For more than one hundred years; Campustown has served the students and community of Iowa State University. The originally residential neighborhood west of Ames was born in the early 1900s; when the school compelled students to seek residence off campus. However; local government overlooked the neighborhood; and it fell behind the achievements of Big Ames. After the boom of the previous decade; community leaders organized a secession movement in 1916. It took nearly a quarter century; but the neighborhood finally connected to the grid of public utilities. Author Anthony Capps takes readers on a journey from Campustown�s roots; through its vibrant years in the 1960s to current projects breathing new life into the district.
#3605224 in eBooks 2016-11-02 2016-11-02File Name: B01M4RFNQ2
Review
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Not an easy read. but good.By ChristinaI enjoyed reading this. because I am interested in the story of Dido and Aeneas. If you already know the story. it really helps. He does change it somewhat from Virgils version. But I liked seeing how he added his own twists to the story.It is a little bit of a tough read. b/c it is in his original text--words do not have our modern spelling. "u"s are "v"s. I liked that the text was completely unchanged. but it did make it slow going.All and all. if you like Marlowe or are interested in Dido/Aeneas story. you will enjoy this play.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Underscores instead of italicsBy TysonIf youre like me and cant stand Kindle editions that use underscores instead of italics. then this ebook just wont do. Since plays use a lot of italics for cast. stage direction. etc. Its just really too much for me to handle reading things like _this_.With that being said. however. it is free.. so you cant complain too much.