1980

' • t: THEFACTBOOK1980COVER

George Cooke (American, 1193-1849) 1770-1849 Oil on Canvas 30 x 25 inches University of Libraries Special Collections Photograph by W. Robert Nix

The was near extinction, with many functions suspended and a student body reduced to seven, when the Reverend Moses Waddel became its president in 1819. During his administration enrollment increased to one hundred, and academic pro­ grams were revitalized. In addition, campus facilities more than doubled with the construc­ tion of New College and Demosthenian Hall. After these substantial contributions, President Waddel resigned in 1829 to return to full-time ministry in the Presbyterian Church.

The 1980 Fact Book cover illustration is the third in a series which honors people who have made outstanding contributions to the development of The University of Georgia.

Alonzo Church, president of The University of Georgia 1829-1859, was chosen for the first in the series in 1978. His thirty-year administration, longest in the University's history, culminated with a plan for reorganization and expansion of the University which included the establishment of the School of Law.

The portrait of was selected for the 1979 Fact Book cover. Baldwin drafted the 1785 Charter of The University of Georgia, worked for its passage as a member of the Georgia General Assembly, and served as Chairman of the original Board of Trustees. The father of The University of Georgia later served as a member of the Con­ tinental Congress, the Federal Constitutional Convention, the United States House of Repre­ sentatives, and the United States Senate.

THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA Athens 30602 OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT December 8, 1980

Dear Colleague:

This year marks the twelfth anniversary of the Fact Book's publication. Since 1969 it has become an increasingly valuable source of concise, comprehensive information about the wide-ranging development and resources of The University of Georgia.

We take particular pleasure this year in presenting Fact Book 1980 to faculty and friends of the University. We hope you will continue to rely upon it for ready data in the performance of your varied activities.

Sincerely, t,/()JtUW~ Fred C. Davison President PREFACE AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

The University of Georgia Fact Book 1980 is intended as a reference guide to quantifiable information about the University. development it records through objective figures and tables reinforces a host of more subjective indications of this University's progress and growing stature.

We in the Office of Institutional Research and Planning invite your suggestions for additional or more detailed data for inclusion in future editions of the Fact Book.

Our sincere appreciation is extended to those in many units throughout campus who contributed information for this year's publication. Special thanks must be given to Anne Coleman and Sharon Culberson who type-set Fact Book 1980 and to the University Printing Department staff who produced the final document.

Larry G. Jones, Associate Director Nancy G. Holmes, Technical Writer Institutional Research and Planning December 8, 1980 TABLE OF CONTENTS

Page List of Figures...... ix

GENERAL INFORMATION University of Georgia Perspective ...... 2 Purpose ...... 3 Chronological Highlights in the History of The University of Georgia ...... 4 Institutional and Professional Accreditation ...... 6 Commitment to ...... ' 6

ADMINISTRATION Board of Regents...... 8 Board of Regents' Staff...... 8 Central Administrative Officers ...... 9 Presidents or Chancellors of The University of Georgia ...... 9 Deans of Colleges and Schools...... 10 University Standing Committees ...... 10 Directors of Institutes and Service Units ...... 11

ADMISSIONS New Freshmen: Fa111960-1980 ...... 14 High Schools of Entering Freshmen: Fall 1980...... 15 Mean College Scholastic Aptitude Test Scores for Freshman Classes: Fall Quarter 1960-1980 ...... 16 Entering National Merit and Achievement Program Scholars: Fall 1970-1980 ...... 16 Grade Point Averages for Entering Undergraduate Transfer Students: Fall1975-1980 ...... 18 Colleges and Universities from which Undergraduate Students Transferred to The I 1980...... 19 980 ......

EN

28 ...... 29

Residence ...... Foreign Students and Exchange Visitors Country: Fall 1980 ...... : FY 1959-60-1969-70 ...... 34 Degrees Conferred by Year, School, and Sex: FY 1970-71-1979-80...... 36 Degree Majors: 1980 ...... 42

ACADEMIC INFORMATION Class Sizes, Courses, and Sections: Regular Enrollment FY 1979-80 ...... 48 1979-80 ...... 48 Credit Hour Loads. Fall Quarter 1980 ...... 49 Student Class Rank Student Classification: Fall Quarter 1980 Cumulative Grade Point Average ...... 50 Grades Class: Quarters 1978~1980 ...... 51 Honors Program Enrollment and Sections: 1979-80...... 52 Honors Program Awards: FY 1963-64-1979-80 ...... 52 of Honors Students by Major and Class: Fall 1980...... 53 Statistical Analysis of Advanced Placement...... 54 Teaching and Research Assistantships Supported by Fall 1980 ...... 55 Graduate Fellowships and Assistantships Awarded through the Graduate School: Fall 1980 ...... 55 Matriculation Fees by Quarter: Fall 1972-Fall 1980...... 56

STUDENT RELATED INFORMATION Division of Student Affairs ...... 60 Career Planning and Placement Service ...... 61 Social Sororities and Fraternities ...... 62 Honorary Fraternities/Societies at The University of Georgia ...... 63 Student Financial Aid Programs: FY 1979-80 ...... 64 University Health Service ...... 65 Student Housing ...... 66 Georgia Athletic Association Board of Directors ...... 69 Georgia Head Coaches ...... 70 at University : Fall 1980 ...... 70 Academics Pertaining to Athletes on Scholarship ...... 70 Won by Georgia ...... 71 71 1980 ...... 72 74 ...... 74 Faculty by Total Years of Service in Rank at UGA: Total University, September 30, 1980 ...... Tenured and Non-Tenured Faculty by Age Range and Rank: Total University, September 30, 1980...... 82 Graduate Faculty Membership by Rank Total University, September 1980 ...... 82 Special Professorships, September 30, 1980 ...... 83 Average Faculty Salaries Based on Academic Year: 1971-72-1980-81 ...... 85 Highest Earned Degrees of Faculty and Allied Professional Staff by Rank: Total University, September 30, 1980...... 86 Universities Awarding Highest Degrees to Members of the Faculty September 30, 1980 ...... 87 Universities Awarding Highest Degrees to Members of the Graduate Faculty September 30, 1980 ...... 88 Student Credit Hours by Instructional Level by Academic Staff: FY 1979-80...... 89 Institutional Activity by Academic Staff: FY 1979-80 ...... 89 University Employees by Occupational Classification ...... 90

FINANCIAL INFORMATION Sources of Revenue: FY 1979-80...... 92 Percent Distribution of Revenue by Source: FY 1970-71-1979-80...... 93 Expenditures by Budgetary Function: FY 1979-80 ...... 94 Percent Distribution of Expenditures by Budgetary Function: FY 1970-71-1979-80 ...... 95 Budgetary Distribution of State of Georgia Appropriations: FY 1961-62-1980-81 ...... 96 Sources of Unrestricted Revenue for Resident Instruction: FY 1961-62-1980-81 ...... 97 Sources of Grant and Contract Instructional Funds: FY 1979-80 ...... 98 Sources of Budgeted Research Funds: FY 1969-70-1979-80 ...... 99 Sources of Budgeted Services Funds for Resident Instruction: FY 1969-70-1979-80 ...... 99 Sources of All Research Funds: FY 1979-80 ...... 100 Sources of Research Funds from Grants and Contracts by Agency: FY 1979-80 ...... 1 Sources of Grant and Contract Research Funds: 1979-80 ...... 1 Sources of I Service Funds: FY 1979-80...... 1 Annual Fund Dollars at Work: 1980 ...... 1 History of Annual Giving as Reported to Gifts Receiving Office ...... 1

RESEARCH, AND AUXI ARY D ADMIN UNITS Agricultural Experiment Stations ...... 1 Auxiliary and Administrative Services ...... 106 Studies and ...... 1 Center for Applied Isotope Studies ...... " ...... Center for Applied Mathematics ...... " ...... 107 Georgia Center for Continuing Education .. ,., .. , ...... , ..... , , ..... , ...... 107 Georgia Museum of Art ...... 108 Georgia Review...... 108 Gerontology Center...... 108 Institute for Behavioral Research ...... 108 Institute for Natural Products Research ...... 108 Institute of Community and Area Development ...... 108 Institute of Continuing Judicial Education ...... 108 Institute of Continuing Legal Education in Georgia ...... 109 Institute of Ecology ...... 109 Institute of Government ...... 109 Institute of Higher Education ...... 109 Institute of Natural Resources ...... 109 Instructional Resources Center ...... 110 Marine Sciences Program...... 110 Office of Campus Planning ... , ...... 110 Office of Computing and Information Services...... 110 Office of Development and University Relations...... 111 Office of Institutional Research and Planning...... 111 Office of International Development...... 111 Office of Research Administration ...... 111 Poultry Disease Research Center ...... 111 Public Safety Division...... 111 Dean Rusk Center for International and Comparative Law ...... 112 Small Business Development Center ...... 112 University of Georgia Botanical Garden ...... 112 University of Georgia Libraries...... 112 University of Georgia Museum of Natural History ...... 113 University of Georgia Press ...... 113 University of Georgia Research Foundation, Inc ...... 113 University of Georgia Research Park...... 113 Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Assistance Laboratories ...... 114 Veterinary Medical Experiment Station ...... 114

PHYSICAL FACILITIES

""'"r"'IT'\1 Buildings Use, Athens Campus e e ~. ~ ~ ~. 8. ~.a Q e Q ~ 9 a'~ & Q. D. s 9 a 8 s ~ 116 Number of Rooms by Basic Room Type, Athens Campus ...... 116 Utilization of Instructional Facilities: Fall 1980 ...... 116 Summary Years Completion, Athens Campus ...... 117 Major Academic and Administrative Buildings, Date of Initial Occupancy, Athens Campus ...... 118 Major Building Projects Completed 1960-1980, All University ...... 119 Projects Currently Under Construction...... 126 Authorized Projects Planned ...... , ...... 126 Land Holdings ...... 127 LIST OF FIGURES

Page

Figure 1. The University of Georgia Administration Organization ...... 12 Figure 2. SAT Scores for Entering Freshmen: Fall Quarter 1960-1980 ...... 17 Figure 3. Regular Enrollment: Fall Quarter 1971-1980 ...... 23 Figure 4. Distribution of Fall 1980 Enrollment by County of Georgia Residence ...... 31 Figure 5. Total Degrees Conferred: FY 1960-1980 ...... 41 Figure 6. Georgia Alumni, Geographic Distribution by State: Fall 1980 ...... 75 Figure 7. Distribution of Georgia Alumni by County of Georgia Residence: Fall 1980..... 77 Figure 8. Percent Distribution of Revenue by Source FY 1979-80...... 93 Figure 9. Percent Distribution of Expenditures by Budgetary Function: FY 1979-80 ..... 95 Figure 10. University of Georgia Map: Athens Campus ...... 128

UNIVE OFG PERSPECTIVE

Just after the close of the American Revolution, the Georgia legislature took a step that was to start another one in higher In 1785, Georgia became the first state in the nation to grant a a state-su a whereby states the higher

16 years on paper campus, money, or students. Finally, in 1801, a was selected the began to trickle into the newly formed town of only of the college . Classes were in a primitive log structure while the University, then called Franklin College, waited for its first permanent building.

From such tenuous beginnings The University of Georgia has grown to become a major teaching, research, and service institution with more than 1,850 faculty members, 13 colleges, and a physical plant serving over 23,000 students. The campus, including forestry and agricultural areas, covers some 33,700 acres. In addition, off-campus centers and experiment stations carry University services to all parts of the state.

The rich heritage of the tree-shaded campus of Franklin College, now the University's Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, has been preserved in spite of extensive campus expansion to pro­ vide the most modern of classroom and laboratory facilities. The arch at the campus entrance, the 1806 Old College structure which now houses administrative offices, and other early nine· teenth-century buildings renovated continuing use quiet tribute to Georgia's nearly 200-year commitment to provide quality education for its citizens.

The long and interesting cannot be Several studies il complete Sketch of 1; and PURPOSE

The University of Georgia is the State's oldest, most comprehensive, and most diversified education­ al institution. As the capstone of the University System of Georgia, it influences the entire structure of education in the State leading the pace of achievement and creating a climate of intellectual and cu development in and service missions, the University focuses its enormous resources to improve the quality life throughout Georgia and increasingly beyond the State's boundaries as well.

Teaching has historically been the primary purpose of the University and continues to be a vital

responsibility. A special strength of the University lies in the scope and div~rsity of degree programs it offers. At the undergraduate level the University provides 19 baccalaureate degree programs, with concentrations in 181 major fields through a framework of 115 academic departments. At the graduate level it offers 19 Master's degrees in 131 areas of concentration and doctoral degrees -Ph.D, Ed.D, or D.P.A.-in 76 areas. In addition, professional degree programs are available in law, veterinary medicine, pharmacy, social work, and forest resources.

The continuing vitality of the University's graduate educational programs depends not only upon excellence in teaching but upon a strong commitment as well to basic and applied research in all academic disciplines. In addition to training experts and scholars, the University seeks through research to expand the frontiers of knowledge by providing the expertise and resources necessary to cope with increasingly complex and difficult problems.

The University directly affects the lives of ions through its service capabilities. Entire industries have come as a to new and can to

response to structure to to ment.

in success-

purposes 101 to in areas. CHRONOLOGICAL HIGHLIGHTS IN THE HISTORY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA

Year Year

1784 Legislature granted 40,000 acres and 1870 Master of Arts became an earned degree, named Board of Trustees for University based on a prescribed course of study of Georgia on campus

1785 Legislature adopted UGA charter 1872 By executive order, UGA was designated the state's land-grant institution 1803 Demosthenian Society founded State College of Agriculture and the Me· 1804 First commencement exercises held and chanic Arts opened for operation as a first honorary degrees awarded department of the University

1811 Trustees suspended institution for several 1874 Medical College of Georgia at Augusta months became Medical Department of UGA

1816 President Brown and other professors re­ 1878 Trustees adopted changes in degree pro· signed under pressure from Trustees, and grams, abandoning the elective in favor the University was again dissolved until of a fixed curriculum for each program. January 1, 1817 Instead of one degree (AB) in Arts and Sciences, there would be three (Bachelor 1820 Phi Kappa Society founded by J. H. of Arts, with emphasis on Latin and Greek; Lumpkin Bachelor of Science, requiring only one classical language; Bachelor of Philosophy, 1830 UGA began receiving a fixed annual appro­ stressing modern languages). Three degrees priation as support from the state were possible in the Agricultural College: Bachelor of Agriculture, Bachelor of En­ 1833 Botanical Garden founded gineering, Bachelor of Chemistry.

1834 Alumni Society organized 1881 General Assembly abolished tuition fees for all students 1842 Legislature stopped providing annual ap­ propriation; UGA remained "private in 1883 Bachelor of Philosophy degree discon­ support and public in control" until 1875 tinued

1854 William Terrell gave University $20,000 to 1885 School of Technology in Atlanta establish­ establish a department of agriculture ed as a branch of UGA

1859 Trustees accepted plan to expand and re­ 1888 Trustees adopted resolution for establish­ organize UGA into several schools (med· ment of Experiment Station ical school, law school, agriculture school, engineering school) and authorized grant­ 1889 Board of Trustees reorganized to include ing of the following degrees: Bachelor of one member from each congressional Arts, Master of Arts, Bachelor of Laws, district, two from Athens, and four from Doctor of Medicine, Doctor of Philosophy, the state at large Doctor of Divinity, and Doctor of Laws. This was an effort to change UGA's status 1891 State Normal School established at Athens from a small classical college to a true uni­ as a branch of UGA; became Georgia St.ate versity. Teachers College in 1927

law School established 1892 Intercollegiate athletics introduced to LJ ni­ versity; first football game was against 1864-66 University closed during Civil War Auburn

1866 First social fraternity (Sigma 1901 By act of the General UGA began maintenance appro­ priations from the state Trustees authorized establishment of School of Civil Engineering 1903 School of Pharmacy established

State of Georgia received grant of land First summer school sessions held under Morrill Act of 1862 1905 Certification accredited .ols 1869 AB curriculum reduced from four to two replaced written examination as require­ years; and senior years became ment for admission to UGA elective CONT'D: CHRONOLOGICAL HIGHLIGHTS IN THE HISTORY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA

Year Year 1906 College of Agriculture and School of 1960 Honors Program began Forest Resources established 1961 UGA became racially integrated 1908 A & M College divided into College of Science and Engineering and College of Institute of Community and Area De­ Agriculture velopment and Institute of Ecology estab­ lished College of Education founded 1964 School of Social Work began operations 1910 Graduate School established by W. H. Bocock Institute of Higher Education established 1912 School of Commerce (later College of 1965 Institute of Continuing Legal Education Business Administration) founded in Georgia founded 1915 School of Journalism established 1966 First "Study Abroad" Program conducted 1918 Board of Trustees adopted resolution ad­ 1968 Institute of Natural Resources began mitting women to University for the junior operations and senior years only 1969 Rural Development Center established 1931 University System of Georgia organized under Board of Regents School of Environmental Design formed 1932 State College of Agriculture and State 1970 Institute for Behavioral Research estab­ Teachers College merged officially with lished UGA; all engineering was transferred to Georgia Tech; School of Commerce at 1972 Rising Junior Test adopted as a graduation Georgia Tech came to the Athens campus requirement 1933 School of Home Economics founded 1974 Special Studies Program implemented statewide, and standard minimum SAT 1938 University of Georgia Press established score established as a requirement for admission to any System institution 1942 Athens became site of one of U.S. Navy's five Pre-Flight Schools 1976 Institute for Natural Products Research established UGA lost accreditation with Southern As­ sociation of Colleges and Secondary 1977 Rusk Center for International and Com~ Schools because of political interference parative law dedicated 1943 University System regained full accredi­ UGA Small Business Development Center tation and a new, constitutional Board established of Regents was created School of Accounting established in 1945 Georgia Museum of Art founded College of Business Administration 1946 Georgia Review began publication Geochronology Lab became Center for Applied Isotope Studies College of Veterinary Medicine re-establish­ ed by Regents 1978 School of Home Economics became College of Home Economics 1949 All agricultural activities (College of Agriculture, Experiment Station, and Ex­ Institute of Continuing Judicial Education tension Service) combined under one Dean established 1953 Kellogg Foundation bestowed a grant Gerontology Center established for establishing Georgia Center for Con­ tinuing Education Black Alumni Association founded 1954 Institute of law and Government (now UGA Research Foundation established called Institute of Government) founded 1980 UGA accorded Sea Grant College stat~s Marine Institute established

Sources: Life in the Old South; R. P. Brooks' The University of Georgia Under AD'mJ,msrra;riDI1S 1785- Annual of Georgia INSTITUTIONAl AND PROFESSIONAL ACCREDITATION

Institutional Accreditation

Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, Commission on Colleges

Professional Accreditations

Agricultural Engineering Engineers' Council for Professional Development Art National Association of Schools of Art Business American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business Chemistry American Chemical Society Forestry Society of American Foresters Home Economics American Home Economics Association Interior Design Foundation for Interior Design Education Research Journalism American Council on Education for Journalism Landscape Architecture American Society of Landscape Architects Law American Bar Association; Association of American law Schools Music National Association of Schools of Music Pharmacy American Council on Pharmaceutical Education Psychology (Clinical) American Psychological Association Social Work Council on Social Work Education Teacher Education National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education Veterinary Medicine American Veterinary Medical Association

Other Professional Accreditation

Georgia Museum of Art The American Association of Museums University Service Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals University of Georgia Press The Association of American University Presses

AFFI VE ON

against any student or employee because of race, color, religion, national sex, age, or

OF REGENTS

Regent Residence District Term of Office Lamar Plunkett Chairman Bowdon Sixth 1978-1985 Marie W. Dodd Roswell State-at-Large 1978-1981 B. Vienna State-at-Large 1976-1983 Jesse Hill, Jr. Atlanta State-at-Large 1978-1985 0. Torbitt lvey, Jr. Augusta State-at-Large 1977-1984 Milton Jones Columbus State-at-Large 1974-1981 Erwin A. Friedman Savannah First 1976-1983 William Divine, Jr. Albany Second 1980-1982 John H. Robinson, Ill Americus Third 1979-1986 Scott Candler, Jr. Decatur Fourth 1977-1984 Eldridge W. McMillan Atlanta Fifth 1975-1982 Lloyd L. Summer, Jr. Rome Seventh 1980-1987 Thomas H. Frier, Sr. Douglas Eighth 1978-1985 Sidney 0. Smith, Jr. Gainesville Ninth 1980-1987 F. Bishop Athens Tenth 1979-1986

BOARD OF REGENTS' STAFF

Position Staff Member Chancellor Vernon Crawford (Acting} and Vice Chancellor­ Development H. Dean Propst Secretary Henry G. Neal lor- Fiscal Affairs and Treasurer Shealy E. McCoy - Facilities Frank C. Dunham Vice Chancellor- Research Mario J. Goglia Vice Chancellor- Public Relations and Information Robert M. Joiner Howard Jordan, Jr. Thomas F. McDonald Harry B. O'Rear Haskin R. Pounds Robert J. Cannon James L. K. Cheek

Mary Ann Hickman H. Jr.

Carol M. Miller Mosshart Jacob Wamsley CENTRAl ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICERS

Office Officer

President Fred C. Davison Assistant to the President Albert B. Jones Assistant to the President James B. Kenney University Professor of Law J. Beaird

Vice President for Academic Affairs Virginia Y. Trotter Associate Vice President Sidney Brown Associate Vice President M. Louise McBee Associate Vice President James H. Buck Assistant Vice President Leroy Jr.

Vice President for Research Robert C. Anderson Assistant Vice President William 0. Burke Assistant Vice President Nathan W. Dean

Vice President for Services S. Eugene Younts Assistant Vice President John D. Burke

Vice President for Business and Finance Allan W. Barber

Vice President for Development and University Relations H. Perk Robins Associate Vice President J. Donald Elam Assistant Vice President Louis T. Griffith

Vice President for Student Affairs Dwight 0. Douglas Associate Vice President William R. Mendenhall Associate Vice President Bruce T. Shutt

PRESIDENTS OR CHANCELLORS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA

President/Chancellor Term

Josiah Meigs Finley Moses Waddel Alonzo Andrew Henry Tucker Patrick Hues William E. Boggs Walter Barnard Hill David Crenshaw Charles Mercer Steadman Harmon White Caldwell DEANS OF COllEGES AND SCHOOLS College Dean College of Arts and Sciences ( 1801) Dean William Jackson Payne Associate Dean Charles W. James Associate Dean Robert W. John

School of Law (1859) Dean J. Ralph Beaird Associate Dean Walter R. Phillips

School of Pharmacy ( 1903) Dean Howard C. Ansel Associate Dean Durwood N. Entrekin

College of Agriculture (1 906) Dean, Acting Christian J. B. Smit

School of Forest Resources ( 1906) Dean Leon A. Hargreaves, Jr.

College of Education (1908) Dean Joseph A. Williams Associate Dean, Acting Huey B. Long Associate Dean Doyne M. Smith

Graduate School (1910) Dean, Acting John C. Dowling Associate Dean Harold W. Gentry

College of Business Administration (1912) Dean William C. Flewellen, Jr. Associate Dean Archie B. Carroll

School of Journalism and Mass Communication ( 1915) Dean Scott M. Cutlip Associate Dean John T. Russell

College of Home Economics (1933) Dean Emily H. Pou

College of Veterinary Medicine ( 1946) Dean David P. Anderson Associate Dean Oscar J. Fletcher, Jr. Associate Dean John M. Bowen Associate Dean Charles M. Dobbins, Jr.

School of Social Work ( 1 Dean Charles A. Stewart Associate Dean Richard J. Anderson

School of Environmental Design (1969) Dean Robert P. Nicholls

UN NG

Executive Jean-Pierre Piriou Educational Affairs Committee James Buck Committee Louise McBee Admissions Committee Richard Hill and Instructional Aids Committee Fredricka Reisman Samuel M. on Student Affairs James Stewart Committee on Facilities Charles Committee on Athletics WilliamM. DIR OF INSTITUTES AND SERVICE

Institute/Unit Director

Agricultural Experiment Stations William P. Flatt Bureau of Educational Studies and Field Services Doyne Smith Campus Planning Wi Center for Applied Isotope Studies John E. Noakes Center for Applied Mathematics George Ad om ian Cooperative Extension Service Talmadge DuVall Division of Research: College Business Administration Niemi Georgia Center for Continu Education Georgia Museum of Art Richard Schneiderman* Georgia Review Stanley W. Lindberg Gerontology Center James E. Montgomery Institute for Behavioral Research William A. Owens Institute for Natural Products Research S. William Pelletier Institute of Community and Area Development Ernest E. Melvin Institute of Continuing Judicial Education Jerome Braun Institute of Continuing Legal Education James W.Curtis Institute of Ecology Frank B. Golley Institute of Government Delmer Dunn Institute of Higher Education Cameron L. Fincher Institute of Natural Resources Ronald M. North Institutional Research and Planning David G. Clements Marine Sciences Program Museum of Natural History Joshua Laerm Office of Computing and Information Services James L. Carmon Office of International Development Darl Snyder Office w.

Law Small Business Development Center

Blue Veterinary Medical Experiment Station M. Bowen Figure 1 THE UNIVERSITY Of GEORGIA NOVEMBER 1 1980 ADMINISTRATIVE ORGANIZATION

BOARD Of REGENTS

CHANCELLOR

PRESIDENT

ASSISTANT TO PRESIDENT. ] - ADMINISTRATION J

[ BUDGET REVIEW INSTITUTIONAL RESEARCH AND PLANNING

CAMPUS PLANNING

VICE PRESIDENT ACADEMICAFFAIRS

BOTANICAL GARDEN REGISTRAR COMPUTING + INFO SERVICES FORAPPLIED ISOTOPE STU ADMINISTRATrvE SERVICE5~ GA CTR FOR CONTINUING ED ADMISSIONS COMPUTER SERVICES FOR BEHAVIORAL RSCH ALUMNI RELATIOoiS INTERNATIONAL DEVEL. PROG STUDEN1 FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION SERVICES ~fTUTE OF ECOLOGY DEVELOPMENT INST OF COMM + AREA DEVEL CAREER PLANNING + PLACEI.ilT F.O.CULTY RECORDS INST OF NATURALRESOURCES . PUBUC RELATIONS I I~!STITUTEOF GOVERNWJENT COUNSELING + TESTING CTR GEORGIA MUSEUM OF ART MARINE INST/SEA GRANT PROG MARINE RESOURCES EXT SRVC INTERNATIONAL SRVC + PROG GERONTOLOGY GENTlER RESEARCH ADMINISTRATION OFF MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY JUDiCIAL PROGRAMS HONORS PROGRAM RESEARCH SHOPS AND STORES STUDENT ACTIVITIES INSTRUCTIONAL DEVEL CTR RESEARCH PARK UNIV HEALTH SERVICES LIBRARIES RESEARCH FOUNDATION, INC UNIVERSITY HOUSING MARINE SCIENCES PROGRAM ADMIN DATA PROCESSING ROTC SPECIAL STUDIES PROGRAM USGA APPLICANT CLEARINGHOUSE I I

DEAN DEAN SCHOOL SCHOOL ENVIRON JOURNALISM DESIGN + MASSCOM

NEW FRESHMEN FALL1960-1980

%of Applied %of Applied % of Admitted Fall Quarter Applied Admitted Admitted Enrolled* Enrolled Enrolled

1960 2,593 2,192 85% 1,546 60% 71%

1961 2,835 2,220 78 1,745 62 79

1962 3,094 2,495 81 1,917 62 77

1963 3,567 2,830 79 2,084 58 74

1964 3,981 3,246 82 2,285 57 70

1965 4,685 3,873 83 2,536 54 65

1966 5,150 4,013 78 2,512 49 63

1967 5,207 3,691 71 2,482 48 67

1968 5,672 4,416 78 2,677 47 61

1969 5,484 5,159 76 2,456 45 59

1970 5,600 4,291 77 2,486 44 58

1971 5,176 3,923 76 2,265 44 58

1972 5,442 4,211 77 2,502 46 59

1973 5,141 3,925 76 2,349 46 60

1974 5,323 4,493 84 2,754 52 61

1975 5,191 4,183 81 2,499 48 60

1976 5,590 4,292 77 2,530 45 59

1977 5,530 4,290 77 2,578 47 60

1978 6,177 4,564 74 2,631 43 58

7,072 4,623 65 2,542 36 55

1980 6,716 4,597 68 2,439 36 53

*1967-1969: Approximately 200 Summer-on-Trial students each summer not included 1972: 51 irregular students not included 1976-1980: New students in Special Studies not included Source: Undergraduate Admissions Office HIGH SCHOOLS OF ENTERING FRESHMEN FALL 1980

High School Students High School Students

Dunwoody, Dunwoody 65 North Springs, Atlanta 15 Clarke Central, Athens 61 Darlington, Rome 15 Cedar Shoals, Athens 58 Heritage, Conyers 14 Walton, Marietta 55 Southwest DeKalb, Decatur 14 Wheeler, Marietta 43 Fayette County, Fayetteville 14 Riverwood, Atlanta 40 Shamrock, Decatur 13 Lakeside, Atlanta 37 Towers, Decatur 13 Henderson, Chamblee 34 Elbert County, Elberton 13 Chamblee, Chamblee 29 Forest Park, Forest Park 13 Woodward Academy, College Park 27 Berkmar, Lilburn 13 Stone Mountain, Stone Campbell, Smyrna 13 Mountain 26 Newton County, Covington 12 St. Pius X, Atlanta 25 Central, Macon 12 Tucker, Tucker 25 Marietta, Marietta 12 Briarcliff, Atlanta 23 Redan, Stone Mountain 12 Crestwood, Atlanta 23 Northside, Warner Robins 12 Peachtree, Chamblee 23 Westminster (Girls), Atlanta 11 Parkview, Lilburn 23 Bainbridge, Bainbridge 11 Roswell, Roswell 22 Clarkston, Clarkston 11 Lovett, Atlanta 21 Dalton, Dalton 11 Northside, Atlanta 21 Stratford Academy, Macon 11 Stephens County, Toccoa 21 Athens Academy, Athens 10 Warner Robins, Warner Robins 21 Madison County, Danielsville 10 Ridgeview, Atlanta 19 Sequoyah, Doraville 10 South Gwinnett, Snellville 19 Griffin, Griffin 10 Marist, Atlanta 17 Southwest, Macon 10 Hardaway, Columbus 17 Milton, Alpharetta 16 Subtotal Academy of Richmond County, 16 16 16 1 16 16 15

Source: issions Office MEAN COLLEGE SCHOLASTIC APTITUDE TEST SCOR FOR FRESHMAN CLASSES FALl1960-1980

Verbal Score Mathematics Score Total Score Number UGA Nat'/ UGA Nat'/ UGA Nat'! Year of Scores mean mean* mean mean* mean mean*

1960 1,546 422 477 438 498 860 975 1961 1,745 439 474 1 495 890 969 1962 1,865 452 473 472 498 924 971 1963 1,930 462 478 483 502 945 980 1964 2,285 467 475 486 498 953 973 1965 2,536 479 473 498 496 977 969 1966 2,512 500 471 520 496 1,020 967 1967 2,482 495 466 517 492 1,012 958 1968 2,677 504 466 528 492 1,032 958 1969 2,455 507 463 539 493 1,046 956 1970 2,470 507 460 531 488 1,038 948 1971 2,265 505 455 534 488 1,039 943 1972 2,502 493 453 526 484 1,019 937 1973 2,349 487 445 525 481 1,012 926 1974 2,741 477 444 509 480 986 924 1975 2,499 478 434 516 472 994 906 1976 2,530 481 431 518 472 999 903 1977 2,578 486 429 527 470 1,013 899 1978 2,631 492 429 530 468 1,022 897 1979 2,542 493 427 535 467 1,028 894 1980 2,422 492 424 534 466 1,026 890

*National mean of all candidates, 1960-1966; National mean of all college bound, 1967-1980 Source: Admissions Office

ENTERING NATIONAL MERIT AND ACHIEVEMENT PROGRAM SCHOLARS FALL1970-1980

Entering UGA-Sponsored UGA-Sponsored Entering National fi/Jerit Nat'/. Merit Nat'!. Merit Nat'/. Achieve- Achieve- & Year Scholars Scholars ment ment Scholars

1 9 19 0 0 19 1 1 17 0 1 1972 43 0 1 1973 3 3 1974 4 6 1975 46 53 4 6 59 1976 30 5 11 1 42 57 6 7 64 1978 46 52 13 18 1 7 9 1980 46 57 4 5 Figure 2 SAT SCORES FOR ENTERING FRESHMEN FALL QUARTER 1960-1980

VERBAL MATH TOTAL

600 600 1100

1000

500 500 --.a.. ~/ ...... -·~ ...... __ --- ... ' ' ' ' .... --',,,_ 900 I -· -·

400 400

800

--- UGA ---•-- NATIONAL

300 300 I ----. 700 _l __ T-----~----~----~----.- '60 '65 '70 '75 '80 '60 '65 '70 '75 '80 '60 '65 '70 '75 '80

Data from page 16 G INT AVERAGES FOR ENTERING UNDERGRADUATE TRANSFER STUDENTS FALL1975-1980

YEAR Grade-Point 1976* 1977* 1978* 1979* 1980 No. % No. % No. % No. % No. % No. %

3.00 and Over 691 32.6% 725 33.1% 752 33.2% 712 35.2% 701 35.2% 574 33.5%

2.90-2.99 85 57 84 68 66 55 2.80-2.89 11 113 144 125 107 97 2.70-2.79 122 125 115 97 92 81 2.60-2.69 115 145 155 132 136 101 2.50-2.59 55 165 161 127 123 107

Subtotal 594 28.0% 605 27.7% 659 29.1% 549 27.2% 524 26.3% 441 25.7%

2.40-2.49 99 95 94 78 95 68 2.30-2.39 95 113 99 93 95 77 2.20-2.29 82 98 79 67 84 87 2.10-2.19 95 82 68 51 44 69 2.00-2.09 11 99 87 52 60 91

Subtotal 483 22.8% 487 22.3% 427 18.9% 341 16.9% 378 9.0% 392 22.8%

Below 2.00 29 1.4% 19 0.9% 22 1.0% 20 1.0% 18 .9% 31 1.8%

No Available 323 15.2% 351 16.0% 403 17.8% 398 19.7% 372 8.6% 277 16.2%

TOTAL 2.120 100.0% 2,187 100.0% 2,263 100.0% 2,020 100.0% 1,993 100.0% 1,715 100.0%

*1975-1979 totals include transfer students entering professional schools. Source: Admissions Office COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES FROM WHICH UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS TRANSFERRED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA FALL 1980

Co/lege/University Students College/University Students

DeKalb Commu College, DeKalb Community College, Clarkston 84 North Campus 11 Abraham Baldwin Agricultural Emory University 11 College 60 Brewton-Parker College 10 Gainesville Junior College 56 Brunswick Junior College 10 Georgia Southern College 53 Bainbridge Junior College 8 Georgia State University 53 Berry College 8 Kennesaw College 52 Agnes Scott College 7 Young Harris College 50 Emanuel Community Junior College 7 Macon Junior College 42 LaGrange College 7 Valdosta State College 40 Waycross Junior College 6 Middle Georgia College 39 Andrew College 5 UGA Night School 36 Mercer University 5 Clayton Junior College 35 Oglethorpe University 5 Augusta College 34 Shorter College 5 West Georgia College 31 Wesleyan College 4 Armstrong State College 29 Southern Technical Institute 3 Emmanuel College 25 Tift College 3 Gordon Junior College 25 UGA Graduate School 3 Columbus College 23 Atlanta Junior College 2 Emory Oxford College 23 Georgia Baptist Hospital 2 Truett-McConnell College 23 Albany State College 1 Georgia College 22 Atlanta Christian College 1 Albany Junior College 21 Clark College 1 Dalton Junior College 21 Fort Valley State College 1 North Georgia College 20 Georgia Military College 1 Brenau College 19 Morehouse College 1 Georgia 18 lege 1 Kalb 1 14 1 14 14 4 1,1 12 557 12 12 1 15 GRADUATE SCHOOL ADMISSIONS FALL 1968-1980

%of Applied %of Applied % of Admitted Fall Quarter Applied Admitted Admitted Enrolled Enrolled Enrolled

1968 3,240 1,856 57% NA NA% NA%

1969 3,720 2,193 59 1,299 35 59

1970 4,089 2,132 52 1,338 33 63

1971 4,423 2,126 48 1,392 31 65

1972 3,693 1,934 52 1,333 36 68

1973 3,669 1,775 48 1,196 33 67

1974 3,934 2,204 56 1,350 34 61

1975 3,841 2,123 55 1,188 31 56

1976 3,888 1,991 51 1,203 31 60

1977 4,071 2,121 52 1,308 32 62

1978 4,282 2,111 49 1,257 29 60

1979 4,536 2,225 49 1,338 29 60

1980 4,210 2,111 50 1,343 32 64

NA: Not Available Source: Graduate Admissions

FALL QUARTER ENROLLMENT BY CLASS 1960-1970

7960 1967 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1961 1968 1969 1910

Freshman 1,789 1,998 2,062 2,211 2,470 2,703 2,806 2,714 3,317 3,000 3,238 Sophomore 1,476 1,792 1,880 2,058 1,857 2,393 2,872 2,573 2,851 2,828 2,646 Junior 1,573 1,734 1,987 2,302 2,439 2,383 3,302 3,538 3,934 3,844 3,766 Senior 1,432 1,488 1,682 2,032 2,321 2,628 2,706 3,530 3,645 3,809 3,790 Irregular & Transient 154 179 185 154 163 205 193 188 218 218 215 Graduate 722 873 990 1,133 1,101 1,397 1,725 2,157 2,718 3,182 3,489 Professional* 392 583 635 662 743 765 856 913 969 1,007 1,142 Total Regular Enrollment 7,538 8,647 9,421 10,552 11,094 12,474 14,460 15,613 17,652 17,888 18,286 In-Service 2,901 2,960 2,576 2,644 2,072 Extension 1,744 1,797 954 1,058 823 Independent Study 818 749 887 1,013 692 Total Continuing Education 5,463 5,506 4,417 4,715 3,587

TOTAL 19,923 21,119 22,069 22,603 21,873

*Includes Law, Pharmacy, Veterinary Medicine Source: Registrar's Office

FALL QUARTER ENROLLMENT BY CLASS 1971-1980

1911 1912 7973 1914 1915 7916 1911 1918 7919 1980

Freshman 3,084 3,363 3,293 3,836 3,605 3,679 3,560 3,345 3,513 3,298 Sophomore 2,994 3,109 3,251 3,438 3,545 3,478 3,774 3,820 3,429 3,771 Junior 3,972 4,308 4,214 4,449 4,150 4,110 4,091 4,016 4,134 3,775 Senior 3,876 3,817 4,100 3,962 4,276 4,171 4,253 4,283 4,364 4,469 Special Studies 168 289 299 338 326 Irregular & Transient 272 329 300 366 517 365 356 361 304 354 Graduate 3,791 3,991 3,779 3,848 3,865 3,688 3,752 3,940 3,974 4,163 Professional* 1,243 1,367 1,381 1,334 1,484 1,579 1,590 1,622 1,655 1,603 Total Regular Enrollment 19,232 20,284 8 21 21 21,238 21,665 21,686 21,711 21,759 In-Service 1,313 1,517 11176 1,071 569 558 584 544 543 659 Evening"* 568 537 492 578 543 698 769 Extension 753 797 766 242 460 166 155 169 56 Independent 603 573 514 470 445 425 303 344 351 263 Total Education 2,669 2,456 2,011 1,648 1 ,71 1

TOTAL 21 23,286 23,359 23,47'0

*1971-1972 includes

Work

Source: Figure 3 REGULAR ENROLLMENT FALL QUARTER 1971-1980

22,000 TOTAL Regular Enrollment

20,000

18,000

16,000

14,000

12,000

10,000

8,000

6,000

4,000

2,000

0 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980

Data from page 22 c:::::::::::l Undergraduate Enrollment ([[[[Ill Special Studies, Irregular & Transient f;:..;t.;.;}J Professional Enrollment ~Graduate c:::=l Irregular & Transient Only

23 8

52 CONT'D: COLLEGE ENROLLMENT BY QUARTER 1

College 1973-14 1914-15 1975-16 1916·11 1977-78 1978-79 1979-80 1980·81

ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN

Summer Total NA 107 121 112 106 119 95 95 Undergraduate 63 89 100 83 80 92 78 73 Graduate NA 18 21 29 26 27 17 22

Fall Total 284 328 290 255 224 226 242 225 Undergraduate 240 284 247 213 187 196 208 179 Graduate 44 44 43 42 37 30 34 46

Winter Total 287 305 282 244 222 227 229 Undergraduate 244 263 242 204 184 201 195 Graduate 43 42 40 40 38 26 34

Spring Total 291 307 273 236 216 222 220 Undergraduate 250 270 230 198 181 190 190 Graduate 41 37 43 38 35 32 30

FOREST RESOURCES

Summer Total NA 119 67 65 83 85 86 76 1st Professiona I 120 79 23 24 45 37 34 33 Graduate NA 40 44 41 38 48 52 43

Fall Total 252 117 169 191 176 204 214 158 1st Professional 193 61 101 130 119 132 139 97 Graduate 59 56 68 61 57 72 75 61

Winter Total 222 168 194 182 215 227 216 1st Professional 169 102 123 122 151 159 140 Graduate 53 60 71 60 64 68 76

Spring Total 216 150 191 193 194 207 193 1st Professional 165 93 121 138 136 137 125 Graduate 51 57 70 55 58 70 68

HOME ECONOMICS

Summer Total NA 290 316 288 278 311 322 313 Undergraduate 233 253 278 255 245 269 270 266 Graduate NA 37 38 33 33 42 52 47

Fall Total 652 737 170 733 770 827 791 746 Undergraduate 604 691 724 685 704 753 713 663 Graduate 48 46 46 48 66 74 78 83

Winter Total 652 756 744 749 773 812 746 Undergraduate 607 709 698 705 713 736 674 Graduate 45 47 44 60 76 72

Spring Total 668 717 748 741 778 789 732 Undergraduate 627 679 704 694 724 656 Graduate 38 44 47 65 76

JOURNALISM

Summer Total NA 410 468 368 Undergraduate 355 371 420 253 255 Graduate 39 49

Fall Total 587 Undergraduate 815 495 465 534 65 84 Winter Total 807 548 584 Undergraduate 732 454 504 Graduate 54 57 62 94 80 734 571 668 662 482 579

8

532 R CAMPUS ENROLLMENT

Out-of-State Foreign Total Students Students Students*

1 8,453 1 1 9,809 1 129 11,050 2, 12,330 124 1 1 14,406 183 16,208 1 1 18,481 1 278 19,799 1 4,025 394 21,193 1 453 20,019 1 443 21,101 1972-73 19,290 3,595 478 23,363 1973-74 19,205 3,389 492 23,086 3,398 502 24,147 3,286 510 24,470 6 476 23,963 526 24,184 26,588 3,263 674 26,389 D

State

6

Massachusetts

5

states are not DISTR OF 1 REGULARLY EN LLED GEORGIA R BY COUNTY OF RESIDENCE

County Enrollment County Enrollment County Enrollment

Appling 16 Fannin 25 Oglethorpe 71 Atkinson 11 Fayette 101 Paulding 30 Bacon 10 191 Peach 49 Baker 3 70 Pickens 22 Baldwin 46 Franklin 91 Pierce 17 Banks 14 Fulton 1,942 Pike 18 Barrow 109 Gilmer 38 Polk 37 Bartow 58 Glascock 3 Pulaski 18 Ben Hill 27 Glynn 176 Putnam 19 Berrien 17 Gordon 48 Rabun 34 Bibb 433 Grady 37 Randolph 8 Bleckley 29 Greene 44 Richmond 363 Brantley 7 Gwinnett 489 Rockdale 107 Brooks 14 Habersham 105 Schley 4 Bryan 6 Hall 266 Screven 17 Bulloch 70 Hancock 21 Seminole 19 Burke 32 Haralson 11 Spalding 106 Butts 27 Harris 16 Stephens 122 Calhoun 7 Hart 69 Stewart 6 Camden 26 Heard 4 Sumter 41 Candler 7 Henry 65 Talbot 6 Carroll 73 Houston 306 Taliaferro 9 Catoosa 40 Irwin 10 Tattnall 12 Charlton 8 Jackson 147 Taylor 12 Chatham 531 Jasper 34 Telfair 15 Chattahoochee 8 Jeff Davis 15 Terrell 9 Chattooga 23 Jefferson 38 Thomas 71 Cherokee 55 Jenkins 12 Tift 89 Clarke 3,805 Johnson 22 Toombs 35 Clay 142 Jones 26 Towns 13 Clayton 238 Lamar 18 Treutlen 12 Clinch 5 Lanier 3 Troup 82 Cobb 1,003 Laurens 93 Turner 9 Coffee 42 Lee 12 Twiggs 1 Colquitt 58 Liberty 35 Union 21 Columbia 68 Lincoln 20 Upson 58 Cook 14 Long 11 Walker 90 Coweta 69 Lowndes 94 Walton 119 Crawford 5 17 Ware 67 49 54 12 Dade 7 Mcintosh 12 3

Source: Office of Institutional Research and

FORE

of

DEGREES CONFERRED BY YEAR AND SCHOOL FY 1959-60-1969-70

Type of Degree 59-60 60-61 61-62 62-63 63-64 64-65 65-66 66-67 67-68 68-69 69-70

GRADUATE DEGREES Doctoral Degrees Ph.D. (1940) 6 7 20 33 36 45 69 83 86 121 151 Ed.D. (1948) 5 7 5 17 24 33 44 40 37 54 81 Total Doctoral Degrees 11 14 25 50 60 78 113 123 123 175 232

Specialist Degrees Ed.S. (1970) 175

Master's Degrees M.A. (1911) 31 31 36 46 50 69 79 83 101 118 145 M.S. (1913) 41 49 67 78 90 89 100 96 139 120 127 M.F.A. (1940) 14 7 10 16 12 20 22 28 35 23 41 M.Mus.Ed. (1951) 5 7 6 7 2 3 8 4 14 8 14 M.L.A. (1957) 1 2 0 0 2 5 2 M.Ag.Ext. (1964) 3 5 3 2 7 4 3 M.For.Res. (1950) 6 5 4 5 2 5 2 6 5 8 M.Art.Ed. (1953) 2 2 0 2 3 1 4 8 12 7 M.Edu. (1932) 123 139 159 172 193 211 253 316 450 515 532 M.Pub.Adm. (1967) 1 6 22 20 M.Bus.Adm. (1950) 11 20 14 16 14 9 23 36 33 42 112 M.Acc. (1964) 7 5 6 9 6 11 19 M.Soc.Work (1964) 0 0 14 32 23 54 53 M.Home Ec. (1928) 3 4 3 6 4 5 5 4 7 4 L.L.M. ( 1970) 2 Total Master's Degrees 235 264 301 345 382 425 516 617 834 946 1,089

TOTAL Graduate Degrees 246 278 326 395 442 503 629 740 957 1,121 1,496

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES Agriculture B.S.A. (1915) 117 120 131 163 167 214 195 211 257 256 219 B.S.A.E. (1931) 23 20 20 9 14 14 20 17 35 22 27 B.L.A. & B.S.L.A. 18 12 13 16 19 15 21 25 36 22 Total Agriculture 158 152 164 188 200 243 236 253 328 300 246

Arts & Sciences A.B. (1910) 135 136 158 247 328 387 451 429 488 575 576 B.S. (1910) 132 141 148 160 188 230 246 207 267 322 289 B.S.Chem (1950) 2 6 8 7 6 16 5 3 14 9 11 B.F.A. (1934) 33 36 38 49 50 75 86 74 82 99 105 B.Mus. (1959) 11 10 14 11 10 11 19 14 28 29 34 B.S.Physics (1960) 6 2 4 2 3 5 3 8 Total Arts & Sciences 314 330 367 480 584 723 809 730 884 1,037 1,023

34 75 256 268

TOTAL

ESSIONAL DEGREES Forest Resources B.S.F.R. 81 94 124

51 56 83 84

7 134 16 DEGREES CONFERRED BY YEAR, SCHOOl, AND SEX FY 1970-71-1979-80

Type of Degree 70-11 11-72 72-73 73-74 74-75 75-76 76-71 17-78 78-79 79-80 GRADUATE DEGREES Doctoral Degrees Ph.D. (1940) Male 170 179 180 153 128 165 159 157 137 140 Female 12 35 29 36 31 39 37 49 44 54 Total 182 214 209 189 159 204 196 206 181 194 Ed.D. (1948) Male 73 72 77 64 46 55 31 35 35 41 Female 17 30 19 25 27 28 28 31 32 28 Total 90 102 96 89 73 83 59 66 67 69 D.P.A. (1972) Male 1 4 6 1 3 5 4 3 Female 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 Total 4 6 3 5 4 5 Total Doctoral Degrees Male 243 252 258 221 180 221 193 197 176 184 Female 29 65 48 61 58 67 65 80 76 84 Total 272 317 306 282 238 288 258 277 252 268

Specialist Degrees Ed.S. ( 1970) Male 270 71 60 63 58 72 101 85 49 41 Female 370 99 110 103 99 102 110 73 64 90 Total 640 170 170 166 157 174 211 158 113 131

Master's Degrees M.A. (1911) Male 76 105 74 75 51 49 63 60 57 43 Female 44 62 54 46 47 47 52 49 50 48 Total 120 167 128 121 98 96 115 109 107 91 M.S. (1913) Male 129 106 133 130 105 102 111 148 127 147 Female 35 50 54 54 35 37 51 54 58 84 Total 164 156 187 184 140 139 162 202 185 231 M.F.A. Male 7 28 28 18 20 6 21 30 22 15 Female 19 11 17 15 24 22 20 31 32 26 Total 36 39 45 33 44 38 41 61 54 41 M.Mus.Ed (1951) Male 6 6 6 5 0 5 8 :3 5 11 13 19 5 2 12 16 M.A.M. (1 Male 3 Female 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Total 3 3 0 3 3 1 M.L.A. (1 Male 4 6 6 8 8 9 Female 0 0 3 5 6 Total 4 4 5 6 6 9 13 15 CONFERR BY SEX -1979-80

of Degree 70-71 71-72 72-73 73-74 74-75 75-76 76-77 71-18 78-19 79-80

Master's Degrees (Cont'd) M.Ag.Ext. (1964) Male 5 4 4 4 4 3 3 0 4 4 Female 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 Total 5 4 4 5 4 3 4 0 4 6 M.For.Res. Male 10 2 7 8 3 2 5 2 4 Female 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 2 Total 10 2 7 8 3 2 6 5 6 M.Art Ed. (1 Male 4 1 2 2 1 5 0 2 Female 4 11 8 5 6 8 4 8 6 15 Total 5 15 9 7 8 9 9 8 8 16 M.Edu. (1932) Male 250 308 311 324 243 276 183 136 141 114 Female 403 480 616 611 586 654 524 414 360 387 Total 653 788 927 935 829 930 707 550 501 501 M.Pub.Adm. {1967) Male 41 40 39 32 28 23 17 21 15 16 Female 4 0 4 6 3 9 11 6 8 5 Total 45 40 43 38 31 32 28 27 23 21 M.Bus.Adm. (1950) Male 139 118 113 115 134 136 111 89 117 129 Female 3 2 4 7 10 16 24 19 27 33 Total 142 120 117 122 144 152 135 108 144 162 M.Acc. (1964) Male 10 20 23 30 20 33 38 24 28 30 Female 0 0 4 5 5 12 5 10 13 Total 10 20 24 34 25 38 50 29 38 43 M.Soc.Work (1964) Male 16 19 32 42 20 28 32 18 18 14 Female 48 27 55 54 56 60 57 47 46 81 Total 64 46 87 96 76 88 89 65 64 95 Ec. Male 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 8 9 1 Total 0 8 5 8 9 L.L.M. 0 0 Female 0 0 0 3 0 M.A.T.( 0 0 4 5 3 5 3

Male 3 4 5 8

0 0 2 5 6 2 E 1

10-71 11-12 12-13 73-14 14-75 15-76 76-17 17-18 78-19 79-80

Male 770 777 794 638 682 603 544 557 536 Female 653 872 666 626 727 0 1,183 1

TOTAL Graduate 876 975 897 826 782 761 Female 978 942 952 819 766 901

EGREES

Male 21 198 241 273 310 313 325 3 52 54 90 98 103 122 Total 201 224 206 234 250 295 363 408 416 447 B.S.A.E. 931 Male 22 15 22 12 13 13 11 16 26 Female 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Total 23 15 20 22 12 13 13 11 17 27 B.S.E.H. (1971) 2 24 26 16 18 35 17 18 21 Female 0 2 5 4 5 13 2 10 Total 2 24 26 21 22 40 30 20 31

229 272 321 338 347 372 Female 3 15 21 57 58 95 111 106 133 226 251 250 282 283 330 416 449 453 505

336 258 256 237 225 281 254 535

207 88 87

37 1 5 163 146 1!?2 CONT'D: DEGREES CONFERRED BY YEAR, SCHOOL, AND SEX FY 1970-71-1979-80

Type of Degree 70-71 11·12 72-73 73-74 74-75 75-76 76-77 77-78 78-79 79-80

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES (Cont'd.) Arts & Sciences (Cont'd) B.S.Pcs. (1960) Male 2 1 1 1 1 0 3 2 Female 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Total 2 0 3 3 Total Arts & Sciences Male 554 547 579 595 549 589 525 510 529 546 Female 469 493 467 592 499 516 448 466 442 496 Total 1,023 1,040 1,046 1,187 1,048 1,105 973 976 971 1,042

Business Administration B.B.A. (1915) Male 797 709 738 698 663 636 632 640 586 501 Female 76 77 84 87 124 164 175 225 220 236 Total 873 786 822 785 787 800 807 865 806 737

Education B.S.Ed. (1915) Male 181 202 178 165 139 150 157 149 115 124 Female 668 766 698 683 625 581 523 524 437 446 Total 849 968 876 848 764 731 680 673 552 570

Environmental Design B.L.A. (1970) Male 35 30 28 31 29 33 49 34 40 33 Female 0 0 0 2 ..,., 3 8 7 16 9 13 Total 35 30 28 ..,., 32 41 56 50 49 46

Home Economics B.S.H.E. (1919) Male 0 0 0 3 0 0 3 1 Female 114 167 165 197 191 207 190 200 203 224 Total 114 167 165 198 192 210 190 200 206 225

Journalism A.B.J. ( Male 138 137 156 157 186 196 174 158 145 145 Femaie 97 139 123 151 159 178 183 217 191 212 Total 235 276 279 308 345 374 357 375 336 357

TOTAL Degrees Male 1,918 1,861 1,908 1 Female 1,437 1,657 1,558 1,733 1,658 1,712 1,621 1,759 1,608 1,760 Total 3,355 3,518 3,466

PROFESSIONAL DEGREES Forest Resources B.S.F.R. (1912) Male 107 99 72 120 37 30 41 65 52 47 Female 0 0 0 2 1 3 7 3 8 9 Total 72 122 38 48 68 60 56 CONT'D: DEGREES CONFERRED BY YEAR, SCHOOL, AND SEX FY 1970-71-1979-80

Type of Degree 70-71 71-72 72-73 73-74 74-75 75-76 76-77 71-78 78-79 79-80

PROFESSIONAL DEGREES (Cont'd) Law J.D. (1969) Male 108 134 187 197 185 184 171 152 146 149 Female 3 2 13 15 33 39 52 40 51 Total 109 137 189 210 200 217 210 204 186 200

Pharmacy B.S.Phar. (1950) Male 106 113 122 125 86 99 100 99 87 83 Female 20 17 14 32 34 50 45 64 42 49 Total 126 130 136 157 120 149 145 163 129 132

Social Work B.S.W. (1975) Male 0 0 5 7 6 6 Female 0 4 28 35 31 37 Total 0 4 33 42 37 43

Veterinary Medicine D.V.M. (1922) Male 55 51 57 60 54 56 53 65 65 45 Female 4 6 3 7 10 19 20 21 20 38 Total 59 57 60 67 64 75 73 86 85 83

TOTAL Professional Degrees Maie 376 397 438 502 362 369 370 388 356 330 Female 25 26 19 54 60 109 139 175 141 184 Total 401 423 457 556 422 478 509 563 497 514

TOTAL DEGREES* Male 3,520 3,352 3,441 3,488 3,031 3,223 3,125 3,043 2,903 2,814 Female 2,437 2,499 2,562 2,772 2,660 2,862 2,712 2,753 2,515 2,845 Total 5,957 5,851 6,003 6,260 5,691 6,085 5,837 5,796 5,418 5,659

*The sum of the August, December, March and June graduates for the particular fiscal year. Source: Registrar's Office Figure 5 TOTAL DEGREES CONFERRED FY 1960-1980

6000 6000

~TOTAl Degrees Conferred

..... 111... Undergraduate Degrees 5000 .._._Graduate Degrees 5000 ..... ,.. .. Professional

4000 4000

Ill ......

(j//P, ~~ ..,111 __ ... 111... --·•'' -...--- ...... --

~~~-- 3000 ,. 3000 ,, 1111, ,' ...... ' 2000 2000

1000 1000

0

1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980

pages DEGREE MAJORS 1980

Major/Degree(s) Major/Degree( s) Major/Degree (s)

Accounting Art Education Classical Culture BBA, MACC BSED, MAED, MED, EDS, AB EDD Administration in Special Classics Education Art History MA EDS MA Clothing & Textiles Adult Education Audiology Education BSHE MED, EDS, EDD MED Clothing, Textiles, Interiors, and Advertising Avian Medicine Furnishings ABJ MAM MS, MHE

Agricultural Economics Biochemistry Comparative Literature BSA, MS, PHD BS, BSA, MS, PHD AB, MA, PHD

Agricultural Education Biological Science Computer Science BSA, MED, EDS BSA AB, BS

Agricultural Engineering Biology Consumer Economics & Family BSAE, MS BS Management BSHE Agricultural Extension Botany BSA, MAEXT BS, BSA, MS, PHD Cooperative Vocational Education MED Agricultural Journalism Broadcast News BSA ABJ Counseling & Student Personnel Services Agricultural Mechanization Business Administration & EDS, EDD, PHD Technology Industrial Geography BSA BBA Criminal Justice AB Agronomy Business Administration BSA, MS, PHD MA, MBA, PHD Curriculum & Instruction MED, EDS, EDD Agronomy /General Agriculture Business Education BSA BSED, MED, EDS, EDD Dairy Science BSA, MS Business Systems MS BBA Dance Education BSED Animal & Science PHD Dietetics & Institution PHD BSHE Animal Nutrition PHD Distributive Education BSED, EDS Animal Science PHD Child Drama BSHE PHD Anthropology MA Child Childhood Childhood Education Education MED, BSHE Area Studies AB, ABJ Early Childhood Special Education MED Art Retardation PHD BSHE CONT'D: DEGREE MAJORS 1980

Major/Degree(s) Major/Degree(s) Major/Degree(s)

Economics Food Service Management Health Occupation Education AB, BBA, MA, PHD BSHE BSED, MED

Education Foods and Nutrition Higher Education MA MHE, MS EDD

Education of Exceptional Children Foreign Language Education History EDD, PHD BSED, MED, EDS AB, MA, MAT, PHD

Education of Gifted Forest Resources Home Economics EDD MFR, MS, PHD MHE, MS

Educational Administration Forest Resources Planning and Home Economics & Journalism M EDS, EDD Administration BSHE BSFR Educational Measurements Home Economics Education EDD Forest Water Resources BSHE, MED, EDS BSFR Educational Media Horticulture MED, EDS Forestry Sciences BSA, MS BSFR Educational Philosophy Housing MED, EDD French BSHE AB, MA, MAT Educational Psychology Housing, Family Management, & BSED,MED,EDS,EDD,PHD Furnishings & Interiors Consumer Economics BSHE MHE, MS Elementary Education MED,EDS,EDD,BSED General Agriculture Industrial Arts Education BSA BSED, MED, EDS Emotionally Disturbed Children MED, EDS General Business Industrial Relations BBA BBA English AB, MA, MAT, PHD Geographic Education Interdisciplinary Studies EDD AB, BS, BFA, BSA English Education BSED, MED, EDS Geography International Business AB, BS, MA, PHD BBA Entomology BS, BSA, MS, PHD Geology Interrelated Program in Exceptional AB, BS, MS, PHD Children Environmental Health MED BSEH German MAT Journalism Experimental Foods MA BSHE Germanic and Slavic Languages AB Architecture Family LA BSHE Greek MA Education Fashion BSHE Guidance & EDS & Literature Finance BBA Health & Education BSED Latin Fish & Wildlife Biology MA BSFR Law Food Science LLM PHD REE

Major/Degree(s) Major/Degree(s) Major/Degree(s)

Law & Accountancy Music Composition* Political Science MACC/JD BMUS AS, MA, PHD

Law & Business Administration Music Education* Poultry Science MBA/JD BMUS, MED, MMED, EDS, EDD BSA, MS, PHD

Disorders Music Psychology EDS BFA AB, BS, MS, PHD

Education Music Performance* Public Administration EDS BMUS DPA,MPA

Music Theory* Public Relations BFA ABJ

Magazines Music Therapy* Publication Management ABJ BMUS ABJ

Management Newspapers Reading Education BBA ABJ MED, EDS, EDD, PHD

Management Sciences Nutrition Science Real Estate & Urban Development BBA BSHE BBA

Marketing Organizational Management Recreation & Leisure Studies BBA BBA BSED, MED, EDS, EDD

Mathematics Pharmacology (Veterinary Medicine) Rehabilitation Counseling AB, BS, MA, PHD MS, PHD MED, EDS

Mathematics Education Pharmacy Religion BSED,MED,EDS,EDD BSPH R, MS, PHD AB

Mathematics (Non-Thesis) Philosophy Research Design MA AS, MA, PHD EDD

Medical Microbiology Physical Education Risk Management & Insurance MS MED, EDS, EDD BBA

Mental Retardation Physics Romance Languages EDS AB, MS, PHD AB, MA, MAT, PHD

Education PHD MED, EDS

Middle School School Psychology BSED EDD

Middle School Education Plant Genetics School Psychometrist EDS BSA MED

Molecular & Genetics Plant School Social Services Education PHD BSA MED, EDS

Science Education EDD

Plant Protection & Pest Social Science Education MFA MPPPM BSED, MED, EDD CONT'D: DEGREE MAJORS 1980

Major/Degree(s) Major /Degree(s) Major/Degree(s)

Social Sciences Speech Pathology Timber Management & Utilization AB MED, EDS, EDD BSFR

Social Work Speech Pathology & Audiology Trade & Industrial Education BSW, MSW BSED BSED, MED, EDS

Sociology Statistics Veterinary Medicine AB, MA, PHD AB, BS, MS, PHD DVM

Sociology Education Student Personnel in Higher Veterinary Parasitology EDD Education MS, PHD MED, EDS Spanish Veterinary Pathology AB, MA, MAT Supervision MS, PHD MED, EDS, EDD Speech Communication Vocational Education AB,MA Teacher Education MED, EDS, EDD EDD Speech Education Zoology BSED, MED, EDS Telecommunication Arts BS, MS, PHD ABJ

Joint Degree(s) Certificate Program(s)

Pre-Medicine Afro-American Studies BS French Studies Three years at The University of Georgia and Latin American Studies one year in the School of Medicine at the Medical Studies Medical College of Georgia Women's Studies

Pre-Dentistry Pre-Professional Programs BS Pre-Forest Resources Three years at The University of Georgia and Pre-Journalism one year in the School of Dentistry at the Pre-Pharmacy Medical College of Georgia Pre-Theology Pre-Medicine - Pre-Dentistry Pre-Veterinary Medicine Pre-Law BS Pre-Veterinary Medicine Three years at The University of Georgia and Allied Health one year in the College of Veterinary Medicine at The University of Georgia

Bachelor and Bachelor of Science in Engineering BS and BSE Three years at The University of Georgia and two years at the Georgia Institute of Technology

*Applied Areas in Music '"''u''"''~s Baritone, bassoon, cello, clarinet, composition, double bass, electronic music, flute, French horn, guitar, harpsichord, oboe, organ, percussion, piano, saxophone, trombone, trumpet, tuba, viola, violin, voice

CLASS SIZES, COURSES, AND SECTIONS REGULAR ENROLLMENT FY 1979-80

Junior Senior Professional Graduate All Division Division Division Division Divisions

Average Class Size Per Course Section 26 22 35 12 24

Number of Courses 451 1,982 293 2,257 4,983

Number of Class Sections 4,239 5,595 647 6,177 16,658

Source: Office of Institutional Research and Planning

TOTAL UNIVERSITY STUDENT CREDIT HOURS FY 1979-80

Credit-Hour Junior Senior Professional Graduate Source Division Division Division Division Total

Regular Enrollment 394,591 365,883 78,769 130,337 969,58()

In-Service Education 30 3,296 15,386 18,712

Evening 16,052 1,297 17 ,34f)

Extension 2,940 55 2,995

Independent Study 8 1 3 6,91l

Regents' Study 0

Subtotal 417,541 374,442 78,772 145,763 1,016,51&

Military 838 1,866

TOTAL 418,569 375,280 145,763 1,018,384

Source: Office DISTRIBUTION OF STUDENT CREDIT-HOUR LOADS FAll1980

Credit Hr. Special !rreg. & Load Studies Frosh Soph Junior Senior Transient Grad Prof Total

NC" 1 6 9 7 4 5 1 33 1 1 5 1 5 13 2 1 1 3 7 12 3 3 5 5 25 38 4 2 1 8 1 12 5 25 42 54 147 100 1,486 9 1,863 6 2 1 3 5 17 3 136 4 171 7 1 1 2 14 2 18 1 39 8 2 4 5 11 1 54 81 9 2 1 2 10 2 65 7 89 10 5 64 164 148 390 54 1,201 9 2,035 11 5 14 45 48 103 3 264 4 486 2 15 25 34 45 88 4 105 48 364 3 15 26 48 83 129 4 94 67 466 4 8 18 41 63 85 5 24 43 287 15 35 2,035 1,916 1,961 1,808 118 433 417 8,723 16 29 741 955 639 524 25 168 478 3,559 7 151 215 181 157 221 3 16 63 1,007 18 33 75 123 206 238 6 13 88 782 9 14 45 44 73 3 6 186 378 20 8 28 105 207 376 7 21 8 760 21 3 7 34 58 107 1 5 95 310 22 4 6 5 34 2 5 57 23 5 13 20 1 40 24 2 5 10 65 82 25 1 1 6 6 23 2 39 26 3 9 1 13 27 2 1 1 5 28 1 1 2 29 1 1 30 1 1 3 1 1 7 31 2 2 32 1 1 33 2 2

Average load 16.1 15.2 15.2 15.3 15.1 11.1 9.0 16.4 14.1 TOTAL 326 3,298 3,771 3,775 4,469 354 4,163 1,603 21,759 **NC =Registered and paid fees, but withdrew, cancelled registration. or enrolled as auditor

QIJI.I(\4\1\\H\\!:.i~ \l\ ~1;\~t\t\.!t\\lrio\ R~~~arcnancl Planning STUDENT CLASS RANK BY STUDENT CLASSIFICATION FALL QUARTER 1980 CUMULATIVE GRADE POINT AVERAGE

Lower Limit of Cumulative Grade Point Average and Number in Group CLASS UPPER 1/10 UPPER 1/4 UPPER 1/3 UPPER 1/2 UPPER 2/3 AVG. GPA LEVEL SIZE No. GPA No. GPA No. GPA No. GPA No. GPA

Studies 296 39 3.00 85 2.00 99 1.43 296 0.00 296 0.00 NA

Freshman 343 3.67 702 3.33 1,110 3.00 1,486 2.67 1,872 2.29 2.53

3,503 361 3.55 877 3.11 1'173 3.00 1,756 2.65 2,423 2.33 2.64

Junior 384 3.62 950 3.25 1,268 3.05 1,876 2.78 2,502 2.49 2.76

Senior 533 3.64 1,329 3.31 1,763 3.14 2,653 2.87 3,537 2.60 2.88

& Transient 331 41 4.00 83 3.57 121 3.33 182 3.00 221 2.66 2.80

Professional (Not reported due to differences in the calculation of grade point average.)

Graduate 4.201 857 4.00 1,085 3.90 1,443 3.82 2,198 3.67 2,920 3.50 3.55

NA: Not Grades earned in Special Studies courses are not included in the student's average grade point average. Source: Office of Institutional Research and Planning DISTRIBUTION OF GRADES BY CLASS FAll QUARTERS 1978-1980

Quarter and Class A 8 c D F WF s u v I w NR

Fall 1978

Undergraduate Special Studies 16.3% 29.8% 26.0% 8.7% 4.9% 0.5% 8.2% 0.6% -% 1.3% 3.5% 0.2% Freshman 22.2 29.6 24.1 7.5 3.5 0.3 7.1 0.4 0.1 1.4 3.3 0.4 Sophomore 23.6 29.8 19.5 5.8 3.8 0.5 9.3 0.6 0.1 1.8 4.4 0.8 Junior 28.2 31.1 17.6 5.0 2.8 0.4 7.0 0.4 0.1 2.2 4.4 0.8 Senior 32.7 30.2 15.0 2.8 1.9 0.2 9.7 0.6 0.2 2.6 3.1 1.1 Irregular 36.0 26.4 12.4 3.4 1.9 0.2 5.9 0.7 3.4 8.4 1.1 Total Undergraduate 27.0 30.1 18.8 5.2 3.0 0.3 8.3 0.5 0.1 2.0 3.9 0.8 Professional*·• 21.4 40.1 20.7 3.4 1.1 * 9.2 0.1 * 1.8 0.9 0.3 Graduate 46.2 22.2 2.6 0.3 0.2 0.1 15.4 0.1 0.7 6.7 2.6 2.7 Fall 1979

Undergraduate Special Studies 15.4% 27.2% 18.2% 4.5% 3.5% 0.8% 24.1% 1.8% -% 1.5% 2.7% 0.3% Freshman 21.2 30.4 24.8 7.7 4.1 0.4 5.5 0.7 1.2 3.0 1.0 Sophomore 24.2 28.6 20.8 5.8 3.5 0.5 8.5 0.9 0.1 1.6 4.3 1.2 Junior 28.2 30.9 18.6 5.0 2.6 0.4 6.5 0.9 0.1 1.9 4.0 0.8 Senior 31.7 30.4 15.1 3.1 1. 7 0.3 9.9 1.1 0.2 2.6 3.0 0.9 Irregular 34.9 30.2 13.7 3.0 2.0 0.2 4.1 0.5 1.2 2.7 6.2 1.2 Total Undergraduate 26.6 30.1 19.4 5.2 2.9 0.4 8.0 0.9 0.1 1.9 3.6 1.0 Professional*** 12.4 19.8 10.4 1. 7 0.6 * 5.0 0.1 * 0.4 0.5 49.0 Graduate 45.6 21.5 3.2 0.3 0.2 0.1 15.2 0.2 0.9 7.6 2.7 2.3 Fall 1980

Undergraduate Special Studies 12.7% 32.6% 24.3% 7.0% 3.9% 0.6% 12.6% 0.7% -% 2.5% 2.2% 0.8% Freshman 20.6 31.1 22.9 7.7 4.0 0.3 5.8 0.5 * 1.2 4.7 1.2 Sophomore 21.4 30.3 20.0 5.9 2.8 0.4 7.9 1.1 0.1 1.6 6.9 1.5 Junior 27.1 30.6 18.3 4.6 2.3 0.3 5.7 1.5 0.1 1.6 6.4 1.5 Senior 31.4 30.3 15.4 3.3 1.6 0.1 7.8 1.6 0.3 2.5 4.4 1.2 Irregular 30.3 29.3 13.5 5.4 2.7 0.1 3.3 0.4 1.0 4.2 8.2 1.5 Total Undergraduate 25.3 30.6 18.9 5.3 2.6 0.2 6.9 1.2 0.2 1.8 5.6 1.3 Professional*** 13.2 20.4 9.8 1.4 0.3 * 4.4 0.1 * 0.7 1.3 48.3 Graduate 46.6 21.3 3.1 0.3 0.1 0.1 15.8 0.2 0.5 6.7 2.7 2.5

*Less than 0.1 percent **Law grades were not included in the professional grade distributions. ***Law grades were not reported at the time the grade distribution was made. Key: WF =Withdrew Failing; S =Satisfactory; U =Unsatisfactory; V =Audit; I = Incomplete; W =Withdrew; NR = None Reported Source: Office of Institutional Research and Planning HONORS PROGRAM ENROLLMENT AND SECTIONS FY 1979-80

School/Students/Sections Summer Fall Winter Spring Total

Arts & Sciences Students 35 946 865 687 2,533 Sections 3 61 59 51 174

Business Students 121 59 51 326 Sections 6 4 4 14

Total Students 35 1,067 924 738 2,859 Sections 3 67 63 55 188

Average Students Per Section Arts & Sciences 11.7 15.5 14.7 13.5 14.6 Business 20.2 14.8 12.8 23.3 Total 11.7 15.9 14.7 13.4 15.2

Source: Annual Report of Honors Program 1979-80

HONORS PROGRAM AWARDS FY 1963-64-1979-80

Graduates With Junior Year General Honors Certificate Winners

1963 40 1964 19 44 1965 20 70 1966 31 66 1967 39 84 1968 35 71 1969 46 94 1970 55 84 1971 82 1 1972 94 182 1973 121 165 1974 137 193 1975 111 199 1976 138 184 1977 158 192 1978 1J'll'\ I "'tV ..e:v..::"'"'"' 1979 143 219 1980 146 183

Source: Annual Report of Honors Program 1979-80 DISTRIBUTION OF HONORS STUDENTS BY MAJOR AND CLASS FALL 1980

CLASS Fr. So. Jr. Sr. College and Major (1st) (2nd) (3rd) (4th) Total

Agriculture 25 15 15 8 63 Arts and Sciences Anthropology 0 0 2 0 2 Art 1 9 7 11 28 Biochemistry 0 3 3 7 13 Biology 13 9 11 14 47 Botany 1 0 0 0 1 Chemistry 9 10 15 10 44 Comparative Literature 0 0 2 0 2 Drama 1 5 4 3 13 Economics 2 0 3 5 10 English 4 10 7 12 33 Geography 0 0 2 0 2 Geology 1 1 2 3 7 German/Russian 0 1 0 1 2 History 4 6 5 6 21 Mathematics 17 8 4 6 35 Medical Technology 2 2 0 2 6 Microbiology 1 0 4 12 17 Music 7 8 6 6 27 Philosophy and Religion 0 1 2 2 5 Physics and Astronomy 4 2 4 2 12 Political Science 12 10 11 13 46 Pre-Dentistry 3 4 1 0 8 Pre-Engineering 1 2 0 2 5 Pre-Medicine 23 34 12 2 71 Pre-Nursing 1 1 0 0 2 Pre-Law 15 15 5 10 45 Pre-Pharmacy 1 0 1 0 2 Pre-Veterinary Medicine 11 10 3 0 24 Psychology 4 6 6 6 22 Romance Languages 0 2 6 1 9 Speech 0 1 1 0 2 Sociology and Social Science 4 0 0 1 5 Statistics and Computer Science 11 5 4 7 27 Zoology 1 1 1 4 7 Undecided 32 22 6 0 60 Total Arts and Sciences 186 188 140 148 662 91 260 3 5 5 10 23 Environmental Design 3 2 2 2 9 2 2 5 0 9 0 3 1 2 6 Journalism 39 41 46 30 156 ~ I 5 0 0 6 1 2 1 2 6

TOTAL 333 354 272 241 1,200 STATISTICAL ANALYSIS OF ADVANCED PLACEMENT

July 1978-June 1919 July 1919-June 1980 Total Total Exemption With Without Total Exemption With Without Total Tests Credit Credit Exemptions Tests Credit Credit Exemptions

5 - 2 2 6 281 67 - 67 159 47 - 47 Chemistry 248 24 - 24 232 34 - 34 English 3,004* 749 2,823 3,572 2,733* 441 2,230 2,671 French 369 130 503 633 240 106 342 448 German 67 33 103 136 37 28 69 97 Greek 3 4 4 8 3,045 124 1,992 2,116 2,605 201 1,708 1,909 2 2 2 4 4 4 6 10 32 21 49 70 18 11 25 36 Mathematics 3,094 1,215 - 1,215 2,657 2,297 - 2,297 1 1 - 1 Physics 14 - 7 7 14 - 5 5 222 11 36 47 101 10 21 31 83 4 5 9 16 1 3 4 1 - 1 1 1 1 2 3 413 217 548 765 285 132 368 500

10,884 2,602 6,075 8,677 9,108 3,313 4,779 8,092 of credits and exemotions 100% 24% 56% 80% 100% 36% 52% 88%

number of tests taken in English and Mathematics was not available for C.E.E.8. Achievement Examinations. Report of Honors Program 1979-80 GRADUATE TEACHING AND RESEARCH ASSISTANTSHIPS SUPPORTED BY DEPARTMENTS FALL1980

Number Number of of Type Assistantships Assistants

Graduate Assistants 769 701

Graduate Business law Assistants 21 21

Graduate Teaching Assistants 275 263

Graduate laboratory Assistants 362 316

Graduate Research Assistants 650 506

Veterinary Medicine Graduate Assistants 19 19

TOTAL 2,096 1,826

Source: Office of Institutional Research and Planning

GRADUATE FELLOWSHIPS AND ASSISTANTSHIPS AWARDED THROUGH THE GRADUATE SCHOOL FALL1980

Number of Assistants and Type Assistantships

NSF Graduate Fellows 7

Graduate Research Assistants

Graduate Non-Teaching Assistants 218

TOTAL

Source: Office of the Dean of the Graduate School MATRICULATION FEES BY QUARTER FALL 1972-FALL 1980

Total Total Non-Resident Student Resident Non-Resident Maintenance Fees Fees* Fees Fees

Fall 1972-Summer 1973 12 or more Quarter Hours Forestry $ 148.00 $240.00 $28.00 $ 176.00 $416.00 Law 157.00 240.00 28.00 185.00 425.00 Veterinary Medicine 172.00 600.00 28.00 200.00 800.00 Other Schools and Colleges 145.00 240.00 28.00 173.00 413.00 Per Quarter Hour: Less than 12 Law 14.00 20.00 28.00 Veterinary Medicine 15.00 50.00 28.00 Other Schools and Colleges 12.00 20.00 28.00

Fall 1973-Summer 1974 12 or more Quarter Hours Forest Resources $ 148.00 $240.00 $34.50 $ 182.50 $422.50 Law 157.00 240.00 34.50 191.50 431.50 Veterinary Medicine 172.00 600.00 34.50 206.50 806.50 Other Schools and Colleges 145.00 240.00 34.50 179.50 419.50 Per Quarter Hour: Less than 12 Law 14.00 20.00 34.50 Veterinary Medicine 15.00 50.00 34.50 Other Schools and Colleges 12.00 20.00 34.50

Fall 1974-Summer 1975 12 or more Quarter Hours Forest Resources $ 148.00 $ 240.00 $36.00 $ 184.00 $424.00 Law 157.00 240.00 36.00 193.00 433.00 Veterinary Medicine 172.00 600.00 36.00 208.00 808.00 Other Schools and Colleges 145.00 240.00 36.00 181.00 421.00 Per Quarter Hour: Less than 12 Law 14.00 20.00 36.00 Veterinary Medicine 15.00 50.00 36.00 Other Schools and Colleges 12.00 20.00 36.00

Fall 1975-Winter 1976 12 or more Quarter Hours Forest Resources $ 172.00 $ 288.00 $37.00 $209.00 $497.00 law 182.00 288.00 37.00 219.00 507.00 Veterinary Medicine** 200.00 NA 37.00 237.00 NA Other Schools and Colleges 168.00 288.00 37.00 205.00 493.00 Per Quarter Hour: Less than 12 law 16.00 24.00 37.00 Medicine 17.00 NA 37.00 Other Schools and 14.00 24.00 37.00

1976-Summer 1977 or more Quarter Hours Forest Resources $ 189.00 $317.00 $37.00 $226.00 $543.00 Law 200.00 317.00 37:00 237.00 554-.00 220.00 NA 37.00 257.00 NA 185.00 317.00 37.00 222.00 Per Quarter Hour: less than 12 Law 17.00 26.00 37.00 19.00 NA 37.00 15.00 26.00 37.00 CONT'D: rv1ATRICULATION FEES BY 1 1980

Total Total Non-Resident Student Resident Non-Resident Maintenance Fees Fees* Fees Fees

Fall 1977-Summer 1978 12 or more Quarter Hours Forest Resources $ 189.00 $ 317.00 $49.00 $ 238.00 $555.00 Law 200.00 317.00 49.00 249.00 566.00 Veterinary Medicine 220.00 NA 49.00 269.00 NA Other Schools and Colleges 185.00 317.00 49.00 234.00 551.00 Per Quarter Hour: Less than 12 Law 17.00 26.00 49.00 Veterinary Medicine 19.00 NA 49.00 Other Schools and Colleges 15.00 26.00 49.00

Fall 1978-Spring 1979 12 or more Quarter Hours Forest Resources $ 189.00 $317.00 $51.00 $ 240.00 $557.00 Law 200.00 317.00 51.00 251.00 568.00 Veterinary Medicine 220.00 NA 51.00 271.00 NA Other Schools and Colleges 185.00 317.00 51.00 236.00 553.00 Per Quarter Hour: Less than 12 Law 17.00 26.00 51.00 Veterinary Medicine 19.00 NA 51.00 Other Schools and Colleges 15.00 26.00 51.00

Summer 1979-Spring 1980 12 or more Quarter Hours Forest Resources $ 199.00 $350.00 $56.00 $ 255.00 $605.00 Law 210.00 350.00 56.00 266.00 616.00 Veterinary Medicine 231.00 NA 56.00 287.00 NA Other Schools and Colleges 195.00 350.00 56.00 251.00 601.00 Per Quarter Hour: Less than 12 Law 18.00 30.00 56.00 Veterinary Medicine 20.00 NA 56.00 Other Schools and Colleges 16.00 30.00 56.00

Summer 1980-Fall 1980 12 or more Quarter Hours Forest Resources $ 279.00 $490.00 $ 66.50 $345.50 $835.50 Law 294.00 490.00 66.50 360.50 850.5() Pharmacy 273.00 490.00 66.50 339.50 829.5() Veterinary Medicine 323.00 NA 66.50 389.50 NA Other Schools and Colleges 236.00 448.00 66.50 302.50 750.50 Per Quarter Hour: Less than 12 Forest Resources $ 23.00 $ 41.00 $66.50 law 25.00 41.00 66.50 23.00 41.00 66.50 Medicine 27.00 NA 66.50 Other Schools and 20.00 38.00 66.50

Summer quarter. fees are

the SR EB common market Fall 1975. Students from states enroll on an in-state basis. NA. Not Source: Office of Institutional Research and

THE DIVISION OF DE FAI because it believes student potential is enhanced through a systematic emphasis on individual needs, provides services and programs that help students (1) understand and use available academic resources, (2) plan their life work, (3) learn to live with others in harmony and mutual respect, and (4) maintain mental and physical health as they inte­ grate personal, professional, and social values.

The Office of the Vice President for Student Affairs provides leadership, coordination, and budgetary ten departments within Student

The Career Planning and Placement Office assists students both before and after graduation to explore career options pursue career goals. In addition, this department assists students who seek employment while attending the University, supplies information regarding profes- and and comprehensive placement services.

The Counseling and Testing provides a broad range of counseling and testing services to the University community. Major areas of service include individual and group counseling, structured group programs, career exploration, learning skills, outreach programs, non-tradi­ tional student services, consultation, training, administration of national and university-wide testing programs, and test-scoring services.

The Department of Student Activities contributes to students' social, cultural, recreational, and intellectual development through its programming areas: Black Affairs, Communiversity, lntramurals and Sports Clubs, Leadership Development, Fraternity and Sorority Affairs, Special Programs, Student Clubs and Organizations, and the University Union. This depart­ ment also publishes a quarterly activities calendar, processes the student I.D. card, and main­ tains an Information Center in Memorial HaiL

The Department of University Housing provides residence hall and family housing accommoda­ tions for students; it also serves as a liaison between the University and those fraternity and sorority corporations with houses on University property. The department sponsors a variety of recreational educational programs and maintains a student and professional staff wh()se efforts are directed to promoting students' personal, social, and scholastic development.

The Office of International Services and Programs offers activities designed to promote inter- understanding both foreign American students. to advising students on immigration matters, personal problems, finances, and in work, or travel abroad. CONT'D: THE DIVISION OF STUDENT AFFAIRS

The Office of Student Financial Aid determines the student financial aid eligibility of students attending The University of Georgia; coordinates other on-campus and off-campus awards in student financial aid packaging to prevent over-awards; and reports all aid awarded to students attending the University to the Board of Regents, the federal government, and University officials.

The Undergraduate Admissions Office advises prospective students regarding admission to the University and coordinates the University's Orientation Program for new students. This office reviews applications for admission and readmission and determines transfer credit for courses taken at other institutions.

The University Health Service maintains a professional staff of physicians, nurses, counselors, and technicians to provide students with comprehensive physical and mental health services on an outpatient and inpatient basis. Its services include physical therapy, laboratory and x-ray facilities, various specialty clinics, a pharmacy, and a health education department. The University Health Service also offers a voluntary accident/sickness insurance policy and a dental plan for students, in addition to the many services which are automatically covered by the student health fee.

CAREER PLANNING AND PLACEMENT SERVICE

1919-80 1980-81 (Actual) (Estimated) Senior-Graduate-Alumni

Number Active Files Beginning of Year 2,077 2,032 Number Added During the Year 2,902 2,950 Total Case load 4,979 4,982 Total Placement 2,947 2,982 Number Active Files End of Year 2,032 2,000

Campus Interview Visits

Business and Industry Institutions 1 140 Government Agencies 85 100 Military Organizations 48 50 Graduate/Professional 9 10 Co-op/1 ntern/Su mmer 64

Total 1 1 0

Student Employment

Number Individual Applicants 4,018 4,000 Number Personal Interviews 5,215 5,200 Number of Reported Job Placements 1,832 1,800

Source: Career Planning and Placement SOCIAL SORORITIES AND FRATERNITIES

Date Total Established Membership SORORITIES on Campus Fa/11980 Alpha Chi Omega 1938 140 Alpha Delta Pi 1933 157 Alpha Gamma Delta 1923 109 Alpha Kappa Alpha 1971 21 Alpha Omicron Pi 1934 141 Chi Omega 1922 176 Delta Delta Delta 1933 150 Delta Gamma 1967 143 Delta Phi Epsilon 1935 119 Delta Sigma Theta NA NA Kappa Alpha Theta 1937 173 Kappa Delta 1924 144 Kappa Kappa Gamma 1947 142 Phi Mu 1921 162 Pi Beta Phi 1936 114 Sigma Delta Tau 1924 66 Sigma Kappa 1964 72 Zeta Phi Beta NA NA Zeta Tau Alpha 1949 149 TOTAL Membership 2,178

Date Total Established Membership FRATERNITIES on Campus Fa/11980 Alpha Epsilon Pi 1926 91 Alpha Gamma Rho 1927 48 Alpha Phi Alpha 1969 9 Alpha Tau Omega 1878 115 Chi Phi 1867 80 Chi Psi 1890 82 Delta Chi 1965 37 Delta Tau Delta 1882 67 Kappa Alpha 1868 87 Kappa Alpha Psi 1970 19 Kappa Sigma 1901 81 Lambda Chi Alpha 1915 108 Omega Psi Phi 1973 NA Phi Beta Sigma 1975 NA Phi Delta Theta 1871 63 Phi Gamma Delta 1968 78 Phi Kappa Psi 1974 21 Phi Kappa Tau 1950 44 Phi Kappa Theta 1967 16 Pi Kappa Alpha 1908 83 Pi Kappa Phi 1915 29 Sigma Alpha 1866 100 Sigma Chi 1872 100 Sigma Nu 1873 65 Sigma Phi Epsilon 1963 74 Sigma Pi 1948 20 Tau Epsilon Phi 1919 101 Tau Kappa 1971 98 Theta Chi 1948 15 Zeta Beta Tau 1915 47 TOTAL Membership 1,778 Source: Advisor to of Student Division of Student Affairs. HONORARY FRATERNITIES/SOCIETIES AT THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA

Date National Honorary Established Fraternities/Societies on Campus Type

Alpha Epsilon Delta 1932 Pre-medical Alpha Kappa Psi 1922 Professional Business Alpha Lambda Delta 1934 Freshman Academic Alpha Zeta 1914 Agriculture, Forestry, Veterinary Medicine, Home Economics, and Environmental Design Beta Alpha Psi 1963 Accounting Beta Gamma Sigma 1918 Commerce and Business Administration Blue Key 1926 Student Activities Gamma Iota Sigma 1975 Risk Management and Insurance Gamma Sigma Delta 1961 Agriculture, Forestry, Home Economics, and Veterinary Medicine Gamma Theta Upsilon 1966 Geography Golden Key 1978 Scholastic Kappa Delta Epsilon 1956 Education Kappa Delta Pi 1929 Education Kappa Tau Alpha 1929 Journalism Mortar Board 1939 Leadership Omicron Delta Epsilon 1963 Economics Omicron Delta Kappa 1934 Leadership Phi Alpha Theta 1956 History Phi Beta Kappa 1914 Liberal Arts Phi Eta Sigma 1938 Freshman Academic Phi Kappa Phi 1923 General Phi Sigma 1951 Biological Sciences Phi Sigma Tau 1973 Philosophy Phi Zeta 1925 Veterinary Medicine Pi Sigma Alpha 1948 Government and Political Science Psi Chi 1929 Psychology Rho Chi 1949 Pharmacy Rho Lambda 1976 Panhellenic Sigma Delta Pi 1955 Spanish Sigma Xi 1946 Scientific Research Xi Sigma Pi 1941 Forestry

In addition to the national honoraries, the following local honorary fraternities exist to recognize student achievement:

Aghon sno~op1·" Greek Horsemen Zodiac Biftad Gridiron Pyramid

Source: Department of Student Activities STUDENT FINANCIAL AID PROGRAMS FY 1979-80

Number of Student Aid Program Awards Amount* Scholarships (No repayment required) Institutional Scholarship 87 $ 117,827 Private Scholarship 433 620,580 All Other Scholarships 351 211,917 Subtotal 871 $ 950,324

Grants (No repayment required) Basic Educational Opportunity Grant 2,957 $ 2,811,392 Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant 74 24,780 Vocational Rehabilitation 61 52,149 Georgia Incentive Scholarship 1,392 387,978 Tuition Waivers 1,192 357,600 Institutional Grants 254 810,291 Subtotal 5,930 $ 4,444,190

Loans Repayable by Cash Only National Direct Student Loan 1'177 $ 1,141,598 Federally Insured Student Loan 100 221,620 Guaranteed Student Loan 3,178 6,460,762 Institutional Loans 29 37,500 All Other Cash Repayment Loans 1,322 324,334 Subtotal 5,806 $ 8,185,814

Repayable by Cash or Service Regents' Scholarship 96 $ 49,568 Federal Health Professions Loan 98 172,823 State Health Careers Loan 49 69,932 Subtotal 243 $ 292,323

Student Employment (As financial assistance) College Work-Study Program 776 $ 530,257 Graduate Assistants 2,246 5,323,769 Student Assistants 3,840 3,151,625 Subtotal 6,862 $ 9,005,651

TOTAL Financial Aid 19,712 $ 22,878,302

monies as I as departments Source: Office of Student Financial Aid UNIVERSITY HEALTH SERVICE

Patient Services

1918-19 1919-80 Outpatient Services Number of Individuals seen as Outpatients 15,616 15,964 Total Student Visits for Outpatient Services 72,193 77,044 Total Student Visits for Physical Health 66,919 71,392 Visits Treated Primarily by Physicians 24,859 24,440 Visits Treated Primarily by Nursing Staff 19,831 14,201 Visits Treated Primarily by Practitioners in Training 3,792 3,971 Visits to Immediate Care 12,320 13,795 Visits to Dermatology Clinic 586 758 Visits to Sexual Health Seminar 1,504 1,544 Visits to Gynecology Clinic .. 4,926 Visits to High Blood Pressure Clinic 119 99 Visits to Allergy/Immunization Clinic 3,834 3,973 Visits for Directed Self-Care 1,953 1,224 Visits to Physical Therapist 956 1,015 Visits to Diet Clinic 999 1,446 Visit Type Unspecified 7 10 Total Student Visits to Mental Health Division 5,267 5,642 Student Visits for Personal, Vocational, Educational, Premarital and Marital, Social, and Financial Counseling on Individual or Couple Basis 4,854 5,274 Student Participation in Psychotherapy Groups, Sensitivity and Growth Groups, and Encounter and Marathon Sessions 413 368 Inpatient Services Total Students Admitted to Hospital 124 118 Total Students Admitted to Intermediate Care 695 576 Total Patients Admitted 819 694 Auxiliary Services Total Prescriptions Filled by Pharmacy 45,120 53,141 Total Laboratory Procedures Processed 57,764 72,127 Total X-ray Films Taken 4,987 4,872

Distribution of Patient Problems

1918-79 1919-80 Number Percent Number Percent Problems Seen and Throat 6.80% 5,582 6.62% Cardiovascular 11,988 15.37 12,401 14.71 Gastrointestinal 3,242 4.16 3,396 4.03 Urinary Tract 2,696 3.46 3,048 3.65 Gynecology 11,971 15.35 13,701 16.25 Endocrine (Non-gynecologic) 162 .21 274 .3:3 8,226 10.55 9,191 10.9(.) 10,505 13.47 11,720 13.9(.) Mental Health 5,632 7.22 6,291 7.45 Headache, Neurological 792 1.02 857 uz Non-specific-Not Classified Elsewhere 6.65 4,319 5.1Z Health Maintenance 15"76 13,535 HAinnr''t<>rl elsewhere Source: Office of Director of the Health Service STUDENT HOUSING

Residence Halls Women's Men's Date of Date of Initial Fa/11980 Initial Fa/11980 Building Occupancy Occupancy Capacity Building Occupancy Occupancy Capacity Boggs 1961 176 164 Hill 1961 182 168 Brumby 1966 1,018 1,000 Lipscomb 1961 177 162 Church 1961 174 164 McWhorter 1967 165 165 Mary Lyndon 1937 116 123 Milledge 1921 168 154 Me II 1961 174 164 Morris 1957 143 148 Payne 1939 230 204 Russell 1967 1,028 1,008 Rutherford 1938 148 156 Subtotal 1,863 1,805 Subtotal 2,036 1,975

Coeducational Date of Women Men Total Initial Fa/11980 Fa/11980 Fa/11980 Building Occupancy Occupancy Capacity Occupancy Capacity Occupancy Capacity Creswell 1963 643 626 380 380 1,023 1,006 Myers 1953 179 168 332 317 511 485 Oglethorpe House 1979 301 305 192 200 493 505 Reed 1953 245 243 230 234 475 477 Subtotal 1,368 1,342 1,134 1'131 2,502 2,473

Occupancy Capacity Women's Total 3,404 3,317 Men's Total 2,997 2,936 TOTAL Residence Halls 6,401 6,253

Married Student Housing

Fa/11980 Fa/11980 Date of Initial Occupancy Capacity Building Occupancy (Units) (Units) University Village A 1964 28 28 University Village B 1964 24 24 University Village C 1964 24 24 University Village 0 1964 29 29 University Village E 1966 28 28 University Village F 1966 24 24 University Village G 1966 24 24 University Village H 1966 24 24 University Village J 1966 36 36 University Village K 1966 34 34 University Village L 1966 30 30 University Village M 1973 36 36 Village N 1973 36 36 University Village P 1973 42 42 University Village Q 1973 42 42 University Village R 1973 42 42 University VillageS 1973 42 42 TOTAL 545 545 CONT'D: STUDENT HOUSING University-Owned Fraternity and Sorority Houses Fa/11980 Building Occupancy Capacity Sorority Houses Alpha Chi Omega 66 66 Delta Phi Epsilon 50 50 Sigma Delta Tau 32 43 Subtotal 148 159 Fraternity Houses Alpha Epsilon Pi 29 32 Alpha Tau Omega 52 53 Chi Phi 27 30 Chi Psi 26 30 Kappa Alpha 33 33 Kappa Sigma 40 55 Phi Delta Theta 28 32 Delta Chi 16 20 Pi Kappa Alpha 45 66 Sigma Chi 24 32 Sigma Nu 20 40 Tau Epsilon Phi 30 30 Subtotal 370 453 TOTAL 518 612

Fraternity- and Sorority-Owned Houses Fall 7980 Building Occupancy Capacity Sorority Houses Alpha Delta Pi 72 72 Alpha Gamma Delta 52 52 Alpha Omicron Pi 56 56 Chi Omega 75 75 Delta Delta Delta 50 50 Delta Gamma 75 68 Kappa Alpha Theta 58 58 Kappa Delta 58 56 Kappa Kappa Gamma 66 66 Phi Mu 76 76 Pi Beta Phi 71 71 Sigma Kappa 48 65 Zeta Tau AI ph a 68 68 Subtotal 825 833 Fraternity Houses Alpha Gamma Rho 44 44 Delta Tau Delta 31 31 Lambda Chi Alpha 57 57 Phi Gamma Delta 36 36 Phi Kappa Psi 12 25 Phi Kappa Tau 19 30 Phi Kappa Theta 12 15 Pi Kappa Phi 12 13 Sigma Alpha 15 30 Sigma Phi 35 40 Sigma Pi 11 12 Tau Kappa Epsilon 44 44 Theta Chi 13 30 Zeta Beta Tau 19 20 Subtotal 360 427 Professional Houses Alpha Psi 12 12 Kappa Psi 3 3 Subtotal 15 15 TOTAL CONT'D: STUDENT HOUSING

Student Residences Summary

Number Fa/11980 Type of Residence of Buildings Occupancy Capacity

Women's Residence Halls 7 2,036 1,975 Men's Residence Halls 6 1,863 1,805 Co-educational Residence Halls 4 2,502 2,473 Subtotal Residence Halls 17 6,401 6,253

Married Student Housing 17 545 Units 545 Units

University-Owned Sorority Houses 3 148 159 Sorority-Owned Houses 13 825 833 Subtotal Sorority Houses 16 973 992

University-Owned Fraternity Houses 12 370 453 Fraternity-Owned Houses 14 360 427 Professional Fraternity-Owned Houses 2 15 15 Subtotal Fraternity Houses 28 745 895

TOTAL 78 8,664 8,685

Student Housing Summary

Number Fal/1980 Type of Residence of Buildings Occupancy Capacity

Women's Student Housing 23 3,009 2,967 Men's Student Housing 34 2,608 2,700 Co-educational Residence Halls 4 2,502 2,473 Married Student Housing 17 545 Units 545 Units

TOTAL 78 8,664 8,685

Source: Office of Institutional Research and GEORGIA ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION BOARD OF DIRECTORS

Fred C. Davison Chairman Allan Barber Treasurer William M. Powell Faculty Chairman J. Reid Parker Athletic Director, Administration Vincent J. Dooley Athletic Director, Sports Program

Alumni Members Lee Daniel Kirby R. Moore Wuckliff A. Knox, Jr. Frank W. Seiler Donald M. Leebern, Jr. Lamar Travis Wansley T.H. Milner, Jr.

Faculty Members

J. Donald Edwards John D. Kehoe, Jr. W. E. Hudson Clifford Lewis Charles W. James Joe LaRocca

Emeritus Members

Ira E. Aaron Mark Hanna M. Cook Barwick Tom. H. Paris, Sr. William T. Bradshaw George S. Pathemos George T. Fesperman S. Andy Roddenberg

Student Member Jeff

Source: Sports Information Director GEORGIA HEAD COACHES

Athletic Program Coach Athletic Program Coach

Athletic Director- Gymnastics: Men Greg Corsiglia Administration Reid Parker Women Rick Walton Athletic Director- Swimming: Men Pete Scholle Sports Program Vincent Dooley Women Jack Bauerle Assistant Athletic Director- Tennis: Men Dan Magill Women's Programs Liz Murphey Women Greg McGaritY Baseball: Steve Webber Track: Men Lewis Gainey Basketball: Men Hugh Durham Women Bill Katz Women Andy Landers Volleyball: Sidney Feldman Football: Vincent Dooley Golf: Men Dick Copas Women Liz Murphey

ATHLETES AT THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA FALL 1980

Scholarship Non-Scholarship Total Sport Men Women Men Women Men Women

Baseball 21 * 13 * 34 * Basketball 13 10 3 4 16 14 Football 93 * 60 * 153 * Golf 8 8 6 3 14 11 Gymnastics 10 8 2 7 12 15 Swimming 24 15 6 3 30 18 Tennis 10 7 3 6 13 13 Track 25 14 12 18 37 32 Volleyball * 12 * 3 * 15

TOTAL 204 74 105 44 309 118

*Not applicable Source: Athletic Director- Administration

ACADEMICS PERTAINING ON SCHO IP

Number on on Quarter Scholarship Dean's List

1979 1980 280 108 Spring 1980 247 95

Source: Athletic Director- SOUTHEASTERN CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIPS WON BY GEORGIA

Sport Years*

Baseball 1933,1953,1954 Track 1937

Golf 1941,1950,1951,1952,1957 I 1958,1959,1961 I 1962,1963,1964, 1965,1969,1970,1971,1972,1977,1978 Football 1942,1946,1948,1959,1966,1968,1976,1980 ** Swimming 1951,1952,1955 Tennis 1971 '1972,1973, 1974,1975,1977,1978,1979

*The Southeastern Conference was established in 1933. **National Champions Source: Sports Information Office

GEORGIA ATHLETIC TRAINING FACILITIES

Coliseum Facilities located within the Coliseum include 1. Main training room with steam bath 2. Small training room 3. Weight room 4. Theatre-style meeting room 5. Dressing facilities for football, basketball, track, baseball, plus several dressing rooms for visiting teams.

Henry Feild Tennis Stadium Tennis Facility with 3,400 seating capacity. Four indoor courts.

Track Eight-lane, quarter mile with Chevron 440 surface.

Stegeman Hall Eight-lane 25x50 meter pool with dressing quarters.

Practice fields Four football practice fields, including one regulation-size Turf field. Ail other teams practice in their playing facilities. PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS OF REGULARLY ENROLLED STUDENTS FALL 1980

lrreg & Studies Frosh Soph Junior Senior Transient Grad Prof Total

Total Class 326 3,298 3,771 3,775 4,469 354 4,163 1,603 21,759

Matriculation Status New Matriculants 324 2,757 1,965 2,257 58 2,745 389 13,494 Transfers 2 292 1,000 1,790 2,173 248 8 1'113 6,626 Former UGA Students 1 2 3 10 21 1,292 62 1,391 Status Unknown 6 12 17 29 27 118 39 248

Status Full-Time 309 89 3,503 3,499 3,754 178 2,473 1,566 18,471 Part-Time 17 109 268 276 715 176 1,690 37 3,288

Sex Male 76 1 1,907 . 1,823 2,261 200 2,215 1,003 11' 159 Female 150 1 1,864 1,952 2,208 154 1,948 600 10,600

Ethnic - American Indian 2 2 6 10 5 7 32 American 82 157 185 137 136 14 122 58 891 Oriental American 1 8 10 15 12 2 16 7 71 American 3 20 11 22 23 6 22 9 116 Caucasian 240 3,474 3,531 4,164 243 3,341 1,444 19,484 ·Unknown 64 89 64 124 89 657 78 1,165

Marital Status 322 3,135 3,227 2,936 3,548 222 1,937 1,130 16,457 Married 4 43 102 207 350 122 1,488 336 2,652 Status Unknown 120 442 632 571 10 738 137 2,650

Residence In-State 290 3,273 3,337 4,000 232 2,702 1,332 17,999 Out-of-State 36 465 498 438 469 122 1,461 271 3,760 : SE PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS OF REGULARLY ENROLLED STUDENTS FALL 1980

Special lrreg& Studies Frosh So ph Junior Senior Transient Grad Prof Total

Pledge/Member 16 98 824 824 969 4 60 75 2,870 Non-Member 310 3,200 2,947 2,951 3,500 350 4,103 1,528 18,889

Alumni Relationship Father 32 307 308 301 441 20 84 114 1,607 Mother 16 133 166 143 158 5 32 35 688 Father and Mother 24 206 239 217 252 17 51 71 1,077 Brother and/or Sister 1 8 33 69 298 9 124 88 630 Parent and Brother/Sister* 1 2 9 18 80 4 32 28 174 No Familv 253 2,644 3,025 3,045 3,320 303 3,872 1,295 17,757

17orunder 4 69 3 76 18- 20 306 3,076 3,284 2,118 165 45 6 95 9,095 21 - 24 11 99 388 1,453 3,830 103 1'165 996 8,045 25- 29 2 16 60 128 358 95 1,478 395 2,532 34 30- 13 15 34 67 54 828 83 1,094 35-39 6 3 15 22 25 350 22 443 40-49 3 13 11 15 18 14 270 6 350 50-64 6 7 12 9 12 58 3 107 65 and older 6 4 10 Unknown 4 3 7 Church Preference 113 851 895 1,041 1 '105 37 169 358 4,569 Catholic 38 468 472 413 477 49 191 167 2,275 Christian Church 1 12 31 36 68 2 12 13 175 Episcopal 16 191 225 206 225 13 26 69 971 Jewish 20 144 174 144 154 10 71 70 787 Lutheran 2 69 79 94 78 5 11 30 368 Methodist 62 570 626 631 713 29 114 216 2,961 15 241 271 273 290 10 56 86 1,242 Other Churches 35 317 326 345 428 43 292 153 1,939 No Preference; No Response 24 435 672 592 931 156 3,221 441 6,472 students previously counted Source: Office of Institutional Research and Planning ALUMNI STATISTICS October 31, 1980

Alumni/Friends No. on File

Alumni Currently on File Bachelor Degrees only 73,513 Graduate and Professional Degrees only 21,248 Both Degrees 12,725 Matriculates 8,045 Total Alumni 115,531

Non-Alumni Associates, Corporations, Foundations, etc. 12,690

TOTAL 128,221

Source: Alumni Development Services

NUMBERS OF LIVING ALUMNI BY CLASS YEAR October 31, 1980

No. on No. on No. on No. on Class File Class File Class File Class File

1886 1 1918 50 1939 944 1960 1,606 1893 1 1919 42 1940 997 1961 1,571 1896 2 1920 80 1941 1,060 1962 1,784 1897 1 1921 79 1942 11181 1963 1,936 1900 1 1922 112 1943 686 1964 2,262 1901 1 1923 126 1944 671 1965 2,583 1903 3 1924 123 1945 572 1966 2,865 1904 2 1925 160 1946 709 1967 2,928 1905 1 1926 192 1947 1,199 1968 3,706 1906 8 1 1 1948 1,948 1969 4,225 1907 12 1928 241 1949 1970 2 1908 9 1929 1950 2,765 1971 4,971 1 10 1930 1 1 2,021 1972 5,065 1910 16 1931 337 1952 1,659 1973 5,167 1911 18 1932 1953 1,437 1974 5,381 1 2 10 1 1954 1 14 4,925 1913 1 1 1 130 1976 1914 1935 529 1956 1,154 1 5,152 1 1915 1 1 I 1916 1937 7 1 1,366 1979 4,948 1917 38 1938 796 1959 1,476 1980 4,396

Source: Figure 6 GEORGIA ALUMNI GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION BY STATE FALL 1980

.,_,,;;i-s~....._,.___},;.>.r~.-"-.. . . Jr..~: . \ """1"1m<>l•-···-r·_;f-:t' \ ) 22 \ ~/. -<'--/i: ' ~-'- \ . >\'). 64 '' N.H 57 168 w•W"'''"·~r 1\;,• -H'· • ' ...... , ·v:.:t-~)-·~·\.. ~;, ~~>.·i6C·~r;· Mass .... 414 I 173 ' ·•·•·• Li /ill-- / ..,., ' : .J... <-._,-'/•"'' 2,275 "'' R.I...... 50 -- -- 343 [ ~;Y .,;:;-"¥~' Conn .... 336 78 • / / .... . f. IC.#' 691 ' N.J. . ... 694 ""''''\" .: / .. ?' - 14 ~--~rtDel. . 118 ·--- \ ;;'\17)\:lt-- 6 } ... ~ \ 665 "' • • ~.cvJ":<~.~)Md ...... 789 152 \ , . ~---·r • ... ,·•J D.C.•... 376 42 r 172 ~ 305 <. } . / l, ( 1 ~ 343 ··\ r~·'"r..454 :.,., /'., 2,559 ~., (. j I -/ ~

~TwiitiirO-- .,·;;;,,....------1 ,,.c/··• ______...-·/ -.J'" ,:. "')! (':;'(~m",~:~,c------2,102 (<. 3,149 ;?~) ··""'---l214 \.._ 4,157 92 ' ~ ...... - ib«·'-·~;,;---4 76 2,087 79 ' 9 89 \ \{ ~ -- .. .I 84 ~~('-..__. __ 1,639 .f-· ~~ ( \.-- )).J.." •• ,.. :\ .·;r . )./ ...-.-- . \ 11£>\IIAII ~ \ -l/.. J') '\ \ TOTAL U.S. ~\ \ . {) ...... _ FOREIGN • ...... 1 TOTA L ALUMNI. · · . •. . . : ...... 4,639892 I !., . . . . 15,531 ~

Source: Alumni Development Services DISTRIBUTION OF RESIDENT GEORGIA ALUMNI BY COUNTY OF RESIDENCE FALL 1980

No. of No. of No. of Alumni Alumni Alumni County on File County on File County on File

Appling 140 Fannin 126 Oglethorpe 199 Atkinson 55 284 Paulding 113 Bacon 104 Floyd 1,073 Peach 232 Baker 27 Forsyth 212 Pickens 118 Baldwin 515 Franklin 463 Pierce 137 Banks 74 Fulton 8,146 Pike 80 Barrow 538 Gilmer 118 Polk 260 Bartow 343 Glascock 24 Pulaski 127 Ben Hill 166 Glynn 825 Putnam 145 Berrien 118 Gordon 264 Quitman 9 Bibb 2,125 Grady 204 Rabun 189 Bleckley 163 Greene 237 Randolph 119 Brantley 34 Gwinnett 2,016 Richmond 2,572 Brooks 125 Habersham 412 Rockdale 431 Bryan 60 Hall 1,679 Schley 27 Bulloch 503 Hancock 51 Screven 125 Burke 229 Haralson 117 Seminole 99 Butts 109 Harris 130 Spalding 580 Calhoun 91 Hart 343 Stephens 465 Camden 99 Heard 26 Stewart 71 Candler 117 Henry 307 Sumter 391 Carroll 486 Houston 880 Talbot 37 Catoosa 150 Irwin 102 Taliaferro 35 Charlton 45 Jackson 647 Tattnall 160 Chatham 2,487 Jasper 91 Taylor 101 Chattahoochee 10 Jeff Davis 108 Telfair 179 Chattooga 130 Jefferson 223 Terrell 129 Cherokee 428 Jenkins 97 Thomas 439 Clarke 7,208 Johnson 83 Tift 594 Clay 33 Jones 151 Toombs 292 Clayton 909 Lamar 136 Towns 80 Clinch 51 Lanier 29 Treutlen 44 Cobb 3,620 Laurens 518 Troup 461 Coffee 365 lee 78 Turner 140 Colquitt 459 Liberty 117 Twiggs 47 Columbia 194 Lincoln 94 Union 123 Cook 85 Long 19 Upson 304 Coweta 410 Lowndes 624 Walker 346 Crawford 45 lumpkin 107 Walton 567 Crisp 263 McDuffie 267 Ware 510 Dade 34 Mcintosh 49 Warren 65 Dawson 39 Macon 153 Washington 184 Decatur 294 Madison 453 Wayne 255 DeKalb Marion 53 Webster 24 Dodge Meriwether 192 Wheeler 54 Dooly 141 Miller 96 White 216 Dougherty 1 Mitchell 290 Whitfield 736 Douglas 247 Monroe 168 Wilcox 103 185 Montgomery 83 Wilkes :259 Echols 3 Morgan 289 Wilkinson 64 114 121 Worth 186 Elbert 469 Muscogee 1 Emanuel 271 Newton 439 Evans 86 Oconee 797 TOTAL

Source: Alumni Development Services Figure 7 DISTRIBUTION OF GEORGIA ALUMNI BY COUNTY OF G RGIA RESIDENCE FALL 1980

page

FACUL TV AND ALLIED PROFESSIONAL STAFF BY RANK AND TOTAl UN 30, 1980

Associate Assistant Subtotal Research Function Professor Professor Professor Instructor Lecturer

Administration 9 3 1 22 Student Welfare 1 4 8 15 Libraries 5 2 7 Instruction 480 427 460 159 1 50 General Research 11 4 15 Station 35 41 53 130 Extension Service 20 42 67 129 Extension and Public Service 7 7 26

TOTAL 563 534 604 169 10870 52

00 0 Associate Assistant Subtotal Function Professor Professor Professor Instructor Lecturer

Administration 9 8 3 Student Welfare 1 4 8 2 15 Libraries 5 2 7 Instruction 495 435 466 130 General Research 12 4 16 Station 42 38 48 1 129

Extension ServicE~21 48 61 130 Extension and Public Service 7 6 11 2 26 57

TOTAL 587 543 602 138 1.870 55

Research Associate Research Assistant Research Postdoctoral Associates, Public Service Associates, Public Service ee;d"ntc Public Service 3 Administrative Clinical Associates,

Source: Office of Institutional Research and Planning Years Professor No. % No. % % %

0-1 9 1 10 89 4.8 32 23.2 7.5 1-2 2 2.0 20 74 2.3 15 0.9 6.5 2-3 8 1 10 .8 78 3.0 5.2 6.3 3-4 17 2.9 8 3.3 97 6. 3 9.4 145 7.8 4-5 6 .0 20 3.7 56 90 5-6 7 1.2 22 4. 32 5.3 8 5.8 69 3.7 6-7 1 2.2 39 7.2 2.8 72 3.8 7-8 14 2.4 41 7.6 3 0.5 2 3.2 8-9 22 3.8 5.7 1.5 62 3.3 9-10 17 2.9 4.4 3 10-20 333 56.7 264 48.6 03 7.1 23.2 732 39.1 20-30 85 14.5 36 6.6 36 6.0 0.7 158 8.4 30-40 37 6.3 8 1.5 5 0.8 0 Over 40 7 1.2 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 7 0.4

TOTAL 587 100 543 100 602 100 138 00 100 Median Year 1967 1969 1977 1977 1970 of Appointment

A vg. Years of Service at UGA 14.8 10.8 5.9 5.1 10.1 Source: Office of Institutional Research and Planning FACUL TV BY YEARS OF SERVICE IN RANK UGA TOTAL UNI September 30, 1980

Associate Assistant Years Professor Professor Professor Instructor Total No. % No. % No. % No. % No. %

0-1 47 8.0 64 11.8 132 21.9 37 26.8 280 15.0 1-2 44 7.5 71 13.1 96 15.9 16 11.6 227 12.1 2-3 45 7.7 68 12.5 90 15.0 21 15.2 224 12.0 3-4 48 8.2 71 13.1 84 14.0 15 10.9 218 11.7 4-5 21 3.6 42 7.7 43 7.1 3 2.2 109 5.8 5-6 15 2.6 17 3.1 21 3.5 7 5.1 60 3.2 6-7 29 4.9 19 3.5 5 0.8 4 2.9 57 3.0 7-8 3 2.2 20 3.7 4 0.7 4 2.9 41 2.2 8-9 24 4.1 19 3.5 5 0.8 0 0.0 48 2.6 9-10 24 4.1 18 3.3 7 1.2 2 1.4 51 2.7 10-20 245 41.7 124 22.8 95 15.8 28 20.3 492 26.3 20-30 23 3.9 10 1.9 16 2.6 1 0.7 50 2.7 30-40 9 1.5 0 0.0 4 0.7 0 0.0 13 0.7 Over 40 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0

TOTAL 587 100 543 100 602 100 138 100 1,870 100 Median Year 1971 1977 1978 1978 1977 of Rank Avg. Years of Service In Rank at UGA 8.7 5.6 4.5 4.4 6.2

Source: Office of Institutional Research and Planning

81 RED E AND K

AGE Rank 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 Total In No. % No. % No. % No. % No. % No. %

Professor Tenured 0 32 89 169 95 235 97 125 95 561 96 Non-Tenured 0 4 11 8 5 8 3 6 5 26 4 Total 0 36 100 77 100 243 100 131 100 587 100

Associate Professor Tenured 0 132 79 207 90 0 96 29 00 478 88 Non-Tenured 0 36 21 24 10 5 4 0 65 12 Total 0 168 100 231 100 115 100 29 100 543 100

Assistant Professor Tenured 0 1 1 30 26 35 56 22 73 88 15 Non-Tenured 48 100 343 99 87 74 28 44 8 27 514 85 Total 48 100 344 100 117 100 63 100 30 100 602 100

Instructor Tenured 0 0 0 0 0 0 Non-Tenured 32 100 55 100 28 100 15 100 8 100 138 100 Total 32 100 55 100 28 100 15 100 8 100 138 100

Total Tenured 0 165 27 406 73 380 87 176 89 1,127 60 Non-Tenured 80 100 438 73 147 27 56 13 22 11 743 40 Total 80 100 603 100 553 100 436 100 198 100 1,870 100

Source: Office of Institutional Research and Planning

GRADUATE FACULTY MEMBERSHIP BY RANK TOTAL UNIVERSITY September 30, 1980

Total Faculty Graduate Faculty Membership %of %of Total %of Rank Number Total Number Graduate Faculty University Rank

Professor 587 31% 422 56% 72%

Associate Professor 543 29 272 36 50

Assistant Professor 602 32 64 8 11

Instructor 138 8 0

TOTAL 1,870 100% 758 100% 41%

Source: Office of Institutional Research and Planning

82 Professor

Law \Iv.

mni Burton Edmund Burke Feldman Stuart McCutchen

Jack Miller Ellis Paul Torrance Lafayette Geography Merle Charles Prunty, Jr. Parasitology Frank Alfred Hayes Reading Education Ira Edward Aaron Romance Languages John Clarkson Dowling Special Education Kathryn A. Blake Zoology William Burnham Cosgrove Zoology Robert Barclay McGhee Zoology Eugene Pleasants Odum Zoology Lawrence Richards Pomeroy

Alumni Foundation Distinguished Teaching Professor of Political Science George Steven Parthemos

David C. Barrow Professor of Mathematics George Adomian

General Sandy Beaver Teaching Professor of Art Vincent Jean Dieball Chemistry Richard Keith Hill English Charles lvey Patterson, Jr. Geology Gilles Olivier Allard History Warren F. Spencer Philosophy and Religion Robert Hyman Ayers Statistics and Computer Science Rolf E. Bargmann

D. W. Brooks Distinguished Professor of Agronomy John Frank McGill Food Science John Clifton Ayres Plant Pathology and Genetics Everett Stanley Luttrell

Ful E. Callaway Professor of II-+ Ml L Robert Enggass Ecology Eugene Pleasants Odum Law Verner Franklin Chaffin Molecular and Population Genetics Norman Giles

Thomas Reade Rootes Cobb Professor of Law Vaughn Charles Ball

Lamar Dodd Professor ofArt John Robert Beauchamp

Franklin Professor of Classics James Wagner Alexander

83 F 1

Professor

F Beranek

Bruce Perry Sentell, Jr. Norman Albert Polansky

Professor Biochemistry Milton Joseph Cormier Biochemistry Jean LeGall Biochemistry William Lawrence Williams Botany and Biochemistry Joe Lynn Key Chemistry Norman Louis Allinger nselor Education George Michael Gazda Entomology Murray Sheldon Blum Entomology Chester Mora Himel Geography Roy Allen Welch Geology Vernon James Hurst History Aubrey Christian Land History Victor Samuel Mamatey History Earl Frederick Ziemke Music Almonte Charles Howell, Jr. Political Science Robert Thomas Golembiewski Zoology Moises Agosin

Richard Brevard Russell Professor of History Gilbert C. Fite Political Science Charles Spencer Bullock, Ill

Shackelford Professor of Law John C. O'Byrne

David Dean

Food Science John Joseph Powers

J. M. Tull Professor of Accounting James Don Edwards

S. I Law James Ralph Beaird Psychology William Abbott Owens, Jr.

84 ~AlAQ BASED ON ACADEMIC YEAR 1971-72-1980-81

Rank l'.971-7/ 1(}7/-7.? 1913-74 1914-75 1976-71

*Appropriated $21,938 **Supplemented 22,412

1 1 1 1 1 1 ,1 1 1 16,784 1 1 1 '

1 1 1 13,861 1 1

00 "'IV.!t-' I'-"' 'Vij I 1"-' I ~ '-'-"""-4 1 13,381 1 13,867 1 1 tn Instructor 1 1 11 1 .. 1 1 11 1

All 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 15,903 1 1 1 1

Special U HIGHEST EARNED DEGREES OF FACUL TV AND ALLIED PROFESSIONAL STAFF BY RANK TOTAL UNIVERSITY September 30, 1980

Doctorate Master's Professional Baccalaureate None

Rank No. % No. % No. % IVa. % No. % No. %

Professor 528 90 38 6 16 3 5 1 0 587 1 Associate Professor 462 85 64 12 13 2 4 1 0 543 1 Assistant Professor 421 70 151 25 21 3 9 2 0 602 1 Instructor 11 8 109 79 3 2 13 9 2 2 138 1 ,. Subtotal 1,422 76 362 19 53 3 31 2 2 1,870 1

Lecturer 19 35 26 47 5 9 5 9 0 55 1 Research Associate 1 139 87 14 9 2 1 4 3 0 159 2 OJ Service Associate 15 17 64 73 4 4 5 6 0 88 1 O'l Librarian 2 4 50 96 0 0 0 100 Other Allied3 27 23 40 34 18 15 29 24 5 4 119 100 Subtotal 202 43 194 41 29 6 43 9 5 1 1

TOTAL 1,624 69% 556 24% 82 4% 74 3% 7 * 2,343 100%

1 Agricultural Research Scientists, Associate Research Scientists, Assistant Research Scientists, Postdoctoral Associates, Research ates, Research Scientists 2 Extension Associates, Public Service Associates, Public Service Assistants, Public Service Representatives 3 Administrative Staff, Clinical Pharmacy Associates, Physicians *Less than one percent Source: Office of Institutional Research and Planning RSITIES AWARDING H DEGREES TO MEMBE OF THE LTV 1

!Vo. per Institution Institutions

59 57

44 41 Hi

Indiana-Bloomington, Tennessee 31 30 Iowa, Iowa Columbia, 26 Auburn, Harvard 25 Chicago 23 Louisiana State-Baton Rouge 22 George Peabody 21 Duke, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania State 20 Texas-Austin 19 Texas A&M, Yale 18 Missouri-Columbia, Virginia Polytechnic Institute 16 Emory, Kentucky, Syracuse 15 Clemson, Washington 14 California-Davis, Oklahoma State 13 Columbia Teachers College, Kansas, Stanford 12 Maryland-College Park, Tulane 11 Colorado, Johns Hopkins, Northwestern, Rutgers, Vanderbilt 10 Alabama 9 California-Los Angeles, Case Western Reserve, New York, Princeton 8 Mississippi State 7 Arkansas, Colorado State, Kansas State, Washington State, Washington University 6 Arizona, Mississippi, Nebraska, Oregon, Oregon State, Rhode Island, Temple, Virginia 5 Brown, Connecticut, Cranbrook Academy, Massachusetts, -Greens­ boro, Rice, Rochester, , Southern Illinois, Southern California 4 ifornia-Riverside, East Carolina, London, Oklahoma, SUNY-Stony Brook, 3 and under

Summary of Highest Degrees

Professiona I 58 Baccalaureate 36 No Degree 2 TOTA 1,925 *Includes Professors, Associate Professors, Assistant Instructors, and Lecturers. Source: Office of Institutional Research and Planning

87 Minnesota

15 14 3 12 9 8 7 Kansas, Washington 6 College, George Peabody, Johns Hopkins, Kentucky, Maryland- Col Park, Syracuse, Virginia Polytechnic Institute 5 California-Davis, Missouri-Columbia, Oklahoma State, Stanford 4 Alabama, Clemson, Colorado, London, Massachusetts, Northwestern, Oregon State, Southern California, Texas A&M, Vanderbilt, Washington Uni-

3 Colorado State, New York, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, Washington State, Wayne State 2 California Technology, California-San Diego, Kent State, Massachusetts Institute of State, Nebraska, New South Wales, Temple, Tulane, State Boston, Boston College, Brandeis, Fordham, Georgia Institute Houston, Illinois Indiana Missouri-Rol New

3 1

and

88 STUDENT CRED FY 1979-80

Percent of Credit bv Academic Staff Level of Hours GTA

L 11

ACADEMIC F

00 FY 1979-80 <.0 Of 1-

Lower 1 17.7

1.6

1

L 1 UNIVERSITY EMPLOYEES BY OCCUPATIONAL CLASSIF

Employees As of 11/01/80 New Employees 1 - 10/80 Percent Occupational Classification* Full-Time Part- Time Total Full-Time Part- Time Total New

Executive/ Admin istrative/IVIa na ger ia I 537 2 539 16 0 16

Instructional Faculty 1,830 79 1,909 158 181

Professional Non-Faculty 1,046 37 1,083 163 5 168

Secretarial/Clerical 1,575 127 1,702 331 27 358 2 .03

Tech n ica 1/Paraprofessiona I 899 87 986 210 21 231 tO 0 Skilled Crafts 295 0 295 30 0 30 10.16

Service/Maintenance 1,024 38 1,062 167 2 169 15.91

TOTAL 7,206 370 7,576 1,075 78 1,153 1%

*Office of Civil Rights Occupational Classifications Source: Office of Institutional Research and Planning

%

$ 1%

$ 1

$ 19

8 $ 3.8% $ 8.3%

$ 2,580,622

19

$

* $ % $ $ 41 %

L $ 147,665 100.0%

F

92 Source 77-78

3.9

Endowment 0.1 * 0.2

than percent Source: Office of the Vice President Business and

PE D E BY SOURCE

ENDOWMENT 0.2%

53.1%

STATE OF GEORGIA

COUNTIES OF GEORGIA

93 R

Function of Total

$

$ 11 Institute

Resident 7.1 $

Public Service Cooperative $ 105,309 13.6% Marine Resources Extension Service 608,188 .3 Minority Business Enterprise 99,858 .1 Resident Instruction 11,646,632 5.8 Subtotal $ 39,459,987 19.8%

Academic Support $ 8,775,332 4.4% Libraries $ 5,519,566 2.7% Student Services $ 2,835,232 1.4% Institutional Support $ 12,572,571 6.3% Physical Plant $ 12,270,309 6.1% Scholarships and Fellowships $ 1,376,887 .7% $ 9.3%

L $ 199,966,571 100.0%

Source: President and Finance

94 Function 71-12 78-79 79-80

30.5% 30.6% 29.4% Research 16.9 16.9 17.6 7.5 17.9 17.9 18.9 19.1 19.9 Pub Iic Service 18.3 18.9 18.8 18.9 8.5 19.0 19.7 19.8 3.9 4.4 4.4 4.4 4.0 4.4 4.4 libraries 3.2 3.3 3.1 3.0 3.0 3.0 2.8 2.7 Student Services 1.8 1.4 1.4 1.4 .3 1.3 1.2 1.2 1.4 Institutional 5. 5.9 5.9 6.5 6.4 6.3 6.3 Plant 5.5 6.1 6.3 6.3 6.6 6.4 6.2 6.1 Scholarships and 3.8 .9 .4 .6 .6 0.7 0.7 8.8 8.9 8.6 8.7 8.9 9.3 9.2 9.0 9.0 9.3

Source: Office of the Vice President for Business and Finance

Figure 9 PERCENT DISTRIBUTION OF RES BY BUDGETARY FUNCTION FY 1979-80

SCHOLARSHIPS & FEllOWSHIPS 0.7%

29.4%

STUDENT INSTRUCTION

liBRARIES

19.9% RESEARCH

95 BUDGETARY DISTRIBUTION or OF G

Veterimuy Medicine Agricultural Cooperative Fiscal Resident Experiment Experiment Extension Year Instruction Station Station Service

1961-62 $ 5,500,080 $ $ 1,820,000 $ 326,000 $ 962-63 6,214,327 2,127,000 395,500 1963-64 7,476,951 2,213,602 436,000 1964-65 8,944,261 1 2,686,601 561,000 1965-66 1,206,998 2,748,577 2,919,889 656,000 966-67 13,181,671 3,224,929 742,000 1967-68 26,021,985 3,870,000 0,500 968-69 29,815,319 4,220,000 913,000 1969-70 31,692,460 4,754,000 1,148,000 970-71 36,049,661 5,088,189 4,958,640 1,267,790 1971-72 37,380,218 4,838,497 4,899,658 1 '189,252 1972-73 41,579,699 ,541 5,787,000 1,295,000 (0 O'l 48,873,806 8,01 ,000 7,490,041 1974-75 52,075,827 8,863,780 8,240,044 975-76 50,983,167 9,430,970 8,315,990 976-77 55,977,330 526,000 9,663,593 8,916,636 977-78 62,382,821 663,000 1 ,326,818 10,423,636 978-79 70,069,900 874,783 12,384,900 12,049,415 355,584 1979-80 77,303,591 ,466,436 13,933,259 13,553,125 382,490 1980-81 * 84,792,167 ,303,080 6,650 5,152,455 507,648

Education and Rural Center with in Resident Instruction

within Resident Instruction to FY 1978-79. Bu~neu established as new fund 1' 1978. Budget for the June 30. 1981.

(Decrea~l Source: Office of Vice President for Business and Finance Fees Amount

$

co --J

**

1 SOURCES OF GRANT AND CONTRACT INSTRUCT\01\\Al \=UI\\DS FY 1979-80

Other State Budgetary Federal of Unit 0£ OHDS NSF HRA ADAMHA Agencies Georqia Other Total

Academic Affairs $ $ $ $ $ $ 11 $ $ $ $ Agriculture 60,630 Arts and Sciences 159,600 106,960 106,939 87,007 Business Administration 12,689 12,689 Education 757,474 599,165 140,766 1 Georgia Museum of Art 9,492 Graduate School 29,140 40 Home Economics Institute of Ecology 17,934 Institute of Government 39,163 Journalism 50,000 Law Pharmacy 6,270 39,370

C.D Public Safety 00 Social Work 128,845 46,040 Special Studies 268,823 Student Affairs 639 2,000 2,639 University Libraries 2,972 2,972 Veterinary Medicine 230,701

TOTAL $ 1,228,671 $ 728,010 $301,070 $ 270,071 $ 152,979 $ 303,601 $ 2,984,402 $1 $ 192 $ %of Total 37.7% 22.3% 9.2% 8.3% 4.7% 9.3% 91.6% 6.0% 2.4%

*Federal funds provided to state agencies for agency distribution as grants within the state have been tabulated as federal in nature.

OE Office of Education, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services OHDS Office of Human Development Services, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services NSF National Science Foundation HRA Health Resources Administration, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services ADAMHA Alcohol, Drug Abuse, and Mental Health Administration, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services OTHER FEDERAL AGENCIES Federal agencies other than the five listed STATE OF GEORGIA Agencies of the State Government OTHER Sources other than those identified above

Source: Office of Instructional Institutes, Graduate School sou

%of %of Fiscal Year

1969-70 $ 12,924,642 48% $ 1 52% $ 26,687,392 1970-71 1 1 26,528,487 1971 11,139,096 1 57 25,858,308 1972-73 11 41 1 1973-74 1 1 61 3111 1974-75 1 41 20,237,485 34,091 1975-76 13,1 61 33,741 14 1 1 41 7 59 36,345,123 1977-78 18,947,405 45 23,305,036 55 42,252,441 1978-79 56 16,625 1979-80 23,106,211 43 30,292,789 57 53,399,000

Source: Office of the Vice President for Research

SOURCES OF BUDGETED SERVICES FUNDS FOR RESIDENT INSTRUCTION FY 1969-70-1979-80

%of %of Fiscal Year Outside Funds Total State Funds Total Total

1969-70 $ 1,246,933 31% $ 2,835,258 69% $ 4,082,191 1970-71 1,529,409 33 3,167,542 67 4,696,951 1971-72 2,800,507 48 3,044,079 52 5,844,586 1972-73 3,330,582 51 3,196,881 49 6,527,463 1973-74 4,203,192 55 3,430,250 45 7,633,442 1974-75 4,389,310 57 3,338,337 43 7,727,647 1975-76 5,145,831 61 3,243,653 39 8,389,484 1976-77 4,578,050 56 3,616,648 44 8,194,698 1977-78 6,093,426 60 4,053,223 40 10,146,649 1978-79 6,539,118 57 4,934,103 43 11,473,221 1979-80 7,350,364 58 5,280,365 42 12,630,729

*I amounts Education both prior to and after inclusion in Resident Instruction but does not include funds internally generated by the Georgia Center for Continuing Education. Source: Office of the Vice President for Research

99 $ $

1

$ $ $ $ $ *

$ $ $ %

00 OF R F G FY 1979-80

DOD& Unit HEW NSF DOE USEPA General Research $ $ $ $ $

Business Administration Education Forest Resources Home Economics

Medicine Center for Iso tope Studies Center Institute for Behavioral Research 93 Institute for Natural Products Institute of Institute of Resources

_,0

Total General Research $ $ $ $ $ Stations $ $ $ $ $

TOTAL $ $ $ $

"Includes Hatch Stennis Funds

EW

NSF DOE

NASA , Civil Defense , Office of Naval

Other and other Federal r~n~>ndP~

Source: Office of the President for Research SOURCES OF GRANT AND CONTRACT RESEARCH FUNDS FY 1979-80

Budgetary Unit Federal State Other Total

General Research Agriculture (Resident Instruction) $ 55,315 $ $ 6,000 $ 61,315 Arts and Sciences 6,505,872 9,750 583,791 7,099,413 Business Administration 24,763 12,536 37,299 Education 14,169 14,169 Forest Resources 372,688 ·- 22,000 23,133 417,821 Home Economics 344,003 12,500 356,503 Pharmacy 173,059 10,868 183,927 Veterinary Medicine 1,356,426 211,358 366,939 1,934,723 Center for Applied Isotope Studies 119,850 119,850 Computer Center 819,471 819,471 Institute for Behavioral Research 89,193 6,840 96,033 Institute for Natural Products Research 97,589 97,589 Institute of Ecology 3,967,852 14,844 3,982,696 Journalism 9,039 9,039 Marine Institute 30,545 173,612 204,157 Marine Sciences Program 758,800 758,800 Natural Resources Institute 8,738 6,000 20,730 35,468 Vice President for Research (Administration) 113,430 53,879 167,309 Total General Research $ 14,837,594 $ 249,108 $ 1,308,880 $ 16,395,582 Agricultural Experiment Stations $ 5,271, 174* $ 383,950 $ 1,055,505 $ 6,710,629

TOTAL $ 20,1 08,768 $ 633,058 $ 2,364,385 $ 23,106,211 %of Total 87% 3% 10% 100%

*Includes $3,175,034 Federal Hatch Act and Mcintyre Stennis Funds Source: Office of the Vice President for Research

102 Service State~

Generated

lture $ $ $ $ Arts and Sciences Botanical Business Administration

Environmental Design Georgia Center (Auxiliary not included) Home Institute of Community and Area Development 534,737 1 Institute of Government 723,038 106,366 Institute of Higher Education 246,527 International Development 42,740 8,438 51,178 Journalism and Mass Communication 28,136 28,136 Law 88,644 122,288 333,330 544,262 Marine Science 12,870 12,870 Pharmacy 25,950 7,875 33,825 Public Safety 98,170 98,1 Social Work 193,235 193,235 University Press 218,949 483,797 702,746 Veterinary Medicine 216,669 1,119,267 1,335,936 Vice President for Academic Affairs 24,983 2,299 27,282 Vice President for Services 265,385 55,398 320,783 Subtotal: Resident Instruction $ 5,280,365 $2,298,724 $ 17,443 $ 14,1 Marine Extension Service $ 522,305 $ 9 $ $ 608,024 Cooperative Extension Service $ 13,553,125 $ 14,439 $ 9,953,448* $ 23,521,012

TOTAL $ 19,355,795 $ $ 1 $ 38,325,568 %of Total 50.5% 6.3% 43.2% 100.0%

*Includes $4,707,618 Federal Smith-Lever funds Source: Office of the Vice

103 K

$

R

Total Year Contributors Contributors Gifts*

1945 1,760 $ 36,282 1964 1 $ 184,912 1946 2,596 1 1 1 1 1 1947 3,263 1 11,003 210,884 1948 1967 1 1,494 1 1 180,893 1950 1 1 1 1 1952 1953 1 7,141 1 1 1

$

104

pick-up and delivery

buses for students staff. Seven routes p.m., with a night route from 6:00p.m. to 10:30

Duplicating is a camera-ready material. Located in the basement of the Business Services ilding, the center provides pick-up and delivery service, in to services such as folding, binding, drilling, copy reducing, and collating. Services are available departments and units listed in the University or Student Chart of Accounts.

Office Machine Maintenance has factory-trained technicians who repair and maintain reprographic equ and typewriters for University Departments.

Uniform Store, located in Hardman Hall, serves as a source of military uniforms ROTC

Bookstore is a retail facil specializing in textbooks, paperback books, educational supplies, art supplies, monogrammed novelties, and convenience items. Unusual books not carried in stock may be procured through the special order depart­ ment.

Services seeks to satisfy the food service needs of students, faculty, and staff a wide variety of wholesome foods served at reasonable prices. Four dining facilities-Bolton Hall, Snelling Hall, Oglethorpe Hall, and the Bulldog Room-are main­ tained the Food Services for its customers. In addition, the McWhorter in athletic programs. The University Food Services also University groups.

recreational facility available to students, The 18-hole championship greens, and are through 8:30a.m. and and idays from 7:30a.m. until sundown. The Pro Shop line of golfing equipment and supplies.

n:>!"Tr>~PIJT provides the following printing services to departments or Student Chart of Accounts: type setting, offset and a I range of related services.

106 contractors Services.

1'HE BUREAU OF ED Cl)nsu as requested State Department of 1:o local school

THE R R problems of applied optimization theory, and computer mathematics, with an applied able at the doctoral level. Modern applied mathematics has a strong ment of the physical and biological sciences, economics, psychology, and ter has contributed some advances in methods available to areas. also provides analytical and computer methods for solutions or approaches to diverse It is supported by state funds, governmental grants, fou and

THE COOPERATIVE EXTENSION SERVICE acts as an educational service arm for the Uni­ versity, providing information and training to Georgia citizens. Staff members, representing both the University of Georgia College of Agriculture and the U.S. Department of Agriculture, present educational programs in agriculture, home economics, community and rural develop­ ment, and 4-H and youth development. Programs are based on research from Experiment Sta­ tions and coordinated at the local level by County Extension Directors in response to needs articulated by local citizens.

The Rural Development Center, located at Tifton, is an educational and public service unit of the Cooperative Extension Service the University Georgia College Agricu The program of the Center is directed toward the realization of four principal objectives: agricul­ tural and forest production efficiency; advanced marketing techniques and utilization of farm and forest commodities; comprehensive community development; and manpower training and development.

THE DIVISION OF RESEARCH: COLLEGE OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION serves the State through research projects on economic and and the Southeast. It provides a current collection business and economic helps faculty members develop proposals and obtain and offers editorial and administra- tive support to faculty engaged in business and economic research.

The Division publishes papers and monographs; and of monographs on the Georgia economy. In conducts a program State and regional economic analysis through the Center Regional Studies and the Georgia Economic Forecasting Project.

THE GEORGIA CENTER FOR CONTINUI~~G EDUCATI plans and implements education­ al programs in response to the diverse needs of adult Georgians, as manifested individually or

107 and educa-

the the best contemporary reviews. Intended for the informed, lines by drawing a wide range and the musical and visual arts.

R was established in 1 to promote and coordinate instruc- of aging. The Center faculty, composed of some departments/units within the University administers graduate level. Special programs are planned to pro­ gerontology as a multi-disciplinary study.

10 R a multidisciplinary research organization, efforts of faculty, staff, and graduate students from various significant social and behavioral problems. The I 8 R provides funds from government agencies or private founda­ state and regional experts in an expanding number

PRODUCTS RESEARCH carries out a broad range of naturally occurring substances of plant origin, with particular and the Southeast. Projects involve research on alkaloids, agents, the development of new synthetic methods, spectroscopic methods to structure elucidation problems. characterization, and elucidation of chemical structures of new treatment of disease.

AND AREA DEVELOPMENT brings the resources of of Georgia's communities by providing technical assistance commissions, state agencies, and units of iocai is represented, including adult education, arts admin- commu education, criminal justice, ecology, geography, program takes many forms: consultation and workshops, conferences, seminars, individually designed task force investigations, and research studies. In addition, ICAD publishes reports of staff members' books on of interest, audiovisual materials, and three periodicals.

THE INSTITUTE OF CONTINUING JUDICIAL EDUCATION OF GEORGIA is housed at the University Georgia School Law. It plans and conducts approximately twenty seminars year development judges Georgia courts and

108 in Universitv of educational agencies and organizations dealing with all phases

E OF to size relevant aspects of the physical, and social as as law and humani- ties, to solve complex natural resource management problems. The Institute conducts research and University programs and to ( 1) development, use, and management biological use, and manage- ment water and land resources; energy-resource and management; (4} climatology; and {5) natu resource analysis. The Institute cooperates closely with

109 to govern- resources.

was established in 1953 to serve as a !ty Research ecology to provide an understanding of energy through the marshes, and factors regulating ecosystem.

The Marine Extension Service helps to solve problems related to the State's marine resources. The Marine Resources Center on Skidaway Island is the major marine educa­ for schools and colleges in the State. At the Brunswick Extension Station, ists work directly with the fishing and seafood processing industry to solve problems resource management and utilization.

The Georgia Sea Grant Program, part of the National Sea Grant College Program, was established in 1 1. In an approach roughly analogous to that of the Land Grant System in working with agriculture, Sea Grant promotes the wise use of marine re­ sources through a coordinated program of research, education, and advisory services. Sustained excellence in all three areas of activity earned Sea Grant College status for the in 1980, when it became the fifteenth institution in the nation to attain that

THE OFFI OF CAMPUS PLANNING assists the University administration in planning the physical development of The University of Georgia and its related agencies. It plans, coordi­ nates, and implements construction projects both on and off campus and serves as liaison agent between the University and the Board of Regents' Office of Facilities. More specifically, this office helps departments conceptualize proposed projects; places these projects in priority · and assists in site determination, selection of architects and engineers, preparation of programs, and final and development of master plans.

OF R ON SER CES manages four large major hardware systems, all mterconnected. 1 wo 1!:$lVI 370ii 58's serve as primary support for the of Georgia's research, and administrative programs; the CDC OMEGA 480-2 supports Library Automation System; the CDC CYBER 70/74 is support machine Georgia Computer Network.

OCIS is divided into three large functional areas to serve the broad user community-the Com­ puter Services Division, the Information Services Division, and the Special Projects Division. The Computer Services Division is composed of three departments responsible for systems programming, the operation of all computers and associated hardware, and the provision of assistance to all individuals who use the facilities. The Information Services Division is respon- literature from machine-readable data bases, Library Automation

110 census The Special Projects manages

E OFFI OF DEVELOPMENT AND UNIVE RELATIONS is responsible for the planning, coordination, and conduct of all programs involving alumni and friends of the Univer- sity, including institutional public and fund The Office of the Vice President embraces three functional units. The Office works Sod- and various and college groups to conduct year-round programs involving alumni () friends throughout the United States. The Development staff is concerned with all aspects of fund-raising for University and works closely with the various schools and colleges, their alu friends. University of Georgia Foundation, an independent incorporated group created to assist University, handles endowments and unrestricted funds received from alumni, friends, and corporate donors. The Office of University Relations gathers and disseminates information about the University to members of the University com­ munity as well as to the various publics of the institution. An Office of ~dministrative Services supports the work of all offices under the Vice President.

fHE OFFICE OF INSTITUTIONAL RESEARCH AND PLANNING has as a primary respon- the collection, organization, and analysis of data to serve all aspects of the operation and management of the University. In addition to student, faculty, staff and space utilization analyses, this unit conducts studies related to projected needs, program objectives, and efficien- cy and effectiveness in the use institutional resources.

fHE OFFICE OF INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT serves as a liaison between The Univer­ sity of Georgia and ministries of foreign governments as well as developing educational institu­ tions in other countries. It seeks ways to answer academic and technological needs of develop­ ing nations who ask for assistance in the areas of agriculture, veterinary medicine, basic sciences, business administration, community and area development, ecology, education, environmental design and planning, forestry, home economics, pharmacy, rural development, social sciences, and social work. Services are delivered directly to potential recipients or through organizations such as the U.S. Agency for International Development, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, consortia such as the South-East Con­ sortium for International Development, and private consulting groups.

THE OFFICE OF RESEARCH ADMINISTRATION has the responsibility of general admin­ istration of sponsored research accounts on behalf of The University of Georgia and the Univer­ sity of Georgia Research Foundation, Inc., and also of several State-funded units administered through the Office of the Vice President for Research. Expenditure accounting is provided for several sponsored programs, research institutes, and other research support functions admin­ istered through the Office of the Vice President for Research. The University's research service shops and Central Research Stores are administered by the Office of Research Administration.

THE POULTRY DISEASE RESEARCH CENTER carries out basic and applied research pro­ grams in many of the diseases of domestic poultry which are of economic importance to the poultry industry of Georgia. Diagnostic, laboratory, and consultative services are provided to individuals and groups in all phases of poultry production.

THE PUBLiC SAFETY DiViSiON, through the Director of Public Safety, administers function­ al, educational, and community service programs which respond to hazards of life and property arising out of activities in the University community. Crime prevention and control are carried out by the University of Georgia Police Department headed by a Chief of Police and staffed by some fifty sworn police officers with full Peace Officer authority. The UGA Police Depart­ ment personnel conduct the Northeast Georgia Police Academy to provide basic, in-service, and advanced/specialized training for city, county, and state law enforcement agencies in twenty­ four counties of northeast Georgia. The Traffic Safety Department provides traffic analyses, parking control, accident prevention, and pedestrian safety programs.

111 The SBDC's are encompassed 1 learning programs conducted by the Division of Continuing Education; 2) one-on-one cou ing, applied research, and economic provided the Division of Business Information Services; 3) emphasis on I through the work of staff in the success for minority business ownership through the Business Development; and I International Trade and Development

THE UNIVERSITY OF G RGIA I laboratory for teaching and research in the Piedmont plant communities, as I as for study and enjoyment from 8:00a.m. to dusk daily.

Short courses other and group tours arranged on arrangement for meetings and r-n,n-to,rar'"

the autonomous affords one of the largest academic resources for research Southeast.

The Libraries provide information for the University's and activities. They conduct approximately 500,000 circulation transactions annual 25,000 Interlibrary Loan requests, including a large number tions within the State. Libraries, 97 week ing for 1,300 in

112 Added Material FY

0

collected Libraries manuscripts, broadsides, photographs, sl filmstrips, motion res, sound recordings, audio and video tapes, music scores, and sheet

E UNIVE OF G R RAL HISTORY, which contains the most extensive collection Georgia natural and specimens, is one of the largest natural history museums in the Southeast. The Museum comprises six extensive research collec­ tions: Anthropology (3.5 million artifacts); Botany (135,000 plant specimens); Entomology (250,000 insects, several million mites); Mycology (25,000 fungi); Geology (mineralogical, economic geology ore, fossil vertebrate and invertebrate fossil collections); and Zoology ( 125,000 vertebrates, 5,000 invertebrates, 5,000 reef corals).

THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA PRESS was established in 1938 as the book-publishing arm of The University of Georgia faculty. Since then it has published over 500 books in a variety of areas by authors not only from The University of Georgia but from other American institutions as well. The Press publishes between 30 and 35 books per year for the benefit of both scholars and educated laypersons. During the past four years over 240,000 copies of its books have been sold to a wide audience throughout the world.

THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA RESEARCH FOUNDATION, INC., administers the spon­ sored research program for the University. All research proposals (except certain Agricultural Experiment Station proposals going to USDA) are submitted through and awards made to the Research Foundation. In turn, the Research Foundation sub-contracts with the University to conduct the research activities. It provides project development assistance to faculty members and is a source of direct support for research through its Departmental Research Support activ­ ities, Grants Program, and Contingency Fund.

THE UNIVERSITY OF GE GIA RESEAR PARK, a center for research and develop­ ment, provides services and educational facilities for University, State, federal, and private organizations. Activities in the Research Park are related to applied studies in animal and plant pathology, agricultural engineering, bacteriology, botany, entomology, chemistry, pharmacy, physics, gtmiogy, food science, pouitry science, forest management, work utilization, water pollution, zoology, ecology, community and area development, and research and personnel training in the area of mental retardation.

Facilities Located at the Research Park (Controlling Agency) Agricultural Research Facilities (UGA) Botany and Biochemistry Plant Growth Research Facilities (UGA) Cobalt 60 Irradiation Facility (UGA) Environmental Research Laboratory (Federal) Georgia Retardation Center, Athens Branch (UGA and State)

113 Institute Ecology Facility ( Northeast Georgia Area Planning and Development !try Disease Research (UGA) Psychology Animal Behavior Laboratory (UGA) Richard B. Russell Agricultural Research Center (Federal) Riverbend Research Laboratories (UGA) Testing and Analysis Southeast Poultry Research Laboratory ( ) Southern Regional Poultry Genetics Laboratory (UGA)

1HE VETERINARY MEDICAL DIAGNOSTIC ASSISTANCE RATORIES at Athens ~nd Tifton handle over specimen submissions each year. The laboratories are "'~"" 1."~""'1'1 ~nd equipped to give diagnostic assistance to the Georgia Department of Agriculture, the live­ ~tock industry, and animal owners of Georgia through a policy of referral from local veteri- 11arians.

1HE VETERINARY MEDICINE EXPERIMENT STATION coordinates and conducts research

114

UN BY

of

9 $ 113

$

17 18,817,000 17 6,812,000 Subtotal $

210 $ 1

Source: Office of Institutional Research and Planning

NUMBER OF ROOMS BY BASIC ROOM TYPE ATHENS CAMPUS

Room Use Number

Classrooms 281 Teaching Laboratories 360 Laboratories 11167 Offices 4,070

Source: Office of Institutional Research and Planning

UTILIZATION OF INSTRUCTIONAL FACILITIES FALL 1980

% Student Stations Occupied When Average Class Is In Room

Classrooms 27 62% 31 Teaching Laboratories 22 66

Source: Office of Institutional Research and Planning

116 OF

Years

$

6

1 - 1 14 6.80

- 1 17 1

1 - 1 1 1 1,089,500 15 14.00**

1966- 1 31 1,633,000 23 19.60

- 1 1,284, 100 18 29.30

1 - 1 336,600 4 41.08

L $ 1 7,259,600 100% $ 17.82

117 Initial Initial Building Name Occupancy Building Name Occupancy A.cademic 1831 LeConte Hail 1938 A.derhold: Education 1971 Library, Main: llah Dunlap Little 1952 A.gricultural Engineering Center 1966 Library, Main Addition 1974 A.gricultural Extension 1937 Library, Science: Boyd Graduate Studies 1968 A.lumni House 1943 Livestock-Poultry 1960 A.nimal Quarters Annex 1974 Lucy Cobb ( 1858) * 1954 A.utomotive Center 1971 Lucy Cobb-Carriage House ( 1908) * 1954 Baldwin Hall 1938 Lucy Cobb-Gym (1905)* 1954 Barrow Hall 1911 Lucy Cobb-Margaret Hall {1898)* 1954 Barrow Hall Lab 1936 Lucy Cobb-Seney-Stovall Chapel (1885)* 1954 Barrow Hall Addition 1952 Lumpkin House 1850 Benson (1946)* 1979 Lustrat House 1847 Biological Sciences 1960 Meigs Hall 1905 Biological Sciences Addition 1972 Memorial Hall 1923 Bishop House 1942 Military: Army ROTC 1931 Bolton Hall 1963 Miller Plant Sciences 1972 Boyd Graduate Research Center 1968 Moore College 1874 Brooks Hall: Business Administration 1924 New College 1823 Brooks Hall Addition 1972 Old College 1806 Business Services 1967 Park Hall 1938 Business Services Annex 1969 Park Hall Addition 1970 Candler Hall 1901 Peabody Hall 1913 Central Research Stores 1969 Personnel Services 1951 Chapel 1832 Phi Kappa Hall 1834 Chemistry 1960 Physical Education 1928 Chemistry Addition 1971 Physical Education Addition 1969 Child Development Lab 1940 Physical Plant 1958 Child Development Lab Addition 1970 Physical Plant Addition 1970 Clark Howell 1937 Physics 1959 Coliseum 1964 Physics Addition 1969 Conner Hall 1908 Poultry Disease Research 1958 Conner Hall Renovation 1975 President's House (1856) * 1949 Dairy Science 1939 President's House Renovation 1956 Dawson Hall 1932 Printing 1977 Dawson Hall Addition 1971 Psychology 1968 Demosthenian Hall 1824 Psychology Auditorium 1968 Denmark Hall: Environmental Design 1901 Psychology Animal Labs 1968 Dudley Hall 1942 Psychology Animal Lab Annex 1969 Ecology 1974 Public Safety 1966 Fain Hall 1942 Public Safety Addition 1976 Family Housing Office 1970 Recording for the Blind 1967 Fine Arts 1941 River Bend Research Labs 1974 Food Science 1959 Sanford Stadium 1929 Forest Resources 1938 Sanford Stadium Expansion 1967 Forest Resources Additions 1968 Snelling Hall 1940 Garden Club of Georgia (1850) * 1950 Snelling Hall Renovation 1969 Geography, Geology, Speech 1960 Snelling Hall Addition 1979 Georgia Center for Continuing Education 1956 Soil Testing Lab 1970 Georgia Center Addition 1966 Soule Hall 1920 Georgia Museum of Art 1907 South Thomas Street i967 Gilbert Health Services 1942 Stegeman Hall 1943 Gilbert Health Services Addition 1973 Stegeman Hall Addition 1953 Greenhouse Complex: Research Park 1969 Terreil Hall 1904 Griggs Hall 1942 Tucker Hall 1961 Hardman Hall: Air Force ROTC 1918 University Bookstore 1968 Hoke Smith Annex 1940 Veterinary Medicine 1949 Home Management Houses- 4 1940 Veterinary Medicine Addition: ICM 1973 Industrial Arts 1971 Veterinary Medicine Addition 1979 Joe Brown Hall 1932 Visual Arts 1961 Journalism 1968 Visual Arts Annex 1951 Journal ism Auditorium 1968 Waddel Hall 1807 Law School 1932 Wilson Hall: Pharmacy 1964 Law School Addition 1967 *Date constructed Source: Office of Institutional Research and Planning

118 $ $ $

1 $ $ $ $ 1 1966

1 1966 750,000 1

119 1

Date Funds Funds

$

1

Library 1 3,559,000 5,633,000 Business Services 1968** ,000 ,000 Forest Resources 1968 640,000 1,276,000 1,916,000 Golf Pro Shop 42,500 42,500

Addition to Main Lab 1968 52,200 52,200 Soil Tillage Lab 1968 63,000 63,000 Psychology 1 94,000 94,000 University Bookstore 1968 850,000 Classroom Bu 1 1 6,150,000 Physics Addition 1969 128,100 128,100 Snelling Hall Renovation 1969 426,000 426,000 House Renovation 1969 148,000 148,000 Greenhouse Complex (5) 1969 65,000 50,000 115,000 Central Research Stores 1969 150,000 150,000

Annex 1 1 146,000 K::~nn::~ . "-rr-- Fraternity Renovation 1969 119,000 119,000

1 100,000 Academic Building Addition and Renovation 1969 160,000 160,000 Business Services Annex 1969 105,000 105,000 Bulldog Room Renovation 1969 128,000 128,000

**Occupancy Date

120 CONT'D: MAJOR BUILDING PROJECTS COMPLETED 1960-1980 ALL UNIVERSITY

University Total Completion Federal & State Other Project Project Date Funds Funds Funds Costs

Women's Physical Education Addition 1969 $ 333,000 $ 667,000 $ $ 1,000,000 Park Hall Addition 1970 333,000 667,000 1,000,000 Child Development Lab Addition 1970 147,000 295,000 442,000 Soil Testing Lab 1970 263,000 263,000 ADP Center Renovation 1970 225,900 225,900 Steam Distribution System Addition 1970 386,500 386,500 Married Student Housing Office/Warehouse 1970 216,400 216,400 Physical Plant Addition 1970 126,000 126,000 Barrow Hall Renovation for Electron Microscope Lab 1970 155,200 155,200 Avian Medicine Clinics Lab 1970 100,000 100,000 Auditorium Building (Plains) 1970 150,500 150,500

Subtotal 1966-1970 $6,027,000 $ 31,973,300 $3,872,000 $ 41 ,872,300

Home Economics Addition 1971 $ 309,200 $ 984,100 $ $ 1,293,300 Aderhold (Education) 1971 1,550,000 3,112,000 4,662,000 Industrial Arts 1971 190,000 384,000 574,000 Chemistry Annex 1971 766,600 1,672,800 2,439,400 Administration Building, Rural Development Center '~ (Tifton) 1971 720,000 720,000 Beef Cattle Barn 1971 160,000 160,000 Greenhouse, Phase 1, Addition to Biological Sciences 1971 71,000 51,000 122,000 Demonstration Bu i !ding (Rock Eagle Park) 1971 135,000 135,000 Headhouses (3), College of Agriculture 1971 53,400 62,100 115,500 Paving and Site Work, Rural Development Center (Tifton) 1971 50,000 50,000 Business Services Annex and Personnel Services Renovations 1971 170,000 170,000

"' 121 1

$ $ $

1

1 1

122 MAJOR LD 1 980 ALL

Date Funds Funds

1 $ $ $ $

1 1 1

Renovations

1 690,600 690,600

1974 411,600 411,600 Swine Research Center 1974 382,900 382,900 General Research Building 1974 1,872,600 1,872,600 Site Development Vet. Med. 1974 145,400 145,400 Main Library Annex 1974 5,188,000 5,188,000 REA Cottage, Rock Eagle 4-H Center {Eatonton) 1974 (State Insurance) 71,600 Water Distribution System (Griffin) 1974 41,000 41,000 Clark Howell Hall Renovation 1974 80,000 80,000 Botanical Gardens Waterline 1974 37,100 37,100 Animal Quarters Annex 1974 257,800 60,000 317,800 Livestock Sales Facility, Phase II (Tifton) 1974 Joe Brown Renovation 1974 175,000 175,000 Boar Testing Station 1974 Dairy Research Building 1 Research 1,200,000 Rooilrlinn ... ""- ""- -~"~"':1 I 10UO,OUU 1,605,600 Livestock Pavilion, N.W. Branch 1 687,600 Pike County irrigation System (Bledsoe Farm) 1975 101,700 101 Pike County Farm Buildings (Griffin) 1975 123,800 123,800 Dairy Science Center 1 1 1

123 CONT'D: MAJOR BUILDING PROJECTS COMPLETED 1960-1980 ALL UNIVERSITY

University Total Completion Federal & State Other Project Project Date Funds Funds Funds Costs

f>esticide Building (Tifton) 1975 $ $ 54,700 $ $ 54,700 f>esticide Building (Griffin) 1975 70,800 70,800 University Bookstore Addition 1975 71,000 71,000 Conner Hall Renovation 1975 2,608,500 2,608,500 Botanical Garden Headquarters Building 1975 (Callaway Foundation) 646,400 646,400 Sewer Collection Facility, Phase II (Skidaway) 1975 439,000 439,000 Dairy Cattle Facility (Tifton) 1975 705,400 705,400 Poultry Research Center 1975 1,919,000 1,919,000

Subtotal 1971-1975 $7,157,900 $ 41 ,678,900 $ 1,123,200 $ 49,960,000

Pesticide Building (Plains) 1976 $ $ 50,000 $ $ 50,000 Pesticide Building (Midville) 1976 50,000 50,000 Fine Arts Renovation 1976 1,064,400 1,064,400 Rural Development Center, Phase II 1976 1,469,700 1,469,700 Plant Sciences Casework 1976 154,000 154,000 Pesticide Building (Blairsville) 1976 50,000 50,000 Shellfish Mariculture (Skidaway) 1976 455,000 455,000 Public Safety Addition 1976 306,000 306,000 Gilbert Health Services Renovation 1976 82,500 82,500 Research Building, Georgia Experiment Station 1976 1,559,000 1,559,000 Main Steam Power Plant Addition 1977 590,000 590,000 Electrical Distribution System, Phase I 1977 1,162,300 1,162,300 College of Vet. Medicine HVAC Renovation 1977 603,900 603,900 Ecology Building Addition 1977 544,600 544,600

124 R ILD 980 UNIVE

Federal & State Date

$ $ $

1 Distri- System, Phase II 1978 218,900 218,900 Underground Fuel Storage 1978 1,600 211,600 Pens, Animal Diagnos- tic Lab (Tifton) 1978 40,000 40,000 Sanford Stadium West 1978 (Athletic Association) 140,000 140,000 Wastewater Plant (Tifton) 1978 11,700 11,700 Equine Building 1979 (Private Gift) 76,500 76,500 Vet. Medicine Addition 1979 6,213,500 6,213,500 Baseball Building (Foley Field) 1979 (Athletic Association) 36,700 36,700 Central Food Warehouse 1979 588,300 588,300 Aflatoxin Laboratory 1979 450,000 450,000 Snelling Hall Addition 1979 (Auxiliary Surplus Funds) 787,000 787,000 Center Appl Isotope Studies 1979 0,000 210,000 1980 (Athletic Funds) 316,000 316,000

60,000 (Rock Eagle) 10 1 0

1980 773,003

Subtotal 1976-1980 $ 773,003 $ 1 51,500 $ 1,502,610 $ 19,427,113

L 1960-1980 $ 16,231,903 $ 117,607,700 $ 6,497,810 $ 140,337,413

Source: Office of Campus Planning

125 PROJECTS CURRENTLY UNDER CONSTRUCTION

Estimated University Total Completion Federal and State Other Project Project Date Funds Funds Funds Cost

Academic Building (C-6) 6/81 $ $ 3,734,600 $ $ 3,734,600

Addition to Law School (C-7) 6/81 1,689,000 1,689,000

Feed Processing and Metabolism Center (BR 18-04) 12/79 211,800 211,800

Library Building Skidaway Island (BR 11-06) 12/79 (CPRC)* 247,500 25,000 272,500

Seney-Stovall Chapel Lucy Cobb Institute Exterior Restoration N/A 50,000 50,000 100,000

Wastewater Treatment System, Tifton (BR 10-13) 9/80 68,390 68,390

Sutton Dining Hall Phase II (BR 10-19) 5/81 600,000 600,000

General Classroom Building Elevator (BR 10-20) 5/81 166,000 166,000

Student Center Athens (C-47) 5/82 5,000,000 5,000,000

Addition to Sanford Football Stadium 9/81 (Athletic Association) 11,270,000 11,270,000

TOTAL $ 297,500 $ 11,519,790 $ 11,295,000 $ 23,112,290

*CPRC: Coastal Plains Regional Commission Source: Office of Campus Planning

AUTHORIZED PROJECTS BEING PLANNED

Source of Estimated Project Funds Project Budget

Georgia Museum of Art Unfunded $ 10,000,000

Phase II, Renovation Private Seney-Stovall Chapel and Lucy Cobb Institute Federal 92,566

Parking Decks, Main Campus (Planning only) State 5,000,000

TOTAL $ 15,092,566

Source: Office of Campus Planning

126 Clarke 581

Related Areas Clarke 567 Total Acres 1

Station Areas Clarke Cattle Research Farm Clarke Cattle Research Farm 125 Research Farm 813 Beef Cattle Research Farm 148 Plant Sciences Oconee 90 Plant Sciences Oconee 341 Total Acres

Station Areas Spalding 943 Cowan Farm Spalding 66 Double Cabins Farm Spalding 170 Pike Farm Pike 81 Bledsoe Farm Pike 151 Nix Property Pike 53 Georgia Mountain Branch Station Union 401 Northwest Georgia Branch Station Floyd 905 Northwest Georgia Branch Station Gordon 329 Central Georgia Branch Station Putnam 1,605 Central Georgia Branch Station Morgan 95 Total Acres 4,799

Coastal Plain Station Main Areas Tift 1,890 Bowen Farm Tift 75 Gibbs Farm Tift 308 Ponder Farm Tift 201 Ponder Farm Worth 104 Range Grazing Station (Alapaha) Berrien 2,804 Extension- Research Center (Attapulgus) Decatur 423 Southwest Georgia Branch Station Burke 469 Southwest Georgia Branch Station Sumter 420 Americus Plant Materials Center Sumter 13 Total Acres 6,707 Cooperative Extension Service Rock 4-H Center Putnam 1,461 4-H Camp Newton 145 Total Acres 1,606

School of Forest Resources Bishop F. Grant Memorial Forest Morgan 305 Bishop F. Grant Memorial Forest Putnam 12,154 Hardman Forest Jackson 156 Satilla River Forest Camden 1,516 Watson Springs Forest Greene 604 Whitehall Forest Clarke 750 Nathaniel D. Arnold Memorial Clarke 26 Nathaniel D. Arnold Memorial Oconee 20 Total Acres 15,831 TOTAL Acres of University-Held Land 33,784 Source: Office of Campus Planning

127 <( () a "'r:::: a.. ·-.<:::"'"' <( ::;«:O>- 0 ::2E - .... (!)"( <( !i Cl,) 0~ .... -"'0:;, :2- ::l (!J ;;l..\ .~ a: :~ !© u.. 0 Q;ll I I.U "'"' (!J ·~·~ ;:,~ u.. 0 >- 1- if) a: I.U > z :::) Figure 10 LEGEND

Academic/0120, 7-A Demosthenian Hall/0021, 7-A Kappa Sigma Fraternity/2233, 3-M c~Plant Sciences, Miller/1 061, 3-L 6. Aderhold Hall/1060, 3-K Dudley Hall/ 1051 , 3-J 6. Law School/0043, 6-C Post Office, Self Service/2637, 6-H Administrative Data Processing 6. Ecology Building/1 033, 3-J Learning Service Center/2612, 5-N Poultry Disease Research/2300, 3-C Center/0110, 5-A Environmental Design/0044, 7-D LeConte Hall/0053, 5-D Practice Field/2615, 6-N Agricultural Engineering Center/1090, Fain Hall/1053, 3-J Legion Pool/2605, 7-1 Psychology/0064, 5-E 3-M Family Housing Office/2238, 2-P 6. Library, Main/0054, 6-D Psychology Auditorium South/0063, 5-E Agricultural Extension/1 043, 6-M Family Housing University Village 1, 2 & 6. Library, Science/1621, 7-H Public Safety/0180, 6-G Agronomy Farm/3050, 1-B 3/2221, 2-N Lipscomb Hall/2208, 7-H Recording for the Blind/2614, 8-F Alpha Chi Omega Sorority/2218, 6-L Family Housing University Village Livestock-Poultry/1 013, 4-H Reed Hall/0280, 5-F Alpha Epsilon Pi Fraternity/2232, 3-1 4/2240, 2-P Lumpkin Street, 1088 S./2119, 6-L Russell Hall/2212, 9-K Alpha Psi/2255, 4-0 Fine Arts/0060, 6-F Lumpkin Street, 1238 S./2030, 6-M Rutherford Hall/121 0, 5-J

Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity/2234, 3-H Food Science/1020, 4-H Lumpkin Street, 1242112 S./2627, 7-N \~Richard Russell Agricultural Research Alumni House/1661, 5-N Forest Resources/1044, 3-K Lumpkin Street, 1240 S./2628, 6-M Building/2646, 1-D Automotive Center/1634, 2-F Forestry Science Laboratory/1550, 2-L Lumpkin Street, 1238Vz S./2629, 6-M Sanford Stadium/0686, 4-G Baldwin Hall/0050, 5-D Forest Science Laboratory Annex/1511, Lumpkin Street, 1242 S./6-N Sigma Chi Fraternity/2205, 7-F Baptist Student Union/2603, 7 -E 2-K Lumpkin Street, 1260 S./2635, 6-0 Sigma Delta Tau Sorority/2220, 7-P Barrow Hall/1021, 4-1 Garden Club of Georgia/0650, 7-D Lumpkin Street, 1280 S./2636, 6-0 Sigma Nu Fraternity/2237, 3-H Baseball Field House/2616, 5-P General Research/2125, 2-F Lumpkin House/1012, 4-H 6. Snelling Hall/1643, 4-K Biological Sciences/1 000, 4-H Geography, Geology, Speech/1002, 5-H Lustral House/0632, 6-B Soule Hall/1220, 5-J 1'.) Bishop House/0032, 6-B Geology Hydrothermal Laboratory/0090, Lutheran Student Center/261 0, 6-K S. E. Environmental Laboratory/2698, c.o Boggs Hall/2216, 7-J 5-H Mary Lyndon Hall/1221, 5-K 2-C Bolton Hall/2210, 7-1 6. Georgia Center/1640, 5-L McWhorter Hall/1280, 3-N S. E. Poultry Research Laboratory/2699, 6. Boyd Graduate Studies/1023, 4-J Georgia Museum of Art/0631, 6-B Meigs Hall/0024, 8-B 2-E Brumby Hall/2213, 10-M Georgia Retardation Center/2639, 3-E Mell Hall/2209, 7-1 Southern Regional Poultry Genetics 6. Business Administration/0055, 6-D 6. Gilbert Health Center/0640, 7-C Memorial Hall/0670, 5-F Laboratory/4051, 1-B Business Services/011 0, 6-A Greenhouses, P.P., Hort., Agr./2410, 2-F Military, Army ROTC/0061, 6-E Stegeman Hall/0080, 6-G Business Services Annex/0121, 6-A Greenhouse Botany/2415, 2-F Milledge Hall/0271, 4-E Swine Arthritis Research/2320, 3-D Catholic Student Center/2613, 7-P Greenhouse A-N Pha. Hort./1340, 4-L Moore College/0025, 8-B Tau Epsilon Phi Fraternity/2207, 7-G Candler Hall/0031, 7-C Greenhouse 1-N. Pha. Pat./1350, 4-L Morris Hall/2204, 7-E Tennis Court/2622-2623, 3-0 Chapel/0022, 7-B Greenhouse 2-N Pha. Pat./1351, 4-L Myers Hall/1222, 5-K Terrell Hall/0023, 6-B 6. Chemistry/1 001, 5-H Greenhouse 3-N. Pha. Hort./1352, 4-L New College/0030, 7-B Thomas Street Annex/2601, 5-A Child Development Laboratory/1652, 4-L Griggs Hall/1 052, 3-J Oglethorpe House/2217, 6-K Thomas Street, Shed/2602, 5-A Chi Phi Fraternity/2200, 8-C Hardman Hall/1031, 4-J Old College/0130, 6-C Thomas Street, South/2600, 5-A Chi Psi Fraternity/2202, 8-D Hercules Laboratory/1632, 2-J 6. Park Hall/0056, 6-E Track Field/1662, 6-P Church Hall/2215, 7-J Hill Hall/2214, 6-1 Payne Hall/0270, 4-E Tucker Hall/1250, 2-J 6. Clark Howell Hall/0290, 6-H Hodgson House/2609, 6-J Peabody Hall/0042, 6-C University Bookstore/0671, 5-F Coliseum/1654, 5-M Hoke Smith Annex/1042, 5-M People's Park/6-N Veterinary Medicine Complex/1070, 3-M 6. Connor Hall/1011, 4-H Home Management Houses/1246, 4-L Personnel Services/0620, 6-B Veterinary Farm/2351, 1-N

Creswell Hall/2211, 8-J lndustri~lArts/1 082, 3-L Pharmacy/1 041, 4-K Visual Arts/0040, 6-B Dairy Research Building/2840, 2-M Intramural Field/2607, 2-N Phi Delta Theta Fraternity/2206, 7-G Visual Arts Annex/0026, 6-B Dairy Science/1050, 3-K Joe Brown Hall/0250, 7-E Phi Kappa Hall/0020, 7-A Waddel Hall/0041 , 6-C 6. Dawson Hall/1 010, 5-J Journalism/0062, 5-E Physics/1003, 5-1 Wesley Foundation/2611, 6-M Delta Chi Fraternity/2235, 3-G Journalism Auditorium North/0065, 5-E Physical Plant/1130, 3-1 Women's Physical Education/1 030, 4-J Delta Phi Epsilon Sorority/2219, 7-P Kappa Alpha Fraternity/2201, 8-C Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity/2203, 8-D