Biological Preserves

Displaying 51 - 70 of 70 in reverse chronological order
# Title Date Summary
51 Outdoor Ed program builds preserves
Northern Iowan 72:2, p.8
Survey of preserves with description of recent improvement projects.
52 Man-made forest dedication set
Northern Iowan 71:61, p.1
Lowland Forest Exhibit will be dedicated; will bring wooded portion of preserve system holdings to about fifty acres.
53 UNI developing preserves
Northern Iowan 71:26, p.7
Professor Dowell talks about the growing system of biological preserves.
54 Memorial grove planned to honor Milo Lawton
UNI Century 1:4, p.6
Board will use Lawton memorial funds to establish grove near creek along Hudson Road northwest of Towers and to establish prairie preserve on south campus; Board also approves of Cubby award to outstanding member of Northern Iowan staff; photo.
55 UNI Prairie Preserve "reclaims the land"
Northern Iowan 69:58, p.5
Professor Smith seeds the prairie on the south campus off 29th Street.
56 Prairie planned for campus
Alumnus 57:3, p.17
Foundation grants $2000 for twelve acre prairie restoration south of 29th street; will prepare and plant in spring 1973; photo.
57 UNI grows grass; 12-acre prairie preserve
Northern Iowan 68:57, p.3
Professor Smith talks about his work to establish a prairie.
58 'Beware--life in progress'; the UNI biological preserve
Northern Iowan 68:31, p.6
Vandalism and unintentional damage disrupt research in University Avenue preserve.
59 Untitled
Northern Iowan 68:29, p.6
Professor Clausen notes chestnut tree in preserve; photo.
60 UNI Biological Preserve: delicate outdoor laboratory
Public Relations News Release 1972:264, p.1
Article on the UNI Biological Preseve.
61 Cutline
Public Relations News Release 1972:267, p.1
The only American Chestnut tree in Black Hawk County is located at the UNI Biological Preserve. Measuring the tree is Bernard Clausen, a professor of biology.
62 Cutline
Public Relations News Release 1972:268, p.1
Dutch elm disease turned this former woodlot into open space at the UNI Biological Preserve. Prof. Dixon L. Riggs can be seen here surveying the result.
63 Outdoor lab developed for SCI biology
College Eye 63:40, p.5
Conservation Club is cleaning up the Matala Preserve.
64 Foundation accepts funds for memorial to Dorothy Matala
Alumnus 48:1, p.12
May be used to purchase wildlife preserve.
65 SCI Foundation to purchase tract of land for biological project
College Eye 57:16, p.3
Will purchase 75 acre tract along Snag Creek north of Cedar Falls for $6500; will use Matala memorial funds.
66 Dr. Matala biology memorial fund reaches $300 mark
College Eye 57:14, p.4
Funds may be used to purchase wildlife preserve.
67 College foundation purchases land
College Eye 56:15, p.6
SCI Foundation purchases two-acre prairie near Butler Center Cemetery.
68 SCI Foundation purchases tract of Iowa prairie
Alumnus 46:4, p.10
Two acres north of Parkersburg near Butler Center Cemetery will be named after Joseph Clay; photo.
69 Seven acre garden converted into outdoor class laboratory; campus tract serves as a bird refuge home for native plants
College Eye 24:2, p.2
Description of the College Garden.
70 Growth and expansion
Fifty Years at the Teachers College 0:0, p.129
Description of the steady growth in enrollment and the ways in which the Normal School met the needs of the state; growth of the campus and its facilities.