Student activities -- Georgia -- Atlanta.
Found in 8 Collections and/or Records:
Collection on Student Life at Georgia Tech
The collection contains materials that document student life on the Georgia Tech campus, including notebooks and papers, news clippings, magazines, student publications, photographs, brochures and programs, and other memorabilia.
Dean of Students Audio/Visual Materials Collection
This collection contains photographs of Georgia Tech locations, student activities, surrounding Atlanta locations, historic images, and artwork.
DramaTech Visual Materials Collection
This collection contains photographs of DramaTech productions. Photographs include images of set construction, rehearsals, cast and crew, and scenes from productions.
Miller Templeton Papers
This collection documents the activities of Miller Templeton, a graduate of and administrator at Georgia Tech, with his time spanning the late 1950s through his retirement in 1998. Materials in the collection span the 1970s through the mid 1990s, documenting his time overseeing Smith Hall in the 1980s, the founding and administration of Outdoor Recreation Georgia Tech (ORGT), and his course notes for Psychology 1010, a precursor to today’s GT 1000.
Regulations for Students, Faculty, and Instructors
The Regulations for Students, Faculty, and Instructors consists of booklets and some accompanying textual material outlining the rules and regulations for governing the student body at Georgia Tech.
Student Activities Committee records
These records document the activities of the Student Activities Committee during the late 1980s. Charters, minutes, a constitution and bylaws, and other administrative files make up the collection.
T Book
The T Book began in 1904 as an annual publication of the YMCA (Young Men's Christian Association) at the Georgia School of Technology. The T Book served as a student handbook. It contained information on Tech student services, activities, traditions, and customs, as well as information about the YMCA itself. The cessation of its publication coincided with YMCA's departure from campus circa the early 1970s.