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Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

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A publication of the Georgia Tech Alumni Association.
28
»i / II MARCH APRIL 1950 Vol. XXVIII No. 4
Transcript
Page 1: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

»i /

II

MARCH — APRIL

1950 Vol. XXVIII No. 4

Page 2: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

"My only regret is that I didn't investigate these opportunities earlier"

SOMETIMES it takes a while to get your bearings. In my case, for instance, I worked six months in a bank, a year with a casualty insurance company, and after four years in the Navy I put in 12 months work­ing in an office with my father. I was dissatisfied with my career, and convinced that I was not cut out for office work.

About this time a friend of mine began talking to me about his long experience in the life insurance business. He was getting out of life, and out of his work, exactly what I was looking for. So I decided to make a four-month study of his business.

This convinced me that life insurance offered the kind of life and earnings I wanted, and that my friend's company, the New England Mutual, was ideal. Its policies are unusually liberal, and it has back of it the prestige of being the first mutual life insurance company chartered in America.

I signed up. I took the company's thorough train­ing course. And now — my time is my own, which means I'm working harder than ever before, but it doesn't seem that way because I'm getting so much satisfaction out of my work. I have time to con­tribute to my home town through civic work, and there is still time left for golf and tennis. And my earnings, which are in direct proportion to the effort I put in, are considerably higher than when I worked for someone else.

I have only one regret, and it is that I did not investigate earlier the opportunities offered by the life insurance profession.

<33^J4^\

Recent graduates of our Home Office training course, although new to the life insurance business, earn average first-year commissions of $3600—which, with renewal com­missions added, brings the total yearly income average to $5700. From here, incomes rise in direct proportion to each individual's ability and industry.

If you'd like information about a career that gives you a business of your own, with no slow climb up a seniority ladder and no ceiling on earnings, write Mr. H. C. Chaney, Director of Agencies, 501 Boylston Street, Boston 17, Mass.

The NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

B. B. Plyler, Jr., Wilson, N. C.

G. NOLAN BEARDEN, ' 29 , Los Angeles

CARL S. INGLE, ' 3 3 , Jacksonville

C. GRAHAM HURST, ' 48 , Savannah

They can give you expert counsel on "Living Insurance"—a uniquely liberal and flexible life insurance program tailored to fit your family's needs.

Page 3: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

On Competition Hatch a good idea and you hatch competitors.

It works this way—to take General Electric as

an example:

In 1934, the automatic blanket was initially developed by General Electric. Today there are twelve other companies making electric blankets in competition with G. E.

In 1935, General Electric first demonstrated fluorescent lamps to a group of Navy officers. In 1938, the first fluorescent lamps were offered for sale. Today they are being manufactured by a number of companies.

T h e first turbine-electric drive for ships was proposed and designed by G-E engineers. Today four companies in this country build this type of ship-propulsion equipment.

After several years of laboratory development, General Electric began production and sale of the Disposall kitchen-waste unit in 1935. Today fourteen other companies are in this field.

T h e first practical x-ray tube, developed at General Electric years ago, is now a highly com­petitive business for seven manufacturers.

In 1926, a practical household refrigerator with a hermetically sealed unit was put on the market by General Electric. Today 34 companies are manufacturing household refrigerators with hermetically sealed mechanisms.

Research and engineering snowplow the way, not only for new public conveniences, but also for new companies, new jobs.

There are 20% more businesses today than there were immediately after the war.

Industry furnishes over 10,000,000 more jobs than ten years ago.

T h e average family owns more and better products of industry than ten years ago.

Any American company that plows back money into research and engineering develop­ment makes new business not only for itself, but for others.

T h e economy that does most to foster compe­tition is the one that makes easiest the establish­ment and growth of business.

You can put your confidence in-

GENERAL ELECTRIC

Page 4: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

Geomia Tecltjuumnus Published every other month during the college year by the National Alumni

Association of the Georgia Institute of Technology

VOL. XXVIII NO. 4

I K T H I S I S S U E New Building for School of Architecture

Founders of Engineering Day Commemorated Thankful for What We Are About to Receive

President of Harvard Visits Ga. Tech Rob't T. "Bob" Jones, Jr., Recipient of A. P. Accolade

Annual Nominations for National Alumni Officers Deaths of Distinguished Alumni

Club Meetings — Prominent Mentions — Sports

N A T I O N A L A L U M N I A S S O C I A T I O N BOARD OF TRUSTEES

Oscar G. Davis, '22, President • Price Gilbert, Jr., '21, Vice-President • Wm. Stewart Boyle, '28, Vice-President • Chas. R. Yates, '35, Treasurer • R. J. Thiesen,

'10, Exec. Secretary • W. R. Beard, '40, Mgr. Alumni Activities Frank W. Allcorn III, '41 • Roddey Garrison, '23 • Ivan Allen, Jr., '33 • Henry W. Grady, '18 • Chas. M. Brown, '25 • Robt. H. Tharpe, '34 • Jack F. Glenn, '32

G E O R G I A T E C H A L U M N I F O U N D A T I O N , I N C . OFFICERS AND TRUSTEES

Geo. W. McCarty, '08, President • F. E. Callaway, Jr., '26, Vice-President • Thos. Fuller, '06, Vice-President • W. A. Parker, '19, Secretary-Treasurer • Howard

Ector, '40, Exec. Secretary C. L. Emerson, '08 • Walter M. Mitchell, '23 • Clem A. Evans, '22 • Wm. T. Rich, '10 • Julian T. Hightower, '19 • R. B. Wilby, '08 • Geo. T. Marchmont, '07 • F. H. Neely, '04 • F. M. Spratlin, '06 • C. P. Rather, '23 • J. E. Daven­port, '08 • John A. Simmons, '15 • Y. F. Freeman, '10 • A. D. Kennedy, '03 •

Geo. S. Jones, Jr., '12 • G. W. Woodruff, '17

G E O R G I A T E C H A T H L E T I C A S S O C I A T I O N A L U M N I M E M B E R S

Robt. B. Wilby • L. W. Robert, Jr. • J. J. Westbrook ALUMNI STATE ADVISORY COUNCIL BY DISTRICTS

1 E. Geo. Butler, Savannah 2 R. A. Puckett, Tifton 3 W. C. Pease, Columbus 6 Jas. T. Kinnett, Macon 7 R. A. Morgan, Rome 8 I. M. Aiken. Brunswick 9 W. H. Slack,

Gainesville 10 Wm. D. Eve, Augusta

S T A F F R. J. THIESEN, Editor ROANE BEARD, Assistant H. M. CHAMBLESS, Staff Associate Editor & Business Manager

Office of Publication: 208 Knowles Building Georgia Institute of Technology • Atlanta, Georgia

ENTERED AS SECOND CLASS MATTER MARCH 22, 1923 at the Post Office in Atlanta, Ga., under the Act of March 8, 1879.

SCHEDULE OF ENGINEERS' WEEK ACTIVITIES Wednesday, 26 April to Sunday, 30 April Date Place Event Time

P.S.

Stunt Night Honors' Day Exercises Open Hall of Engineering Luncheon for Officials Judging of Exhibits Close Hall of Engineering Open Hall of Engineering Close Hall of Engineering Open Hall of Engineering Close Hall of Engineering T-Day Football Game Open Hall of Engineering Glee Club Concert Close Hall of Engineering Engineers' Ball Onen Hall of Engineering Close Hall of Engineering

The Field House is located where Ponce de Leon dead ends at the new super-highway, east of the campus.

8:00 10:00 12:00 12:30 2:00 9:30 9:00 9:30 9:00 6:00 8:00 9:00 2:30 5:00 8:00 2:30 6:00

P.M. A.M. A.M. P.M. P.M. P.M. A.M. P.M. A.M. P.M. P.M. A.M. P.M. P.M. P.M. P.M. P.M.

25th 26th 26th 26th 26th 26th 27th 27th 28th 28th 28th 29th 29th 29th 29th 30th 30th

YMCA Gymnasium Field House O.D.K. Hall Field House Field House Field House Field House Field House Field House Grant Field Field House Gymnasium Field House Gymnasium Field House Field House

Building for School of

Architecture Authorized

At the March 1, 1950, meeting of the Board of Regents, the construction of a modern, new architectural building for Georgia Tech was approved. The newly established University Building Au­thority will raise the necessary con­struction funds by issuing revenue certificates.

The University System Building Authority was created in 1949 by the General Assembly to construct build­ings needed by the various units of the University System and to lease the structures to the schools.

The board allocated $1,014,000 for the new Ga. Tech architecture building. The financing plan as drawn up by the board calls for the retirement of the revenue certificates in thirty years, at which time the building will become the property of Ga. Tech. The board also approved nine buildings at other schools. The total estimated cost for the ten buildings is $4,583,974.

Urgent Need

Mr. L. R. Siebert, Executive Secretary of the Board of Regents, stated, "We considered the Architecture Building at Tech as an acute necessity. We only wish we had money for the other buildings you need."

Location and Dimensions

Facing Campus Drive, the new build­ing will straddle Cherry Street, which will be closed at that point. There will be two large wings, both perpendicular to Cherry Street, which will be con­nected by a colonnaded veranda. The wing closer to Campus Drive will have an overall dimension at its greatest width of one hundred thirty-eight feet. Maximum depth of that wing will be fifty feet.

The veranda connecting the two wings will measure ninety-four feet by thirty-five feet. Overall width of the second wing will be two hundred and nine feet with a maximum depth of fifty-four feet.

New Library Vital Necessity

There is a most urgent need, also, for an adequate, modern, fire-proof library at Georgia Tech; not to mention other important building requirements. Library plans are being drawn and will be completed, it is hoped, by or before the end of summer; and it has been reliably stated that the library build­ing will be the next structure that will be authorized by the Board of Regents, under the University System Buildin'g Authority.

THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Page 5: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

Founders of Engineers' Day Commemorated Address Delivered at Unveiling of Plaque

Commemorating Edmund Kneisel and Joseph Stubbins

By HUGH STUBBINS

"It is indeed a great privilege and honor for me to stand here today to help you pay tribute to two of our num­ber who lived and fought for God, our Country, and our way of life.

In founding 'Engineering Day' on the campus at Georgia Tech, Edmund Knei­sel and Joseph Stubbins have done great service to their Alma Mater, to us, and to the citizens of our commu­nity. This day was inaugurated to awaken the interest of people not readily aware of the newest develop­ments and advances in engineering. It has now become an annual institution here and I understand that in unison with other technical colleges a move­ment is on foot to make it a national occasion. May it be a help to the lay public in keeping abreast of the un­folding frontiers of human knowledge in Science and Engineering.

Perhaps it doesn't hurt to remind our­selves again that the advances in basic science and its application in technical fields, that have been made in the first half of our century, were hardly dreamed of a mere 100 years ago. Truly we live in the age of Science and its effect upon our way of life has been profound.

At the beginning of this century a new world, full as much of hazard as of promise, was coming into being. When the century was young the United States went through an unprecedented period of technical development and industrial expansion. The internal combustion en­gine, the radio-telephone, and the air­plane, the high speed elevator and the tungsten lamp were among the early inventions that launched us into an era of mechanization. Engineers harnessed Niagara Falls, awesome wonder of ear­lier generations, as a source of hydro­electric power and America was on its way toward creating the highest stand­ard of material living of any people thus far inhabiting the earth.

But being an architect and feeling somewhat diffident to discuss engineer­ing and scientific development before such authorities in these fields, I should like to mention very briefly the deep effects they have had on the architec­ture of our time. Engineering has, in fact, helped to bring us back to basic and fundamental concepts of that exact­ing and universal art. It would be hard to name a single engineering method or achievement that doesn't in some was affect our physical environment or that does not in some way influence our thought and methods of building.

Hugh Stubbins, Jr., Arch. '33, M.S.Arch. Harvard, '35; Prof. Harvard Gradu­ate School of Design, shown making address before Tau Beta Pi plaque commemorating his younger brother Joseph Stubbins and Edmund Kneisel.

Imagine what technological advances in structural systems and materials have made possible! What changes they have made in our physical en­vironment! Great rivers can be spanned with delicate threads of steel and large spaces can be enclosed with uninter­rupted spans of thin concrete.

Man is inquisitive and in his search for the WHY of things he has shown an aptitude to solve the mechanical and material problems of life. His aptitude in approaching the moral issues have unfortunately not developed at the same rate. It is to be regretted that our life moves faster and faster, that our civili­zation is so complex that it leaves little time for relaxation, for contemplation into the meaning of life and for spiritual development. Let us not forget that technique is not an end in itself, but should be, rather, a means toward the fulfillment of a better, more balanced life, a means toward making the world a better place in which to live.

We in America have gone far in many fields and we have been through two great wars in order to preserve the way of life that we have developed in a system of democracy and free enter­prise. As we look ahead into the next half century we face another new era, which seems also to be as full of hazard as of promise. Vannevar Bush, in his recent book, has said: "The future will be influenced by the ways in which science affects the material things of man's existence; it will also be deter­mined by the way in which his inter­pretation, or misinterpretation, of the

t e a c h i n g s of s c i e n c e a f f ec t s h i s philosophy of life by its effect on t h e c h o i c e b e f o r e h i m . M a n k i n d has come to a fork in the road and two courses lie ahead — on the one side are those who see life only a harsh struggle, whose fatalism now rests on the materialistic fallacy that science teaches us all there is to know or feel. On the other side are those who have faith that life has meaning, who would follow science where it applies but reach beyond in aspiration."

Science builds instruments ever more intricate and powerful to delve into the inner recesses of matter, and to search beyond the edges of space. It speculates on cause and effect and the probability of chance even in the inter­relation of physical things. But when it comes to why forces exist, to the definition of consciousness, to such things as free will and choice of action, it pauses. Nor does it deal with faith. Such things are beyond the realms of science.

Let this memorial remind us to aspire, in our search, for t ruth in all things. Let it remind us to reach beyond the immediate task at hand and to keep our country in the vanguard of Christian civilization.

It is with a great deal of humility that I now reveal this memorial plaque to Edmund B. Kneisel and to Joseph B. Stubbins who founded 'Engineering Day' on the campus of the Georgia Institute of Technology in 1940 and who later gave their lives in defense of their country in World War II."

March-April, 1950

Page 6: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

Annual Nominations for National Officers B,BB A L U M N I 'NFLUENCE

A nominating committee composed of three prominent alumni, who are neither officers nor on the Board of Trustees of the Alumni Association, was appointed on March 1 to nominate four active alumni for officers of the Georgia Tech National Alumni Asso­ciation for the 1950-51 year, beginning September 1, 1950.

This procedure is in accordance with Article Five of the By-laws of the Asso­ciation, as adopted at the annual gen­eral business meeting of the alumni on September 26, 1947, in Atlanta.

The nominating committee was com­posed of the following alumni: Messrs. Charles F. Stone, Chmn. of the Board, Atlantic Steel Co.; M. A. Ferst, Presi­dent of M. A. Ferst, Ltd., and George Winship, President Fulton Supply Co. In keeping with precedent, they unani­mously nominated the current officers for a second and concluding term, ex­cepting only the present Vice-President at Large, Wm. Stewart Boyle of Hous­ton, Texas, who advised that he was not in position to accept the renomi-nation.

The committee then nominated Mr. Frank B. Williams, another active, prominent and influential alumnus, for the office of Vice-President at Large; making the list of 1950-51 nominations as follows:

For President: Oscar G. Davis, '22.

For Vice-President: Price Gilbert, Jr., '21.

For Vice-President at Large: Frank B. Williams, '20.

For Treasurer: Charles R. Yates, '35.

As stated, the current officers were renominated for their second and con­cluding term, with the exception of the Vice-President at Large and Treas­urer, respectively.

All of you are quite familiar by now, with the biographies, in brief, of your present officers. However, to bring any one or all concerned up-to-date, it's a pleasure to repeat the information on the renominated officers and to publish an outline of the activities of the new nominee, as follows:

For President: Oscar G. Davis, B.S. in M.E., 1922. Investments and personal business activities, Atlanta, Ga. Former vice-president of the Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Boston, Mass.; also pre­viously connected with the Coca-Cola Company in Atlanta. Subsequently was

Vice-President of the Fulton National Bank of Atlanta; Chairman of the Alumni Association committee on the proposed Georgia Tech Student Ac­tivity-War M e m o r i a l Building and member of the Board of Trustees of the National Alumni Association. When at Tech, he was a campus leader and also a star guard on Georgia Tech's nationally famous "Golden Tornado," during the years of 1920, '21, '22 and '23.

For Vice-President: Price Gilbert, Jr., B.S. in M.E., 1921. Advertising and Pub­lic Relations Executive, Atlanta. A leader in Georgia Tech and business affairs; and, also in campus activities during his undergraduate years. Mana­ger baseball team, '21; Koseme, Pan-Hellenic Council, and so forth. A pres­ent member of the Board of Trustees of the Ga. Tech National Alumni Association.

For Vice-President at Large: Frank B. Williams, 1920, Textile Engr. General Agent of Lanett (Ala.) Mills Division, West Point Manufacturing Co., West Point, Georgia. President Educational Textile Foundation and presided when the ground breaking ceremonies took place for the Wm. Harrison Hightower Textile Building at Georgia Tech. Out­standing and active Tech alumnus, prominent civic leader in city, state, and national affiairs. Son, Frank B. Williams, Jr., graduated as a Bachelor of Textile Engineering, June, 1949.

For Treasurer: Charles R. Yates, Gen. Sci., 1935. Southeastern representative, Joshua L. Baily & Co., Atlanta, Ga. Present, exceptionally competent and cooperative treasurer and member of the Board of Trustees of the Georgia Tech National Alumni Association. Campus leader and honor student, dur­ing his college years. A leading citizen in civic, Georgia Tech, church and busi­ness activities, Distinguished in college, state, national and international golf.

Active members of the Georgia Tech National Alumni Association who desire to send in further nominations on the foregoing, or on other active alumni members, should mail their nomina­tions to the Georgia Tech National Alumni Association, Knowles Building, Georgia Tech, Atlanta, Ga., by April 30, 1950.

Ballot blanks on all nominees, which will include space for inserting names for respective class secretaries, will be carried in the coming May-June issue of this publication.

In the January 19, 1950, issue of the "American Wool and Cotton Reporter," an interesting two-page article was published on the "Bibb Alumni Influ­ence" which, it may be added, was and is a definite factor in the lives and experiences of a large number of Geor­gia Tech alumni.

Among other important facts, con­cerning the Bibb Manufacturing Com­pany, which started in 1887 at Macon, Ga., the article stated:

"It was Bibb's taking over the Porter Mills, it was Bibb's big operation in the Columbus area — good operation, good labor leadership, good m a c h i n e r y , which really showed the other mills in the area how to do it. Following a suc­cession of very able managements, Col­onel W. D. Anderson, now chairman of the Bibb, has been the active driving force for many years; he is the fellow who has not only made Bibb great and a big money earner, but who has se­lected and trained and brought up the young men who have influenced and been responsible for successful oper­ations in a great many other Southern mills.

One of the biggest Bibb Alumni Asso­ciations at the present time is in Dan­ville, Va., headed by Russell B. Newton, president of the Dan River Mills, and the accomplishments of Mr. Newton and his associates at Dan River during the past eight years have been remarkable."

Russell B. Newton, 1920, Ga. Tech, succeeded Mr. George Harris, Ga. Tech, 1900, as president of the Dan River Mills, Danville, Va., just recently; and Mr. Harris became Chairman of the Board, which position he held until his death last month, February 16. — An article on the death of Mr. George Harris is carried in this issue of the Alumnus.

The story on the "Bibb Influence" added that George Harris "grew up under the tremendously able West Point Mfg. Co." after his education at the Naval Academy, Georgia Tech, and Lowell Textile School. Later experi­enced as president of the Exposition Cotton Mills; Springs at Lancaster, S. C , and then as the Dan River presi­dent, succeeding Mr. Robert West. "Probably one of the best things Mr. Harris did," the article continued, "was to get Russell Newton away from Bibb." Newton went to Dan River in 1941, and his well deserved success has been most extraordinary.

THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Page 7: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

A. P. SELECTS JONES AS GREATEST GOLFER

Robert T. "Bob" Jones, Jr., M. E., 1922, many-time na­tional, international, and "Grand Slam" champion, shown at left as of today — II iih plenty of hair and vigor — and at right at the height of his career, in 1928, with his famous put­ter "Calamity Jane." Bob Jones was se­lected in the Associa­ted Press Poll as the greatest golfer of the half-century.

Photo, Courtesy Atlanta Journal

Robert Tyre "Bob" Jones, Jr., M.E., 1922, internationally prominent Grand Slam, Grand Person and otherwise many-time golf champion, was selected in the recent Associated Press poll as the greatest golfer of the half-century.

Like his Nation and his State, Georgia Tech alumni, faculty members, students and a host of other friends are very proud of Bob Jones — and always have been — and his new and exceptionally high honor is most eminently deserved.

Georgia Tech is further proud of the fact that Bob was an outstanding stu­dent and campus leader, and a former president of the Georgia Tech National Alumni Association and a past member of the Board of Trustees of the Georgia Tech Athletic Association; not to men­tion his additional and modest prom­inence in college, civic and national affairs.

O. B. "Pop" Keeler, esteemed dean of golf writers, sports columnist of the Atlanta Journal, and Bob Jones' bril­liant "Boswell," related a number of the other high points of Bob's career in his column of February 3; among many of the interesting facts, he stated that:

"In the last nine years of his career, from 1922-1930, Bob played in 12 Open

championships, nine American and three British.

He finished first or second 11 times in those 12 starts.

That could easily be greater than the startling, publicity attractive grand slam."

Bob reached his forthy-eighth birth­day on March 17. He's already a grand-daddy. And he's slowly recovering from a serious back operation per­formed in October, 1948.

Retired at 28 "Some 20 years ago Bob injured the

fifth vertebra of his spinal cord. The operation was designed to relieve pres­sure on his motor nerve which nearly immobilized his right side. He has just about recovered except for his right leg. There's still a slight drag, but he's getting better, though not enough for 18 holes of golf.

Turning time backward, to the advent of this young American sportsman, it seems almost incredible that Bob Jones could have competed in major league golf — meaning national championships — for 15 years, and yet retire at the age of 28.

He qualified and won his first two matches in the U. S. Amateur of 1916, soon after winning the Georgia State

Amateur, at the age of 14. Beginning in 1916, he played in every U. S. Amateur, through 1930; in the U. S. Open from 1920 through 1930, inclusive; in the British Amateur in 1921, 1926 and 1930; and in the British Open in 1921, 1926 1927 and 1930, incidentally winning the last three, you might say, in succession.

He played in the first of the Walker Cup international matches, in 1922, and in four more, being U. S. captain in 1928 and 1930, and never losing a match at singles, and only one, in the four­somes."

The Grand Slam "And in 1930 Bob did what had never

been done before, never since and possi­bly will never be done again:

He grand slammed golf — winning the British Amateur and Open and the American Amateur and Open.

No other man ever has won more than two of the four in the same season. As the competitor to achieve this aim would have to be an amateur it seems more and more likely that the classic verdict by George Trevor, former sports editor of the New York Sun, is correct:

'He has entrenched his record safely and forever within the impregnable quadrilateral of golf.'

(Continued on page 20)

March-April, 1950

Page 8: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

Bradley Foundation Provides Facilities for Students

Adequate eating and study facilities for students on the academic part of the Georgia Tech campus are to be pro­vided through a grant of $50,000.00, made February 25 by the W. C. and Sarah H. Bradley Foundation of Co­lumbus, Ga.

The announcement of this generous gift to the state-owned institution was announced jointly by William Bradley Turner, Chairman of the Board of the Foundation and graduate of Georgia Tech in the Class of 1943, and by Cherry L. Emerson, Vice-President of Georgia Tech.

Mr. Turner is the grandson of the late W. C. Bradley, who was chairman of the board of the Coca-Cola Company and also had interests in the Bibb Man­ufacturing Co., and many other indus­trial enterprises in Georgia.

The funds are to be used for the con­struction of a one-story building com­plete with basement, back of and con­necting the present Administration and Library Buildings. The basement will house new kitchens and other utilities, while the main floor will provide space for a soda fountain, serving counters, and dining tables and chairs.

It is planned to convert the present lunch room in the basement of the Ad­ministration Building into a senior-study lounge and the present soda-fountain space into a general-student study lounge. The placing of the pres­ent kitchens in the new building will

Textile Course Acclaimed By Engineers' Council

The Engineers' Council for Profes­sional Development, the official accred­iting agency of the engineering pro­fession, has accredited for the first time a curriculum in textile engineering, ac­cording to its recently issued annual report for 1949.

The first and only textile engineering course, to receive this official seal of approval, is offered by the A. French Textile School of the Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Ga. Bachelor-of-science and master-of-science de­grees in textile engineering are granted upon completion of the undergraduate and graduate parts of the curriculum.

Housed in the new Harrison High-tower Textile Engineering Building, completed late last year at a cost of more than one million dollars, the Georgia Tech Textile School is now able to supplement its teaching with the latest types of textile equipment and machinery installed in various labora­tories and mill sections of the building. The faculty includes outstanding textile educators and research men, all of whom have supplemented their training with practical experience in industry.

The gentleman in this picture is not necessarily an "old cow hand."' He is Col. Blake R. Van Leer, President of Georgia Tech, expensively attired in a cowboy hat, boots and spurs presented to him by the South Texas Georgia Tech Club at their alumni meeting on February IS in Houston.

also remove a great fire hazard to the Administration Building.

Construction of the new building will start in early June and should be com­pleted by the beginning of the fall quarter in September.

However, he emphasizes, the fact

that these plans will not in any way interfere with the eventual construction of the Student Activities Building on the eastern part of the campus, if and when funds for it are provided by the State of Georgia or by private interests.

THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Page 9: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

THANKS FOR WHAT WE ARE ABOUT TO RECEIVE

By Oscar G. Davis, Pres . Ga. Tech Nat ' l . Alumni Ass'n.

Turn to page 4 in this issue of the ALUMNUS and there is the story.

Tech is going to get a million dollar Architectural Building! Perhaps in the near future funds may be also forth­coming for other badly needed build­ings, including a Library adequate for present requirements.

These funds won't exactly be a free trip for Tech since the money comes from the sale of revenue bonds to be paid off over a period of 30 years. Somewhere along the line Tech must be granted the annual means of paying interest and retirement of these bonds.

Further details are found in the arti­cle about the new building; but we can rest assured that the arrangements are okay in every way because Geor­gia's meticulous State Auditor, B. E. Thrasher, has approved the arrange­ments. Incidentally, the deal is not con­fined to Tech but funds are also pro­vided for several of the University Sys­tem units.

Thanks of all Tech men go to the State Legislature, Governor Talmadge, Chancellor Caldwell, the afore-men­tioned B. S. Thrasher, The University Housing Authority, and to the Board of Regents, the body which finally au­thorized the bonds and allocated the proceeds to the various units of the University System.

This brings us to the point we've been aiming at all this time. Let's jump into the family circle and distribute a few well-deserved bouquets of praise to a quartette of our own Tech officials and alumni who had a big part in getting this major miracle going.

First, rousing cheers are due Colonel Blake R. Van Leer, President of Georgia Tech and his first-lieutenant and Vice-President, Cherry L. Emerson. Cherry Emerson is an outstanding alumnus of the Class of 1908 and we're going to herewith also claim Blake Van Leer as an alumnus by virtue of office, adoption and respect.

These two college officers and civic leaders have gone beyond the normal call of duty in tirelessly presenting with force and eloquence the problems of Georgia Tech. In person, in print and on the air, they have brought Tech's story to the general public, to influen­tial groups and individuals and to the specific bodies possessing the power to do something about the situation.

You should be more or less familiar with a condensation of Col. Van Leer's Report for the Year 1948-49 as made to the Board of Regents, since a special reprint was sent to each Tech alumnus.

This presentation of Tech's physical needs and financial dilemma was also put in the hands of legislators and others to whom knowledge of Tech's value and needs might prove helpful.

We commend this report to your at­tention. Read the first few pages and you'll have a pretty good idea of Tech's physical deficiencies and dollar prob­lems. Then skip over to Page 20 and read Col. Van Leer's appreciative com­ments on Alumni Contributions to the Roll Call. We hope you are a Roll Call contributor, and therefore, a real part in this expression of thanks.

You could hardly have read any Georgia newspaper recently without seeing the report of a speech that Cherry Emerson made before the Grif­fin Rotary Club. In this speech he cour­ageously and frankly attributed Tech's plight to failure of the State to properly support this valuable asset. With quiet­ly stated but telling fact and phrase, Cherry made front page headlines in the big city papers. His statements have carried decided weight and have had much influence in gaining Tech the funds for the Architecture Building.

Yes, we can be proud and grateful for the job that Messrs. Van Leer and Emerson have done in bringing Tech, her value and her needs, so effectively to general attention.

In way of praise, we move now to our two alumni on the Board of Regents — Frank Spratlin of the Class of 1906 and Jack McDonough of the Class of 1923. Frank Spratlin has ably served on the Board since 1943, while Jack has been a valued member since 1947 and has only been recently reappointed by Gov. Talmadge for a new term.

The Board of Regents, as you doubt­less know, is an impartial, non-political, body which directs the affairs of the University System of Georgia. It must look at all units of the system with un­biased eyes, letting no amount of loyal­ty to one's particular Alma Mater sway judgment or prejudice vote. The Board includes graduates of many Georgia colleges, Tech's representatives being the afore-mentioned Messrs. Spratlin and McDonough.

The Board of Regents was, of course, the final word on the authorization and allocation of these new building funds, and deserves our hearty thanks for beginning the s o l u t i o n of a truly tough problem. We are proud that Tech has two alumni on this Board and equally sure that the Board values high­ly the services they perform for it.

Representatives Honor President Van Leer

During its January, 1950, session, the House of Representatives of the State of Georgia paid high tribute to Presi­dent Blake R. Van Leer of Georgia Tech, by adopting a resolution that lauded his leadership, ability, and busi­ness acumen.

As House Resolution 223, the citation was introduced by Messrs. Pannell of Murray, Moulton of Floyd, Bennett of Barrow, Smith of Fulton, and many others; and it is quoted in full here­with:

A PRIVILEGED RESOLUTION

WHEREAS, the Honorable Blake R. Van Leer, President of the Georgia Institute of Technology, has repeatedly demonstrated outstanding leadership, ability, and business acumen, and;

WHEREAS, the Honorable Blake R. Van Leer is nationally recognized as a leader in the field of education, and;

WHEREAS, he has materially con­tributed to the betterment of economics and the social life of the State of Geor­gia and the nation through his office as President of the Georgia Institute of Technology:

THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED by this House of Representatives assem­bled in regular session, that we do com­mend and highly praise his untiring efforts in behalf of the institution, stu­dents and citizens of this State.

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that a copy of this Resolution be sent by the Clerk of this House, to the Honorable Blake R. Van Leer and to the Chan­cellor and Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia.

IN HOUSE

READ and ADOPTED Feb. 9, 1950

/ s / Joseph Boone

CLERK OF THE HOUSE (SEAL STATE OF GEORGIA)

Here, then, are four Tech men who refute the old belief that engineers lack the eloquence and salesmanship to put across their ideas. These men with then-knowledge of Tech's worth and their ability to tell it to the world are doing a major service to Tech, Georgia, and to the Southland.

Alumni, take a tip from them! Speak out about Tech. Let friends, business­men, politicians and others of influence know about Tech, what she needs and what she should get!

And start by seeing that you, yourself, are an active alumnus, contributing to the Alumni Roll Call according to plan!

March-April, 1950

Page 10: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

STUDENTS OUTLINE ENGINEERS'WEEK

By TED DANSBY and STAN MARX

Starting Wednesday, April 26th, and continuing through Sunday, April 30th, the honor and professional societies will be working together in a combined effort to make Georgia Tech's Engi­neers' Week a success. The lay public and the engineers of Georgia are in­vited to see the exhibits of work done by each department of engineering and to be shown, through guided tours, the buildings, laboratories, classrooms, ma­chines, and facilities of Georgia Tech. Tau Beta Pi Association, under whose leadership Engineers' Week is organ­ized, is especially anxious to extend to Tech alumni an invitation to see the progress Tech has made and to under­stand something of the ambition Tech has of taking the lead in professional development and engineering thought.

The enrollment at Georgia Tech has risen very rapidly since pre-war days, with a maximum registration of 4,336 full-time day students recorded in 1950. A $4,000,000 campus housing program, directed by Vice-President Cherry L. Emerson, has been completed since President Blake R. Van Leer's induction in 1944. Although the housing need has not been entirely met, the growth of housing affords a great con­trast to the expansion in instructional facilities, where the Hightower Textile Building is the only new permanent structure erected. Engineers' Week, 1950, is eying the day when Georgia Tech will possess the physical capacity to equal the national prominence in education and engineering which it has attained.

All the industries of Georgia will be invited to visit Georgia Tech during Engineers' Week, with the hope that they will further coordinate their de­velopments with the facilities of re­search and training provided by Tech. It is felt that the engineering curri­culum can be greatly improved by a close relationship between engineering corporations and industries and Tech. The voice of industry can make clear to the lay citizenry of Georgia the financial and physical needs of Georgia Tech. In return, the processes of train­ing, the advancements of training meth­ods, and the facilities for industrial and engineering research will be illustrated during Engineers' Week, 1950. It is hoped that industry will become even more conscious of the role that a good engineering school can play in the ad­vancement of the technological aspects of human culture.

The high school students in the At­

lanta area will be invited to witness the activities during Engineers' Week. Representatives of Tau Beta Pi will appear before the students to speak in behalf of the engineering profession and of the value of Georgia Tech in training engineers. Attempts will be made to bring the upper classes of high schools to the Georgia Tech campu; during Engineers' Week. Presenting engineering to the young people in its best light, betters the hope of attracting the cream of tomorrow's citizens.

A varied schedule of engineering ex­hibits, guided tours of the campus, ath­letic events, an Engineers' Hall and a musical concert are planned to catch the eye of as many of the lay public as possible. Thus far, engineering has never held the respect and dignity which has been accorded the other professions. The laymen have never, as a whole, considered the vital part which engineering plays in the advance­ment of culture. Every human is, to some extent, an engineer — a creator of goods and machines — and the lay­man is not always conscious of a need for professional engineering.

Just as the administrative officers of State Government will be invited to attend Engineers' Week to observe the growth and needs of Georgia Tech, we invite alumni of Tech to visit the cam­pus, observe the progress which has been made in physical plant and aca­demic excellence, to take note of the part which they can play as ambassa­dors of Georgia Tech's needs, and to carry away with them a pride in their alma mater. We invite alumni to par­ticipate in the fun of Engineers' Week. We invite alumni to join us on Engi­neers' Week, 1950, in anticipating the day when Georgia Tech will be able to mould a healthy attitude toward engi­neering and of engineers toward the civilization they serve.

(See Schedule on Bottom,

of Page 4)

Requirements for High School Graduates Revised

High school graduates entering Geor­gia Tech in the future will be allowed to submit two units of science for the one unit of physics required for ad­mission, according to an announcement by W. L. Carmichael, Registrar.

This means that a high-school stu-

Dr. Conant, Harvard President, Visits Georgia Tech

Georgia Tech was delightfully hon­ored by a visit of Dr. James Bryant Conant, President of Harvard Univer­sity, on March 16.

He and Mrs. Conant were met, upon their arrival in A t l a n t a , by their brother-in-law and sister, Professor and Mrs. Harold Bush-Brown; Presi­dent Van Leer of Tech, and others. Pro­fessor Bush-Brown is head of the De­partment of Architecture at Georgia Tech. The distinguished visitors then began their busy day as breakfast guests of President and Mrs. Van Leer, in the lovely new president's home.

After several morning engagements and a tour of the campus, Dr. Conant was the luncheon guest of the college; he then addressed the faculty at 1:09 P.M., in the auditorium of the new Harrison Hightower Textile Bulding. During the evening he spoke to mem­bers of the Harvard Club of Atlanta, at the Atlanta Lawyers' club rooms.

Following a trip to Birmingham, Ala., on March 17, where he made an address before a large gathering of Harvard alumni and others, Dr. Conant returned to Atlanta for a short visit with his sister and brother-in-law, Professor and Mrs. Harold Bush-Brown.

In one of his Atlanta interviews, Dr. Conant predicted that the cold war would probably get more unpleasant; but he was of the opinion that "with good luck and some intelligence, we may be able to get through a long period of a divided world." In his ad­dress at Georgia Tech, he stressed the importance of informative courses for liberal arts students, as to the necessity of a knowledge of the sciences; and, likewise, s i m i l a r c o u r s e s for the science students, in important, liberal arts studies.

Dr. Conant was very liberal with his time, and brilliantly answered a num­ber of rather vital questions that were propounded at the Georgia Tech faculty meeting.

dent can now complete one unit each in any of the following two scientific courses: general science, biology, chem­istry, and physics. It is recommended by Georgia Tech officials that, where possible, at least one of these courses should be physics.

This change will make the entrance requirements of Georgia Tech more in keeping with the curriculums of the majority of the high schools of Georgia and the Southeast. Another important reason is to broaden the background experiences in science for those students who enter Georgia Tech.

10 THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Page 11: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

Home Coming Plans Plans for a bigger and better Home

Coming are getting under way now for next fall. One of the often-repeated complaints has been that sufficient no­tice about such events has been lack­ing. Here we go again — advising you in plenty of time to make your plans now to attend Home Coming on the week-end of October 28, the date of the Tech-Kentucky football game.

This Home Coming will be of par­ticular interest to alumni of the classes of '05, '10, '15, '20, '25, '30, '35, '40, and '45, who will have their 45th, 40th, 35th, 30th, 25th, etc., reunions. Plans are being made now by the classes of '10, '30, and '40 for get-togethers and it is hoped that the others will get organized soon. A class list will be sent soon to all members of the reunion groups mentioned above for whom the alumni office has an address. If you are a member of one of these 5-year groups and do not get a list by the end of June, please advise the alumni office and you will receive one by return mail.

All alumni, their families and friends are invited to attend the Alumni Bar­becue Lunchoen at 12:00 noon on the campus. There will be tables set up for the various classes so that you will be seated with or near your class.

Be sure to place your order with the Athletic Association for tickets to the Kentucky game immediately upon re­ceipt of applications. Individual game applications will be mailed to all alumni on record about the middle of June. If, by July 1, you have not received applications, write the Athletic Asso­ciation or your Alumni Association and you will receive them.

Unless staying with Atlanta friends, make your hotel reservation as far in advance as possible. If unable to get ho­tel accommodations on your own, write the alumni office and all possible will be done to assist you.

Secretaries of the afore-mentioned reunion classes are as follows:

1905 —Robert Gregg, TCI & RR, 2000 First Ave., Birmingham, Ala.

1910 —Milton Howard, Robert & Co., Fairlie St., Atlanta 1, Ga.

1915 — Edgar Montague, Southern Bell Telephone Co., Atlanta, Ga.

1920 — L. F. Kent, Moncrief Furnace Co., Box 1673, Atlanta, Ga.

1925 — Herbert Hutton, Post Engineer Office, Ft. Benning, Ga.

1930 — C . L. "Red" Williamson, 201 Eureka Dr., N. E., Atlanta, Ga.

1935 — J e r r y G. Perkerson, 1660 N. Cross Keyes Dr., Brookhaven, Ga.

1940 — C . Philip Richards, 960 Drewry St., N. E., Atlanta, Ga.

1945 — Maurice H. Furchgott, 977 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

ROBERT CHEEK, '41, WINS HIGH HONOR Robert C. Cheek, Ga. Tech, B.S. in

E.E., '41; and M.S. and E.E., Univ. Pitts­burgh, '43, and now central station engineer with the Southeastern District of the Westinghouse Electric Corp., has been selected as the outstanding young American electrical engineer of 1949, according to Eta Kappa Nu, honorary electrical engineering society and spon­sors of the award.

The presentation of the award was made on Monday night, January 30, 1950, at a dinner of the society in the Henry Hudson Hotel, held in connec­tion with the annual meeting of the American Institute of Electrical Engi­neers. Established in 1936, the award recognizes young electrical engineers for "meritorious service in the interest of their fellowmen." Nominations for the award are received from sections of the A.I.E.E., faculty members of the engineering colleges and by key men in the electrical industry.

Some idea of the magnitude of the work which he has done is obtained when it is realized that he has written 16 technical articles for such magazines as the "Electrical World," "Electric Light & Power," and the "Westinghouse Engineer." He has presented a total of 9 technical papers to the A.I.E.E. and other engineering societies.

Robert C. Cheek, E.E., '41, named as the outstanding young American electri­cal engineer of 1949 by honorary E. E. society.

Mr. Cheek's energy and ingenuity have resulted in the production of 23 recognized inventions. They range from such things as radio receiver circuits to methods for relay protection of trans­mission lines. A large number of these inventions is now being used.

The Georgia Tech Band is shown in parade formation inarching through the streets of Tampa. The band was invited to participate in the Gasparilla parade on Monday, February 6, by the Gasparilla committee. Tampa alumni got busy and arranged for quarters and meals and Tech administrators arranged for transportation • thus giving the well-deserving band a nice trip. According to the "Tampa Morning Tribune" it was hard to determine which of two units received the greatest ovation — the Tech band or the Conga dancers from Cuba. Over 40 bands and 60 floats were in the parade. Some 600,000 people were present for the occasion.

As a clincher for Tech the pirate captain to whom the Tampa mayor, Curtis Hixon, surrendered the keys to the city, was Jim Warren, Tech Alumnus of 1923.

Student Coordination Assured Estes Mann, president of the Student

Council, announced that in the future all homecoming activities will be co­ordinated under a three-man com­mittee which is to be appointed by the Student Council. President Mann stated that this plan will be in effect in time for the next homecoming game.

The main purpose of this coordination of activities is to inform the alumni of Tech of the many events which take

place during the homecoming week­end. Mr. Oscar Davis, president of the Tech Alumni Association, is working on the plan with the Student Council.

The Homecoming Dance, the 'Reck Parade, the Homecoming Decorations Contest, fraternities' open-house par­ties, and other such events will be in­cluded in the schedule. Student Council President Mann stated that in the past all such events have been very good but with no coordination between them.

March-April, 1950 11

Page 12: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

ALUMNI PROMINENTLY MENTIONED Ivan Allen, Jr., and Rock G. Taber,

who led the Atlanta Community Chest through its successful campaign in 1949, were honored on February 23 by several hundred Atlantans at a testi­monial dinner and presented scrolls "for distinguished service."

Mayor Hartsfield struck the keynote when he said: "These two men are truly great citizens of Atlanta."

Mr. Hal Dumas presented the scroll to Mr. Allen, who served as General Chairman of the campaign. The cita­tion expressed appreciation for Mr. Allen's "sincere interest, untiring zeal and many contributions to the progress of the campaign."

Mr. Allen has been elected unani­mously to succeed Mr. Taber as Presi­dent of the Chest for 1950.

* • Frank L. Asbury, Jr., has been named

Group Manager of all Spun Weaving plants of Burlington Mills, Greensboro, N. C. Although he has been with Bur­lington Mills less than two years, Mr. Asbury has a long career in textile management behind him. A Georgia Tech graduate in Textile Engineering, he has held top supervisory positions in the industry since 1925.

He is married to the former Alice Pope Harris and they have three chil­dren. He enjoys football, baseball and golf for recreation. He plans to move his family to Greensboro as soon as he can find a suitable residence.

* * Frank A. Cowan, who has been with

the Long Lines Department of Ameri­can Telephone & Telegraph Co. for more than 30 years, now steps com­petently into the big job as head of Long Lines Engineering, with a record of brilliant engineering in the telephone field as well as a score of inventions.

Mr. Cowan has contributed to some important Bell System developments. Not content with that, Mr. Cowan has also achieved the highest rating in the U. S. Power Squadrons — Navigator; formerly had a 32-foot cruiser with an automatic pilot he built himself. Add to all this his home hobby of fashioning reproductions of antique furniture and you have the picture of a man of precision.

An Alabaman by birth and a graduate of the Georgia Institute of Technology with a B.S. in E.E., 1919, Mr. Cowan began his telephone career in 1920 with Long Lines at Atlanta. Two years later he went to the Engineering group at New York where he progressed to the position of transmission engineer with­in six years.

He and his wife make their home in New York City.

Robert S. Neblett, assistant general manager of the General Electric Com­pany's Nucleonics Department, has been appointed business and construction manager of the Knolls Atomic Power Laboratory.

Mr. Neblett, in his new capacity, will handle all business and contractual re­lations between the laboratory and the A.E.C. These relations are becoming quite extensive, and will expand rapid­ly with the progress of new construc­tion, such as the work on the experi­mental atomic power plant at West Milton, N. Y.

A native of Corsicana, Texas, Mr. Neblett studied at Georgia Tech, where he was graduated in 1923, with the de­gree of B.S. in Electrical Engineering. Later he joined the GE Test Course as a student engineer. He rose through various positions until he was assis­tant manager of the turbine division of the company's Apparatus Department. When the GE Nucleonics Department was organized, in April, 1948, to oper­ate the AEC plant at Hanford, Washing­ton, and to administer the general con­tract between GE and the AEC, he was named assistant general manager, a post which he will continue to hold.

* • George H. Echols, B.S. in C.E., 1923,

whose appointment as chief engineer, maintenance of way and structures, of the Southern at Knoxville, Tenn., was reported in the Railway Age of Janu­ary 7, was born on June 17, 1901, at Milledgeville, Ga. He entered the ser­vice of the Southern in 1924 as a junior engineer at Macon, Ga., serving there subsequently as assistant engineer. In July, 1926, he was promoted to assistant track supervisor at Rome, Ga., and four years later was appointed track super­visor at Jacksonville, Fla. He was pro­moted to assistant division engineer at Atlanta in March, 1935, and became di­vision engineer at Atlanta, in 1946.

Monie A. Ferst, president of M. A. Ferst, Ltd., and chairman of the board of Scripto, Inc., has been elected a di­rector of the Fulton National Bank of Atlanta.

Mr. Ferst, Georgia Tech, M.E., 1911, is a member of the board of trustees of the Georgia Tech Research Institute, the Atlanta YMCA, the Atlanta and DeKalb Chambers of C o m m e r c e , American Chemical Society, Georgia Engineering Society, and the National Chemurgic Council. He also has long been active in the American Arbitration Association and the National Association of Manu­facturers. He is a member of the Stand­ard Town and Country Club of Atlanta.

Robert S. Neblett, E.E., 1923, of G. E.'s Nucleonics Dept., appointed business and construction manager of the Knolls Atomic Power Laboratory.

Jesse D. Jewell, Georgia Tech, 1923, pioneer of Northeast Georgia's vast poultry industry, was named Gaines­ville's "Man of the Year" in 1949 at the Rotary Club's annual Ladies' Night banquet.

The award, a watch given annually since 1936 by Owen Osborne Hosiery Mill, Inc., was presented by E. F. Hughs, Sr., a past president of the club. The "Man of the Year" is chosen annually by the Rotary Club's board of direc­tors for "outstanding achievement dur­ing the previous year."

Mr. Jewel was cited for his contri­bution to the welfare of the State and his community during 1949.

• • Fred B. Moore, Class of 1925, Atlanta

businessman and civic leader, will di­rect the 1950 polio fund drive in Ful­ton county and the Fifth congressional district.

In making the announcement of Mr. Moore's appointment, Mr. Fred J. Tur­ner, State co-chairman of the campaign, said: "We have just had the worst polio epidemic our country has ever known. Never before has Georgia so desperate­ly needed funds to provide medical care and aid for polio victims, for protection against the spread of polio, and for polio research.

"The Georgia chapter of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis is most fortunate to have the services of Mr. Moore. I am confident that under his leadership, Greater Atlanta and this district will raise more than its share of the money needed."

The Georgia chapter extends financial assistance to eight out of every 10 polio victims in Georgia. It is helping 128 victims from Fulton county alone.

12 THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Page 13: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

PROMINENT MENTIONS (Con't) General Charles E. Thomas, Jr., 1918,

Selected Temporary Major General

Otis O. Rae, E.E., 1918, appointed mana­ger of Westinghouse Electric Corp., Southeastern District, Atlanta headquar­ters. Mr. Rae succeeds Mr. Thomas Fuller, E.E., '06, who is retiring after 44 years with the company.

Otis O. Rae has been named manager of the Westinghouse Electric Corp.'s Southeastern district, with headquar­ters in Atlanta. Mr. Rae succeeds Thom­as Fuller, who is retiring after 44 years of service with the company.

Formerly central station manager for the Southeastern district, Mr. Rae has served as assistant district manager for the past two months.

Mr. Rae joined Westinghouse im­mediately upon his graduation from Georgia Tech in 1918 and has moved through a series of promotions with the corporation. He is a native of Au­gusta, Ga., and is a member of the American Society of Mechanical Engi­neers, Industry Association, and the Atlanta Athletic Club.

Mr. Fuller, also a Georgia Tech grad­uate, has been with Westinghouse since 1906. A native of Charleston, S. C , he joined the corporation after graduation and for several years worked as a sales engineer in the Atlanta and Charlotte offices. After several promotions, he was appointed Southeastern district manager in 1929.

Mr. Fuller is Vice-President of the Georgia Tech Alumni Foundation, a member of the Capital City Club, and Piedmont Driving Club.

* * W. Murray Werner, C.E., '17, has been

promoted to the office of Illustrious Potentate of El Karubah Temple, in Shreveport, La. Mr. Werner owns and operates The Werner Company, general building contractors, in Shreveport.

Brig. Gen. Charles E. Thomas, Jr., Inspector General for Headquarters Continental Air Command, Mitchell Air Force Base, New York, has been promoted to temporary major general, it was recently announced. The same order promoted him to permanent brigadier.

Veteran of 32 years' Air Force ser­vice, General Thomas was formerly as­signed as Commanding General of the 1503 Air Transport Wing at Tokyo. He succeeds Colonel Edgar T. Selzer, at the Mitchell Base.

Originally from Atlanta, Ga., the General was educated at Riverside Mili­tary Academy, Gainesville, Ga., and the Georgia Institute of Technology, Class of 1918.

General Thomas has acquired a well rounded service school education —hav­ing studied Aeronautical Engineering at the Air Service Mechanics School, and graduated from the Army Industrial College, the Air Corps Tactical School, the Army War College and the Chemi­cal Warfare School.

The General commenced his Air Force career in 1918 as a flying instruc­tor at Love Air Force Base and Elling­ton AFB, Texas.

Among his myriad early assignments, he served as Depot Supply Officer at Fairfield Air Intermediate Depot, Ohio, 1920-26, as Personnel Adjutant of Camp Nichols in the Philippines, Chief In­spector for the Engineering Department at Rockwell Air Depot in Calif., Supply Officer at San Antonio Air Depot, in Texas, and Operations Officer at Max­well AFB, Alabama.

Following a duty tour as instructor at the Air Corps Tactical School at Max­well, General Thomas assumed com­mand of the Southeast Air Depot at Wellston, Ga., and in January, 1943, was appointed commander of Warner Robins Air Depot, at Robins AFB, Ga., later redesignated Warner Robins Air Service Command.

Appointed Deputy Chief of Staff of the 21st Bomber Command in the South Pacific in May, 1944, the General was serving as Deputy Commander for Operations of the Air Force in the

General Charles E. Thomas, Jr.

Pacific Ocean area by October of that year.

He has been awarded the Legion of of Merit with one Oak Leaf Cluster.

Returning to the States in the fall of 1945, General Thomas was appointed Commanding General of Brookley Air Force Base, Alabama.

Assigned overseas again the follow­ing year, the General was named Chief of the Air Division of the Army Ad­visory Group at Nanking, China. In January, 1949, he became Commanding General of the 1503rd Air Transport Wing at Tokyo, which position he held before his recent assignment as In­spector General of the Continental Air Command at Mitchel Air Force Base, Hempstead, N. Y.

A Command Pilot, General Thomas is an enthusiastic golfer, hunter and fisherman.

General and Mrs. Gladys Whittington Thomas, also of Atlanta, Ga., reside at Mitchel Air Force Base.

The Thomas' have one son, Robert W. Thomas, 19, who is presently attend­ing Sullivan Prep School for West Point, in Washington, D. C.

Eugene Miller, B.S. in Chemical Engi­neering, 1945, has written another arti­cle that has been accepted by Coronet Magazine. This one, entitled "When Greensboro Licked Polio," is appearing in the January issue of Coronet. His

former article, "Where Science Finds New Einsteins," was published by Coronet in September, 1949.

Mr. Miller is working as City Hall Reporter on the Greensboro Daily News, Greensboro, N. C.

March-April, 1950 13

Page 14: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

A L U M N I CLUB MEETINGS Baltimore, Md.

Tuesday, February 21, was the date that some thirty loyal Georgia Tech alumni in the Baltimore area gathered for dinner and for fellowship, with President Bill Cassell, '43, presiding.

After a delicious chicken dinner, Howard Ector, representing the Geor­gia Tech Alumni Foundation, spoke briefly to the gathering about the school and the progress that has been made there within the past few years. Immediately following this address, Mr. Ector showed the colored film of the Tech-Georgia football game of this past year, which was well received by all.

President Cassell appointed a com­mittee of four to bring in a new slate of officers for presentation at their next meeting, which is to be held in May.

Memphis, Tenn. Dear Roane:

On Monday night, January 23, 1950, the Memphis Chapter of Georgia Tech Alumni Association had a meeting in the Military Ballroom of the King Cotton Hotel. The main speaker of the evening was Bobby Dodd, Georgia Tech coach, who gave an interesting and in­formative talk on Tech's prospects for the coming season and other topics of interest to all alumni present.

Several sports writers, officials and high school coaches were present to hear Bobby's talk. Color movies of the Georgia Tech-Tennessee game were shown and Bobby narrated them as only he can do.

An election of officers for the coming year was held and Luther B. Hawkins was elected president, Tom F. Faires, vice-president and Bob Colmer was re­elected secretary and treasurer. Charles S. Peete, retiring president, closed the meeting with a short history of the activities of the local Georgia Tech Alumni Chapter.

I am mailing under separate cover a picture of the speakers' table at this meeting. Hope that you will see fit to use it in an issue of the Georgia Tech Alumnus.

I am very happy that we will con­tinue our association for another year and look forward to hearing from you again soon.

R. P. COLMER, JR. Secretary

Macon, Ga. There were 44 alumni at the Feb­

ruary 27 meeting of the Macon Georgia Tech Club. Coaches Bobby Dodd, Ray Graves, and Ray Ellis were guests for the occasion and provided a very inter­esting program. Each made an excel­lent talk and they then showed the color film of the Tech-Georgia game. It was a most enjoyable evening.

The distinguished group of alumni above were gathered together on February 21 in Baltimore to hear Howard Ector, '40, Executive Secretary of the Georgia Tech Alumni Foundation. They are, first row, left to right: Farmer (V.-P.), Cassell (Pres.), Ector, Ross (Sec.-Treas.), Coursen (Promotor for this meeting); second row, Bohn, Cox, Bartles, Goodwin, Radcliffe, Kirkpatrick; third row, Hammersla, Purinton, Seay, Marshall, Boehm, Walke, Brennan; fourth row, Grill, Vrey, Wilson, Leroy, Pate, Tewes, Hammond and Toppen.

Shown above at the January 23 meeting of Memphis, Tenn., Alumni Club, at the speakers' table, left to right, are: Luther Hawkins, '48, President of Memphis Club; Walter Stewart, Commercial Appeal Sporlswriter; Ruffner Murray, coach at Central High School; Ceylon B. Blackwell, '18; Bobby Dodd, head football coach and guest speaker; Charles S. Peete, '33, past president of Memphis Club; Bob Colmer, '46, Secretary-Treasurer of Club; Bobby Lloyd, Southeastern Conference official; Floyd Roberts, Tech High coach; Bob King, Principal of Central High; Frank O. Waddey, '29, member of Tech's Rose Bowl team, and Tom Roberts, '20.

Danville, Va. Dave C. Boy, '37, provided the im­

petus for getting some 30 Tech men to­gether for a dinner meeting in Danville, Va., on the night of February 24.

The Dan River Country Club was the scene of this gathering, and there were four alumni who came from as far as Martinsville, Va., to attend. Mr. Russell B. Newton, '27, recently elected Presi­dent of the Dan River Mills, was intro­duced and said a few words to the gath­ering. After this, Howard Ector, Execu­tive Secretary of the Georgia Tech Alumni Foundation, talked b r i e f l y about the work of the Foundation and the advances made by the school in the past few years. At the conclusion of this talk, the colored pictures of the Tech-Georgia football game of this past year were shown to the gathering.

Before dismissal, Chairman Boy ap­pointed four men to a committee to in­vestigate the possibilities of organizing a formal Georgia Tech Club in this area. All those present seemed enthusi­astic about the formation of such a club. Another meeting is planned for late spring.

Norfolk, Va. The Y.M.CA. of Norfolk was the

gathering place for some twenty-three Georgia Tech men on the night of February 23. In the absence of R. B. Waterman, '33, Delmas Eichhorn, '48, presided and introduced Howard Ec­tor, Executive Secretary of the Georgia Tech Alumni Foundation. Mr. Ector made a brief, informal talk about Geor­gia Tech and the progress being made there. At the conclusion of this talk, a lengthy question and answer session ensued, after which the pictures of the Tech-Georgia football game of this past year were shown. These pictures were well received by all, and especially by some of the sons of Tech men who were present with their fathers.

It was definitely decided to organize a Norfolk-Portsmouth chapter of the Alumni Association, and a committee was appointed to select a slate of offi­cers to be presented at the next meet­ing. It was felt that this group was making definite progress toward the establishment of a real Tech club in this area.

14 THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Page 15: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

MISSISSIPPI ALUMNI GATHER Shown above at the January 13 meeting of the Tech Club of Mississippi at Jackson are, left to right, first row: Alton Westbrook, '26, G. F. Monell, '34, Hill Tvson, '36, Matt Alexander, '34. Dave Gammill, '47, (Sec.-Treas.), Jim Hackl, '46; second row, Tom Salisbury, '22, Bill Akin. '28, John Howard, '27, E. E. Elmer, '14, L. P. Warren, '26. Cliff Waterhouse, '08, Gene Drummond, '12, (Pres.), Ike Garber, '27, Conrad Stevenson, '18, Hooker Pepper, '25, Preston Waldrop, '30, Paul Williams, '26, Harry Blair, '32: third row, Melvin Boots, '26, Ralph Robinson, 49, Roger Harrington, '49, Gene Johnson, '34, Allen Bowen, '49, Farris Gibbs, '46, Grey Cobb, '48, Gene Damon, '49, Joe Ware '29, Bowden Palmer, '31. Woodroiv Howie, '39, Wallace Armstrong, '41, Jack Willis, '48. Dick Bodine, '48, M. F. Hubbard, '35, Roane Beard. '40; fourth row. James Powell, '49, Jim C. Everett, '42, How ord Ector, '40, Gerald Herndon, '48, M. H. Blanton, '49, B. M. Myers, '49, Danm Hall, '48, Ben Stevens, '48, Scott Kelso '47. J. P. Beaudrot. '33, Sims Munford, '34, (V.-Pres.), James Spain, Jr., '46. R. S. Ford, '38, H. E. Richard, '32 Charles Broad, '28.

Jackson, Miss. The Georgia Tech Club of Mississippi

held its first full scale meeting on Fri­day, January 13, 1950, at the Robert E. Lee Hotel in Jackson, Mississippi. The date turned out not unlucky and every­one seemed to thoroughly enjoy the get-together.

The evening started off with a social hour which extended slightly over the hour's schedule. A pianist was on hand to help out with "Up With the White and Gold," and "Alma Mater," but she got drowned on "Ramblin' Wreck." Those whose voices lacked quality made up the difference with volume.

By the time dinner was under way, there were 53 old and new Tech men present, ranging from "Cliff" Water-house, '08, to "Dinky" Bowen, '49. The majority of them came from Jackson and nearby towns, but T. P. Beaudrot, '33, drove all the way from Tupelo, Miss., 220 miles, and R. S. Ford, '38, and H. E. Richard, '32, drove 200 miles from the other end of the state, Pascagoula, Mississippi.

Eugene Drummond, '12, organized the meeting in excellent fashion and presided over the meeting during the business to be handled. Others were heard from, some spontaneously. Offi­cers elected were:

Eugene D. Drummond, '12, President. Robert Sims Munford, '34, Vice-

President. D a v e G a m m i l l , '47, S e c r e t a r y -

Treasurer. Guest speakers were Howard Ector,

'40, Executive Secretary of the Geor­gia Tech Alumni Foundation and Roane Beard, '40, Manager Alumni Activities, National Alumni Association. These two explained the workings of their

Pittsburgh, Pa. On Monday night, February 20, some

twenty-five enthusiastic Georgia Tech men in the Pittsburgh area gathered at the Hotel Webster Hall for a din­ner meeting. Mr. K. M. Patterson, '23, of the Westinghouse Electric Corp., was instrumental in getting this group to­gether, and it was decided, to form a chapter of the Georgia Tech Alumni Association in the near future. Mr. Pat­terson appointed a committee of three men to make recommendations along this line and to submit a slate of offi­cers to serve this club. This committee will report at the next meeting to be held in the spring.

Howard Ector, Executive Secretary of the Georgia Tech Alumni Founda­tion, represented the school and spoke briefly to those assembled about the progress being made at Tech, and some of the changes that have come about in the past few years. At the conclu­sion of this informal address, Mr. Ector showed the colored film of last year's Tech-Georgia football game, which was well received.

All present reported an enjoyable evening, and it is hoped that this is the beginning of a strong club to repre­sent Georgia Tech in the Pittsburgh

particular organizations, told of the many changes being made at Tech, and told the groups how they, as alumni, could help keep Tech at the top among engineering schools. A question and answer period about faculty members, etc., was held at the conclusion of their talks, then movies of the Tech-Georgia football game were shown.

All-in-all, it was a fine beginning of a new Tech club.

Augusta, Ga. The Georgia Tech Club of Augusta

held a dinner meeting at the Margaret Hamilton Hotel on Thursday night, March 2. There were approximately 40 members present for the occasion.

Howard Ector and Roane Beard from the Alumni Office were guest speakers for the occasion. They brought the club up to date on recent developments at Tech and narrated the film of the Tech-Georgia football game of last season.

One of the highlights of the meeting was the welcoming to Augusta of two former Tech football stars, Harry Milli-gan, '32, and "Buck" Flowers, '32. These two have come from separate prep schools and joined forces to coach foot­ball at Richmond Academy in Augusta. The club voted to support them to their utmost during coming football seasons and agreed to promote to the best of their ability the spring game held in March.

Retiring President Ralph A. "Scotty" Ireland presided. New officers inducted for the coming year are:

President — Hugh A. Groves, '30, 703 Marion Bldg.

Vice-President — Fred J. Morgan, '29, Morgan Truck and Tractor Co.

Secretary — E d Macuch, '46, 2626 Hazel St.

Treasurer — James G. Swift, '46, City Hall.

Richmond, Va. The first meeting of Georgia Tech

alumni ever held in the Richmond area assembled at the Hotel Richmond on Wednesday night, February 22. The purpose of this get-together was to dis­cuss the formation of a Georgia Tech

(Continued on next page)

March-April, 1950 15

Page 16: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

RICHMOND (Con't) Alumni Club of Richmond, and to hear an informal address by Howard Ector, Executive Secretary of the Georgia Tech Alumni Foundation. William E. Woods, '07, presided at this dinner meeting, and Parker Deans, '38, was in­strumental in helping with the prelimi­nary arrangements.

After Mr. Ector's brief talk, pictures were shown of the Georgia-Georgia Tech football game of this past year. It was unanimously decided that a Tech club should be formed in Richmond, and Chairman Wood appointed a com­mittee to bring in recommendations to the next meeting, regarding charter, by-laws and officers. Jack Herod, son of Dr. N. S. Herod, long-time teacher and friend of Tech boys, was an interested visitor at this meeting. Mr. Herod is now practicing law in Richmond.

Charleston, S. C. A reorganization meeting of the

Charleston Alumni group was held in the Naval Officers Club, Naval Base, Charleston, South Carolina, on the eve­ning of January 17. The following offi­cers were elected:

President — W. Lucas Simon, '09, 90 Church Street, Charleston, South Caro­lina.

Vice-President — David T. Coleman, '27, 166 Grove Street, Charleston, South Carolina.

Sec.-Treas. — Louis Y. Dawson, Jr., C.E., '20, 33 Church Street Charleston, South Carolina.

Arrangements for the meeting were made by Captain Robert Hall Smith, USN, 1919.

It is planned to have a regular meet­ing in June to outline the projects for the club.

SOUTH TEXAS

An informal reception in honor of Dr. and Mrs. Blake R. Van Leer was given February 16 by Georgia Tech Alumni of South Texas. Thirty-seven Tech men, and their ladies, attended the re­ception, and a dinner party later in the Empire Room of the Rice Hotel, Hous­ton. Before the end of the reception, Dr. Van Leer talked briefly but very interestingly about affairs at Georgia Tech.

With Dr. and Mrs. Van Leer in the re­ceiving line were Mr. W. Stewart Boyle, who is President of Georgia Tech's South Texas Alumni Associa­tion, and Vice-President at Large of the National Alumni A s s o c i a t i o n , M r s . Boyle, Mrs. Howard T. Tellepsen, and Mr. Tellepsen, Past President of the South Texas group. It was a real pleas­ure for everyone to meet, or to see again, both Dr. and Mrs. Van Leer on this occasion.

Head Coach Bobby Dodd talks to Columbus, Ga., Alumni Club President Leon Camp, '22, while three former pupils look on. Left to right are: Bob Davis. '48, All-America tackle and secretary of Columbus Club; Dodd, and Camp. In the back are Roane Beard, '40, and Hays McKinney, '49.

Dallas, Texas The organization meeting of the

Greater Dallas Georgia Tech Club was held Monday evening, February 20, 1950, at Sammy's Restaurant, Dallas, Texas. George T. Marchmont, '07, who has been largely responsible for get­ting the Tech men together in the Dallas area, presided during the presen­tation of a slate of candidates for the formal organization of the club. The following officers were elected by the thirty-five members present to serve for the coming year:

John C. Jacobs, '39, President. Jeff H. Hooker, Jr., '40, Vice-Presi­

dent. Charlie A. McGill, '48, Secretary-

Treasurer. Leland B. Bass, '15, and M. J. Kone-

mann, '38, Executive Committeemen.

The speaker for the evening was Col. Blake R. Van Leer. Col Van Leer acquainted those present with the great progress that Georgia Tech has made during recent years. He also pointed out the importance of or­ganized alumni groups to the further advancement of the school. During the question period, which followed Col. Van Leer's address, talk inevitably got around to football and the Georgia Tech-S. M. U. game which is to be played in Dallas next September. Need-ness to say, we are all looking forward to the game.

During the several days they were in Houston, the Van Leers were shown the San Jacinto Battleground, the Houston Ship Channel, and other points of interest. Also, they attended a re­ception, given in their honor by Mr. Stewart Boyle, at the Shamrock Hotel. Dr. and Mrs. Van Leer were the house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Roy Cul-len during their visit.

J. W. FRYER, JR., Secretary

Columbus, Ga.

The Tech club of Columbus held a dinner meeting at the Ralston Hotel on January 25, 1950.

There were 65 present to hear Head Coach Bobby Dodd, the main speaker. Coach Dodd talked about the prob­lems presented due to the N.C.A.A. "Sanity Code," team prospects for next year, and the general athletic situation at Tech. At the end of the regular meet­ing, he narrated the Tech-Georgia game movie. The entire program was received with enthusiasm by those present.

The meeting was arranged by Bob Davis, '47, former All-America tackle and present secretary of the club, and was presided over by Leon K. Camp, '22, president of the club.

Those in attendance were John R. Boyd, W. L. Westbrook, William J. Hen-drix, Floyd Mitchell, Jr., Tom Devane (guest), D e r w a r d W. Terry, Gene Kemp, Jack M. Averett, A. Illges, J. Wright Brown L. E. Anderson, E. War­ren Parker, J. Fred Glass, Jack Gantt, E. R. DuBose, W. C. Buck, R. C. Smith, W. Fred Ziegler, Guy Garrard, Paul K. McKenney, Fred Saunders, Walter Jackson, Forbes Bradley, Ed Merritt, Roy T. Fagan, W. B. Eskew, Shorty Smith.

W. W. Purks, E. Oren Smith, Walter Boone, Leon A. Camp, F. C. Martin, Ed­ward W. Swift, Jr., W. C. Pease, W. E. Gross, Joe Flowers, Jr., Charles Flow­ers, Abram Siegel, T. J. Allen, Jr., C. S. Roach, J. S. Barnette, E. Lynn Smith, John Kinnett, Jr., Wilfred E. Gross, Jr., Bill Bland, C. Dexter Jordan, R. B. Betts, T. Jeff Kelly, Jr., T. J. Hallman (guest), Walt Miller, C. A. Cobb, R. W. Sewell, Will Johnson, Herbert Hutton, H. A. Patterson, R. H. Taliaferro, Her­bert H. Hughes, Bob Davis, Roane Beard (guest), C o a c h Bobby Dodd (guest), H a y s M c K i n n e y (guest), George Matthews, Sr. (guest), Tom Kinney (guest).

16 THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Page 17: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

CLASS M E N T I O N S 1907

Robert M. Angus, Russell H. DeGrove and Richard L. Lampp announce the formation of a partnership on January 1, 1950, to engage in the practice of civil engineering and surveying, with offices at 420 Hildebrandt Building, Jacksonville, Fla., the partnership to be known as Robert M. Angas and Associates.

1909 N. E. Adamson retired from Norfolk

Naval Shipyard on December 31, 1948, and is now Special Representative for National Lead Co., of 105 York St., Brooklyn, N. Y.

1922 A. W. Palin, Jr., is District Operating

Manager for Graybar Electric Co. at their newly created Gulf Coast District, with headquarters in Houston, Texas. Both the new Gulf Coast District and the old Southwestern District continue under the supervision of George T. Marchmont, '07, whose headquarters are at Dallas.

1923 Rogers W. Malone is Production Man­

ager for Coca-Cola Bottling Co., At­lanta, Ga.

1925 W. R. Forrester, former Georgia Tech

football player, and a textile engineer, has joined the firm of J. J. Finnigan Co., Inc., Atlanta, as a sales engineer.

1927 Joseph H. Chaille is Assistant to

Agency Vice-President of the Equitable Life Assurance Society, New York, N. Y.

1928 James A. Hayes, Jr., is a partner in

the firm of Hayes & Co., Real Estate; president of Big Town Recreation, and owner of Hayes Pulp & Timber Co., all of Atlanta.

Julian C. Jet t is chief draftsman for Bush-Brown, Gailey & Heffernan, Ar­chitects, Atlanta.

1929 Albert L. Clifton is Vice-President

and General Manager of Clifton Mfg. Co., Waco, Texas.

1931 Alfred L. Mullins is a partner in the

firm of Croft Electric Co., Macon, Ga.,

1932 Horace A. Hunnicutt is a represen­

tative of International Nickel Co., in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

1932 Major Edward S. Mathes, formerly

with the Military Department at Geor­gia Tech, is now overseas. His address is, Hq. 40th AAA Brigade, APO #503, % P. M., San Francisco. Calif.

1933 Burton O. Heinrich is General Super­

intendent for Ford Motor Co., Canton, Ohio.

Roland L. Toups is chief engineer for South Coast Corp., Houma, La.

1934 William H. Chambers is associated

with the Biltmore Garage, Biltmore Hotel, Atlanta.

Albert B. Hammond is Vice-President and General Manager of The Berryton Mills, Berryton, Ga.

Frank M. Ridley, Jr., Atlanta insur­ance executive, will be Atlanta Chair­man of the 1950 drive for the Georgia Heart Association.

1935 Frank A. Traber is Assistant Manager

of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., 202 Candler Bldg., Atlanta, Ga.

1936 Chauncey W. Huth is Superintendent

of the Coca-Cola Bottling Co., of Springfield, Mass.

1937 Lt. Col. Richard A. Beard, Jr., is

among students currently enrolled in the Air University's Senior Officers' Military Management Course at the USAF Special Staff School, Craig Air Force Base, Alabama. Upon completion of the course, he will return to the Marine Corps Air Station at Toro, Cali­fornia, where he is assigned to duty with headquarters Squadron, 1st Ma­rine Aircraft Wing.

1938 Robert R. Voorhees is Sales Engineer

for Roller Bearing Co. of America, Trenton, N. J.

Thomas L. Hill is district sales repre­sentative of the Construction Materials Department of the General Electric Company for the State of Georgia.

1939 Dorroh L. Nowell, Jr., is Ceramic En­

gineer with Merry Brothers Brick & Tile Co., Augusta, Ga.

Mac H. Burroughs is owner and presi­dent of Burroughs Insurance Agency, Miami, Fla.

Glenn E. Prahl was recently pro­moted to the position of Engineering Supervisor in the Iowa Department of the A m e r i c a n Associated Insurance Companies, and is living in Des Moines, Iowa.

1940 Hoyt E. Broward is a professional

engineer with Reynolds, Smith & Hills, 227 Park St., Jacksonville, Fla.

Joseph B. Gillenwater is Assistant Superintendent for Bailey Construction Corp., Lorado, West Virginia.

W. J. "Bill" Hogan has been employed to head the new rent and property management department of the Gene Craig Realty Co., Atlanta.

Neil Walker recently announced his association with Louis Bates, former professor of English at Georgia Tech, in the insurance business. They will represent Lincoln National Life Insur­ance Co. of Ft. Wayne, Ind. with offices at 407 Palmer Building.

1942 Lt. Edwin B. Dickson is with the

2059th Air W e a t h e r Wing, Tinker A.F.B., Oklahoma City, Okla.

Frank W. Michal is Project Mechani­cal Engineer for Johnson & Johnson, New Brunswick, N. J. He recently re­ceived his Professional Engineer's li­cense in N. J. and N. Y.

1943 Frank B. Lincoln, Jr., is Head of the

Physics Laboratory, Hollingsworth & Whitney Paper Co., Waterville, Maine.

Robert M. Cox has been made Branch Manager of the Orlando, Florida, office of Hill York Corp.

Anthony Zagarella is a student at Co­lumbia University, New York, study­ing for his Master's degree in Industrial Engineering.

1944 John Burke Jackson, Jr., of 778 Adair

Ave., Atlanta, is now a field represen­tative of the Guardian Life Insurance Co. of America. He is associated with the company's Holcombe T. Greene Agency, Atlanta.

Jose I. Gonzalez is a full time instruc­tor at Purdue University — doing grad­uate work on Master's Degree.

1945 Robert J. November is Cost Engineer

for the Roth-Schenker Corp., 350 5th Ave., New York City.

1946 Lt. (j.g.) Earl B. Fowler, Jr. 's address

is: USS Leary, DDR 879, % F. P. O., New York, N. Y., and his home address is 215 Bradford Ave., Norfolk, Va.

1947 Hugh Austin Brown is Sales Repre­

sentative for Noland Co., Inc., Atlanta. N. Richard Miller is Manager of Key­

stone Homes, Inc., Baltimore, Md. Lee Howard, Jr., is Plant Engineer,

Calcasieu Paper Co., Elizabeth, La. 1948

Herbert I. Goldberg is Superintendent of Construction for Margold Electric Co., Inc., Yonkers, N. Y.

P. G. North, Jr., is a Junior Engineer for Chrysler Corp., Highland Park, Mich.

1949 Jule C. Spach is a student at Union

Theological Seminary, Richmond, Va., taking a special course in Bible study. He will be there until December, then he and his family will go to Northern Brazil as educational and industrial missionaries.

March-April, 1950 17

Page 18: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

WEDDINGS AND ENGAGEMENTS Beers-Shepherd

Announcement is made by Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Beers of the marriage of their daughter, Miss Bertha Salisbury Beers, to Dan Plunket Shepherd, on February 18, 1950, at St. Luke's Epis­copal church, Atlanta. Mr. Shepherd received his B. of I.M. degree in Sep­tember, 1949.

Borzynski-Rice

Mr. and Mrs. Felix Borzynski an­nounce the marriage of their daughter, Miss Nancy Moore Borzynski, to Gene Thornton Rice. The ceremony took place in the pastorium of the First Baptist church in Elberton, Ga. Mr. Rice graduated in 1949 with a B. of E.E., and is affiliated with Southeastern Un­derwriters Association.

Elliott-Taylor

Mr. and Mrs. P. M. Eliott, of Monroe, N. C., announce the marriage of their daughter, Miss Theo Beatrice Elliott, to Robert Jenks Taylor III, on March 18 at the First Presbyterian church in Monroe. Mr. Taylor was graduated from Georgia Tech in 1947 with a B.S. in E.E., and now holds an executive position with the American Surigical Supply Co., of Atlanta.

Foster-Moore Mr. and Mrs. Robert Edmonds Foster,

Sr., announce the marriage of their daughter, Miss Minnie Foster, to Joseph Riddell Moore. The wedding took place on February 21, 1950, at the De­catur First Methodist church.

Mr. Moore received his B.S. in M.E. in 1942, and at present is assistant plant engineer at F. C. Huyck & Sons, Ken­wood Mills, Albany, N. Y.

Gentry-Varner Mr. and Mrs. Guy Bransford Gentry

announce the marriage of their daugh­ter, Miss Elynor Truman Gentry, to John Edward Varner, Jr., on February 25, 1950, in the Frances Winship Wal­ters Chapel of St. Mark Methodist church, Atlanta.

Mr. Varner received his B.S. degree in Chemistry in June, 1948, and is now serving as a chemist for Burlington Mills, Burlington, N. C.

Hester-Ducey Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Hester announce

the engagement of their daughter, Miss Betty Jane Hester, to Robert E. Ducey, of Savannah, Ga. The marriage will be solemnized at the Sacred Heart church, Atlanta, on April 15, 1950.

Mr. Ducey graduated in September, 1949, with a B. of I.M.

Hopkins-Lochridge Mrs. Hawkins Hopkins announces the

engagement of her daughter, Miss Betsy Hopkins, to Marshall Armstrong Loch-ridge, Jr., the date of the wedding to be announced later. Mr. Lochridge re­ceived his B. of I.E. in 1949 and is now doing graduate work at Georgia Tech.

Jagels-Starr Announcement is made by Mr. and

Mrs. Charles Jagels of the engage­ment of their daughter, Miss Nancy LaVake Jagels, to James Thrower Starr. The marriage will be an event of May 12, 1950, at the First Presby­terian church, Atlanta.

Mr. Starr graduated in June, 1948, with a B. of I.M., and is associated with J. W. Starr and Son Lumber Co.

McCauley-Stumberg

Mr. and Mrs. George Marion Mc-Cauley announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Suzanne Timmons McCauley, to Berthold Gotlieb Stum-berg, Jr., of Tallassee, Ala.

Mr. Stumberg received his Bachelor of Textiles degree in 1949 and is now employed by the Huntsville Manufac­turing Co., Huntsville, Ala.

(Continued on page 19)

BIRTHS Beard

Mr. and Mrs. W. Roane Beard an­nounce the birth of a son, Jeffrey Boyd, at Crawford Long Hospital, Atlanta, on February 13, 1950. Mr. Beard gradu­ated in Industrial Management in 1940 and is now Manager of Alumni Activi­ties, here in the Alumni Office.

Bernstein Mr. and Mrs. Bertram P. Bernstein

announce the birth of a daughter, Jo Ann, on January 19, 1950. Mr. Bern­stein received his B.S. in Civil Engi­neering in 1943.

Brown Mr. and Mrs. Vernon S. Brown an­

nounce the birth of a son, Michael Leigh, on February 23, 1950, at St. Josephs Infirmary.

Mr. Brown graduated with the Class of 1934 and is now Southern Represen­tative for Robbins Co., with head­quarters in Atlanta.

Bryan Mr. and Mrs. Southworth Field

Bryan, of Jefferson, Ga., announce the birth of a son, Southworth Field, Jr., on January 26, 1950, at Piedmont Hos­pital, Atlanta. Mr. Bryan graduated in 1947 with a B.S. in M.E.

Cavette Mr. and Mrs. N. M. Cavette announce

the birth of a daughter, Linda Louise, on February 11, 1950. Mr. Cavette re­ceived his B.S. in I.M. in 1941.

deGolian Mr. and Mrs. Felix deGolian, Jr., an­

nounce the birth of a son, William Du-four, on January 24, 1950, at St. Josephs Infirmary, Atlanta. Mr. deGolian re­ceived his B.S. in M.E. in 1934.

Harris Mr. and Mrs. Julian H. Harris an­

nounce the birth of a daughter, Judy Ann, born February 19, 1950.

Mr. Harris, Arch., '28, is an instructor at Tech and a prominent sculptor.

Hubbard Mr. and Mrs. Millard F. Hubbard an­

nounce the birth of a daughter, on January 17, 1950. Mr. Hubbard gradu­ated in 1935 with a B.S. in E.E.

Mathes Rev. and Mrs. F. A. Mathes announce

the birth of a daughter, Martha Anita, on January 23, 1950. Rev. Mathes re­ceived his B.S. in M.E. in 1932, and is now pastor of the South Highland Presbyterian church, Birmingham, Ala.

Mattingly Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Mattingly

announce the birth of a son, John Ben­jamin, on January 28, 1950. Mr. Mat­tingly attended Georgia Tech with the Class of 1938.

Parham Mr. and Mrs. Render T. Parham an­

nounce the birth of a daughter, Deb­orah Jane on January 8, 1950, at Val­ley Hospital, West Point, Ga. Mr. Par­ham graduated with the Class of June, 1948.

Peak Mr. and Mrs. T. Ellis Peak, Jr., an­

nounce the birth of a son, William Ellis, on February 6, 1950, at Baton Rouge General Hospital. Mr. Peak received his B.S. in Chemistry in 1947.

Ravenel Rev. and Mrs. Bruce Ravenel an­

nounce the birth of a son, Bruce Walker III, on January 25, 1950, in Seattle, Wash. Rev. Ravenel graduated with the Class of 1941. He is vicar of St. Johns Episcopal church in Centralia, Washington.

Roane Mr. and Mrs. S. A. "Red" Roane, an­

nounce the birth of a daughter, Sara Elizabeth, in Greenville, S. C , on Janu­ary 29, 1950. Mr. Roane is a textile engineer, Class of 1923.

18 THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Page 19: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

EVERETT STRUPPER, TECH IMMORTAL PASSES SUDDENLY

Everett Strupper Everett Strupper, B.S. in M.E., 1918,

President of the Piedmont Life Insur­ance Company, nationally prominent and highly esteemed All-America foot­ball star of Georgia Tech, died un­expectedly of a thrombosis at the Geor­gian Terrace Hotel, in Atlanta, on Sat­urday morning, February 4. He had returned from a business trip the day before, in apparent excellent health; however, his illness that developed dur­ing the night was, so regretfully, more serious than he realized and, despite his great strength, it proved to be fatal.

An outstanding student and a leader in c a m p u s organizations at Tech, "Strupe" was also captain of an All-Class basketball team, a member of the Varsity Track team and captain in

1918; and, as stated, All-America half­back during the season of 1917-18.

Strupper's business began upon his graduation from Georgia Tech, after service in World War I. He first re­turned to Columbus and entered the automobile tire business. He later^ moved to Atlanta and became associated with a former teammate, G. M. (Pup) Phillips, with the Massachusetts Mu­tual Life Insurance Company. Later he was general agent of the Volunteer State Life Insurance Company.

He was a member of the select Mil­lion-Dollar Round Table of the National Association of Life Underwriters.

He was several times president of the Atlanta Touchdown Club, and the first president of the organization. He was also the first president of the North-side Atlanta Kiwanis Club which was chartered in May, 1948. A vestryman of St. Philips Episcopal Cathedral; a member of the Atlanta Nine o'Clocks, Capital City Club, the Piedmont Driv­ing Club, the Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity and Past President of the North Side Boys' Club.

He was in constant demand as a speaker by various athletic organiza­tions throughout the South.

Everett S t r u p p e r was fifty-three years of age at the time of his death. His passing was a terrific shock to his teammates, classmates, and host of other close Georgia Tech associates, faculty members, athletic staff, students and m a n y o t h e r s t a u n c h friends throughout the State of Georgia and the nation.

A native of C o l u m b u s , Georgia, Strupper entered Georgia Tech in 1914. He never played on a losing team dur­ing his career. The 1915 and 1916 Tech teams tied two games and the 1917 eleven won nine straight to achieve the National championship. He was a mem­ber of the Tech team which ran up

an all-time record score of 222-0 against Cumberland University in 1916. He teamed with Joe Guyon, Albert Hill and Judy Harlan to make up one of the most devastating backfields in Southern football annals.

Walter Camp, originator of All-Amer­ica football teams, made no selection in 1917 because of World War I, but Strupper was awarded the position at left halfback by a poll of sports writers.

"Strupper was the finest broken field runner ever to play at Tech," W. A. Alexander, Athletic Director, said upon learning of his death. "He was also an able track man, a great team man and a good citizen."

Strupper's head coach was the late John W. Heisman who wrote the fol­lowing about "Strupe" for Christy Walsh's book, Intercollegiate Football:

"Strupper radiated brilliance every­where. His play was without a flaw. Were I compelled to risk my head on what one absolutely unaided gridster might accomplish, football under arm and facing eleven ferocious opponents, I would rather choose and chance this man on how he might come through the gauntlet than any ball carrier I have ever seen in action."

In addition to being selected twice for All-America, Strupper was chosen three times for All-Southern. Following his football career, he became one of the leading grid referees of the nation, and, for several years, he was Presi­dent of the Southern Football Officials' Association.

Surviving are his wife; a step-daugh­ter, Miss Gwyneth Oliver; three aunts, Mrs. C. C. McGehee, of Atlantic Beach, Fla., and Mrs. George Golden and Mrs. Meredith, both of Columbus.

Funeral services were held in Atlanta and the burial rites were conducted at the family cemetery grounds, in Columbus.

WEDDINGS & ENGAGEMENTS (continued)

Wilson-McNeil Announcement is made of the mar­

riage of Miss Emily Jane Wilson, to Daniel Childress McNeil, on November 24, 1949, in Atlanta.

Mr. McNeil received his B. of I.E. de­gree in 1949, and is at present employed by the American Blower Corp., Dallas, Texas.

Neely-Merry Miss Lily May Neely, daughter of

Mrs. William Lloyd Neely, Sr., was married on January 7, 1950, to Mr. Pierce Merry, Jr. The marriage took place at the First Presbyterian church in Statesville.

Mr. Merry received his B. of M.E. in

December, 1949, and has joined the firm of Merry Brothers Brick and Tile Company in Augusta, Ga.

Packard-Montaldo Mr. and Mrs. Horace Nelson Packard

announce the marriage of their daugh­ter, Miss Elizabeth Fuller Packard, to John Stanley Montaldo, on Saturday, the eleventh of February, 1950, at Ossin-ing, N. Y. Mr. Montaldo graduated in 1940 with a B.S: degree in Public Health Engineering.

Pettit-Pearce Mrs. Edmund Pettit announces the

marriage of her daughter, Miss Annie Lou Pettit, to Thomas Jefferson Pearce,

Jr., on February 25, 1950, in the Buford Street Methodist church, Gaffney, S. C.

Mr. Pearce received his B.S. degree in Mechanical Engineering in 1947, and is employed by Southern States Equip­ment Corp., at Hampton, Ga.

Williams-Henry Mr. and Mrs. Livsey Earle Williams

announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Elizabeth Wightman Williams, to Charles Lorenzo Henry, Jr. The wedding will take place April 11, 1950, at the First Presbyterian church, Atlanta. Mr. Henry received his B. of T.E. in December, 1949, and is associated with the Nylon division of DuPont in Chattanooga.

March-April, 1950 19

Page 20: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

DEATHS OF PROMINENT ALUMNI George S. Harris

Mr. George Simmons Harris, Chair­man of the Board of Dan River Mills, Danville, Va., nationally and inter­nationally prominent in the textile in­dustry, died on February 16 at the Memorial Hospital in Danville, follow­ing a relapse from an illness of last June.

Mr. Harris was born on January 16, 1881, at Cedartown, Ga. He was edu­cated at the U. S. Naval Academy; Georgia School of Technology, 1900; and Lowell, Mass., Textile School, graduating from the latter, after com­pleting the three-year course in 18 months. Soon after his graduation from Lowell, he was made superintendent of the Sycamore Mills, Sycamore, Geor­gia, a position he held until he left in 1906 to become superintendent of the Gate City Cotton Mills at College Park, Georgia. In 1907 he went to Lanett, Ala­bama, as superintendent of the Lanett Cotton Mills, where he served 13 years. During 1916-20 he also acted as agent for the Lanett Bleachery and Dye Works.

In 1920 he was elected president of the Exposition Cotton Mills in Atlanta and during a ten year tenure added to his knowledge of cotton mill oper­ations.

He was the thirtieth president of the American Cotton Manufacturers Asso­ciation in 1927-28 and is known as the founder of the Cotton Institute; and served as chairman of the committee which achieved the consolidation of the association and the institute, in 1949.

Mr. Harris was elected president of Dan River Mills at a meeting of the board of directors held April 9, 1940. He succeeded Robert R. West as president and treasurer on May 1, 1940. At the same time, he was elected a director.

From 1928 to 1933, he served as a Class C director of the Federal Re­serve Bank for the Sixth District,~ Atlanta.

Mr. Harris is survived by his wife, the former Miss Minnie Teague of Lowell, Mass; two daughters, Mrs. Wil­liam O. Martin, Jr., and Mrs. William T. Hunter, both of Atlanta; two sisters, Dr. Agnes Ellen Harris, Dean of Wom­en of the University of Alabama, and Mrs. Margaret Harris Blair, a profes­sor at the University of Georgia at Athens; one brother, James Coffee Har­ris, Jr., of San Francisco, Cal., and Ave grandchildren, all of Atlanta.

Funeral services were held in Dan­ville, and the burial was in West View Cemetery, Atlanta, Saturday, February 18.

Harvey Granger Harvey Granger, 50, class of 1922,

representative of the New England

Mutual Life Insurance Company in Sa­vannah for 15 years, died suddenly on March 5. He was a member of the Leaders Association, the company's top honorary organization for outstanding fieldmen.

He leaves his wife and son.

Edward Lynn Huie Edward Lynn Huie, brother of Ralph

Huie, Atlanta mayor pro tern, died Jan­uary 6, 1950, in an Atlanta hospital.

Mr. Huie was graduated from Georgia Tech in 1914. He had been with the Otis Elevator Co. for the last 29 years.

He was an elder of the Philadelphia Presbyterian church and formerly su­perintendent of the Sunday School, and was a past master of the Forest Park lodge, F. & A.M., No. 399.

Surviving are his wife, formerly Miss Marie Moore, of Conley; a son, E. L. Huie, Jr., of Morrow; a granddaughter; a sister, Mrs. Guy A. Bennett, of Miami, and his brother, Ralph A. Huie.

Fleming Law Fleming Law, Vice-President of the

American Securities Insurance Co., died February 26, 1950, at his residence, 4050 Brookhaven Dr., Atlanta, follow­ing a short illness.

Born in Montgomery, Ala., Mr. Law spent his early childhood in Gaines­ville, Ga. He attended Georgia Tech, leaving school in 1921 to accept a posi­tion as secretary with the firm of Spratlin, Harrington and Thomas. In 1936, he left the company to organize the American Securities Company and become V i c e - P r e s i d e n t , a position which he held until his death. He was mayor of North Atlanta and had been a member of the Capital City Club.

Surviving are his widow; a daughter, Miss Margaret Rogers Law; two sons, Fleming Law, Jr., and Frank Spratlin Law, a sister, Mrs. W. D. Lever, all of Atlanta, and two brothers, DeLacy Law, of Atlanta and Lewis F. Law, of Day-tona Beach.

Walter A. Reynolds Walter A. Reynolds, of 531 St. Marks

Ave., Westfield, N. J., died February 25, 1950, after an illness of three weeks.

Mr. Reynolds was a native of At­lanta, and was a retired sales engineer of the New York office of Lunken-heimer Co., Cincinnati, Ohio, with which he had been associated for 40 years. A graduate of Georgia Institute of Technology, Class of 1898, he was a member of Stella Masonic Lodge of Brooklyn, and the Westfield chapter of the Old Guard.

In addition to his wife, he is survived by a daughter, Mrs. William M. Everitt of Westfield; a son, Spencer W., at home, and two grandchildren.

BOBBY JONES WINS A.P. AWARD (Continued from page 7)

And yet, and with no authority what­ever from Bob for a quotation, I have the idea that another phase may be more proudful to him. Anyway it means a lot to this aging reporter.

Bob's career began with seven lean years in which he played in 11 major championships before winning one. The public tends to forget that in the radi­ance of the following years — but not the old reporter.

And my personal opinion is that his performance in the United States and British Opens in the last nine years of his career constitutes Bob's finest record in golf."

First Seven Times "In 12 American and British Open

starts he finished first seven times and second four times. And two of the seconds came after a tie and playoff. So he finished with the top score in nine of his last 12 Opens.

There's a record I'll predict never will be matched."

"Pop" Keeler's article went on to describe — and very interestingly — the "most important" shot and other fine plays of Bob Jones; and, added his commendations, as well he would.

The triumphant receptions that Bob received in New York, Atlanta, and other appreciative cities were among the many popular acclaims that were accorded him, upon the completion of his "Grand Slam" championships. A great person, absolutely modest, bril­liant and plain as a swell old shoe — that's what the world also knows, to state it briefly, about Bob Jones. He rates the best of all congratulations, always, and our heartiest good wishes go out to him for his every continued success.

20-Game Slate for Tech Nine Announced

A 20-game schedule with the five other teams in the Eastern Division of the Southeastern Conference was announced for Georgia Tech's baseball team. The Jackets open the season in Atlanta March 31 with Vanderbilt.

Coach Joe Pittard's team, which won nine and lost 11 last year, will play home and home two-game series with Vanderbilt, Tennessee, Kentucky, Geor­gia and Auburn.

The schedule: March 31-April 1, Van­derbilt; April 5-6, Kentucky; April 12-13, Tennessee; April 14-15, at Auburn; April 21-22, at Vanderbilt; April 26-27, at Tennessee; April 28-29, at Kentucky; May 5-6, Auburn; May 12, Georgia; May 13, at Georgia; May 19, at Georgia; May 20, Georgia.

20 THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Page 21: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

1V SPORTS *

SWIMMING The fate of Georgia Tech's swimming

team seemed to hinge more on the way Johnny Hiles was used by Coach La-noue than on team strength. For in­stance, Tech had been defeated by Georgia earlier in the season (their first lost to the Bulldogs since 1941), but in their return engagement Coach La-noue decided to put Hiles in the 100 yard freestyle, which Hiles had never swum. Hiles won over Georgia's Coo­per, who previously had been con­sidered a sure first. Hiles also won the 440 and swam a leg on the 150 yard medley relay, which Tech won. Tech won the meet 44-31. In the Florida meet J o h n n y s w a m the 150 yard backstroke which he hadn't done since he was a freshman. He won, enabling Tech to squeeze by Florida 38-37, set­ting a new Tech record in the balance.

Of course, the excellent swimming by Towles and Griffin in the breaststroke, who usually finished 1 and 2, Harp in the backstroke, Avery and Chapman in the dashes, Edleson in the relays, and Mulherin in diving always helped Tech make a creditable showing.

In the Southeastern Conference Meet Tech nipped Georgia to win its fourth straight conference championship. The Jackets scored 82 points, Georgia 75, Florida 71, and Vandy 10.

Hiles set a new 100 yard backstroke record of 1:04.7 and won the 150 yard individual medley. Towles set a new record in the 200 yard breastroke for Tech in 2:31.9. Volk, of Georgia, set a new 100 yard breastroke record in 1:03.7. Others for Tech who won points were Edleson, Harp, Griffin, Chapman, Avery, and Mulherin. Georgia Tech may well be proud of these boys who have put up their best on every oc­casion to come through, often against better odds.

A swimming meet can be very close and yet there can be a big difference in the score. Tech's season was not as good as in recent years, but they defi­nitely are above the average. It's just too bad Johnny Hiles didn't have un­limited endurance. Tech could win them all.

RESULTS Date

Jan. 14 Jan.21 Jan. 27 Feb. 3 Feb. 4 Feb. 9 Feb. 11 Feb. 18 Feb. 25 Mar. 3-4 Mar. 10-11

Tech 46 49 41 35 44 25 24 38 44

(fifth (Ga.

Opponent Score Auburn 29 Emory 26 N. C. State 34

Georgia 40 Vanderbilt 31

N. C. University 50 Florida State 51

Florida U. 37 Georgia 31 A.A.U. N. C. (first)

2nd) S.E.C. (Tech 1st)

The two men in the short pants are Johnny Hiles (left), and Page Griffin. Hiles is captain of Tech's swimming team and more than any one man, has been largely responsible for Tech winning the 1948, 1949, and 1950 conference cham­pionship (see article in this issue). Grif­fin, son of Dean George C. Griffin, is a breaststroker, and has had the bad for­tune of swimming with Towles who nips him by a close margin in every meet. Towles has been first in the 200 yard breaststroke in the conference meet for the last two years and holds the confer­ence record.

WRESTLING Georgia Tech's grapplers won 3, lost

5, tied 1 and placed third in the South­eastern AAU, b e h i n d Auburn and Maryville. Wrestling has begun to have an excellent following in the south, where it is a comparatively new sport. The televising of matches and addition of new colleges to the wrestling field are reasons for the increasing popu­larity.

Tech was fortunate in being able to schedule a match with Oklahoma A. & M., current N.C.A.A. champions and consistent winner of national honors. This team is coached, by Art Griffith, father of Tech's assistant wrestling coach, Jack Griffith. Bob Miller is Tech's regular coach. The Oklahomans de­feated our boys easily, but it is hoped that our grapplers picked up some pointers from the champs.

Tech's r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s in most matches were: 121 lb. Bill Geisler, 128 lb. Gardner Ivey, 136 lb. Frank Garrard, 145 lb. Bill Erb, 159 lb. Harold Zell, 165 lb. Gene Franklin, 175 lb. Rahily Rhodes, Heavyweight Ray Beck.

The Jackets won two matches from Vandy, one from Chattanooga, and tied Duke. They lost two to Auburn and one to V.M.I., Oklahoma A. & M., and Maryville.

1950 Matmen — Tech's wrestlers, above are: first row (I. to r.) Kirk, Garrard, Erb, Zell, Burnsed, Franklin; second row, Geisler, Lookabaugh, Rhodes, Rice, Ivey, Vanden-Heuval; third row, Townsend, Engel, Beck, Cone, Bluestone and King.

BY NOW, YOU HAVE PROBABLY NOTICED OUR NEW STYLE, HEADS AND LAY-OUT. WE HOPE YOU LIKE IT. IF YOU HAVE ANY SUGGESTIONS, KINDLY LET US HEAR FROM YOU.

March-April, 1950 21

Page 22: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

FORMER TECH PLAYERS NOW COACHING

Georgia Tech has never furnished very many men in the coaching field, principally due to the fact that a teaching job is usually required along with it and Tech does not give certifica­tion of teaching ability, even though the man may be perfectly apt.

Former Tech men now coaching at Tech are Roy McArthur, '34, head basketball and assistant football coach; George "Mutt" Manning, assistant fresh­man football coach; Bill Jordan, '38, varsity end coach; Dean George Grif­fin, '22, cross-country coach; Norris Dean, '35, track coach; Tommy Plaxico, '41, assistant track coach; J. C. "Whack" Hyder, '38, assistant basketball and baseball coach, and J. H. McAuley, '43, assistant swimming coach. Of course, W. A. "Bill" Alexander, '12, is very active as Director of Athletics here at Tech.

Jim Luck, '48, and his assistant, John Beall, '45, are at Americus, Ga.

Harry Milligan, '32, and M. J. "Buck" Flowers, '32, will coach football at Richmond Academy in Augusta.

R. L. "Shorty" Doyal, '21, will be joined by his son, "Buck," '50, at Marist in Atlanta next fall.

Roy Brewer, '32, has long been coach at Hapeville High.

Frank Broyles, '47, will assist Bob Woodruff at the University of Florida this year.

Joe E. Brown, '49, will be an assistant coach at Oklahoma A. & M.

Earl Whelby, '40, is coaching at Ath­ens High, the home town of the "Dogs."

Carlton Lewis, '42, assisted by Haley Ector, '43, has been highly successful as football coach at West Point, Ga.

Lewis Hook is coach at Rossville, Ga., High School.

Jim Still, '49, takes over as coach at Moultrie High this year.

Jim Wright, '42, is assistant coach at Lanett, Ala.

Tom Allen, '39, is coaching at Mount Olive, N. C.

Phil Tinsley, '46, is assistant coach in Orlando, Florida.

George Brodnax, '49, is assistant coach at Georgia Military Academy.

Ralph Slaton, '48, is assistant coach at Auburn.

Three recent graduates have just joined the Atlanta City League as coaches. They are Jack Peek, '49, and Ewell Pope, '50, who will coach at Brown High, and Jack Griffin, '50, who will coach at Sylvan Hills.

J im Southard, '50, will be at Hogans-ville High School.

COURT ACTION Tech forward, Colin Anderson, goes up in the air after a rebound as Jim Riffey, Tulane player, makes a bid for the ball. Number 10 for Tech is sophomore Teeter Umstead. Tech won 59-55 in a thriller.

BASKETBALL Georgia Tech's basketeers will make

good husbands, a p p a r e n t l y . T h e y seemed to like to play at home, but couldn't get going when away. The Jackets won all of their home games, with the exception of Kentucky, and lost all but four of their games away; winning from Michigan State, Wake Forest, West Virginia, and Auburn. This gave them a season record of 14 wins and 13 losses, for a little better than .500 average.

The high point of the season was Tech's win over L. S. U. by the score of 85-58. This game found the Jackets hitting a higher percentage of their shots than in any other. Every member of the squad played and showed up well. The low point of the season was their loss to Kentucky at Lexington (97-62) and to Alabama at Tuscaloosa (73-39).

It might be said that basketball on the whole has improved tremendously in the Southeastern Conference. Mid­way in the season it was anybody's race, but at the end Kentucky, as usual, and Vandy were at the top. Vandy faded in the tournament, and Kentucky went on to stomp Tennessee in the finals. Tennessee had previously elimi­nated Tech in the first round.

Colin Anderson, senior forward, made the AU-SEC team picked by the Asso­ciated Press. Anderson was the only senior on the squad. The squad was well balanced as far as procuring points is concerned.

Scoring for the regular season follows: Melvin Dold, 298; Colin Anderson, 282; Mickey Sermersheim, 250; Bill Cline, 230; Joe Keener, 227; Teeter Umstead, 132; Barry Blemker, 48; Benny Regis­ter, 29; Robert Reidel, 29; James Fritch, 25.

22 THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Page 23: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

Directory of Georgia Tech Alumni Clubs

ALBANY, GA. Pres., John Murray, '27, 1408 Jefferson St., Albany, Ga. V.-Pres., W. Frank Tyson, '34, Camilla, Ga. Sec.-Treas., Henry L. Collier, '41, Americus, Ga.

AUGUSTA, GA. Pres., Hugh Groves, '30, 703 Marion Bldg. V.-Pres., Fred Morgan, '29, Morgan Truck & Tractor Co. Sec, Ed Macuch, '46, 2626 Hazel St. Treas., Jim Swift, '47, City Hall

BALTIMORE, MD. James R. Cassell, '42, 1711 Bloomingdale Rd.

BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Pres., Charles Northen, Jr., '24, Overhill Rd. V.-Pres., C. Lynn Strickland, '30, 3750 Jackson Blvd. Sec.-Treas., James D. Collins, Jr., '35, 1419 Clermont Dr.

CHARLESTON, S. C. Pres., W. Lucas Simons, '09, 90 Church St. V.-Pres., David T. Coleman, '27, 166 Grove St. Sec.-Treas., Louis Y. Dawson, Jr., '20, 33 Church St.

CHARLOTTE, N. C. Pres., W. B. O'Neal, '28, 2251 Vernon Dr. V.-Pres., W. S. Terrell, '31, 1825 Pinewood Cir. Sec.-Treas., A. C. Thies, '43, 400 Hassell PI.

CHATTANOOGA, TENN. Pres., Fletcher Sims, '38, 300 W. 29th St. V.-Pres., Bill Healy, '48, 208 Franklin Rd., L'kout Mtn., Tenn. Sec, A. L. Hawkins, c/o Dupont Nylon Plant. Treas., F. P. "Pat" Ryan, '40, 101 N. Bragg, L'kout Mtn., Tenn.

CHICAGO, ILL. Pres., Bolan H. Boatner. '28, 634 Sheridan Sq., Evanston, 111. V.-Pres., Ben L. Crew, '28, 333 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago Sec, Robert P. Stuntz, '40, Babcock-Wilcox Co., Chicago Treas., John R. Baldwin, '08, 316 Main St., Evanston, 111.

CINCINNATI, OHIO Pres., Ben J. Gantt, '15, Buckeye Cotton Oil Co. V.-Pres.. Henry W. Moore, '28, 3164 Queen City Ave. Sec.-Treas., Claude C. Allman, '28, P. & G. Mfg. Co., Ivorydale 17.

Ohio CLEVELAND, OHIO

Earnest W. Harwell, '23, Hamilton Steel Co., E. 131st St. & Tait Ave.

COLUMBIA, S. C. Tom Daisley, '47, Radio Station WIS

COLUMBUS, GA. Pres., Leon K. Camp, '22, Camp Concrete Products Co. V.-Pres., Frank C. Martin, '31, Martin Furniture Co. Sec.-Treas., Bob Davis, Jr., '47, Swift Spinning Mills

DALLAS, TEXAS Pres., John C. Jacobs, '39, Nebo Oil Co., 930 Mercantile Bank

Bldg. V.-Pres.. Jeff Hooker, '40, 7463 Fisher Rd. Sec.-Treas., Charles A. McGill, '48, 610 Ouida Dr., Grand Prairie,

Texas DALTON, GA.

Honorable Carlton McCamy, Mayor of Dalton DANVILLE, VA.

Dave C. Boy, Jr., '37, Dan River Mills DETROIT, MICH.

Dick Atchley, '48, 7423 Woodrow Wilson, Detroit 6, Mich. FLORENCE-SHEFFIELD-TUSCUMBIA, ALA.

Ray Kytle, '36, Reynold Alloys, Sheffield, Ala. GAINESVILLE, GA.

Charles R. Simmons, '37, Flowery Branch, Ga. GREENSBORO, N. C.

Montgomery Hill, '11, National Theatre Bldg. GREENVILLE, S. C.

Pres., Vardry D. Ramseur, Jr., '39, Box 1356 V.-Pres., Charles M. Galloway, '34, 19 Ashley St. Sec.-Treas., Henry Brown, '28, c/o A. G. Furman. Woodside BldK.

GRIFFIN, GA. Nathaniel Bailey, '22, 1056 Maple Dr.

HAVANA, CUBA Sergio A. Sobredo, '39, Calle 10 No. 1205 Vedado

HOUSTON, TEXAS Pres., W. Stewart Boyle, '28, 1126 Commerce Annex Bldg. V.-Pres., Dunson Dunaway, '44, 7703 El Rancho Sec.-Treas., Jim Fryer, Jr., '40, Cameron Iron Works, Box 1212

INDIANAPOLIS, IND. Pres., Otto S. Brock, '22, 5429 N. New Jersey St. Sec, Fred R. Short, '39, 1062 Winton Ave., Speedway, Ind.

JACKSON, MISS. Pres., Eugene D. Drummond, '12, Box 162 V.-Pres., Robert Sims Munford, Jr., '34, 427 N. State St. Sec.-Treas., Dave Gammill, '47, Major Disinfectant Co.

JACKSONVILLE, FLA. Pres., Ivy H. Smith, '20, 2110 River Rd. V.-Pres., Jack Darby, '41, 5634 Auburn Rd. Sec, J. C. Merrill, Jr., '40, 4575 Ortega Blvd. Treas., A. C. Skinner, Jr., '44, Route 8, Box 105

KINGSPORT, TENN. Pres., A. G. Coffin, '32, 1600 Farridge Dr. Program Chairman, W. T. Jackson, '34, 1641 Newbern Rd. Sec.-Treas., Bill McMillin, '48, 907 Broad St.

KNOXVILLE, TENN. Robert M. Gibbs, '39, Nubbins Ridge Rd., Rt.

LA GRANGE, GA. Charles M. Geer, '16, 1205 Vernon Rd.

LOS ANGELES, CALIF. G. Nolan Bearden, '29, 609 S. Grand Ave. Howard K. Bolles, '34, 314 W. 6th St.

LOUISVILLE, KY. S. T. Pruitt, '29, 2927 Arden Rd.

MACON, GA. Pres., Bill Fleming, '11, 757 Mulberry St. V.-Pres., Geo "Scrappy" Edwards, '38, Vista Cir. Sec.-Treas., Jack Virgin, '33, 112 Emily Place

MARIETTA, GA. Morgan McNeel, Jr., '19, McNeel Marble Co.

MEMPHIS, TENN. Pres., Luther B. Hawkins, '48, Buckeye Cotton Oil Co. V.-Pres., Tom F. Faires, '28, 45 Porter Bldg. Sec.-Treas., R. P. Colmer, Jr., '46, McGregor, Inc., 1071 Union Ave.

MIAMI, FLA. Pres., R. Fulton Webb, '22, 3825 Toledo St., Coral Gables Sec.-Treas., Alan Yopp, '39, 7721 S. W. 59th St., Coral Gables

MOBILE, ALA. Pres., Richard Harrison, '48, 59 S. Jackson St. V.-Pres., Tom Hughes, '39, 13 Audubon PI. Sec.-Treas., O. W. Jervis, '33, Lancaster Rd., Springhill, Ala.

MONTGOMERY, ALA. Pres., Leo J. Drum, '35, 7 Gilmer Ave. V.-Pres., Dan Wilson, Jr., '47, Box 254 Sec.-Treas., Joe Hedrick, '27, Grimes Motor Co.

NASHVILLE, TENN. Pres., Charles E.

Southern, '33, 1510 Clinton St. V.-Pres., William Nightengale, '31, 909 Clark St., Old Hickory,

Tenn. V.-Pres., Hardie C. Bass, Jr., '32, 161 8th Ave., North Sec, John C. Wheeler, '38, 3848 Cleghorne Rd. Treas., Thomas Crain, '47, 1627 Glen Echo Rd.

NEWARK, N. J. Pres., Frank W. Michal, '43, 39 Oxford St. V.-Pres., Simon H. Sculnick, '43, 58 Hillside Ave. Sec, Gerald W. Burg, '43, 179 Garfield St., Passaic, N. J. Treas., Paul A. Rhudy, '47, Dupont, Arlington, N. J.

NEW ORLEANS, LA. Walker Saussy, '23, 318 Carondelet St.

NEW YORK, N. Y. Pres., Edgar Kobak, '18, Ambassador Hotel V.-Pres., W. J. Holman, '28, 944 Kensington Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Sec.-Treas., Dudley King, '34, Holland & Armstrong, 63 Wall St.

OAK RIDGE, TENN. W. H. Herndon, '21, 253 Louisiana Ave.

ORLANDO, FLA. Pres., W. A. McCree, Jr., '36, 4 E. Harvard Ave. V.-Pres., Byron King, '23, 330 N. Orange Sec.-Treas., Tom Yandre, 37, P. O. Box 3547

PENSACOLA, FLA. Eugene C. Smith, '27, Hygeia Coca-Cola Bottling Co.

PHILADELPHIA, PA. Pres., D. A. Worrell, '36, 2909 Haverford Rd., Ardmore, Pa V.-Pres., W. B. Ashby, '40, 401 N. Broad St. Sec.-Treas., R. W. Pries, '40, 1225 Vine St., Philadelphia, Pa.

PITTSBURGH, PA. K. M. Patterson, '23,

RICHMOND, VA. Parker Deans, '38, 2422 Bransford Dr., Richmond 28, Va.

ROANOKE, VA. Edwin B. Branch,

800 Limecrest Rd., Pittsburgh 21, Pa.

'33, Box 1904, Roanoke SAVANNAH, GA.

Pres., Frank C. Underwood, Jr., '32, 1319 N. 36th St., E. V.-Pres., Haywood S. Hansell, '24, 412 E. Victory Dr. Sec, William P. Bergen, '43, 127 Habersham St. Treas., Frank K. Butler, '42, 24 W. Congress St.

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF. Stamps Bethel, '27, Mutual Life Ins. Co. of N. Y.

SEATTLE, WASH. Pres., C. Pat. Johnson, '24, 860 Stuart Bldg. V.-Pres., Thomas E. Gibbs, '99, 2024 E. Lynn St. Sec.-Treas., K. E. Hollingsworth, '27, 5562 Stuart Bldg.

SHREVEPORT, LA. Pres., James T. Carmichael, '36, 927 Boulevard V.-Pres., Jeff Dykes, Jr., '41, 4735 Thornhill Sec.-Treas., Jim Zike, '44, Haynesville, La.

SCHENECTADY, N. Y. Dan Kyker, '46, Bldg. 48, G. E. Co., Schenectady, N. Y.

ST. LOUIS, MO. Rial E. Rolfe, Jr., '47, 5315 Wells

TAMPA, FLA. Pres., R. Dudley Hayes, '26, 2601 Jetton Ave. V.-Pres., Roy Strickland, Jr., '40, 627 Park St., Clearwater V.-Pres., J. Brand Laseter, '40, 803 N. Collins St., Plant City V.-Pres., R. E. Clarson, Jr., '40, 1930 13th Ave., St. Petersburg Sec.-Treas., W. N. Hicks, '47, 914 S. Freemont

WASHINGTON, D. C. Pres., George Viereck, '32, 932 "K" St., N. W. V.-Pres.. Fred Trew, '35, 1526 14th St., N. W. Sec.-Treas., Dick Stirni, '34, 415 Jackson PI., Alexandria, Va.

WEST PALM BEACH, FLA. L. A. Hawkins, '25, King & Fischer Co.,

15 Citizens Bldg.

WEST POINT, GA. Pres., James Wright, '42, Lanett, Ala. V.-Pres., Bill Spell, '40, Lanett Mill, Lanett, Ala. Sec.-Treas., Marshall Mehaffey, '40, Lanett, Ala.

WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. A. R. Nicolas, '22, 318 Carolina Circle

March-April, 1950 23

Page 24: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

THE NAME IS JORDAN Two Jordans, both prominently asso­

ciated with Tech, broke into the news during the month of February. They are Jimmy Jordan, 5 feet 9 inches, 138 pounds, and Bill Jordan, 6 feet 4 inches, over 200 pounds.

Bill Jordan, '38, was persuaded to leave an insurance business to return to Tech as varsity end coach and will be a welcome addition to our fine coach­ing staff. He hails from Anniston, Ala., as do his three brothers who have at­tended Tech, or are attending. They are, Bob Jordan, all-around athlete, who finished in '47; Lamar Jordan '50, senior class president, and Tommy Jordan, '53. Bill is married and has two children.

Bill Jordan is one of only three in the conference who made All-SEC in football and basketball. He also let­tered in baseball. Bill, according to Coach Alexander, is the finest defensive end in Tech's history. He was an excel­lent pass receiver and all-around play­er. Bill played on the only team at Tech that won the S. E. C. basketball cham­pionship. That was in 1937.

Jimmy Jordan, '50, performer of many outstanding feats on the gridiron dur­ing the past 4 years, has just recently gone to work on the sports staff of The Atlanta Journal. J immy also hails from Alabama, Birmingham, that is.

Track The Tech track team started the sea­

son off with a journey to Chapel Hill for the North Carolina indoor relays Feb. 25. They were ousted from the throne as non-conference champion, a title won last year, by the Naval Acad­emy team. Navy was first with 27 points, Tech second with 15%; Florida, 14; L.S.U., 7; Georgia, 6%; Tennesse, Catholic U., Washington College, 5 each, etc.

Tech men scoring were: Lupton, 2nd in shot put; McGrain, tie for third in high jump; Shivers, 4th in 60 yd. dash; Coons, second in 70 yard high and 70 yard low hurdles; Forward, 4th in 70 yard high hurdles; Shivers, 3rd in 70 yard low hurdles. Tech placed third in the mile relay.

The schedule follows: March 25 April 8 April 15 April 22 April 29 May 6 May 13 May 19-20 May 27

Florida Relays Florida

Tulane Tennessee

Georgia North Carolina

Auburn S. E. Conference Inter-Conference

Gainesville Atlanta

New Orleans Knoxville

Athens Atlanta Atlanta

Birmingham Atlanta

He is married and has one child. Jimmy will be sorely missed on the football field next fall as he was a great favorite of the fans who saw him play, but those in and around Atlanta will hear from him via the sports pages.

Jackets Schedule 11 FOOTBALL GAMES

Georgia Tech has put itself on the spot by scheduling an opener next sea­son with mighty Southern Methodist University in Dallas, September 23. S.M.U. replaces Vandy as an opener and judging from the scare they gave Notre Dame, should supply Tech with more than enough opposition.

Other notable changes are the re­placing of Tulane and Tennessee by L.S.U. and Kentucky respectively. W. & L. is replaced by V.M.I, and Davidson is simply added to the regular 10 game schedule.

The full schedule follows: September 23 — S.M.U. at Dallas (Night) September 30 — South Carolina at Grant Field October 7 — Florida at Grant Field October 14 — L.S.U. at Baton Rouge (Night) October 21 — Auburn at Grant Field October 28 — Kentucky at Grant Field (Home

Coming) November 4 — Duke at Durham November 11 —V.M.I, at Grant Field November 18 — Alabama at Grant Field November 25 — Davidson at Grant Field December 2 — Georgia at Athens

Home Coming October 28 — Remember the Date

Season tickets applications will be mailed out during the month of April. Individual game ticket applications will be mailed during the month of June. If you plan to attend any games in or out of town, please return your applications promptly with checks and make the necessary hotel accomodations.

(fe opine

The name Creo-pine on Creosoted Southern Pine is more than a trade mark. It is a pledge of honest, accurate manufacture and rigid inspection from standing tree to fin­ished product. Back of it are 42 years of wood preserving experience. Specify Creo-pine products for long life and lowest cost per year of service.

Creo-pine Products Include:

Poles Piling Cross Ties Cross Arms Floor Blocks

Subflooring Bridge Timbers Structural Timbers Guard Rail, Etc.

SOUTHERN WOOD PRESERVING CO. Atlanta, Ga.

Representatives: NEW YORK

50 Church St. PHILADELPHIA

Glrard Trust Bide. DETROIT

24S4 National Bk. Blde.

Treating Plants:

EAST POINT, GA.

MACON, GA.

CHATTANOOGA, TENN.

Representatives:

PITTSBURGH

Dollar Sav. & Tr. Bids.

CHATTANOOGA

- • —

G E N E R A L I N S U R A N C E

— • —

M O R T G A G E L O A N S

z7

TRUST COMPANY OF GEORGIA BUILDING

A T L A N T A . G E O R G I A

ROBERT THARPE. '34 J. L. BROOKS, '39

24 THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Page 25: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

W/fff Economy!

Economy Non-Clogging Sewage Pump

E C O N O M Y PUMPING makes sound sense to engineers who know the dol­lars and cents value of trouble-free pumping service. To pump longer, at lower cost, with less maintenance, rely on Economy Pumps.

Klipfel Single Seated

Float Valv«

Centrifugal, axial, and mixed flow pumps for all applications. For complete details on any Econ-ony Pump, write Dept. G-I2 Please specify type pump in which you are interested.

Economy Axta Flow Pump

n of Hamilton-Tho HAMILTON, OHIO

Economy Pumps, Inc.

C J L O S E R REGULATION . . more accurate control j0f" . . . that's been the forty year service record of Klipfel

,,////"" Automatic Regulating Valves on installations throughout r . the land.

Klipfel exclusive design inner valves assure better closing, more dependable regulation.

Complete line includes pressure reducing valves, float and lever valves, thermostatic valves, back pressure and

relief valves and pump governors.

For complete details on any Klipfel Valve, write Dept. G-12. Please specify type valve in which you are interested.

MANUFACTURING COMPANY DIVISION OF HAMUTON-THOMAS CORP. HAMILTON, OHIO

Klipf.l Ball Type Reducing Valve

Klipfel Spring Loaded Thermostat

UNITED STATES RADIATOR CORPORATION BETTER HEATING EQUIPMENT for

Homes • School Buildings • Office Buildings • Industrial Buildings Nothing too large or too small

BOILERS • RADIATORS • CONVECTORS • UNIT HEATERS • WARM AIR FURNACES BASEBOARD RADIATION • HEATING ACCESSORIES

H. O. [Oozie) WARD, Jr. Class of 1942

Georgia Representative Office: 156 Alexander St., S. W .

LA. 5 6 5 6 - 5 7 Branch Offices Throughout V. S. Home: 880 Springdale Rd.

CR. 8014

rnr&BE DIMES & CO.

SPANG CHALFANT—Conduit and E.M.T. CRESCENT—Wire, Cable and Cords STEEL CITY—Out let Boxes and Fittings WAGNER Malleable Products WALCO—Conduit Nipples

"Jft&ie THAN 25 YEARS #

of continuously serving the electrical

wholesalers of the Southeast has enabled

us to accumulate, through experience,

knowledge that can be invaluable in

solving your electrical supply problems.

The full resources of Edgar E.

Dawes & Company are at

your disposal for better elec­

trical service. E- E . DAWES; '18

March-April, 1950 2 5

Page 26: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

SOUTHERN CAR - AND -

MANUFACTURING CO., INC. MINE CARS COAL WASHERS CASTINGS

FORGINGS WAREHOUSE STEEL FABRICATED STEEL

LET OUR ENGINEERS HELP WITH YOUR DESIGN PROBLEMS

R. D. (RED) BRYAN-'30 VICE-PRESIDENT AND GENERAL MANAGER

400 SO. 7th ST. — PHONE 4-1714 — BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA

GEORGIA I N S T I T U T E OF TECHNOLOGY offers

to properly qualified young men

Training in Army ROTC Air Force Unit Ground Force Units Coast Art i l lery A.A. Infantry Signal Corps

Ordnance NAVAL ROTC

for information, address

THE REGISTRAR

AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERING

ARCHITECTURE

ARCHITECTURAL ENGINEERING

CERAMIC ENGINEERING

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING

CHEMISTRY

CIVIL ENGINEERING

ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING

INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING

INDUSTRIAL MANAGEMENT

MECHANICAL ENGINEERING

PHYSICS

TEXTILE ENGINEERING

GEORGIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY, Atlanta, Ga. , — :

26 THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Page 27: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

RALEIGH PLANT A N D GENERAL OFFICES OF THE ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT COMPANY 2526 HILLSBORO STREET, RALEIGH, N. C.

We buy, sell, rent and exchange Electrical

Equipment. We rewind and rebuild Electric

Motors, Generators, Transformers, Armatures

and all kinds of Electrical Apparatus to Factory

specifications.

We Are Stocking Distributors for

GE WIRE CABLE, CONDUIT, FITTINGS AND GENERAL ELECTRIC MOTORS, TRANSFORMERS AND CONTROLS

ALLIS-CHALMERS TEXROPE DRIVES HARRINGTON COMPANY PEERLESS HOISTS

SYLVANIA FLUORESCENT FIXTURES ECONOMY FUSES • LAMPS AND ACCESSORIES

HUNTER CENTURY FANS • OHIO CARBON BRUSHES ALL TYPES OF WIRING DEVICES AND MATERIALS

Richmond, Va.

Electrical Equipment Company J. M . Cutliff, E.E. ' 15 , President and Gen. Manager

-:- Raleigh, N. C.—Home Office -:- Augusta, Ga.

/4\ Sym&ol.,, a*td a ^^adctcoK

HE tradition which goes out into the world with every graduate of Georgia Tech is a real and measurable force — one which is demonstrated every day by Tech men in our leading architectural and engineering firms. . . and on important engineering and construction jobs in every section of the world.

Robert and Company . . . proud that so many of its own officers and staff are grad­uates of Georgia Tech . . . extends to Tech Alumni everywhere its sincere best wishes.

ROBERT AND COMPANY ASSOCIATES

C£>7?~cA itecl& d &r * t n eer*s

March-April, 1950 2 7

Page 28: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 28, No. 04 1950

YOU TRUST ITS QUALITY

REG. U.S. PAT. OFF.

REG. U.S. PAT. OFF.

Ask for it either way . . . both trade-marks mean the same thing.

'4


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