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Valdosta State College had been serviced by Powell Library since 1940 but at 25,421 square feet (2,361.7 m 2) the building had grown outdated and was too small to accommodate the expanding student population since the institution became co-educational in 1950. Construction began in 1970 of a new 84,551-square-foot (7,855.0 m 2) library.
The Gertrude Gilmer Odum Library built in 1971 at 85,000 square feet (7,900 m 2), serves as the main library of Valdosta State University. In 2004, a 95,000-square-foot (8,800 m 2 ) addition was built off the southern portion of the building doubling the size of Odum Library.
The collection contains over 515,793 bound volumes and over a million volumes in microforms, as well as current issues of 2,774 magazines, journals, and newspapers. The Odum Library is a Selective Depository of U.S. Government documents and maintains the Archives of Contemporary South Georgia History and a Southern History Collection.
The Student Union features a 305-seat theater with Dolby surround sound, a 10x17' movie screen, and convenience area outside the theater. A two-story, 20,000 square feet (1,900 m 2) VSU Bookstore is located inside the Student Union that features a technology shop and text books on the first floor and university merchandise on the second.
CUNY (Queens College): Graduate School of Library and Information Studies; St. John's University: Library and Information Science; State University of New York (Albany): College of Computing and Information (Information Studies Department) SUNY at Buffalo: Department of Library and Information Studies (Graduate School of Education)
QuEra Computing said on Tuesday the neutral-atom quantum firm has completed a funding round in excess of $230 million, with investment from Google's Quantum AI business unit and SoftBank Vision ...
A 100-year-old home in Valdosta, Ga., is damaged by an oak tree after Hurricane Helene moved through the area on Sept. 27. “It’s going to take a lot longer. We’ve got a lot, a lot of damage ...
The 40-acre (160,000 m 2) north campus of VSU was the former home of Emory Junior College, a two-year institution which opened in 1928. [2] Enrollment was low in the 1930s during the Great Depression and the United States entry into World War II depleted the school's enrollment to the point that Emory Junior College had to close during the duration of the War.