Overcrowding

Displaying 101 - 143 of 143 in reverse chronological order
# Title Date Summary
101 No rooms left in men's dorms
College Eye 46:36, p.3
For fall 1955 quarter.
102 Residence halls filled completely
College Eye 45:39, p.1
Now beyond capacity for fall quarter.
103 Admission standards
College Eye 45:25, p.2
Claims that the admission standard is too low and is causing overcrowding in classes.
104 575 freshmen take English
Public Relations News Release 40:4, p.3
Twenty-nine sections are full to overflowing.
105 English student states protests of theme writing in classroom
College Eye 38:15, p.2
Believes crowded conditions and poor desks do not usually lead to a good essay.
106 False rumor spread; Dean Nelson denies any grading changes
College Eye 38:6, p.4
Standards for dismissal due to low grades will not be altered due to overcrowded conditions.
107 Noon classes to begin in winter, says dean
College Eye 38:4, p.3
Will help to reduce crowding in the classrooms and in the Commons.
108 Double-deckers inhabit Baker, Seerley; men accept with smiles or groans
College Eye 37:31, p.2
Two men placed in some single rooms, three men placed in some double rooms; students and staff talk about the conditions.
109 President Price explains housing, food
College Eye 37:22, p.1
Some dorm rooms will be double-decked; Commons food service must be self-supporting; President Price asks everyone to work together, as they did during the war.
110 At Lawther Hall four in a room becomes a science
College Eye 35:8, p.3
A look at the way that women deal with crowded conditions.
111 "More the merrier" say college coeds in crowded dorm
College Eye 34:32, p.2
Women look at their housing conditions.
112 Students bunk four in a room
Alumnus 27:1, p.16
With WAVES in Bartlett Hall, students are crowded into other facilities; women now use Seerley Hall for Men; photo.
113 Girls in Lawther get adjusted to crowded rooming
College Eye 34:12, p.3
Description of living conditions now that women are in each room.
114 Cut enrollment in high school
College Eye 28:29, p.1
Due to overcrowding, the Campus School will not renew contracts with two rural districts.
115 The garbage can
College Eye 20:45, p.2
Suggests better headlines; investigates crowded corridors.
116 At a recent meeting of one of the classes
College Eye 18:16, p.3
Joking about traffic in the halls.
117 Movements for additional state normal schools
Fifty Years at the Teachers College 0:0, p.138
Overcrowded conditions at the Normal School lead to a dilemma: should the state start more schools or build another building at Cedar Falls?
118 Present library capacity does not meet demands; no room for classes in future library plans
College Eye 16:26, p.7
Library facilities are becoming crowded due to growing book collection and increased enrollment; main hallway on first floor to be devoted to artworks; staff looking forward to elimination of classes in the building.
119 Editorially Speaking
College Eye 11:9, p.4
Praises Clarence Brown's performance on the football field; suggests needed building improvements at I. S. T. C.
120 On account of the size of the senior class
Normal Eyte 9:23, p.548
Some are unable to find work in the Training School.
121 Official
Normal Eyte 9:14, p.326
Board has selected summer session faculty; schedule of classes rearranged; several faculty will be traveling to Europe; additional classrooms badly needed; assignments made for Student Battalion.
122 Editorial
Normal Eyte 9:13, p.301
Applauds recent literary society programs; school needs more room to do its work well; urges students to rest as much as they can over the Christmas holidays.
123 The Training School
Normal Eyte 9:12, p.282
Enrollment causes three new classrooms to be used.
124 A large, happy, good-looking throng
Normal Eyte 9:1, p.6
Conditions are a bit crowded as the year begins.
125 The literary societies have a large problem on their hands
Normal Eyte 8:21, p.292
Rooms in which open sessions are held cannot accommodate the numbers of people who wish to attend.
126 There are too many young women in the school
Normal Eyte 8:15, p.206
May need to form another literary society.
127 Our enrollment the first of the week was 1080
Normal Eyte 8:15, p.210
All classrooms in use; considering course of action.
128 The program for the winter term
Normal Eyte 8:1, p.10
Should be ready soon; becoming difficult to accommodate the increased numbers of students.
129 The correspondence in the office
Normal Eyte 7:14, p.163
Enrollment is likely to increase even further.
130 Another chapel assembly
Normal Eyte 7:13, p.150
Fourth assembly room organized; President Seerley will send written copies of announcements and notices to each room.
131 Official News and Notes
Normal Eyte 7:9, p.99
Memorial addresses for Principal Gilchrist scheduled; excerpts from Board report shows increased enrollment and increased student expenses with overcrowded facilities; case for improved facilities.
132 School has commenced
Normal Eyte 7:1, p.1
Classes underway, but conditions are crowded.
133 In last week's issue
Normal Eyte 5:9, p.65
Table shows growth in enrollment and number of faculty; still much work to be done.
134 The opening week of school
Normal Eyte 5:1, p.1
Enrollment approaching one thousand; Administration Building should be ready by January 1, 1896; landscaping and drives modified on campus front lawn; steps removed from Central Hall; power plant under construction; teachers deal with crowded classrooms.
135 The Fourth Years
Normal Eyte 4:15, p.235
Now seated on rostrum because of crowded conditions.
136 The regular term reception
Normal Eyte 4:1, p.12
Hard to find a place large enough to accommodate increased numbers of students; would like reception room in new building.
137 Although our resources have not been increased to the extent that we might desire
Normal Eyte 3:26, p.201
Increased budget will help to solve the worst of the overcrowding problems.
138 As Pres. Seerley has but one recitation
Normal Eyte 3:15, p.120
Switches rooms with Mary Simmons; rooms are very crowded.
139 The reappearance on our exchange table
Normal Eyte 2:25, p.202
Believes all three Iowa public institutions of higher learning are doing excellent work despite inadequate funding; notes that the Normal has had to use the armory, the library, and the chapel as classrooms.
140 Shall the Normal have a new building this year?
Normal Eyte 1:10, p.73
Prospects for new building dim; Boarding Department will probably close and be converted to classroom space; Normal Hill real estate will boom as entrepreneurs build boarding houses.
141 We of the Normal
Normal Eyte 1:3, p.20
Had hoped to be visited by a legislative committee so that they could see the school's crowded conditions.
142 The old parlor
Normal Eyte 1:1, p.6
Central Hall parlor converted to geography class; President Seerley teaches in library; new building badly needed.
143 The work of the new term
Students' Offering 5:16, p.4
Work is going well, but facilities are crowded; hoping that General Assembly will fund a new building.