University of Northern Iowa - Old Gold Yearbook (Cedar Falls, IA)

 - Class of 1938

Page 29 of 274

 

University of Northern Iowa - Old Gold Yearbook (Cedar Falls, IA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 29 of 274
Page 29 of 274



University of Northern Iowa - Old Gold Yearbook (Cedar Falls, IA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 28
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Page 29 text:

 Let's go to the Commons is rapidly becoming a constant by-word among students, particularly on Friday and Saturday nights when nothing has been previously arranged. Wider and more varied use has been made of the Commons this year than at any other time since its construction. With interest in its use on the increase, a movement has been started for a more open Commons among the more socially-minded campusites. As yet, however, no definite policies have been developed as a result of this movement. Dancing is not the only use to which the Commons is put. Social sororities, faculty men's clubs, and faculty women's clubs hold their regular meetings in rooms especially provided for that purpose. Sunday afternoons find the ball- room devoted to leisure hour concerts provided by prominent members of the music faculty, and hobby groups and student forums meet during the week in the ballroom or the spacious Georgian lounge to discuss topics of student interest. At noon, long lines fill the corridors of the Commons as hundreds of girls file in to look for that long-expected letter at the mail box. Other lines follow the stairway to the cool cafeteria below where excellent food is regularly served. Special dining rooms are provided for dinner parties, and the master minds of the institution — the faculty — have a dining room reserved especially for them. Upstairs, just across from the ballroom, is that indispensable thirst- quenching station, the fountain, where students may grab a coke or a malted between dances, or have a snack at noon. Minus a social director since the early part of the winter term, the Commons has not seemed like the same place. Students, faculty, and administrators alike miss the cheerful and capable presence of Miss Janet Works, who re- signed her position late in December to accept an offer from Princeton Uni- versity at Trenton, New Jersey, of a place in that institution. The line — crowded Coke drinkers between dances Commons pearl divers The ball room on Friday night

Page 28 text:

 The most beautiful and the most practical recreational or social center on any campus in the northwest, is the way the Commons building has been described. Completed five years ago, the Com- mons has become the nucleus for all social activities on the campus. When the tomfoolery and boisterous activity of the frat house subside, or when there is little to do in Bartlett Hall, the boys and girls flock to the Commons in search of a suitable place to expend that surplus energy. Every Monday night finds the proverbial stag, the steady couple, and most of the rest of the students tripping the light fantastic to the tune of the Campus Playboys as they swing into the latest numbers for the weekly recreational dance hour. Fellows get the date for the coming weekend that they have been yearning for, and the girls retaliate by getting their men. Quite naturally, the all-college dances are held in the long ballroom of the Commons, under the sponsorship of one or more of the numerous organizations on the campus. Southeast comer Page 28



Page 30 text:

Built with the aim in view of providing suitable living quarters for a large proportion of the women students in attendance at Iowa State Teachers College, Bartlett Hall stands as the largest single building on the campus. Extending for over four hundred feet along the north border of the campus, and having four wings each a hundred feet in length, it provides facilities for housing better than five hundred students. The building has the best of modem facilities — showers, steam heat, janitor service and other equally valuable aids to comfort- able existence. Recreational facilities are also adequately provided for. The Blue Kitchen and the Yellow Kitchen each have neces- sary equipment for the holding of small informal parties and buffet suppers, and are widely used by the various women's so- cial groups on the campus. In the Green and Rose living rooms the girls may spend time comfortably lounging, or entertaining masculine friends in the afternoon and early evening. In a small recreation room off the Blue Kitchen, ping-pong tables and other equipment are provided. Pag© 30

Suggestions in the University of Northern Iowa - Old Gold Yearbook (Cedar Falls, IA) collection:

University of Northern Iowa - Old Gold Yearbook (Cedar Falls, IA) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

University of Northern Iowa - Old Gold Yearbook (Cedar Falls, IA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

University of Northern Iowa - Old Gold Yearbook (Cedar Falls, IA) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

University of Northern Iowa - Old Gold Yearbook (Cedar Falls, IA) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

University of Northern Iowa - Old Gold Yearbook (Cedar Falls, IA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

University of Northern Iowa - Old Gold Yearbook (Cedar Falls, IA) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941


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