia. The college offers associate degrees in the arts, sciences, and applied sciences, as well as continuing education programs.

History

LaGuardia Community College was founded on January 22, 1967, by a resolution of the Board of Higher Education of the City of New York, a New York State government agency which was the precursor to the City University of New York's board of trustees.[2] The new college, originally designated "Community College Number Nine", was to be comprehensive: "The college will be oriented to the needs and interests of the community in which it is located, providing cultural activities, special services, continuing education and skills training opportunities for community residents of all ages."[3]

The college's first president was Joseph Shenker, who had been Acting President of Kingsborough Community College and at age 29, the youngest community college president anywhere in the United States.[4] In October 1970, the Board of Higher Education, breaking with CUNY's geographic naming convention, named the new college after Mayor LaGuardia, noting his "lifelong public service to the people of the City of New York and of the United States, and his ambitious and successful leadership of good government campaigns to provide decent living conditions and guarantee democratic processes for all...."[5]

The college was officially opened on September 22, 1971, and received its first accreditation from the Middle States Association in December 1972 when the college graduated its first class. Shenker was succeeded as president by Raymond C. Bowen in 1989 and by Gail Mellow in 2000.

The La Guardia and Wagner Archives was established on campus in 1982.[6]

The college has supported numerous educational projects and conferences in collaboration with the Wikipedia community since 2012.

In early 2024, Steve Cohen's Steven & Alexandra Cohen Foundation donated $116 million for the establishment of a workforce development center at LaGuardia Community College, which is planned to open in 2029.[7]

Campus

On March 24, 1970, the New York City Board of Higher Education approved the former Ford Instrument Company building on Long Island City's Thomson Avenue as the location for the College. At this time, Joseph Shenker was named president of the proposed college.[8] [9] Renovations to the five-story, former factory began the same year.[8] This building would serve as the Main building of the new college—renamed Shenker Hall in 2008 in honor of the College's founding president.[10] [11]

The Ford Instrument Building was intended to be a temporary home for the college. On September 22, 1972, the school received from the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, for payment of $1, a 5.2acres site in Astoria that had formerly been the U.S. Army Pictorial Center, with the intention of moving the college to a campus on the new site. Originally the Famous Players–Lasky film studio, the complex consisted of 15 buildings.[12] [13] However, in 1974 during the city's fiscal crisis the site had to be sold off, as the expense of maintaining it in the interim was too high.[12] [14] The Army Pictorial Center would later become Kaufman Astoria Studios.[15] [16] [17]

The current campus including Shenker Hall is located at the east end of Long Island City near Sunnyside. The area is physically separated from the rest of Long Island City by the Long Island Rail Road's Sunnyside Yard. The campus runs between Thomson Avenue to the north and 47th Avenue to the south, extending east from 28th Street near the Queensboro Bridge approach to Van Dam Street.[18] [19] [20] [21] [22] The buildings of the campus consist of former Long Island City factories and warehouses converted for school use.[23]

The closest New York City Subway station to the campus is the 33rd Street–Rawson Street station on the IRT Flushing Line.[21] [22]

Current buildings

C Building

At the far west end of the campus is the C Building or Center III, located between 29th and 30th Street near the Queensboro Bridge approach.[18] The ten-story former factory was constructed in 1912 as the Loose-Wiles Sunshine Biscuits Building. Due to its size and numerous windows, the building was dubbed the "largest factory in Long Island", "world's largest bakery", and the "Thousand Window Bakery".[24] [25] [26] [27] [28] The building was designed by architect William Higginson, with a reinforced concrete frame, and a glazed white terra cotta facade produced by the Atlantic Terra Cotta Company.[29] [30] A spur track from the nearby Long Island Rail Road fed into the rear of the building, allowing freight cars to load and unload inside the facility. The complex also included a two-level garage building for the storage of delivery trucks.[31] [32] The biscuit factory was erected as part of the Degnon Terminal area of Long Island City, created by developer Michael Degnon.[26] [27] [33] Degnon's firm was the contractor that excavated the Steinway Subway Tunnel to Midtown Manhattan.[34] He also proposed and partially developed a major industrial port revolving around Flushing Bay, which later became Flushing Meadows–Corona Park.[33] [35]

By the 1970s, the building was used as the headquarters for Executone, a producer of telephone systems. It also served as a Gimbels warehouse.[36] [37] [38] In 1975, LaGuardia Community College began leasing of space on the third floor the Executone Building, including seven classrooms and a lecture hall.[39] In 1981, the college leased an additional of space on the building's seventh floor.[40] [41] [42] In 1985, the Executone Building became part of a four-building complex known as the International Design Center New York (IDCNY). The complex included the adjacent Bucilla Building (Center II) and the former American Chicle Company factory (Center I).[43] The name "Center III" originated from its use within the Design Center. Due to the 1987 stock market crash, Center III was never redesigned for IDCNY like the other two buildings.[44] The entire Center III building was purchased by LaGuardia in 1998 for $52 million to create a West Campus. The college also purchased the adjacent garage (Center IV), the former Loose-Wiles truck garage. The purchase increased the size of the college campus by 70 percent, and would relieve space in the E Building.[25] [45] [46] [47]

In 2006 the college announced a series of projects to renovate the C Building.[25] One of the projects completed circa 2010 renovated the interior of the building, creating new classrooms and office space. This involved removing a grain elevator used during the Sunshine Biscuit era.[48] Other work involved constructing escalators in the building, overhauling passenger elevators, and converting three freight elevators into passenger elevators.[25] In 2013, LaGuardia announced a project to install a new facade on the C Building, designed by Mitchell Giurgola Architects. An aluminum and terra cotta curtainwall would be installed atop the original terra cotta which was in disrepair, and new windows would also be installed. Both renovations improved the insulation and energy efficiency of the building. In addition, the two front entrances along Thomson Avenue were consolidated into a single main entrance. The project was completed in 2018.[49] [50] [51] [52]

The building features a large rooftop billboard sign which is illuminated at night. Over the years it has featured the names of its various tenants, including Loose-Wiles, Executone, and IDCNY.[24] [27] [53] [34] [54] [55] As part of the modern renovations to the C Building, the sign was fitted with branding for LaGuardia Community College.[25] [56]

B Building

The B Building or Center II is located between 30th Street and 30th Place, across from the C Building. The eight-story building was constructed in 1914 as the American Eveready Building within the Degnon Terminal, designed by Maynicke and Francke.[57] [58] [59] [60] [61] The building occupies the northern half of the block between Thomson and 47th Avenues; the southern half was purchased by Eveready for a future expansion which was never built, and it is currently used as a parking lot.[62] [58] In 1929, the American Knit Goods company leased space in the building, beginning its use as a clothing and textile factory.[63] [64] By the 1940s, the plant was used by the Bernhard Ulmann Company and its subsidiary Bucilla Yarn.[57] [65]

The Bucilla Building became Center II of the International Design Center New York in 1985.[43] [54] As part of renovations for the design center created by I. M. Pei & Partners, the open-air courtyards at the center of the building and the adjacent American Chicle Building (Center I) were covered with skylights to create atriums, while indoor walls were taken down to create more open interiors.[66] By 1998, the International Design Center was renamed the Queens Atrium Corporate Center, and three floors from Center II were leased to DeVry University.[67]

In 2006, LaGuardia Community College received $55 million allocated by the New York State Legislature for the purchase of new school buildings. This was used to lease two floors in the Bucilla Building beginning in 2008.[68] [69] In November 2009, the college opened a Healthcare Career Center inside the B Building.[70]

Four of the eight floors of the building are occupied by the Queens High School Complex of the New York City Department of Education. The complex houses three public high schools: Bard High School Early College Queens, the Academy of Finance and Enterprise, and the High School of Applied Communication.[62]

Joseph Shenker Hall and E Building

Located at the east end of the campus are the adjacent Joseph Shenker Hall, a.k.a. the Main Building or M Building; and the E Building or East Building, formerly the Annex Building. The two buildings occupy a two-block-wide site between 31st Street and Van Dam Street, with a common courtyard in between the two buildings along the de-mapped 31st Place.[71]

The M Building was constructed in 1920 as the White Motor Company truck factory and service station, part of the Degnon Terminal. It replaced the company's plant at Broadway and 57th Street in Midtown Manhattan.[34] [33] [72] [73] In 1941, the building was sold to the Ford Instrument Company, a subsidiary of Sperry Rand.[74] [75] The factory manufactured electronics for the United States Armed Forces' World War II efforts.[76] [77] Following the war, the factory produced missile guidance systems for the Army Ballistic Missile Agency, designed the controls and instrumentation for the USS Seawolf nuclear submarine, and created other computer systems such as aircraft navigation systems for the U.S. military.[78] [79] [80] [81]

The Ford Instrument building was purchased by CUNY for the college, then provisionally known as "Community College IX", in 1970.[12] [8] [82] "Phase I" renovations were conducted in the building prior to the opening of the college in September 1971. At this time, the building included basic classrooms and offices, a 115-seat library, and a "Great Hall" at the south end of the building for assemblies inherited from Sperry Rand.[8] [83] [81] [84] Additional "Phase II" renovations were completed in 1976, which added new classrooms and a theater, an atrium or mall referred to as an "interior street", and converted the Great Hall into a gymnasium.[83] [81] [85]

The E building was originally operated as the Equitable Paper Bag factory building.[71] In 1954, the company claimed to manufacture the largest paper bag in the world, measuring long.[86] The building was purchased by LaGuardia in 1984,[87] with the college proposing a major project to renovate the building and connect it to the Main Building. The plans were drawn up by Danforth Toan of the Warner, Burns, Toan and Lund firm.[88] [87] Ground was broken for the project on November 16, 1989,[89] and the new building complex was dedicated and opened on June 4, 1992.[12] The project included the LaGuardia Performing Arts Center at the south end of the E Building, featuring an 800-seat proscenium theater, and a new campus library at the north end.[12] [88] The basement of the complex contains the athletic facilities of the college. This includes a six-lane NCAA regulation swimming pool constructed in the 1992 project, a fitness center, and a gymnasium for multiple sports including basketball.[88]

On August 14, 2008, the college dedicated the M Building as "Joseph Shenker Hall" in honor of founding president Joseph Shenker. Shenker would pass away in September of that year.[11] [90] [91]

Middle College High School Campus

See main article: Middle College High School at LaGuardia Community College and International High School (Queens). At the far east end of the campus across from the M and E Buildings is the Middle College High School Campus, formerly the college's L Building, located at Van Dam Street and 47th Avenue.[19] [92] [93] The building houses two public high schools affiliated with the college, Middle College High School and International High School.[94] Prior to educational use, the building served as the factory for X-Acto hobby knives,[95] and as a depot for Pan American World Airways.[96]

The building was purchased by the college in 1989. At this time, Middle College High School was moved into the building, with classrooms used by the high school during the day and by the college at night. In addition, an Early Child Care Learning Center for the children of college students was created in the building.[95] [97] [98] On October 20, 1989, the building was dedicated as the Marie LaGuardia Building or L Building in honor of the wife of Fiorello La Guardia, who in 1982 donated records and memorabilia that formed the basis of the La Guardia and Wagner Archives.[12] [99]

An 820-seat addition or annex was completed in October 2012, designed by Goshow Architects. This allowed International High School to move from the M Building into the Middle College Campus.[94] [100] [101]

Former buildings

S Building

The former S Building, a.k.a. the Satellite Building or Satellite College (31-11 Thomson Avenue),[102] [103] is located on Thomson Avenue across to the north of the Main Building.[19] [102] It was originally known as the Sony Building.[104] It was also the headquarters and warehouse for Stroheim & Romann, a fabric and interior design company.[105]

LaGuardia began renting space in the building in 1973, occupying of space.[104] It was the original home of Middle College High School when it opened in 1974.[106] In 1984, the college began leasing the second and third floors of the building, in addition to the basement and first floor already in use.[107] The building features a rooftop parking lot, which was used by the college.[19] [108] The college ceased use of the building in the 1990s, after the completion of the E & M Building complex and the acquisition of the L Building.[95]

In 2008, the New York Public Library began leasing the building.[109] [110] The library renovated the building for use as its Library Services Center, opening in 2010 at the cost of $50 million. The center contains a 238feet automated book sorting machine in the building's basement, and a digital imaging center.[111] [112] [113]

Academics

The College offers associate degrees and certificates in over 50 majors in Business and Technology, Liberal Arts, Health, Math, and Science.

Enrollment

As of the Fall of 2011, LaGuardia had an enrollment of 17,569 undergraduate students, 58% of them attending full-time, and 42% part-time. This undergraduate enrollment made the college the third largest community college in the CUNY system, after the Borough of Manhattan Community College and Kingsborough Community College.[114] [115]

Student body

LaGuardia's student body is made up of people from 160 different countries who speak 127 languages natively.[115]

Of the student population, 43% (6,386) are Hispanic, 22% (3,171) are Asian, 18% (2,699) are Black, 13% (1,937) are White, and 4% (656) described themselves as Other.[115]

Athletics

LaGuardia Community College teams participate as a member of the National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA). The Red Hawks are a member of the community college section of the City University of New York Athletic Conference (CUNYAC) since the 2013-14 season (the inaugural year of the school's athletic program). Sports include men's and women's basketball. Men's & women's soccer and men's & women's swimming & diving will also be added within its athletic program, effectively on the 2014-15 season.[116]

Notable people

Alumni

Faculty

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. CUNY Names Four College Presidents . November 25, 2020 . CUNY Newswire . June 29, 2020 . en.
  2. Fitzpatrick, John. "City University of New York" U.S. History Encyclopedia
  3. Office of the Dean of Community College Affairs of the Board of Higher Education . LaGuardia Community College . 1969-01-01 . A Proposal for the Establishment of Community College Number Nine . LaGuardia Community College Publications.
  4. Web site: Hevesi . Dennis . September 26, 2008 . Joseph Shenker, First President of La Guardia Community College, Dies at 68 . March 22, 2024 . The New York Times.
  5. Web site: A Proposal for the Establishment of Community College Number Nine . Dspace.nitle.org . June 9, 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140714161654/http://dspace.nitle.org/handle/10090/23441 . July 14, 2014 .
  6. "About the La Guardia and Wagner Archives."
  7. Web site: Bamberger . Cayla . March 21, 2024 . Steve and Alex Cohen donate $116M to community college facility . March 22, 2024 . New York Daily News.
  8. Web site: a proposal for the establishment of Community College Number Nine . . June 14, 2022 . 1972.
  9. News: Currivan . Gene . City University Appoints Presidents for 2 Community Colleges . June 14, 2022 . . March 26, 1970 . 39.
  10. http://webdev.laguardia.edu/livewire/98/98.pdf{{dead link|date=September 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
  11. News: Main LaG CC Building Named For Founding President . July 1, 2022 . Queens Gazette . August 20, 2008.
  12. Book: . LaGuardia Community College: The First 25 Years . 1997 . LaGuardia Community College . May 28, 2022.
  13. News: LaGuardia's Future Home . May 30, 2022 . Perspective . October 1972 . 1.
  14. News: Pic Site Outasite . May 30, 2022 . Fiorello's Flute . March 11, 1977 . 4.
  15. Web site: Famous Players–Lasky Studio. March 14, 1978. New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission.
  16. News: McMenamin . James . Movie Studios . May 30, 2022 . The Bridge . Fall 1986 . 13.
  17. News: Sommer . Jack . The fascinating story behind New York City's only remaining backlot movie studio . May 30, 2022 . . November 9, 2015.
  18. Web site: LaGuardia Community College Campus Map . LaGuardia Community College . May 28, 2022.
  19. Web site: LaGuardia Community College: Fall 2004-Spring 2005 Catalog . LaGuardia Community College . May 28, 2022 . 2004.
  20. Web site: Search Profile: Provost & Senior Vice President of Academic Affairs . LaGuardia Community College . 2022.
  21. Web site: MTA Neighborhood Maps: Long Island City. Metropolitan Transportation Authority. September 27, 2015. 2015.
  22. Web site: Neighborhood Map: 33rd Street–Rawson Street . . May 29, 2022 . April 2018.
  23. News: University Rising: LaGuardia Community College Library . May 28, 2022 . . March 24, 2017.
  24. Web site: History Toics: Industry Loose-Wiles (Sunshine) Biscuit . June 19, 2010 . . astorialic.org . https://web.archive.org/web/20100904053739/http://www.astorialic.org/topics/industry/sunshine.shtml . September 4, 2010 .
  25. News: LaG CC Center 3 Building To Get $7M Facelift . May 28, 2022 . Queens Gazette . August 2, 2006.
  26. News: Waxman . Mitch . Queens: The Borough of Homes and Industry . May 28, 2022 . . August 15, 2013.
  27. Book: Vollo . Gary . . Long Island City . 2010 . . 978-0-7385-7385-4 . May 28, 2022.
  28. Web site: Union Agent Reveals 1908 Threat To Queensboro Bridge . June 19, 2010 . The Queens Gazette.
  29. Putnam . Edward H. . The Modern Industrial Building . . March 22, 1916 . 109 . 2100 . 177–182 . May 29, 2022.
  30. Loose-Wiles Bakery, Long Island City, N. Y. . . June 1916 . 3 . 8 . 7 . May 29, 2022.
  31. Sunshine Bakery Buys Trucks for Cleanliness, Cheapness and Advertising Value; Part I . The Commercial Vehicle . May 13, 1915 . 12 . 8 . May 29, 2022. 21–24.
  32. Loose-Wiles Truck Garage Is Light clean and Fireproof–Only Two Exposed Columns; Part II . The Commercial Vehicle . June 1, 1915 . 12 . 9 . May 29, 2022. 23–27.
  33. Book: Willis . Walter I. . Queens Borough, New York City, 1910-1920: The Borough of Homes and Industry . 1920 . Chamber of Commerce of the Borough of Queens . Queens, New York . June 4, 2022.
  34. Book: Panchyk . Richard . Hidden History of Queens . 2018 . . . 978-1-43966-478-0 .
  35. Book: Appendix: The History of Flushing Meadows Corona Park . Flushing Meadows Corona Park Strategic Framework Plan. New York City Department of Parks and Recreation. Quennell Rothschild & Partners. Smith-Miller + Hawkinson Architects.
  36. News: McQuiston . John T. . Manes Bids to End His Feud with L.I. Business Leaders . May 28, 2022 . . November 12, 1981 . B2.
  37. News: News of the Realty Trade . May 28, 2022 . . July 18, 1971 . R7.
  38. News: Horsley . Carter B. . Realty News 'Soft Landing' Seen For Housing Market . June 4, 2022 . . March 25, 1979 . R4.
  39. News: Three Department to Move to Executone 3rd Floor July 21st . May 28, 2022 . Perspective . July 1975.
  40. News: REALTY NEWS; Upper East Side . May 28, 2022 . . May 24, 1981.
  41. News: Answers to question of space and time . May 28, 2022 . Perspective . Spring 1981 . 2, 5.
  42. News: We'll be on the move as renovation ends . May 28, 2022 . Perspective . Fall 1981.
  43. News: Slesin . Suzanne . Queens Site to be Converted into International Design Center . May 29, 2022 . . March 10, 1983 . C6.
  44. Web site: Across the Yards: Solutions for East Long Island City . . May 29, 2022 . 2016.
  45. News: New Building Acquired to Meet Future Growth . May 29, 2022 . LaGuardia Insider . Fall 1998 . 1, 14.
  46. Web site: CUNY Demolishes Historic Queens Building . June 26, 2009 . ArchiTakes . May 29, 2022 . 2009.
  47. Web site: Middle States Self-Evaluation: LaGuardia Community College . LaGuardia Community College . May 30, 2022 . June 2, 1997.
  48. Web site: Citadel Construction to complete 46,000 s/f renovation for Laguardia Community College . June 19, 2010 . New England Real Estate Journal . nerej.com . https://web.archive.org/web/20110714163517/http://nerej.com/27341 . July 14, 2011 .
  49. News: Bartlett . Josey . LaGuardia College to replace facade: Traffic is a concern with revamp of 1913 exterior in $70M project . May 30, 2022 . Queens Chronicle . January 10, 2013.
  50. News: McRae . Tess . 100-year-old building gets a nice spruce up: LaGuardia Center 3 to have facade renovated, more greenery and lights . May 30, 2022 . Queens Chronicle . October 10, 2013.
  51. Web site: Center III Building, LaGuardia Community College . . May 30, 2022 . 2018.
  52. Web site: LaGuardia Community College - Center 3 Facade Replacement . . May 30, 2022 . 2018.
  53. Book: Walsh . Kevin . . Forgotten Queens . 2013 . . . 978-1-4671-2065-4 . May 28, 2022.
  54. News: Slesin . Suzanne . Queens Design Center: To Join, Or Not? . May 29, 2022 . . June 6, 1985.
  55. "Night Lighting" "The Factory Building . . March 22, 1916 . 109 . 2100 . 191 . May 29, 2022.
  56. Web site: C-Building Renovations: FAQ . LaGuardia Community College . May 28, 2022 . 2014.
  57. Book: Queens Subway Options Study, New York: Environmental Impact Statement. July 10, 2016. May 1984. United States Department of Transportation, Metropolitan Transportation Authority, Urban Mass Transit Administration.
  58. News: Big Work at L.I. City . May 29, 2022 . Long Island City Daily Star . . July 10, 1914.
  59. News: American Ever Ready Company Soon to Move Into New Factory; Will Employ 3,000 . May 29, 2022 . Long Island City Daily Star . . December 31, 1914 . 1.
  60. News: $500,000 Building; To be Built by National Carbon Company Here . May 29, 2022 . Long Island City Daily Star . . March 14, 1913 . 1.
  61. News: Another Big Plant; To Be Built This Year in Long Island City . May 29, 2022 . Long Island City Daily Star . . March 10, 1914 . 1.
  62. Web site: NYC Department of Education Building Condition Assessment Survey 2020-2021: Queens High School Complex. New York City Department of Education. May 29, 2022. May 17, 2021.
  63. News: Knit Goods Firm Moves Plant to Long Island City . May 29, 2022 . Long Island City Daily Star . . February 9, 1929 . 16.
  64. News: Knit Goods Firm Moves to L.I. City; Plans Expansion to 350 Employees . May 29, 2022 . Long Island City Daily Star . . February 27, 1929 . 9.
  65. News: $1,000 Looting Laid to Clerk In L. I. City . May 29, 2022 . Long Island Star-Journal . . December 15, 1949 . 1.
  66. News: Goldberger . Paul . Architecture View: In Queens, A Design Center That Lives Up To Its Name . May 29, 2022 . . January 10, 1988.
  67. News: Biederman . Marcia . NEIGHBORHOOD REPORT: LONG ISLAND CITY; Design Buildings Are Back From Dead, Though Less Tony . May 29, 2022 . . March 15, 1998.
  68. Web site: Crystal Reports; LaGuardia Community College; Fiscal Year 2011 . . May 30, 2022 . 2011.
  69. News: Toscano . John . Maltese, Addabbo Battle Down To The Wire In Senate Race . May 29, 2022 . Queens gazette . October 29, 2008.
  70. News: Alexander . Melissa . Healthcare career center opens at LaGuardia CC . May 29, 2022 . Queens Courier . November 13, 2009.
  71. News: The trick is to turn a 'bag' into a building; Architect's drawings due this fall . May 28, 2022 . Perspective . 1985.
  72. News: White Co. Buys at Degnon Terminal . June 13, 2022 . Brooklyn Daily Star . . December 20, 1918 . 2.
  73. News: Astoria Ferry May Stary August 15; Boom to Queens; White Motors Moving . June 13, 2022 . . . July 3, 1920 . 6.
  74. News: Big Plant Purchase: Ford Instrument Co. Buys in Long Island City . June 13, 2022 . . . February 10, 1941 . 31.
  75. News: QUEENS SITE SOLD IN EXPANSION MOVE; Ford Instrument Buys the White Motor Plant in Long Island City . June 4, 2022 . . February 10, 1941.
  76. News: Navy Flag is Won By Ford Company: Instrument Firm One of 14 Praised for Production . June 13, 2022 . . . August 12, 1941 . 3.
  77. News: 'Monty' Inspects L. I. City Factory That Turned Out Supplies for Allies . June 13, 2022 . Long Island Star-Journal . . November 29, 1949.
  78. Ford Instrument Company; Division of Sperry Rand Corporation . Journal of Jet Propulsion . May 1956 . 26 . 5 . 24-S . 10.2514/8.7009 . June 13, 2022.
  79. Web site: Yates . B. . Information Bibliography: Nuclear Propulsion for Ships . . June 13, 2022 . 1958.
  80. News: Ford Instrument Gets 'Shot in the Arm' . June 14, 2022 . Long Island Star-Journal . . April 3, 1958 . 5.
  81. News: La Guardia College, on Old Factory Site in L.I. City, Will Offer Work-Study Prograin . June 14, 2022 . . March 14, 1971 . 92.
  82. News: Leviss Speeds New College for Queens . June 14, 2022 . . . July 9, 1970 . 2.
  83. Web site: An Assessment and Description of the Initiation of an Innovative Curriculum of Cooperative Education at LaGuardia Community College . . June 14, 2022 . August 1972.
  84. Web site: 1971-1972 LaGuardia Community College Student Handbook . LaGuardia Community College . June 14, 2022 . 1971.
  85. News: Renovation Deadline Expected to be Met . June 14, 2022 . Perspective . December 1975 . 1, 6.
  86. News: World's Biggest Bat Made by L.I. City Firm . June 15, 2022 . Long Island Star-Journal . . February 26, 1954 . 10.
  87. News: Tomack . David . LaGuardia Buys the Bag . May 28, 2022 . TheBridge . November 1984 . 1, 5.
  88. News: Building for the future: LaGuardia plans new facility . May 28, 2022 . Cooperative Times . 1986.
  89. News: College Breaks Ground on New $87 Million Construction Project . May 28, 2022 . Perspective . January 1989 . 1–2.
  90. News: Davis . Pete . Building named for first president . July 1, 2022 . . August 27, 2008.
  91. News: Hevesi . Dennis . Joseph Shenker, a Pacesetter at CUNY, Is Dead at 68 . July 1, 2022 . . September 25, 2008.
  92. Web site: Campus Map of LaGuardia Community College - March 25, 1992 . LaGuardia Community College . June 14, 2022 . March 25, 1992.
  93. News: Sidorov . Aleksandr . LaGuardia to expand, buy new building . May 28, 2022 . The Bridge . September 2006.
  94. Web site: NYC Department of Education Building Condition Assessment Survey 2020-2021: Middle College Campus. New York City Department of Education. May 29, 2022. April 6, 2021.
  95. News: Isreal . Erik . Construction of New Building LaGuardia's Step to the Future . June 2, 2022 . The Bridge . Fall 1988 . 7.
  96. Web site: Telephone Address Directory; New York, January 1950 . . 1 August 2023 . January 1950.
  97. News: Hernandez . Cuba . Early Childhood Learning Center . May 28, 2022 . The Bridge . September 1990 . 13, 15.
  98. News: New Child Care Center Opens for Student-Parents . May 30, 2022 . Perspective . April 1990 . 7–8.
  99. News: College Names New Building for Marie LaGuardia, Mayor's Widow . May 28, 2022 . Perspective . January 1990 . 1–2.
  100. News: Expanded Schools Opened In L. I. City . May 28, 2022 . . October 25, 2012.
  101. Web site: Middle College High School, Long Island City, NY . Goshow Architects . May 28, 2022 . 2012.
  102. Web site: The Second Year . LaGuardia Community College Office of Institutional Research . May 28, 2022 . August 28, 1973.
  103. Web site: Middle States Self-Evaluation: LaGuardia Community College . LaGuardia Community College . May 28, 2022 . 1992.
  104. News: Sony Shift Scheduled Soon, Spokesman Says . May 28, 2022 . Perspective . 1973 . 1.
  105. News: Satow . Julie . NYC firm stays put even as it strays . May 28, 2022 . . December 4, 2010.
  106. Web site: Middle College Plan . LaGuardia Community College . June 2, 2022 . 29 . June 1973.
  107. News: Satellite building joins college's space program . June 4, 2022 . Perspective . April 1984 . 10.
  108. News: Parking Available . May 28, 2022 . Fiorello's Flute . December 1977 . 27.
  109. News: Radomsky . Rosalie R. . TRANSACTIONS: Recent Lease . June 2, 2022 . . January 30, 2008.
  110. News: Devine . Jane . Welcome for New York Public Library Neighbors . May 28, 2022 . Library Notes . 2008.
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