georgia tech alumni magazine vol. 27, no. 03 1949

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The GEORGIA TECH JANUARY - FEBRUARY 1949 Vol. XXVII No. 3 ALUMNUS

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A publication of the Georgia Tech Alumni Association.

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Page 1: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 27, No. 03 1949

The GEORGIA TECH JANUARY - FEBRUARY

• 1949 • Vol. XXVII No. 3

A L U M N U S

Page 2: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 27, No. 03 1949
Page 3: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 27, No. 03 1949
Page 4: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 27, No. 03 1949

T H E GEORGIA T E C H A L U M N U S January-February, 1949

THE

GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS Published every other month during the college year by

the National Alumni Association of the Georgia Institute of Technology i

R. J. THIESEN, Editor ROANE BEARD, Asst. H. M. CHAMBLESS, Staff Assoc. Editor & Business Mgr.

OFFICE OF PUBLICATION 208 Knowles Building

GEORGIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY ATLANTA, GA.

ENTERED AS SECOND CLASS MATTER MARCH 22, 1923 at the Post Office at Atlanta, Ga., under the

Act of March 8, 1879

VOL. XXVII January-February, 1949 No. 3

NATIONAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION BOARD OF TRUSTEES

J. J. WESTBROOK, '29 President OSCAR G. DAVIS, '22 Vice-President HUGH HILL, '23 Vice-President CHAS. R. YATES, '35 Treasurer R. J. THIESEN, '10 Exec. Secretary W. R. BEARD, '40 Mgr. Alumni Activities

Frank W. Allcorn III, '41 Roddey Garrison, '23 Ivan Allen, Jr., '33 Price Gilbert, Jr., '21 Chas. M. Brown, '25 Henry W. Grady, '18

Robt. H. Tharpe, '34

GEORGIA TECH ALUMNI FOUNDATION, Inc. OFFICERS A N D TRUSTEES

GEO. W. McCARTY, '08 President F. E. CALLAWAY, JR., '26 Vice-President THOS. FULLER, '06 Vice-President W. A. PARKER, '19 Secretary-Treasurer HOWARD ECTOR, '40 Exec. Secretary

Clem A. Evans, '22 F. A. Hooper, Jr., '16 Thos. Fuller, '06 Wm. T. Rich, '10 Julian T. Hightower, '19 R. B. Wilby, '08 Geo. T. Marchmont, '07 F. H. Neely, '04 F. M. Spratlin, '06 C. P. Rather, '23 J. F. Towers, '01 Geo. W. McCarty, '08 J. E. Davenport, '08 Jno. A. Simmons, '15 Y. F. Freeman, '10 A. D. Kennedy, '03 Geo. S. Jones, Jr., '12 G. W. Woodruff, '17

GEORGIA TECH ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION ALUMNI MEMBERS

J. C. HARRIS L. W. ROBERT, JR. ROBT. B. WILBY

ALUMNI STATE ADVISORY COUNCIL By Districts

1. E. Geo. Butler, Savannah 2. R. A. Puckett , Tifton 3. W. C. Pease, Columbus 6. Jas. T. Kinnett, Macon

7. R. A. Morgan, Rome 8. I. M. Aiken, Brunswick 9. W. H. Slack, Gainesville

10. Wm. D. Eve, Augusta

Dr. Harmon Caldwell Elected Chancellor Geo. W. McCarty, '08, Foundation President President Van Leer Proposed Research Head

"How to Unlock Gifts" Ga. Tech Research Institute Report

Gene Turner Letter Alumni Club Meetings

Alumni and Service Mentions, Sports

Alumni Foundation Officers Announced

Reports on Services to Ca. Tech

Greater and increased service to the Georgia Institute of Technology and to American industry by the 16-year-old Georgia Tech Alumni Foundation during the past year was reported at the November twenty-third meeting, by retir­ing president Cherry L. Emerson. It was pointed out that all the projects sponsored and financed by the Foundation, such as the Georgia Tech A-C Network Calculator Labora­tory, Hydraulics Laboratory, and other research and teach­ing aids have contributed immensely to the industrial development of the South.

After a vote of thanks to Dean Emerson was unani­mously passed by the board, George W. McCarty, '08, presi­dent of the Ashcraft-Wilkinson Company, Atlanta, Ga., was elected president of the Foundation for the coming year. Fuller E. Callaway, Jr., '26, former president of the Calla­way Community Foundation, LaGrange, Ga., and Thomas E. Fuller, '06, southeastern district manager of Westing-house Electric Corp., Atlanta, Ga., were named vice-presidents.

William A. Parker, president of Beck and Gregg Hard­ware Co., Atlanta, Ga., was re-elected as treasurer, and W. Howard Ector re-appointed as executive secretary.

Organized in 1932, the Georgia Tech Alumni Foundation is a non-profit education?.! organization set up to admin­ister, through a board of 21 outstanding Ga. Tech alumni engineers and industrial executives, funds made available by industrialists and other friends of the Georgia Institute of Technology. These funds, realized through contribu­tions, gifts and bequests, are helping the Foundation fulfill its objectives among which are:

1. To make possible the scientific and economic research and investigation necessary for the development of the resources of the South, and to utilize human and natural resources so as to make the South an economically rich and profitable part of the United States and the world.

2. To develop material tests in the laboratories of the Georgia Institute of Technology for the use of American Industry.

3. To train scientific and engineering leaders who will make possible the efficient utilization of manpower in the manufacture of new and better commodities for use in the South and throughout the United States.

4. To foster the continuous coordination of effort between the educational facilities of universities, and the productive facilities of industry.

5. To provide modern equipment and up-to-date facilities at the Georgia Institute of Technology for utilization by small and large industries, and for the training of scientific and engineering leaders.

ALUMNI OFFICE RECEIVES VALUED GIFTS Following our acknowledgment in the December

ALUMNUS for the BLUEPRINTS that were given to the Alumni Office by R. D. Cole, M. E. 1922; and our request for a copy of the 1914 Annual, A. C. Grist, M. E. 1916, of Chattanooga, Tenn., and John L. Davidson, M. E., 1915, of New York City, were both so kind as to come to our rescue, early in December, with a copy apiece of the urgently needed 1914 BLUEPRINT.

During the same period, L. A. Emerson, C. E. 1907, of Columbia, S. C , gave the office several interesting pictures of the 1907 track team and the Mandolin Club of that time.

This very loyal and kind co-operation on the par t of Messrs. A. C. Grist, John L. Davidson and L. A. Emerson is greatly appreciated and it is a real pleasure to thank them publicly and most sincerely for their valuable gifts.

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Page 5: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 27, No. 03 1949

January-February, 1949 THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Dr. Harmon Caldwell Chancellor

University System of Georgia At the October, 1948, meeting of the Board of Regents of

the University System of Georgia, Dr. Harmon W. Caldwell was elected Chancellor of the System to succeed Dr. Ray­mond R. Paty who resigned to become Executive Director of "The Rich's Foundation," of Atlanta.

Dr. Caldwell resigned as President of the University of Georgia, as a result of his election, and recently assumed his active duties as Chancellor of the University System.

Dr. Rogers Named President, Univ. of Georgia

Dr. Jonathan Clark Rogers, President of North Georgia College at Dahlonega, was elected President of the Uni­versity of Georgia, at the January 12 meeting of the Board of Regents. Dr. Rogers succeeds Dr. Harmon W. Caldwell, the new Chancellor of the University System.

Dr. W. D. Young was appointed Acting President of North Georgia College, succeeding Dr. Rogers.

Hon. Hughes Spalding Regents' Chairman

The Board of Regents elected as its Chairman, Honorable Hughes Spalding of Atlanta. He was a member of the original Board in 1931, and its former chairman. Mr. Spalding succeeds Mr. Pope Brock, who retired from the Board of Regents.

GEORGIA TECH RESEARCH INSTITUTE REPORTS DEVELOPMENTS ON VALUABLE CONTRACTS

Contracts with initial budgets of $1,250,000 have been accepted by the Georgia Tech Research Institute, since its organization two and a half years ago. This announcement was made by Chairman William E. Mitchell, of the Insti­tute's Board of Trustees.

During the past year, Mr. Mitchell told the Board that the organization had spent nearly $500,000 on research.

Col. Blake Van Leer, member of the Board and President of Georgia Tech, said that with the present backlog of contracts and "the continued growth of the Institute," it would be able to render "even greater services to the industry of this area."

Dr. Gerald A. Rosselot, Director of Tech's Experiment Station and the Research Institute, said the fields of work covered by the contracts included electrical development, food processing, gasoline-engine development, spectro-graphic analysis, agricultural machinery, equipment design, patent research, technical literature research, chemical product evaluation, wind tunnel research, textile technol­ogy, hydraulics studies and A-C network calculator studies.

The calculator, a $130,000 "brain" for mathematical com­putations, is housed in a $160,000 building at Tech.

LETTERS AND CARDS GREATLY APPRECIATED

Your many fine Christmas and New Year wishes, to all of us in the Alumni Office, were most sincerely appreciated, and we heartily thank you for your very kind thoughts.

We are also exceedingly grateful for the grand letters and messages that were received, following the twenty-fifth anniversary awards that were conferred upon "ye ole alumni secretary;" and we trust that our every sincere wish as expressed to you and to yours, in the December ALUMNUS, reached you well before the Christmas season.

With many thanks, again, we wish to repeat our invita­tion to all of you to visit us, whenever you are on the campus, at our offices in rooms 205, 207, and 208, Knowles Building.

uHow to Unlock Gifts" Condensed from Harper's Magazine

ROBERT W. KING Physicist; Fellow, American Physical Society

(Reprinted in full, by permission of the Editors, from the January, 1949, edition of the Reader's Digest)

Universities, research foundations and other endowed institutions all over the United States are in a critical financial state. Their costs of operation have been rising and their income from investments and gifts has not kept pace. Hence innumerable money-raising campaigns, some successful, many not.

Ask anybody why this crisis has arisen and he will answer that it is due to taxes. Although the country is prosperous, our system of income taxation bears down so heavily upon large incomes, and provides such scant credit for donations, that the sources of philanthropy are drying up. The resultant crisis is more acute and more ominous than most people realize. Many a college president sees no alternative to a snowballing deficit or government sub­ventions. In fact, there is scarcely an endowed institution of higher learning that is not now in receipt of considerable amounts of government money to finance research projects — the same government that takes our tax money. Few of us regard this with equanimity.

Some students of taxation estimate that if the personal and corporate income-tax schedules were revised so as to permit deduction of contributions not from one's taxable income but from one's tax itself, up to say five per cent of one's income, this would unlock the needed funds. Such activities as education, science, medical research, etc., can­not be allowed to go into eclipse. Being essential to the national welfare, they must become a lien upon the federal treasury unless adequately supported by private giving. In either case the money comes from taxpayers; but the latter may eliminate all danger of political control.

Whether or not the specific formula and percentage mentioned above are correct need not be discussed here; this is for Congress to decide. They merely indicate the kind of change that promises to be effective.

My point is simply this: that the financial crisis of our endowed institutions can be surmounted by a carefully devised change in income-tax formulas — surmounted so as to enhance their income without jeopardizing their precious independence of federal dictation, and without pre-empting any tax revenues required for the necessary functions of government.

COACH DODD DEPICTED AS "GAY DECEIVER"

In the November 27 issue of the Saturday Evening Post, the story of the life of Georgia Tech's head football coach, Bobby Dodd, is depicted in a most interesting and enter­taining article entitled, "The Gay Deceiver of Georgia Tech." The story was written by Fred Russell, sports editor of the Nashville, Tenn. Banner. The article carried various illustrations and covered four pages; and it presented many facts to the Nation about one of the most prominent and popular coaches of the country.

One of the many tops items in the article is the story about the performance by Dodd for Tennessee that proved to Coach Bill Alexander, Director of Athletics, that he had finally found the man who was someday to take over the coaching reins at Georgia Tech. Another little known in­cident is tha manner in which Dodd induced Dinky Bowen to display his gridiron prowess at Tech. These and many other bits of interest are ably related in "The Gay Deceiver of Georgia Tech."

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Page 6: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 27, No. 03 1949

T H E GEORGIA T E C H A L U M N U S January-February, 1949

Gene Turner Committee Announcements

*

Gene Turner, Jr.

"Dear Friends: We are able now to make an announcement which I

know will be good news to all friends and supporters of Gene Turner. Gene's son, Eugene Jr., has accepted the call to succeed his father and he will leave for China early in 1949. The Chinese 'Y' is fortunate to have the continuance of Gene Turner's friendly personality and service through another generation and our Committee is fortunate still to be able to sponsor 'Gene Turner. '

Gene, Jr . was born in China and graduated from an American High School there. He then returned to this country for his college work at the University of North Carolina. After graduation there, he attended Yale Divini­ty School, majoring in Sociology and Religious Education. When war came he joined the Marines as a chaplain. He was in the first group that landed at Okinawa and remained there until the end. Since his return he has been getting excellent experience in 'Y' work as a necessary training for work in China.

They tell me that Gene, Jr . is very like our Gene. He has the same friendly bearing and has been active in athletics and other extracurricular activities. He was an Eagle Scout in China. He was given the "Sullivan Award" in his Senior year at the University of North Carolina as the student making the best contribution to student life. He was active in college 'Y' work and in music circles. While at Yale he took training in Y. M. C. A. work at the New Haven Y. M. C. A. on the side. His interest in things "outside the line of duty" was demonstrated in the Army where, as Chaplain he was exempt from the routine re­quirements, but nevertheless he took a part with the rest of them, qualifying as an expert marksman.

Our Gene continues on the payroll until the end of this year when he officially retires. I doubt if he quits work until his mind and muscles refuse to function. Enclosed is a letter from Gene himself.

We are anxious for the Gene Turner Fund to come through strong this year, thereby expressing our apprecia­tion to Gene for his friendship and for his excellent service to the people of China on our behalf.

Sincerely yours, Signed: B. W. Sinclair, 1912

Chairman, Gene Turner Fund Committee"

Gene Turner, Sr.

REPORT LETTER FROM EUGENE A. TURNER

"For some time past, as members of the Gene Turner Fund Committee know, Gene Turner, Jr . has been consid­ering a call to succeed me on the China staff. My wife and I have felt it a matter for Gene, Jr . and his wife to decide, so we have held aloof and made no effort to influence the outcome, although, of course, there was the influence of parental example, and the fact that he was born in China and saw us at work there. In becoming my successor he will be with those among whom he was born and among whom he spent his youth. Like his parents before him, he will be serving youth in numbers greater than any nation on earth. China boasts in boys alone as many as we have people in the whole United States.

Chinese boys grow up just as they do here. If the right influences are brought to bear upon them; if the right motives and purposes are implanted in their minds, they will grow up to be useful, dependable citizens of character who will lead their communities and their nation to a better day. It is the American story repeated in China, where the need for such citizens is greater, perhaps, than here. You who have children of your own, or who have watched youth grow, will know from your experience what I am talking about. Together we have seen it happen over the years — you, here at home, where there is much to help a boy make the grade, and I, both here and in China, where there is much less to help a boy.

It is hardly necessary to tell you that my wife and I have been watching in great sympathy, as well as in silence from the sidelines as Gene, Jr . and his wife have considered their call, nor need we tell you that we view with pride and satisfaction the decision they have made to take up the task which so long has been ours, and may I add, yours too, through the gracious friendship you have given us through the years. We have never been able to express our appreciation for this help, which was just as necessary as the part we have played, and which we have often thought was perhaps the easier part. We have had the excitement and satisfaction which came from the fight. You have continued with us through prosperity and through adversity, when sometimes you may have felt that the dollars could have been used more usefully elsewhere.

(Continued on page 8)

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Page 7: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 27, No. 03 1949

January-February, 1949 THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Handsome Silver Punch Bowl Service, Gift of South Texas Alumni Club,

To Be Used at Opening of President's New Home

President and Mrs . Blake Van Leer shown unwrapping and admir ing the beaut i fu l silver punch bowl , ladle and 2 4 cups tha t were given by the South Texas, Georgia Tech A lumn i Chapter for the President's new home at 292 Tenth Street, N . W. , Atlanta, Ga.

PRESIDENT VAN LEER PROPOSED CHIEF OF ARMY RESEARCH UNIT, ALSO RE-ELECTED HEAD OF S. E. C.

President Blake R. Van Leer, of Georgia Tech, repeated the oath of office in December as a Colonel in the Corps of Engineers, Reserves, when he was re-enlisted by Colonel C. C. B. Warren at Third Army Headquarters, in Atlanta, Ga. By re-enlisting in the Reserves, Colonel Van Leer is back in the organization to which he belonged for more than 25 years.

It was learned that Pres. Van Leer's appointment is preliminary to his being recommended by Lt. Gen. Alvan C. Gillem, Commanding General of the Third Army, as the head of a proposed Army Research and Development Unit in Atlanta.

This unit, one of similar regional ones to be established over the country, will utilize the skill and science of the Army Reserve as well as that of the colleges and universi­ties in defense developments.

Pres. Van Leer's present rank in the Reserve is that of colonel. He first became a member in 1917, as a second lieutenant, joining the unit at Purdue University. He en­tered active service in July of the same year and served with the AEF in World War I as a company officer with the 316th Engineers, Ninety-first Infantry Division. He served overseas for 13 months, participating in the St. Mihiel, Argonne, Meuse-Scheldt and Lyr-Scheldt offen­sives. He was awarded the Criox de Guerre by the French Government.

He retained his commission in the ORC following the war and in 1942 was called to active duty, advancing to the rank of colonel in charge of the Army Specialized Training Division.

Re-elected President S. E. C.

Colonel Van Leer received additional honors when he was re-elected President of the Southeastern Conference, at the sixteenth annual meeting of the organization in Gainesville, Fla., on December 11, 1948.

Elected along with Dr. Van Leer were Fred Mitchell, of Mississippi State, as Vice-President, and N. W. Dougherty, of Tennessee, as Secretary and Treasurer. These three along with Auburn's Dr. Ralph Draughon and LSU's Dr. Harold Stokes will make up the executive committee for the next 12 months,

A change in the transfer rule will allow a student to transfer from one school to another and participate in athletics after a one-year residence. This will only apply to boys who are not on scholarship. Athletes with scholar­ship commitments will not be eligible for competition if they should change from one school to another, and off-campus jobs are banned for athletes.

In a brief address to the members Dr. Van Leer pointed out that there has been vast improvement in relations be­tween the colleges, singling out Auburn and Alabama, who resumed football this year after a forty-year layoff, for particular praise.

Pres. Van Leer urged members to attend the NCAA meetings this and every year.

"If we don't go to these meetings, present our thoughts and fight to get them adopted then we don't have much complaint when the NCAA does something we don't agree with," he declared.

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Page 8: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 27, No. 03 1949

THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS January-February, 1949

CLEMENT EVANS, '22, ELECTED CHAIRMAN NAT'L ASSOCIATION OF SECURITY DEALERS

Clement A. Evans, '22, prominent Atlanta Investment Banker, a trustee of the Georgia Tech Alumni Foundation, was elected Chairman of the Board of Governors of the National Association of Security Dealers, at Sea Island, Georgia, on January 17, 1949.

Mr. Evans, the first Southerner to hold this position, was born in Augusta, Ga., and is the grandson of the beloved and illustrious Confederate General, Clement A. Evans. A veteran securities man, Mr. Evans is a director of the Georgia Marble Co., Columbus Transportation Co., and Atlanta Laundries, Inc. He served in the Marine Corps in World War I. His firm bears his name and, in addition to Atlanta, it has branches in Macon, Augusta, Columbus, and Savannah, Ga.

PLACEMENT OFFICE MAKES FINE RECORD

Georgia Tech's Placement Service is finding jobs for its graduates at the rate of 1,100 a year, a placement rate that is expected to prevail during 1949 and 1950.

Since its organization 16 years ago, Tech Placement Ser­vice has found positions for 15,922 alumni and new gradu­ates in every State in the Union, 204 in foreign countries and 40 in the United States Possessions. Of the number placed in this country, 8,164 are in Georgia. Present place­ments are for the class which finished in December, 1948.

The Placement Service is now under the direction of Fred W. Ajax, Associate Dean of Students.

GEORGIA TECH'S ALMA MATER SONG

It is a most interesting coincidence that, at this time, when Frank Roman's handsome memorial is being de­signed, a letter was recently written to the Editor of the Atlanta Constitution, on the history of Georgia Tech's Alma Mater song, by Iver H. Granath, Arch., 1923, author of the words. Granath now lives at Fruithurst, Ala., where he has to take his affairs relatively easily to conserve his strength.

We quote his letter, in part, as follows:

"In 1919 Georgia Tech had 'Up With the White and Gold,' 'Ramblin' Wreck,' but no 'Alma Mater.' Visiting colleges had their Alma Mater songs.

Perhaps it may have been mental telepathy on that October afternoon that made me feel that Tech also should have an Alma Mater song. Having played the violin in the Woodward Avenue Baptist Church at the age of 12, I thought, but I did nothing. Music had to be seasoned.

Not until 1922 did the opportunity come. It was spring­time when Frank Roman called me into the basement of the Tech YMCA where he had his shop. As you know, 'Wop' was also the bandmaster. Frank hummed a melody for me and I tried to hum it, too. I then suggested to Frank that he compose a lead sheet — you know, the treble clef only.

When this was finished I took it out under the shed on Grant Field and wrote two verses in less than half an hour. The words were not only spontaneous but so sincere that I visualized Tech from the playing field to the classroom. Frank Roman, the master of music who made me feel very small in comparison with his genius, made the arrange­ment which is used to this present day.

Signed: Iver Granath"

E. P. CAULDWELL, '24, HEADS MILITARY ORDER

E. P. "Jess" Cauldwell, B. S. in M. E., 1924, was installed as President of the National Sojourners, Fort McPherson Chapter No. 60, Atlanta, Ga., at the Fort McPherson Offi­cers' Club, on Wednesday evening, December 15, 1948. The retiring President was Colonel Oliver A. Seaver.

Lieutenant General Alvan C. Gillem, Commanding Gen­eral of the Third Army, was the guest speaker of the oc­casion which was attended by the officers and their ladies of the organization.

Among other honor guests were: Major General, Deputy Commander, Chief of Staff, Third Army, Leland S. Hobbs and Mrs. Hobbs; Brig. Gen. and Mrs. George W. Smythe. General Smythe is the new commander of the Georgia Military District. Also, Colonel H. A. Myers and Colonel Frank Ward, Commanding Officer of Ft. McPherson; Dean Raimundo de Ovies; Lt. Col. Burns C. Cox, Ga. Tech, B. S. 1924, and other prominent members and their wives.

COL. VAN LEER SPEAKER AT OHIO STATE

President Van Leer was the principal speaker at the banquet that celebrated the Diamond Jubilee Year of Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, on Friday evening, January 28.

Dr. Van Leer was invited to make the address by Dr. H. E. Nold, Chairman, Department of Mine Engineering of Ohio State University; and he spoke on the subject, "The Social Responsibility of the Engineering Profession."

GENE TURNER REPORTS (Continued)

It all goes back to the far off year of 1907 when I went to Georgia Tech to serve as Secretary to the Y. M. C. A. and to the friendship which began with many of you there.

Just as the sons of many of you have grown up, so has this one of ours. He is becoming 'associated with me in the business' to speak your language. As he goes to China he will find associated with him on Y. M. C. A. Boards and among his colleagues, sons of men whom I knew when they were high school and college students. There are four such sons serving as Directors in the first Y. M. C. A. I served in China. Another is now at the Rochester The­ological Seminary for a year of study. He came to the Y to study English and then into an English Bible Class. Today he is Editor of the Y. M. C. A. Press and has many translations of English books to his credit, plus composi­tions of his own. There are others like these who in their boyhood came into the 'Y' and had the direction of their lives changed.

As Gene, Jr. and his wife go out to assume tasks of this significance, to make friends and train future leaders, I should like to bequeath them to you and to your friendship, if I may, to be your agents, even as my wife and I have been over the years, so that this task which Tech friends took up through me, thirty-five years ago, can continue and move on through perhaps even a more important generation.

As for my wife and me, when we accept retirement in December, circumstances are such that it seems wise for us to settle at Tryon, N. C , where we believe our habits of life will enable us to make ourselves useful. Then there are several personal projects which have for some time awaited our attention.

If any of you find yourselves in the neighborhood of Tryon we hope you will find our latchstring and let us give you a welcome.

As ever, yours, Signed: Gene Turner"

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Page 9: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 27, No. 03 1949

January-February, 1949 THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Alumni Memorial to Frank Roman Alumni Club Meetings

Artist's rendition of the very beautiful monument to be erected in memory of Georgia Tech's beloved former band leader, W . Frank Roman.

A beautiful and lasting memorial will be placed, at an early date, on the site of Frank Roman's grave in Atlanta's Greenwood Cemetery where the beloved former Ga. Tech band leader was buried in December, 1928.

Affectionately remembered as Frank "Wop" Roman, by all Georgia Tech alumni and a host of others, from all walks of life, Frank Roman composed the music for the Ga. Tech "Alma Mater Song," "Up With the White and Gold," and wrote the score of his rendition of Georgia Tech's famous "Ramblin' Wreck" song.

Since the time of "Wop" Roman's burial, neither the alumni, family, nor the many other friends, officials and relatives have been satisfied with the size and location of his lot and the suitability of his memorial.

Recently, Mr. D. B. Donaldson, owner and manager of the cemetery, donated a larger and more prominent lot to the Alumni Association for Frank Roman's last resting place, provided a suitable memorial were furnished.

Through the interest of George C. Griffin, Dean of Men, and C. D. LeBey, Alumni Association Representative; alumnus Morgan McNeel, Jr., also former members of the band and the ANAK Society, funds were raised to purchase the impressive memorial, as shown, in befitting remem­brance of a grand person who took such an important place in the history of Georgia Tech.

In designing the new monument, the official emblem of the college and the musical lyre were selected as ideal symbols, as they were considered to be most appropriate to use from every standpoint.

The new memorial bears the following tribute, in mem­ory of the revered band leader:

FRANK ROMAN 1879 - 1928

Affectionately known as "Wop" Orchestrated the present musical score of "Ramblin' Wreck"—Band leader of Georgia Institute of Technology from 1914 until his death—and wrote the music for the Alma Mater song.

WIND TUNNEL MODERNIZED In order to keep its wind tunnel research equipment

up to date, the Daniel Guggenheim School of Aeronautics at Georgia Tech has recently completed the installation of a new balance system in its nine-foot wind tunnel, at an overall cost of approximately $50,000. Writing in the November, 1948, issue of "The Research Engineer," bi-monthly journal of the Georgia Tech Engineering Experiment Station, Research Associate Professor E. I. Bricker of the School of Aeronautics points out that in 1932, when the first wind tunnel was installed at Georgia

DALTON, GA. The Georgia Tech Club of Dalton had an excellent dinner

meeting on Thursday night, November 18, at the Dalton Elk's Club.

Mr. Walter M. Jones was responsible for the arrange­ments and did an excellent job of getting Tech men there. There were 37 out of a possible 43 present at the meeting. Certain families were well represented: namely, the Ham-iltons, Higgins, Jones', McCamys and the Smiths.

Honorable Carleton C. McCamy, '31, Mayor of Dalton, was elected President of the Club by unanimous choice. Mr. Henry L. Smith, '90, Tech's first graduate, was desig­nated to remain President Emeritus.

Dean George Griffin was guest speaker and was in his usual good form for the occasion. Roane Beard of the Alumni Office narrated the Tech-Tulane football game which concluded the meeting.

LOS ANGELES, CALIF. A meeting of Georgia Tech Alumni in and around Los

Angeles was held on Friday night, November 17, 1948 at the Roger Young Auditorium Restaurant. There were 26 present for the social get-together, dinner and showing of the Orange Bowl game.

It was decided that the Alumni Club be organized on an informal basis and that three or four meetings a year at the most be held. Co-chairmen were appointed to arrange the next meeting. The youngest and oldest graduates were appointed; Gordon McHenry, '48 and C. D. Smith, '16.

The group was very enthusiastic and seemed very much interested in promoting the Club and interest in Georgia Tech.

MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE Charles S. Peete, '33, was elected president of the Mem­

phis Georgia Tech Club at a reorganizational dinner meet­ing held at the King Cotton Hotel on November 15, 1948. He is an architect with offices in the Goodwyn Institute Building.

Luther Hawkins, '48, who is with Buckeye Cotton Oil Company was elected Vice president. Frederick Fuchs, '36, was elected secretary and treasurer. Fred is the district manager for Ohio Brass Company.

The meeting was arranged by Frank O. Waddey, '29, former All-America end at Tech. Ceylon Blackwell, '18, President and General manager of the DeSoto Garage, was Master of Ceremonies.

The next meeting was held on January 10, 1949, at the King Cotton.

NASHVILLE, TENN. The Georgia Tech Club of Nashville had a Turkey Din­

ner and election of officers last Thursday night, December 9. Approximately 65 members and wives were present, and it was an enjoyable occasion.

Retiring president, Mr. Wister H. Ligon, was able to keep all speeches to a minimum, including his own.

Charles E. Southern, '35, was elected president for 1949; William Nightengale, of Old Hickory and Hardie C. Bass, Jr., Class of '32, Vice-president; John Charles Wheeler, Class of '38, secretary; and Thomas Crain, '47, treasurer. Stephen May, '32, was in charge of the entertainment com­mittee for the meeting and dinner.

Tech, the world's speed record for airplanes was 294 miles per hour and that progress since that date could not have been achieved without extensive research.

The new balance system just installed on the Georgia Tech nine-foot wind tunnel was built to Georgia Tech specifications, and the installation was performed by the staff of the School of Aeronautics. It is now being used extensively in the many aeronautical research projects being conducted at the college.

9

Page 10: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 27, No. 03 1949

10 T H E GEORGIA T E C H A L U M N U S January-February, 1949

Deaths Carroll

Mr. C. H. Carroll, Jr., died in Sonoma, Cal. on January i, 1949. A native of Tunica, Miss., Mr. Carroll graduated from Georgia Tech in 1927 where he was a member of the Theta Chi fraternity.

He spent 18 years with Western Union before World War II and was superintendent of the company's New York office when he entered the Army. Mr. Carroll served four years in the army as a glider pilot and later as major in the Signal Corps in Iran, India and Italy.

At the time of his death he owned and operated a fruit ranch in California.

Survivors are his wife; his mother, Mrs. C. H. Carroll, Sr., of Atlanta, and a son, C. H. Carroll III, also of Atlanta.

Little

Services for C. Beman Little, chief engineer and secre­tary of the Brownell Company, were held in Dayton, Ohio, on November 27, 1948.

Mr. Little who was 76, died suddenly on November 25 at his home, 700 Oxford Avenue, Dayton. A native of Putnam County, Georgia, Mr. Little was graduated from Georgia Tech in 1892, and had lived in Dayton for 55 years. He was a member of Westminster Presbyterian Church and Mystic lodge of Masons.

Surviving are his wife, two daughters, Mrs. Charlotte Hollstein, Detroit; and Mrs. Marian Beck; a son, Kenneth B. Little, Cincinnati; a brother, F. B. Little of Ft. Valley, Ga., and four grandchildren.

Nicholas

Mr. Leslie R. Nicholas, B.S. in Commerce, 1922, died on the morning of December 17, 1948, at his home in Port Chester, N. Y.

Stacy

Ernest H. Stacy, of 504 Holderness St., S. W., Atlanta, died unexpectedly at his residence on December 18, 1948.

Mr. Stacy lived in Atlanta virtually all of his life. He came to Georgia Tech from his home in Brunswick, soon after the turn of the century. Upon graduating in 1904, he remained in Atlanta.

He was stock control engineer for the Georgia Paper Co., and was a member of the Presbyterian church.

Survivors include his wife, and a son, Gilbert T. Stacy, of Atlanta.

Weaver

Births

Henry G. Weaver, prominent Georgia Tech alumnus, who was head of General Motors' Customer Research Depart­ment, died at his home in Detroit of a heart attack, on January 3. He was 59 years of age.

Born in Eatonton, Ga., Mr. Weaver was graduated from Georgia Tech with a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering in 1911. A public speaker, he returned to Tech on several occasions as program guest.

He wrote a book, "Mainspring," that dealt with inven­tions from the time the wheel was developed until the present. It was published about a year ago. He was also the author of many important, informative pamphlets, some of book length.

A pioneer in customer research in the automotive indus­try, he joined General Motors in 1921, and was made head of the research staff in 1927.

Flowers Mr. and Mrs. Gewin W. Flowers announce the birth of a

daughter, Holly Ann, on December 21, 1948. Mr. Flowers received his B.S. degree in Chemical En­

gineering in 1940. Hicks

Mr. and Mrs. Walton Neil Hicks, Jr., announce the arrival of a son on October 3, 1948.

Mr. Hicks received his B.S. degree in Industrial Engi­neering in 1947.

Myers Mr. and Mrs. George J. Meyers announce the birth of a

daughter, Karen Lynn, on October 16, 1948. Mr. Myers graduated in 1947 with a bachelor's degree in

Electrical Engineering. He is with the U. S. Navy Mine Countermeasures Station, Engineering Department, Pana­ma City, Fla.

Murray Mr. and Mrs. Frank Murray announce the birth of a son,

William Franklin, Jr., on October 17, 1948. Mr. Murray received his B. of M.E. degree in 1947.

Schwartz Mr. and Mrs. Howard K. Schwartz announce the birth

of a son, Louis Randolph, on November 7, 1948. Mr. Schwartz graduated in 1943 with a B.S. degree in

Aeronautical Engineering. Weatherford

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Weatherford, Jr., announce the arrival of a daughter, Sally Ellen, on September 24, 1948.

Mr. Weatherford received his B.S. degree in Industrial Management in 1941.

Weddings and Engagements Estes-Bourne

Mr. and Mrs. James Walter Estes announce the engage­ment of their daughter, Miss Winifred Estes, to William Braddock Bourne, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. William B. Bourne, of Brunswick, Ga.

Mr. Bourne received his B.S. degree is March, 1948, and is a member of SAE fraternity.

The marriage will be an event of February 5, taking place at the First Baptist Church in Decatur.

Grant-Rudolph Mr. and Mrs. John William Grant, Jr., announce the mar­

riage of their daughter, Miss Lillian Lochrane Grant, to William Edward Rudolph, the marriage being an important social event of January.

Mr. Rudolph received his B.S. degree in Architecture in 1946 and is vice president of E. R. Wilkerson, Inc.

Hall-Simpson Mr. and Mrs. James Augustus Hall of Ware Shoals, S. C ,

announce the marriage of their daughter, Miss Constance Hall, to Stanley Smith Simpson, Jr . The wedding took place on January 6 at the First Baptist church in Ware Shoals.

Mr. Simpson graduated from Georgia Tech with a B.S. in M.E., 1946. He is employed by the Minneapolis Honeywell Regulator Co., in Charlotte.

Huie-Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Augustus Huie announce the mar­

riage of their daughter, Miss Eleanor Huie, to Kenneth Alvin Johnson. The wedding took place December 18, at the Mikell Memorial Chapel of the Cathedral of St. Philip.

Mr. Johnson, a graduate of Georgia Tech., B.S. in M.E., 1948, is now associated with the engineering division of the Coca-Cola Company.

(Continued on next page)

Page 11: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 27, No. 03 1949

Janviry-February, 1949 T H E GEORGIA T E C H A L U M N U S 11

Class Mentions 1903

Alex R. Howard, of Concord, N. C , was the subject of a highly merited editorial in the December 12, 1948, issue of the "Concord Tribune," upon his announcement that he would not be a candidate for any public office. Mayor Howard has given a full and overflowing measure of ser­vice as alderman and mayor, and he is entitled to seek retirement. But Concord hopes that his retirement from office will not mean full cessation of his activities. 1908

George Clifford Waterhouse is a prominent contractor in Jackson, Miss. 1909

Robert A. Morgan is a member of the textile engineering firm of Moore, Thies, and Morgan, Rome, Ga.

N. E. Adamson, M.E., head of a Laboratory at Norfolk Naval Shipyard, Portsmouth, Va., retired on December 31, after more than 39 years of continuous service. 1910

Redding Sims is Vice President and Secretary of National Blow Pipe & Mfg. Co., New Orleans, La. 1911

Tilman Trammell Blakely is President of Commercial Bank & Trust Co., Griffin, Ga.

Linwood F. Green is General Traffic Engineer for South­ern Bell Telephone Co., Atlanta. 1912

Thomas H. McDowell is President of The Hinesville Bank, Hinesville, Ga. 1913

Henry K. Barwick is a Ford dealer in Wynne, Arkansas. 1914

R. S. Howell is Director, Engineering Extension Division at Georgia Tech. 1915

Allen Philip Francis is manager, The Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection and Insurance Co., Atlanta.

Blanchard Drake Smith is Director of Research at Scrip-to, Inc., Atlanta.

John Walter Turner is Manager of General Electric Sup­ply Corp., Baltimore, Md. 1917

Robert G. Glover is Commercial Attache, American Em­bassy, Caracas, Venezuela.

WEDDINGS AND ENGAGEMENTS (Cont'd)

Potter-Koebley Mr. and Mrs. Reuben E. Potter announce the marriage of

their daughter, Miss Lois Potter, to Albert Victor Koebley, Jr., on November 25, 1948, at St. Paul, Minnesota.

Mr. Koebley graduated in 1942 with a B.S. in M.E., and the couple are at home, 1648 West Lune Avenue, Chicago, 111.

Shipp-Blount Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Markham Shelton announce the mar­

riage of their daughter, Miss Vincencia Allen Shipp, to George Chisholm Blount, J r . The wedding took place on December 18.

Mr. Blount graduated from Georgia Tech in 1943 with a B.S. degree in Aeronautical Engineering.

Walton-Callaway Mr. and Mrs. Ralph O. Walton, of Hamilton, Ga., an­

nounce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Laura Elizabeth Walton, to Howard Hollis Callaway, son of Mr. and Mrs. Cason Callaway.

Mr. Callaway attended Georgia Tech with the class of 1947, and is a member of the 1949 class of the United States Military Academy.

Healy Awarded Rhodes Trophy

The annual Rhodes Trophy award is shown being received by Bill Healy, All-America guard. The presentation is being made by Mr. and Mrs. James D. Robinson and their son James D. Robinson I I I . Mrs. Robinson is the daughter of Mr . Joe Rhodes. This trophy is awarded annually to the Tech player most valuable to his team. The award was started by the late Mr . Rhodes before the first World War . The award was made at the annual football dinner, on December 7 , given by Mr. and Mrs. James D. Robin­son, Jr.

CLASS MENTIONS (Cont'd)

Henry H. Harris is with Southern Bell Telephone & Tele­graph Co., Athens, Ga.

W. Murray Werner is a general building contractor in Shreveport, La. 1918

John S. Ball is Tax Collector for Britt County, with resi­dence at Jackson, Ga.

John Wharton Humphreys is a partner in the firm of Barili & Humphreys, Architects, Atlanta. 1919

Parks M. Betterton is President of Tennessee Coffin & Casket Co., Inc., Chattanooga, Tenn.

G. M. "Pup" Phillips has been named president of The Atlanta Touchdown Club for 1949. 1920

James B. Holcombe is test engineer for Georgia Power Co., Atlanta.

Carl Fred Phillips is Assistant Engineer, New York Cen­tral System, 466 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 1921

James Burton Wilder is an architect in Greensboro, N. C. 1922

L. Ralph Bush is a Consulting Electrical Engineer, with offices at 232 W. Peachtree St., N. W., Atlanta, Ga.

William B. Cochran, Jr., is sole owner of the Cochran Motor Co., Thomasville, Ga.

John M. Hughlett is Vice President and General Sales Manager of Dan River Mills, 40 Worth St., New York, N. Y.

Albert B. Jordan is Vice President of State Supply Co., 229 E. 11th St., Charlotte, N. C.

Willoughby T. Kennedy is Manager, Bleachery Division of Pepperell Manufacturing Co., Pepperell, Ala.

(Continued on next page)

Page 12: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 27, No. 03 1949

12 THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS January-February, 1949

ALUMNI MENTIONS (Cont'd) 1922 (Cont'd)

Election of N. Baxter Maddox as president of the Atlanta Clearing House Association was recently announced. Mr. Maddox is a vice president and trust officer and a director of the First National Bank of Atlanta.

Clement A. Evans, president of the investment banking firm of Clement A. Evans & Co., Atlanta, has been nomi­nated chairman of the board of governors of the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. 1923

George H. Brodnax, Jr., is Assistant to Vice President of Georgia Power Co., Atlanta.

John O. Chiles is Vice President of Adams-Cates Co., 201 Hurt Bldg., Atlanta.

W. Norman Home is Vice President of Ocala Lime Rock Corp., Ocala, Fla.

James D. Lewis is Owner of Lewis Implement Co., Grif­fin, Ga.

W. T. Mealor is with the S. & H. X-Ray Co., 501 Peach-tree St., N. E., Atlanta.

Phil C. Winstead is President of the Winstead Furniture Co. and Winstead Rulane Gas Co., Mullins, S. C. 1924

Wylie W. Crowe is President of Electric Supply Co., 134 Walton St., N. W., Atlanta.

Franklin J. Johnson is Assistant Engineer for Consoli­dated Edison Co. of New York, Inc., 4 Irving Place, New York, N. Y.

Edward G. Merritt is Sales Engineer for Southern Belt­ing Co., Atlanta.

John C. Stat on is Vice President of The Coca-Cola Co., 310 North Ave., N. W., Atlanta.

Weyman T. Willingham is President of Weyman Will-ingham & Co., Inc., St. Petersburg, Fla. 1925

J. William Lang, Jr., is General Sales Manager of Coastal Oil Co., 60 Park Place, Newark, N. J.

William Ches. Smith, Jr., is a partner in the firm of West-brook-Smith Motors, Ltd., East Point, Ga.

G. Mack Wynn is Vice President of Auto Soler Co., 267 Marietta St., Atlanta.

Fulton County Commissioner Charles M. Brown has re­signed from his position, effective with the completion of his present term. He has served for a period of years and was elected without opposition, as a rule, and has been most successful, constructive, and competent in his position.

Edward Craig Wilton, now with Baltimore Marketing Division, Shell Oil Co., living in Roanoke, Va., has been named to the Shell Ail-American as published in the No­vember issue of SHELL NEWS. The team is made up of players now working with Shell who were stars in their college days. Wilton played at Tech in 1922-24.

1926 John P. Holmes is Vice President of Celanese Corp., 180

Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. C. O. Jenkins is General Manager, Sears, Roebuck &

Co., 2600 Lawndale Drive, Greensboro, N. C. Edward Taylor Newton is a Patent Attorney, with offices

at 1523 Candler Building, Atlanta. Andrew Ray Parker is general foreman of Repairs, Blast

Furnace Dept., Ensley Works, T. C. I., Ensley, Ala. William E. Williams is Plant Superintendent for Avon-

dale Mills, Birmingham, Ala. 1927

John R. Adamson is Controller of Riegel Textile Corp., with headquarters at Trion, Ga.

Carter T. Barron is Manager, Eastern Division, Loews Theatres, 1326 F St., N. W., Washington, D. C.

Paul M. Edwards is a partner in the firm of Edwards & Barnes, Management Engineers, Pittsburgh, Pa.

John Herman Geffken is an Electrical Engineer with L. Ralph Bush, 732 West Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga.

Ellison Stanley McNeice is District Manager, Consoli­dated Millinery Co., 1100 Main St., Dallas, Texas. 1927

James L. Phillips is a consulting electrical engineer, with offices at 448 Brown-Marx Building, Birmingham, Ala. 1928

Wister H. Ligon is President of Nashville Gas & Heating Co., 800 Church St., Nashville, Tenn.

John M. Nichols is President of Nichols Contracting Co., 563 Trabert Ave., Atlanta.

William J. Roman is Salesman-Estimator for Atlanta Glass Co., Atlanta, Ga. 1929

Robert Brener is co-owner of Brener's Department Stores, Chattanooga, Tenn.

Kenneth C. Haughton is lumberman and accountant with Miller & Company, Inc., Selma, Ala.

Joseph T. Holleman is sales representative with Black Star Coal Corp., 225 Ten Pryor St. Bldg., Atlanta.

Robert W. Hubner is sales representative with Pollock Paper Co., Dallas, Texas.

Edward T. Rempe is an architect in Coral Gables, Fla., with offices at 2206 Ponce de Leon Blvd.

Howard John Stemm is Chief Engineer for Swift & Co., Columbus, Ohio. 1930

Rhea W. Baker is Distribution Engineer for Georgia Power Co., Atlanta.

Harold William Beers, Jr., is with Beers Construction Co., 70 Ellis St., N. E., Atlanta.

William E. Elliott is a patent attorney with the U. S. Atomic Energy Commission, c/o University of California, Berkely, Calif.

Norman William Pettys is Secretary-Treasurer of Mather Bros., Inc., 30 Auburn Ave., N. E., Atlanta.

Sidney Goldin, a former basketball star at Georgia Tech, has been elected vice president of District 1 of "Asphalt Institute," a national association of asphalt producers. District 1 includes the Eastern Seaboard and the Gulf Coast area. 1931

Sam DuPree is with Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., Akron, Ohio.

S. C. Harrison is a partner in the firm of Harrison Hard­ware Co., Memphis, Texas.

Albert L. Snyder is with Curtis-Wright Corp., Production Cost, West Caldwell, N. J.

Robert P. (Rip) Williams, Jr., is Manager of the Wash­ington, D. C. Executive Office of Rheem Mfg. Co. After serving three terms as president of the Washington Alumni Club, recently resigned in favor of George Viereck, Class of 1932. 1932

Carl E. Helfrich is an architect, with offices at 21 East York St., Savannah, Ga.

J. Tom Daniel, Jr., is Regional Manager, National Sales Division, the Coca-Cola Co., 105 S. LaSalee Ave., Chicago, 111.

Leland A. Mann is an instructor in Chemical Engineering at Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.

John R. Newell is President of Mandeville Mills, Inc., Carrollton, Ga. 1933

Norman J. Aaron is Director of construction and mainte­nance, Fulton County Schools, Atlanta, Ga.

Levi Joel Ball is Secretary of Pepperton Cotton Mills, Jackson, Ga.

Page 13: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 27, No. 03 1949

January-February, 1949 T H E GEORGIA T E C H A L U M N U S 13

1933 (Cont'd) Reece S. Neal is overseer of printing, Lanett Bleachery &

Dye Works, Lanett, Ala. John Blount Walton is co-owner of Walton & Pollard

Electric Co., Griffin, Ga. 1934

Wink A. Davis is Vice President of J. R. Cheshire Co., Inc., 379 Piedmont Ave., N. E., Atlanta.

Wallace T. Jackson is superintendent of TECA Depart­ment, Tennessee-Eastman Corp., Kingsport, Tenn.

John A. McFarlane is Sales Manager, Southern Mills Co., Inc., 585 Wells St., S. W., Atlanta, Ga.

Robert L. Prichard is Chief of Engineering Division, Richmond County Department of Health, Augusta, Ga. 1935

Henry M. Dozier is an air line pilot — Captain — for United Air Lines, Newark, N. J.

Robert M. Lamar is a partner in the firm of Augusta Hide Co., Augusta, Ga.

Roy Richards is President of Roy Richards Construction Co., Carrollton, Ga. 1936

Francis M. Bulloch, Jr., is Vice President of Walker-Bulloch Stores Co., Heflin, Ala.

Frederick E. Fuchs is District Manager for Ohio Brass Co., Memphis, Tenn.

Roy Gaskins is a chemist for Alabama By-Products Corp., Tarrant, Ala.

William J. Greene, Jr., is an engineer for Wiedeman & Singleton, 1303 Citizens & Southern Bank Bldg., Atlanta. 1937

Young Frank Freeman, Jr., is owner of the Ambassador Ice Cream Co., Beverly Hills, Calif.

Thomas R. Jones is owner of the North Georgia Equip­ment Co., Dalton, Ga.

David D. Long, Jr., is Industrial Engineer for Atlantic Steel Co., Atlanta, Ga.

Leo J. Spencer, Jr., is Branch Manager of Westinghouse-Sturtevant Division, Greensboro, N. C. 1938

Seaborn E. Bagley is General Foreman of Chicopee Man­ufacturing Co., Milltown, N. J.

Manuel M. Cortes is a General Contractor, Colegio 19, Parral, Chihuahua, Mexico.

John R. Leggett is Assistant Chief Engineer, Elizabeth Plant, The Barrett Div., Allied Chemical & Dye Corp., Elizabeth, N. J.

John Uhl (Jack) Nixon is a sales engineer, with offices at 424 Mortgage Guarantee Bldg., Atlanta. 1939

Lee C. Daughtry is a Machinist for Norfolk Naval Ship­yard, Portsmouth, Va.

Beryl R. Headrick is District Manager, Oldsmobile Di­vision of General Motors Corp., Columbia, S. C.

Thomas James Hughes is sales engineer for Johns-Man-ville Sales Corp., Mobile, Ala.

William D. Stroud is sales engineer for The Okonite Co., 904 Pere Marquette Bldg., New Orleans, La.

W. J. Alfriend, Ch.E., is with Johns-Manville Corp., Man-ville, N. J., as a development engineer. 1940

Charles R. Wood is Traffic Manager, Southern Bell Tele­phone & Telegraph Co., Atlanta.

George W. Phillips is sales representative for U. S. In­dustrial Chemicals, Inc., New Orleans, La.

Alex C. Ormond is Structural Design Engineer for Union Bag & Paper Corp., Savannah, Ga.

Albert E. Harrison is Engineer for the Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co., Los Angeles, Calif.

James H. Goodgame is Solvent Plant Foreman, The Buckeye Cotton Oil Co., Memphis, Tenn.

Georgia Tech Baseball History By GEO. C. GRIFFIN

(Continued from former issues) 1917 A. B. Hill, Capt.; J. T. Johnson, Mgr.; J. W. Heisman, Coach. Squad: A. B. Hill, J. T. Smith, C. P. Smith, T. L. Spence, W. S. Bryant, Stanly Fellers, D. E. Morrison, M. F. Guill, R. A. Puckett, W. S. Lyndon, E. C. Settle, H. J. Ivers. Record — 11 won, 7 lost; Ga. won 3 out of 4. Tech 7, Oglethorpe 3; Tech 4, Birmingham 3; Tech 11, Birming­ham 2; Birmingham 4, Tech 3; Tech 11, Indians 1 (who were the Indians?); Mercer 2, Tech 0; Mercer 3, Tech 1 (like Auburn, Mercer had been a hard team to beat for some­time); Tech 4, Stetson 0; Auburn 6, Tech 5; Sewanee 0, Tech 5; Sewanee 1, Tech 4; Clemson 2, Tech 3; Clemson 1, Tech 5; Mercer 3, Tech 5; Georgia 2, Tech 1; Georgia 1, Tech 0; Georgia 4, Tech 1; Georgia 2, Tech 3. 1918 M. F. Guill, Capt.; J. S. Budd, Mgr.; Joe Bean, Coach. Varsity: B. D. Heath, M. L. Wheeler, M. F. Guill, C. F. Tur­ner, W. R. Whatley, W. D. Smith, L. C. Ingram, B. Wilder, B. P. Webb, J. N. Guyon, A. H. Murphey, F. O. Pruitt, F. H. Asbury, Hall Ivens. Record — Mercer 8, Tech 0; Mercer 2, Tech 5; Davidson 7, Tech 1; Davidson 1, Tech 6; Auburn 4, Tech 8; Auburn 10, Tech 4; Auburn 3, Tech 8; Auburn 3, Tech 0; Oglethorpe 1, Tech 5; Vandy 1, Tech 4; Mercer 4, Tech 3; Mercer 0, Tech 10; Ga. 2, Tech 0; Ga. 3, Tech 4; Ga. 4, Tech 2; Ga. 3, Tech 4. 1919 C. F. Turner, Capt.; B. B. Williams, Mgr.; Joe Bean, Coach. Squad: B. Adams, F. H. Asbury, D. I. Barron, A. H. Murphy, D. G. O'Leary, F. O. Pruitt , C. F. Smith, W. D. Smith, O. J. Spivey, E. F. Turner, B. P. Webb, M. C. Wheeler, B. Wilder. Records for 1919 very sketchy — lost 2, Mercer; Tech 5, Clemson 0; Tech 9, Clemson 3; Tech 4, Mercer 2; Tech 8, Mercer 1; won three from Fur-man; lost to Camp Gordon; lost 2 to Alabama; won from Atlantic Steel; split even with Mississippi State; lost 4 to Georgia. All Sou. Selections — Barron, Webb. 1919 marked split of athletic relations with Georgia, relations were re­newed the fall of 1925 when Tech won football game 3 to 0. 1920 M. L. Wheeler, Capt.; Joe Bean, Coach; J. H. Dowl-ing, Mgr. Squad: M. L. Wheeler, E. P. Lidell, E. H. Spivey, A. H. Murphey, F. L. Asbury, D. J. O'Leary, F. O. Pruitt , B. P. Webb, A. L. Flowers, C. F. Turner, W. M. Mitchell, C. P. Armbucket, L. C. Ingram, O. I. Barron, E. C. Steele, J. T. Edwards. Record — Tech 4, Erskine 2; Tech 18, Erskine 0; Tech 3, Mercer 0; Tech 1, Oglethorpe 5; Tech 8, Fla. 0; Tech 6, Auburn 2; Tech 4, Auburn 5; Tech 2, Clemson 1; Tech 5, Clemson 4; Tech 6, Fla. 3; Tech 9, Fla. 3; Tech 6, Davidson 2; Tech 4, Davidson 0; Tech 5, Vandy 4; Tech 4, Vandy 2; Tech 4, Wofford 2; Tech 12, Furman 1; Tech 4, Furman 0.

TECH FROSH 9 —GEORGIA FROSH 7 Georgia Tech's freshman football team nosed out the

yearlings from Athens in their annual Thanksgiving Day Charity tilt by the score of 9 to 7 before 38,000 fans.

It was the only win of the three game season for the baby Jackets. Both teams had lost to the Auburn freshmen due to inability to make extra points.

Tech scored in the first period after a pass from Darrell Crawford to Pete Ferris had set up a score. George Maloof bucked it over from the 2 yard line. The extra point was blocked.

Georgia moved back quickly in the second period to score on a pass from Billy Grant to Henson. Haskins booted the extra point to give Georgia the lead, 7 — 6.

Tech again drove deep into Georgia territory to the nine yard line, but couldn't click so kicked a field goal from the 16 yard line which gave them the margin of victory. Billy Harkness made the kick. Harkness' father, incidentally, coached Bobby Dodd as a freshman at Tennessee.

(Continued on page 18)

Page 14: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 27, No. 03 1949

14 T H E GEORGIA T E C H A L U M N U S January-February, 1949

Second Annual Alumni Roll Call Since September, gifts both large and small have been

pouring into the Alumni Roll Call Office. To date, 1009 generous and interested alumni have given of their means to help an expanding Georgia Tech.

The cause is worthy The need is great Will you do your part, Before it's too late?

Here follows the names of those Techsters who have contributed. The star preceding some names indicates a contribution to both the Annual Roll Calls, 1947-48 and 1948-49. GET YOUR NAME INSCRIBED HEREON:

1890 James M. Couper

*H. L. Smith 1892

* Frank E. Whitney 1894

E. A. Greene 1895

Theodore Oetjen 1896

* J. Adger Stewart 1897

Ed. L. Wright 1898

Julian J. Jones 1899

L. R. Camp 1900

T. D. Killian 1901

Max Ohlman * J. F. Towers

1902 * Paul M. McKenny

1903 Alfred D. Kennedy

* Alex R. Howard ' Charles F. Stone

1904 * Frank H. Neely

C. W. Mathews «F. E. McLeod * Byran M. Blackburn

1905 Robert Gregg

* G. H. Yancey 1906

S. W. Mays * Frank M. Spratlin * F. J. Torras • J . G. Holtzclaw

G. M. Stout * George T. Marchmont

1908 Albert V. Jones

' R . B. Wilby * George W. McCarty

J. G. Burke * William R. Snyder * C. L. Emerson

Ray C. Werner * J. E. Davenport

Clifford Waterhouse Dan I. Maclntyre, Jr.

' L . W. Robert, Jr. W. O. Tarpley

1909 N. E. Adamson

» William T. Rich * W. Lucas Simons

Robert A. Morgan 1910

* J. F. Rogers R. R. Stewart Redding Sims

* R. J. Thiesen * Homer W. Hesterly * N. W. Holliday, Jr.

1911 • J. A. Gantt

M. S. Hill K. C. McRae J. Albin Johnson

* J. Eckard Crane * M. A. Ferst

W. L. Heinz L. F. Green E. V. Plane

1912 Frank A. Stivers 1 W. A. Aichel Otis A. Barge W. A. Alexander W. B. Houseal

» T. H. McDowell B. Earle Yancey

' C. P. Goree

1922 Walter M. Wolff David M. Kalish

" Oscar G. Davis J. E. Getzen

* E. L. Hollingsworth A. B. Jordan Willoughby T. Kennedy

* Leon K. Camp John M. Hewlett L. Ralph Bush

* Albert G. Vogt 1923

* Alex Rittenbaum Phil C. Winstead John O. Chiles Alex T. Hunt H. Grady Miller H. A. Butler

* Iver Granath ' W. W. Purks

W. Paul Lyman * Julian Hall Turner * Vernon L. Borum

J. W. Warren ' Charles W. Young

W. E. Dimmock Charles Fleetwood

' Emory L. Jenks * John I. Alford l! J. R. De Priest

W. Norman Home ' W. T. Mealor * Hampton L. Daughtry

James D. Lewis * G. A. Thompson, Jr.

G. H. Brodnax, Jr. * A. L. Chason

Joe L. Jennings Thomas R. Self Max M. Cuba Homer Whelchel

1924 W. W. Crowe

" Franklin J. Johnson John C. Staton Ed. G. Merritt J. F. Edwards

' Walter E. Stevens ' J. A. Peterson 1 C. Patrick Johnson ' Wilbur B. King ' John H. O'Neill, Sr. ' O. P. Stark

C. W. Hollenbeck ' Sidney T. Yancey " John P. Baum * Alton M. Costley ' Weyman Willingham

1925 * Phil B. Narmore

Lee M. Sessions John P. Harrison Guy H. Merry Edgar M. Costley (Deceased)

* Wingate Jackson ' William R. Gilkenson R. A. James : Charles M. Brown

' J. F. Bryan ' G. Mack Wynn J. Frank Mathews W. Ches Smith, Jr.

' James L. Knight George E. Bardwell

' J. William Lang, Jr. William F. Law

' W. R. Webb 1926

Frederick Bellinger John W. Youmans Andrew R. Parker

' Walter H. Godwin 1 H. C. Allen, Jr. ' Spencer W. Boyd Harvey McLean J.Ridley Reynolds, Jr. John P. Holmes Ed Newton Harry Erdberg Thomas C. Huguley O. H. Sale E. R. Culbertson L. J. McGinty 1 Joe Bernath Warren Wheary

• Lawrence J. Zimmerman ' T. G. Reddy, Jr. ' Hal L. Smith ' Web C. Brown C. L. McWhorter G. H. Taylor John L. Underwood

' W. E. Williams, Sr. C. O. Jenkins

1927 Sam D. Murray

1927 C. E. Gammage Karl B. Nixon G. N. Bisenar E. S. McNeice Hugh B. Kirkman William E. Waters John H. Geffken Carter T. Barron M. Berry Grant P. E. Findlay, Jr. N. S. Turner Hazen A. Walker Clifford A. Strickland John R. Adamson R. H. Higdon Jos. H. Chaille Paul M. Edwards J. L. Phillips

1928 William M. Rapp James S. Walton W. C. Wardlaw, Jr. Earl G. Embree T. L. Waxelbaum W. J. Peabody T. C. Marbut Richard A. Guthman Lyman B. Whitlow T. McRae Williams Charles P. Connally, Jr. John M. Nichols W. T. Roman W. J. Holman, Jr. Clarence Hagedorn Irving H. Hitchcock Hazard E. Reeves Wister H. Ligon Ernest B. Merry, Jr. E. S. Trosdale, Jr. Julian C. Jett

1929 H. T. Bolles Ed T. Rempe Howard J. Stemm T. A. Knight, Jr. Joseph F. Goode J. I. Murdock Charles A. Rudolph Ernest DeFore K. C. Haughton R. W. Hubner W. Cary Hansard J. J. Westbrook C. S. Smith Jos. M. Grollman J. T. Kinnett Nathan M. Ayers L . J . Harris H. A. Mitchell Parker S. Day Bennett R. Adams, Jr. John C. Dodd Jack M. Barlow Jos. T. Holleman Robert Brener C. R. Fincher Robert L. Grant, Jr. Wadley R. Glenn

1930 Norman W. Pettys Henry D. Collier R. M. Austin Rhea W. Baker Carol M. Smith R. Tate Bowen Thomas P. Goodman P. W. Jones, Jr . J. M. Roberts C. N. Whitmer R. L. Heard J. M. Mitchell A. H. Swanke Russell D. Bryan M. N. Clarke Mark E. Johnson K. C. Thomas H. W. Beers E. L. Hanna G. I. Teasley A. H. Chamberlin, Jr. William E. Elliott M. Graham Clark Lee W. White Charles B. King George A. Nellis Sidney Goldin Donald W. Yager

1931 Robert L. Fulghum Harold D. Hirsch John W. Parker, Jr. William B. Hankinson W. O. Ball Charles St. Clair Smyly R. P. Williams, Jr. N. Pansy E. G. Strauss, Jr.

1913 T. T. Blakeley

* M. A. Jamison * Harry Segel * J. H. Thiesen * Harleston J. Hall * Hugh Luermann

H. K. Barwick * Walter R. Boyd

1914 * F. L. Shackelford * Joseph A. Logan * E. W. Connell * A. Pierce Roberts

R. S. Howell 1915

Ben J. Gantt W. T. McCullough, Jr.

* Victor G. Vaughn George A. Mercer, Jr. B. D. Smith J. Walter Turner A. P. Francis

* C. B. Grimes 1916

* Frank A. Hooper, Jr. * Paul E. Beard * Wade H. Wright * Paul R. Yopp

A. C. Grist 1917

* Raymond T. Cole J. M. Flanigan Sam E. Levy

* William E. Turner * George W. Woodruff * John A. Simmons * J. Talley Johnston

W. Murray Werner * Henry H. Harris

Robert G. Glover 1918

Graham Granger R. Allen Jones John A. Dodd

* W. P. Ferguson Lewis R. Sams

* Ceylon B. Blackwell * Henry W. Grady

Walter C. Askew, Jr. A. L. Schlesinger J. W. Humphreys

* Lawrence Willet John S. Ball

* O. M. Kessler 1919

* W. A. Parker Julian T. Hightower

* P. M. Betterton * Lamar N. Wise * Julian T. Hightower

1920 James MacDonald John H. Vickers J. B. Holcombe Carl F. Phillips

* Raymond H. Ulrich * Hamilton C. Arnall * J. J. Phillips * Gratton W. Rowland

Beverly D. Wayt 1921

N. Barnard Murphy * Ben H. Wilkins * Robert M. McFarland, Jr.

J. Burton Wilder Price Gilbert, Jr.

* W. D. Gardner * R. E. Lynch

Johnston McCorkle * S. B. Hooker

1922 * C. S. Coleman * James D'Arcy

F. M. Dickerson * J. Harry Gault * William B. Cochran, Jr. * Herman L. Gaines

Albert H. Staton

Page 15: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 27, No. 03 1949

January-February, 1949 THE GEORGIA TECH A L U M N U S 15

SECOND ANNUAL ROLL CALL (Cont'd)

1931 E. Posey Jones

* William C. Miller * James C. Dawson, Jr.

James A. Byars *F . W. Kerr * Paul L. Dorn * A. N. Bell * W. H. Calaway

8am DuPree * S. C. Harrison

Albert L. Snyder 1932

* George G. Bailey *J . R. Newell

Harry D. Dewar Thomas H. Hall Ralph M. Langford

*F . A. Mathes R. P. Hardeman

*W. A. Home, Jr. * Albert J. Hill

William P. Rocker * J. L. Dawson * B. F. Smallwood * Dan A. McKeever * Gerald B. Fletcher * Frank A. Forrester * A. E. Patton

Leland A. Mann Edward S. Mathes J. Tom Daniel, Jr .

* Daniel B. Alexander * E. M. Clary * Carl E. Helfrich * Walter F. Kiley * H. G. Parker

Edward R. Hahn 1933

J. L. Ball Reece S. Neal

* J. F. Plexico * Fred W. Bull

E. A. Baker, Jr. * Woods W. Huff * Norman J. Aaron * Jose R. Fiol * Charles A. Kelley, Jr.

John B. Walton James W. Holland Robert W. Lawson Edwin B. Branch Ben W. Burton W. F. Mitchell

* John M. David * Fred G. Story

Theodore Taube * J. M. Cheatham

F. M. Phillips Stanton N. Field J. R. McArthor Harry B. Anderson William F. Armentrout Roland L. Toups

* J. S. Gruel, Jr. * L. W. Cleveland * William P. Clark, Jr.

Ned E. Holland * Dunlap Scott, Jr. * Herbert A. Williams, Jr. * Eugene J. Pontiff, Jr. •Hubert E. Ulmer

1934 * John F. Paterson

Rudolph W. Cisco, Jr. James F. Brazell, Jr.

* R. J. Thiesen *J . T. Kinnett

Orlando A. Ridriquez-Jorge * Wink A. Davis

Wallace T. Jackson Alton H. Parker

* R. L. Pritchard George R. Vance F. L. Bell James M. Latimer

* Robert Tharpe Felix DeGolian, Jr. Howard T. Tellepsen D. C. Akers, Jr.

* Robert Wardle, Jr. * Vernon S. Brown

Edward Doud * John D. Hutcheson *M. A. Honnell *Udo O. Thran * J. T. Woodbury * Thomas J. Judge * J. J. McLendon, Jr.

Charles W. Wolcott, Jr. David T. Fargason Irving S. Preston Charles B. Fontaine, Jr.

* Warren Baggett Frank A. McAllister, Jr.

* John A. MacFarlane Walter W. LeRoy

* Homer G. Ray, Jr. W. C. Meredith

1935 * Harrison Bray

1935 * William J. Ellison, Jr.

Archie C. Johnson, Jr. Roy Richards

» Robert L. Bell * Cyril D. Stapleton * William H. Glenn, Jr .

Thomas R. Hoag * James B. Dent * Robert C. Eley, Jr. * Samuel A. Tull * F. A. L. Holloway

Ed. H. Sutter Millard F. Hubbard Fred R. Trew Frank H. Baker Malcolm W. Orr, Jr.

* Richard G. Neal J. H. Ridley

* Sam Zimmerman, Jr. G. R. Edmondson Walter L. Susong

* Charles N. Dannals, Jr. * Henry M. Dozier

Robert M. Lamar Wright T. Paulk E. Davis Wilcox

* Leo J. Drum, Jr. 1936

H. W. Richards William D. Stroud

* David D. Fay Jack Kinsler

* William A. McCree, Jr. F. M. Bullock, Jr.

* Roy Gaskins » Hamford Sams. Jr.

Walter Castles, Jr. * Conway Mizell * William C. Paulson * A. Avary Austin » Frederick B. Avery * J. W. Keith

C. D. D'Orofris * Lloyd W. Jackson * William S. Ginn * Frederick E. Fuchs

Cone M. Maddox, Jr. William J. Greene, Jr.

1937 * Thomas T. Flagler, Jr. * Max Kuniansky

H. J. Kanter James D. Finley Basil Powell J. W. Clegg

* Archie E. Goode Roger M. Jacobs

' John Hand Williams ' Thomas E. Yandre * George H. Hightower * Edwin R. Granberry

David W. Miller * Edgar Allen Poe > H. D. Emmert, Jr. * Garland Wilson, Jr. > Charles T. Anderson

David D. Long, Jr. * Luther Drennon ' Y. F. Freeman, Jr. " L. J. Spencer, Jr.

Don C. Johnston 1938

" George D. Ray, Jr. S. E. Bagley, Jr. Manuel M. Cortes

'William F. Stokey " W. C. Northern * John R. Leggett

J. F. Parker * Ben P. Jones

Robert McDonald * Robert S. Holmes ' Edward Guy Cole, Jr.

S. G. Robertson, Jr. " W. A. Snellgrove, Jr.

Jos. G. Dickey ' N. C. Harrison, Jr.

Sewell Howard 1 Jack U. Nixon F. L. Humphrey, Jr. Knowles H. Henley

* Robert H. Ferst William B. Johnston

' William A. Peavy, Jr. W. S. James

> Robert A. MacKenzie Dennis D. O'Brian

* Audrey W. Parrish * Sam R. Phillips

Charles V. Johnson ' James M. Feagle W. R. Jenkins

> H. D. Morgan, Jr. E. W. Klein. Jr. Robert R. Voorhees Charles A. Staples

1939 Colburn Coe

•H. C. Tilford, Jr. ' Walter W. Howie

1939 * Thomas R. Jones * Robert A. Fry

James E. Corr Lee C. Daughtry B. R. Headrick

* W. Beverly Johnson, Jr. William M. Miller

* Frank A. Walker * Franklin T. Waltermire

W. J. Alfriend, Jr. * Robert M. Gibbs

Robert F. Head, Jr. Joseph K. Dillard W. D. Henderson

* Thomas J. Hughes John R. Wyant Orlando A. Rodriquez-Jorge

* M. G. Mitchell, Jr. Raleigh O. Worrell

* J. L. Brooks Jason T. Pate R. L. Adams, Jr.

* S. H. Fowler Paul S. Nurko

* E. R. Flynt Eugene V. Fontaine

* J. A. Vendrell * William H. Dodds * W. B. Sears

William A. Childs, Jr. Edwin B. Erwin

1940 * Harold A. Dye * Arthur Hagedorn, Jr. * Marshall J. Mehaffey * Charles R. Wood * Howard Ector

Alvin E. Raettig, Jr. John M. Sena David E. Cavenaugh

* Robert L. Ison J. F. Scruggs James V. Hogg Forrest H. Holz

* John W. Lemon H. M. Conway, Jr.

*R. H. Crossfleld * W. Roane Beard

A. S. Combs * Paul C. Rhyne, Jr.

Raul A. Oguendo Graham L. Gunn

* A. Rufus Morgan, Jr. * J. Turner Jones * John E. Anderson, Jr. * Norman W. Moss * W. B. Ashby

Spence Higgins * John D. Nations * Alex C. Ormond

Leonard Wilkins * Albert E. Harrison

E. G. Weissenberger George W. Phillips Ralph L. Pries Cornelius F. Walker

* G. C. Bestor * Robert A. Carl

James H. Goodgame George A. Wright

* W. F. Bennett H. E. Broward

* Irvin Massey Charles S. Roach Ed. L. Scanling James C. Malone, Jr.

* Lee A. Shearouse * Albert G. Daniel

Morris Klein C. E. Person

1941 R. B. Bridges Clayton J. Davis

* W. C. Gregory S. M. Whitehill, Jr. R. J. Harter

* Donald C. Hulbert * Edgar D. Johnson * Leland O'Callaghan, Jr. » William G. Story

John T. Elder Leslie M. Jones

* Leo W. Kelley Walter B. Lumsden, Jr. George S. Mauney H. C. Van Arsdale R. C. Aebersold Frank W. Allcorn III Richard C. Cohn A. Y. Carmichael Edwin M. Clapp, Jr.

* Stokes Ramseur * James H. Voyles, Jr. * F. A. Whitaker

J. G. Wohlford Edward E. Livingston

* W. Edwin Marshall * George W. E. Daughtry * George H. Graham * A. Thornton Kennedy * George E. Zeigler, Jr.

John A. Dickson

* Madison F. Cole * Otis A. Barge, Jr.

E. L. Phillips * W. J. Carter III * Craig C. Davis * Lewis V. Coursen * Robert C. Webb * William J. Hicklin, Jr. * Laurence F. Martin

Walter C. Thomas James E. Faw, Jr.

* Dixon R. Olive, Jr. 1942

*B. F. Boltenfield * Richard E. Prince, Jr. * Paul B. Bailey *C. W. Kilpatrick

Ben H. Hall, Jr. Frank M. Bristol

* A. H. Christian * William B. Bennet * James P. Poole * Ben S. Daniel

Peter F. Koryeinski Albert F. McCarty

* George P. Guill * William W. Massengale * John Corry * Everett Bernardo

Chester C. Courtney, Jr. Zack F. Daniel, Jr. John O. King, Jr. Hector McA. McNeill Hubert Patterson

* Robert L. Rod F. C. Cheney James W. Largen

* William W. Holt, Jr. * Albert V. Koebley, Jr. * James C. Lewis * C. M. Neuner * George S. Kehr * R. M. Thompson, Jr.

William B. Henderson Royle A. Jackson

* Maurice H. White Hugo Quillian

* Frank L. Sheram * David E. Willis * Melbourne L. Winton •James W. Griffith * E. M. Ranson, Jr.

William G. Soloman III * Lochlin W. Caffey

David W. Johnston Henry G. Almand, Jr. Hugh D. Hungerford

* Robert C. Barrett Charles F. Ketchey

* Grover C. Taylor * Quintin B. Farmer * Richard F. Griffith * John F. Kneisel

Robert M. Lang, Jr. * James E. McDaniel, Jr.

Ed T. Mitchell G. W. Stradtman Fred L. Bulbin

* Edwin B. Dickson Charles H. Finch

* John A. Leudemann 1943

F. T. Branch John S. Kennard

* William C. Ross * Harris M. Carter, Jr. * Walter A. Reisor, Jr.

Harold W. Harrison H. F. Hunter Daniel C. Jorgensen

* M. B. Merts, Jr. William D. N. Elfrink John B. Thomas, Jr. Alan A. Kurtis

* Robert L. Beard James R. Williamson

* Henry W. Mauldin, Jr. Joe Aizpurn F. R. Adair

* Andrea Duus, Jr. Warren R. Pollard, Jr. Floyd D. Richards John Q. Bullard William H. Funk

* Kenneth R. Hall * Eugene H. Farris •Fred L. Calkins

Josiah V. Benator * Robert H. Johns * LeRoy A. Woodward

N. Barnard Murphy. Jr. Henry M. Powell, Jr. Chas. W. Wray Ben J. Aycock C. D. Mcintosh, Jr.

* W. R. Mountcastle. Jr. L. C. Radford, Jr.

* John M. Saums Charles E. Waits, Jr.

* Robert L. Branner. Jr. Grady W. Brooks Ashton L. Cary

Page 16: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 27, No. 03 1949

16 THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS January-February, 1949

SECOND ANNUAL ROLL, CALL (Cont'd) 1943 (Cont'd)

J o h n A. Dickson * L. P . McCar ty * Danie l Mihalko * Wil l iam D. T u c k e r * H a r r y E. M u r r a y

Milton Pe r l i ng * F . W. Rose * F r a n k A. A lexande r , J r . * J o h n F . R ichenake r * Harold S. Cas tagne t t a * Alvin M. Fers t , J r .

J a m e s H. McAuley

1944

J o e R. Wil l iams * Ino G. Weiske * Delord R. M a b r y

Ernes t H. Cox « J i m H. Z ike

B u c h e r Scot t Moses Cenke r F r a n k H. Nelson

* R a l p h A. I re land , J r . Cleveland W. Cochran

• F r e d C. Beil Roy W. Darwin , J r . J o h n G. H a m m o n d T. N. Pigford

* J o h n E. Gross Will iam G. Pechu l i s

* Jose I. Gonzales * H e r m a n Samue l

J a m e s S. Best * A. M. B r a d b e r r y

Joe T. Schomberg George L. Brock Rock H. C a n a d y

1945

Samue l F e l d m a n * J o h n A. S immons , J r .

Ed A. F r y e r J o e B a k e r Hill, J r . E. E. David, J r . W. J . Brough ton , J r . R. L. Eng lund

* J o h n R. N e w m a n * W. J . P a r k i n s o n

R icha rd W. S tevens Char les W. Helzer

* Alber t L. J o n e s P a u l D u k e

* V. A. S t ivers T h o m a s C. Owens W. C. S t empe l

* A. D. Dorse t t , J r . B e n n o G. Rothch i ld

* George T. M a r c h m o n t , J r . * W. B . Jones , J r .

Angus I. Hines , J r . Rober t J . Tay lo r III Dabney C. J a c k s o n L. L. Gel le rs ted t , J r .

* E. L. B a r n e s * Geo. F . Smi th , J r .

Claud Daley, J r . H o m e r M. H u n t

1946

Danie l L. W o r t h J a c k F . C l e a r m a n

* Wil l iam A. G r a n b e r r y * J a m e s M. K o r n

Ca lhoun Win ton • W i l l i a m E. Scot t

A r t h u r H. Hinners , J r . J a s . J . Mooney J o h n J . Glover

* H a n s F . S teen J a s . R. M a c P h e r s o n Myron M. R a n d m a n J o h n Van H o r n Miner , J r . Gordon M. Coleman

* R. P . Colmer, J r . D. A. D r e x e l

* J a s . M. Spain, J r . R. T. Campbe l l J . W. H u n t e r Alber t Kle in , J r .

* Daniel C. K y k e r , J r . T. H. Townsend , J r . E. B. Avere t t , J r .

* S. P . Lenoi r B e r t r a m C. Wol lner W. F . Wrye

* F r e d e r i c k A. Hoyt , J r . H. C. Brea r l ey , J r .

* J . E. Counci l Char les H. Kohler , J r . A n d r e w P . Mar inos

* D. R. P a t c h » Phi l ip L. Scharff, J r . * Ear l B. Fowler , J r .

W. C. P a x s o n * R icha rd W. Smith , J r . * J a m e s E. S tevens * Rober t A. Foyle * Will iam D. Cla rke

1947 ' Rial E. Rolfe, J r .

Rober t O. Wi lhe lm k H e r b e r t W. Gehr ing , J r .

Eugene C. Hadlock * E d w i n ,H. S m i t h

Dudley J . F i t t s ' El ton L. P a r k e r • Wil l iam R. Canals * Don F . DeLong ' J a c k L. Redfe rn

D. W. G r a n m i l l R icha rd Endres s

" Jefferson H. Wallis R. T. F e l k n o r H. H. Howell , J r .

' J o h n B. Jackson , Jr.-F r a n k D. Cain, J r . H. W. Degnan , J r .

' J e a n W. Levy T h o m a s S. Lucas Char les A. Burde l l

1 J u l i a n F . F iske , J r . • J o e E. F loyd

Will iam H. Folwel l R. H. T r i m m e r H u g h D. Mau ld in Wil l iam F . M u r r a y

1 Dona ld J . De i t e r s L. J . M u r r a n s Lloyd E. Pascal , J r . Char les N. Whi tmi r e Wade H. Denn i s

> E. B. Ell iott , J r . J . C. Bos ton Wil l iam G. M u r p h y , J r .

' H o w a r d H. Cal laway ' R. E. Gre tz inger , J r .

Ashley J . Carswel l Donald C. J e n k i n s J . Wyl ly Keck , J r . George L. Lane , J r . F r a n k W. Le i tne r Joseph M. Maas Will iam E. Newton J a c k W. S u m m i t t

' I rv ing Weinbe rg J . I. H u n t Will iam L. Imer she in W. R. B r o w n E. Calvin Johnson , J r . Joseph E. S a n d e r s

' L. C. B o w d e n 1 F r a n k W. Denn ing ton ' J a m e s R. Foltz 1 W. N. Hicks Rober t S. Kel ley

1 Ea r l W. S t r a d t m a n Richard H. Al lmand , J r .

' W. T. Moore J . F . F a u l k n e r

' Edga r O. R a n d Wil l iam H. Novins R. J . Wollschlager

' J o h n D. P lax ico ' D. T. Ca l lahan 1 Fo r r e s t A. Morgan

1948 F . E. Graf A. M. Har r i s , J r . J a m e s M. LeVan, J r . Ra lph P u c k e t t , J r . Al Smal le r B e n M. S tevens , J r . L. T. T h o r n t o n Don D. K i n n e t t R. Wilson Vanderhoof, J r Claud L. Cope K e n n e t h E. J o h n s o n M. H. Sch ind le r J a m e s Reed, J r . Ed. M. Fossas P a u l B . Hor ton Richard C. Reed, J r . D. O. M c G r a w J o h n G. B a r n e t t B . T. McClel land J a m e s N. Robinson J a m e s L. G a m m e l l Doyle A. G r a h a m J o h n J . Conoley, J r . Wil l iam W. G r a h a m I rby A. Wadl ing ton , J r . De lmas F . E icho rn R i c h a r d A. Har r i son Danie l J . O 'Leary P . H. Sanders , J r . Lewis F . Spi tzer B . E. S te t zenmul le r C. L. Ti l l s t rom Hal . S. Hol t s inger Ra lph Saul Don Delugach J a m e s M. Tucker , J r . G. W. Clark H a r v e y N. Levin Davis E. Welborne , J r . Win ton H. Smi th Will iam J. Camp

HEALY AND BRODNAX MAKE ALL AMERICA

Bill Healy, outstanding guard on the Tech team for the last three years made All-America on the first team of a number of selections; namely NEA, INS, Football Writers Association, as picked by them and written by Grantland Rice for Look Magazine, and Sporting News. He made the second team as picked by AP.

Healy was captain of the 1947 team and has played a ferocious game every Saturday since coming to Tech. He made several all star teams last year including All-South­eastern Conference.

Healy was given the annual award as being the best lineman in the Southeastern Conference by the Birming­ham Quarterback Club. He also received the trophy for being the "Lineman Most Valuable to His Team," by the Atlanta Touchdown Club, as well as the Rhodes Trophy. (See picture this issue).

End George Brodnax was picked on the Colliers All-American first team. This team was selected after eight of the countries' leading coaches had studied motion pic­tures of games played in all parts of the United States.

Brodnax, a senior, was co-captain of the 1948 team and was a consistent star on offense and defense.

Both Healy and Brodnax made the AP ALL-SEC, Frank Zeigler, Tech fullback, made the second team.

1948-49 BASKETBALL SCHEDULE

Dec. 3 — Howard College at Birmingham

4 — Birmingham Southern at Birmingham

11 — Chattanooga

18 — Furman

20 — Long Island at New York

22 — Lasalle at Philadelphia

Jan. 7 — Tulane at New Orleans

8 — LSU at Baton Rouge

11 — Auburn at Auburn

14 — Alabama

17 — Kentucky

22 — Tennessee

26 — Georgia

29 — Tulane

Feb. 2 — Georgia at Athens

5 — Tennessee at Knoxville

7 —LSU

10 — Florida

12 — Duke at Durham

16 — Georgia

19 — Kentucky at Lexington

23 — Auburn

26 — Florida at Gainesville

March 3-4-5 — SEC Tournament at Louisville

ROLL CALL (Cont'd) * C. C. Neid l inger F r i ends

Will iam A. Giemza A r t h u r I. Ha r r i s P re s ton Mcin tosh * Eugene A. T u r n e r

1949 F . G r a h a m Wil l iams Russell J . Ziebell I rv in B . Levenson W. J u l i a n Bell, J r . * Roy M. Mundorff

Page 17: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 27, No. 03 1949

January-February, 1949 T H E GEORGIA T E C H A L U M N U S

Sports 17

Shown above is the 1949 edition of the Yellow Jacket basketball team. Top row, I to r: Melvin Dold*, Joe Keener*, Jim Nolan* , Colin Anderson*, and Dale Lupton. Middle: Jack Owens, Jimmy Stewart*, Tom Pearson*, Barry Blemker, Paul Godwin*. Bottom: James Frit'ch*, Henry Schoening*, Mike Sermersheim*, and Benny Register.

(It is interesting to note that the top row averages a fraction under six feet four inches in height). * Denotes Lettermen

ALABAMA 14 — GA. TECH 12 The Crimson Tide took advantage of two Ga. Tech mis-

cues and played alert football to hand the Engineers their second defeat of the 1948 season, 14-12.

In the second quarter Tech's safety man, J immy Petit, fumbled a punt on his five yard line, Alabama recovering. On a cleverly executed play Cadenhead went around left end for the score without being touched. Tech's secondary was pulled in and completely fooled by a fake buck. The half ended with Alabama leading 7 — 0.

In the third period, Tech's center, Lewis Hook inter­cepted a Bama pass on his 34 and ran it to the Tide 32. Bowen who had been crippled a good part of the season, made six. Bowen again ran off tackle and though hemmed close to the sideline, kept twisting, turning and driving till he had gone all the way for a Tech score. Bowen missed the extra point. Late in the third period a long pass in­tended for Tech end, Jack Griffen, was intercepted by Bama center, Speed, who ran 62 yards to score again for the Tide. He picked up interferers as he went and was not touched. Salem booted the extra point and Tech was be­hind 14 — 6.

In the fourth period, Tech drove forward twice only to be stopped by an intercepted pass or passes badly thrown. The third drive netted a touchdown with only a minute and a half to go. A 47 yard run by Joe Cobb after receiving a short pass was the highlight of this drive. Bowen scored on a short plunge through the middle. A bad pass from center prevented the extra point from being made.

TECH 54—CITADEL 0 Tech had a field day at the expense of Little Citadel on

Nov. 20, 1948. The Jackets set a new high in yardage gained when they ran up a total of 710 yards by rushing and passing on their outclassed opponents.

On the second play of the game Bob McCoy ran 87 yards for a touchdown. Red Patton threw to George Brodnax for the second score. The third was made on a pass from Southard to McCoy, covering 34 yards. A pass from South­ard to Brodnax was good for the fourth six pointer. A minute before the half a pass, Brown to Anderson, who lateraled to Harvin, was good for another touchdown.

In the third period Queen ran from the nine yard line for a touchdown. Al Lansing scored again from the eight after a drive had covered 73 yards. Buddy Fowlkes, track star, ran 39 yards for the final talley.

Hays McKinney, Tech guard, broke his leg in an effort to score from the one yard line. Rumsey Taylor also suffered a broken foot in the game. Tech used 43 players and couldn't seem to keep from scoring except twice when McKinney tried to score.

Ga. Tech (12) The Yardstick Alabama (14) 12 First Downs 10

152 Yards Rushing 124 164 Yards Passing 65 25 Passes Attempted 12 11 Passes Completed 3 31 Punting Average 30.5 35 Yards Penalized 30

Page 18: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 27, No. 03 1949

18 THE GEORGIA TECH A L U M N U S January-February, 1949

GEORGIA 21 — TECH 13 The Georgia Bulldogs completely outclassed Georgia

Tech on Sanford Field in the classic struggle played before 52,000 fans November 27, 1948. It was the only game of the 1948 season in which the Jackets had not played superior football against an opponent.

Georgia was not to be denied as they drove 64 yards in the first quarter for a score made by Floyd Reid on a 5 yard sweep around his left end. Although hit for no gain by Bob McCoy, he shook loose and went across for the score.

The second drive in the second quarter started from their own 8 yard line. Joe Geri ran for 45 yards to the Tech 47, passes by Rauch for 10 and 15 yards to Lorendo and line smashes by Geri and Tilletski carried it on down where Tilletski bucked over from the four. Geri again kicked the extra point. The score at half time stood Georgia 14, Tech 0.

In the second quarter Bradach blocked a Georgia punt, but Tech couldn't move and they lost their first scoring opportunity on two incomplete passes. Later an inter­cepted pass stopped them again.

Early in the third period Mathews broke through and blocked Geri's punt. The ball rolled into the end zone where Brodnax recovered for the Tech score. Bowen con­verted and Tech was back in the game.

Again in the third period Tech was forced to kick from behind its goal line. Humphreys, who averaged 50 yards, kicked a beauty to McCall who caught it on his own 46. Tech men had him covered, but he got by them some way and went all the way for the score. He was aided by some sensational blocking on Georgia's part.

In the fourth quarter Tech drove 61 yards through Georgia's line with Bowen going over from the 5 on sheer determination. The extra point was wide. The score was Georgia 21, Tech 13.

TECH-GEORGIA FROSH GAME (From page 13) For Tech Darrell Crawford, Powell Sheffer and Ray

Thompson were standouts in the backfield. Crawford's passes were beautifully thrown. In the line Pete Ferris, end, John Bryan, tackle, and Ray Beck, guard, stood out.

Georgia featured Billy Grant, quarterback, Dick Raber and Zippy Morocco halfbacks and two tackles Marion Campbell and Bill Hagerty. J immy Henson at end turned in a fine performance.'

Georgia Frosh (7) The Yardstick Tech Frosh (9) 12 First Downs 13

159 Yards Rushing 89 17 Passes Thrown 12 5 Passes Completed 7

93 Yards Passing 106 28.2 Punting Average 32.2 35 Penalties 60

John Rauch, who completed 8 of 11 passes, Joe Geri, who gained 129 yards, plus Georgia's line play accounted for the difference in the two teams. Tech really had the ball only a small part of the time because they couldn't stop the much heavier Bulldogs.

Humphreys' kicking, Bowen's determination, and the de­fensive play of Healy, Hook and Ziegler kept Tech from getting a much worse defeat. Tech (13) The Yardstick Georgia (21)

7 First Downs 18 62 Yard Rushing 259 17 Forward Passes 11 6 Passes Completed 8

65 Yards Passing 105 0 Passes Intercepted 3

50 Punting Average 31 50 Yards Penalized 70

Page 19: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 27, No. 03 1949

January-February, 1949 T H E GEORGIA T E C H A L U M N U S 19

GEORGE W. DUNN - PHILADELPHIA,PA.

How did I make the transition from a Teachers' College to the life insurance business? Here is about how it happened.

I waved a fond farewell to Moorhead State Teachers' College, Minnesota, in the spring of 1941, and settled down to do some serious thinking concerning my future. Uncle Sam supplied some of the answers in September of that year, and for the next five years the Army Air Corps was my boss, and my address was a succession of Army Air Bases and A.P.O. numbers, which stretched from Colorado to Scotland, England, Africa, Italy and Corsica.

For two of these years it was my good fortune to be associ­ated with a brother officer, "Cap" Haines, in civilian life a partner in New England Mutual's Philadelphia General Agency, Moore and Haines. He, my wife—a U. S. Army nurse, whom I married in Africa—and I spent long hours discussing life insur­ance and its possibilities as a career for me. It offered all of the things that I had ever hoped for in business: independence, unlimited income possibilities and, most of all, a never-ending challenge to my ability in a field where limits do not exist, excepting as I alone set them.

Before I had finished my terminal leave, I was studying for my Pennsylvania State Insurance examination, and was making field trips with my friend from overseas.

Now, after two years, I am more convinced than ever that there is no better future than that which the New England Mutual offers. To prove my point, I have the support of my 97 policy­holders, and the one million dollars of new life insurance which I have placed on their lives. S ^ _

GRADUATES of our Home Office training courses, practically all of them new to the life insurance business, are selling at a rate which produces aver­age first-year incomes of $3600. The total yearly income on such sales, with renewal commissions added, will average $5700.

Facts such as these helped George Dunn solve his career problem. If you'd like to know more, write Mr. H. C. Chaney, Director of Agencies, New England Mutual Life Insurance Company, 501 Boylston Street, Boston 17, Massachusetts.

These Georgia Tech men are New England Mutual representatives:

HARVEY GRANGER, '22, Savannah

G. NOLAN BEARDEN, '29, Los Angeles

CARL S. INGLE, '33, Jacksonville

C. GRAHAM HURST, '48, Savannah

Get in touch with them for expert counsel on your life insurance program.

Page 20: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 27, No. 03 1949

20 THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS January-February, 1949

Directory of Georgia Tech Alumni Clubs

THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION Pre s iden t — J o e J . Westbrook, '29

Vice -Pres iden t — Oscar G. Davis, '22 Vice -Pres iden t — H u g h Hill, '23 T r e a s u r e r — Chas. R. Yates , '35

Exec . S e c r e t a r y — R. J . .Thiesen, '10 A l u m n i Clubs

ASHEVILLE, N. C. H a r r y R. Allison, '24, 18 Mane t t a Rd., Ashevil le , N. C.

AUGUSTA, GA. Pres . , Dor roh Nowell , '39, 522 G r e e n e St. V.-Pres . , F r a n k S. Dennis , Jr . , '33, 728 Milledge Rd. Sec.-Treas. , A lbe r t J . Roesel, '38, 2622 H e n r y St.

RATON ROUGE, LA. J a m e s LaRoche, '40, 2052 Myr t leda le Ave.

BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Pres . , A. R. " B u c k " F lowers , '22, 710 1st Nat iona l Bldg. V.-Pres . , Ed Crowley, '28, The Texas Co., P . O. Box 115 Sec.-Treas. , L y n n S t r ick land , '30, S t r i ck land Tire Service .

CHARLESTON, W. VA. F . N. Thave r , '46, 1702 Woodbine Ave.

CHARLOTTE, N. C. Pres . , J o h n Vickers , '20, P . O. Box 1145 V.-Pres . , T o m B a r n h a r d t , '22, B a r n h a r d t Mfg. Co. Sec re ta ry , Alber t Glover , '24, 2108 Wellesley Ave. Treas . , War ing Best, '29, 1962 S te r l ing Rd.

CHATTANOOGA, TENN. P re s . J a c k Chivington, '39. Davenpo r t Hosiery Mills, Cha t tanooga ,

Tenn . V.-Pres . , J o h n J . Hill, '35, 928 Volun tee r Bldg., Cha t tanooga ,

Tenn . S e c , Louis Chambless , '35, Combus t ion Eng inee r ing Co-

Chat tanooga , Tenn . Treas . , Reid M u r p h y , '40, Signal K n i t t i n g Mills, Chat tanooga ,

Tenn . CHICAGO, ILL.

Pres . , Geo. M. Eggar t , '32, 6755 N. Ar tes i an Ave. , Chicago 5, 111. V.-Pres . , F r a n k Whi te , '33, 5031 Quincy St., Chicago 44, 111. Sec.-Treas. , Ben L. Crew, '28, 333 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago 1,

111. COLUMBIA, S. C.

W a r r e n Irvin, '08, Dist. Mgr., Wi lby -Kincey Thea t r e s . COLUMBUS, GA.

Pres . , Hugh McMath, '20, E x c h a n g e Bldg. V.-Pres . , Fo rbes Brad ley , '17, Co lumbus Mfg. Co. Sec.-Treas . , Oscar Bet ts , '24, Mgr., Rals ton Hotel .

DALLAS, TEXAS Geo. T. Marchmon t , '07, G r a y b a r Elec. Co., 400 S. Aus t in Ave .

DALTON, GA. Honorab le Car l ton McCamy, Mayor of Dal ton, Georgia .

DANVILLE, VA. Dave C. Boy, Jr . , '37, D a n River Mills.

DAYTON-WRIGHT FIELD, OHIO Lt . Col. E. G. Nabel l , '24, 31 E. Emerson Ave .

DETROIT, MICHIGAN Dick Atchley , '48, 7423 Woodrow Wilson, De t ro i t 6, Michigan.

FLORENCE — SHEFFIELD — TUSCUMBIA, ALA. Ray Kyt le , '36, Reynolds Alloys, Sheffield, Ala.

GAINESVILLE, GA. Char les R. Simons, '37, F lowery Branch , Ga.

GREENSBORO, N. C. Mon tgomery Hill, '11, Nat iona l T h e a t r e Bldg.

GREENVILLE, S. C. Pres . , V a r d r v D. Ramseur , Jr . , '39, P . O. Box 1356. V.-Pres . , Char le s M. Gal loway. '34, 19 Ashley St. Sec. -Treas . , H e n r y B r o w n , '28, Greenvi l le , S. C.

GRIFFIN, GA. Na than ie l Bai ley, '22, 1056 Maple Dr ive .

HAMPTON, VA. Lloyd Fisher , '42, 229 Regen t St., H a m p t o n , Va.

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

HOUSTON, TEXAS Pres . , W. S t e w a r t Boyle , '28, 1007 Sta te Nat ' l B a n k Bldg. V.-Pres . , Dunson D u n a w a y , '44, 3212 Sunse t Blvd. Sec.-Treas. , J a y Cannon, '35, St. Joe P a p e r Co. Asst. Sec.-Treas. , J i m F rye r , Jr . , '40, Shell Chem. Corp., Box 2527

JACKSONVILLE, FLA. J o h n Hous ton Marshal l , '26, 4703 Ortega Blvd.

KINGSPORT, TENN. Pres . , Bill J o r d a n , '38, 309 W. Ravine . P r o g r a m Cha i rman , A r t h u r Coffin, Jr . , '32, 1600 Fa i r r i dge Dr. Sec. -Treas . , Rober t L. Bea rd , '43, Tennessee E a s t m a n Corp.

KNOXVILLE, TENN. Char les S. L indsay , '42, 2171 Coker Ave .

LaGRANGE, GA. Char les M. Geer , '16, 1205 Vernon Road.

LOS ANGELES, CALIF. Geo. Nolan Bea rden , '29, 609 S. G r a n d Ave. H o w a r d K. Bolles, '34, 314 W. 6th St.

MACON, GA. Pres . , J u l i a n H. T u r n e r , '23, P . O. Box 941. V.-Pres . , Ed Jones , '38, 132 Cur ry Dr. Sec.-Treas. , J a c k Virgin, '33, 112 Emily P lace .

MARIETTA, GA. Morgan McNeel, J r . , '19, McNeel Marble Co.

MEMPHIS, TENN. Pres . , Char le s S. Pee t e , '33, G o o d w y n Ins t i tu te Bldg., Memphis ,

Tenn . V.-Pres . , L u t h e r B. Hawkins , '48, B u c k e y e Cot ton Oil Co.,

Memphis , Tenn . Sec.-Treas . , F r e d e r i c k Fuchs , '36, 532 G o o d w y n Ins t i tu te Bldg.,

Memphis , Tenn .

MIAMI, FLA. Pres . , A r t h u r C. Bivins , Jr . , '26, Pacific Lbr . & Supp ly Co., P . O.

Box 868. V.-Pres. , J o h n Shuey , '22, Co lumbus Hotel , Biscayne Blvd.

Sec.-Treas. , R. Fu l ton Webb , '22, 4005 A u r o r a St., Coral Gables , Fla .

NASHVILLE, TENN. Pres . , Char les E. Sou the rn , '33, 1510 Cl in ton St., Nashvi l le , Tenn . V.-Pres . , Wil l iam Nightenga le , '31, 909 Clark St., Old Hickory ,

Tenn . V.-Pres . , Hard ie C. Bass, Jr . , 32, 161 8th Ave. , Nor th . Nashvi l le ,

Tenn . S e c , J o h n C. Wheele r , '38, 3808 Cleghorne Rd., Nashvi l le , Tenn . Treas . , T h o m a s Crain, '47, 1627 Glen Echo Rd., Nashvi l le , Tenn .

NEWARK, N. J . F r a n k W. Michal , '43, 39 Oxford St., P r e s i d e n t Simon H. Sculnick, '43, V.-Pres . Gera ld W. Burg , '43, S e c , 179 Garfield St., Passaic , N. J . P a u l Rhudy , '47, Treas .

NEW ORLEANS, LA. Walke r Saussy, '23, 318 Caronde le t St.

NEW YORK, N. Y. Pres . , J . Albin Johnson , '12, 37-14 Th i r t i e th St., Long Island City,

N. Y. V.-Pres . , Wm. E. T u r n e r , '17, A m e r i c a n B r a k e Shoe Co., 230

P a r k Ave. , N e w York City. Sec.-Treas. , Dudley W. King, '34, Hol land & A r m s t r o n g Law

Office, 63 Wall St., N e w York City. NORFOLK, VA.

R. B. W a t e r m a n , '33, Room 211, SAL R. R. Bldg., Norfolk 10, Va. PENSACOLA, FLA.

Eugene C. Smi th , '27, Hygeia Coco-Cola Bot t l ing Co., Ph i l a ­delphia , P e n n .

PHILADELPHIA. PA. Pres . , W. L. G. "Vars i ty" Johnson , '25, 1206 Pub l ic Ledge r V.-Pres . , D. A. Worrel l , '36. Sec.-Treas. , W. B. Ashby, '40, 401 Nor th Broad St., Ph i l ade lph ia

8, Pa . ROANOKE, VA.

Edwin B. Branch , '33, Box 1904, Roanoke , Va. ROME, GA.

J. Ridley Reynolds , '26, Georgia P o w e r Co., Rome, Ga. SAVANNAH, GA.

Pres . , F r a n k C. Underwood , Jr . , '32, 1319 N. 36th St., E. V.-Pres . , H ayw ood S. Hansel l , '24, 412 E. Victory Dr. S e c , Will iam P . Bergen , '43, 127 H a b e r s h a m St. Treas . , F r a n k K. But ler , '42, 24 W. Congress St.

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF. S t a m p s Bethel , '27, Mutua l Life Ins . Co. of N. Y.

SEATTLE, WASH. Pres . , C. P a t Johnson , '24, 860 S t u a r t Bldg. T h o m a s E. Gibbs, '99, 2024 East L y n n St. K. E. Hol l ingswor th , '27, 5562 S t u a r t Bldg.

SHREVEPORT, LA. Pres . , J a m e s T. Carmichae l , '36, 927 Bou leva rd V.-Pres . , Jeff Dykes , Jr . , '41 Sec.-Treas. , J i m Zike, '44

SCHENECTADY, N. Y. Dan K y k e r , '46, Bldg. 48, Genera l Elect r ic Co., Schenec tady , N. Y.

TAMPA. FLA. Pres . , H. B. T a t u m , '43, 938 Giddens Ave. , Tampa , Fla . V.-Pres . , T a v e r Bayly , '13, P res . , F i r s t Na t ' l B a n k , Clearwater ,

Fla . V.-Pres . , Otto Kraus , '40, 4036 8th St., S., St. P e t e r s b u r g , Fla . Sec.-Treas. , W. J . P inks ton , '22, Gen . Mgr., Elect r ic Supply Co.

VALDOSTA, GA. Will iam L. Goodloe, Jr . , '42, 2507 Oak St.

WASHINGTON, D. C. Pres . , R. P . Wil l iams, '31, R h e e m Mfg. Co., 921 17th St., N . W. V.-Pres . , Bob Aust in , '30, N o r d b e r g Mfg. Co., B a r r Bldg. V.-Pres . , George Vierick, '32, 932 " K " St., N. W. Sec.-Treas. , Dick St i rn i , '34, U. S. C & G Survey .

WEST PALM BEACH, FLA. L. A. Hawkins , '25, K i n g & F i scher Co., Ci t izens Bldg., W. P a l m

Beach , Fla . WEST POINT, GA.

Pres . , J a m e s Wright , '42, S h a w m u t Mill, S h a w m u t , Ala. V.-Pres . , Bill Spell, '40, Lane t t Mill, Lane t t , Ala. Sec.-Treas. , Marshal l Mehaffey, '40, Lane t t Mill, Lane t t , Ala.

SWIMMING SCHEDULE

J a n u a r y 22 — E m o r y Univers i ty a t E m o r y 28 — Nor th Carol ina S ta te a t Rale igh 29 — U. of Nor th Carol ina a t Chapel Hill

F e b r u a r y 5 — Vanderb i l t a t Nashvi l le 12 — D u k e Univers i ty a t Tech 16 — U. of Georgia a t A t h e n s 19 — U. of F lor ida a t Tech

March 5 — SEAAU Senior Open Championsh ips a t Tech 12 — SEC Meet a t U. of Georgia a t A t h e n s 21 — U. of F lor ida a t Gainesvi l le 23 — U. of Miami at Miami 25 & 26 — N C A A a t Chape l Hill (Not Definite)

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January-February, 1949 THE GEORGIA TECH A L U M N U S 21

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