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Box Multi

 Container

Contains 28 Collections and/or Records:

WSB Radio broadcasting script, 1939

 File — Box: Multi, Folder: 1
Description From the Collection:

This collection contains a single WSB radio script from a program aired on May 18, 1939. The script documents a roundtable discussion held by three Georgia Tech professors on ceramic engineering, entitled "Ceramic Georgia, Present and Future."

Dates: 1939

Resume, 1939

 File — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

This collection contains a single resume with numerous recommendations from Chapman's past employers.

Dates: 1939

Evaluations, 1948

 File — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

This collection contains evaluations, which were produced by the Registrar's Office in March 1948. These evaluations compare the course subject content in a semester system versus a quarter system.

Dates: 1948

Flight training, 1939 - 1939

 File — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

These records contain items relating to Georgia Tech's flight training program for students, including a memorandum from Dr. Marion Brittain to the Georgia Tech faculty advisory committee, discussing the importance of student participation. There are also several letters dealing with the Civil Aeronautics Authority in Washington, D. C.

Dates: 1939 - 1939

R. L. Gamble transcripts, 1925 - 1925

 File — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

This collection contains two 1925 transcript interviews regarding a Georgia Tech student, Raymond Luther Gamble. A professor, C. A. Jones, completed one transcript interview and the other transcript interviewer is unknown.

Dates: 1925 - 1925

H. L. Strickland papers, 1900 - 1900

 File — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

This collection contains H.L. Strickland's report card, dated 27 June 1900. The report card lists such information as his grades, classes, averages, and class ranking.

Dates: 1900 - 1900

Enrollment statistics, 1888-1908; list of students, 1904-1905, 1888 - 1908

 File — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

This collection consists of two Georgia Tech enrollment lists. One is from 1888-1908, which is a simple list of the number of students attending Georgia Tech for each of these years. The second list consists of a booklet from the 1904/1905 school year. The booklet includes information such as the student's name, class ranking, parent/guardian's name, and address.

Dates: 1888 - 1908

Financial donations, 1920 - 1926

 File — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

These financial records, composed of bank receipts and correspondence dealing with Tech's capital campaign, date from the 1920s. Correspondents include Kenneth Matheson,Nathaniel Harris, and W. T. Perkerson.

Dates: 1920 - 1926

Programs, 1919 - 1923

 File — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

The Marionettes Programs include two programs from the 1920 production of three one-act plays: "The Florist Shop," "Helena's Husband," and "The Rising of the Moon," and one program from the 1923 production of "Polly with a Past." There is also a copy of the officers' photograph published in the 1919 Blueprint yearbook.

Dates: 1919 - 1923

Committee records, 1954 - 1955

 File — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

This collection consists of several reports from the Committee on Education Objectives and Methods, such as "The Aims and Objectives of the Georgia Institute of Technology." Along with these reports, there are critiques from Georgia Tech's Social Sciences Department on the committee's findings.

Dates: 1954 - 1955

Decal, undated

 File — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

The Georgia Tech decal is black, yellow, and white and reads, "Georgia Tech: A Rambling Wreck and a Helluva Engineer."

Dates: undated

Pamphlet, ca. 1948

 File — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

This collection contains a Georgia Tech insurance pamphlet for new employees. The pamphlet focuses on such items as group plans, accidental death, and surgical reimbursement benefits.

Dates: ca. 1948

Report, 1936 - 1936

 File — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

This collection consists of a single report, which discusses the semester system versus the quarter system. The report was written by Floyd Field in February 1936. This report also includes a small survey from other institutions, such as the University of Texas and Cornell University, on the quarter and semester systems.

Dates: 1936 - 1936

Address, 1948 - 1948

 File — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

This collection contains information regarding the first annual Southeastern Industrial Vision Congress, including a copy of a newspaper clipping from the Atlanta Constitution, dated November 14, 1948, and an address given by Charles T. McNary. The address discusses the benefits of a good vision program for employees working in industry.

Dates: 1948 - 1948

Conference records, 1954 - 1954

 File — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

This collection contains a conference brochure and notes from an address given by Lt. Gen. Leslie R. Groves.

Dates: 1954 - 1954

Schedule, February 1917

 File — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

This collection consists of a single-page schedule for Georgia Tech's irregular students for February 1917. The schedule lists the timetable for special, freshman, sopbomore, junior, and senior students. The names of the professors are listed at the bottom of the page.

Dates: February 1917

Correspondence, 1934 - 1934

 File — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

The correspondence contains a typed request by F. S. Holliday to substitute Mechanical Engineering 148 for Mechanical Engineering 40. However, faculty member T. W. Fitzgerald denied Holliday's request. In Holliday's handwritten note, he wrote, "Not approved, because I understand ME 148, Industrial Relations, is a snap course."

Dates: 1934 - 1934

Correspondence, 1940 - 1940

 File — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

The correspondence contains information regarding necessary changes to the graduation ceremonies at Georgia Tech. Bunger requested such changes as the date, time, and location of the ceremonies.

Dates: 1940 - 1940

Correspondence, 1969 - 1969

 File — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

This collection contains two copies of a letter from Clyde Orr, Jr., chair of the Statutes Committee, to Dr. Vernon Crawford, Acting President of Georgia Tech. The correspondence deals with the relationship between the "Joint Statement on Rights and Freedoms of Students" and the "Statutes of the Georgia Institute of Technology."

Dates: 1969 - 1969

Correspondence, 1925 - 1925

 File — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

This collection contains a single piece of correspondence from the Georgia Tech faculty to the Georgia Tech Board of Trustees. The correspondence is concerned with a formal request for group insurance for faculty and staff, and it outlines a plan that had been presented to the faculty by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company.

Dates: 1925 - 1925

Correspondence, 1935 - 1935

 File — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

The Harvey West Correspondence contains a typed request from West to the Georgia Tech faculty. He asked the faculty to consider having student dances on campus. Within the correspondence, there are handwritten notes from H. A. C. (otherwise unidentified) and Georgia Tech's President, Dr. Marion Brittain. President Brittain denied West's request.

Dates: 1935 - 1935

Correspondence, 1950 - 1950

 File — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

In this correspondence, Assistant Professor Jackson recommended a change in the Civil Engineering curriculum. He recommended that certain students be exempt from the civil engineering curriculum and be allowed to substitute other courses with the same credit hours. There are also several handwritten names and notes on the correspondence.

Dates: 1950 - 1950

Box 1, bulk: 1908 - 1912

 Item — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

This collection contains one list compiled by the Office of the Dean of Students, which lists Georgia Tech alumni from 1908-1912. The list also mentions the alumni's occupation and residence after graduation.

Dates: Majority of material found within 1908 - 1912

Box 1, 1936-05

 Item — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

This collection contains a Georgia Tech bookstore inventory from May 1936. The inventory is contained in an examination "blue book." The inventory provides prices and quantities for each book listed.

Dates: 1936-05

Box 1, bulk: 1933 - 1934

 Item — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

This single report dates from the 1933-1934 school year at Georgia Tech. It focuses on student activities, such as student classes, sports, fraternities, and clubs. The report also includes the number of members, averages, and rankings for each group represented. Because the name of Floyd Field, then Dean of Men, is typed at the end of the report, it may be assumed that he compiled the information.

Dates: Majority of material found within 1933 - 1934

Box 1, 1943

 Item — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

The Judge S. Price Gilbert, Sr. Speech, entitled Remarks of Judge Price Gilbert Presenting "Gilbert Memorial Infirmary," is a single speech given on June 4, 1943, during the 140th Commencement Exercises at the University of Georgia. Gilbert dedicates the infirmary to his late son, Francis Howard Gilbert, and father, Jasper Newton Gilbert, M.D.

Dates: 1943

Box 1, 1933

 Item — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

This collection contains one report from Floyd Field, head of Georgia Tech's School of Mathematics (then mathematics department), to Chancellor Charles M. Snelling. Field wrote the report, discussing teacher preparations, on December 31, 1933.

Dates: 1933

Box 1, 1941

 Item — Box: Multi
Description From the Collection:

This collection contains two copies of a memorial speech given on the death of Georgia Tech professor, Gilbert Hillhouse Boggs. During his funeral services, the entire student body gathered on Grant Field to hear this tribute. As one copy of the speech bears the handwritten name W.G. Perry, the speech may have been given by William Gilmer Perry, then Dean of General Studies at Georgia Tech.

Dates: 1941