Chemistry committee meeting in a lab in room 698 on the 6th floor of Kell Hall. In the picture, left to right, are:
Dr. Harry P. Hopkins, Jr.
Dr. Hugh J. Bronaugh
Dr. William G. Trawick, Department Head
Unidentified
Two pages of this issue are dedicated to the history of Kell Hall, excerpted from an article titled "CONVERTING: Garage into College" in College and University Business, 1948, by Loula N. Cantrell
An article about the Senior Class purchasing the memorial plaque for the renaming of the Ivy Street Building to Kell Science Hall in honor of Wayne S. Kell. The plaque cost $168 and was made by East Point Foundry.
Page 2: cartoon about military navigation students being lost in the Ivy Street Building.Also, an article about renovations to the Georgia State Signal office on the 1st floor of the Ivy Street Building.Page 3: an article about a course in Radio…
An article about a display case with a collection of artifacts from the burial mounds at Etowah, curated by the Geography, Geology, and Anthropology Department
An article about the refectory, managed by R. A. Christopher, which serves as a place to eat, provides students with jobs as cashiers, provides its profits for student activities, and contains the lost and found.
Page 1: a brief article about new labs for biology on the 4th floor of the Ivy Street Building costing $20,000. Labs included basic biology, bacteriology, and invertebrate/vertebrate lab. The labs are adjoined by a classroom.
Page 5: an article…
An article about new biology spaces on the 4th floor of the Ivy Street Building, including a microtone room, a slide room, a microscope lab, lecture rooms, a library, and an expansion to the Zoology lab.
Page 2: an article about the art department facilities on the 7th floor and students working on the rooftop. Photograph of Pat Peirce sketching on the rooftop with an unidentified model.Page 5: an article about the Management Department and its…
An article about a new psychology lab on the 4th floor, directed by Dr. James P. Rogers and Dr. T. T. Crawford to conduct studies on rats. Photograph of Barbara Marston and Betty Wright with some rats.