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. |