tn 2090 .G38 1972 -a . 3

Fact Book 1972 I The University of Geor-gia THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA , Georgia 30601

ce of the Provost

November 1, 1972

Dear Colleague:

In 1969 THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA FACT BOOK was developed as a convenient source of accurate information regarding the many facets of our University community. Since that time, it has provided a ready source of basic factual information for use in answering common questions about the University.

This 1972 edition of THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA FACT BOOK is being distributed to each faculty member. We hope that the information which it contains will continue to be helpful to you and will enable you to appreciate the diversity and complexity of your University and will enhance your under­ standing and pride in its progress. Your comments and suggestions on this publication will be welcome.

Sincerely yours,

~!10~ S. W. Pelletier, Provost

Fact Book 1972 The University of Georgia

Edited by Michael B. Bunch Office of Institutional Research and Planning PREFACE

The 1972 Fact Book was compiled and edited in an effort to present to the faculty and administration a concise and objective source of information about the University of Georgia for the year 1971-72. The amount of detail on any one topic is necessarily limited by the scope of this publication but we feel that its purpose; i. e., that of a handy reference, has been well served. The few changes in this year's edition are part of a contin­ uing effort to make the Fact Book more useful.

Various offices throughout the University cooperated with the editor in compiling the information contained herein. Their efforts greatly facilitated the job of editing, and for their cooperation I am indeed grateful.

The Fact Book is a service to the University by the Office of

Institutional Research and Planning. Corrections, criticisms, and sug­ gestions are welcomed and should be sent to the editor at the Office of

Institutional Research and Planning.

Michael B. Bunch

ii TABLE OF CONTENTS

Page

List of F vi

I. ADMINISTRATION Central Administrative Officers 2 Colleges and Schools, Dates of Establishment and Deans 2 Institutes and Service Units 3

II. ADMISSIONS New Freshmen Fall 1963-72 6 Summary of New Freshmen by High School 7 Summary of New In-State Transfers 8

III. ENROLLMENT Cumulative Summer School Enrollment 1963-72 10 Fall Quarter Enrollment by Class Levels 1963-72 11 Fall Quarter Enrollment by Schools and Colleges 1963-72 15 Fall Quarter Enrollment by Sex 16 Resident/Non-Resident Distribution of Campus Enrollment 16 Cumulative Campus Enrollment by States 17 Foreign Students Fall 1972 18 Distribution of Foreign Students by Country 18

IV. DEGREES CONFERRED Total Degrees Conferred by School or College 1963-72 20 Graduate Degrees Conferred 1963-72 22 Types of Degrees Conferred Over the Past Ten Years by Year and School 24 Undergraduate and Professional Degrees Conferred by Year, School, and Sex 1963-72 29

V. OTHER STUDENT RELATED INFORMATION Class Sizes, Sections, and Credit Hours 34 Distribution of Honor Students by Major 35 Honors Program Enrollment Numbers and Section Numbers 36 Distribution of Honors Students by Class Fall Quarter 1972 36 Course Exemptions Through Departmental Advanced Placement Tests Summer/Fall 1971 37 Honors Program Degrees 37 Social Fraternities 38 Cumulative Fraternity Scholastic Averages 39 Social Sororities 40 Cumulative Sorority Scholastic Averages 41 National Honorary Fraternities 42

iii Graduate Fellows and Assistants 43 University Health Services 44 Career Planning and Placement Services 47 Financial Aid Programs--University Administered 48 Financial Aid Programs--Private and State Administered 49 Georgia Athletic Association 50 Georgia Head Coaches 50 Athletes at the University of Georgia Fall Quarter 1972 51 Academics Pertaining to Scholarshipped Athletes 51 University of Georgia Athletic Facilities 52 Southeastern Conference Championships Won by Georgia 53 Department of Student Activities/Union 54

VI. FACULTY Faculty by Rank - Total University 56 Resident Instruction Faculty 57 Schedule of Faculty Salaries 57

VII. LIBRARY Library Statistics 60 Circulation Statistics 61 Special Collections 61

VIII. MUSEUM 64

IX. RESEARCH Source of All Research Funds 68 Source of Research Funds from Grants and Contracts 71 Source of Grant and Contract Research Funds 74

X. RESEARCH AND SERVICE UNITS Alumni Relations 78 Bureau of Educational Studies and Field Services 80 Cooperative Extension Service 81 The Georgia Center for Continuing Education 82 The Institute for Behavioral Research 85 The Institute of Community and Area Development 86 The Institute of Comparative Medicine 87 The Institute of Continuing Legal Education 88 The Institute of Ecology 89 The Institute of Government 90 Institute of Higher Education 91 The Institute of Natural Resources 92 Instructional Resources Center 93 Office of Computer Activities 94 Public Safety Division 95 Research Park 97 The Service Program of the College of Business Administration 98 University Press 99

iv XI. REVENUE Sources, Amounts, and Percentages of Revenue July 1, 1971-June 30, 1972 102 Expenditures by Amounts and Percentages 103 State Appropriations for Various Services 104 Percentage Distribution from Various Sources of Revenue for Resident Instruction 1962-63 to 1971-72 105 State of Georgia Appropriations 1962-63 through 1971-72 106

XII. AUXILIARY ENTERPRISES University Bookstore 108 University Food Service 109 University Golf Course 110 University Printing Department 110 Central Duplicating Service 111 Central Office Supply 111

XIII. PHYSICAL FACILITIES University of Georgia Main Campus 114 Major Academic Buildings and Date of Initial Occupancy 115 Major Building Projects Completed 1960-1970 117 Major Building Projects Completed 1971-72 121 Projects Currently Under Construction 123 Authorized Projects Being Planned 124 Land Holdings 125 Residence Halls 126 Fraternity and Sorority Buildings 127 Married Housing Units 128 Residence Summary 129 Campus Bus System 130 Maintenance and Operating Personnel for University Facilities 131

v LIST OF FIGURES

Figure Page

1 Total Undergraduate Enrollment Fall Quarter 1963-72 12

2 Total Professional Enrollment Fall Quarter 1963 72 13

3 Total Graduate Enrollment Fall Quarter 1963-72 14

4 Total Degrees Conferred 1963-72 21

5 Graduate Degrees Conferred 1963-72 23

6 Masters Degrees Conferred 1963-72 27

7 Doctoral Degrees Conferred 1963-72 28

8 Baccalaureate Degrees Conferred 1963-72 31

9 Professional Degrees Conferred 32

vi Administration CENTRAL ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICERS

Fred C. Davison President

S. llill iam Pelletier Provost

A. L Kleckner Assistant Vice President for Instruction

Robert C. Anderson Vice President for Research

S. Eugene Younts Vice President for Services

Allan W. Barber Acting Vice President for Business and Finance

COLLEGES AND SCHOOLS DATE OF ESTABLISHMENT AND DEAN

DATE DEAN

College of Arts and Sciences 1801 Victor S. Mamatey, Acting Dean

School of Law 1859 James R. Beaird, Acting Dean

School of Pharmacy 1903 Kenneth L. Waters

College of Agriculture 1906 Henry W. Garren

School of Forest Resources 1906 Allyn M. Herrick

College of Education 1908 Joseph A. Williams

Graduate School 1910 Hardy M. Edwards, Jr.

College of Business Administration 1912 William C. Flewellen, Jr.

School of Journalism 1915 Warren K. Agee

School of Home Economics 1933 Emily Quinn

College of Veterinary Medicine 1946 Richard B. Talbot

School of Social Work 1964 Charles A. Stewart

School of Environmental Design 1969 Hubert B. Owens

2 INSTITUTES AND SERVICE UNITS

DIRECTOR

Bureau of Educational Studies and Field Services H. Smith

Cooperative Extension Service Charles P. Ellington

Georgia Center for Continuing Education Thomas W. Mahler

Institute for Behavioral Research William A. Owens

Institute of Community and,Area Development Ernest E. Helvin

Institute of Comparative Medicine Richard B. Talbot

Institute of Continuing Legal Education James W. Curtis

Institute of Ecology Eugene P. Odum

Institute of Government Morris W. H. Collins, Jr.

Institute of Higher Education Cameron L. Fincher

Institute of Natural Resources E. Leonard Cheatum

Instructional Resources William Worth McDougald

Office of Computer Activities James L. Carmon

Research Park William 0. Burke

Public Safety Division Edward T. Kassinger

Services Division, College of Business Administration W. Wray Buchanan

University Library W. Porter Kellam

University Press Ralph H. Stephens

3

Admissions NEWFRESHMEN

Fall 1963-72

Fall Quarter Applied Admitted Enrolled

1963 3,567 2,830 2 08L1-

1964 3,981 3,246 2,285

1965 4,685 3,873 2,536

1966 5,150 4,013 2,512

1967 5, 207'1< 3,691'"' 2 '482"'<

4,416'1< 77"'( CJ'\ 1968 5' 6 72i< 2' 6

1969 5 ,484'1< 4' 159"'< 2 ,456"'<

1970 5,600 4,291 2,486

1971 5,176 3,923 2,265

1972 5,442 4,211 2 '502''d(

* Does not include Summer--approximately 200 enrolled each summer ** Does not include 51 irregular students

Source: Admissions Office Georgia High Schools Which Contributed Ten or More Students to the Freshman Class at the University of Georgia Fall Quarter 1972

Clarke Central 121 Dublin 14 Salldy Springs 56 Therell () 14 Hellderson (DeKalb) 46 Avondale 13 Peachtree (DeKalb) 46 Darlington () 13 NoTth Springs (Fulton) 45 Forest Park 13 Briarcliffe (DeKalb) 44 Hardaway (Columbus) 13

La~eside (DeKalb) 44 Marist (Atlanta) 13 St. Pius X (Atlanta) 33 Stephens County 13 Tucker 28 Berkmar (Gwinnett County) 12 Ridgeview (Fulton) 26 Jonesboro 12 Central (Macon) 24 Lakeshore 12 Chamblee 22 Newnan 12 Dykes (Atlanta) 22 Northeast (Macon) 12 Clarkston 20 Northside (Warner Robins) 12 Druid Hills 20 Rockdale County 12 Shamrock (Decatur) 20 F. T. Wills (Marietta) 12 Campbell (Smyrna) 18 Baker (Columbus) 11 Marietta 18 Columbia (DeKalb) 11 North Fulton 18 Cross Keys (DeKalb) 11 Gainesville 17 Lovett (Atlanta) 11 Griffin 17 McEachern (Marietta) 11 Headland (Fulton) 17 Richmond Academy 11 Westminister (Atlanta) 17 Roswell 11 Wheeler (Cobb) 17 Sequoyah (DeKalb) 11 Monroe Area 16 Stratford Academy (Macon) 11 Northside (Atlanta) 16 West Rome 11 Stone Mountain 16 Grady (Atlanta) 10 Warner Robins 16 Madison County 10 Westside (Augusta) 16 Savannah County Day School 10 Lafayette 15 All Other In-State 909 Dalton 14 Total In-State 2,116 Total from High Schools Out-of-State 437 TOTAL FRESHMEN 2,553

7 SUMMARY OF NEW IN-STATE TRANSFERS* FALL 1972

College Transferred From Male Female Total

A.B.A.C. 89 24 113 Armstrong State College 16 10 26 Albany Jr. College 29 18 47 Brewton Parker College 11 3 14 Brunswick Jr. College 23 17 40 Columbus College 14 11 25 Clayton Jr. College 22 9 31 DeKalb College 60 57 117 Dalton Jr. College 29 7 36 Emory 19 10 29 Emory/Oxford 5 8 13 Floyd Jr. College 5 6 11 Georgia Tech 48 3 51 Georgia Southwestern College 6 8 14 Georgia State College 29 27 56 Georgia College 8 18 26 Georgia Southern College 33 38 71 Gordon Military College 15 3 18 Gainesville Jr. College 54 24 78 Augusta College 29 12 41 Kennesaw Jr. College 24 18 42 Mercer University ll 15 26 Middle Georgia College 111 44 155 Macon Jr. College 15 4 19 North Georgia College 9 20 29 Reinhardt College 6 7 13 South Georgia College 21 5 26 UGA/Athens 9 11 20 Valdosta State College 13 22 35 West Georgia College 54 41 95 Young Harris College 15 18 33

Other In-State 43 44 87

Total In-State 875 562 1,437

Total Out-of-State 367 330 697

TOTAL 1,242 892 2,134

* All schools listed with 10 or more transfers

8 Enrollment CUMULATIVE SUMMER SCHOOL ENR.OLLMENr 1963-72

School 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1

Agriculture 232 285 276 280 337 332 313 210 212

Arts & Sciences 1,551 1,603 1' 728 1,794 1,796 1 '914 2,072 1,973 2,032

Business Admin. 773 808 880 954 1,053 1 '133 1,313 1,291 1,129 Education 962 1,191 1,397 1,288 1,505 1,552 1,420 1,333 1,358

Environmental Design 43 36

Forest Resources 113 116 50 59 95 107 129 134 131 t-' 0 Home Economics 167 166 155 166 167 192 200 198 200

Journalism 165 167 187 235 318 326 325 285 304

Law 68 72 48 57 50 92 111 162 158

Pharmacy 93 132 174 206 186 208 214 179 219

Veterinary Medicine 56 63 53 48 53 58 57 59 60

Graduate 1,752 1,888 2,234 2,580 2,809 3,422 3,516 3,986 4,383

Total 5,932 6,491 7,182 7,667 8,369 9,336 9,670 9,853 10,222 10

Source: Registrar's Reports FALL QUARTERENROLLMENT BY CLASS LEVELS 1963-72

1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1

Freshman 2,211 2,470 2,703 2,806 2, 714 3,317 3,000 3 238 3,084 3

Sophomore 2,058 1,857 2,393 2,872 2,573 2,851 2,828 2,646 2,994 3 Junior 2,302 2,439 2,383 3,302 3,538 3,934 3,844 3,766 3,972

Senior 2,032 2,321 2,628 2,706 3,530 3,645 3,809 3,790 3,876

Graduate 1,133 1,101 1,397 1, 725 2,157 2' 718 3,182 3,489 3, 791 3

1st Year Professional 202 283 286 350 375 369 413 473 496 t-' t-' 2nd Year Professional 225 180 221 207 252 258 275 312 363

3rd Year Professional 179 217 206 250 234 288 259 297 326

4th Year Professional 56 63 52 49 52 54 60 60 58

Irregular 154 163 205 193 188 218 218 215 272

TOTAL 10,552 11,094 12,474 14,460 15,613 17,652 17,888 18,286 19,232 20,

Source: Registrar's Reports F 1

TOTAL UNDERGRADUATE ENROLLMENT~~ FALL QUARTER 1963-72

15,000

14,000

13,000

12,000

11 '000

10,000

9,000

0 i:il ....:I 5 8,000 !l§ i:il ~ 7,000 ~ ~ 6,000

5,000

4,000

3,000

2,000

1,000

0

1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972

* Professional students not included (Law, Pharmacy, and Vet. Med.)

12 Figure 2 TOTAL PROFESSIONAL ENROLLMENT* FALL QUARTER 1963-72

1,500

1,400

1,300

1,200

1,100

1,000

900

A fj ....:! 800 0 ~ r.::l ~ 700 p:)

~ 600

500

400

300

200

100

0

1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 * Law, Pharmacy, and Veterinary Medicine

13 Figure 3 TOTAL GRADUATE ENROLLMENT FALL 1963-72

4,500

4,000

3,500

3,000

2,500

2,000

1,500

1,000

500

0

1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972

14 FALL QUARTERENROLLMENT BY SCHOOLSAND COLLEGES 1963-72

School 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 19

Agriculture 720 746 803 899 904 857 679 657 730 7

Arts & Sciences 3,877 4,159 4' 6..58 5,230 5,282 5,921 5,680 5,884 6,348 6 ,. Business Administration 1' 777 1,858 2,091 2,389 2,486 2,803 2,767 2,670 2,608 2 Education 1,360 1,445 1,633 1,943 2,285 2,657 2, 728 2,658 2,705 2,596

Environmental Design 137"~ 151 167 201 1-' v. Forest Resources 211 202 211 288 343 341 364 328 284

Home Economics 357 312 350 391 393 470 487 487 526 5 9

Journalism 420 494 562 733 850 890 840 807 822

Law 222 217 203 246 283 326 401 499 568

Pharmacy 235 325 348 396 395 421 378 409 419 1 Veterinary Medicine 240 235 218 220 235 248 245 247 264 368

Graduate School 1,133 1,101 1,397 1' 725 2,157 2, 718 3,182 3,489 3,791 3 991

TOTAL 10,552 ll '094 12,474 14,460 15 '613 17,652 17,888 18,286 19,232 20.284 - * Formerly included in Agriculture

Source: Registrar's Reports FALL QUARTER ENROLLMENT BY SEX 1963-72

Year Male Percent Female Percent Total

1963 6,643 63.0 3,909 37.0 10,552 1964 6,975 62.9 4,119 37ol 11' 094 1965 7,797 62.5 4,677 37.5 12,474 1966 9,027 62.4 5,433 37.6 14,460 1967 9,565 61.3 6,048 38.7 15,613 1968 10,732 60.8 6,920 39.2 17,652 1969 10,867 60.8 7,021 39.2 17,888 1970 10,992 60.1 7,294 39.9 18,286 1971 11,457 59.6 7' 775 40o4 19,232 1972 11,929 58.8 8,355 41.2 20,284

RESIDENT & NON-RESIDENT DISTRIBUTION OF CAMPUS ENROLLMENT* 1963-72

Georgia Out-of-State Foreign Total Year Students Students Students Students

1962-63 9,042 1,879 129 11,050 1963-64 10,062 2,128 140 12,330 1964-65 10,404 2,407 124 12,935 1965-66 11,483 2, 779 144 14,406 1966-67 12,636 3,389 183 16,208 1967--68 14,643 3,708 130 18,481 1968-69 15,643 3,878 278 19,799 1969-70 16' 774 4,025 394 21,193 1970-71 15,881 3,685 453 20,019 1971-72 17,228 3,430 443 21,101

·k The numbers on this table represent the number of individuals attending the University at some time during the years listed.

Source: Registrar's Reports

16 CUMULATIVE CAMPUS ENROLLME·NT BY STATES

1969-70 1970-71 1971-72 1969-70 1970-71 1971-72

A1aban:Vl 154 124 127 Montana 0 0 0

Alaska. 3 2 2 Nebraska 1 4 4

Arizoo.a 3 5 5 Nevada 0 1 4

Arkansas 7 12 9 New Hampshire 5 8 6

California 66 74 64 New Jersey 141 152 132

Colorado 6 6 13 New Mexico 9 7 6

Connecticut 46 52 41 New York 264 266 264

Delaware 11 8 12 N. Carolina 408 325 329

D. C. 11 15 18 N. Dakota 4 3 2

Florida 723 595 481 Ohio 69 76 77

Georgia 16' 774 15,881 17,228 Oklahoma 8 8 16

Hawaii 2 4 6 Oregon 3 4 3

Idaho 1 4 4 Pennsylvania 99 100 97

Illinois 63 78 75 Rhode Island 6 7 8

Indiana 35 36 28 s. Carolina 698 599 531 Iowa 15 18 16 s. Dakota 5 4 3

Kansas 10 14 10 Tennessee 189 172 192

Kentucky 51 61 58 Texas 57 63 58

Louisiana 73 64 64 Utah 7 6 5

Maine 6 5 5 Vermont 6 7 2

Maryland 108 120 118 Virginia 420 373 352

Massachusetts 78 60 47 Washington 11 4 3

Michigan 35 34 31 w. Virginia 24 22 24

Minnesota 9 10 11 Wisconsin 17 19 18

Mississippi 39 37 29 Wyoming 0 1 1

Missouri 19 16 19 TOTAL 20,799 19,566 20,658

Source: Registrar's Report

17 FOREIGN STUDENTS Fall 1972

Male Female Total aumber 310 90 400

Percent 77,5 22.5 100.0

DISTRIBUTION OF FOREIGN STUDENTS BY COUNTRY Fall 1972

.Australia 5 Japan 9 :Belgium 3 Korea 21 :Brazil 3 New Zealand 2 Canada 11 Norway 2 China 60 Peru 3 Columbia 6 Philippines 4 Cuba 18 Pakistan 9 Egypt 8 Spain 2 England 15 Sweden 1 Finland 1 Taiwan 7 France 9 Thailand 20 Germany 8 Venezuela 14 1 Other African 16 Hong Kong 9 Other Asian 18 Iceland 3 Other European 14 India 48 Other Latin American 16 Indonesia 2 Other 5 Iran 19 Ireland 6 Israel 2 TOTAL 400

18 Degrees Conferred TOTAL DEGREES CONFERREDBY SCHOOL OR COLLEGE 1963-72*

School 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 Total

Agriculture 188 200 243 236 253 328 300 246 226 251 2' 71

Arts & Sciences 480 584 723 809 730 884 1,037 1,023 1,023 040 8,333

Business Adm. 432 480 525 598 596 655 720 770 873 786 6,435

Education 306 360 403 436 466 668 786 855 849 968 6,097

Environmental Design 30 35 30 95

Forest Resources 77 56 65 59 58 62 94 124 10 9 801

N Home Economics 76 90 88 78 74 119 111 130 114 16 1,047 0 Journalism 85 125 123 149 156 255 256 268 235 276 1,928

Law 43 63 74 51 61 56 83 84 109 1 761

Pharmacy 56 50 83 102 120 106 134 1 6 126 130 1,023

Vet" Medicine 43 57 62 51 48 52 57 61 59 5 547

Graduate 394 439 503 629 740 957 1,121 1,496 2,201 1,910 10, 90

TOTAL 2,180 2,504 2,892 3,198 3,302 4,142 4,699 5,203 5,957 5,851 39,928

'fc The number of degrees conferred each year is determined by the sum of the June plus August s for the particular year.

Source: Registrar's Reports TOTAL DEGREES CONFERRED 1963-72 6000

5400

~800

4200

3600

Cf) li.l ~ li.l 0 3000 0""" gg p::) ~ 2400

1800

1200

600

0 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972

21 GRADUATEDEGREES CONFERRED1963-72

Degrees 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 Total - Ph. D. Male 32 36 41 59 77 78 114 135 170 179 921 Female 1 0 4 10 6 8 7 16 12 35 99 Total 33 36 45 69 83 86 121 151 182 214 1,020 Ed. D. Male 12 17 23 28 26 28 40 55 73 2 374 Female 5 7 10 16 14 9 14 26 17 30 148 Total 17 24 33 44 40 37 54 81 90 102 522 D. P. A.* Male 1 1 Female 0 0 Total 1 1

N Masters N Male 219 253 266 310 367 517 513 609 708 770 4 532 Female 126 129 159 206 250 317 433 480 581 653 3 334 Total 345 382 425 516 617 834 946 1,089 1,289 1,423 7 866

Ed, S. -td~ Male 69 272 1 412 Female 106 368 99 573 Total 175 640 170 985 Total Graduate Degrees Male 263 306 330 397 470 623 667 868 1,223 1,093 6,240 Female 132 136 173 232 270 334 454 628 978 817 4 154 TOTAL 395 442 503 629 740 957 1,121 1,496 2,201 1,910 10,394

* Doctor of Public Administration conferred for the first time in August 1972.

*"~~Education Specialist conferred for the first time in August 1970. Source: Registrar's Report GRADUATE DEGREES CONFERRED 1963-72

1500

C/) r.:l r.:l ~ r.:l 0 1200

0""" p:: r.:l ~ ~ 900

600

300

0

1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972

23 TYPES OF DEGREES CONFERREDOVER THE PAST TEN YEARS BY Y"E.L\RMID SCROOL

Type of Degree 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 Total

Graduate

Ph. D. 33 36 45 69 83 86 121 151 182 214 1~020 Ed. D. 17 24 33 44 40 37 54 81 90 102 .522 D. P. A. 1 1 Total Doctorates so 60 78 113 123 123 175 232 272 317 1 543 M.A. 46 so 69 79 83 101 118 145 120 1 7 978 M. S. 78 90 89 100 96 139 120 127 164 156 1 159 M. F. A. 16 12 20 22 28 35 23 41 36 39 272

I'V M. Mus. Ed. 7 2 3 8 4 14 8 14 17 16 93 +' M.A. M. 3 3 M. L. A. 0 1 2 0 0 2 5 2 4 4 20 M. Ag. Ext. 0 0 5 3 2 7 4 3 5 4 33 M. For. Res. 5 2 5 2 1 6 5 8 11 2 47 M. Art Ed. 1 2 3 1 4 8 12 7 5 15 58 M. Edu. 172 193 211 253 316 450 515 532 652 788 4,082 M. Pub. Adm. 1 6 22 20 45 i1-0 134 M. Bus. Adm. 16 14 9 23 36 33 42 112 142 120 547 M. Ace. 0 7 5 6 9 6 11 19 10 20 93

Continued on next page Cont 'd.: TYPES OF DEGREESCONFERRED OVER THE PAST TEN YEARS BY YEAR AND SCHOOL

Type of Degree 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 Total

M. Soc. Work 14 32 23 54 53 64 46 286 M. Home Ec. 3 6 4 5 5 4 7 4 11 0 49 L. L. M. 2 3 3 8 Total Masters 344 379 425 516 617 834 946 1,089 1,289 1,423 7,862 Ed. S. 175 640 170 985 Total Graduate 394- 439 503 629 740 957 1,121 1 /+96 2,201 1' 910 10,390 Agriculture B. S. A. 163 167 214 195 211 257 256 219 201 224 2,107 B. S. A. E. 9 14 14 20 17 35 22 27 23 15 196 B. S. A. & B. S. L. A. 16 19 15 21 25 36 22 154 N VI B. S. E. H. 2 12 14 Total 188 200 243 236 253 328 300 246 226 251 2 471 Arts & Sciences A. B. 247 328 387 451 429 488 575 576 589 594 4 664 B. S. 160 188 230 246 207 267 322 289 270 283 2,462 B. S. Chern. 7 6 16 5 3 14 9 11 3 5 79 B. F. A. 49 50 75 86 74 82 99 105 134 127 881 B. Mus. 11 10 11 19 14 28 29 34 26 30 212 B. S. Physics 6 2 4 2 3 5 3 8 1 1 35 Total 480 584 723 809 730 884 1,037 1,023 1,023 1,040 8.333

Continued on next page Cont'd.: TYPES OF DEGREES CONFERREDOVER THE PAST TEN YEARS BY YEAR AND SCHOOL ------· Type of Degree t963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 Total

Business Admin. B. B. A. 432 480 525 598 596 655 720 70 873 6 6 435 Education B. S. Ed. 306 360 403 436 466 668 786 855 849 ,097 Environmental Design B. L. A. 30 35 30 Forest Resources B. S. F. R. 77 56 65 59 58 62 94 24 107 801 Home Economics B. S. H. E. 76 90 88 78 74 119 111 130 114 1 7 1.047 N 0\ Journalism A. B. J. 85 125 123 149 156 255 256 68 235 76 1.928 Law L. L. B. 43 63 74 51 61 56 348 J. D. 83 84 109 137 413 Pharmacy B. S. Phr. 56 50 83 102 120 106 134 116 126 130 1,023 Veterinary Medicine D. V. M. 43 57 62 51 48 52 57 61 59 57 547 Total Undergraduate 1,786 2,065 2,389 2,569 2,562 3,185 3,578 3,707 3,756 3' 9!+1 29,538

GR.A.NDTOTAL 2' 180 2,504 2,892 3,198 3,302 4,142 4,699 5,203 5,957 5,851 39' 928

Source: Registrar's Reports F 6

}~STERS DEGREES CO~~ERRED 1963-72

1500

1400

1300

1200

]100

1000

900

Cll ~ ~ e5 800 ~ t=l rx.. 0 700 ~ p::) ~ 600

400

300

200

100

0 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972

27 Figure 7 DOCTORAL DEGREES CONFERRED 1963-72

225 -

200

175

150

125

100

75

50

25

0 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972* •;•; Ed. D. • Ph. D. * One Doctor of Public Administration Degree

28 UNDERGRADUATEAND PROFESSIONAL DEGREES CONFERRED

BY YEAR, SCHOOL, AND SEX 1963-72

School 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 Total Agriculture Male 182 194 230 233 246 316 288 234 213 236 2,372 Female 6 6 13 3 7 12 12 12 13 15 99 Total 188 200 243 236 253 328 300 246 226 251 2,471 Arts & Sciences Male 2:56 345 413 479 400 500 606 555 561 547 4,662 Female 2:24 239 310 330 330 384 431 468 462 493 3,671 Total Lj.8o 584 723 809 730 884 1,037 1,023 1,023 1 '04,0 8,333 Business Adm. Male Lj.09 449 499 575 572 616 677 704 797 709 6,007 tv \.0 Female 23 31 26 23 24 39 43 66 76 77 428 Total Lj.32 480 525 598 596 655 720 770 873 786 6,435 Education Male 84 83 77 89 95 136 143 176 180 202 1,265 Female 2.22 277 326 347 371 532 643 679 669 766 4,832 Total 306 360 403 436 466 668 786 855 849 968 6,097 Environmental Design Male 28 35 30 93 Female 2 0 0 2 Total 30 35 30 95 Forest Res. Male 77 56 65 59 58 62 93 124 107 99 800 Female 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 Total 77 56 65 59 58 62 94 124 107 99 801

Continued on next page Cont 'd.: UNDERGRADUATEAND PROFESSIONAL DEGREES CONFERREDBY YEAR, SCHOOL, AND SEX 1963-72

School 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 197:2 Total

Home Economics Male 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 3 Female 76 90 88 78 74 118 110 129 114 167 1,044 Total 76 90 88 78 74 119 111 130 114 167 1,047 Journalism Male 57 73 75 82 85 127 142 152 137 137 1,067 Female 28 52 48 67 71 128 114 116 98 139 861 Total 85 125 123 149 156 255 256 268 235 276 1, 928 Law Male 43 62 74 so 58 54 82 81 108 134 746 w 0 Female 0 1 0 1 3 2 1 3 1 3 15 Total 43 63 74 51 61 56 83 84 109 13 761 Pharmacy Male 51 49 78 95 111 99 121 103 106 113 926 Female 5 1 5 7 9 7 13 13 20 17 97 Total 56 so 83 102 120 106 134 1 6 126 1 1,023 Vet. Medicine Male 43 56 60 so 46 so 52 58 55 51 521 Female 0 1 2 1 2 2 5 3 4 6 26 Total 43 57 62 51 48 52 57 61 59 57 547 Total Undergraduate Degrees Male 1,202 1,367 1,571 1' 712 1' 671 1,961 2,205 2,216 2,299 2,258 18,462 Female 584 698 818 857 891 1,224 1,373 1,491 1,457 1,683 11, 76 TOTAL 1' 7 86 2,065 2,389 2,569 2,562 3,185 3,578 3,707 3,756 3,941 29,538

Source: Registrar's Reports F 8 DEGREES CONFERRED 1

3750 -

3500 -

3250 -

3000 -

2750 -

2500 -

2250 -

(/) Pil 2000 - ~ Pil A 1750 - "'"'0 p::; Pil (:Q 1500 - ~

1250 -

1000 -

750

500 -

250

0 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972

31 Figure 9 PROFESSIONAL DEGREES CONFERRED 1963-72

150 -

!II II Ill•

Cf.) l'il l'il €5 l'il 0 j:o;., 75 - 0 ~ ~ ~

25

0 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 .•.•; LAW - PHARMACY C:J VETERINARY MEDICINE

32 Student-Related Information CLASS SIZES, SECTIONS, AND CREDIT HOURS

Average Class Size

Summer 1 71-Spring '72

Junior Division 29.2 Senior Division 18,6 Graduate Division 7 7 Professional Division 50.0 All Divisions 18.1

Number of Class Sections

Junior Division 2,657 Senior Division 5,128 Graduate Division 4,163 Professional Division 345 All Divisions 12,293

Student Credit Hours Junior Division 292,599 Senior Division 433,140 Graduate Division 148,812 Professional Division 60,704

All Divisions~·~ 935,255

* Excludes In-Service, Extension, and Military Credit Hours

Source: Office of the Vice President for Instruction

34 ~ege of Arts and Sciences

Art 10 Statistics 5

Art 35 Zoology/Biology 30

Bio s 13 Undecided 78

Bot .any 2 Total 571

Chemistry 19 Pre-professional Programs, Arts & Sciences

Classics 2 Pre-Law 20

ive Literature 6 Pre-Med, Pre-Dent, Med Tech, Phys. Therapy 103 Drama 11 Pre-Vet 4 Ecooomics 4 Pre-Social Work 4 Entomology 1 Engineering 1 English 44 Pre-Pharmacy 13 Fine Arts 3 Total 145 Geography 2 TOTAL ARTS & SCIENCES 716

Geology 5 Agriculture 19

German 3 Business Administration 63

History 31 Education 44

Linguistics 1 Environmental Design 9

Mathematics 48 Forest Resources 6

Microbiology 1 Home Economics 14

Music 20 Journalism 98

Philosophy & Religion 10 Pharmacy 5

Physics 6 Total 258 258

Political Science 72 GRAND TOTAL 974

Psychology 69

Romance Languages 16

Sociology 21

Speech 3

35 HONORS PROGRAM ENROLLMENT NUMBERS AND SECTION NUMBERS

1969-70 1970-71 1971-72

Fall 0 1 ) 68 (39 52 ) 943 36) 59 (3

Winter 700 (65) 53 (5) 747 (54) 49 (4) 895 (49) 54 (4)

Spring 606 (43) 47 (4) 708 (26) 52 (3) 791 (21) 58 (2)

S u!Ulller 96 (--) 7 (-) 114 (--) 9 (-) 100 (--) 10 (-)

TOT.AL 21099 (178) 158 (14) 2,337 (119) 162 (11) 2, 729 (106) 181 (9)

Fig tires for College of Business Administration shown in parentheses.

Source: Annual Reporrn of Honors Program 1970-71 and 1971-72

DISTRIBUTION OF HONORS STUDENTS BY CLASS FALL QUARTER 1972

SCHOOL OR COLLEGE FRESHMEN SOPHOMORES JUNIORS SENIORS TOTAL

Agriculture 4 8 4 3 19

Arts and Sciences 214 215 177 110 716

Business Administration 10 19 20 14 63

Education 8 l3 16 7 44

Environmental Design 4 4 l 9

Forest Resources l 2 2 l 6

Home Economics 4 8 2 14

Journalism 27 23 26 22 98

Pharmacy 2* 37<* 5

TOTAL 268 292 251 160 3 974

*2nd Year Pharmacy **3rd Year Pharmacy

36 COURSE EXEMPTIONS THROUGH DEPARTMENTAL ADVANCED PLACEMENT TESTS Summer /Fall 19 71

BiolDgy 10 10

Chen1is try 42 42

English 992 992

History 1,510 453 1,963

Mathematics 197 21 218

Political Science 30 15 45

Psychology 13 15 28

TOTAL 1,750 1,548 3,298

HONORS PROGRAM DEGREES

Honors Degree Junior Division Graduates Certificates

Class of 1964 19 25 Class of 1965 20 35 Class of 1966 31 65 Class of 1967 39 59 Class of 1968 35 76 Class of 1969 46 99 Class of 1970 55 76 Class of 1971 82 87 Class of 1972 94 124 Class of 1973 128 Class of 1974 77 ...., 1 - - - l_,l.i:lt;::; uf 1975 3

TOTAL 421 854

Source: Annual Report of Honors Program

37 IA.L FRATERNITIES<'~

DATE ESTABLISHED ~ ON ACTIVE ----PLEDGES ALL Acac :L-a 1966 7 15 22 silon Pi 1926 35 15 50 A1 ph a- Gamma Rho 1927 30 8 38 Alpha- Phi Alpha 1969 14 7 21 Alpha- Tau Omega 1878 64 24 88 Chi Phi 1867 54 9 63 Chi Psi 1890 49 23 72 Delta Chi 1965 27 10 37 Delta Tau Delta 1882 30 8 38 FarmHouse 1965 4 1 5 Kappa Alpha 1868 44 23 67 Kappa Alpha Psi 1970 12 11 23 Kappa Sigma 1901 61 18 79 Lambda Chi Alpha 1915 53 28 81 Phi Delta Theta 1871 35 14 49 Phi Gannna Delta 1968 46 20 66 Phi Kappa Tau 1950 34 16 50 Phi Kappa Theta 1967 37 12 49 Pi Kappa Alpha 1908 48 15 63 Pi Kappa Phi 1915 39 8 47 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 1866 59 30 89 Sigma Chi 1872 59 21 80 Sigma Nu 1873 54 9 63 Sigma Phi Epsilon 1963 29 8 37 Sigma Pi 1948 35 11 46

,., ..... ~ .. nt..~ 1 Ql Q /, t:. .l.CI.l.L .U_LJO-L..LVU"'--~1-- .Ll..l.J... .L../.L.J -rv 8 54 Tau Kappa Epsilon 1971 58 14 72 Theta Chi 1948 44 13 57 Zeta Beta Tau 1915 12 2 14 TOTAL 1' 119 401 1,520

*Figures are for Winter Quarter (March), 1972

Source: Advisor to Fraternities, Department of Student Activities, Division of Student Affairs 38 CUMULATIVE FRATERNITY SCHOLASTIC AVERAGES*

FRATERNITY AVERAGE MEMBERSHIP CHAPTER AVERAGE

Phi Ga:rmna Delta 58 3.0553 Tau Epsilon Phi 51 2.7578 Sigma Pi 45 2.7394 Phi Kappa Theta 40 2.6575 rau Kappa Epsilon 66 2.6514 Zeta Beta Tau 9 2.6265 theta Chi 54 2.5851 Sigma Chi 71 2.5802 K.appa Alpha 64 2.5787 Alpha Epsilon Pi 59 2.5650 Alpha Tau Omega 78 2.5185 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 91 2.4876 Lambda Chi Alpha 70 2.4749 Chi Psi 62 2.4748 FarmHouse 3 2.4655 Delta Tau Delta 31 2.4426 Sigma Nu 61 2.4385 Sigma Phi Epsilon 36 2.4087 Phi Kappa Tau 50 2.3909 Pi Kappa Phi 43 2.3908 Phi Delta Theta 51 2.3774 Chi Phi 56 2.3756 Kappa Sigma 64 2.3657 Alpha Gamma Rho 32 2.3565 Pi Kappa Alpha 58 2.2982

1 ., Kappa Alpha Psi .L.J 2.2879 Alpha Phi Alpha 16 2.1629 Delta Chi 28 2.1500 Acacia 6 2.0066

* For Fall, Winter, and Spring, 1971-72

Source: Advisor to Fraternities, Department of Student Activities, Division of Student Affairs 39 SOCIAL SORORITIES*

DATE ESTABLISHED SORORITY ON CAMPUS ACTIVE PLEDGES ALL

Alpha Chi Omega 1938 72 14 86

Alpha Delta Pi 1933 64 42 106

Alpha Gamma Delta 1923 1+8 36 84

Alpha Omicron Pi 1934 51 37 88

Alpha Xi Delta 1960 35 20 55

Chi Omega 1922 70 42 112

Delta Delta Delta 1933 61 40 101

Delta Gamma 1967 64 35 99

Delta Phi Epsilon 1935 44 30 74

Delta Zeta 1961 Inactive

Kappa Alpha Theta 1937 82 12 94

Kappa Delta 1924 48 32 80

Kappa Kappa Gamma 1947 59 36 95

Phi Mu 1921 59 37 96

Pi Beta Phi 1936 37 32 69

Sigma Delta Tau 1924 40 27 67

Sigma Kappa 1964 35 8 43

Zeta Tau Alpha 1949 64 40 104

TOTAL 933 520 1,453

* Figures are for Spring Quarter, 1972

Source: Advisor to Sororities, Department of Student Activities, Division of Student Affairs

40 CUMULATIVE SORORITY SCHOLASTIC AVERAGES

PLEDGE ACTIVE

Kappa Alpha Theta 2.6549 3 1019 3.0331

Delta Gamma 2.8154 3.0409 2.9915

Zeta Tau Alpha 2. 7280 3.0083 2.9631

Delta Phi Epsilon 2.6643 3.1499 2.9597

Sigma Delta Tau 2.2706 3.0909 2.9278

Delta Delta Delta 2.6985 2.9500 2.8813

Kappa Delta 2.5029 2. 96 77 2.8692

Alpha Xi Delta 2.5367 2.9161 2.8631

Alpha Omicron Pi 2.7418 2.9506 2.8539

Alpha Gamma Delta 2.8206 2.8386 2.8380

Chi Omega 2.4801 2.8774 2.8015

Alpha Chi Omega 2.5792 2.8349 2.7852

Alpha Delta Pi 2.3208 2.9350 2.7843

Phi Mu 2.6206 2.8281 2. 7782

Kappa Kappa Gamma 2.4445 2.7694 2.7064

Pi Beta Phi 2.1303 2.8018 2.6361

Sigma Kappa 2.3957 2.6536 2.6023

TOTAL 2.5577 2.9304 2.8473

* For Fall, Winter, and Spring, 1971-72

Source: of Student Activities, Division of Student Affairs

41 NATIONAL HONORARY FRATERNITIES'>'~

Name Date

Alpha Epsilon Delta 1932 Pre-medical

Lambda Delta 1934 Freshman vlomen

Beta Gamma Sigma 1918 Commerce & Business Administration

Gamma Sigma Delta 1961 Agriculture, Forestry, Home Economics & Veterinary Medicine

Gamma Theta Upsilon 1966 Geography

Kappa Delta Pi 1929 Education

Kappa Tau Alpha 1929 Journalism

Mortar Board 1939 Senior Women

Omicron Delta Kappa 1934 Leadership (men)

Phi Alpha Theta 1956 History

Phi Beta Kappa 1914 Liberal Arts

Phi Eta Sigma 1938 Freshman Men

Phi Kappa Phi 1923 General

Phi Sigma 1951 Biological Sciences

Phi Zeta 1925 Veterinary Medicine

Pi Mu Epsilon 1934 Mathematics

Pi Sigma Alpha 1948 Government & Political Science

Psi Chi 1929 Psychology

Rho Chi 1949 Pharmacy

Sigma Delta Pi 1955 ~panish

Sigma Pi Sigma 1941 Physics

Sigma Xi 1946 Scientific Research

Xi Sigma Pi 1941 Forestry (men)

Source: Baird's Manual of American College Fraternities, 18th edition, 1968

·k Due to some difficulty in distinguishing between "honorary" and "professional" fraternities, this list may be incomplete. 42 GRADUATE FELLOWS AND ASSISTANTS*

TYPE NUMBER

NDEA Title IV Fellows 43

NSF Trainees 9

NSF Graduate Fellows 5

University of Georgia Foundation Scholarships 2

Graduate Research Assistants 40

Graduate Non-Teaching Assistants 158

Predoctoral Assistants 11

Total 268

~·( This table is incomplete. Information was available only on fellowships and assistantships awarded through the Graduate School and does not include departmental teaching and research assistants. These figures are estimates for Fall Quarter, 1972.

Source: Office of the Dean of the Graduate School

43 UNIVERSITY HEALTH SERVICES

Activity Data 1970-71 1971-72 Outpatient Services: Total Students Served as Outpatients 17,388 15,843 Total Student Visits for Outpatient Services 65,586 67,081 Total Student Visits for Physical Health Division 58,326 61,378 Visits by appointment 9,988 11,587 Visits on walk-in basis 29,387 30,512 Visits to Dermatology Clinic 686 847 Visits to Gynecology Clinic 410 1,107 Visits to Surgery Clinic 432 406 Visits to Allergy Clinic 2,127 1,825 Visits to Immunization Clinic 511 474 Student treatment by nursing personnel 10,702 11,297 Student treatment through self-medication 3,378 3,204 Visits to Physical Therapist 705 1,894 Total Students Seen by Mental Health Division 1,237 1,132 Total Student Visits to Mental Health Division 7,260 5,703 Student visits for personal, vocational educational, pre-marital and marital, social, and financial counselling on individual or couple basis 5,545 4,876 Student participation in psychotherapy groups, sensitivity and growth groups, and encounter and marathon sessions 1 '715 827 Inpatient Services: Total Students Hospitalized at Health Service 473 408 Total Prescriptions Filled by Pharmacy 44,246 42,071 Total Laboratory Procedures Processed 39,825 45' 119 Total X-ray Films Taken 8,651 9,276

44 Cont'd.: UNIVERSITY HEALTH SERVICES

]niversity and Community Service

All members of the Mental Health Division were assigned consultative ions with residence halls. Mental Health psychiatr sts and psychologists also met either individually or as a group with the Judicial Affairs Committee, Student Government Association, Probation Department, campus ministers, and £acul

Physical Health physicians continued to lecture and lead discussions in the Pharmacy School's Department of Pharmacology and conduct first-aid and cardiopulmonary recuscitation training in the School of Forestry. The Division participated in the Cooperative Stroke-Hypertension study with the Medical College of Georgia. A presentation on hospital management of hypertensive emergencies was a part of the in-service training program at Athens General and St. Mary's Hospitalso Health Services also cooperated with the Georgia Heart Association and the Georgia Regional Medical Program in a blood pressure screening program involving local junior and senior high school studentso

University Health Services cooperated with the local hospitals, Civil Defense, Red Cross, and the Athens Police and Fire Departments on the Joint Disaster Preparedness Committee of the Crawford W. Long Medical Society. The U. S. Department of Public Health was aided by University Health Services in the identification and treatment of asymptomatic female carriers of gonorrhea. One physician served as advisor to a local Explorer Scout unit of high school students interested in medical careers, and another supervised the Family Planning Clinic of the Clarke County Public Health Department.

The role of University Health Service nurses has come to include educational and support activities as well as service. The nursing staff was involved in classes for gynecology patients and discussion sessions on sexual respon­ sibility. In response to the needs of students, a satellite clinic was es­ tablished in the Graduate Studies Research Building.

Student Traineeships Served in the Health Services

College of Education 4

Clinical Psychology 5

School of Pharmacy 135

Medical College of Georgia 15

School of Social Work 3

Accreditations

Hospital: Joint Commission on the Accreditation of Hospitals

Mental Health Division: American Board on Counseling Services, Inc.

45 Cont'd.: UNIVERSITY HEALTH SERVICES

Full-Time Professional Staff

1970-71 1971-72

Mental Health Psychiatrists 3 4

Physical Health Physicians 8 9

Hospital Administrator 1 1

Clinical Psychologist 1 1

Counseling Psychologists 4 3

Psychiatric Social Worker 1 1

Registered Nurses 12 12

Licensed Practical Nurses 4 4

Medical Record Librarian 1 1

Pharmacist 1.5* 1.5*

Laboratory Technologists 1 2

Laboratory Technicians 2 2

X-Ray' Technicians 1 2

Dietitian 1 1

* One full-time and one half-time

Source: Office of the Director of the University Health Services

46 CAREER PLANNINGAND PLACEMENTSERVICES

SENIOR-GRADUATK-ALUMNI 1969-70 1970-71 1971-72 1972-73 (Estimate)

Number Active Beginning of Year 1,681 1,964 1,800 2,381

Number Added During the Year 1,907 1,987 2,519 2,000

TOTAL CASE LOAD 3,588 3,951 4,319 4,381

TOTAL PLACEMENT 1,624 2,151 1,938 2,581

Number Active End of Year 1,964 1,800 2,381 1,800

CAMPUSINTERVIEliJ VISITS +'- '-I Business and Industry 414 392 317 330

Educational Institutions 119 137 99 100

Government Agencies 70 48 45 50

Military Organizations 9 10 33 35

Graduate Schools 5 3 7 10

TOTAL VISITS 617 590 501 525 FINANCIAL AID PROGRAMS

UNIVERSITY ADMINISTERED

1970-71 1971-72 Estimated 1972-73

Number Amount Number Amount Number Amount

National Direct Student I,oans 1,232 $827,233 1,424 $1,081,506 1,600 $1,250,000 University Trust Fund Loans 200 208,819 200 200,000 200 200,000 University Emergency Loans 809 74,438 820 81,505 900 90,000 Cuban Loan Fund 7 9,000 3 1,865 5 5,000 Health Professions Pharmacy Loans 57 30,000 55 35,165 60 47,000 Health Professions Vet. Hed. Loans 47 29,700 56 46,815 65 48,000 Law Enforcement Education Loans 20 15 '716 21 18,463 25 20,000

College Work Study Program 819 333,315 807 382,660 900 450 000 +'- 00 Educational Opportunity Grants 597 383,765 568 407,584 600 420,000 Health Professions Pharmacy Grant 91 72,482 86 71,310 90 80 000 Health Professions Vet. Hed. Grant 55 44,742 56 42,122 65 48 000 Law Enforcement Education Grant 179 30,090 189 42,694 200 44 000

General Motors Scholarship 8 10,275 8 10,000 7 7 950 Kahn Memorial Scholarship 5 5,310 5 5,000 5 5,300 National Merit Scholarship 90 45,809 87 49.000 122 80,000 Regents Scholarship 82 39,556 90 45,000 llO 55,000 University Freshman Scholarship 41 11 '382 26 8,500 100 10,000 Other Scholarship Programs 150 45,000 150 45,000 150 45,000

Source: Office of the Director of Student Aid FINANCIAL AID PROGRAMS

PRIVATE AND STATE ADMINISTERED

1970-71 1971-72 Estimated 1972-73

Number Amount Number Amount Number Amount

State Teacher Scholarship Program 182 $ 174,056 306 $ 208,378 200 $ 150,000

State Scholarship Program 58 60,000 48 50,442 50 50,000 Georgia Higher Education Assistance Corporation Loans 1., 648 1,623,687 1,230 1,230,000 1,500 1,500,000

-!=' Guaranteed Loans and \0 Scholarships Other States 100 100,000 296 296,000 200 200,000

G. I. Bill 1,400 N/A 1,476 N/A 1,525 N/A Other Outside Scholarship or Assistant Programs 850 N/A 850 N/A 850 N/A

Source: Office of the Director of Student Aid GEORGIA ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION BOARD OF DIRECTORS

Chairman Dro Fred C. Davison

Treasurer Allan Barber

Faculty Chairman Mr. Reid Parker

Athletic Director Joel Eaves

Faculty Members: Dro Mark Hanna

W. E. Hudson

Dr. Joe LaRocca

Dr. Ira E. Aaron

Dr. George Parthemos

Alumni Members: Cook Barwick, AtlaL_a

W. D. Bradshaw, Canton

Edsel Benson, Athens

Thomas E. Green, Macon

Thomas H. , Gainesville

Dr. S. A. Rodenberry, Columbus

Robert W. Miller, Atlanta

GEORGIA HEAD COACHES

Athletic Director: Joel Eaves

Football: Vince Dooley BaskPthall; Ken Rosemond Baseball: Jim Whatley Track: Forrest Towns Golf: Dick Copas Tennis: Dan Magill Swimming: Pete Scholle Wrestling: Frank Keller Gymnastics: Lee Cunningham Rifle: Peter Feddo

50 ATHLETES AT THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA FALL QUARTER 1972

SPORT SCHOLARSHIP NON-SCHOLARSHIP TOTAL

Baseball 21 5 26

Basketball 21 5 26

Football 121 20 141

Golf 9 3 12

Gymnastics 10 10 20

Rifle 0 21 21

Swimming 17 8 25

Tennis 7 3 10

Track 19 15 34

Wrestling 16 10 26

TarAL 241 100 341

ACADEMICS PERTAINING TO SCHOLARSHIPPED ATHLETES

NUMBER OF SCHOLARSHIPPED NUMBER OF ATHLETES MAKING GRADES OF SCHOLARSHIPPED QUARTER 3.0 OR BETTER ATHLETES

Fall, 1971 45 238

Winter, 19 72 52 233

Spring, 1972 63 228

51 UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA ATHLETIC FACILITIES

SPORT FIELD OR HOUSE SEATING CAPACITY

Baseball Frank D. Foley Field 1,000

Basketball Coliseum 10,400

Football Sanford Stadium 59,200

Golf University of Georgia Golf Course

Gymnastics Coliseum 10,400

Swimming Stegeman Hall 500

Tennis Henry Feild Stadium 1,500

Track University Track 1,000

Wrestling Coliseum 10,400

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, wrestling, plus several dressing rooms for visiting teams.

Henry Feild Tennis Stadium dressing quarters for tennis team

Stegeman Hall dressing quarters for swimming team

Practice Fields three practice football fields (all other teams use the facilities in which they play to practice with the exception of the wrestling team which has a wrestling room located in the Coliseum).

52 SOUTHEASTERN CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIPS WON BY GEORGIA (since inception of Southeastern Conference beginning in 1933)

YEAR SPORT 1933 Baseball 1937 Track 1941 Golf 1942 Football 1946 Football 1948 Football 1950 Golf 1951 Golf Swinnuing 1952 Golf Swinnuing 1953 Baseball 1954 Baseball 1955 Swinnuing 1957 Golf 1958 Golf 1959 Golf Football 1961 Golf 1962 Golf 1963 Golf 1964 Golf 1965 Golf 1966 Football 1968 Football 1969 Golf 1970 Golf 1971 Golf Tennis 1972 Golf Tennis Rifle'>'<

* Southern Collegiate Riflery Association Championship. This Association is made up of the ten Southeastern Conference Teams.

53 DEPARTMENT OF STUDENT ACTIVITIES/UNION

The Department of Student Activities/Union provides a variety of programs for students, faculty, administrators, and the Athens community. There is a regular S(hedule of social, cultural, recreational, and intellectual programs including tne following:

E11tertainment Entertainment Division presents dances and jam sessions throughout the year f€aturing some of the area's finest talent as well as top national acts. Musical offerings satisfy a wide range of tastes with such attractions as Bill Monroe and the Bluegrass Boys, Vince Vance and the Valliants, and Jesus Christ Superstar. R€gular features of the Entertainment Division are Coffeehouse and Girnrne Shelter.

Cinematic Arts The Cinematic Arts Division presents a weekly movie series in the South P-J Auditorium with prices ranging from 50¢ to $1.50. Some of the year's top features W€re M*M:s'>':H~'<- and 2001: A Space Odyssey.

Ideas and Issues Ideas and Issues presents some of the nation's most provocative and enlight­ ening speakers. Included in the year's schedule were Sen. Wayne Morse, Norman Mailer, Hal Suit, and Dr. Paul Erlich.

Recreation Division Recreation Division each year sponsors competition in several sports as well as exhibitions. Tournament Week included competition in billiards, snooker, table tennis, chess, and bowling. The Division also sponsored Road Rally and a bike race.

Fine Arts Division Highlights of the year included the Atlanta Boy's Choir and (Mozart Requiem). Fine Arts Division also presented Springtime Evening of Music with the Varsity Band, the Glee Clubs, and the Jazz Ensemble.

Cultural Affairs Cultural Affairs presents a wide range of entertainment in the form of concerts, plays, and performances. The Atlanta Symphony played to a capacity crowd as did the Broadway plays "Company" and "Promises, Promises." Bread, Seals & Crofts, the New York Rock Ensemble, the Romeros, Isaac Hayes~ and the Canadian Opera Company also drew very large audiences.

Special Events In addition to the seemingly endless array of activities provided for the benefit of students and others, the Union also sponsors many special events each year. The Bridal Fair and the International Gift Bazaar are among the most notable.

54 Faculty FACULTY BY RANK TOTAL UNIVERSITY 1971-72

Assoc. Asst. Res. Prof. Prof. Prof. As soc Inst. Total

A

Student Welfare 3 3 16 13 35

Libraries 2 3 11 56 72

Instruction 358 305 561 32 220 1,476

Agricultural Extension 17 21 65 35 138

Agricultural Experiment Stations 33 28 60 4 15 140

Georgia Center 2 1 7 11 21

General Research 5 5 11 74 6 101

Extension and Public Service 6 2 4 1 13

TOTAL 452 372 736 110 359 22029

HIGHEST EARNED DEGREES HELD BY FACULTY MEMBERS (TOTAL UNIVERSITY)

Degrees Number % of Total

Doctorates (Ph.D., Ed.D., etc) 1,308 64.5

Masters (M.A., M.S., M.Ed., etc.) 591 29.1

Professional (LL.M., J.D., D.V.M., M.D.) 58 2.9

Baccalaureates 72 3.5

TOTAL 2,029 100.0

Source: Office of Vice President for Instruction

56 RESIDENT INSTRUCTION FACULTY

Rank Number

Professor 425

Associate Professor 372

Assistant Professor 584

Instructor 207

TOTAL 1,588

SCHEDULE OF FACULTY SALARIES (Academic Year Basis Without Foundation)

Rank Salaries

Professor $18,122

Associate Professor 14,318

Assistant Professor 11' 916

Instructor 9,140

All Ranks 13,778

Source: Resident Instruction Budget

57

Library LIBRARY STATISTICS

Growth in Volumes

1966-67 1967-68 1968-69 1969-70 1970-71 1971-72

Vo1umes, July 1 757,593 772, 876,160 995,713 1,075,315 1,158,047

Net Additions 122,2691 103,3303 119 55 79,602 82,732 86,454

Total 879,8622 876,160 995,713 1,075,315 1,158,047 1,244,501

Growth in Non-Book Holdings

Added Total 1971-72 June 30, 1972

Ma~uscripts (Pieces) 19' 726 1,113,458

Photographs, Pictures, Prints 632 59,165

Maps 1,360 187,081

Aerial Photographs 3,429 97,960

Slides 450 38,226

Microfilm (Spools) 4,576 61' 770

Microfiche 54,530 218,207

Microcards 8,542 104,952

Microprints 19,820 314,872

Phonograph Recordings 3,230 13' 908

Tape Recordings 66 496

Unbound Sheet Music and Scores 2,118 17,775

/, 1 (\ ') Humar1 Relatiorts Area film Cards -., ...... 32' 741

1 Includes 27,968 volumes in microform. 2 Includes 107,032 volumes in microform. 3this and succeeding years do not include volumes in microform.

60 CIRCULATION STATISTICS 1971-72

NOn-Reserve Books Reserve Books

Students 279,432 Ove 9 064 Faculty 46,902 Two-hour 121,162 Other 15,127 Three-day 11' 764 Carrels 13,627 Seven-day 95 Total 355,088 Total 142,085

Non-Book Materials Experiment Stations

Out-of-Building use 6,324 Coastal 30,250 Building use 86,381 Georgia 38,486 Total 92,705 Total 68,736

Grand Total Circulation 658,614

SPECIAL COLLECTIONS

Confederate Imprints Collection - One of the largest and most comprehensive collections of publications of the thirteen states of the Southern Confederacy 1861-65.

Georgiana

DeRenne Library Collection - Excellent collection of materials on Georgia. Includes the original permanent Constitution of the Confederate States of America.

Egmont Papers -Covers the first two decades, 1732-52, of Georgia's history.

Keith Read Collection - Approximately 3600 items including diaries, letters, letter books, journals, and other unique materials of the early periodo

Telamon Cuyler Collection - More than 30,000 items dealing v-7ith Georgia history from 1760-1870.

Louis A. Moore Collection - Four thousand bound volumes and several thousand

Charles Colcook Jones Collection - Plantation life and civil war times (1757-1905).

Husic

Guido Adler Collection - Personal library and private papers of the noted Viennese music historian.

Olin Downes Papers - Papers of American music critic including approximately 50,000 letters to and from composers, musicologists, singers, performers, critics, literary men, and statesmen.

61

Museum THE GEORGIA MUSEUM OF ART

The Georgia Museum of Art was founded in 1945 by Alfred H. Holbrook, a retired New York The Museum's first works of art were donated by Mr. Holbrook in honor of his late wife. The Eva Underhill Holbrook Memorial Collection of American Art consisted of one hundred works by one hundred artists representing one hundred years of art. The collection has experienced enormous growth through the generosity of Mr. Holbrook and now accounts for the major portion of the Museum's nearly three thousand works of art.

The Permanent Collection The permanent collection (the Holbrook Collection) consists of paintings, prints, drawings, pottery, and assorted memorabilia of the period from 1850 to 1945. It is primarily composed of American works but also includes four­ teen European paintings from the S. H. Kress Foundation.

Exhibit ions The Museum annually presents 15 to 20 exhibitions, not only from the permanent collection but also from the Athens Art Association, graduate students, and outside sources including the American Federation of Arts, the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the International Exhibitions Foundation. In 1971-72 loans of 881 objects were secured from 82 institutions and lenders. The following were included in the year's exhibits: La Belle Epoque from the L. Wittamer DeCamp Collection Portraits After Anthony van Dyck from the permanent collection ------~urer and His Times Photographs ~ Alfred Eisenstaedt accompanied by a lecture by Alfred Eisenstaedt Rediscovered Printmakers of the 19th Century Master Printmakers from the Cooper-Hewitt Museum of Decorative Arts -<~nr'l n<=>Qicrn <::mirhQnni.<~n TnQrir11rinn ---- ._..-~-o--., ------John Sloan 1871-1951 (Seen only in cities of 1.5 million or greater population with the exception of Athens) Etchings and Engravings from the Permanent Collection: Stefano Della Bella Adriaen van Ostade Tribal Arts of West ------Africa II 19th and---- 20th- Century---- Paintings from the Collection of the Smith College Museum of Art from the American Federation of Arts Edward Lear in Greece 20th Century--- Portraits from the Museum of Modern Art, New York The Racetrack World: Paintings ~Lee Townsend

64 Cont'd, THE GEORGIA MUSEUM OF ART

Services The Georgia Museum of Art is dedicated to the concept of instructional service not to the Univers but to the as well. Extensive files are maintained on each object for the benefit of students. The Museum cooperates with various departments in scheduling exhibits of common interest. During the year the Museum presented Durer and His Times in cooperation with the Dept. of Germanic and Slavic Languages; Edward Lear in Greece with the Classics Dept.; and Photographs EY Alfred Eisenstaedt in conjunction with the School of Journalism.

Who May Use The Museum is virtually a public facility. During 1971-72 approximately 20,000 visitors filed through its doors. Classes from kindergartens, Head Start programs, elementary schools, high schools, and colleges throughout the state were enriched by visits to the Museum. Tours were scheduled not only by art classes but classes in history, classics, home economics, sociology, environmental design, languages, journalism, and architecture as well.

Friends of the Museum Friends of the Museum was recently established to stimulate the use of exhibitions and a greater interest in art and the Museum. In the future the group hopes to extend the services of the Museum through lectures, children's programs, and other special events. Membership is open to all who share its interests and goals.

65

Research SOURCE OF ALL RESEARCHFUNDS 1971-72

State Appropriated Research Funds Research Grants School or College Funds from Sales and Contracts Total

General Research Arts and Sciences $ 3,726,992 $ $ 3,307,277 $ 7,034, Business Administration 516,108 149,744 665

0\ Education 1,068,696 438,984 1,507, 00 Forest Resources 63,275 72,073 135, Graduate School 173,103 173

Home Economics 126,888 19,926 146

,Journalism 57,446 ' Law 31,200 20,000 51,200

Pharmacy 194,216 122,472 316,

Social Work 34,911 561,080 595,

Environmental Design 4,o66 4, Agriculture 313,362 180,629 493, Vice President for Research 154,481 154, Can't.: SOURCEOF ALL RESEARCHFUNDS 1971-72

State Appropriated Research Funds Research Grants School or College Funds from Sales and Contracts Total

Institutional $ $ $ 127,552 $ 127, Administration 110,403 110, Central Research Stores 72,200 ,200

Computer Center 902,624 902,

Veterinary Medicine 611,020 702,947 1,313, 0'\ \0 Institute of Ecology 57,342 487,088 544, Institute for Behavioral Research 90,315 192,704 283, Marine Institute 239,314 110,605 349, Natural Resources Institute 124,030 58,550 182,

Services Shops 299,155 107,432 4o6, Natural Products Laboratory 52,387 52,

Institute of Community and Area Development 10,544 10,

Electron Microscope Laboratory 46,400 46' Division of Research- College of Business Administration 1,000 1.000 Con 't.: SOURCEOF ALL RESEARCHFUNDS 1971-72

State Appropriated Research Funds Research Grants School or College Funds from Sales and Contracts Total

Vocational Education Research SDE $ $ 9,930 $ $ 9, Institutional Research and Planning 236,329 236,

Total General Research $ 8,341,983 $ 190,562 $ 7,454,255 $15,986,

Agricultural Experiment Stations $ 4,838,497 $ 1,348,170 $ 3,684,841* $ 9,871,

-...! 0 Grand Total $13,180,480 $ 1,538,732 $11,139,096 $25,858,

*Includes $1,962,678 Federal Hatch and Mcintire-Stennis Funds

Source: Office of the Vice President for Research SOURCEOF RESEARCHFUNDS FROMGRANTS AND CONTRACTS 1971-72 (BY AGENCIES)

DOD & School or College HEW NSF AEC USEPA NASA USDA Other Total

General Research

Arts and Sciences $1,279,306 $1,040,830 $ 185,788 $ 103,999 $ 137,391 $ $ 559,963 $3 Business Administration 20,000 -...) 129,744 ...... Education 407,534 31,450 Forest Resources 39,073 33,000

Home Economics 19,926

Law 20,000 20,

Pharmacy 68,160 35,748 18,564

Social Work 435,420 125,660 Computer Center 250,999 347,041 87,868 216,716 Veterinary Medicine 230,1'73 102,939 369,835 Institute for Behavioral Research 134,504 58,200

Institute of Ecology 12,820 403,980 49,888 20,400 Con' t. : SOURCEOF RESEARCHFUNDS FROM GRANTS AND CONTRACTS1971-72 (BY AGENCIES)

DOD& School or College HEW NSF AEC USEPA NASA USDA Other Total

Marine Institute $ $ $ $ $ $ $ 110,605 $ 110, Natural Resources Institute 58,550 Institutional 58,056 68,496 1,000

Agriculture 154,:::~2916,500 9,900

-....! N Total General Research $3,148,125 $1,485,687 $ 716,709 $ 153,887 $ 492,794 $ 58,200 $1,398,853 $ 7,

Agricultural Experiment Stations $ 66,977 $ $ 26,266 $ 105 $ 71,936 $2,581,291* $ 938,266 $ 3,

Grand Total $3,215,102 $1,485,687 $ 742,975 $ 153,992 $ 564,730 $2,639,491 $2,337,119 $11,

*Includes $1,962,678 Federa:_ Hatch and Mcintire-Stennis funds.

Source: Office of the Vice President for Research Con 't.: SOURCEOF RESEARCH:ruNDS FROMGRANTS AND CONTRACTS 1971-72 (BY AGENCIES)

HEW U. S. Department of Health, Education & Welfare, including (PHS) Public Health Service, (NIH) National Institutes of Healt':1., (OE) Office of Education, (VRS) Vocational Rehabilitation Service, (WA) Welfare Administration

NSF National Science Foundation

AEC Atomic Energy Cormnission

USEPA U. S. Environmental Protection Agency

NASA National Aeronautic.s and Space Administration

DOD Department of Defense, including (AF) Air Force, (CD) Civil Defense, (ONR) Office of Naval Research, u. s. Arrrry

"'-! USDA U. S. Department of Agriculture w Other States, Foundations, Private Agencies and other Federal agencies SOURCEOF GRANTAND CONTRACTRESEARCH FUNDS 1971-72

%of School or College Federal State Other Total Total - General Research

rts and Sciences $2 ''795 '374 $ 312 $ 511,591 $ 3,307, )+ Business Administration 129,744 20,000 149, 7'+4 .

-....! Education 407,534 27,000 4,450 438, 5.9 _p. Forest Resources 62,073 10,000 72,07':1, .o

Home Economics 19,926 19,926 .

Law 20,000 20,000 .J

Pharmacy 103,908 18,564 122,

Social Work 435,420 125,660 561,080

Computer Center 902,624 902,

Veterinary Medicine 564,683 138,264 702,947 9.

Institute of Ecology 466,688 20,400 487,088 6. Institute for Behavioral Research 192,704 192, . Con't.: SOURCEOF GRAN~'AND CONTRACT RESEARCH FUNDS 1971-7Q

%of School or College Federal State Other Total Total

Marine Institute $ 1,605 $ $ 109,000 $ 110,605 Natural Resources Institute 55,950 2,600 58,5 Institutional 127,552 127, .7 Agriculture 180,629 180, .

~ Total General Research $6,426,488 $ 182,972 100. Ln $ 844,795 $ 7,454,

Agricultural Experiment Stations $2 ''746' 575* $ 528,481 $ 409,785 $ 3,684,841 100.

Grand Total $9,173,063 $ 711,453 $1,254,580 $11,139,096

*Includes $1,962,678 Federal Hatch Act and Mcintire-Stennis Funds.

Source: Office of the Vice President for Research

Research and Service Units ALUMNI RELATIONS

Staff Director of Alumni Relations, two Associate Directors of Alumni Relations, three Assistant Directors of Alumni Relations, B Records Accountant II, Programmer, Consultant, and clerical staff of seventeen.

Facilities The Alumni House is located on South Campus adjacent to the Coliseum.

Functions The Office of Alumni Relations conducts all four functions of an alumni program--alumni activities, fund raising, alumni publications, and record keeping.

Programs Major programs of the Alumni Society include (1) formation and promotion of alumni chapters throughout Georgia and in major population centers where large numbers of University alumni live outside the state--currently there are 45 active alumni chapters, (2) handling class reunions on the basis of five-year rotation, (3) conducting the Annual Meeting of the Alumni Society each spring, (4) UGA TODAY program which brings back to the campus key alumni leaders for presentation of up-to-date information on the University, (5) a highly successful annual giving program that ranks among the top 20 in the nation's major state colleges and universities in the number of contributors, (6) student recruitment program with major emphasis on National Merit Semi­ Finalists and the upper 5 per cent in academic standing among the junior and senior classes of Georgia high schools, (7) public relations program for high school advisers and junior college admission officers and advisers, (8) recognition of the letter-winner each year in each of the 10 intercollegiate sports who has had the highest academic average for the preceding three quarters, (9) a major program among student leaders on campus that includes assisting each year with the Blue Key Banquet and the ODK-Mortar Board Banquet for student leaders, (10) active program among the younger alumni who have been graduated from the University during the past 10 years, (11) an enlarged program for alumni associations among the graduates of the various professional schools and colleges on campus (Law, Veterinary Medicine, Business, Pharmacy, Journalism, Environmental Design), (12) emphasis on scholarships with Alumni Society and Foundation combined giving more than 100 scholarships each year, (13) successful Alumlli Seminar program that is attracting more alumni each year and is conducted by top professors on campus, (14) assist in special fund drives on campus, (15) publication of GEORGIA ALUMNI RECORD (five issues a year) year) (16) conducts alumni tours each year for interested a sophisticated system for record (a) GEORGIA ALUMNI RECORD, published during the months of September, ~ovember, January March and June. (b) GEORGIA ALUMNI NEWS, published during the months of August, October, February, April, May, plus a special newsletter to members of recently graduated classes sent during the Spring and Fall. Various school alumni as iat let for the College of Business Administration, School of Pharmacy, College of ~eterinary Medicine, School of Journalism.

}actual Information on Alumni Listings*

Graduates by Classes**

Total Graduates 68,089

Other Classifications Matriculates, Misc. 8,542 Friends 729 SNS 1,615 Non-Alumni Faculty 503 Exchanges 116 Honorary Alumni 4 Pharmacy School Friends 2,503 Retired Faculty 53 Business Firms 18 Non-Alumni Parents 159

Total Other Classifications 14,242

Total Record on Alumni System 82,331

Total Number of Male Graduates 44,252

Male Graduates Living in Georgia 27,528

Total Number of Female Graduates 23,837

Female Graduates Living in Georgia 15,178

Total Alumni Living in Georgia'>'ddc 42,706

Total Alumni Living Out-of-State*** 19,504

Total Alumni with Address Unknown 5,879

*Does not include August, 1972 Graduates ~·r'l'>Graduates Only ~<'**Does not include Address Unknowns BUREAU OF EDUCATIONAL STUDIES AND FIELD SERVICES

taff The Associate Dean for Services is the Director of the Bureau. There are 12 staff members ass to the of Educational Adminis- tration and the Bureau, One staff member serves as Director of Educational Studies and Surveys.

The fundamental ective of the Bureau in accomplish its service mission is to provide educational consultants as requested by the public schools of Georgia, the region, other colleges and the State Department of Education.

Functions The services of the Bureau are available on a continuing basis to local school boards and other educational agencies for the analysis of problems, for the improvement of educational practices, and for the continual updating of the knowledge and skills of administrative, supervisory, and teaching personnel.

Services Planning and development studies to include comprehensive educational surveys. Educational research to include evolving problems and contem­ porary issues in education. The exchange of ideas and practices in administration as they relate to instructional services for the professional growth of practicing administrators. Publications on up-to-date practices and techniques relating to current school projects and issues. Consultation regarding information retrieval systems for school systems and consultative assistance in regard to administrative school planning. The Bureau also contracts its services to schools, colleges, school districts, or other agencies.

Publications "Journal of Research and Development in Education" (National) "The Department of Elementary School Principals Quarterly" (Regional)

Conferences and Programs Superintendents' Research and Educational Development Program (four two-day conferences), Superintendents; District Programs (in eight congressional districts), Curriculum Directors' Research and Educational Development Program (three three-day conferences), Principals' Research and Educational Development Program (six one-day conferences). In-Service Program for Teachers of English (Seventh Congressional District), In-Service Program for Teachers of Mathematics (Seventh Congressional District), In-Service Program for Teachers of Industrial Arts (Seventh Congressional District).

80 COOPERATIVE EXTENSION SERVICE

The Cooperative Extension Service is an educational undertaking of the University of Georgia College of Agriculture and the U. S. Department of Agriculture with the cooperation of the counties of the state. Admin­ istratively, it is an integral part of the University. It was created by the Smith-Lever Act of Congress in 1914 which provided for the Department of Agriculture to join with the states in conducting off-campus educational programs relating to agriculture, community and resource development, home economics and youth development.

Specialists in more than 20 subject matter areas are available to assist county Extension personnel and, through them, the people of the state in planning programs and carrying out recommended practices. The specialist and administrative and supervisory staff numbers about 150. Most of these are housed on the Athens campus. Some are located in other areas including the Rural Development Center at Tifton.

Responsibilities

The Extensi~n Service acts as an educational service arm for the Uni­ versity and provides information about Federal farm programs to the people of the state. Staff members are representatives of both the University and USDA. In their dual roles they carry out broad educational programs based on research developed in the Experiment Stations and elsewhere. County­ wide program development boards function in each county under the leadership of the Extension Service County Agents and County Extension Home Economists.

Service Activities Major areas of service include agricultural engineering, agronomy, animal science, community and resource development, dairy science, eco­ nomics and farm management, entomology, forestry, horticulture, landscape architecture, marketing and utilization, plant pathology, poultry science, veterinary medicine, family life, food science and food preservation, health, home management, housing, equipment and home furnishings, nutrition and youth development, including 4-H Club program. Special programs are also carried out with resource development and rural area development in­ cluding the work of the Area Planning and Development Commissions. The Extension Service is working increasingly with management problems, agri­ business firms and urban people. It is conducting a special nutrition education program for disadvantaged families in 34 counties with most of the families in urban situations. The Extension program helps people identify and understand their needs and problems and use new technology and information in solving them. It is practical, problem-centered education. In addition to personal contacts, meetings, direct mail, etc., the Extension Service provided citizens of the state with more than one million copies of publications each year on a wide range of subjects.

81 THE GEORGIA CENTER FOR CONTINUING EDUCATION

Facilities

The Georgia Center is a residential adult education facility with:

137 double bedrooms with a sleeping capacity of 274 18 conference rooms of varying sizes with a total seating capacity of 1,120 8 dining areas with a total seating capacity of 916 48 offices 2 libraries 4 elevators

Staff

The Center has an averRge monthly payroll of over 500. This includes:

240 hourly employees 97 salaried employees on weekly or bi-weekly payrolls 54 administrative employees on monthly payrolls 11 administrative personnel joint-staffed with other schools, colleges, or institutes on campus 54 part-time instructors 70 University of Georgia faculty members contributing to the Center's program (average per month)

Program

During the 1971-72 fiscal year the Center conducted:

278 conferences registering some 23,936 conferees 646 other meetings and activities involving 26,563 participants

Extension programs in virtually every county in the state including non-credit programs and credit courses at both the undergraduate and graduate level

Television programming originating from WGTV in the Center and broadcast over a statewide network that includes eight other ETV stations

82 THE GEORGIA CENTER FOR CONTINUING EDUCATION

INSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES DIVISION

1. The Instructional Services Division has a staff of 47 ional

2 The four s within Instructional Services are Univers Extension, Conferences and Short Courses, Program Development and Evaluation, and Inter-Institutional Programs.

3. The University Extension Department is responsible for the off-campus credit and non-credit continuing education effort of the Georgia Center.

4. The Conferences and Short Courses Department is responsible for the residential conference program at the Georgia Center.

5. The Department of Program Development and Evaluation is composed of a staff of 20 specialists who are joint-staffed with one of 8 academic departmentsJ colleges, and institutes.

6. The Department of Inter-Institutional Programs is responsible for strengthening relationships with other institutions of higher education and developing joint programs in continuing education.

7. The Georgia Center has a professional staff member jointly employed with and housed in each of four University System Junior Colleges.

8. The off-campus credit program of University Extension is equal in enrollment to a college with 1,647 full-time students. The enrollment consists of 803 equivalent full-time undergraduate students and 844 equivalent full-time graduate students.

83 THE GEORGIA CENTER FOR CONTINUING EDUCATION

COMMUNICATIONS DIVISION

1. WGTV the University of Georgia's Public Television station, telecasts seven days a week from the transmitting site at Stone Mountain. The station is one of the originating stations in the Georgia Network of ETV stations.

2 Communications Division produces 15 full film productions in a typical year.

3. WGTV produces for national distribution approximately 15 television productions each year.

4. WGTV produces for local telecast approxin~tely 100 television programs each year,

5. The Georgia television signal is picked up and transmitted by Community Antenna systems in approximately 70 communities in a five-state area.

6. Program Guides for Georgia Television were mailed to approximately 16,500 people each month. A sizeable number go into each county of the State and approximately 500 are mailed out of the State.

7. WGTV receives 6,000 viewer letters in a typical year and has a potential viewing audience of over 2~ million.

8. WGTV works very closely with the campus Cultural Affairs and Lecture Series in order to produce television programs with visiting celebrities.

9. WGTV has the second largest viewing audience of all the University-based stations in the nation.

10. Communications Division operates a film distribution system from the film library on the campus of the University of Georgia. Approximately 30 films are picked up and delivered each day.

11. Campus participations in WGTV's productions number approximately 300 per year.

12. The film library of the Georgia Center has 2,200 films which are distributed nationwide, primarily to institutions of higher education.

13. The operations section of the Communications Division (audio-visual support for conferences and meetings) prints thousands of signs each year and pre­ pares hundreds of audio-visual services.

14. Communications Division operates the Media Production Service (MPS) which is a service to state agencies, other schools and colleges, and associations.

84 THE INSTITUTE FOR BEHAVIORAL RESEARCH

The Institute for Behavioral Research is a multidisciplinary research ~rganization. Its purpose is to encourage a pooling of the expertise of staff members and students from such departments as Sociology, lsychology, Political Science, Geography, Economics, and Educational Jsychology in behalf of an attack upon significant social and behavioral jlroblems.

The staff currently consists of a two-thirds time Director, eight one-third time professors, and four secretaries, The Institute also provides both housing and research experience for twenty graduate assis- t:ants.

Facilities

Physically, I.B.R. is housed in the new and spacious Graduate Studies Research Center with ready access to the University of Georgia Computer Center, a technical library, small group behavior laboratories, and related facilities.

Contracts and Grants

Members of the staff of I.B.R. have been the recipients of $205,798 in research grants and contracts during 1972.

Research Programs

Contemporary research programs turn about such topics as the sociology and psychology of public health, regional migration and manpower, the development of a behavior taxonomy and the production of objective aids to curricular and career counselling.

Publications

During 1972 members of the staff of I.B.R. have prepared approximately 25 papers; published 22 contributions to the professional literature, and given eight lectures, talks, seminars, or colloquia.

85 AND AREA DEVELOPMENT

sed

Full-time Director and Associate Director plus 29 ssional personnel oint staffed with academic s, schools and other institutes.

members from 48 s, schools or other institutes in ICAD service

Administered 11 contracts or grants for services amounting to $246,909.

Studies Conducted approximately 88 studies for community and area organizations, state agencies, or federal agencies.

Publications Published 46 reports, articles, or other documents on various planning and technical subjects for groups outside the University.

Educational Activities Organized, conducted or participated in over 396 conferences, forums, panels or workshops, and gave 146 lectures or special talks to outside groups.

Consulting Participated in approximately 547 technical consultations with outside groups, 400 general planning consultations, and honored 413 requests for factual information,

Fields of Public Service Social work, business and economics, fine arts, recreation, safety edu- cat law enforcement, general services, pharmaceutical services, , trade and services, government field training, economic , governmental data systems, environmental design, training, adult education, and hcQlth services.

86 THE INSTITUTE OF COMPARATIVE MEDICINE

(Based on Fiscal Year 1971-72)

Director and Associate Director plus 96 professional personnel jointly staffed from the Col of Veter Medicine College of Arts and Sciences, School of Pharmacy, College of Agriculture, School of Fores and School of Home Economics.

The Institute functions in coordinating research on the fundamental aspects of comparative medicine and the clinical sciences. The educational mission of the Institute is, therefore, oriented toward the strengthening of the graduate programs in the biomedical sciences. The service function of the Institute is manifest in the consultative roles of its members in com­ parative and laboratory animal medicine programs of the University System agencies and organizationso

Contracts and Grants

The Institute of Comparative Medicine was responsible for the administra­ tion of $1,505,488 in contracts and grants during Fiscal year 1971-72.

Publications

Submitted over 82 papers for publication in biomedical journals.

87 THE INSTITUTE OF CONTINUING

LEGAL EDUCATION IN GEORGIA

The Institute of Continuing Legal Education in Georgia represents the combined efforts of the Univers of Georgia School of Law the Law Schools of Emory and Mercer Universities and the State Bar of Georgia in providing a continuing legal education program for the Georgia lawyer. The Institute is the educational arm of the State Bar. five or more seminars a year are held to keep lawyers abreast of changes and new developments in the law. These seminars vary from one to three dayso Courses are held at the Georgia Center for Continuing Education, the University of Georgia School of Law and in the major cities throughout Georgia.

The University of Georgia pays the salaries of the Director of the Institute and staff as well as provides office facilities for the Institute in the Law School building. The Director is also a member of the faculty of the Law School.

Staff

The faculty of the Institute is made up of prominant practitioners and specialists of the State Bar of Georgia as well as selected members of the faculties of Georgia, Mercer, and Emory University Law Schools. In addition, national experts teach and lecture at these institutes.

Of particular importance to the successful operation of the Institute are the services furnished by the Headquarters of the State Bar of Georgia. The services of the General Counsel and the Secretary-Treasurer are donated to the Institute. Supportive clerical services are also performed by State Bar personnel, and the Executive Secretary of the State Bar serves as Secretary­ Treasurer of the Institute.

Services

In addition to service to the general practioner, programs are planned for specialist groups and Sections of the State Bar of Georgia. Annual educational meetings are held for City & County Attorneys, Juvenile Court Judges, Superior Court Judges, District Attorneys, and County Court Trial Judges and Solicitors.

Through this continuing legal education program, the Institute provides the profession, to increase his own expertise, and to benefit from the knowledge of experts in various fields.

The Institute prepares extensive program materials for each meeting and is the publisher of the Georgia Lawyers Basic Practice Handbook as well as various formbooks for lawyers.

88 THE INSTITUTE OF ECOLOGY

Full-time Executive Director plus full, associate, and student members jointly staffed with 12 academic departments and schools; a technical and clerica staff of 15 persons.

Facilities

New $1.6 million Ecology Building with research and administrative fEcilities under construction, with spring 1974 completion date. Administrative oifices and computer facilities temporarily located in the Rockhouse (Lumpkin House). Members utilize laboratories in the Sciences, Plant Sciences, and Forest Resources Build Research areas at Horseshoe Bend near the campus. Institute operates the Savannah River Ecology Laboratory (SREL) near Augusta for the U. S Atomic Energy Commission. Also has members and students at the Marine Institute on Sapelo Island and Skidaway Institute of Oceanography near Savannah.

Contracts and Grants

Administers grants amounting to about $815,000.

Research Programs

Operates multidisciplinary research programs in radiation and temperate forest ecology, Supports research programs in marine and tropical ecology.

Publications

Members published more than 100 papers and books in 1971.

Training Programs

Graduate Faculty of Ecology operates an Interdisciplinary Ph. D. Degree Program in Ecology in cooperation with the academic departments. Systems ecology training program offered in cooperation with the Zoology and Botany Departments. More than 100 graduate students working in ecology-oriented fields in academic departments.

Service Activities

Members active on many international, national, and local committees. Institute has special relationships with the International Biological Program, Organization for Tropical Studies, International Society of Ecology, and The (national) Institute of Ecology. Members also give speeches and conduct workshops for laymen, as well as serve as ecological consultants.

Relationships with Other Groups

Cooperates closely with Institute of Natural Resources, Tropical Studies Group, and academic departments of Zoology, Botany, Microbiology, Entomology, Poultry Science, Statistics, Agronomy, Geology and Geography, and the schools of Law, Forest Resources, and Environmental Design. 89 THE INSTITUTE OF GOVERNMENT

(As of June 30, 1972)

Staff

In addition to a Director, the Institute employs 32 full-time ssionals within its general budget including 18 people jointly staffed with the depart- ments of Political Science, Soc , Account , and and Finance, the School of Social Work, the Georgia Center for Continuing Education and the Institute of Community and Area Development. An additional 24 staff members were employed under grants or contracts and 9 graduate students worked under research assistantships. The Institute is organized into five divisions: Governmental Field Services, Governmental Training, Research (Public Law, Public Finance, and State Government), Corrections, and Police Science.

Budget, Contracts, and Grants

The Institute's 1971-72 state-supported budget amounted to $388,127. The Institute of Government also cooperated with the Georgia Center in ad­ ministering $700,000 in federally funded governmental training programs. Other grants and contracts totalling $900,000 were also held by the Institute,

Studies and Consultations

During 1971-72, the Institute's faculty provided consultative services or conducted studies in connection with more than 150 different projects for local, state and national governments.

Publications

Five books and ten full-length reports were published this year. Of its past and current publications, the Institute distributed 4,091 copies.

Training Activities

The Institute of Government planned, conducted, or co-sponsored 255 conferences and workshops at which 7,791 people attended. Of these, 133 conferences were held off-campus at local and regional training facilities in Georgia. These conferences covered a full range of governmental training, police science, and corrections activities.

Other Educational Activities

The Institute serves as an agent of the Board of Regents in developing police science degree programs at Georgia state colleges. It also administers the off-campus Master of Public Administration program in cooperation with the Department of Political Science.

90 Director, four full-time taff

ive agreements with other institutions educational agencies,

Conferences, s, consultative services, and institutional studies for two-year and four-year col s in and surround Dur 1971-72, conferences and workshops were held involving more than 340 administrators and faculty members 132 different institutions in 29 District of Columbia, and Canada. This involved a total of 30 conference

Instruction

Doctoral program in h education. E doctorates in h education have been conferred. Five were conferred in 1972.

Seminars on topics in higher education conducted for faculty members of Georgia Colleges. These include faculty members selected for the Faculty Development in Georgia program, faculty members from developing colleges who attend the University as Academic Year Fellows, and faculty members from developing colleges who attend other institutions as Summer Scholars.

Training Programs dealing with administrative leadership, institutional research, management information systems, and institutional planning.

Research

Studies dealing with various aspects of higher education: student protests and legal rights, administrative needs and characteristics, academic internships, curricular problems, and instructional stragegies. Other studies requested by academic departments, colleges within the University, and state organizations.

Contracts and Grants

Currently, the Institute works with 23 colleges funded under Title III of the Higher Education Act. Two special projects funded under the Education Professions Development Act are: Management Tnfnrmat ion Sy.c;tPms And Lone-Range Planning, and Administrative Team Leadership Development for Colleges in the Southeast. Two smaller grants from private foundations.

Publications

Monographs and Newsletter Series. Two monographs and two newsletters were published in 1971-72.

91 THE INSTITUTE OF NATURAL RESOURCES

(Based on Fiscal Year 1971-72)

Full-time staff includes director and three associate directors, plus a research associate and two clerical members. The director also is director of Coastal Resources Development for the University System.

Facilities

Offices located in Building No. 1 of the School of Forest Resources. Various laboratory facilities of other units of the University are available for use by INR.

Contracts and Grants

Total budget for INR for 1971-72 was approximately $124,000. INR administered grants of $216,700 from the National Sea Grant Program (NOAA, Department of Commerce); $100,000 from the Ocean Science Center of the Atlantic Commission; $79,000 from the Office of Water Resources Research; $168,000 for the Marine Resources Extension Center, and $3,400 from private donors.

Programs

Coordinates programs and activities pertaining to (1) the Marine Institute at Sapelo Island, the Skidaway Institute of Oceanography, and the Marine Resources and Extension Center at Skidaway and substation at Brunswick; (2) biological resources--fish, wildlife, forests; and (3) use and management of water and mineral resources.

Relationships with other groups

Cooperates closely with the Institutes of Ecology, Government, and Community and Area Development, and with schools and departments of Forest Resources, Law, Environmental Design, Geology, Botany, Zoology, and the Environmental Resources Center of the Georgia Institute of Technology.

92 INSTRUCTIONAL RESOURCES CENTER

The Instructional Resources Center was created in the Fall of 1969 as a part of the Office of the Vice President for Instruction. It became a separately budgeted unit the following year. The Center was established to assist col s, schools, s and individual facul members in the otilization of modern media in instruction.

This assistance takes several forms. The preparation of charts, graphs, overhead projectuals, artwork for slides, and visuals for television is the ~esponsibility of the graphics department. The photographic department prepares slides, photographs, and duplicates slides.

The IRC has recently added to its services the duplication of audio tapes, both the reel-to-reel type and cassettes. The IRC equipment pool has continued to grow and now contains several types of recorders, slide projectors, 16 mm projectors and 8 rnrn projectors. This equipment is delivered and an operator provided for users in the General Classroom Building. It is available for loan campus-wide if the user will pick up and return the equipment.

Closed-circuit television production is also a part of the resources available in th~ IRC. The IRC is able to produce in either black and white or color in a variety of formats. In addition to studio productions the IRC has available a small portable camera and video tape recorder. The new 3/4" videocassette format is now available for duplication, production, and playback.

The IRC Film and Tape Library is a collection of films, video tapes, and audio tapes which are reserved for on-campus instructional use. The collection which has grown from less than thirty in 1969 now numbers more than 252 titles in 16 rnrn film, 6 titles in 8 rnrn, more than 215 titles in audio tapes, and more than 70 slide sets.

The IRC provides to the University community consultation concerning the utilization and/or purchase of equipment for visual presentations.

The services of the IRC are generally without charge to instructional users. However, projects with extensive production or requiring special materials may require supplemental funding from other sources. Services to non-instructional University functions will be provided on a cost basis as materials and equipment are available.

The IRC employs three full-time persons, one joint-staffed person, and three graduate students. Additional student assistants are hired as they are needed and as funds are available. This staff has produced more than 175 television productions for classroom use, 15 instructional films, and more than 45,000 slides.

93 OFFICE OF COMPUTER ACTIVITIES

The Office of Computer Activities has four divisions, Institutional Data Processing, Computational, Information Services, and Research, which the Univer A 1 175 have been assigned to this office.

The processing units present in operation are an IBM 360 model 65, an IBM 360 model 30, a CDC 6400, an IBM 7094, two IBM 1401's, and an IBM 1130. To these processors are attached a var of peripheral devices including tape drives, disks, drums, data cells, and about 50 remote terminals. A CALCOMP plotter model 900/1136 is presently in operation at the Center.

Software

The scientific languages FORTRAN and ALGOL, the business language COBOL, and the general purpose language PL/1 are all in use on at least one machine. An assembler language is available for every machine. In addition, a conversational language is in use for remote terminals, and a simplified mathematical language is used on the AMTRAN console.

Services

The Computational Division has a User Services Department that functions as the information desk for the Division. User Services assumes production responsibility for standard programs and provides indirect assistance in the areas of programming and control languages.

Other services are also available through the Information Services Division. The Computer Software Management and Information Center (COSMIC) Department disseminates programs originally developed by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) and the Department of Defense (DoD). The Georgia Information Dissemination Center (GIDC) Department provides scientific researchers with references to current and past literature in their particular fields of interest. At the present time, this Department provides services on nineteen data bases covering a broad spectrum of disciplineso

94 PUBLIC SAFETY DIVISION

) response to the f the urban-like the some 27,000 persons researching, teach , and visit on campus

) To provide such response in an exemp manner so as to "teach example'' on the of the Univers for communi- ties faced with similar problems of life safety, proper and related civic lems of envirolli"11ental concern;

(3) To provide such response by members of the academic community-­ students--careful selected and ssional trained in the process, who upon leaving the Universi can provide knowledge and stimulation for improvement in the areas of law enforcement and environmental concerns of benefit to the communities in which they take up residence as citizens;

(4) To insure that all concerned are aware that the campus is not a sanctuary for law violators who would jeopardize the social as well as educational life of the academic community.

Structure

Headed by the Director of Public Safety, the staff consists of an Assistant Director who also serves as Chief of Police, University of Georgia Police Department; a Manager, Safety Services Department; and Manager, Traffic Safety Department.

Functions

UGA Police Department - Responsible for providing full peace officer authority on the properties of the University. Forty-seven sworn police officers, including a Captain in charge of patrol operations and a Captain of detectives in charge of investigative operations. During 1971-72, 1,109 criminal complaints were handledo Of these complaints, 287 were cleared. Arrests totaled 107. The Department has an unusually high stolen property recovery rate of 37.4% of the $88,000 worth of property reported stolen. All officers are required to be academically involved in under­ graduate or graduate studies. Approximately 51.2% of all sworn officers are graduate students. Professional law enforcement training averaged 172 hours per officer for the year, probably the highest average of any law enforcement agency in the state.

Safety Services Department - Responsible for professional specialized attention to Radiation Safety, Laboratory Safety, Accident Prevention Control, Fire Prevention, and Environmental Safety Programs. Charged with enforcement of Georgia Fire Safety Code and conducting inspections relative to Georgia Public Health Laws and Regulations as they apply to Food Services, Dairy and Pasteurization Plants, Rodent and Pest Control) Swimming Pools, Air Samples, 95 Cont'd.: PUBLIC SAFETY DIVISION

Noise Control, disposal of organic solvents, and other areas of environ­ mental safety.

Traffic Safety Department - Responsible for traffic safety studies, parking control program relating to handling 29,000 registered cars and movement and parking problems involving 10,000 cars on campus each day.

Community Services

UGA Police Department is responsible for conducting Northeast Georgia Police Training Academy, providing basic recruit training to state, municipal, and county law enforcement officers in the northeast Georgia area. Officers of the Department are also involved in lecturing in academic areas such as Political Science, History, Sociology, Physical Education, etc. on law enforcement problems.

The Safety Services Department conducts numerous training classes relating to safety--Radiation and Laboratory Safety for faculty and students. Accident Prevention Safety Officer conducts training classes for students and employees. Training classes are conducted in fire prevention for em­ ployees and students. Environmental Safety Officer conducts training classes for Food Service personnel and in other training areas related to environmental safety.

The Traffic Safety Department conducts Driver Education Programs for employees.

96 RESEARCH PARK

The University of Georgia Research Park is being developed as a center for specialized University, state, federal, and private research facilities. the Park's Director is responsible to the Vice President for Research and is aided by a Research Park committee. The Park presently consists of over 400 acres in the public sector and approximately 100 acres in the private sector. The Park's physical plant, consisting of buildings already in use or under construction, is valued at approximately $32 million.

Facilities

Agricultural Research Facilities (UGA) Arthritis Research Facility (UGA) Botany and Biochemistry Research (UGA) Cobalt 60 Irradiation Facility (UGA) Forestry Sciences Laboratory (Federal) Georgia Retardation Center, Athens Branch (State) General Research Building (Under Construction--UGA) Institute of Ecology {UGA) Poultry Disease Research Center (UGA) Psychology Animal Behavior Laboratory (UGA) Richard B. Russell Agricultural Research Center (Federal) Southeast Poultry Research Laboratory (Federal) Southeast Water Laboratory (Federal) Southern Regional Poultry Genetics Laboratory (UGA)

Research

Research Park facilities conduct basic and applied studies in animal and plant pathology, agricultural engineering, bacteriology, botany, ento­ mology, chemistry, pharmacy, physics, geology, poultry science, forest management, work utilization, water pollution, zoology, ecology, and research into performance and function of the mentally retarded together with pre­ paration of personnel to work with them.

Relationship with University

Twenty-nine scientists working in federal and state labs have received adjunct appointments to the University faculty. This includes directors of all permanent Research Park laboratories. Other scientists from the Park frequently give lectures and conduct seminars for University faculty members and students.

97 THE SERVICE PR0~1 OF THE COLLEGE OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION

19 -72

The Division of Services staff consists of an Administrative Assistant for Services, who serves as director, three Field Business at the Center, and a

tation and itation*

Consultat itations by College of Business Administration-­ Community Groups Federal/State Government City/County Govern­ ment , APDC's ), Business and Industry Associations (63), Other Educational Institutions (56).

Seminars/Workshops

Forty-one (41) sponsored seminars/workshops were held at the Georgia Center. Approximately 221 conference days were logged. A total of 2,295 participants attended, and 13,053 conference days were recorded. Several workshops were held in other Georgia cities, such as Brunswick and Warner Robbins. An on-campus conference of particular note at the Georgia Center on July 7-9 was the Southern Business Administration Association Workshop for Department Heads which attracted 60 participants from the southern region.

Studies/Publications

More than 21 faculty members of the College conducted or participated in more than 12 funded research projects which were valued at 1/2 million dollars. The Division of Research and its computer support assisted in de­ veloping the College of Business faculty evaluation program, the operational­ ization of the Wharton econometric forecasting model and hundreds of statis­ tical and program operations. The faculty of the College had 140 articles printed, 16 books, 25 monographs, 21 chapters or parts of books, and numerous other reports, studies, abstracts, and book reviewso

Data Collection and Dissemination

The Division of Research continued its collection and dissemination of data about the local business activity in the State of Georgia. The data were published in Georgia Business (12 copies) and made available in the tical Abstract. ~------* Figures represent individual calls or visits to firms, etc. in each group classification.

98 UNIVERSITY PRESS

The University of Georgia Press was zed in the summer of 1938 ith stated purpose of i and s. Its primary function is to publish the results of research and scholar­ ship for the benefit of scholars and students and to publish readable and authentic ions of such material for the educated the Press also et and preserve the his and culture of the state and region. Included among its publications are books on various university disciplines: agriculture, anthropology, archaeology, economics, education, fine arts, history, journalism, lan- guage and literature, law philo itical science, science, and sociology.

Through its publishing program the Press carries the work of scholars beyond their campuses to the specialist and to the public at horne and abroad, putting to use the results of scholarship, research, and creative thought.

The imprint of the Press is controlled by a 12-rnernber Faculty Editorial ]oard. In addition to the Director, the staff is composed of eleven full­ and five part-time employees.

Offices are in Waddel Hall; book storage and shipping in the basement of Old College; warehousing on South Campus.

99

Revenue THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA SOURCES, AMOUNTS, AND PERCENTAGES OF REVENUE JULY 1, 1971 - JUNE 30, 1972

Source Income Percentage of Total

From the State of Georgia Por General Operations $ 37,380,218 Por Continuing Education 1,189,252 Por Agricultural Experiment Station 4,838,497 Por Cooperative Extension Service 4,899,658 Por Rural Development Center 313,348 Por Marine Resources Extension Service 162,129 Total State of Georgia 48,783,102 48.7

From the Counties of Georgia Por Cooperative Extension Service $ 1,750,743 1.7

From Federal Appropriations Por Teaching $ 183,816 For Agricultural Experiment Station 1,785,819 For Cooperative Extension Service 3,195,217 Total Federal Appropriations 5,164,852 5.2

From Student Fees $ 11,592,887 11.6

From Sales, Services, and Misc. Sources of Teaching Departments $ 2,863,501 of Continuing Education 162,175 of Agricultural Experiment Station 1,348,170 of Cooperative Extension Service 748,090 of Rural Development Center 14,894 Total Sales, Services, and Misc. Sources 5,136,830 5.1

From Organized Activities Relating to Educational Departments $ 288' 492 .3

From Gifts, Grants, and Research Contracts *(State, Federal, and Private) $ 18,030,480 18.0

From Auxiliary Enterprises $ 9,306,101 9.3

From Endowment $ 77,357 .1

TOTAL $100,130,844 100.0

* Includes Student Aid

Source: Office of the Vice President for Business and Finance

102 THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA EXPENDITURES BY AMOUNTS AND PERCENTAGE JULY 1, 1971 - JUNE 30, 1972

Percentage of Total

Instcuction and Departmental Research $ 33,681,153 33.8

Organized Activities Related to Educational Departments 565,443 .6

General Administration and General Expenses 6,618,985 6.7

Library 3,034,115 3.0

Operation and Maintenance of Instructional Plant Facilities 5,873,266 5.9

Organized Research (Not Including Agricultural Experiment Station) 9,356,198 9.4

Extension and Public Services 6,734,237 6.8

Student Aid 2,402,265 2.4

Auxiliary Enterprises 8,866,985 8o9

Agricultural Experiment Station 9,600,512 9.7

Cooperative Extension Service 12,746,731 12 o8

TOTAL $ 99,479,890 100.0

Source: Office of the Vice President for Business and Finance

103 THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA STATE APPROPRIATIONS FOR VARIOUS SERVICES JULY 1-JUNE 30, 1970-71, 1971-72, 1972-73

~--~~~~~-~- -~-~-~~-~-~~ Appropriation Appropriation Appropriation 1970-71 1971-72 1972-73

A. Campus Instruction Maintenance and Operation $ 36,049,661 $ 37,380,218 $ 41,656,000

B. Continuing Education 1,267,790 1 189,252 1,295,000 c. Agricultural Experiment Station 5,088,189 4,838,497 5,760,000

D. Cooperative Extension Service 4,958,640 4,899,658 5,737,000

E. Rural Development Center 313,348 334,000

F. Marine Resources Extension Service 162,129 175,000

Total State Appropriations $ 47,364,280 $ 48,783,102 $ 54,957,000

Source: Office of the Vice President for Business and Finance

104 THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA PERCENTAGE DISTRIBUTION FROM VARIOUS SOURCES OF REVENUE FOR RESIDENT INSTRUCTION~'' 1962-63 - 1971-72

:fiscal Per Cent from Per Cent from Per Cent from 'iear State Appropriations Student Fees Other Sources

1962-63 65.50 30 23 4.27

1963 64 67.05 26.32 6.63

1964-65 67.70 27.58 4. 72

1965-66 71.00 25.51 3.49

1966-67 61.71 28.63 9.66

1967-68 72.54 18.80 8.66

1968-69 74.19 18.51 7.30

1969-70 69.72 22.53 7.75

1970-71 72.75 20.79 6.46

1971-72 72.11 20.89 7.00

~·( Does not include Restricted Revenue

Source: Office of the Vice President for Business and Finance

105 THEUNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA STATE OF GEORGIAAPPROPRIATIONS 1962-63 THROUGH1971-72

Fiscal Resident Continuing Agricultural Cooperative Rural Marine Resources Per Year Instruction Education Experiment Extension Development Extension Total Increase Station Service Center Service Previous

1971-72 $37,380,218 $1,189,252 $4,838,497 $4,899,658 $313,348 $162,129 $48,783,102 3.

1970-71 36,049,661 1,267,790 5,088,189 4,958,640 47,364,280 12.

1969-70 31,692,460 1,148,000 4,396,000 4,754,000 41,990,460 8.

1968-69 29,815,319 913,000 3' 811,000 4,220,000 38,759,319 12.

...... 0 1967-68 26,021,985 1,010,500 3,545,000 3,870,000 34,447,485 71.0 "' 1966-67 13,181,671 742,000 3,000,314 3,224,929 20, lL;8, 914 14.9

1965-66 11,206,998 656' 000 2, 748,577 2,919,889 17,531,464 16.

1964-65 8,944,261 561,000 2,800,111 2,686,601 14,991,973 21.

1963-64 7,476,951 436,000 2,245,264 2,213,602 12,371,817 13

1962-63 6,214,327 395,500 2' 172,500 2,127,000 10,909,327 12.6

Source: Office of the Vice President for Business and Finance Auxiliary Enterprises UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE

Facilities

A modern spacious facility that officially opened on November 30, 1969, has 29,584 square feet in total, with approximately 17,060 square feet devoted to sales areas.

Location

Corner of Sanford Drive and Baxter Street Extension (at stadium bridge)

Services

A retail store specializing in the following types of merchandise:

Textbooks, new and used (approximately 120,000 in inventory) Paperback Books (approximately 60,000 in inventory) Educational Supplies Sundries UGA monogrammed sweatshirts, ashtrays, and other novelties

Staff

Employs approximately 40 people normally, but a staff is increased to approximately 80 people with the employment of temporary and part-time per~onnel during bookrush periods.

Who May Use

Students Faculty Staff Alumni University Visitors

108 UNIVERSITY FOOD SERVICE

Facilities

Unit Name: BOLTON HALL SNELLING HALL BULLDOGROOM McWHORTERDINING HALL

Seating Capacity: 1,000 325 376 224

Size of Facility: 13,872 sq. ft. 6,000 sq. ft. 7,000 sq. ft. 3, 765 sq. ft.

Location Baxter Street Green Street Memorial Hall Ag Drive and Field Street

Services Student Student Snack Bar Cafeteria for Athletic t-' Small Group 0 Cafeteria Cafeteria Association 1.0 Banquet Services Faculty Luncheon Banquets Catering Catering Staff

No. of employees: 26 21 17 11

Wh9 May Use Students Students Students Athletes Faculty & Faculty & Faculty & Staff Staff Staff Univ. Groups Univ. Groups Univ. Groups UNIVERSITY GOLF COURSE

F~cilities

An 18 Hole Championship Course, 6,930 yards long, designed by Robert Trent Jones; a 30 Tee Dr with Put Chipping Green; the Course was opened in September of 1968.

Location

Milledge Extension, off East Campus Road, approximately one mile south of the Married Student Housing Complex.

Services

All facilities listed above, also rental motorized cars, rental pull­ carts, rental clubs, and locker space; Retail Pro-Shop with inventory of balls, clubs, shoes, bags, etc.

Who May Use

Students Faculty Alumni Dependents of Students, Faculty, and Alumni Conferees University Club Members

UNIVERSITY PRINTING DEPARTMENT

Facilities

A complete Printing Plant which has the equipment to produce almost all types of printing jobs; has approximately 9,800 square feet in total area.

Location

The basement floor of Terrell Hall

Services

Provides high quality printing services in the areas of type-setting, off-set printing, letter-press printing, and binding.

Staff

Employs 24 people on a full-time basis,

Who May Use

Any department or unit listed in the University Chart of Accounts, or the Student Activity Chart of Accounts.

110 CENTRAL DUPLICATING SERVICE

A complete duplicating facility containing Xerox, Offset and corre- per 1 equipment.

Location

The basement of the Business Services Building

Services

Provides quality duplicating and copying services.

Staff

Employs 6 people on a full-time basis.

Who May Use

Any department or unit listed in the University Chart of Accounts, or the Student Activity Chart of Accounts.

CENTRAL OFFICE SUPPLY

Facilities

Central Office Supply is a University-operated warehouse and issuing facility for office supplies and related items.

Location

Business Services Annex (one block back of Business Services Building on Broad Street)

Services

Provides office supplies at cost to University departments. Lower costs realized by large quantity purchases are passed on to departments. Delivery direct to user. Catalog available,

Staff

Employs 6 people on a full-time basis.

Who May Use

Any department or unit listed in the University Chart of Accounts, or the Student Activity Chart of Accounts.

111

Physical Facilities UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA MAIN CAMPUS

BUILDINGS NUMBER GROSS AREA CONSTRUCTION SQUARE FEET COST

Administration 9 168,200 $ 676,000

Academic 102 3,592,700 65,244,000

General 54 834,700 8,247,000

SUB-TOTAL 165 4,595,600 74,167,000

Residence Halls 20 1,326,800 17,549,000

Married Housing 17 514,300 6,485,000

SUB-TOTAL 37 1,841,100 24,034,000

TOTAL 202 6,436,700 98,201,000

NUMBER OF ROOMS OF BASIC ROOM TYPES

240 Classrooms

350 Teaching Laboratories

1,050 Research Laboratories

3,480 Offices

UTILIZATION OF INSTRUCTIONAL FACILITIES FALL, 1971

Teaching Classrooms Laboratories

Number of Rooms 235

Hours Used/Week 29 24

% Student Stations Occupied When Room is in Use 67 72

Average Class Size Per Room 31 21

Source: Office of Campus Planning

114 MAJOR ACADEMIC BUILDINGS AND DATE OF INITIAL OCCUPANCY

(Athens Campus)

Building Name Initial Building Name Initial Occupancy Occupancy

Academic 1831 Geology Hydrothermal Lab 1962 Aderhold (Education) 1971 Georgia Center for Continuing 1956 ADP Center 1970 Education Agricultural Engineering Center 1966 Georgia Center Addition 1966 Agricultural Extension 1937 Georgia Museum of Art 1907 Alumni House 1943 Gilbert Health Services 1942 Automotive Center 1971 Golf Pro Shop 1968 Baldwin Hall 1938 Greenhouse Complex (Rsch. Park) 1969 Barrow Hall 1911 Griggs Hall 1942 Barrow Hall Shop 1936 Hardman Hall 1918 Biologica 1 Sciences 1960 Hoke Smith Annex 1940 Biological Sciences Addition 1972 4-Home Management Houses 1940 Bishop House 1942 Industrial Arts 1971 Bolton Hall 1963 Journalism 1968 Boyd Graduate Rsch. Center 1968 Journalism Auditorium 1968 Business Administration 1924 Laundry 1963 Business Administration Addition 1972 Law School 1932 Business Services 1968 Law School Addition 1967 Business Services Annex 1969 LeConte Hall 1938 Candler Hall 1901 Library, Main (Dunlap Little) 1952 Central Research Stores 1969 Library, Science 1968 Chapel 1831 Livestock-Poultry 1960 Chemistry 1960 Lucy Cobb 1858 Chemistry Addition 1971 Lucy Cobb Seney-Stovall Chapel 1885 Child Development Lab 1940 Lucy Cobb Carriage House 1808 Child Development Lab Addition 1970 Lucy Cobb Gym 1905 Coliseum 1964 Lumpkin House 1850 Conner Hall 1908 Lustrat House 1847 Dairy Science 1939 Margaret Hall 1898 Mo;rTc U::::::~11 Dawson Hall 193? ...... _"='_ ...... W<- ...... 1.,. 1905 Dawson Hall Addition 1971 Memorial Hall 1923 Demosthenian Hall 1824 Military Army ROTC 1931 Dudley Hall 1942 Miller Plant Sciences 1972 Environmental Design 1901 Moore College 1874 Fain Hall 1942 New College 1823 Family Housing Office 1970 Old College 1801 Fine Arts 1941 Park Hall 1938 Food Science 1959 Park Hall Addition 1970 Forest Resources #1 1938 Peabody Hall 1913 Forest Resources #2 1968 Personnel Services 1951 Forest Resources #3 1968 Pharmacy 1964 Garden Club of Georgia 1950 Phi Kappa Hall 1834 Geography, Geology, Speech 1960 Physical Plant 1958 115 Con' MAJOR ACADEMIC BUILDINGS AND DATE OF INITIAL OCCUPANCY

Building Name Initial Building Name Initial Occupancy Occupancy

Physical Plant Addition 1970 Snelling Hall 1940 Physics 1959 Soil Testing Lab 1970 Physics Addition 1969 Soil Tillage Lab 1968 Poultry Disease Research 1958 South Thomas Street Building 1967 President's House 1956 Stegeman Hall 1943 Psycholcgy 1968 Stegeman Hall Addition 1953 Psycholcgy Animal Labs 1968 Terrell Hall 1904 Psychology Animal Lab Annex 1969 University Bookstore 1968 Psychology Auditorium 1968 Veterinary Medicine 1949 Public Safety 1966 Visual Arts 1961 Recording for the Blind 1967 Visual Arts Annex 1951 Sanford Stadium 1929 Waddel Hall 1807 Sanford Stadium Dressing Rooms 1971 Women's Physical Education 1928 Sanford Stadium Expansion 1967 Women's Physical Education Addition 1969

SOURCE: Office of Campus Planning

116 MAJOR BUILDING PROJECTS COMPLETED 1960 1970

University Completion Federal & State Projec:-t Date Funds Funds Other Total Cost

Physics 1959-f~ 30,000 1,670,000 1,700,000

Food Science 1959'>'~ 1,310,000 1,310,000

Biological Sciences 1960 600,000 3,000,000 3,600,000

Chemistry 1960 33,000 2,490,000 2,523,000

Geography-Geology 1960 1,550,000 1,550,000

Livest~ck Poultry 1960 1,230,000 1,230,000

Visual Arts 1961 919,000 919' 000

Six Dormitories 1961 3,180,000 3,180,000

Geology Hydrothermal Lab 1962 32,000 32,000

Georgia Seed Lab (State) 1963 253,000 253,000

Stadium Bridge 1963 255,000 255,000

Creswell & Bolton Halls 1963 3,620,000 3,620,000

Laundry & Dry Cleaning Bldg. 1963 100,000 100,000

Horticulture Bldg. (Tifton) 1963 360,000 360,000

Pharmacy Building 1964 100,000 1,680,000 1,780,000

Coliseum 1964 4,090,000 4,090,000

Forestry Research Lab (Federal) 1964 611 '000 611 '000

Poultry Disease Lab (Federal) 1964 900,000 900,000

Married Student Housing-lOS Units 1964 1,025,000 1,025,000

Animal Lab (Vet. Med.) 1964 40,000 40,000

Continuing Education-Addition 1966 457,000 457,000

Agricultural Engineering 1966 675,000 1,300,000 1,975,000

Public Safety 1966 50,000 50,000

117 Con~'d: MAJOR BUILDING PROJECTS COMPLETED 1960-1970

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

Bru'(llby Hall 1966 3,300,000 3,300,000

200 Married Student Apartments 1966 2,000,000 2,000,000

Food Science Lab (Griffin) 1966 750,000 750,000

Ani~al Disease Lab (Tifton) 1966 460,000 460,000

Campus Electrical System Expansion 1966 225,000 225,000

McWhorter Hall 1967 978,000 978,000

Russell Hall 1967 3,600,000 3,600,000

Recording for the Blind, Inc. 1967 (Callaway Foundation) 100,000

Agricultural Engineering & Lab (Tifton) 1967 115 '000 115,000

Alpha Chi Omega Sorority 1967 184,000 184,000

Delta Phi Epsilon Sorority 1967 293,000 293,000

Law School Addition 1967 2,998,000 2,998,000

Central Heating & Distribution System Expansion 1967 420,000 420,000

Sanford Stadium Expansion 1967 (Athletic Association) 3,295,000

Boyd Graduate Studies Center and Science Library 1968 2,074,000 3,559,000 5,633,000

Business Services 81,000 81,000

Forest Resources Addition 1968 640,000 1,276,000 1,916,000

Golf Pro Shop 1968 42,500 42,500 Poultry Disease Research Addition to Main Lab 1968 52,200 52,200

Soil Tillage Lab 1968 63,000 63,000

Psychology Animal Lab 1968 94,000 94,000

118 Cont 'd -: MAJOR BUILDING PROJECTS COMPLETED 1960-1970

University Completion Federal & State Projec-t: Date Funds Funds Other Total Cost

Univer~ity Bookstore 1968 850,000 850,000

General Classroom Building 1968 1,640,000 4,510,000 6,150,000

Physics Addition 1969 128,100 128,100

Snelling Hall Renovation 1969 426,000 426,000

Alumni Rouse Renovation 1969 148,000 148,000

Greenhouse Complex (5) 1969 65,000 50,000 115 '000

Central Research Stores 1969 150,000 150,000

Psychology Animal Lab Annex 1969 26,000 120,000 146,000

Kappa Alpha Fraternity Renovation 1969 119,000 119,000

Georgia Center (Stone Mountain) WG1V 1969 100,000 100,000

Academic Building Addition & Renovation 1969 160,000 160,000

Business Services Annex 1969 105,000 105,000

Bulldog Room Renovation 1969 128,000 128,000

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

., f"\'"7/'\ J... 7/V 263,000 263,000

ADP Center Renovation 1970 225,900 225,900

Stearn 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

119 Corrt'd.: MAJOR BUILDING PROJECTS COMPLETED 1960-1970

University Completion Federal & State Project Date Fund Total

Bartow 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

TOTAL 16,126,000 51,429,300 3,395,000 70,950,300

* All science center buildings are shown to include the whole complex.

** Occupancy Date

Source: Office of Campus Planning

120 ~1AJOR BUILDING PROJECTS* COMPLETED PROJECTS 1971-1972

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

Additio~ to Home Economics 1971 309,200 984,100 1,293,300

AderholD (Education) 1971 1,550,000 3,112,000 4,662,000

Industr.i.a.l Arts 1971 190,000 384,000 574,000

Addition to Chemistry 1971 766,600 1,672,800 2,439,400

Administration Building, Rural Develop~ent Center, Tifton 1971 720,200 720,200

Beef Cattle Barn 1971 160,000 160,000

Greenhouse, Phase I, Addition to Biological Sciences 1971 71,000 51,000 122,000

Demonstration Building, Rock Eagle Park 1971 135,000 135,000

Three Headhouses, College of Agriculture 1971 53,400 62,100 115,500

Paving and Site Work, Rural Development Center, Tifton 1971 50,000 50,000

Renovations of Business Services, Business Services 1971 170,000 170,000 Annex, Personnel Services

Silos and Irrigation System, Coastal Plain Experiment 1971 89,000 89,000 Station

FAPP Research Broiler House, Veterinary Medicine 1971 37,100 37,100

Veterinary Medicine Office Mobile Building (12 Units) 1971 47,000 47,000

Automotive Center 1971 150,000 150,000

Sanford Stadium Dressing Rooms 1971 190,000 190,000

Hardman Hall Renovation 1971 77,100 77,100

Addition to Biological Sciences 1972 5111400 1,196,400 121 MAJOR BUILDING PROJECTS COMPLETED PROJECTS 1971-1972

University Total Completion Federal and Project Dat,e Funds Stat,e Funds Other Cost

Additicn to Business 1972 500,000 1,192,800 1,692,800 Administration

Miller Plant Sciences 1972 1,400,000 2,503,300 3,903,300

Campus Heating System 1972 1,013,000 1' 013,000 Expansion

Chemistry Fixed Equipment 1972 84,800 84,800

Home Economics Fixed Equipment 1972 49,500 49,500

TOTAL 5,525,200 13,256,200 190,000 18,971,400

*As of September, 1972

SOURCE: Office of Campus Planning

122 PROJECTS CURRENTLY UNDER CONSTRUCTION*

Completion Federal and Project Project Date Funds State Funds Other Cost

Married Student Housing 1972 3,674,500 3,674,500 (240 unj_ts)

Institu-te of Comparative 1972 677,400 930,100 1,607,500 Medicine

Tennis C:ourts (Peoples' Park) 1972 43,200 43,200

Vet. Mea. Interim Facilities 1972 571,800 571 '800

Plant sciences Lab 1973 318,300 ll5 ,400 433,700 Equipment

Botany Greenhouse Phase II 1973 290,000 290,000

Health Services Addition 1973 1,232,500 1,232,500

Main Library Annex 1973 5,188,000 5,188,000

Mary Lyndon Hall Renovation 1973 524,200 524,200

General Research Building 1973 1,827,600 1,827,600

Livestock Sales Facility, 1973 75,000 75,000 Tifton

Cattle Feeding Facility, 1973 690,600 690,600 Tifton

Swine Research Center, 1973 415,000 415,000 Tifton

Ecology Building 1974 1,603,500 1,603,500

TOTAL 1,285,700 16,848 200 43,200 18,177,100

*As of September, 1972

SOURCE: Office of Campus Planning 123 AUTHORIZED PROJECTS BEING PLANNED*

University Total Estimated Federal and Project Project: Bid Date Funds State Funds Other Cost

Animal Quarters Annex Fall, 1972 220,000 220,000

Swine Besearch Center, Fall, 1972 381,100 381,100 Athens

Conner Hall Remodeling Fall, 1972 1,697,500 1,697,500

Dairy Science Center, Fall, 1972 1,317,800 1,317,800 Athens

Dairy Besearch Building, Fall, 1972 241,400 241,400 Athens

Research Building, Tifton Fall, 1972 1,200,000 1,200,000

Research Building, Griffin Winter, 1973 1,150,000 1,150,000

Poultry Research Center, Spring, 1973 1,000,000 1,000,000 Athens

Livestock Pavilion, Calhoun Winter, 1973 150,000 150,000

Dairy Cattle Facility, Spring, 1973 500,000 500,000 Tifton

TOTAL 220,000 7,637,800 7,857,800

*As of September, 1972

SOURCE: Office of Campus Planning

124 LAND HOLDINGS

LOCATION COUNTY ACRES r~e University of Georgia Campus

Main Campus Clarke 575 Botanical Garden Clarke 293 Related Areas Clarke 860

College Station

Main Areas Clarke 1,895 Dairy Cattle Research Farm Clarke 445 Oglethorpe 125 Beef Cattle Research Farm Oglethorpe 799 Wilkes 148 Plant Scienc~Farm Oconee 433 Hardman Forest Jackson 456 Watson Springs Forest Greene 597 Georgia Mountain Branch Station Union 396 Northwest Georgia Branch Station Floyd 907 Gordon 348 Central Georgia Branch Station Morgan 400 Putnam 13,841 Southeast Georgia Branch Station Burke 469 Southwest Georgia Branch Station Sumter 447 Montezuma Peanut Plant Macon 18

Georgia Station

Georgia Station Spalding 1,251

Coastal Plain Station

? (:,('17 Coastal Plain Station Tift ..... ,...... ,.._~ Worth 104 Range Grazing Station Berrien 2,804 Shade Tobacco Station Decatur 414

Agriculture Extension Service

Dublin 4-H Center Laurens 170 Rock Eagle 4-H Center Putnam 1,461

TOTAL: 32,263

SOURCE: Office of Campus Planning 125 RESIDENCE HALLS

Capacity ~omen's Residence Halls Date of Initial Occupancy

1961 164 Brumby 1966 1,000 Church 1961 164 Creswell 1963 992 Hill 1961 168 Mary Lyndon* 1937 132 Mell 1961 162 Myers 1953 479 Rutherford 1938 155 Soule 1920 117

Sub-Total 10 Buildings 3,533

~en's Residence Halls Date of Initial Capacity Occupancy

Clark Howell 1937 160 Joe Brown 1932 137 Lipscomb 1961 164 McWhorter 1967 167 Milledge 1921 154 Morris 1957 152 Payne 193"9 233 Reed 1953 480 Russell 1967 1,000 Tucker 1961 176

Sub-Total 10 Buildings 2,823

mflm7\T J.U..L.l":)..LJ 20 Residence Halls 6,356

*Not in use, being renovated, completion expected Summer, 1973.

SOURCE: Office of Campus Planning

126 FRATERNITY AND SORORITY BUILDINGS

University Owned Fraternity Houses ity

Alpha Epsilon Pi 34 Tau 54 Chi Phi 32 Chi Psi 28 Kappa Alpha 42 Kappa Sigma 50 Phi Delta Theta 30 Delta Chi 20 Pi Kappa Alpha 66 Sigma Chi 38 Sigma Nu 36 Tau Epsilon Phi 30

Sub-Total 12 Buildings 460

Not University Owned Capacity

Acacia 14 Alpha Gamma Rho 45 Alpha Phi Alpha 10 Delta Tau Delta 25 Kappa Alpha Psi 10 Lambda Chi Alpha 52 Phi Gamma Delta 25 Phi Kappa Tau 30 Phi Kappa Theta 21 Pi Kappa Phi 20 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 30 Sigma Phi Epsilon 30 Sigma Pi 14 Theta Chi 42

Sub-Total 14 Buildings 368

Professional Fraternity Residences Capacity

Alpha Kappa Psi 30 Alpha Psi 12 Omega Tau Sigma 18 Kappa Psi 6

Sub-Total 4 Buildings 66

TOTAL 30 Buildings 894

127 University Owned Sororities Capacity

Alpha Chi 62 Delta Phi Epsilon 50 Sigma Delta Tau 44

Sub-Total 3 Build 156

Not University Owned Capacity

Alpha Delta Pi 60 Alpha Gamma Delta 50 Alpha Omicron Pi 50 Alpha Xi Delta 42 Chi Omega 66 Delta Delta Delta 50 Delta Gamma 60 Kappa Alpha Theta 54 Kappa Delta 52 Kappa Kappa Gamma 65 Phi Mu 67 Pi Beta Phi 60 Sigma Kappa 40 Zeta Tau Alpha 60

Sub-Total 14 Buildings 776

TOTAL 17 Buildings 932

MARRIED HOUSING UNITS

Date of Initial Unit Building Occupancy Capacity

University Village A 1964 28 University Village B 1964 24 University Village c 1964 24 University Village D 1964 29 University Village E 1966 28 University Village F 1966 24 University Village G 1966 24 TTniu,:.rAirv..,...,.. ___ -----J Village H 1966 24 University Village J 1966 36 University Village K 1966 34 University Village L 1966 30

Sub-Total ll Buildings 305

New Married Student Housing (Completion expected Fall, 1972) 1972 240

TOTAL 545

128 RESIDENCE SUMMARY

Type of Residence Number Accomodation

Women 10 3533 Men 10 2823

Sub-Total 20 6356

Sororities 17 932 Fraternities 30 894

Sub-Total 47 1826

University Village 11 305 Units New Married Student 6 240 Units Housing

Sub-Total 17 545 Units

TOTAL 84 8727

SOURCE: Office of Campus Planning

129 BUS SYSTEH

War Surplus buses 5 1956 Bluebird Bus Gas Engine--35 passenger 1 967 Bluebird­ Gas engine--35 passenger 2 1968 Gl\1--Transit type coaches Diesel -35 passenger 5 1969 Gl\1--Transit type coaches Diesel engine--33 passenger 2 1970 Gl\1--Transit type coaches Diesel engine--33 passenger 1 1972 Gl\1--Transit type coaches Diesel engine--33 passenger 3 Total 19

Campus Routes Route 1 Russell Hall 2.5 miles Route 2 East-West 3.1 miles Route 3 North-South 3.1 miles Route 4 Married Housing 3.8 miles Route 5 Milledge Avenue 3.9 miles Route 6 Night 3.6 miles Route 7 East-West/Married Housing 4.5 miles (All routes operate 7:00 a. m. to 6:00 p. m. except Night Route which operates 6:00 p. m. to 10:30 p. m.)

Regular session of school (Fall-Winter-Spring) Fourteen (14) buses are used on 7 routes. 14 buses (Summer) First session of summer school 7 buses Second session of summer school 7 buses

System Utilization Fiscal Year 1971-72 2,877,840 riders Fiscal Year 1971-72 294,439 miles Fiscal Year 1971-72 28,344 hours (Campus Transit System) Fiscal Year 1971-72 4,174 hours (Campus Charter Service)

Staff Sixteen (16) full-time bus drivers Sixteen (16) student part-time drivers One (1) Foreman

~·~ Seven Gl1 Diesels are equipped with air conditioning and Public Address System

130 MAINTENANCE AND OPERATING PERSONNEL

FOR UNIVERSITY FACILITIES

Physical Plant 630

Hous 130

Other 42

TOTAL 802

Source: Office of the Director of Physical Plant

131