
The Chronicle stops the presses
Play offers new twist on classic story
Students create illustrations for Georgia Ports Authority
Graduate student channels classic horror in thesis film
Alumnus creates mobile gallery
SCAD libraries hold artist’s book competition for students
Griffis discusses development of Arthur legend
Noted author speaks to students
The Green Scene: 'We have a dream'
Personnel File: New staff members join SCAD-Savannah
SCAD hosts regional IDSA conference
Titus Kaphar to speak at SCAD




The Bee Line
Women’s lacrosse sets records in Kennesaw State win
Athlete Feats highlights for Feb. 22
Baseball takes series from St. Thomas
Women’s basketball wraps up second place in Florida Sun
Athletics updates for Feb. 15
Baseball off to best start in program’s history
Big third period leads lacrosse team to victory


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This Week: Exhibitions
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Published: Friday, July 14, 2006
Through July 21 “Two Artists, One Stone” Poetter Hall, 342 Bull St. Through July 26 “Homo Hominis” by Mikhail Turovsky, Jorge Alvarez and Kiril Jeliazkov Red Gallery, 201 E. Broughton St. Through Aug. 13 “Landscape Revisited” by Sherran Deems Pinnacle Gallery, 320 E. Liberty St. Through Sept. 16 “Threads of Faith” Beach Institute, 502 E. Harris St. Ongoing “Patterns of Decoration: The Evolution of the Picture Frame” Earle W. Newton Center for British and American Studies, 227 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. “Focus on Court Artists” Earle W. Newton Center for British and American Studies, 227 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. “The Illustrated Mark Twain” Earle W. Newton Center for British and American Studies, 227 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. “Painters to Their Majesties: Art and Power of the Royal Court” Earle W. Newton Center for British and American Studies, 227 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Painting Gallery, second floor “The Master Eye: 19th- and 20th-century Photographs from the Rhoades Collection” Earle W. Newton Center Museum, 227 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Photo Gallery, first floor “Mapping the Past: A Selection of Antique Cartography from the Newton Collection” Earle W. Newton Center for British and American Studies, 227 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Map Galleries, first floor “Framed in America: Masterworks of Design 1890-1940” Earle W. Newton Center for British and American Studies, 227 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Front Foyer Gallery |
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