This collection contains reports and records from the Committee on Education Objectives and Methods.
This inventory draws together all of the publications that relate to the cooperative program at Georgia Tech, including bulletins, guides, handbooks, and newsletters.
Cosmos Science Fiction and Fantasy Magazine was a short run science fiction publication in 1953-1954. It was published under Scott Meredith Agency and Star Publications. The Georgia Tech Archives and Special Collections holds copies between 1953 - 1954, though the reader should note that it may not be a complete run of the publication.
This collection contains undated color slides illustrating the process of producing cotton fabric, from the cotton bale to the cloth.
This collection consists of academic course evaluations, which provide a comparison between Georgia Tech's course subject content in the semester and quarter systems.
This collection contains Georgia Tech track and cross country records, such as a program/score card and a roster.
This collection contains software and stories from Georgia Tech's CS2110 course, Computer Organization and Programming. CS2110 offers an introduction to basic computer hardware, machine language, assembly language, and C programming. As part of the course, students create games for the Game Boy Advance. This collection includes selections of the games, as well as oral histories with the student game creators.
Four document cases of notes, lab reports, quizzes, and tests compiled during D. Lynn Whitt's time as a student at the Georgia Institute of Technology.
During the 1938-1939 academic year, a proposal was made to establish a preliminary flight training program at Georgia Tech's Daniel Guggenheim School of Aeronautics, which was sponsored by the federal government. These records consist of several letters and memoranda dealing with the flight training program.
This collection contains photographs of Atlanta and Georgia Tech from 1953-1954 when Koehler was an exchange student for a year through the Georgia Tech World Student Fund and the Georgia Tech YMCA, earning a master's degree in electrical engineering. Additional photographs are from Oct-Dec 1960 when teaching at Georgia Tech for a year.
This collection consists of two rough drafts of Brin's 1990 novel, Earth, and a list of editions of Brin's work.
This collection consists of scrapbook pages containing newspaper clippings from Georgia Tech's 1931-1932 football season.
This collection consists of photographs of students using library computers.
The records include correspondence, annual reports, and statistical data containing information relating to library staff and faculty, Georgia Tech colleges and schools, library associations and vendors, and other administrative matters concerning the operation of the Georgia Tech Library and Information Center.
This collection consists of the annual reports of the Dean of Faculties, which include reports on each college and division under the Dean of Faculties' purview, as well as data on current faculty at Georgia Tech.
The Dean of Faculties records include minutes, legal records, personnel files, financial records, and correspondence.
This collection contains photographs of Georgia Tech locations, student activities, surrounding Atlanta locations, historic images, and artwork.
This single item is a decal promoting Georgia Tech school spirit.
Delap's F and SF Review science fiction publication in 1975-1978. It was published by Frederick Patten and edited by edited by Richard Delap. The Georgia Tech Archives and Special Collections holds copies between 1975 - 1976, though the reader should note that it may not be a complete run of the publication.
This collection contains printed handbooks providing information on campus housing at Georgia Tech.
On December 31, 1933, a meeting took place between Charles M. Snelling, chancellor of the University System, and college department heads from Georgia. During this meeting, the group discussed a possible statewide course coordination. This collection contains a report from Georgia Tech's mathematics department to Chancellor Snelling.
The cards in this collection contain names, addresses, and grade information on Georgia Tech students in various courses of study. Although the majority of student records are from Mechanical Engineering, the records of students in Civil Engineering and Electrical Engineering are also included.
Georgia Tech offered its first doctor of philosophy degree in 1950. These records discuss such concerns as residency requirements, presentation of thesis topics, and course requirements.
This collection consists of photographs of the interior of the Georgia Tech library.
This collection consists of a drafting manual and drawings.
These records include production files and administrative materials, including programs from plays and performances as well as membership rolls, meeting minutes, correspondence, and other materials documenting the history of DramaTech.
This collection contains photographs of DramaTech productions. Photographs include images of set construction, rehearsals, cast and crew, and scenes from productions.
'Dynamic Science Fiction' was published from 1952 to 1954 by Columbia Publications, Inc. under editor Robert A. W. Lowndes. The publication ran every other month, and was intended as a companion to Lowndes' two other science fiction publications: 'Science Fiction Quarterly' and 'Future Science Fiction.'
This collection contains receipts, a library card, and an athletic ticket book owned by Earl W. Purser, a student at Georgia Tech in 1924.
This collection contains the lecture notes, research materials, biographical information, and correspondence of Earl Wadsworth McDaniel, professor of Physics at the Georgia Institute of Technology.
The early presidents of Georgia Tech were influential in shaping the character of the institution and determining its future. Materials contained within this collection include correspondence, press releases, school records, maps and architectural drawings from the presidencies of Lyman Hall, Kenneth G. Matheson, Marion L. Brittain, and Blake R. Van Leer.
This collection consists of numerous photographs of Georgia Tech President Blake Van Leer while in office (1944-1956), but there is also one photograph of William Alexander, Georgia Tech football coach from 1920 to 1944. Several photographs were found in an envelope marked Gasper-Ware Studio (876 West Peachtree Street, Atlanta).
Ed Lafitte was a member of the Georgia Tech baseball team in 1906-1907. This collection consists of one photograph of Lafitte in his Georgia Tech baseball uniform.
This collection consists of physics laboratory reports from 1941 to 1942, created when Ed Negri was a student at the Georgia School of Technology.
This collection is composed of a Georgia Tech football scrapbook and an edition of The Technique, Georgia Tech's student newspaper.
The Edward B. Van Voorhees Visual Materials Collection contains black and white negatives and photographs illustrating Georgia Tech student life and activities, 1939-1943. There are many images of Georgia Tech dances, an NROTC summer cruise, initiations by various student organizations, and student life in general. The negatives have been scanned and the digital images are available for viewing.
Papers relating to the education and hobbies of Edward L. Darling, Jr. during and after his college years.
This collection includes one folder, containing a graduation photograph of Edward L. Darling, Jr., a postcard from a friend in Savannah, and a photograph of the 1925 Anak Society members.
This collection contains a Georgia Tech physics laboratory manual, graduation programs from the Class of 1947, and class reunion materials from the 1939-1940 freshman co-op class at Tech.
The Edwin P. Kohler Slide Collection contains color slides of 1964 Georgia Tech Homecoming activities and the Tech campus in the mid-1960s.
This collection contains material collected by Edwin Rembert DuBose, Sr, including: personal papers, correspondence, articles, and programs related to Georgia Tech and the Alumni Association (Series 1); material collected about and from trips set up by the Georgia Tech Alumni Association (Series 2); and publications from and related to Georgia Tech, including newsletters, newspapers, magazines, programs, and campus publications (Series 3).
This collection contains photographs separated from the Edwin Rembert DuBose, Sr. Papers. It includes photographs from 1928 to 1998 and contains snapshots taken while traveling with the Georgia Tech Alumni Association, photographs and snapshots from class reunions, snapshots sent to DuBose in Christmas cards (mostly of alumni events), photos of Tech students, personal photos, and official military photographs.
Ella Cliff Kiser, a young woman who lived on Spring Street and attended Georgia Tech's baseball and football games, kept a scrapbook documenting those teams from 1910 through 1912.
Emory Rumble, a member of the class of 1926, collected the programs in this collection as both an undergraduate and an alumnus.
This collection contains information on enrollment in the School of Engineering and numbers of degrees granted.
The Engineering Retention Project was funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF). These records include the third year activities annual report, dated October 4, 1994.