Difference between revisions of "Talk:Currier Hall"

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I don't know anything about editorial decisions on the wiki, but are you sure that Currier has the most bathrooms per resident above ground? Dodd pretty much has a bathroom for every room, plus some public bathrooms next to the dining hall, and I know some of the small houses (Woodbridge, Hubbell, etc.) have lots of bathrooms, too...
 
I don't know anything about editorial decisions on the wiki, but are you sure that Currier has the most bathrooms per resident above ground? Dodd pretty much has a bathroom for every room, plus some public bathrooms next to the dining hall, and I know some of the small houses (Woodbridge, Hubbell, etc.) have lots of bathrooms, too...
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You most recent person are confused about the situation here. There is a difference between most bathrooms per resident, and most residents per bathroom. If everyone has their own bathroom as in Dodd, that's a high bathrooms/resident ratio and a low resident/bathroom ratio. In Currier, it is the opposite situation: With nine people sharing a bathroom, there is a high resident/bathroom ratio and a low bathroom/resident ratio. --[[User:07djd|07djd]] 13:31, 7 March 2006 (EST)

Revision as of 13:31, March 7, 2006

Fun Fact: Bathrooms

A recent editor removed the fun fact saying Currier has the highest bathroom to resident ratio on all the aboveground floor. I lived there and am reasonably certain this is true. Can anyone comment on why the item might have merited removal? The previous editor gave no comment in the edit summary or here.

I have restored the bathroom fact for now.--05jl 21:45, 6 March 2006 (EST)

I don't know anything about editorial decisions on the wiki, but are you sure that Currier has the most bathrooms per resident above ground? Dodd pretty much has a bathroom for every room, plus some public bathrooms next to the dining hall, and I know some of the small houses (Woodbridge, Hubbell, etc.) have lots of bathrooms, too...

You most recent person are confused about the situation here. There is a difference between most bathrooms per resident, and most residents per bathroom. If everyone has their own bathroom as in Dodd, that's a high bathrooms/resident ratio and a low resident/bathroom ratio. In Currier, it is the opposite situation: With nine people sharing a bathroom, there is a high resident/bathroom ratio and a low bathroom/resident ratio. --07djd 13:31, 7 March 2006 (EST)