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(the story of Tech's research) •••••••••••n ••••Mi^^HM 1 1

Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

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Page 1: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

(the story of Tech's research)

• • • • • • • • • • •n ••••Mi^^HM

1 1

Page 2: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

Call Mr. Amco-WA. 0800

for Quick Delivery

IVAN ALLEN CO. 29 Pryor St., Atlanta

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Gainesville • Macon

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OFFICE SUPPLIES

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PRINTING • BLUEPRINTS

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I. E. Morris '24

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Atlanta Georgia

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for the Builder GLAZING

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INSTALLATION Service

Atlanta GLASS Company 82-92 HOUSTON ST., N.E., ATLANTA 3, GA.

Bill Roman, '28, Manager

(UMfttffl For the second year in a row Tech

has come out of the Sugar Bowl with a convincing victory and a bad press. One thing about this year's game that differed from the '53 classic is that our opponent received even a worse press than accorded us.

Quite a few alumni have questioned the selection of the Sugar Bowl as Tech's postseason game this year. It can be explained by one statement — the team elected the New Orleans game. Coach Dodd has always left the selec­tion of a bowl game up to a vote of the boys on the team. This year was no ex­ception. The boys would rather go to New Orleans because it is closer to At­lanta than any other bowl site of equal importance. The nearness of New Orleans means that more of the boys' families could attend the game. So New Orleans it was.

• • • • •

You will notice that we have changed the style and format of the ON THE HILL page in this issue. We have done away with the straight news style and substituted a narrative of happenings on the campus for the past three months. It was written by a student. His name — you guessed it, George P. Burdell, '56.

• • • • • We had planned to do a three page

spread on the Tech publications for the last issue of the ALUMNUS. But some­where along the way we overwrote the sports section and ended up with only a single page article — a reprint from the ENGINEER. This issue we are printing the other two pages — one

THE NEW EDITOR of the YELLOW JACKET? When we asked the art staff of the humor magazine to send us a photo of their new boss — we received this.

from the YELLOW JACKET and one from the TECHNIQUE. They are on page 12 and 13.

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THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Page 3: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

Our center page double spread is an excellent aerial view of the campus taken during the Georgia-Tech game this past Fall. It shows the new library and the other new additions to the cam­pus clearly. With a magnifying glass we ascertained that the photo was taken during the first quarter of the game as Tech was lining up to kick its second PAT. The scoreboard read 13-0 which made the task easy. The photo was taken by Bobby Sorrell and was given to us by Dean George Griffin. If you are careful about removing the staples, the double page may be taken out and framed. It's one of the best aerial shots ever taken of the campus.

• • • • •

A RECENT n e w s a r t i c l e datelined Washington, D. C, states simply

that Lt. Col. William Gay Thrash, '39, of the United States Marines is to be one of the five marines decorated for their con­duct as PWs during the recent Korean crisis. The announcement went on to say that the awards are based on "outstand­ing leadership notwithstanding commu­nist punishment, rejection of communist philosophy at a great risk of life, en­couraging fellow prisoners to resist red coercion and similar acts."

We talked to Gay Thrash during his recent stay in Atlanta. P r o v i d i n g Marine security wills it, we hope to

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Call, wire or write today for fur­ther information . . . there is no obligation.

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ALL TYPES OF W I R I N G DEVICES A N D MATERIALS

Augusta, Ga.

Electrical Equipment Company J. M . Cutliff, E.E. ' 1 5 , President and Gen. Manager

Laurinburg, N. C. Raleigh, N. C. — Home Office Richmond, Va.

January-February, 1954

Page 4: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

And More Ramblin -have an exclusive story from him in the near future.

THE state Engineering Experiment Station on the campus is one of the

research agencies largely responsible for the happy marriage of pure science and industry that has meant so much to the progress of the South in recent years. Our feature photo-text story in this issue is devoted to the operations of the station. It starts on page 6 under the title "From Peanuts to Platinum." Odom Fanning, the station's new publications director penned it for us. The photos are by Cecil Allen, one of our favorite photographers.

JOB interview time has hit the campus again. The companies, big and small,

are pouring their representatives on­to the campus in search of engineers. Tech's Placement Director, Fred Ajax, is doing the directing of the traffic in his own inimitable fashion. He slowed down long enough the other day to tell us that the average salary for those receiving their bachelor's degree this year will likely be in the neighbor­hood of $375 per month. This represents an increase of $10 per month over last year's figures. How does this figure compare with the starting salary aver­age when you were sweating out a job?

ENGINEERS' WEEK is coming up the last week in February. As usual, the

students are going to hold their annual exhibits in Crenshaw Hall (back of the Varsity). This year the various schools on the campus will be vying for the best exhibit trophy won for the past two years by the Civil Engineering School. Another win by the CE's will

give them permanent possession of the trophy. The boys really go all out on their exhibits — for instance, the "tran­sit gang" put in over 2,000 man-hours on their winning exhibit. If you're in Atlanta during the weekend, Feb. 25-27, come on out to the campus and look around at the inventiveness of the '54 Tech students. The experiment station is also holding open house during the weekend.

WHEN the Nov.-Dec. issue of the magazine reached us, we took one

look at the cover and were slightly appalled at what we saw. The engraver has goofed slightly and there was an overlap of the cover photo and the logo­type (signature plate) . There wasn't too much we could do about it then, so we just tried to forget about it. The follow­ing day our weekly issue of LIFE reached us. It made us very happy; they had experienced the same difficulty on a much larger scale. If the pro­fessionals can do it — so can we ama­teurs.

• • • • •

TAKE a look at Tech's home schedule for the 1954 football season — it's

on page 21. When you receive your ticket applications in May, be sure and get your season ticket applications right back to the Athletic Association. Your alumni priority does not apply to indi­vidual game applications, but it will help you with your season tickets. This should be Tech's greatest home schedule in years — maybe the greatest in his­tory.

• • • • •

THE association and foundation office staffs would like to thank all of the

alumni who sent Christmas cards to them. Your thoughtfulness is greatly appreciated.

R. B. W., Jr.

Just Published!

G E O R G I A T E C H

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

IVAN ALLEN, J R . , '33

JOHN C. STATON, '23

DAVID J . ARNOLD, '18

GEORGE H. BRODNAX, '23 ARTHUR B . EDGE, J R . , '26 R. RODDEY GARRISON, '23 JACK F . GLENN, '32 GEORGE W. MATHEWS, J R .

OFFICERS AND TRUSTEES

President P A U L A. D U K E , '45 Treasurer

Vice-President W. ROANE BEARD, '40, Earec. Secretary Vice-President ROBT. WALLACE, J R . , '49 Editor, Alumnus

J o e K. MCCUTCHEN, '32

•48

HAROLD MONTAG, '18 FRANK RIDLEY, J R . , '34 I. M. SHEFFIELD, J R . , '20 CHARLES R. S I M O N S , '37

EUGENE C. S M I T H , '27 FREDERICK G. STOREY, '33 C. L Y N N STRICKLAND, '30 FREEMAN STRICKLAND, '24 HENRY W. S W I F T , '37 W I L L I A M C. WARDLAW, J R . , '28

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

WALTER M. MITCHELL, '23

J O H N P . B A U M , '24

FULLER E. CALLAWAY, J R . ,

J . E. DAVENPORT, '08

C. L . EMERSON, '08

THOMAS FULLER, '06

Y. F . FREEMAN, '10

JULIAN T. HIGHTOWER, '19

OFFICERS AND TRUSTEES

President W I L L I A M T. R I C H , '10 Treasurer

Vice-President R. J . THIESEN, '10 Executive Secretary

'26 W. J . ( JACK) H O L M A N , JR . , '28 C. PRATT RATHER, '23

GEORGE S. JONES, J R . , '12

GEORGE W. MCCARTY, '08

GEORGE T. MARCHMONT, '07

FRANK H. NEELY, '04

W I L L I A M A. PARKER, '19

FRANK M. SPRATLIN, '06

GEORGE W. WOODRUFF, '17

ROBERT H. W H I T E , '14

ROBERT B . WILBY, '08

CHARLES R. YATES, '35

by Palmer Putnam ^mai Consultant to the 5 f ^ l ^ B United States Atomic K^jir3 Energy Commission

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The au tho r ' s sys temat ic analys is of the p r o b l e m inc ludes a r ev iew of pas t popula t ion g rowths in a sea rch for answer s to t h e ques t ion : " Is popula t ion g rowth p red ic t ab l e?" Hav ing concluded t h a t it is not , h e crea tes t h e device of a hypothe t i ca l T rus t ee of Energy , w h o t h e n a s k s : "Wha t a r e t h e m a x i m u m plausible popu la t ions of t h e n e x t 50 to 100 y e a r s ; and w h a t a r e t h e m a x i m u m plausible d e m a n d s for low-cost e n e r g y ? "

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THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Page 5: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

Volume 32 No. 3 Geo^Tkfijllmmw Jan.-Feb., 1954

From the Secretary's Desk . . .

THIS is the Atomic Age As I read the new articles that appear in our papers and

magazines, it becomes more and more apparent to me that the future roll of the engineer, architect arid industrial man­ager is about the most important on life's stage. In this great country of ours, the discovery of nature's secrets, the de­velopments from the findings, and the practical (or impraci-

cal; as in war weapons) application to everyday life provide threatening new horizons for this group. I say threaten­ing because mishandling and lack of foresight can mean destruction, small or large.

A good bit of our fate is in our own hands, but as you know, blunders by our diplomats, our military or by big business can seal us from our free enterprise, free thinking way of life. It is difficult for our governments to plan far beyond the present, due to pressures and to a possible short term

of office. Long distance planning and the pitfalls of short­sighted planning can be pointed out by engineers and other private citizens who should keep abreast of developments. We need more scientifically trained men in government, both local and federal. There is a real responsibility resting one-sidedly on the shoulders of our lawyers and other poli­ticians. You, as worthy citizens, should take an active part in government and its planning.

An example of poor planning and short sightedness is found in the appalling death and accident rate achieved on

our highways and streets. Our wars have not been nearly as costly. Lack of planning is evident. 7,370,000 cars and trucks were produced in 1953. There were 54,745,000 vehi­cles in use during the year: the death rate and accident rate continues to climb. Red Cross relief is not used for this type of catastrophe. It is man made and thus man's individ­ual responsibility. Apparently legislators are either not try­ing or cannot cope with this problem. There must be some solution, and I don't think that it is more horsepower with greater pickup for passing.

The reason for the above dissertation is, first; to point out the increased need for engineers, architects and industrial managers in this atomic, electronic, jet age in which we're living. Technology is going to increase, not decrease. It offers an excellent means of livelihood. It is here to stay; if anything stays. Second, the engineers of the present and future have a real responsibility as citizens. High type high school graduates with the proper aptitudes and leadership should be encouraged to enter the field of engineering. Third, Georgia Tech and other colleges and universities of an engineering nature must offer and require courses de­signed to produce a well-rounded civic minded graduate. Finally, your interest in your Alma Mater is needed at all times if this institution is to properly train engineering, business and political leaders of tomorrow. Without your guidance, moral support and encouragement, Georga Tech will not progress.

Think about this a little bit, won't you? — ROANE BEARD

SEVENTH ROLL CALL TOTALS-As of Jan. 27

5332 Contributors-$56,593.18

Contents EDITORIALS

Ramblin'

The Atomic Age

THE INSTITUTION

From Peanuts to Plat inum

Of 'Recks and Print

On the Hill

SPORTS

Sugar Bowl Game

'54 Preview

THE ALUMNI

With the Clubs

News by Classes

2

5

6

12

17

18

21

23

24

Staff

Executive Editor W. Roane Beard

Editor and Manager Robert B. Wallace, J r .

Editorial Assistant Mary Peeks

ON THE COVER

Multi-dollar research with a two-dollar appa­ratus — see about the cover on page 8.

Cover Photo by Cecil Allen Engineering Experiment Station

Published bi-monthly from. September to June, inclusive, by the Georgia Tech National Alumni Association, Georgia Institute of Technology, 225 North Avenue, Atlanta, Georgia. Subscription price (35< per copy) included in membership dues. Entered as second class matter at the Post Office, Atlanta, Georgia, under Act of March 3, 1S79.

January-February, 1954

Page 6: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

from

GEORGIA'S annual peanut crop is second only to cotton as the state's major agricultural product—it totals 300,000

tons, worth $60,000,000. Yet, the farmers and handlers of peanuts long have realized that they need speedier, more efficient methods and equipment. Where could they turn for help? Where, but to the Engineering Experiment Station, Georgia Institute of Technology.

More about peanuts in a moment. First, let's place in perspective the Georgia Tech Engineering Experiment Station.

If you were graduated in the class of 1902, you entered the business world at the same time this country saw its first industrial research laboratory. The concept of mass pro­duction soon followed, yet it was not until the late 1930's that universities and non-profit research institutions really became important in the scientific research picture.

Georgia Tech was ready for that trend. If you were in the class of '19, your stay on the campus coincided with the establishment of the Engineering Experiment Station. (You probably didn't notice, because you were too thankful that World War I had ended.) That year the General Assembly of Georgia created the Station "to aid in the promotion of engineering and industrial research, and for the more complete development and utilization of the natural re­sources of Georgia, and for the encouragement of industries and commerce, and insuring the public welfare of the people of Georgia consistent with modern progress and preparedness."

Came the '30's, with their increased emphasis on applied science, and in 1939 the Research Building on the Georgia Tech campus, providing a permanent home for the Engi­neering Experiment Station, was completed.

Since the end of World War II, the Georgia Tech Engi­neering Experiment Station has grown with tremendous strides. Its budget in 1945-46, for example, was $240,000. In 1947-48, it was $451,000. In 1950-51, $850,000. In 1951-52, $1,400,000.

Today, the annual volume of sponsored research at the Georgia Tech Engineering Experiment Station totals ap­proximately $2,000,000. The greater part of that amount comes from private industry and the United States Govern­ment. A small fraction is State funds. The Station has a modern, well-equipped plant and a staff of more than 400 employees.

to

PL1TIIM # # •

Tech's Research is Big Business

VALUE $5,000 — A display of the platinum family of metals — palladium, platinum, rhodium, iridium, and two which are rela­tively unknown in their pure metallic form — ruthenium and osmium — but which are used primarily as alloying agents. This is one of the few complete collections of its kind in the world.

THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Page 7: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

THE BUILDING — center of the activities of the sta­tion, it provides an excel­lent model machine shop, chemical labs, large and flexible work floor area with readily available util­ity services for full-scale pilot plant operations, chemical control lab, draft­ing room, conference rooms, photographic and microscopic dark rooms mid offices.

Although it is the largest engineer­ing research facility in the South, the Engineering Experiment Station measures its accomplishments less by the dollar mark than by its service to the State of Georgia. In addition to helping with the solution of immediate problems of definite interest to industry in Georgia, the Station is participating in an adult education program through demonstration of the value of applied technical effort. Many of the companies which have sponsored work here have,

of their own accord, added engineers to their staffs. The effect of these indus­trial programs is to improve southern industries. New industries also are be. ing created by the development of new products in current research and de­velopment programs.

In line with the Station's policy of ever-increasing service to Georgia in­dustry, the number of research projects sponsored by the Station itself (rather than by outside interests) has increased by 50 per cent in the past year, and the

FROZEN FOOD PHOTOG-RAPHY — Thomas W. Kethley, biologist, is shown making color photographs of frozen food materials in a study of the effect' of low temperatures on the sur­vival of microorganisms.

' Jf^tt^

V

Hf ^ j f l S ^ ^ ^ ^

M l

number of projects sponsored jointly by the Station and an industry or or­ganization was nearly four times as great as the year before. Furthermore, the Station greatly accelerated its sur­veys of the research needs and possi­bilities for Georgia.

As has been the case since the begin­ning of the Korean conflict, a substan­tial portion of the Station's research efforts are being devoted to national defense research. Because most of that type of work is classified for security, it is possible to describe only those proj­ects undertaken specifically for the in­dustrial development of the state and region.

Back, now, to the subject of peanuts. Four years ago, the Engineering Ex­

periment Station began a long-term re. search project, conducted jointly with the Georgia (Agricultural) Experiment Station, and sponsored by the Georgia-Florida-Alabama Peanut Association and the United States Department of Agriculture. This project was designed to study the problems involved in pick­ing, transporting, receiving, handling, storing, and shelling peanuts. At the same time that mechanical engineers were busy devising and testing new equipment to improve those processes, an industrial engineering group was undertaking a survey of procedures in a number of Georgia plants.

Important results already have come out of those studies — new machinery has been installed in a number of pea­nut handling plants, for example, and new methods have been adopted.

In many other fields, the Station's scientific and technical staffs are apply-

January-February, 1954

Page 8: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

ZERO — Dr. Waldemar Ziegler, Research Professor, is shown at the instrument panel operating equipment for the solution of problems dealing with the properties of mat­ter at virtually absolute zero. This research field has received a great deal of publicity in the past year.

ing the same know-how, with similar success. Several of Georgia Tech's lab­oratories and departments are cooperat­ing in a study of Georgia clays. This work will be expanded as the clay in­dustry becomes aware of their research needs.

Georgia produces more naval stores products than any other state or similar area in the world. Nevertheless, in re­cent years the naval stores industry has experienced tremendous competi­tion from synthetic chemicals. To de­velop new markets and new products, the industry turned to the Georgia Tech Engineering Experiment Station. This work is only now in its early stages.

As the use of radioisotopes, the by­product of atomic energy, spreads to more biological and industrial areas, the Station's work in radioactivity be­comes increasingly important.

No single service rendered Southern industry by the Experiment Station is more important than that provided by the A-C Network Calculator. This intri­cate equipment aids electrical power companies in designing transmission and distribution systems.

The Station's important basic re­search in thin-metal films of platinum and two dozen other metals is described in a separate article in this issue.

Other projects under way or recently completed include studies of new tech­niques in phase microscopy; high-tem­perature protective ceramic coatings; microbiological damage to cotton fiber; television studies; fuel-injection sys­

tems for gasoline engines; the nature and applications of high-speed elec­tronic computers; and a survey of the research needs of Georgia industry.

In summary, the Georgia Tech Engi­neering Experiment Station was active­ly engaged, during the last fiscal year, in 146 projects, 67 of which were spon­sored by industry and 41 by the various agencies of the United States Govern­ment. The Station itself sponsored 24 projects out of funds provided by the State and shared the cost of 14 other projects with various other organiza­tions.

"The South is becoming industrial­ized at a pace we must all admire," says Massachusetts' Senator John F. Kennedy, in an article, "New England and the South: The Struggle for Indus­try," in The Atlantic for January. "In 1951 the South added, on the average, one multimillion-dollar plant a day. In that year capital investment in new Southern plants reached $3,000,000,000."

Senator Kennedy went on to urge non-partisan support for "the rapid ef­forts of the South to obtain some of New England's many and well-known advantages, in skilled labor, research, markets, and credit facilities."

Georgia Tech alumni can be proud of the Engineering Experiment Station, and the role it is playing in the rapid efforts of the Southern region to gain those advantages, through research on everything from peanuts to platinum.

The Georgia Tech laboratory is studying some 25 different metals,

About the Cover Mrs. Margaret C. Chester, Research

Assistant, Georgia Tech Engineering Experiment Station, is shown using a simple infra-red oven, a homemade de­vice costing less than two dollars, which takes the place of one which might be bought for $100 or more. It consists of a bulb, a gold-plated beaker, and a stand. With this inexpensive yet prac­tical oven, the scientists in the thin-metal film studies (described on page 9) can obtain temperatures up to 625 C, for heat-treating laboratory speci­mens of metals. Another similar im­provised oven in the same laboratory permits temperatures up to 1,000° C. From the time the ovens are turned on. those temperatures can be reached in approximately one minute, and the oven cools almost as rapidly. This rapid heat cycling is important because some of the studies require rapid alternate heating and cooling cycles. In addition, this ability to complete rapid heat cycles permits completion of many tests in the same time the average oven would re­quire for a single test.

This heating is important primarily because it causes the metal in the film to aggregate or granulate — structural changes which then are studied under the microscope. In essence, this proce­dure creates an "electronic finger-print" of the metal under study.

Mrs. Chester, a graduate of Witten­berg College, Springfield, Ohio, has been employed by the Engineering Experi­ment Station for a year and a half.

Author Fanning looks over a natural quartz.

among them gold, silver, aluminum, nickel, rhodium, all the platinum met­als, and several very rare metals you probably never heard of. Many of these metals are relatively corrosion-proof, except aluminum and silver. (Those are exceptions, as any housewife knows!) In industry, this resistance to corro­sion, plus electrical transmission prop­erties and solderability, makes these metals useful in manufacturing many of the gadgets which go into our radio and television sets and other electronic equipment. On the following pages we relate that story.

THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Page 9: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

THIN METAL FILMS — R. B. Beher, Research Physicist, and Mrs. Margaret C. Chester, Research Assistant, are shown oper­ating high vacuum equipment. In this chamber, the pressure is lowered to one one-billionth of that of the normal atmos-phere — so low that metals evaporate when heated, forming « vapor which will coat any cool surface within the chamber.

It is possible to make these metal films very, very thin — as thin as one ten-millionth to one 50-millionth of an inch. In essence, then, we have a metallic coating or mirror. By study­ing the reflective and other properties of such mirrors, the scientists can ascertain characteristics of the metal deposit.

Almost 100 years ago, Dr. Michael Faraday, the great scientist whose dis­covery of electro-magnetic induction made possible today's electrical indus­try, was experimenting with thin films of such metals as gold, silver, and cop­per. He was tinkering with materials which had been used since the early civilized days of the Egyptians.

Today, following principles discov­ered by Faraday, scientists at the Geor­gia Tech Engineering Experiment Sta­tion are studying thin-metal films for their tremendous practical potentiali­ties in industry and defense.

Fortunately, the tools of the times are infinitely superior to those of a century ago. Faraday, in a lecture in 1857, de­scribed his work on metal films with a "microscope with very high powers (up to 700 linear)." Investigators today at Georgia Tech have the advantage of such superior equipment as the electron microscope, which can magnify, by pho­tographic means, up to 100,000 diame­ters, permitting study of particles as small as one one-millionth of an inch!

R. B. Belser, Research Physicist of the Georgia Tech Engineering Experi­ment Station, directs the thin-film studies, which are sponsored by the

U. S. Army, Signal Corps Engineering Laboratories, Fort Monmouth, N. J. Some of the investigations are basic re­search, designed to add to man's knowl­edge, just as Faraday's work did. Others have defense implications. Most impor­tant, the findings of the Georgia Tech group have a practical, peacetime ap­plication to the growing electronics in­dustry of the South and the nation, in which thin-metal films are used in the preparation of optical surfaces, as con­trol devices on radio circuits, and in glass-to-metal bonding. There are also many other more technical if perhaps less glamorous industrial uses.

THE SPUTTERING SYSTEM — This is used for those metals which have such high melting points that evaporation is un­suitable. The metals of the platinum family are examples. Minute quantities of the metal being studied are vaporized by electrical means; this vapor deposits a film on a glass quartz surface near the electrode. The device pictured was developed <il Georgia Tech. It) makes possible the sputtering of certain

of the platinum metals at a rate 10 to 20 times faster than previously recorded by any other similar device. Because of this advance, the Georgia Tech group is undertaking the first extensive study of the metals of the platinum family and their properties which make them useful in many commercial applications.

Page 10: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

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THE METALLURGICAL MICROSCOPE in action — it magnifies from 100 to 2,000 diameters.

A METALLOGRAPHIC PICTURE — in-dium and gold evaporating simultaneous­ly and then heated to 662 degrees F. in a vacuum.

The Equipment T h e m e t a l l u r g i c a l mic roscope is u sed

t o t a k e p i c t u r e s of o p a q u e , h i g h l y pol ­i shed objects . I n t h e t h i n film s tud ies , i t p e r m i t s i nves t i ga t i ng t h e s t r u c t u r e s of t h e films, a n d w h e r e t w o m e t a l s a r e c o m b i n e d in one t h i n - m e t a l film, t h e a l ­loy ing ac t ion of t he se t w o m e t a l s . T h e p h o t o g r a p h a b o v e w a s t a k e n b y t h i s m e t h o d a n d s h o w s t h e t r e e - l i k e s t r u c ­t u r e w h i c h a p p e a r s to b e cha rac t e r i s t i c of m e t a l a l loys .

THE ELECTRON MICROSCOPE in action — it magnifies from 2,000 to 25,000 diameters. The resulting photographs have a 3-D quality.

AN ELECTRON MICROGRAPH & DIF­FRACTION PATTERN — gold heated to 392 degrees F. and magnified 23,000 times gives this pattern. By studying par­ticle size (speckled) and the lines in the diffraction pattern (sunspot), one may determine much about the stability of the metal and its reactions to tempera­ture and corrosion.

M o r e compl i ca t ed t h a n t h e m e t a l l u r ­g ica l mic roscope , t h e e l ec t ron m i c r o ­scope can, w i t h p h o t o g r a p h i c s u p p l e ­m e n t a t i o n , magn i fy u p to 100,000 d i ­a m e t e r s . Th i s is poss ib le b e c a u s e of t h e s h o r t w a v e - l e n g t h of t h e e lec t ron , a p ­p r o x i m a t e l y 1/100,000 of t h e w a v e l e n g t h of l igh t . T h e a b o v e p h o t o s w e r e t a k e n b y t h i s device .

10 THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Page 11: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

X-RAY — Still another type of instrument used to investigate the alloying habits and characteristics of metals is the x-ray diffraction spectrometer, shown here being operated by Wil­liam E. Woolf, Research Physicist. Because of the short wave

lengths and penetrating effects of x-rays, the internal crystal structures of metals and other substances must be studied with this equipment.

1 4 J P i M •

James C. Sellers, Research Assistant, is shown operating a fre­quency measuring device, which is so sensitive that it is capable of measuring one cycle in 10,000,000 per second. Its accuracy is checked daily against the national radio frequency signal. This equipment is used to measure daily the output of fre­quencies of as many as 40 quartz crystals operated simultane­ously and continuously in the constant temperature ovens shown in the background — the tiny holes in the wall rack. For the past four years Georgia Tech's Engineering Experi­ment Station has been studying the frequency changes of such crystals when they are coated with various metals — experi­ments which have won wide attention from physicists through­out the world.

AN INCIDENTAL DISCOVERY of the metallurgy laboratory is that of new methods for decorative ap­plication of metal to glass and ceramic surfaces. These methods permit an amateur to draw permanent pictures on glass, as shown in this photograph (a por­trait of Queen Elizabeth). Any lettering or design can easily be drawn on a clean glass, ceramic, or hard mineral surface.

January-February, 1954 11

Page 12: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

OF RECKS AND PRINT (Installment #2)

*?a*H4#d *&4At TVoncU-

A Real Crip Course

Editor's Note — The folloiving article is a reprint front

the Fall, 1953 issue of the YELLOW JACKET. After we

had it set in type, we discovered that it was reprinted

from an older edition of the Tech humor magazine. So

this is a reprint of a reprint — anyhow, it's still funny.

"You're right, this is 201, just sit anywhere for the first day. I'll run over the roll quickly so we can all get oat early . . . no point in holding class today. Let's see, there are 29 of you — no, 30; — no it is 29, or, wait a minute, will you please get a seat and stay in one place while I count. Yes, I mean you — with the chartreuse shirt.

"I'll pass these cards out, and I don't want you to put a thing on them until I tell you. All right, now take the card and hold it so the edge opposite all the other edges .makes an angle of 27.83 degrees with the leg of the table I'm sit­ting on. Without changing the position of the card, carefully type out the in­formation I have written out on the board. First your name, just the way you would normally write it — last name second, first name in between your middle name and your blood type; then write your parents ' names, their occupations, birthplaces, and ages. Right next to that; your age, height, weight, and shoe size — sex preference — civilian or married — point average — the names of any four close friends of yours in Indo-China — Atlanta ad­dress and phone — number of times you have tried this course before, who gave it to you, a general listing of all the other courses you've had and the ones you are going to take, the titles of twenty of the books you have read in the last week, and what you have learned in similar courses such as this. On the next line state the reasons for entering Tech, number of legitimate descendants, political and church affili­ations, my name, and the telephone

numbers of any fifty of the girls you know in Atlanta.

"What's that? No, you may not have another card!! There should be ample room on the one you have for that information. All right, now quickly pass the cards to your right, toward the center, and I will take them up on the end of the left hand side of the rows facing you with your backs toward the corner. Let's hurry so we can all get out early today.

"Next time we come in you will take your seats alphabetically. I am going to dismiss you early today, but first let's take a few moments to go over some of the objectives of the course.

"As you know, this is one of the most important courses here at Tech. You will be expected to master it fully, and unless you do so, it will be impossible for you to go on to the next class. Of course you realize with the seventeen new textbooks required for this one hour credit course, we will not have t ime to be bothered with those of you who do not have a comprehensive, funda­mental background in all the courses preceding this, and you will be respon­sible for brushing up on any of your weak points.

"We have twelve quizzes during the quarter which will count one-half the final grade. A paper of 500,000 words will be due at the end of the third and sixth weeks, and we will have pop quizzes whenever I deem it necessary. If the grades in here run true to aver­age, there will be approximately 11 failures, no A's, 1 B, 2 C's, 13 D's, and the rest E's. There will be no

re-exams. The B will go only to the outstanding I.M., the C's to the foot­ball players, the D's to the students on the Dean's list, and the rest of the grades will be distributed equally among the rest of the students. You will undoubtedly agree that this sys­tem is an excellent one because your grade depends solely on your own initiative. Professor changes are made with the permission of the Board of Regents only.

"Now, a brief word about assignments and then I want to let you go early. All homework will be kept at a mini­mum, so therefore you will be expected to do it all. The assignment for next time is the first 5 chapters, with ques­tions 1 through 270 to be writ ten out and handed in. These assignments will be counted as 25% of your final grade.

"My name is Shaft, and I am sure we will get along fine. We will t ry to make classes as interesting as possible; I even know a few jokes that I might get around to telling. If you have any questions concerning the course, feel free to come see me either in my office or at my apartment in Milledgeville.

"Well, I said I would let you go early so — oh, there goes the whistle. Just a minute, before you go, please fill out 5 copies of your schedule and give them to me as you go out.''

—Bruce D. Smith.

M H H i H H v

BRUCE D. SMITH, '52 — his stuff is still funny four years after its first appearance in print.

12 THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Page 13: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

Editorials from

THE 7ec6*rique Last Thursday evening, after a rous­

ing pep rally for the New Orleans bound Yellow Jackets on Grant Field, the freshman class staged an impromptu shirt-tail parade. The freshmen organ­ized the parade on their own; it was not authorized and the police were not informed beforehand. The next day the local papers carried such mislead­ing headlines as, "Tech Frosh Raid City in Pep March," and statements to the effect that several persons were injured, others were mauled, a theater damaged, police shoved aside and the entire city put in danger.

Get the Facts We recalled the actions of our local

paper last spring when they attempted (and failed) to instigate a Tech pantie raid on Agnes Scott, and again when a Are broke out near the campus and the papers wrote it up as a "pajama riot." So once again we decided to check on the newspaper's account of the "riot" and get the true facts.

Our findings are as follows: The newspaper's account of what happened was incomplete and incorrect. Not only were some of the statements deceptive; others were nothing less than lies. After speaking to many participants in the "riot," the theater manager and the police department, we uncovered the true story.

No Damage The theater manager was not mauled,

neither were the ushers, no one was hurt and the theater stage was not dam­aged. The manager reported the only damage to the theater was the ticket box which was knocked over. Further­more, the lady behind the concession

stand was not brushed into the street by the mob. Participants claim she was not touched; she evidently became excited and frightened by the crowd and WALKED into the street to get air, where she fainted. She was then taken to the hospital and treated for shock. It is absurd to think that theater patrons became frightened, as the fresh­men were singing Ramblin' Reck (some of the theater goers even joined in) and most Atlantans are aware of shirt-tail parades by this time.

The account by the paper is exactly opposite from what really happened. The police department has no idea where the reporter got the information he said the police gave him. Furthermore, in disagreement with the local paper, the police were not "shoved aside" and riot squads did not meet the parade. The police force is not so weak that they cannot stop a mob if they deem it necessary. The freshmen were not stopped by any group; they simply dis­persed and the parade died out.

Nothing New The truth is that the freshmen staged

a shirt-tail parade not unlike those in the past. The "shenanigans" like block­ing traffic, pulling down trolley poles, letting air out of tires and placing a small car upon the sidewalk are the same stunts freshmen have been doing for years in shirt-tail parades. The freshmen were absolutely wrong in staging a parade on their own initiative, but that is the only thing they did wrong.

What we want to know is this: Why do the local papers continually ham­mer at Tech activities and traditions and try to make front page news out of minor incidents? We accused them of being copy-starved in the past. Is this the case or do they just hate us?

Editor BILL ROSS

We Help, Too It seems odd that big write-ups are

never given when Georgia Tech stu­dents participate in the Old Newspaper Boy campaign, the Empty Stocking Fund, Community Chest, Cerebral Palsy Charity football game, Cancer Fund and donations of blood to the Red Cross, to name a few. Even though the freshmen were only indirectly respon­sible for the woman fainting, they are collecting a fund to aid her in hospital expenses. Does all this sound like we have unhonorable intentions? The an­swer is emphatically NO!

Yes, local papers, the freshmen owe an apology to the community for stepping on some of their rights, but you owe us a far greater apology for the false impressions you have given the public about Georgia Tech. We are proud of our school and our traditions, and we are enraged at you for printing hearsay and fallacious statements about

WE WANT REAL WRECKS By JOHN LANGFORD

About this time of year, it is most appropriate to refer to a rule laid down by the Ramblin' Reck Club concerning the annual Reck parade: "The wrecks are supposed to be real wrecks and not floats."

This year the word is going around that the only way to win the Reck parade is to enter a cleverly devised float, not an authentic "wreck." Judg­ing from the decision of the judges a year ago, this opinion is understand­able. However, we have been assured by the Ramblin' Reck officials that the winner of the parade this year will defi­nitely be a real wreck, and there will not be a repetition of last year.

Negligence of the most basic rule of the Reck parade should not be allowed

Managing Editor LANGFORD

to continue. It is probable that a re­verse trend could be established and future parades might resemble a por­tion of the Mardi Gras and not the traditional Ramblin' Reck parade.

This might come as a blow to the esthetic factions of the campus, but beauty has its place. The Reck parade should be symbolic of the traditional spirit of Tech — sputtering, stalling rat­tletraps, not gaily bedecked floats.

Along with many other Tech fans, we are looking forward to this year's parade. We aren't observing from the standpoint of interest that attracts thou­sands of fascinated spectators annually to the affair, but to see if this year's judges remain t rue to the Ramblin' Reck tradition.

The Ramblin' Reck club has taken its stand on the forthcoming parade, and we take full agreement. Let's hope that this year's winner will be a wreck, in every sense of the word. We want no floats, boats, or autos draped with gaily colored streamers. We are proud of the Ramblin' Reck parade in its real tradi­tion. Only a rambling, rattling wreck should be allowed to win.

January-February, 1954 13

Page 14: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

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Page 15: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

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Page 16: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

The responsibilities of a man grow as his family's needs grow—even more so when the cost of living has gone up.

Unfortunately, many family men have failed to bring their life insurance protection into line with today's living costs. As a result, the average American family simply does not own enough life insurance.

Fathers, too, are worth more now

It's obvious that the worth of the family breadwinner has gone up as the cost of his family's expanding needs has gone up. Talk this important problem over with a

New England Mutual career underwriter. He will help you work out enough protection for your specific situation.

GEORGIA TECH ALUMNI WHO ARE READY TO SERVE YOU AS OUR AGENTS:

G. Nolan Bearden, '29, Los Angeles

Carl S. Ing le , '33 , Jacksonvi l le

A lber t P. Elebash, '34 , Montgomery

The NEW ENGLAND Wh MUTUAL Li/e Insurance Company of Hoston

1 6

THE COMPANY THAT FOVMiED MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE IN A M E R I C A - 1 8 3 5

THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Page 17: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

on the hill...

The first quarter of the year has come and gone and a pretty busy one it was for most of us students. On top of the rough curriculum and the usual fall ex­citement—football, rushing, dances, pep rallies, etc. — we acquired a girl cheer­leader for the first time in the history of the school.

The Technique spent at least 20% of its editorial space complaining about all the publicity the coeds were getting from the local press. (Thus adding more clippings for the coed's files.) They got downright bitter about it in some of their editorials. The major part of the balance of their editorial material was spent in complaining about the unfair coverage Tech students in general were receiving from the same local press. It seems as if our newspaper was a little perturbed about the way the dailies front paged and exaggerated the over­charged pep rally the "rats" put on the Thursday night before the Tulane game. It looks to me like the local papers did a good job apologizing for the story about the rally. They wrote editorials on the "boys will be boys" theme and com­mended the "rats" for their offer to move the library books and collect money for the female employee of the local theater who was slightly injured in the melee. Actually, Tech came out lucky publicity-wise on the rally — at least, we didn't make Life magazine as did another leading engineering college with its riots.

The biggest hassle of the quarter was the temporary suspension of the Yellow Jacket. The campus humor (?) maga­zine was ordered to cease publication when the faculty advisor resigned as a result of the first issue of the school year. Seems as if the staff of the Yellow Jacket neglected to show any of the

copy to the advisor before it came off the press. (I am told that most of you alumni will recall at least one suspen­sion of the Yellow Jacket during your stay at Tech.) Compounding the con­fusion of this suspension, one of the campus r e l i g i o u s g r o u p s leveled a charge via a letter to President Van Leer that the Yellow Jacket was a rather obscene rag and shouldn't be allowed to circulate among the pure-in-heart engineers. (This was hardly an original charge, as most of you can testify.) As a result of all these com­plications, Yellow Jacket editor Gordon Crane was asked to resign from his post — having a strange desire to obtain a

proves that 'Recks haven't changed much over the years.

This past quarter was one of the most tragic in the history of the campus. I know you would have to look hard to find a week as tragic as the first one in December. That Monday, Dr. Arant, professor of Industrial Management, died in his office while waiting to meet his 10 o'clock class. Death was attrib­uted to a heart attack. On Thursday of that week, a freshman student hung himself in his dormitory room. On the following Sunday, two students and two alumni were killed in one of the strang­est aviation accidents on record. The four National Guard pilots were on a

Ed Wells, Journal-Constnucion T H E PRESIDENT'S CHRISTMAS — a new Lincoln was presented to the President of Tech on Christinas morning by Mrs. L. W. Robert, Jr., through the Alumni Founda­tion. President and Mrs. Van Leer are shown receiving the keys to the car from Secre­tary Jack Thiesen of the Alumni Foundation.

degree from this institution, he willing­ly complied. The November issue of the magazine finally made its appearance on January 4th. I'll guarantee that it had an enthusiastic readership, which

T H E P R I D E O F T H E FLATS — Tech's 1953 Cross Country team, SEC champions. Coach Griffin is in the back row, extreme right.

formation flight in their F-84 Thunder Jets, when they encountered bad weath­er near Atlanta. Evidentaly the leader of the flight misread his altimeter, for all four flew into the ground near Du-luth, Georgia. The pilots were Won Hodge, a junior in the A.E. School; Sam­uel Dixon, a senior in the A.E. School; Elwood C. Kent, '49, and John L. Ten-nant, '49. That same afternoon a fresh­man student died of a heart attack at the Municipal Airport. A very depress­ing week for everyone on the campus.

The students will miss the sage coun­seling and guidance of former Asso­ciate Dean T. Benjamin Massey, who resigned his position as head of Tech's Counseling and Guidance Service to move over to the Athletic Association as assistant to Athletic Business Man­ager Howard Ector. He was a real friend of the students, and brought a feeling for the students' point-of-view that will be hard to replace.

George P . Burdel l , J r .

Page 18: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

'JACKETS "PEPPER" MOUNTAINEERS IN SUGAR BOWL, 42-19

On January 1, 1954, Tech became the first football team to win three major bowl games in succession when they whipped an outclassed West Virginia team 42-19 in the Sugar Bowl. The game the New Orleans sports writers labelled no-match back in December turned out to be just that.

The star of the game was Tech's senior quarterback, Pepper Rodgers, who has almost made a career out of starring in bowl games. The slight At­lanta boy was voted the outstanding player award by the press and radio folks immediately after the game. It was the second year in a row that a 'Jacket has walked off with the award. Leon Hardeman won it last year.

Rodgers led Tech to three first half scores with his great passing and ball handling and finished up his college ca­reer with his greatest football day. He completed 16 passes in 26 attempts which turned out to be just one shy of the Sugar Bowl record set by TCU's im­mortal Davey O'Brien. As it was, Tech set a lot of new records in the game. Their 20 completions in 35 attempts for 268 yards all broke the TCU records set in 1939. They also wrote a new high score in the Sugar Bowl books with their 42 points, and the combined points scored in the game eclipsed the old record.

The 'Jackets took the opening kick-off

and drove to their first score in seven pass plays, five of them completed. Sam Hensley caught Rodgers' 21-yard throw for the score. During this 67-yard drive Tech only tried three running plays, and two of them were called back for offsides. Rodgers added the point mak­ing it 7-0. West Virginia came right back with a 60-yard touchdown run by full­back Allman, but a holding penalty nullified it. The 'Jackets forced a punt and started another 67-yard drive with a fair catch. This time Jimmy Durham caught the scoring pass from Rodgers, a one-yard bootleg job that completely fooled the Mountaineers. Again Rodgers converted and Tech was out in front 14-0.

West Virginia finally got going late in the first period with a 69-yard drive that resulted in an early second period score. Halfback Williams placed the six points on the board with a five-yard end sweep. Larry Morris, the game's outstanding defensive star, blocked the extra point t ry making it 14-6. The Mountaineers almost moved up close to the 'Jackets later in this period, but Marconi dropped a perfect Wyant pitch in the end zone to end this threat.

Before the halftime show got under­way, Tech had scored again. This time they drove 77 yards to the score. Brig-man started this one with a pass to Davis. Then after two more long pass

gains, Hardeman bounded over from the 10, but Tech was offside and had it called back. Rodgers came in and after being thrown back to the West Virginia 28, threw three perfect strikes to make it 20-6. Henry Hair caught the final one for the score. Rodgers missed the point and at half-time it was 20-6. Tech.

Early in the third period a Tech drive stalled at the West Virginia 8, and Rod­gers stepped back and kicked his third bowl game field goal in three years to make it 23-6. A few minutes later, Tech took a West Virginia punt on their own 26 and drove for another score. This time, Hardeman scored on a 23-yard run so perfectly executed that none of the Mountaineers seemed aware that he had the ball. One of the backs even patted Leon as he went by as if to say, "You can stop faking now we have the man with the ball." Turner missed the point try making it 29-6.

Both teams added 13 points to their scores in the final stanza, Tech scoring on a great 43-yard run by Larry Ruffin and a deceptive 9-yard burst by Billy Teas. Both the Mountaineer's scores came on long drives against the Tech reserves.

Coach Dodd used every man he took to New Orleans and, at one time, was using an all freshman backfield.

END OF AN ERA — Leon Hardeman scores his last touch­down for the 'Jackets, a 23-yard waltz through the Mountain­eers in the Sugar Bowl game. In the left panel, Brigman (18) and Turner (31) fake so effectively that the West Virginians

Journal-Constitution Photos — Jillson are completely off balance. In the right panel, Hardeman passes the safety man who patted him on the shoulder as the little gamester went by. This brought Hardeman's final total" to 22 TD's and 132 points, both school records.

18 THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Page 19: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

TECH EDGES DUKE, 13-10 In the most dramatic game of the

year, the 'Jackets came from behind in the last three minutes to edge Duke's Blue Devils, 13-10. Billy Teas, the slim mercury from the Devils' own hills of Carolina, supplied the clincher in the rip-roaring contest when he sprinted 48 yards with a Duke punt.

Until Teas made his spectacular run, the 'Jackets were about the most frus­trated team to appear on Grant Field since the SMU Mustangs butted their heads against fate on October 3. Tech had threatened the Duke scoring zone time and time again during the game, but could only cross the goal line one time up until Teas' run. They had fallen victim to a "phantom whistle" during the Devils' scoring drive in the third period. Everything seemed to go wrong for 57 minutes of the game, but the last three minutes made up for it.

The game was a hard fought thriller from the opening kickoff. Duke scored first with a seven yard field goal after the 'Jackets had stalled a 73 yard drive. Tech came roaring right back in the second quarter with a 41 yard drive climaxed by a one yard sneak by Pepper Rodgers for the score. The point t ry was wide and Tech led at the half, 6-3.

THE $85,000 TOUCHDOWN — Photographer C. E. Jones of the BLUE PRINT staff catches the whole story of the Duke game with this shot of Billy Teas crossing the goal line with the score that gave Tech the victory and the Sugar Bowl bid. Note block at zero stripe by Jake Shoemaker.

In the third period, Duke drove 58 yards to a score aided and abetted by the much discussed "ethereal whistle" which this writer and many others distinctly heard in the upper regions of the pressbox. The play which caused so much comment started out as a sim­ple off-tackle slant by halfback Caudle, who was seemingly stopped for no gain by an official's whistle — Caudle lat-eralled to Quarterback Barger who scampered 19 yards through the open mouthed 'Jackets before he was finally brought down. Six plays later Kistler rammed it over from the Tech 5 on a great individual effort. The point was good, and the 'Jackets trailed 10-6.

Three times during the final period the 'Jackets drove within scoring range only to be halted by a tough Duke de­

fense or an untimely pass interception. After Duke halted the last Tech threat with an interception at their own five, the 'Jackets forced a fourth down punt which Teas fielded at the Duke 44. The Tech speedster ran back to the 48 and faked a hand-off to Larry Ruffin, and with the aid of great blocks by Sam Hensley and Jake Shoemaker sprinted down the East sidelines for the winning score. The point was good and that was the ball game.

It was a fitting climax to another great game in the Tech-Duke series. Funny thing, this was the game that was almost not scheduled. It was added to the schedule after the Notre Dame game was moved from Atlanta to South Bend.

HUMPHREYS SCORES AGAINST GEORGIA on a 13-yard gallop in the 2nd quarter.

Journal-Constitution, Bill Wilson IT'S FULLBACK DAY as Hunsinger starts one of his many long runs against Georgia.

TECH 28, GEORGIA 12 The 'Jackets trimmed their arch-ri­

vals from Athens 28-12 on November 28 to make it five wins in a row over the Bulldogs. The game, a rather lackluster battle after last week's Duke tussle, was played before a capacity house at Grant Field plus a local television audience.

For a change, Tech got out in front in this one scoring early in the first period on a one-yard sneak by Pepper Rodgers. The sneak capped a short 13-yard drive made possible by a Bulldog fumble; in fact, there were three fum­bles at this point, one by Tech and two by Georgia, the 'Jackets came up with the odd one. The point was good and

Tech had a 7-0 lead. Near the end of the first quarter, the

'Jackets drove 70 yards to score in a fine display of passing and signal calling by Quarterback Rodgers. Sub Fullback George Humphreys scored this one with a twisting 13-yard run through the be­fuddled Bulldogs and Rodgers added the point to make it 14-0.

The Bulldogs got a break early in the second quarter when Tech's Mitchell fumbled at the 'Jackets 25. Bratkowski stayed on the ground and Georgia scored in 8 plays, but missed the point and it was 14-6 Tech. The next time Georgia got the ball, one of the oddest plays of the series took place. Halfback

Madison had taken a pass from the "Brat" and was on his way to a score when Tech's Dave Davis hit him at the Tech 5 and dislocated him from the ball. Tech Tackle Daugherty grabbed the errant missile and Tech had it at their own five. The 'Jackets then drove 95 yards to a score in only 14 plays. Billy Teas threw his only pass of the-season, a real blooper, to end Durham for the six points. Rodgers converted and Tech led 21-6 at the half.

The second half was a dog eat dog affair with both teams scoring in the fourth quarter. The final score was 28-12, in a rather dull Tech-Georgia game.

January-February, 1954

Page 20: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

TALK ABOUT TECH EDITOR'S NOTE: The following article

is reprinted from the New Orleans States of January 2, 1954. It was writ­ten by our good friend and former col­league, Pete Finney, sports staffer with the States. We wish to thank the paper and Pete for permission to reprint the article. Incidentally, the States is the only paper in New Orleans that has re­mained consistently friendly towards Tech during the past two years.

SUGAR BOWL SIDELIGHTS By PETER FINNEY

West Virginia's dressing room was about what you'd expect.

A few Mountaineers shed tears but, on the whole, the bruised heroes from the hills resembled survivors plucked from a raft in midocean — too shocked to speak and too numb to cry.

Commodore Art Lewis, who went down with his ship, tried to remain composed. A mighty Georgia Tech air arm had just blown "the best team in West Virginia history" out of the Sugar Bowl, running up a record 42 points.

"What can I say," he mumbled. "We met a great football team on one of its best days."

Did he figure Tech to pass as much as it did?

"No, we didn't. It was the most they've thrown all year. We made so many mistakes. And. they took advan­tage of every one. They're far and away the best team we've played."

Lewis had plenty company in the belief that Tommy Allman's 60-yard touchdown run in the first period that could have tied the score at 7-7 (but was nullified because of holding) went a long way to shake West Virginia's con­fidence.

"Then there was that pass Marconi dropped in the end zone. It would have put us back in the game at 14-13. We still had a lot of fight left, but it placed us in a terrific hole."

Lewis was practically alone in calling the Engineers WVU's toughest foe.

Several of his black-jersied gladiators phoo-phooed the idea — although it probably can be attributed to young emotions, frustration, and refusal to face reality.

It remained for center Bob Orders, former West Pointer, to give an im­partial appraisal.

"I don't know if they were the best," he said, "but they were the fastest and smartest team we've played this season.

"No one really stood out in the line, excepting maybe that Morris. Rodgers was very deceptive. His faking had a lot to do with the success of their passing. Turner was the hardest runner."

West Virginia Gov. William C. Mar-land went on record as saying he was "mighty proud" of the team.

Allman presented the game ball to the governor, who indicated he intends to keep it on the desk in his executive mansion.

The team that was supposed to fight with a fury born of scorn and fanned by ridicule said very little about dead-eye Pepper Rodgers who would do nicely in one of those famed Virginia "turkey shoots."

A glum-faced Mountaineer agreed, however: "It'll be a time before anyone at the training table yells 'PASS the PEPPER.' "

REMEMBER HEISMAN? If you are a former player or man­

ager on any of Coach John Heisman's Tech teams of 1904-1919, we need your help. Ed Pope of the Atlanta Constitu­tion sports staff is writing a book on "Football's Greatest Coaches" and needs some stories and anecdotes about Heisman. If you know any, how about dropping Ed a line at the Constitution.

His book will cover 25 great coaches and all three of Tech's coaches, Heis­man, Alexander and Dodd are in the "greatest" category to Pope. How about helping him out?

JUST A FEW (hundred) LEFT-YOUR DEMAND DEMANDED that we have this record album made. So here it is — the Tech band and Glee Club playing and singing all the Tech fa­vorites. So what happened to the de­mand? They're only $3.60 each post­paid. Buy one now. Use order blank.

IF YOU HAVEN'T RECEIVED YOUR FREE ITEMS, DROP US A POSTCARD TODAY. GEORGIA TECH COLLEGE INN-ATLANTA,

TECH GLASSES of many styles and sizes. In ad­dition to the style shown (Tech seal) we have the Bowl Glass (all the Tech bowl scores p lus Coach Dodd's photo) and the Yellow Jacket glass. In 12, 10 or 7 or. sizes. Only .55 each. State style and size when ordering.

BROCHURES OF ALL THE TECH ADDRESS IT TO BROCHURE-

GA.

PLEASE SEND ME THE FOLLOWING INDICATED ITEMS -

No. Item

KID'S "T" SHIRTS

Size No.

(Sizes 2, 4, 6 & 8) $1.10 Each)

TECH "RAT" CAPS

($1.35 each)

I enclose my check for to cover the above items.

Name Address.

Item

RAMBLIN' 'RECK ALBUM ($3.60 each)

GLASSES (indicate style) ($0.55 each)

MAIL WITH CHECK OR MONEY ORDER TO GEORGIA TECH COLLEGE INN, ATLANTA, GEORGIA

20 THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Page 21: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

'54—THE ROUGH YEAR? Coach Bobby Dodd's 'Jackets face the

"toughest schedule in Tech history" this fall minus the services of 15 outstanding players who were the leaders in Tech's past three years of football greatness. Gone from the '53 squad are (backs) Leon Hardeman, Pepper Rodgers, Glenn Turner, Charlie Brannon, Joe Hall; and (linemen) Dave Davis, Orville Vereen, Sam Hensley, Ed Gossage, Cecil Trainer, Bob Sherman, Dick Inman, Roger Frey, Frank Givens and Bulldog Carithers.

How will next fall's team stack up with the '53 team? Coach Dodd answers it this way: "In the first place, we could have a better team next year and still not have as good a record as we did in '53. The schedule is a lot tougher. There are no breathers or even semi-breathers. We have replaced Davidson, Clemson, Vanderbilt and Notre Dame with Ten­nessee, LSU and Kentucky. Not a very fair exchange from a won-lost view­point.

"In the second place, we will not have the experienced depth that we started this season with. You can't lose 15 boys like we lost this year and not feel it. Sure, we'll have quite a few brilliant individuals, but our overall team bal­ance will be below last season.

"Then there is another fact that must be considered. The caliber of SEC foot­ball has been off this past season. A lot of teams have been rebuilding while we have been at our peak. This year, the teams of the SEC should all be bet­ter than they were last season. And we play eight of them. I look for an in­teresting season, certainly one that the Atlanta fans will enjoy. It's been a long time since we've had a home schedule like this one."

That's the way Bobby Dodd sees the '54 season. He's not talking "poor mouth," just being honest, a renowned

trait of his. We figure that the 'Jackets will be a contender for the SEC crown this fall — an early guess at the record would have to be 7-3. Spring practice may give all of us a better line on what to expect.

THE SCHEDULE Sept. 18 — Tulane at Atlanta Sept. 25 — Florida at Atlanta Oct. 2 — SMU at Dallas Oct. 9 — LSU at Atlanta Oct. 16 — Auburn at Atlanta Oct. 23 — Kentucky at Atlanta Oct. 30 — Duke at Durham Nov. 6 — Tennessee at Atlanta Nov. 13 — Alabama at Atlanta Nov. 20 —Open Nov. 27 — Georgia at Athens

BASKETBALL Tech's basketball team has a perfect

record, in reverse, for the present sea­son. To date, the 'Jackets have lost ten straight games, six to SEC foes. The luckless hoopsters have fallen before South Carolina, Auburn (twice), Geor­gia, Georgia Teachers, Florida, Ken­tucky, Mississippi State, Mississippi and Vanderbilt.

The worst beating of the season came at the hands of the revenge-minded Kentucky Wildcats, who trounced Tech 105-53 in their re-entrance to SEC com­petition after a forced one-year lay-off. The 'Jackets came within two seconds of edging the Mississippi State quintet but a State basket just before the gun gave them a one point victory.

The ten game losing streak this sea­son gives the 'Jacket five 16 straight losses over a two-year period. Things look better for Tech as only one man on the squad finishes his eligibility this season.

LEADS 'JACKETS FOR '54 — Larry Mor­ris, Ail-American center for the '53 'Jack­ets, has been elected to lead the '54 team. Morris, a bulwark for the 'Jackets for the last three years, made seven major Ail-American teams the past season, his first as a tu>o-u>ay performer at center.

W h o B o u g h t

O u t b o a r d M o t o r s

I n 1 9 5 3

Percent of Occupation Motors Sold

Professional 11.3 Managers, Proprietors 16.6 Clerical, Sales 13.2 Skilled Workers 33.9 Semi-skilled Workers 10.5 Other Occupations 14.5

100.0

Five hundred thousand motors were bought in 1953 — to November 1.

VM W$1faieti

: - u i i i

by EVINRUDE

An Engineering Feat

Even Georgia Men Appreciate TECH MEN w i l l more fu l ly understand the engineer­ing skil l that is to be found in EVINRUDE'S 1954 Outboard Motors. But, even a riveter and librarian alike w i l l appreciate the utter quietness that has been achieved in Evinrude's All New 71/2 h.p. FLEETW1N. It is so quiet you can talk and be heard any place in your boat while it runs wide open . . . Everything about it is new but the name. Whole motor rides on rubber. Has Gearshift, (neutral, forward, reverse) Roto-Matic Speed Control, Auto-Lift Hood and Sep­arate Gas Tank.

Give an Evinrude and Share the Fun

. /^P.YRON AND G A R R O W / ^ Wm * ' " "^ -^ "Where Boating Pleasures Begin" - S ^ ^ e e s a e r ^

594 Luckie St., N. W. at Nor th Ave., A t lan ta Telephone EL. 0307

Atlanta's Only Evinrude Dealer — We Repair Boats and Service all makes of motors

January-February, 1954 2 1

Page 22: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

Miles Apart yet Heart-to-Heart

When you're far away from someone, there's nothing like a telephone call to bring you near. The sound of a warm, familiar voice and the eager exchange of personal news is almost as satisfying as an actual visit.

Near or far, wherever they are, friends appreciate your calling. Long Distance calls cost little—especially after six every evening and all day Sunday. Then you can talk from Cleveland to Pittsburgh for

as little as 45^; Chicago to Omaha for only 85^; New York to Los Angeles for only $2. (These are the 3-minute, station-to-station rates and do not include fed­eral excise tax.)

Somewhere today there is someone who would like to hear your voice.

YOU SAVE TIME WHEN YOU CALL BY NUMBER

When you're calling out-of-town, it will speed your call if you can give the operator the num­ber you want. It's easier, too.

22 THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

I

Page 23: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

A NEW RECORD in attendance was set at the December 3 meeting of the Georgia Tech Club of New York held at the Reeves Sound Studio. President Van Leer spoke to the crowd of 110 on "The Georgia Tech of 1953." Other guests from the

with the CLUBS MILWAUKEE, WIS.

The Georgia Tech Club of Milwaukee held a stag party on December 5. Fea­tures of the evening's entertainment were an audition of the Tech record album, "Songs of the Ramblin' Recks" and a viewing of the movie, "A Visit to Georgia Tech."

During the business meeting, the fol­lowing officers were elected to guide the club for 1954: James Winette, '45, presi­dent; Terryl Montgomery, '22, vice-president, and W. Hackett Emory, Jr., '28, secretary-treasurer.

RALEIGH, N. C. President Paul Lyman, '23, presided

over the ladies' night supper meeting of the Raleigh Georgia Tech Club held December 11. During the business ses­sion, the 1954 officers were elected. They are W. C. Pierson, '28, president; Tom Anderson, '43, vice-president, and M. Ray Walker, '50, secretary-treasurer. The meeting featured the film, "High­lights of 1952."

NEW ORLEANS, LA. A re-organizational meeting of the

New Orleans Georgia Tech Club was held at the New Orleans Country Club on December 1. 46 alumni attended the stag dinner meeting and elected the following officers for the coming year:

Fred Fuchs, '36, president; James Ryan, '37, vice-president, and Bill Treadway, Jr., '50, secretary-treasurer. During the business meeting, the members voted to sponsor an open house for visiting alumni during the Sugar Bowl week­end.

Alumni Secretary Roane Beard spoke on the National Alumni Association, latest developments at Tech and the football ticket situation. After the fea­ture talk, the football film, "Highlights of 1952," was shown to the group. A question and answer period closed out the highly sucessful meeting.

KNOXVILLE, TENN. H. E. Dennison, head of Tech's Indus­

trial Management School, was the fea­ture speaker at the November 18 meet­ing of the Knoxville Georgia Tech Club. Mr. Dennison's humerous talk on Geor­gia Tech and the men it has produced was well received by the club members and guests. Films of the Georgia Tech-Notre Dame game were shown and nar­rated by the editor to wind up the meeting.

During the short business meeting presided over by President Joe Nun-nally, '35, Haley Keister, '49, and John Kirkland, '49, were elected to fill the vice-president post left vacant by the departure of Hank Klosterman, '50.

N E W O F F I C E R S of the Kingsport, Tenn. Alumni Club are shown at the Novem­ber 17 meeting, left to right are: E. R. Seay, '49, secretary-treasurer; D. A. Henderson, '38, president and Jim Hud­son, '48, vice-president. Mov­ies of the Tech-Florida game were shown to the members and guests. Special guests for the meeting were the three local high school football coaches.

administration were Professor Herman Dickert, head of Tech's Textile Engineering School and Colonel Leslie Zsuffa, Tech's director of public relations. Hazard Reeves, '28, president of the club was host for the meeting.

AUGUSTA, GEORGIA T5he Georgia Tech Alumni Club of

Augusta met at the Red Lion Restau­rant on December 7, with President Allan Matthews wielding the gavel. 78 members and guests turned out to hear feature speakers Dr. Hershel Cudd, di­rector of Tech's Engineering Experi­ment Station, and Coach Tonto Cole­man, the assistant athletic director at the "flats."

Dr. Cudd discussed the work of the ex­periment station and the benefits it was giving to Southern industry. Coach Coleman narrated the Tech-Duke game and gave forth with a few comments on Tech's athletic program. Both speakers were enthusiastically received by the audience.

During the business meeting, Frank Dennis, Sr., '17, reported on the prog­ress of the club's scholarship comittee. His detailed report included the fact that the Augusta Club scholarship is now open to any student in the Augusta t rade area and will be limited to the Co-op program at Tech with a grant of $350.

Paul Bailey, '42, conducted the "Bai­ley Lottery" and the door prizes went to Francis Saxon, '23; R. Floyd Gambill, '50, and C. G. "Red" Freeman, a loyal Tech supporter who was a guest of the club for the meeting.

SUGAR BOWL PARTY The New Orleans Georgia Tech Club

hosted over 200 visiting alumni at a pre-Sugar Bowl cocktail party on Thursday afternoon, December 31. Honored guests at the affair, held in the International House, were President Van Leer, Coach Dodd and his staff, Alumni Secretary Beard and Athletic Association Business Manager Ector.

PHILADELPHIA LUNCHEON MEETINGS

The Philadelphia Georgia Tech Club is sponsoring a series of informal lunch­eons to be held the second Tuesday of each month at 12:30 P. M., at the Engi­neers Club. All alumni who happen to be in Philadelphia on these dates are invited to attend the luncheons. No res­ervations are needed.

January-February, 1954 23

Page 24: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

— 35 ^ « 5 ^

"*• ^ ** tS *•** ** *l ** ^ « S 5 ? •* »

NEWS OF THE ALUMNI by, L^ladded v %

5 » £ * S -» O- *" ! t S-

» S s a ~ S " > «. - ~ - * S = s s: <£ a S S § j§ 1 £ =

' O R ^ r ' Spencer B- Atkinson, '08, recently WO received the Albert H. Ketchum Memo­

rial Award, the "Nobel Prize" in the orthodon­tics field. Dr. Spencer is head of the depart­ment of graduate orthodontics, University of Southern California's School of Dentistry, Pasadena, Calif.

Mr. and Mrs. William Rich are shown (background) as they set sail, Dec 4, on the S. S. EXCALIBUR on a 47-day Medi­terranean voyage. Mr. Rich, '10, is Vice-President of Jacobs Pharmacy Co., and is also on the Board of Trustees of the Alumni Foundation.

/ | ^ Edward J. Puckhaber, '17, died Novem-' * ber 29 in a Dallas, Texas hospital after

a long illness. At the time of his death he was a professor of Business Law at Southern Methodist University. He had been on the staff there since 1946. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Rachel Puckhaber, 7042 Turtle Creek Ed., Dallas; daughter, Sue Puckhaber, and one brother.

in | Col. John W. Childs, '21, has been as-•" signed to District Headquarters, Ga.

Military District, 699 Ponce de Leon Ave., N. E., Atlanta. He will serve as District Chief. Col. Childs was director of Non-Resident In­struction at Ft. Benning prior to this assign­ment.

" i t Robert T. (Bobby) Jones, '22, has been •*•* named Man of the South for 1953. He

was also named to the South's Hall of Fame for 1953. His mailing address is 1425 C & S Bank Bldg., Atlanta.

"il **• William Brosnan, '23, executive vice-•"" ' president of the Southern Railway Sys­

tem, Washington, D. C, was presented a spe­cial achievement award plaque on Noveniber 21 at the ODK banquet hall on the campus. The presentation was made through Phi Sig­ma Kappa.

Tom P. Malone, '23, has been elected presi­dent of the Albany Kiwanis Club. Mr. Malone is in the real estate business in Albany, Ga.

"%A Willian Henry (Bill) Shippen, '24, died ~" unexpectedly at his home, Nov. 10, 1953,

of a heart attack. He was an aviation editor and feature writer on the Washington Star, Washington, D. C, at time of death. During World War two he was director of Public Re­lations at Bell Aircraft, Marietta, Ga. He had been with the Washington Star since 1927. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Frances Shippen, and five sisters.

' O R D- ^u^an Reid, '28, died November 14 • " at his home in Atco, Georgia. No fur­

ther information was available at this writing.

/ O l Bernarde E. Anderson, '31, has been ^ ' promoted to production superintendent

at DuPont's Edge Moor, Del., pigments plant. He has been with DuPont since 1933. Mr. An­derson's address is 2219 West 17th St., Wil­mington, Del.

' 3 4 Robert Tharpe, '34, president of the At-lanta Mortgage Bankers Assn. and part­

ner in the mortgage firm of Tharpe & Brooks, Inc., was recently elected vice-president of the Mortgage Bankers Assn. of America.

'VT BORN TO: Charles R. Simons, 37, and * * Mrs. Simons, a daughter, Eloise Ellis,

Nov. 25. Their home address is 1411 Riverside Dr., Gainesville, Ga.

MARRIED: John Stinson Cook., '37, to Miss Willnita Wyatt. The wedding took place in December. Mr. Cook is associated with the Life Ins. Co. of Ga. in Atlanta. Their home address is 89 Montgomery Ferry Dr., Atlanta, Ga.

' 3 8 Raymond G. Davis, '38, has been pro-'*** moted to the rank of Colonel, USMC.

Col. Davis was awarded the Medal of Honor for heroic actions in Korea during the with­drawal from the Chosin Reservoir in 1950. He also holds the Navy Cross, Silver Star, Legion of Merit and Bronze Star. Col. Davis is pres­ently serving as head of operations and train­ing headquarters, USMC, Washington, D. C. His home address is 128 So. Fenwick St., Ar­lington, Va.

' 3 Q MARRIED: Edward Reid Flynt, '39, to "*~ Miss Carolyn Williams, Dec. 14. Mr.

Flynt is a research engineer at the Ga. Tech Experiment Station.

' 4 0 M A R E I E D : James H. Dukes, '40, to Miss ^ " Thelma Chance, Nov. 28. Their home

address is 126 Second Ave., Decatur, Ga.

'A | J. T. Bayer, Jr., '41, has been appointed division staff engineer, office of the Fla.

Chief Engr., Southern Bell Tel. Co. BORN TO: Churchill Pomeroy Goree III, '41,

and Mrs. Goree, a daughter, Winnie Wilson. November 25. Their home address is P. O. Box 41, Doraville, Ga.

Robert W. Gibeling, '41, has opened an of­fice for the practice of architecture at 157 Peachtree St., N. W., Atlanta. He has prac­ticed architecture for a good many years in this area, serving with several prominent At­lanta architectural firms.

Lt. Col. George J. Holly, Jr., '41, is now com­manding officer of the Trois Fontaines Ord­nance Depot, Trois Fontaines, France. His mailing address is Hdqr. 37th Ord. Bn., APO 216-3, % P.M., New York, N. Y.

' 4 3 MAERIED: Robert Lamar Beard, '43, to Miss Betty Eleanor Letzer, Dec. 5. Mr.

Beard is with the Tennessee Eastman Co., Kingsport, Tenn.

BORN TO: Robert W. Goree, '43, and Mis. Goree, a son, Robert Wilson, Jr., Nov. 23. Their home address is 1944 Ardmore Rd., N. W., Atlanta.

William B. Turner, '43, has been appointed to the Board of Trustees of the Georgia Tech Research Institute. He will serve on the board as one of the two members elected by the Alumni Association. Mr. Turner heads three Columbus, Georgia firms: the W. C. Bradley Co., Bradley Realty & Investment Co., & De­velopers-Investors, Inc.

Journal-Constitution, Bill Wilson '33 SQUAD REUNION — the first Tech team to play Duke held a reunion in Atlanta on Friday night, November 20. The 'Jackets upset the Blue Devils that year to spoil Duke's hopes of a Rose Bowl trip. The boys were entertained by Bob Tharpe, '31, all-Southern tackle on the team. Front (L. to R.) Morris Katz, end; John Poole, center; Eddie Laws, guard; Bob Tharpe, tackle; Carl Shaw, center, and Oscar Thomp­son, end. Second row: Phil Slaughter, end; Gonk Gardner, tackle; Jimmy Slocum. end; Norris Dean, halfback; Chick Galloway, halfback. Back row: Shorty Roberts, halfback; Tom Spratlin, end; Jack Phillips, fullback; Wink Davis, halfback; Jerry Perkerson, halfback; Pug Boyd, halfback, and Dave Wilcox, guard.

24 THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Page 25: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

A Guy O. Whelchel, '44, has been ap-^ ^ pointed manager of marketing admin­

istration and research at General Electric's Electronics Div., Syracuse, N. Y. He has been with the company since 1947.

iAK Reginald F. Pippen, Jr., '45, has re-^ a cently joined the legal office, Redstone

Arsenal, Huntsville, Ala., as patent attorney Prior to joining Redstone he was patent at­torney at the U. S. Navy Electronics Lab in California.

• A-w Howard H. Callaway, '47, was recently ^ ' named to the Ga. State Board of Re­

gents to fill the unexpired term of his father, who has recently resigned. The term will ex­pire January 1, 1958.

MARRIED: William E. Huie, Jr., '47, to Miss Doris Camp, Dec. 28. Mr. Huie is employed in the missile division of the McDonald Aeronau­tical Corp., St. Louis, Mo.

• AO Joseph E. Alexander, '48, is an electri-" ° cal engineer with DuPont's Sabine Riv­

er Works near Orange, Texas. His home ad­dress is 2311 Alden, Orange, Texas.

ENGAGED: Henry Atkinson Dick, '48, to Miss Marian Knowles. The wedding will take place April 1. Mr. Dick was graduated from the Va. Theological Seminary and is now serving as assistant rector of Christ Episcopal Church in Charlotte, N. C.

Frederick B. Cornish, '48, is now special as­sistant to the president of the Brown Instru­ment Div. of Minneapolis-Honeywell Co., Philadelphia, Pa. His mailing address is 189-B W. 65th Ave., Philadelphia 20, Pa.

ENGAGED: Mendel T. Gordon, '48, to Miss Helen Citron. The wedding will take place February 7. Mr. Gordon is employed by the Ga. Tech Experiment Station.

BORN TO: Albert D. Smaller, '48, and Mrs. Smaller, a daughter, Elizabeth Caroline, Nov. 4. Their home address is 2141 No. John Russel Cir„ Elkins Park, Pa.

i AQ MARRIED: Lt. Tom M. Arnold, Jr., '49, of ^ ' Kennesaw, Ga., to Miss Ruth Schlan-

genhaufer of Munich, Germany. The wedding took place at the Bitburg Officers Club, Bit-burg AFB in the French Zone of Germany. The couple plan to return to the states in February.

Lt. Albert K. Gilbert, Jr., '49, recently re­ceived the Bronze Star for his work as gen­eral duty dental officer with the 120th Medi­cal Bn., 45th Inf. Div. in Korea.

George Kirk, '49, has been promoted to Div. Mgr., Republic Sales, Div. of the Gen. Shoe Corp. in Nashville, Tenn. He has been with the company since 1949.

Leo W. (Hank) Klosterman, '49, is now sales engineer with Armo Drainage and Metal Products, Inc. His home address is Rt. 6, Wymberley, Savannah, Ga.

ENGAGED: J. Erskine Loue, Jr., '49, to Miss Gay McLawhorn. The wedding is to take place February 6. Mr. Love is with the Atlanta Film Converting Co. in Atlanta.

Ken Morrow, '49, is now with the Richfield Oil Corp. His new address is 3244 Sawtelle Blvd., Los Angeles 34, Cal.

BORN TO: Henry L. Whitehead, '49, and Mrs. Whitehead, a daughter, Regina Annette, Dec. 27. Their home address is 518V4 Hermitage Ave., Charlotte, N. C.

L. W. KLOSTERMAN, '49

/ E A Lawrence M. Merl, '50, is on the tech-" '* ' nical staff of the U. S. Naval Ordnance

Lab, White Oak, Silver Spring 19, Md. Lt. William H. Saunders 111, '50, has quali­

fied as a carrier pilot after training on the USS Monterey in the Gulf of Mexico. His per­manent mailing address is 21 Nassau Dr., New Orleans, La.

Lt. Gale V. Watt, '50. recently completed a course at the Guided Missile School, Ft. Bliss, Texas, and has reported to the U. S. Fleet Training Center Naval Base, Norfolk, Va.

ENGAGED: Daniel D. Bradach, '50, to Miss Carol Gray. The wedding will take place in February. Mr. Bradach is employed by Black-stock's, Inc., in Atlanta. . . . Carlos A. Ygartua, '50, to Miss Sarah Hutson. Mr. Ygartua is in Naval OCS at Newport, R. I.

MARRIED: Jeff Perry Knight, '50, to Miss Nita Joyce Blankenship, Dec. 11, in Alexandria, Va. Mr. Knight is an electronics engineer with the Melpor Corp. Their home address is 1205 N. Pitt St., Apt. 35, Alexandria, Va. . . . WaVace J. Richards, '50, to Miss Rose Mary Durden, Oct. 10. Their address is 1319V2 E. 39th St., Savannah, Ga.

BIRTHS: Bobby Joe Anderson, '50, and Mrs. Anderson, a son, Stanley Eugene, Nov. 16. . . . Their address is 454 Rock Springs Rd., N. E., Atlanta. . . . Witt I. Langstaff, '50, and Mrs. Langstaff, a daughter, Jamie Louise. Nov. 29. Their address is 2877 Kenwood Dr., Kingsport, Tenn.

/ E l Lt. Victor J. Caruso, '51, has been trans-3 I ferred from Redstone Arsenal to White

Sands Proving Ground, N. M. His permanent mailing address is 2307 Walnut St., Tampa, Fla.

Lt. James D. Garrett, '51. was recently awarded the Bronze Star in Korea. He was cited for meritorious service as communica­tions officer in the Third Bn. Hdqrs. Co. His permanent mailing address is 1605 Dennis Rd., Chattanooga, Tenn.

Anthony D. Kolk, Jr., '51, is on the staff of Horizons, Inc., Cleveland, Ohio, as a research associate in the Metallurgy Dept. His address is 3730 E. Antisdale, So. Euclid, Ohio.

Lt. Cecil L. Ramsey, '51, recently completed a guided missile course at Redstone Arsenal and has been transferred to Ft. Bliss, Texas. His permanent mailing address is 224 Car-rington Ct., Huntington, W. Va.

ENGAGED: Thomas R. Hitz, Jr., '51, to Miss Betty Sacre. The wedding will take dace in February. Mr. Hitz is employed by Robert & Co., 96 Poplar St., Atlanta. . . . Bruce Jones Sams, Jr., '51, to Miss Adele King Risley of Savannah. Mr. Sams is a junior at Harvard Medical School. The wedding date will be an­nounced later.

MARRIED: Herbert James Kizer, Jr., '51, to Miss Betty Stockton, Jan. 9. Their ma'ling ad­dress is 111 Martin St., Jefferson, Ga. . . . Robert Franklin Sailors. Jr., '51. to Janina Gluszcynski of Rio de Janeiro, Dec. 1. Mr. Sailors has been connected with a real estate firm in Rio de Janeiro. The couple plan to return to the states in February. . . . Albert F. Stanleton, '51, to Miss Mary Scarborough, Dec. 29. Mr. Starjleton is a mechanical engi­neer at Robins AFB, Warner Robins. Ga.

BIRTHS: Charles S. Bond, '51, and Mrs. Bond, a son. Turner Dixon. Dec. 21. Mr. Bond is an aeronautical engr. -with ARO. Their horo<= ad­dress is 315 Enterprise Ave., Tullahoma. Tenn. . . . Roy H. Harris, '51, and Mrs. Harris, a daughter. Kathryn Ann, Dec. 5. Mr. Harris is with the Hazeltme Electronics Corn. The'r address is 224-39-A 64th Ave., Bayside, L. I., New York.

/ i j « Ross Chen, '52, is now with the I. E. a - * Deot. of Leeds & Northup Co., 4901 Stenton Ave.. Philadelphia 44. Pa.

James A. Collins, '52, USAF. has been in the hosoital since last August suffering from a back iniury received in an accident at that time. He would have finished Flight School in October and been commissioned. His per­manent mailing address is 27 Fourth Ave., SW. Cairo. Ga.

David T. Horton. '52. is on the technical staff of the IT. S. Naval Ordnance Lab., White Oak. Silver Soring, Md.

George C. Reed. Jr.. '52. died November 6. He was a civil engineer with North American Aviation. His mother. Mrs. George C. Re»d, Sr., resides at the Beverly Hotel, Staunton, Va.

Lt. Robert A. Samoden, '52, is serving in Korea as storage officer with the 55th Ord­nance Ammunition Co. His wife. Jeanne, lives at 208 Center St.. W. Haven, Conn.

Marvin E. Wallace, '52. is on the technical staff of the TJ. S. Naval Ordnance Lab., White Oak, Silver Soring. Md.

Lt. Wiley E. Williams, '52, is serving in Ko­rea with the 24th Infantry Div.. where he is a radio officer in the Sig. Co. His wife lives at Rt. 1. Thomasville, Ga.

ENGAGED: S1. Edwin Dyer, '52, to Miss Mary Lou Morris. The "wedding will take place in the spring. Mr. Dver is with the Armstrong Cork Co. His mailing address is 300 12th Ave. So., Nashville, Tenn. . . . Nyrarn Lee Younn, '52, to Miss Jackie Moorhead. The weddine is scheduled for February 6. Mr. Young is with Allis Chalmers in Richmond, Va.

When Ed K. Waters graduated from Illinois Wesleyan ( '37) , he first took a job with the meat-packing industry; then later became associated with a large retail sales organization.

But these did not offer the kind of opportunity Mr. Waters was seeking. He had a desire to serve people and, at the same time, build his own business.

When he turned to a career in life insurance, he began to hear more and more about the great training program of New England Mutual, "the insurance man's life insurance company." He con­tacted this company.

"This was the smartest move I ever made," Mr. Waters says. "I now have my own business, independence, and unlimited earning possibilities, as well as opportunity to expand my services."

It could be a "smart move" for you to investigate the opportunities offered at New England Mutual. Mail the coupon below for a booklet in which 15 men tell why they chose a career with New England Mutual.

NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL Box 333 Boston 17, Mass.

Please send me, without cost or obl igat ion, your booklet, "Why We Chose New England Mutual.

Name

City- _Zone _ S / o / e

The NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL Lite Insurance Company of Boston

The company that founded mutual life insurance in America —1835

January-February, 1954

Page 26: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

MARRIED: Thomas Edward McGouirk, '52, to Miss Mary Jane Catron. Mr. McGouirk is as­sociated with Wiedman & Singleton Engrg. Co. in Aiken, S. C. . . . Frank Ward Reilly, Jr., '52, to Miss Catherine Gay, Jan. 9. Mr. Reilly is with Sherman & Reilly in Chattanooga.

/e»» Lt. Thomas E. Methvin, '53, has been a ' * assigned to the Hdqrs. 3rd Armored Div. at Fort Knox, Ky.

Lt. Ralph A. Youngblood, Jr., '53, is a mem­ber of the 97th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Group at Okinawa. His wife, Noleka, lives at Pooler, Ga.

ENGAGED: Bert R. Astrup, '53, to Miss Mary Elizabeth Hurst. The wedding date will be an­nounced later. Mr. Astrup was with the Ford Motor Co.. Dearborn, Mich., prior to entering the service in December. . . . Roy Brannen Cooper, '53, to Miss Virginia Hudgins. The wedding date will be announced later. Mr. Cooper is employed by the Georgia Tech Ex­periment Station. . . . Lt. Leslie Merritt Ham-ill, '53, to Miss Allardyce Armstrong of Miami, Fla. The wedding will take place in the spring. Lt. Hamill is with the 3305th Pilot Training Squadron at Maiden AFB, Mo. Miss Arm­strong's father, Mr. John Randolph Armstrong, is a Tech graduate, class of '24. . . . Jerry Fuller James, '53, to Miss Su Ellen Holliman. The wedding date will be announced later. Mr. James is attending Naval OCS at New­port, R. I.

MARRIED: Lt. Robert S. Brandt, '53, to Miss Elizabeth Gordy, Dec. 28. They reside in San Angelo, Texas, where Lt. Brandt is stationed at the Goodfellow AFB. . . . Lt. Robert Clay Gillespie, '53, to Miss Sandra Weaver, Dec. 20. Lt. Gillespie is stationed at Ft. Benning, Ga. . . . Osce Peebles Roberts, '53, to Miss Virginia Gwynn Clack, Nov. 26. Mr. Roberts is in Graduate School here at Tech.

BORN TO: Franklin D. Hurst, '53, and Mrs. Hurst, a daughter, Frances Lynn, Oct. 1. Their address is 357 Bayshore Dr., Tampa, Fla. iCA MARRIED: Ben Frank Brian, '54, to Miss a ^ Betty Lee Whelchel, Dec. 18. Mr. Brian will report to Wright Patterson AFB on Feb. 15. His permanent mailing address is 204 Nash Cir., Birmingham, Ala. . . . Virgil Collins Chew, '54, to Miss Charlotte Parker, Dec. 27. Mr. Chew is with Tenn. Eastman, Kingsport, Tenn. . . . James Eric Feltham, '54, to Miss Elizabeth Mickle, Dec. 29. Mr. Feltham is at­tending Graduate School at Georgia Tech.

Today's Architects & Engineers

Set the Shape of America's Tomorrows

ROBERT AND COMPANY ASSOCIATES

(jTfre&itectj? and Gziyizieers ATLANTA.

MITCHELL HEADS FOUNDATION Walter M. Mitchell, '23, prominent

Atlanta businessman, has been elected president of the Georgia Tech Alumni Foundation for the year beginning Jan­uary 1, 1954. The trustees of the foun­dation also announced the election of John P. Baum, '24, of Milledgeville as vice-president and William T. Rich, '10, of Atlanta as treasurer of the corpora­tion for the coming year. R. J. (Jack) Thiesen, '10, is executive secretary of the foundation.

Mr. Mitchell is vice-president and di­rector of the Draper Corporation, tex­tile machinery manufacturers. He is a former Tech football star and the father of Tech's freshman quarterback, Wade Mitchell. Mr. Baum is vice-president of J. P. Stevens and Company of Milledge­ville, woolen goods manufacturers. Mr. Rich is vice-president of Jacob's Phar­macy Company and a director of Rich's, Incorporated, of Atlanta.

c m • » • " , 9

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STEEL CITY—Out le t Boxes and Fittings

WAGNER—E.M.T . Fittings

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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. j , t . DAWES; '18

26 THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Page 27: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

| r Awards that foretell your gain Chemicals from coal hydrogenation. . .

. . . acclaimed the 1953 Chemical Engineering Achievement!

IN 1933 Carbide received the first Chemical Engineer­ing Achievement Award. This recognized the beginning of commercial production of much-needed chemicals from petroleum and natural gas—which proved to be the beginning of the American petrochemical industry.

HISTORY REPEATS—Now, just twenty years later, Carbide has received the 1953 Chemical Engineering Achievement Award for "the first successful produc­tion of chemicals from coal by a high pressure hydro­genation process."

In minutes, coal becomes gases and liquids rich in needed chemicals—"one of the major contributions in this century to the well-being of us all."

Some of these chemicals are used in making plastics, synthetic rubber, pharmaceuticals, vitamins, and many other things. Others are completely new and hold great promise.

FOURTH RECOGNITION —Carbide is the first two-time individual recipient of this award. It also is the fourth time the people of Carbide have been recog­nized, for they shared in two previous group awards—in 1943 for synthetic rubber, and in 1946 for atomic energy.

TRUE SIGNIFICANCE—As in all Chemical Engineer­ing Achievement Awards, coal hydrogenation was recog­nized not as the accomplishment of any one individual but as the result of the cooperative efforts of many.

The people of Union Carbide appreciate the recog­nition of their achievement by the distinguished Com­mittee of Award, composed of senior chemical engi­neering educators.

U N I O N C A R B I D E AND CARBON CORPORATION 3 0 E A S T 4 2 N D S T R E E T HHE N E W Y O R K 1 7 , N . Y.

SYNTHETIC ORGANIC CHEMICALS

EVEREADY Flashlights and Batteries BAKELITE, VINYLITE, and KRENE Plastics

UCC's Trade-marked Products include ELECTROMET Alloys and Metals HAYNES STELLITE Alloys PRESTONE Anti-Freeze LlNDE Oxygen

PYROFAxGas DYNEL' Textile Fibers UNION Carbide NATIONAL Carbons PREST-O-LITE Acetylene AcHESON Electrodes

January-February^ 1954 27

Page 28: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 32, No. 03 1954

Enjoy Coke.. • ice cold

Right from the bottle

"COKE" IS A REGISTERED TRADE-MARK. COPYRIGHT 1952, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY