Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 38, No. 04 1959

24
DECEMBER 1959 EORGIA TEC 1 * 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 * 1 J ^^^^*/*^*l < 11 m NO SMG- 11 I ^E*^ in J if 5 1 i The Ghosts of the Administration Building See Page 10

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Transcript of Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 38, No. 04 1959

Page 1: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 38, No. 04 1959

DECEMBER 1959

EORGIA TEC 1 * 1

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The Ghosts of the Administration Building See Page 10

Page 2: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 38, No. 04 1959

THARPE & BROOKS I N C O R P O R A T E D

M O R T G A G E B A N K E R S

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C O L U M B U S

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S A V A N N A H

G E O R G I A

ROBERT THARPE '34 J. L. BROOKS '39

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A ALONG IN EARLY DECEMBER when the dying agonies of a year are most notice­able, our thoughts drift back over the past 12 months. One of man's greatest assets is his ability to remember only the better things over the long run, while another is that each year for each man is a different proposition. The things that one man will remember, another will dis­miss as trivia, for no two of us travel the same path.

For us, 1959 was an awkward and try­ing year—a year designed for frustration. Yet, there were things worth remember­ing:

The pulse-quickening play of Tech's two great little guards—Blemker and Randall—as they grew to national figures in a sport tailored for giants.

That feeling of joy as you are driven away from a hospital after a couple of weeks of misery. And the tears that just a sunset can bring after you have first encountered the lingering doubt that you might never see one again.

The choked sound coming through a telephone as your dedicated editorial as­sistant tells you her only son may have polio. Then the elation of thanks when after a month of paralysis he finally walks again.

Joe Pittard, leaning on a fungo bat, making a decision that wins a ball game.

The look of the campus on a spring evening and the sounds issuing from the Old Shop Building as the Evening School gets underway.

* * * A NEW YORK IN JUNE.

Anne Bancroft's sensitive portrayal in "Two for the Seesaw," and the way she reacted to her final curtain calls on the night she left the show after 18 months.

The magic of Gwen Verdon on any stage and the sound of that little-girl voice coming from that big-girl body.

The roar of the crowd as Johansson floored Patterson for the first time and the strange diamond-look of Yankee Stadium at night.

The soft quiet of the campus on an evening in summer.

The feeling you get when you open your mail after a three-week trip and find that the Alumnus has finally placed in the national competition.

The job that Bob Eskew did in his first season as athletic business manager

and the way he stood up and was counted under the pressure of the "Wheel Chair" incident that started during the Auburn game and seemed to continue forever.

The energy of Fred W. Ajax and the dedication of George C. Griffin as they go about the daily grind.

The gifted prose of Jimmy Cannon of the New York Journal-American.

The smile on Ed Danforth's well-lined face when he was made an honorary member of the Alumni Association and the lines that he spoke: "I know what they are saying in Athens. They're say­ing, 'that so-and-so was always a Tech man, it's about time they acknowledged i t "

A THE GRACEFUL WAY Bobby Dodd took some of the greatest victories and bitterest defeats of his career.

The way that Dr. Edwin D. Harrison handled the crowd of students at the first all-student meeting in modern times, and his devotion to Georgia Tech.

The press box at South Bend and the way Charlie Callahan runs it.

The sound of Bob Scobey's band in a dixieland club in Chicago. And the taste of the food at Danny's in New York and the Club Bali in Daytona.

The strength that Deans Paul Weber and Jesse Mason bring to two of the toughest jobs on this campus. And the quiet way Roane Beard goes about his seemingly endless parade of tasks.

The friendship of people like Joe Guthridge, Tech's placement director, and assistant coaches, Whitey Urban and Charlie Tate.

A THE FEEL OF your first Leica. The growth of Bill Diehl as a photo-

journalist. "An Evening with Fred Astaire" with

your family seeing "Old Dad's" great­ness for the first time.

Maxie the magnificient — rawboned, red-faced, growling—standing guard over the fortunes of the Jackets from his line-backer's spot.

The smell of ink . . . the sound of presses . . . the smile of Jane and the way she can communicate with a few strokes of a brush where you fail with thousands of taps on a typewriter.

'Bat- HJaJU***.,A. Tech Alumnus

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December, 1959

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yu DECEMBER, 1959

/((mm CONTENTS

VOLUME 38 • NUMBER 4

2. RAMBLIN'—in which the editor looks back with a fondness on the blessings of the year, 1959.

5. SYMPOSIUM ON SCIENCE—in the first of a new series Dr. Vernon Crawford talks about the relationship of science and Christianity.

10. GHOSTS—the past of the Administration Build­ing is graphically portrayed in a fantasy through the camera of Bill Diehl, Jr.

12. THE CLASSROOM BUILDING—the editor and new photographer Harley Ferguson unlimber their cameras for a look at a long-awaited building.

14. THROUGH THE SIDE DOOR to the Gator Bowl—the Jackets lose two out of three but look so good losing that they gain a bowl bid.

16. WITH THE CLUBS—picture reports.

18. NEWS BY CLASSES—an alumni gazette.

Officers of the Georgia Tech National Alumni Association

Joe L. Jennings, '23, Pres. R. A. Siegel, '36, VP Morris M. Bryan, '41, VP Frank Willett, '45, Treas.

W. Roane Beard, '40, Executive Secretary

Bob Wallace, Jr., '49, Editor Bill Diehl, Jr., Chief Photographer

Tom Hall, '59, Advertising Mary Peeks, Assistant

THE COVER

On the very last day of classes in Tech's old Administration Building, Bill Diehl catches the ghost-like flavor of over 70 years in a portrait of a fresh­man moving through the dark of the.^hird floor while a class­room discussion takes place on the second. For more on the building and its ghosts see page 10 of this final issue of 1959.

Cover Photo-Bill Diehl, Jr.

Published eight times a year — February, Marc.l, May, July. September, October, November and December — by the Georgia Tech National Alumni Association, Georgia Institute of Technology; 225 North Ave­nue, Atlanta, Georgia. Subscription price (35c per copy) included in the membership dues. Second class postage paid at Atlanta, Georgia.

SEVERAL ALUMNI have expressed a desire to be kept informed of Tech's entrance requirements as they

are upgraded. One of the major changes that will take place in this area has just been announced by Registrar William Carmichael.

Beginning with the summer term of 1960, Georgia Tech will have two different sets of admission require­ments: one for students planning to major in engineer­ing or science (Group I), and one for those planning to major in architecture, industrial management, or tex­tiles (Group II). Here are the new requirements:

GROUP I (Engineering or Science)

English 4 Algebra 2 Plane Geometry . . . 1 Trigonometry . . . . % History 1 Science 2 Others 6

Group II (Arch., I.M., Textiles)

English 4 Algebra 2 Plane Geometry . . . 1 History 1 Science 2 Others 6

Those in Group I are urged to take 1/2 year of ad­vanced algebra and a year each of chemistry and physics.

In addition to the scholastic units mentioned above, Georgia Tech presently uses the following criteria to judge its high school applicants:

(1) Graduation from an accredited high school. (2) Overall high school point average (over 75 per­

cent of Tech's 1,230 freshmen this year were in the upper third of their high school class).

(3) Results of College Entrance Examination Board Tests.

(4) Recommendation of principal, teachers, and alumni.

Georgia Tech reserves the right in every case to re­ject any applicant whose general records and attitude do not predict success in the Institute's environment not­withstanding the completion of other requirements.

Applicants must comply with such other procedures, including personal interviews and psychological or other tests, as may be necessary to determine the applicant's general fitness for admission to the Institute.

Acceptance or rejection of each and every application will be determined by the Director of Admissions, sub­ject to the right of appeal as provided in the by-laws of the Board of Regents of the University System.

If you require further information or need applica­tion blanks, please write the Registrar's office.

Tech Alumnus

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SYMPOSIUM IENCE

In honor oj the 75th Anniversary of the founding of the Georgia Institute of

Technology, T H E A L U M N U S presents a special series on the philosophical aspects

of science. Here is the first of the eight articles which will appear in this series

SCIENCE AND CHRISTIANITY by Vernon D. Crawford, Professor of Physics

I OR THE FIRST SIXTEEN CENTURIES of the Christian era the history of western man has been largely determined by the impact of

Christianity on the older forms of thought. The Christian influence began as an intimate

experience in the lives of a handful of people close­ly associated with the Master. Yet, in the short space of three hundred years, (and in spite of the persecutions to which Christians were subjected) it grew to the extent that it could successfully challenge the might of the most powerful empire the world had known, the empire of Rome. It well may be that the Christianizing of the Roman em-

December, 1959

pire resulted more from practical political con­siderations than from the sincere religious conver­sion of the majority of the Roman people. Even granting this, one cannot but be amazed at the virility of a faith which in three short centuries could show such a growth in the number of its ad­herents, nominal though many of them undoubt­edly were.

But, an even greater evidence of strength was still to be manifested. When the Roman empire eventually collapsed under the influences of intern­al corruptions and external pressures, a detached

Continued on page 6

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SCIENCE AND CHRISTIANITY — cont.

observer (if there were any at that time) must surely have been convinced that he had witnessed the end of Christianity as an organized religion. But, although the dark ages succeeded in burying, for a time, everything else pertaining to the Medi­terranean cultures, the body of Christianity refused to be interred. In countless Christian monasteries throughout Europe and Asia the flame which Jesus of Nazareth had ignited continued to burn in the hearts of a few men. As a result the Church, through its monasteries, succeeded in preserving not only the body of the faith but many of the fruits of the Greek and Roman cultures as well. Only because of this custodian service was the startling success of the Renaissance possible.

I N the middle ages, and of course later, the Chris­tian Church had a determining effect upon the lives of most of the individuals of the western world as well as upon the politics of the states of Europe and, after their founding, of the states of North and South America. So it may in truth be stated that for sixteen centuries the history of west­ern man has been the history of Christianity and the Christian Church.

What of science during this period? Despite the fact that the Persians, the Greeks, particularly the Arabs, and in this hemisphere the Mayans, had made some remarkable discoveries in astronomy and mathematics, science—in the sense in which we use the term today—may be said to date from the beginning of the seventeenth century. If the discovery of the scientific method may be at­tributed to any individual, that individual was Galileo.

Others, notably Sir Francis Bacon and Wil­liam Gilbert, appreciated the importance of ob­servation and experiment to the development of an understanding of the ultimate nature of things. But, it was Galileo who first exemplified the true spirit of the scientist. He combined the intuition which enabled him to ask meaningful questions of nature with the ingenuity to devise experiments designed to provide the answers; the careful atten­tion to the pertinent details of his experiments; the ability to recognize and to minimize the anom­

alies introduced by extraneous influences; the analy­tical ability to formulate his results mathematically; and the persistence to test the predictions of his theories. His careful researches into the laws gov­erning moving bodies, that branch of physics called kinematics, stands as a model which many who seek to serve the cause of science still contem­plate with profit.

Galileo was a devout Christian and certainly had no intention of undermining the Church in anything that he did. However, when he shifted the subject matter of his researches from the field of kinematics to astronomy, around which church­men had built a formidable body of ecclesiastical philosophy, he precipitated a storm which was to have long-lasting effects. Specifically, Galileo's re­searches led him to adopt the Copernican point of view according to which the sun, not the earth, was at the center of the solar system. This was regarded as heresy by the Church because it re­moved man, made in the very image of God, to a subordinate position in the cosmic arrangement. Galileo was taken before the Inquisition, threaten­ed with torture, forced to recant his views and to restrict his subsequent researches to uncontroversial subjects. This was the first of the conflicts between science and organized Christianity, and one of which the consequences are still being felt.

I N the three and one-half centuries since Galileo's time, science has made fantastic strides. There are three principal manifestations of this progress. First, and for the scientist this is the meaningful one, we now have much clearer and more detailed knowledge of the physical universe than we have ever had; although, as every scientist knows, only the tiniest fraction of scientific truth has yet been discovered. Second, we enjoy a society which is built around the technological advances which increased scientific understanding has made possi­ble. Third, the success of the scientific method in these two respects has given birth to attitudes toward science which were once reserved for reli­gion.

In science, many see the salvation of man while others see only the means of his ultimate destruc-

Continued on page 8

Tech Alumnus

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P ait of the Author Since 1949, Dr. Vernon D. Crawford has devoted himself to teaching and researching in the field of physics at Tech. Now a full professor of physics and head of the physics branch at the Georgia Tech Engineering Experiment Sta­tion, Dr. Crawford is one of the best known and most respected members of the faculty. A native of Novia Scotia, he holds three degrees, all in the field of physics: a B.S.

Photograph — Bill Diehl, Jr. from Mount Allison, M.S. from Dalhousie, and a Ph.D. from the University of Virginia.

Since the formation of the Georgia Tech Speakers Bureau three years ago, Dr. Crawford has proven the most popular of this hardy group of Tech pioneers who are called upon to go out into the State to speak on subjects in which they are experts.

December, 1959

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SCIENCE AND CHRISTIANITY — cont.

tion. It may be that those who hold either of these extreme views are those least acquainted with the methods and aims of science. Nevertheless these views are widely held, and to the extent to which they are held science may be said to have replaced religion in our twentieth century.

One Sunday a seven year old boy went to Sun­day School for the first time. When he returned home he was asked by his mother what he had learned. "Well," he said, "we learned all about Moses and how he helped the Israelites escape from the Egyptians."

His mother asked him to tell her the story and his version went something like this:

"It seems that the Israelites were running away from the Egyptians with Moses in the lead. They were getting along all right until they came to the Red Sea. Moses didn't know how to get across, but he thought he could find a way if he could get a good look at the situation, so he got in a heli­copter and flew over the sea. Then he figured that he needed submarines so he got a fleet of atomic subs and loaded all the Israelites aboard so when Pharoah and his Egyptians got there everybody was gone."

His mother said "That's a very interesting story, son, but are you sure they told it to you that way at Sunday School"?

"Well, no" replied the boy, "but if I told it to you the way they told it to me you never would believe it!"

M, ANY of us have a similar difficulty—the diffi­culty of reconciling what we know, or think we know, about the nature of physical law with the violations of natural law which are commonplace in the Bible. For example, our scientific convic­tions refuse to be reconciled with the accounts of God's doings recorded in the first chapter of Gen­esis. You are familiar with the Scopes "monkey trail" of the twenties when a head-on collision oc­curred between two points of view: the liberal view that man is the result of a process of continual evo­lution from forms of lower order, and the funda­mental view that when Genesis says that God cre­

ated man on the sixth day it means exactly that. This controversy was certainly not settled by the Scopes trial. In the minds of many it has not been settled to this day. However, the interpretation of Genesis has ceased to be the point of controversy that it once was. Scientific evidence for an evolu­tionary process has continued to mount. Then too, modern techniques of dating are unequivocal in their demonstration that the creations of the first six days, according to Genesis, actually spanned billions of years.

Most people, I believe, now regard Genesis as a poetic account of creation. Is Genesis somehow devalued by this change of attitude? I do not think so. It remains the most beautiful and reverent attempt in the world's literature to represent the first acts of the Creator. I do not believe that it will stand up as a text in science, but it was not written as a text in science. Neither do I believe that science will ever successfully dispute the underlying theme of Genesis stated so beautifully in its opening verse: "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth."

XERHAPS the greatest stumbling block to the ac­ceptance of the Bible for a scientifically trained modern, or for any educated man in this scientific age, is its emphasis on the miraculous powers of Jesus. The credo of the scientist may be stated fairly simply: There is a law governing the physi­cal universe. It is a law of constancy, not subject to whim. It is invariant in time and space, which means specifically that the same natural law is in effect today in America as was operative in first-century Palestine. How can one holding these beliefs accept the frequent suspensions of natural law which are reported in connection with the miracles of Christ?

In this connection it is surely important to realize that science is not complete, doesn't have all the answers. What seems to be in violation of natural law may turn out to be in agreement when that law is more fully revealed. It is also important to realize that although the same natural law was in effect in first century Palestine as is in effect here and now, in those days it was completely un­recognized as such. As Dr. Fosdick points out, the

Tech Alumnus

Page 9: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 38, No. 04 1959

word nature is never used in the New Testament to mean cosmic order, but only the specific consti­tution of some particular thing, such as "an olive tree, wild by nature." If there was no concept of natural law there could be no concept of the special suspension of natural law for the accomplishment of a miracle. In other words, their concept of a miracle was very different from ours. To those people, spectacular events which would capture their attention, amaze them, awe them, punish them, or perhaps release them from their punish­ments, were expected and constantly looked for. The way was clear for any unusual event to be hailed as miraculous and for its wondrousness to grow with the retelling.

1 HERE is no question in my mind that Jesus per­formed mighty works, nor that the first, and in many cases the lasting, impression He made on the majority of His contemporaries was that of a miracle worker. This was not a unique distinction—miracle workers were not uncommon—but it was a distinc­tion which Jesus did not seek. It was, indeed, a source of intense worry to Him. He was a teacher, a prophet, a Saviour, not a magician. He knew that in themselves His works were not particularly convincing, that men could marvel at them at the same time they were dismissing the message of Him who performed them, and so the record abounds with instances of Jesus cautioning the on­lookers to tell no man concerning what they had seen.

I believe that to understand Jesus we must learn to see Him "above the heads of His reporters," that we must learn to understand His dismay at a genera­tion in search of a sign. To see Him in this way is not to see Him with a diminished stature, but rather as a believable being who had remarkable insights and a power over the hearts of men which surpasses the understanding. But primarily it is to see a Saviour pointing the way to God. I am con­vinced that this is the light in which He wished to be seen by men.

The point I have been trying to make is that there is no fundamental conflict between science and Christianity. Seeming conflicts arise when un­warranted literalness is forced on Biblical inter­

pretation. Rather than being in conflict, science and Christianity have very much in common.

Each is based on faith. The faith of the scientist is that a natural law exists, although at times it may be perceived but dimly if at all. The Christian's faith is in God, whose nature he may not com­prehend, but whose existence he does not question.

Each has the aim to seek the truth. It was the Master who said "Ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free," a statement of the aim of science no less than of religion. Just as there are two levels of existence, a physical level of which we are directly aware through our senses, and a spiritual level which is usually less directly ex­perienced, much less understood, but no less real; so are there two disciplines by which we strive to reach the ultimate realities, science and religion. Truth cannot conflict with truth. Truth can only be in harmony with and complement truth. True science can only be in harmony with and comple­ment true religion.

Even in their methodology, science and Christi­anity have at least one point in common. The great discoveries of science so frequently are the result of inductive leaps, of inspirational flashes. Is this method of arriving at the truth significantly differ­ent from the method by which Paul reached the truth on the Damascan highway?

-FINALLY, the scientist pursues truth in a manner which the Christian might do well to emulate. That is to say, if he is a good scientist he pursues the truth where it leads, having set aside all precon­ceived notions and prejudices. Too often the Chris­tian spurns this course in his attempts to understand God. He spurns it, perhaps, through fear of divine punishment, but surely God will not punish man for his exercise of his God-given curiosity. Perhaps the Christian fears that he might be led to some unorthodox conclusions. This fear is well founded and represents a calculated risk which all seekers after truth must take. Often, I think, there is the belief that God may in some manner be embarassed by what diligent search may reveal. I doubt that God has anything to hide from a seeker after the ultimate realities, whether the search is carried out in the name of religion or science.

December, 1959

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Page 11: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 38, No. 04 1959

At a class change, students rush up and down the old circular staircases as they have for over 70 years and create this ghostly image on film. The old circular staircases will be a thing of the past as soon as the structure undergoes conversion to an office building.

Since Tech opened in 1888, Room 209 of this building has been used every school year as an English classroom. On the old room's last day, Dr. A. J. Walker arranges a class just as his predecessor Dr. William G. Perry did for almost 50 years and a ghost appears.

1 e Ghosts of the i iministration Building

Photographs by Bill Diehl, Jr.

SINCE 1888 when Georgia Tech first opened its doors to some 130 students, the Administration Building has been used primarily for teaching purposes. Now, with the com­ing of a new building expressly designed as a classroom building (see page 12), the Tech landmark can cease living its small white lie and revert to a purpose more in keeping with its title.

During the final week in which the old building was occupied by Tech students (November 9-13) Alumnus photographer Bill Diehl, Jr. roamed its halls on a special assignment. His mission was to capture on film the flavor of the building that more than any other is Georgia Tech. How well he accomplished this mission may be seen in the images of the ghosts of an era gone forever.

In the tower room of the old building, a young English instructor, I. F. Foote, expresses himself to a class softened by the glare of the early morning sun on the day that the last group of students climbed to the loft.

December, 1959

Page 12: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 38, No. 04 1959

I I I I I H n D i f l V i M r " ' — • H i m i i M M

A New Building Full of Light and Studei s The key ceremony, L to R, Dr. A. J. Walker, head of the English Department; Dr. M. B. Sledd, director of the School of Mathe­matics; Professor M. R. Brewster, director of the School of Industrial Management; Dean Ralph Hefner of the General College; and Dr. E. H. Loveland, director of the School of Psychology.

THE FIVE GENTLEMEN pictured at the left are exchang­ing the symbolic keys to Georgia Tech's long-awaited

new Classroom Building: an experience that is the climax of many years of frustration for them and for their asso­ciates. The ceremony took place on November 17 during the acceptance exercises for the new building at which Board of Regents' Chairman Robert O. Arnold was the principal speaker.

The fire-resistant, air-conditioned, four-story building that made this event possible will house the departments and schools (English, Industrial Management, Mathematics, and Psychology) that they represent. The structure has an over-all area of 137,000 square feet and contains 110 of­fices, 68 classrooms and 23 general purpose rooms.

As you can see by the overall picture of the building, it connects to the Price Gilbert Library through a two-level sidewalk that extends into the new building and forms the halls which connect the classroom areas.

12 Tech Alumnus

Page 13: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 38, No. 04 1959

From the top of the Textile Building the new Classroom Building looks something like this.

II

Two freshmen pause on one of the balconies which overlook the new building's courtyard.

' M l

i f 11 r • i u iinrimriH

CHANGING CLASSES IN THE OPEN HALLWAYS, A NEW EXPERIENCE FOR ALL TECH STUDENTS.

December, 1959 13

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Photographs by Bill Diehl, Jr.

Gerald Burch takes the screen pass and starts on his sensational 57-yard run for Tech's first touchdown in the game against Georgia.

Burch again, this time at the end of the line after his 45-yard fourth-down run from a fake punt formation. Tech scored later.

Through the side do

to the Gator Bowl

THE JACKETS lost two of their last three 1959 games but still managed a bowl invitation by making them all close.

The "heart attack" kids edged Notre Dame, 14-10, in South Bend then lost to Alabama, 7-9, in Birmingham and Geor­gia 14-21, in Atlanta.

Against the Irish, Tech came from behind twice on a cold afternoon before over 58,000 fans. After a field goal put Notre Dame ahead in the first half, the Jackets went 49 yards on the ground for the score. Quarterback Marvin Tibbetts—standing in for the injured Fred Braselton— sneaked for the score on the drive which featured a 32-yard burst by fullback Taz Anderson. Back came the Irish on a pro-like long pass to make it 7-10 and Tech looked out of it. But, Frank Nix's 48-yard kickoff return put Tech at the Irish 45. And Tibbetts again directed a ground at­tack (with one pass thrown in for a six-yard gain) straight for the winning score. Tibbetts put the points on the board with a fine option run off a beautiful fake.

In Birmingham, Tech got off to an early 7-0 lead after recovering Alabama's kickoff fumble and driving 25 yards. But, the Tide scored a touchdown in a few minutes after Wells fumbled a punt at the Alabama 49. They went for two and Tech held a shaky 7-6 lead. In the second period Alabama added a field goal for the 7-9 margin as Tech fumbles continuously stopped drives.

The Georgia game had all of the earmarks of a king-size rout after the Bulldogs grabbed three first half touchdowns on alert play and great passing. Going out trailing 0-21 it looked like Tech would spend the holiday at home. But a great second-half rally pulled the Jackets within a touch­down of the SEC champs. Gerald Burch, the end who sud­denly looked like a halfback, scored the first Tech points when he ,went 57 yards with a screen pass on what Coach Dodd called the "best run I saw all year." After being stopped on the Georgia 14 and the Georgia one, Tech scored in the final four minutes on a Tibbetts to Murphy pass from the Georgia 38. Murphy scattered Bulldogs all over the lot as he went in for the final touchdown. Tech never got another chance at the ball as the Bulldogs' great all-SEC quarterback, Francis Tarkenton, killed the clock by playing the fox to the Jackets' pursuing hounds.

The comeback brought Tech its second Gator Bowl bid in the past four years against Frank Broyles', '47, Arkansas team in what will be dubbed a classic of the pupil-versus-the-teacher variety. It will be played on January 2.

Tech Alumnus

Page 15: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 38, No. 04 1959

New "post-grad" program helps engineers move ahead at Western Electric

Careers get off to a fast start—and keep on growing—at Western Electric.

One big help is our new Graduate Engineering Training Program. This unique full-time, off-the-job study program starts soon after you join Western Electric . . . continues throughout your career. Students are offered courses in various fields including semiconductors, computers, feed­back control systems, and problem solving techniques. What's more, they study methods for improving skills in communicating technical information and the art of getting ideas across.

You'll find the work at Western Electric stimulating, too. As manufacturing and supply unit of the Bell System, we pioneered in the production of the transistor, repeatered submarine cable, and the provision of microwave tele­phone and television facilities spanning the country. Engi­neering skills can't help developing—careers can't help prospering — in the lively, exciting technical climate at Western Electric.

Western Electric technical fields include mechanical, electrical, chemical, civil and industrial engineering, plus the physical sciences. For more information pick up a copy of "Consider a Career a t Western Electric" from your Placement Officer. Or write College Relations, Room 2 0 0 C , Western Electric Company, 195 Broadway, New York 7, N. Y . And sign up for a Western Electric interview when the Bell System Interviewing Team visits your campus.

Western Electric

MANHATTAN'S COLISEUM TOWER building houses Western Electric's New York training center. Here, as in Chicago and Winston-Salem, N.C., Western Electric engineers participate in a training program that closely resembles a university graduate school.

CLASSROOM SESSION at one of the centers takes up the first part of the three-phase program, Introduction to Western Electric Engineering. During this initial nine-week training period, new engineers are provided with a better understanding of Western Electric engineering methods and technical practices.

MANUFACTURING AND SUPPLY <m UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEM

TECHNICAL TALK often continues after class. The free and easy informality of the new Western Electric training program offers plenty of opportunity for the stimulating exchange of ideas.

Western Electric Graduate Engineering Training Centers located at Chicago, Winston-Salem, N. C, and New York. Principal manufacturing locations at Chicago, III.; Kearny, N. J.; Baltimore, Md.; Indianapolis, Ind.; Allentown and Laureldale, Pa.; Burlington, Greensboro and Winston-Salem, N. C ; Buffalo, N. Y.; North Andover, Mass.; L inco ln and Omaha, Neb.; Kansas City, Mo.; Columbus, Ohio; Oklahoma City, Okla.; Teletype Corpo ra t i on , Chicago, 111. and L i t t l e Rock, Ark. Also Western Electric Distribution Centers in 32 cities and installation headquarters in 16 cities. General headquarters: 195 Broadway, New York 7, New York.

Page 16: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 38, No. 04 1959

BIRMINGHAM, ALA.—The fall meeting of the Birming­ham Georgia Tech Club was held at the Homewood Elk's Club on November 6. Tech coaching assistant Jimmy Carlen spoke to the 106 members of the club who attended the meeting. During the business meeting the club's annual scholarship award was increased from $500 to $700 and the following officers were elected: Joseph D. Brasfield, '38, president; Sam G. Pate, '41, 1st vice president; William J. White, '30, 2nd vice president; Charles Bradley, '40, secre­tary; and Hunter Price, '49, treasurer. New directors are J. B. Baggarly, '32; W. F. Murray, '47; J. B. Lyle, '50; Harold Roberts, '50; F. W. Hulse, '34; J. D. Collins, Jr., '35; and Oscar Price, Jr., '41.

Over 300 Georgia Tech alumni came to the "Tech Rally" at the Roosevelt Hotel in New York City on November 19. A panel of Tech's administration and alumni leaders was the chief attraction of the meeting. Speaking for Tech were President E. D. Harrison,

DALLAS, TEXAS—Over 40 Tech alumni and wives turned out for the October 1 meeting of the North Texas Georgia Tech Club in Dallas. Feature attraction of the meeting presided over by President Jim Batson was the showing of the Tech-Kentucky football films.

* * * MACON, GA.—Assistant Coach W. L. "Dynamite" Good-loe was the speaker at the September 29 meeting of the Macon Georgia Tech Club, while Dr. E. H. Loveland, di­rector of Tech's new School of Psychology, was the speaker at the club's November 17 meeting. Present officers of the Macon Georgia Tech Club include W. E. Dunwody, III, '53, president and J. S. Walton, '28, secretary-treasurer.

Athletic Director Bobby Dodd, Alumni Association President John Staton and Foundation President John P. Baum. Chairman of the meeting was Hazard E. Reeves, '28, and the toastmaster was W. J. "Jack" Holman, '28. The crowd was a record-breaker for Tech.

16 Tech Alumnus

Page 17: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 38, No. 04 1959

At the November 6 Chicago meeting featuring the same panel as the New York meeting, a good crowd turned out on the eve of the Notre Dame game. Chairman for this rally was Ben L. Crew and the toastmaster was David W. Harris, '12, shown at the right. Shown at the meeting, Dr. Harrison (L), former Tech football star, now Dr. Jimmy Jordan of the University of Chicago staff and Coach Dodd.

December, 1959 17

Page 18: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 38, No. 04 1959

i l ( jC James Walter Houseal, CE, retired Uw contractor, died October 4 in a

Cedartown, Georgia hospital. He played fullback on the Tech teams in 1902-3 and was captain in 1904.

' ( I D Cherry L. Emerson, former vice UO president of Georgia Tech, died

October 26 in an Atlanta hospital. Prior to joining Georgia Tech in 1945, he had served as president of Robert and Company. At the time of his death he was a consulting engineer with A. Thomas Bradbury, At­lanta architectural and engineering firm.

' f l Q Henry w- Blount died October 27 at UD his home in Waynesboro, Georgia.

He had been a member of the Georgia State Board of Education for ten years. Mr. Blount is survived by a daughter.

M. H. Wright died August 4, 1949.

M O The death of Campbell King has I *• been brought to our attention. His

widow lives at 4012 Morrison Dr., Lynch­burg, Va.

' 1 /1 Thomas Everett Martin died May 1*1 1, 1959. His widow lives at 86 Oak-

view Avenue, Maplewood, New Jersey.

' 1 Q Thomas Brooks Williams, Taunton, IO Massachusetts, died in June 1958.

His widow lives at 380 West Brittannia Street, Taunton, Massachusetts.

I O | | H. J. Price, of 18 Tuston Street, fcU Elberton, Georgia, died September

2. Mr. Price was an architect and builder prior to his retirement several years ago.

»OQ A. L. Chason, Jr., Ch.E., has moved fcO from Birmingham to Atlanta. He

lives at 860 Loridan Circle. John O. Chiles has been elected to serve

on the Board of Trustees, Georgia Tech National Alumni Association. He is presi­dent of Adams-Cates Company in Atlanta.

Joe L. Jennings, TE, Executive Vice President of the West Point Manufacturing Company, West Point, Georgia, has been elected President of the Georgia Tech National Alumni Association for the com­ing year.

,f)A Nenian c- Thompson, EE, died No-L *t vember 7 at his home, 2625 Lanark

Road, Birmingham, Alabama. Mr. Thomp­son was stores department manager for the Alabama Power Company.

Robert Watson (Baby) Roane, TE, super­intendent of Davenport Hosiery Mills in

Chattanooga, Tennessee, died unexpectedly October 12. While at Tech he was captain of the basketball team and was All-South­ern guard for two years. His widow lives at 112 South Crest Road in Chattanooga.

Reuben Williams, Atlanta, died in Sep­tember, 1959. No further information was available at this writing.

' 9 R }ohn C" Hal1, Com-> President of i-V Cobbs, Allen and Hall Mortgage

Company, Birmingham, Alabama, has been elected to serve on the Board of Trustees of the Georgia Tech National Alumni As­sociation for the coming year.

Sanford McNeill Ayers, Arch, a partner in the firm of Ayers and Godwin, died October 31 in an Atlanta hospital. His widow lives at 374 East Paces Ferry Road, N.E., Atlanta.

Solomon Jackson Yeoman died of a heart attack October 23. He was first vice presi­dent of the Commercial National Bank in Anniston, Alabama.

' O Q Wister H. Ligon, CE, President and ^ 0 Director of the Nashville Gas Com­

pany, Nashville, Tennessee, has been elected president of the American Gas Association.

' O Q Robert B. Alexander, EE, has been ^ 3 appointed assistant vice president in

charge of marketing for the Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Company of Maryland with offices in Baltimore.

Alfred M. Carlsen died May 22, 1959. Carra L. Lane, ME, has joined Chicago

Pneumatic Tool Company as Manager of Plant Operations with headquarters at 6 East 44th Street, New York 17, New York. He is responsible for six domestic divisions and subsidiaries. Mr. Lane lives at 611 Palmer Road, Yonkers, New York.

'30 William S. Terrell, Com., head of the Terrell Machine Company in

Charlotte, North Carolina, has been elected to serve on the Board of Trustees, Georgia Tech National Alumni Association.

>Q1 Captain James R. Cain, USN, has 0 I retired from the Navy after 28 years

active duty. He had been President of the General Court Martial Board at the Third Naval District Headquarters in New York City for the past three years. Captain Cain lives at 704 East 58th Street, Savannah, Georgia.

Paul L. Dorn, Com., President of the Crown Candy Company in Atlanta, has been elected to serve on the Board of Trustees, Georgia Tech National Alumni Association.

»QO Roy L. Burt, CE, Assistant Project 0 * . Manager with the U. S. Army Engi­

neers in Los Angeles, died April 18, 1959. His widow lives at 2440 Purdue Avenue, Los Angeles 6, California.

Dr. Charles Fore Wilkinson, Chairman of the New York University Post-graduate Medical School, died September 29 at his home in Westport, Connecticut. Prior to becoming Chairman and professor at New York University in 1949, he was associate director of the Division of Medicine, W. K. Kellogg Foundation. Dr. Wilkinson is survived by his wife, two sons and a daughter.

' Q Q Lawrence C. Smith died October 11 0 0 at his home, 3 Park Lane, N.E.,

Atlanta, Georgia. He was a wholesale fur­niture manufacturer's representative.

' f M Harold E. Davis, CE, is a liaison w " engineer with the New England Iron

Works in Orange, Connecticut. Major Charles U. Edwards, CE, died

January 8, 1959. T. J. Judge, EE, recently presented a

paper before the 14th Annual Engineering Conference of the Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry. His topic was "Mill Experience." Mr. Judge is Co­ordinator and Division Power Plant Engi­neer with International Paper Company in Mobile, Alabama.

J. P. Craven, ME '28, has been elected a vice president of The Babcock and Wilcox Company and placed in charge of the boiler division's manufacturing department. Craven, who former­ly was manager of the division's erection depart­ment, will make his headquarters in Barberton, Ohio. He joined Babcock & Wilcox as a student engineer in 1928 and has served the company as a technical specialist and district erector.

18 Tech Alumnus

Page 19: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 38, No. 04 1959

Frederick J. Hartwig, CerE, pre­sented a technical paper at the na­

tional meeting of the Glass Division of the American Ceramic Society in October. He is head of the Non-metallic Minerals Section of Babcock & Wilcox in Alliance, Ohio.

Samuel R. Phillips, TE, has been named general manager of Latex

Fiber Industries, Inc., a subsidiary of U. S. Rubber Company at Beaver Falls, New York. Prior to this appointment, he was assistant general manager of U. S. Rub­ber's Textile Division.

Jason T. Pate, IM, President and General Manager of Radio Station

WASA in Havre de Grace, Maryland, has been named President of the Maryland-D.C. Broadcasters Association.

'I John W. Birdsall, CE, is in charge of the Preliminary Design Section

with the North Carolina Highway Depart­ment. His home address is Route 1, Mill-brook Road, Raleigh, North Carolina.

'I Born to Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Wilmot, a son, Donald Carl, Sep­

tember 6. Their address is 2602 Woodridge Drive, Decatur, Georgia.

li Thomas W. Fitzgerald, ME, is a partner in the firm of Kideney, Smith

& Fitzgerald, Architects and Engineers, with offices at 220 Delaware Avenue, Buf­falo 2. New York.

WIT-SHARPENER MORE 'ar-

PROBLEMATICAL RECREATIONS

Response to our first collection of these delightfully vexing enigmas has

been so heart-warming that we have decided to issue a second volume

for your delectation. Write to our Dr. William Jacobi, and ask for "More

Problematical Recreations." Gratis, of course.

A n d if you f ind your fancy t ick led by the prospect of work ing wi th

nationally recognized scientists and engineers in such fields as inertial

guidance, radar, tactical data processing systems, airborne digital com­

puters, or space research investigations, you will want to communicate

with our Mr. C. T. Petrie.

LB LITTON INDUSTRIES Electronic Equipments Division, Beverly Hills, California

»i M. J. Osborne, EE, Electrical Super­intendent at Bowaters Southern

Paper Corporation, Calhoun, Tennessee, presented a jointly authored paper at the 14th Annual Engineering Conference of the Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry. The paper was entitled "Power Transfer Within Wet Felts."

Information was recently received of the death of Thomas L. Stedman, Ch.E. No further information was available at this writing.

'4 We were recently advised of the death of Desmond Brewer, EE, of

Denison, Texas. Born to: LCDR and Mrs. Ernest D.

Sanders, CE, a daughter. Commander San­ders is serving with the Navy in Monterey, California.

>i Born to: Dr. and Mrs. Harrington C. Brearley, Jr., EE, a daughter,

Ann Marion, May 19. Dr. Brearley is on the staff of the University of Illinois Digital Computer Laboratory. Their home address is 2017 Cureton Drive, Urbana, Illinois.

James C. Spalding, Jr., Ch.E, died Sep­tember 29 after a brief illness. He was supervisor of the Equipment and Chemical Engineering Section for Sun Oil Company's Southwest production division. Mr. Spalding was active in several engineering organiza­

tions. He also served as an instructor in the Military Intelligence Branch of the Dallas Area U. S. Army Reserve School. Mr. Spalding is survived by his wife and three children, who live at 10306 Gooding Drive, Dallas, Texas.

' i"1 Richard L. Dougherty, EE, has been H 1 appointed advisory engineer at IBM's

Federal Systems Division Laboratory in Kingston, New York. His home address is Rolling Meadows, Hurley, New York.

* AQ Charles C. Collins, EE, was co-rO author of a paper given during the

14th Annual Engineering Conference of the Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry. The paper was entitled "Power Transfer Within Wet Felts." Mr. Collins is an applications engineer with General Elec­tric in Schenectady, New York.

Lt. Robert Zemp Cornwell, U. S. Navy, was killed when attempting to land on an aircraft carrier in the Gulf of Mexico. He was in flight training at Pensacola, Florida.

' 4 Q Engaged: Thomas J. Barfield, Jr., " w IM, to Miss Ingrid Jensen. Mr. Bar-

field is associated with Johns-Manville Sales Corporation as Chattanooga (Tennessee) representative.

Married: Carl Philip Brenner, Jr., EE, to Miss Nellie Rebecca Thompson, Novem­

ber 24. Mr. Brenner is with the Georgia Power Company in Atlanta.

Married: John Arthur Cochrane, Arch, to Miss Carmie LeRue Thrasher, November 29. Mr. Cochrane is with Heery & Heery, Architects, in Atlanta.

Married: Joseph A. Cronk, Jr., IM, to Miss Suzanne S. Schroder. The wedding took place November 28. Mr. Cronk is with the Gaylord Container Corporation in At­lanta.

Charles L. Davidson, Jr., IM, has been appointed a member of the State Game and Fish Commission. He is sales man­ager of the Stone Mountain Grit Co., Lithonia, Georgia.

This office was recently informed of the death of Thomas A. Riddle, CE. His widow and daughter live at Fort Deposit, Alabama.

>C | j Emory D. Ayers, CE, has been trans­it U ferred to the management services

department in the New York office of Union Carbide Corporation. His home ad­dress is 15 St. Mary's Lane, Norwalk, Con­necticut.

Richard U. Dieters, ME, is with Con­solidated Brass Company in Charlotte, North Carolina as a production engineer.

Edwin B. Feldman, IE, has been ap­pointed Director of Engineering for Puritan Chemical Company in Atlanta.

Continued on page 20

December, 1959 19

Page 20: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 38, No. 04 1959

Morris E. Yancey, IM '51, has been appointed a sales representative in North and South Carolina for Morse Twist Drill and Machine Co. Yancey formerly was a sales representative for the Mil­waukee Electric Tool Corp. in the Charlotte, N. C. area. He is married and has one child.

Founded in 1864 and developer of the original twist drill, Morse Twist Drill is a division of Van Norman Industries, Inc.

NEWS BY CLASSES-conf/nued

Born to: Mr. and Mrs. Philip J. Malon-son, AE, a son, James Hicks, July 26. Phil is secretary-treasurer of Damar, Inc., Mar­ietta, Georgia. Their home address is 108 Sourwood Drive in Marietta.

Born to: Mr. and Mrs. Claude A. Petty, EE, a daughter, Pamela Ann. Claude is Director of Physical Plant at Georgia Tech.

»C1 Charles D. Bobo, IM, is a represen-3 1 tative with the First Southeastern

Corporation with offices in the Trust Com­pany of Georgia Building, Atlanta 3, Geor­gia.

Gordon E. Dasher, ME, is a plant engi­neer with the Trenton Box Plant of Union Bag Camp Paper Corporation of Trenton, New Jersey.

Olin M. Fuller, Jr., Ch.E., has been awarded the Ethyl Corporation graduate research fellowship in Chemical Engineering at Georgia Tech for the 1959-60 academic year.

' C O Ivy N. Chastain, CE, has been trans-**^ ferred by the Tidewater Construc­

tion Corporation to Tampa, Florida. He lives at 3902 Vasconia Street, Tampa 9, Florida.

Born to: Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Christi-phine, Ch.E., a son, Frank Barry, III, Octo­ber 11. Their home address is 3923 Sierra Dadre Drive South, Jacksonville 7, Florida.

Ben W. Martin, Ch.E, has been appointed product supervisor of anhydrous in the agricultural sales department of Monsanto Chemical Company's Inorganic Chemicals Division at St. Louis, Missouri.

Married: W. G. Vollrath, CE, to Miss Ann Conway, August 10. Mr. Vollrath is a cost estimator with the Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company. Their home address is 7102 B. River Driven New­port News, Virginia.

J. J. Cunningham, CE, is the author of "Unique Structure Provides Access to Re­finery Operating Unit," which appeared in the October issue of Civil Engineering. He is a civil engineer in the Technical Division at Humble Oil and Refining Company's Baytown, Texas Refinery. He lives at 146 Schrect Street in Baytown.

J. D. Goodson has been made St. Louis district sales manager with Clark Equip­ment Company's Industrial Truck Division.

I M Dr. Walter H. Brader, Jr., Chem, 3 " has joined the research staff of Jef­

ferson Chemical Company's Austin, Texas Laboratories. Prior to joining Jefferson he was with Standard Oil Co., Whiting, In­diana.

Married: Rudy A. Brown, IE, to Miss Lettie Jensen. The wedding took place No­vember 21. Mr. Brown is with the American Furnace Company in St. Louis, Missouri.

Married: Robert M. Bullard, IM, to Miss Ann Wilkins, April 4. Mr. Bullard is an instrumentation sales engineer with Minn­eapolis Honeywell Regulator Company in Atlanta.

Born to: Mr. and Mrs. Rocco A. Cot-roneo, IE, a son, Michael Chris, October 12. Their address is 2520 Allen Avenue, Union, New lersey.

James Loss, IE, is now president of the Industrial Cutter Service, Inc., 3981 SW 12th Street, Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.

Joseph F. Mole, Jr., Ch.E., is a technical service engineer with West Virginia Pulp and Paper Company in Charleston, South Carolina. His home address is 1246 Bam­boo Drive, Old Towne Acres, Charleston, South Carolina.

Married: Charles Ledbetter Nail, IE, to Miss Mary Ann Goodner, November 7. Mr. Nail is with the Atlanta Stove Works.

Robert M. Sharpe, Ch.E., has been pro­moted to chemical engineer in the catalytic cracking section of the Technical Division at Humble Oil and Refining Company's Baytown, Texas refinery. His home address is 215 Mayhaw Drive in Baytown.

I C C Montgomery L. Bell, AE, is head of ** w t h e Aerodynamics Department,

Chrysler Missile Division at Huntsville, Ala­bama.

Born to: Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Kel-ley, IM, a son, Charles Brian, August 8. Mr. Kelley is with IBM. Their home ad­dress is 1870 Windemere Drive, N.E., At­lanta.

Married: Wayne Robbins League, CE, to Miss Gloria Ann Brownlee, October 10. Mr. League is with the Georgia State High­way Department in Atlanta.

Engaged: Werner Pels, TE, to Miss Jac-quelin Benson. The wedding will take place in January. Mr. Pels is associated with the National Cotton Council of America in Washington, D. C.

Engaged: Dennis Raymond Riddle, IM,

to Miss Patricia Kennedy. The wedding will take place December 28. Mr. Riddle is with the First National Bank of Atlanta.

Born to: Mr. and Mrs. Larry Ruff in, IM, a son, Larry Wayne, Jr., September 20. Larry is with Loxcreen Company. Their home address is 3202 Cains Hill Place, N.W., Atlanta.

R. C. Russell, Ch.E., has been promoted to assistant chemical engineer in the Tech­nical Division at Humble Oil and Refining Company's Bayton, Texas refinery.

' E C Born to: Mr. and Mrs. William W. J O Arrants, EE, a son, Gary. Their

home address is 4623 Woodmore View Circle, Chattanooga 11, Tennessee.

Woodroe Bartlett, IM, was separated from the U. S. Air Force in September and is now attending the Virginia Theo­logical Seminary in Alexandria, Virginia in preparation for the Episcopal ministry.

Born to: Mr. and Mrs. George A. Coch­ran, CE, a daughter, Shari Lorraine. Their address is 1144 West Chimes, Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

Engaged: Martin Joseph Keller, IM, to Miss Patricia Lambert. The wedding will take place in January. Mr. Keller is in the Credit Department at Beck & Gregg Hard­ware in Atlanta.

Engaged: Guynn U. Marchman, CE, to Miss Mary Ann Pope. Mr. Marchman is with the Georgia State Highway Depart­ment in Atlanta.

Married: John Robert Markley, ME, to Miss Georgia Ann Holloway, November 27. Mr. Markley is with Vick Chemical Company in Greensboro, North Carolina.

Lt. Jerry L. Terrell, USN, IM, is a mem­ber of Attack Squadron 35 with the U.S. 6th Fleet in the Mediterranean.

Married: Thomas Hickman Vmstead, IM, to Miss Lucrecia Clark, October 23. Mr. Umstead is with the R. A. Siegel Company in Atlanta.

' C l Lt. John D. Cannon, USN, CerE, is *• " in Flight Training at Pensacola,

Florida. Engaged: Lt. Archibald Gann, Jr., Phys.,

to Miss Patricia McClelland Davis. Lt. Gann is serving with the Navy at Patux-ent, Maryland.

Born to: Mr. and Mrs. Ronald K. Get-man, IM, a daughter, Karen Irene, August 2. Getman is a hydraulics engineer with Gresen Manufacturing Company in Minn­eapolis, Minnesota. Their home address is 5601 Second Avenue South in Minneapolis.

Clifford C. Groover, Jr., IE, has been appointed project engineer in the Engineer­ing Department of Puritan Chemical Com­pany in Atlanta.

Born to: Mr. and Mrs. Henry S. Row­land, III, IE, a son, Frank Carmichael, September 25. Mr. Rowland is with Cin­erama, 304 East 44th Street, New York 17, New York.

Lewis A. Safar, ME, is now a member of the Technical Staff of the Space Tech­nology Laboratories in Hawthorne, Cali­fornia. His home address is 646 Aerick Street, Apartment B, Inglewood, California.

20 Tech Alumnus

Page 21: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 38, No. 04 1959

Arthur D. Sills, EE, recently received his masters in electrical engineering and is now working on his doctorate at the Uni­versity of Maryland. His address is 4509 Beechwood Road in College Park, Mary­land.

William R. Walker, IE, is an assistant engineer with Southern Railway System at the Citico Diesel Shop in Chattanooga, Tennessee.

SP/5 William D. Wallace, IE, has been presented a letter of commendation for outstanding technical competence in missile development work at the Army Ballistic Missile Agency at Redstone Arsenal, Hunts-ville, Alabama.

Engaged: Thomas L. Wright, IM, to Miss Jo Anne Franklin. The wedding will take place December 12.

' C Lt. Myrl W. Allinder, USMC, ME, *J is in basic flight training at Pen-

sacola, Florida. Married: James Carson Baker, Jr., IM,

to Miss Florence Belle Moore. Mr. Baker is with Sim-Grady Company. Their home address is 1865 Markone Street, N.W., Atlanta.

Born to : Mr. and Mrs. Ed H. Cawley, IE. a daughter, Judity Gale, September 18. Mr. Cawley is in the Overhead Industrial and Plant Engineering Department at War­ner Robins AFB, Georgia.

Married: Richard Ernest Collett, IE, to Miss Carol Peterson, October 31. Mr. Col­lett is resident engineer for the Kaiser Steel Corporation at Cape Canaveral, Florida.

George A. Dick is a student in the Candler School of Theology at Emory University and is also serving as student associate minister at the First Methodist Church in Atlanta.

Born to: Lt. and Mrs. Benjamin G. Fugctt. Jr., IM, a son, Benjamin G., I l l , October 1. Lt. Fugett is stationed at Stewart AFB in Newbury, New York.

Married: James M. Gregory to Miss Genia Rae Harris. The wedding took place November 28. Mr. Gregory is with the

Memphis Can Company in Atlanta. Ensign David D. Harvey, USN, IM, has

graduated from the Bombardier-Navigator School at Corpus Christi, Texas and is now assigned to Patrol Squadron Four at Naha, Okinawa.

Born to: Ensign and Mrs. Leslie J. Horn, Phys., a daughter, Diana Elaine, July 22. Ens. Horn is currently stationed at the Naval Air Station in Memphis, Tennessee.

Ensigne Harland E. Mathews, USN, TE, is in flight training at Pensacola, Florida.

M. C. Schaff, CE, recently joined Mag­nolia Mobile Homes in Scottsbluff, Ne­braska as production manager.

' C Q Married: Richard Allen Bake, IM, **v to Miss Dolle Utsey, October 9. Mr.

Balte is with Deering-Milliken Corporation in Abbeville, S. C.

Married: Ensign Jean Edward Bobo, IE, to Miss Carol Astin, December 22. Ensign Bobo is stationed at Corpus Christi, Texas with the U. S. Naval Flight Program.

Married: Steve Herren Bomar, Jr., Ch.E., to Miss Sandra Kay Badger in October. Mr. Bomar is working toward his masters degree in chemical engineering at Tech.

J. Donald Brock, Arch, is teaching Math and Physics at the College of West Africa in Monrovia, Liberia, Africa.

Ensign Lawrence R. Crawford, USN, IE, is in flight training at Pensacola, Florida.

Married: Daniel Thomas Donohue, IM, to Miss Margaret Warneke, November 26. Mr. Donohue is with York Air Condition­ing Company in York, Pennsylvania.

Born to: Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Doughty, Jr., EE, a son, Edward Christo­pher, January 18, 1959. Mr. Doughty is in the Production Service Division at Gen­eral Electric in Syracuse, New York. Their home address is Bear Road, North Syra­cuse 12, New York.

James Thomas Ford, ME, is attending the American Institute of Foreign Trade, Phoenix, Arizona, in preparation for a career in American business or government abroad.

William M. Real, USMC, ME, recently graduated from the 24th Officer Candidate Course at Marine Corps School, Quantico, Virginia.

Married: Kermit E. Gay, IM, to Miss Maxine Reese, June 27. Mr. Gay is with the Martin Company. Their home address is 301 Lakeview Avenue, Apartment 6, Orlando, Florida.

Born to : Mr. and Mrs. David H. Hughes, Jr., CE, a daughter, Elizabeth Ann, June 15. Mr. Hughes is with the Eastern Engi­neering Co. in Atlanta.

Born to : Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Keyes, AE, a son, Joseph Wayne, Jr., November 1. Thetr home address is 99 Freeman Drive, Hampton 19, Virginia.

Edward F. Kornahrens, Jr., IE, grad­uated in September from the Navy's Officer Candidate School in Newport, Rhode Is­land and was commissioned an Ensign.

Engaged: Robert A. Langley, Phys., to Miss Sara Haizlip, December 21. Mr. Lang-ley is attending Graduate School at Tech.

Engaged: Jay Russell McLendon, IM, to Miss Grace Robertson. The wedding will take place December 20. Mr. McLendon is with the Life Insurance Company of Geor­gia in Atlanta.

Private Marion L. Roberts, IM, US Army, recently completed the data pro­cessing equipment operator course at the Adjutant General's School at Fort Ben­jamin Harrison, Indiana.

Harry T. Thurman, Jr., IM, is a repre­sentative in the Savannah, Georgia Agency for the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insur­ance Company.

Ensign Hal Wightman, ME, is Main Propulsion Assistant aboard the USS Tal­ladega. His mailing address is USS Talla­dega (APA 208, c /o F.P.O., San Fran­cisco, California.

' f i l l M a r r i e d : Leslie C. Huttemeyer, IM, * '* ' to Miss Norma Jean DeFoor. Mr.

Huttemeyer is with Bendix Aviation Cor­poration. Their home address is 107 Ross Avenue, Hackensack, New Jersey.

35 YEARS OF EXPERIENCE TO HELP YOU SOLVE ELECTRICAL SUPPLY PROBLEMS

For a third of a century our organization has worked closely with electrical supply wholesalers to help them meet

their problems in serving the rapidly expanding electric industry. This experience is at your command to help you.

EDGAR E. DAWES & CO. 405 RHODES BUILDING

STEEL CITY ELECTRIC CO.

WAGNER MALLEABLE PRODUCTS CO.

JAckson 4-7571 ATLANTA 3, GEORGIA SPANG-CHALFANT (Conduit Division)

PLASTIC WIRE & CABLE CORP.

December, 1959 21

Page 22: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 38, No. 04 1959

BOMARC, backed by one of the largest production orders in the field of missiles, and other rapidly expanding missile and space-age projects at Boeing offer exceptional career opportunities. Openings also available with Minuteman solid-propellant ICBM, and with other challenging projects in such advanced areas as orbital systems, lunar systems and interplanetary systems.

BOEING-DEVELOPED 3-axis, all-analog piloted flight simulator. With the rapid growth in importance of electronic installations in both manned and unmanned aircraft, Boeing has greatly expanded research and development work in this area. Openings at all levels in mathematics, physics, electrical, electronic engineering.

I 'p^Kimam

Pfr *s 1 ' ~> V BOEING RESEARCH facilities, most extensive and complete in the industry, give you the solid backup you need to grow in professional stature and get ahead faster. Precision microwave interferometer, above, developed at Boeing, typifies creative assignments open now in Research, Design, Production and Service.

ENGINEERS working in radar and communications are supported by self-sufficient Boeing laboratories, housing equipment such as nation's first automatically recording, precision boresight error range, above. Other openings in infrared techniques, electronic circuitry, and in radar, beacon, guidance and control systems.

Write today, for your free copy of 24-page booklet, 'Environment for

Dynamic Career Growths'1 It pictures the career areas and advantages that

could assure you a brighter future.

Mr. Stanley M. Little,

Boeing Airplane Company,

P . O . Box 3822 - UGT, Seattle 24, Wash.

Send me the Boeing career booklet by return mail.

Name

Address City State. ..

Degree(s) Field of interest

Experience

Seattle • Wichita • Cape Canaveral

Page 23: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 38, No. 04 1959

. . . a hand in things to come

Moving: mountains across trie world

Following rugged paths through lonely African bush country . . . dredging a river bed to carry heavily-laden barges out of the steaming jungles of British Guiana . . . crossing 6,000 miles of ocean to reach a remote island in the South Pacific. This is all part of the job faced by the geologists and mining engineers of Union Carbide as they seek out the ores of chromium, manganese, columbium and other essential alloying metals.

These are the metals that make today's many special steels what they are—sinewy, for the cables of a great suspension bridge . . . sturdy, to support the tallest skyscraper . . . glistening with beauty in stainless steel tableware . . . and suitable for the hundreds of complex parts that make up your automobile. And now the demands of the space age make alloying metals more vital than ever.

Union Carbide moves mountains of ore halfway around the world to assure a dependable supply—almost two million tons a year. And the people of Union Carbide will continue their world-wide mining and refining operations to provide the metals so necessary for the products of today and tomorrow.

Learn about the exciting work going on now in metals, carbons, chemicals, gases, plas­tics, and nuclear energy. Write for "Products and Processes" Booklet G, Union Carbide Corporation, 30 East 42nd St., New York 17, N.Y. In Canada, Union Carbide Canada Limite'd, Toronto.

. . . a h a n d i n t h i n g s to c o m e

Page 24: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 38, No. 04 1959

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