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THE GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS Seasonal »• In Season March-April 1933 » Vol. XI, No. 4 All Seasons ENTERED AS SECOND CLASS MATTER MARCH 22. 1923. AT THE POST OFFICE OF ATLANTA. GA.. UNDER ACT OF MARCH 3, 1879

Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 11, No. 04 1933

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Page 1: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 11, No. 04 1933

THE

GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS

Seasonal

»•

In Season

March-April 1933

»

Vol. XI, No. 4 All Seasons

ENTERED AS SECOND CLASS MATTER MARCH 22 . 1923. AT THE POST OFFICE OF ATLANTA. GA.. UNDER ACT OF MARCH 3, 1879

Page 2: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 11, No. 04 1933

Heard you the first time"

A better Hearing Aid, made by Bell Telephone makers

You WOULD naturally expect it—and you'd be right! When the men

long trained in making telephones turned their attention to apparatus

to help the hard-of-hearing, something superior was bound to result.

These are the men who have built a reputation as experts in sound.

They made the first successful talking picture apparatus and have led the

way in aviation radio and in the many applications of sound amplifying.

The new Western Electric Audiphone is a hearing aid that really

aids. Moreover, special care in design has made it compact and light in

weight—inconspicuous as eye glasses. Try it, and hear the difference!

For an interesting booklet and name of nearest dealer, who will give

you a demonstration, write the distributors, Graybar Electric Company.

"In touch with people again

i

Keeps me up with my class"

Helps me in business"

Western Electric • HEARING AID •

Distributors in Canada: Northern Electric Co., Ltd.

GRAYBAR ELECTRIC CO., Graybar Bldg., New York, N. Y. Gentlemen: Please send me full information on the Western Electric Audiphone and name of nearest dealer. AL-4

ADDRESS

CITY STATE

Page 3: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 11, No. 04 1933

G-E Campus News

-

C O U N T I N G COSMIC RAYS

We hear a lot about cosmic rays, but know little about them. Some believe the rays are the birth cries of new matter, photons, which are like light rays. Others believe they're electrons, the death rattle of matter as it radiates itself away. But what­ever the rays are, they come to us from every direction, night and day.

One of our engineers, Chester Rice, a '10 grad of Harvard, didn't think cosmic rays were so mysterious. He even perfected a device to count them. Imagine — counting cosmic rays! He counts them with a nickel cylinder detector that is suspended in a low-pressure tube. It 's shield­ed by a housing of lead, 4 in. thick, to keep out the effects of radioactive material. The rays, pass­ing into the cylinder, initiate cor­ona discharges, which are fed into an amplifier, then through a radio loudspeaker. The rays can be heard as distinct clicks. The small cyl­inder has a count of eight rays per minute.

D N E P R O S T R O Y

On October 10th last, the largest masonry dam ever built was dedi­cated in Russia. It 's part of the tremendous Dneprostroy hydro­electric development.

There, Charles Thomson, who com­pleted his engineering course in '13 at the South African School of Mines, Johannesburg, Transvaal, was honored by the U.S.S.R. He received the Order of the Red Banner of Labor for his skill. His had been the job of erecting all the

electric apparatus. And some job it was!

As a construction engineer for General Electric, he spent 18 months in Russia. He put into operation the nine enormous 77,-500-kv-a. generators, five of which were built by G.E. They're the largest water-wheel generators ever built. Incidentally, it was some achievement, considering the enor­mous weights, to ship the G-E generators and transformers nearly 6000 miles—and then to put them into operation successfully. Even engineering veterans were aston­ished.

M E E T T H E PHANOTRONS

Boston, proud guardian of the Beans and the Cods, has been harboring another celebrated family, lately. The name is Phanotron; present condition—'that of lusty infancy; job—rectifying alternat­ing current.

Housed in the Salem Street sub­station of the Edison Electric Il­luminating Company in downtown Boston, this equipment is changing alternating current at 13,800 volts, 3-phase, 60 cycles, into direct cur­rent at 238 volts. Listed advan­tages: no moving parts, silent operation, high efficiency, economy in floor space. Six tubes, with a combined rating of 600 amperes, are employed. They are an out­growth of the vacuum tube used in radio sets but have a current capacity 100,000 times greater.

The Phanotron rectifier, a highly desirable neighbor , comes from good old G-E stock, incubated in the Research Laboratory in Sche­nectady. Incidentally, Harry Stein-

er, a University of Kansas grad of '26, is largely responsible for its engineering and design develop­ment.

HELLO, WATERWORKS

Two pumping stations which sup­ply the Baltimore water system have no personal attendants, but they are able to give a complete report of conditions existing at the plant when called on the tele­phone. If you know the telephone number (and the code in which the station elects to talk back), you have only to dial the station. The G-E audible indicating equipment in the station signals how well the pumping equipment is operating, what the water level is, the pres­sure, etc. It gives prompt, com­plete, and—if you please—courte­ous service. The public telephone system is used, but conventional house-to-house conversations in and around Baltimore are in no way affected. Operating officials delight in demonstrating the equipment to the uninitiated, letting them listen as the pumping station makes its report. "Amazing!" is the now familiar remark.

Arthur Johnston, a '25 grad of Oregon State College, is largely responsible for this development. He also did much to develop tele­metering and the electric score­board.

G E N E R A L ELECTRIC

Page 4: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 11, No. 04 1933

I 52 T H E GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS March-April, 1933

/UA complete ARCHITECTURAL ahd ENGINEERING " \ SERVICE in every field.

APPRAISALS' DESIGNING - SUPERVISING-CONSULTING

\

We render to our clients a complete architectural and engineering service under one control, with specialized departments for handling Architectural, Structural, Mechanical, Industrial, Textile, Electrical

and Municipal Engineering Problems.

ROBERT AND COMPANY v=

A T L A N T A =*• cJrchitects and Sngineerst*

C E O R G I A *? /

L. F . KENT, *20, Pres . & Gen. Mgr. G. R. CARY, '24, Engineer

Special Heavy Duty Heating Unit for Schools, Churches and

Theatres.

Heating, Ventilating and Cooling Systems for Residences, Schools, Churches and Theatres Designed, Manufactured and Installed

Equipment Furnished for Us ing Coal, Natural Gas or Oil

Complete Engineering Service Installations in All Southern States

MONCRIEF FURNACE CO. 676 HEMPHILL AVE., ATLANTA, GA.

Georgia School of Technology "cA technical School with cA National imputation"

T H E GEORGIA SCHOOL OF TECHNOLOGY offers to young men of ability and ambition a training which will fit them for positions of responsibility and power.

The national reputation of this institution is based not on claims, but on results. I ts greatest asset is the record being made by its alumni in the productive work of the world.

Complete courses in MECHANICAL, ELECTRICAL, CIVIL, CHEMICAL, T E X T I L E , GENERAL and CERAMIC ENGINEERING, ARCHITECTURE, AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERING, COMMERCE AND GENERAL SCIENCE.

COAST ARTILLERY, SIGNAL CORPS, INFANTRY, ORDNANCE, SEAMANSHIP AND NAVIGA­T I O N UNITS OF T H E U. S. ARMY AND T H E U. S. NAVY R. O. T. C.

For Further Information, Address

THE REGISTRAR Georgia School of Technology

ATLANTA, GEORGIA

Page 5: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 11, No. 04 1933

THE

GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS Published every other month during the college year by the National Alumni Association of the Georgia School of Technology.

R. J. THIESEN, Editor E. L. DANIEL, Business Mgr.—W. J. TURNBULL, Asst. Editor

J. E. NASH, Associate—M. G. KEISER, Associate

OFFICE OF PUBLICATION GEORGIA SCHOOL 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. XI March-April, 1933 No. 4

NATIONAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION EXECUTIVE BOARD

ROBT. T. JONES, JR., '22 A. L. LOEB, '13 J. J. SPALDING, JR., '11 ED. C. LIDDELL, '22 R. J. THIESEN, TO R. D. COLE III, '22

President ..Vice-President ..Vice-President

Treasurer

G. T. MARCHMONT, '07-J. T. MONTAGUE, '14 F. M. SPRATLIN, '06

-Exec. Secretary .-.Board Member

Board Member .....Board Member

Board Member

GEORGIA TECH ALUMNI FOUNDATION, Inc. OFFICERS AND TRUSTEES

Y. F. FREEMAN, TO GEO. T. MARCHMONT, '07— FLOYD W. McRAE, JR., TO FRANK H. NEELY, '04

President Secretary-Treasurer

WM. H. GLENN, '91 ROBT. W. SCHWAB, '07

GEORGIA TECH ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION ALUMNI MEMBERS

L. W. ROBERT, JR., '08 Committee Chairman GEO. W. McCARTY, JR., '08 ROBT. T. JONES, JR., '22

THIS ISSUE

Vote for National Officers

Annual Meeting and Georgia Tech Dag

Employment Activities

Student Council Appropriation

1932 Class Memorial

Alumni Association Benefits Students

Alumni Mention—Sports Curtailed

Directory Supplement

Annual Meeting Plans It has recently been proposed that the date of the annual

business meeting of the National Georgia Teeh Alumni As­sociation be set for Friday, April twenty-eighth, in order to combine the alumni activities with the spring exercises of the college at that time.

The plan is in full accord with suggestions that have been made by many of the individual alumni and a number of the Georgia Tech alumni organizations and it has been heartily endorsed by the Executive Board of the National Association. The idea affords an opportunity for a joint observance throughout the nation and the date advances the usual business meeting of the National Association by two weeks only.

There may be some changes as to the date and arrange­ments, in view of the fact that the governing body of the college has not as yet determined upon the proper course to pursue as to the consolidation of various exercises of the college which have been observed at different times here­tofore. If the full plan is agreed upon, the program will be publicly announced in the near future.

Unless otherwise advised, however, the annual business meeting will be held in the auditorium of the Tech Y. M. C. A. at eight o'clock on the night of April twenty-eighth. The annual military review will take place on the afternoon of the date stated, and all alumni and friends are invited to it. The annual military ball will follow at night; so, these activities together with the Tech-Auburn baseball games on Friday and Saturday will in themselves form a delightful round of events.

Reciprocity Begins at Home Patronize those who patronize us—that's fair; trade

among ourselves, too, and watch the reciprocal results which, fortunately, will be far reaching rather than selfish.

I t can hardly be doubted that a business revival will take place in the very near future, and we know that our ten thousand or more alumni, their relatives, friends and asso­ciates, will remember those who have given us a part of their always educational and ethical advertising. This has been true in the past and it is even more firmly assured for the future.

Alumni of our engineering and business departments have been most loyal to those who have had the vision to keep the names of their respective firms and products before them as representatives of a particular and influential group of buyers. The benefits have been mutual and the goodwill that has redounded to our advertisers is invaluable.

More than ever before, it is going to " p a y to advert ise" and it is certain that it pays an extra dividend to advertise through our Georgia Tech mediums for it is a well estab­lished fact that our alumni, students, and friends patronize those who patronize us.

Vote for Officers All active members of the National Georgia Tech Alumni

Association are requested to send in their votes on the nominees for office for the year 1933-34, as shown on the next page of this number.

The names of the nominees are listed in alphabetical order under the respective positions for which they were nominated; so kindly give the information your considera­tion right now, and send in your ballot promptly.

It isn't necessary to use the blank on the following page, but kindly follow its form and size should you send a typed or written ballot.

Page 6: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 11, No. 04 1933

54 T H E G E O R G I A T E C H A L U M N U S March-April, 1933

Vote for National Officers A loyal and representative group of alumni were nomi­

nated by Georgia Tech men over the country for the 1933-34 term, as a result of the preliminary voting that has just been concluded.

All of the nominees are outstanding, influential, and active alumni and they are thoroughly qualified to hold any office anywhere. The active members of the National Georgia Tech Alumni Association are kindly requested to vote on the nomi­nees at once and to send in their respective ballots on or before April fifteenth.

A duplicate of the ballot shown below may be used, if any alumnus prefers to do so; therefore, submit your votes on any legible form at once, if convenient, on the following eligible active alumni, opposed or unopposed, as proposed on the consolidated nomination:

For President: Rhodes Perdue, '21. Y. P. Freeman, '10, was also nominated and writes that he

greatly appreciates the courtesy that has again been sliown to him; however, he added that he is now a permanent resident of New York City and states that he wouldn't be eligible, and expressed a hearty endorsement of Mr. Rhodes Perdue.

Those who may wish to vote in accordance with the nomina­tions, regardless, have every right to do so.

For First Vice-President: A. L. Loeb, '13, and Ben W. Sinclair, '12.

For Second Vice-President: John G. Chapman, '09; F . Hammond Hardin, '08; Jack J. Spalding, Jr., 1 1 .

For Treasurer: Edw. C. Liddell, '22. Class Secretaries: Dan I. Maclntyre, '08; M. A. Ferst, 1 1 ;

R. W. Beall, 1 8 ; J . S. Budd, 1 8 ; F . B. Gessner, ' 21 ; C. M. Kennedy, '23; Howard Moffat, '32.

Alumni are requested to name other secretaries for their respective classes on their ballots.

Brief summaries of the business activities of those nomi­nated for the national offices, are as follows:

President: Rhodes Perdue, '21, President A. G. Rhodes and Son, and Associate Companies, Atlanta, Ga. Mr. Perdue is a nephew of Mr. Joe Rhodes.

Y. F . Freeman, 10, Paramount Theatres, Paramount Build­ing, New York City. Mr. Freeman heartily endorsed the nomi­nation of Mr. Perdue in declining nomination of himself, as previously stated.

First Vice-President: A. L. Loeb, 13 , Vice-President South­eastern Bonded Warehouse, Atlanta, Ga.

(Continued on next column)

In Appreciation The National Georgia Tech Alumni Association is duly

appreciative and sincerely grateful to the Student Council, Technique, Blue Print, and Yellow Jacket staffs, and the student body in general for their always generous and help­ful co-operation.

By its recent unanimous action, the Student Council has shown that it is not unmindful of what its " b i g brother" organization has done for the undergraduates, in addition to the services that it has rendered to the college and its many departments.

The Alumni Association has been very happy to do its " b i t " for the good of all, and it is a source of much gratification to be assured, in fact as well as in theory, that its endeavors are recognized as considerably worth while.

Material Wanted for Athletic History Mr. George Griffin, Assistant Dean of Men at Tech, is

compiling an athletic history of the institution, and he would like very much to have the names of players, pic­tures and records of the various teams from the beginning of Georgia Tech's athletic activities to the present time.

If any of you are in a position to furnish Mr. Griffin with pictures, or information, kindly communicate with him at his Georgia Tech address.

Ben W. Sinclair, 12, Production Superintendent Georgia Power Company, Atlanta, Ga.

Second Vice-President: John G. Chapman, '09, Superin­tendent Samoset Cotton Mills, Talladega, Ala.

F . H. Hardin, '08, Executive New York Central R. R., New York City.

J . J . Spalding, Jr., 1 1 , Preferred Utilities Company, New York City.

Treasurer: Edw C. Liddell, '22, Beer and Company, Brok­ers, Atlanta, Ga.

One or two other nominations were made for some of the positions, but either the nominee or the one making the nomi­nation happened to be inactive at this time.

As stated at the beginning of this article, all of the nominees are exceptional men, so KINDLY MAIL IN YOUR BALLOT AT ONCE.

Fi l l Out Your Bal lot and Mail It to the Secretary, National Alumni Assoc iat ion,

Georgia School of Techno logy , Atlanta, Georgia.

A L L A C T I V E M E M B E R S A R E R E Q U E S T E D T O V O T E A T O N C E

I hereby vote for the fol lowing as Nat ional Georgia Tech A lumni Officers for the year 1 9 3 3 - T 4 :

For President

For 1st Vice-President

For 2nd Vice-President

For Treasurer

For Class Secretary

Signed

Ballots due in by Apri l 15.

-Year-

N O T G O O D U N L E S S S I G N E D

VOTE NOW

-

Page 7: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 11, No. 04 1933

March-April, 1933 T H E G E O R G I A T E C H A L U M N U S

Down To Business

55

PRESIDENTS

ROOSEVELT

AND

BRITTAIN

President Roosevelt

shown writing his

greetings to Georgia

Tech while on his last

visit to Atlanta prior

to his inauguration

Student Council Makes Appropriation By unanimous vote the Student Council appropriated a

monthly sum of $62.50 for the next six months to the Alumni Association of Georgia Tech, at its regular semi­monthly meeting recently held in its " Y " offices.

The action followed a request from the Athletic Associa­tion which came about because of the fact that the Athletic Association found it necessary to discontinue its regular annual allowances to the Alumni office because of decreased attendance at football games last fall.

The motion was made and unanimously carried by the Student Council to grant the appropriation after considera­ble favorable discussion touching upon the activities of the alumni office particularly in reference to undergraduates. The appropriation will continue until the fall of 1933 at which time the Athletic Association is to reconsider the continu­ance of it, in view of the work that the Alumni Associa­tion does for the former organization.

Bob Jones, Jr., Voted Outstanding Athlete of Decade

Bobby Jones, '22, retired undefeated golf champion of the world, was recently voted the most dominating sports performer of the glamorous decade, 1923-33, by a group of fifty veteran sports observers, representing the nation's leading newspapers.

Taking in every sphere of sporting activity in the United States as well as abroad, the field was wide open, but Bobby emerged the winner by a close decision over Babe Ruth as the "athle te of the decade". Bobby received 50 votes for a total of 207 points while Ruth got 47 votes giving a total of 202 points. Jack Denipsey was awarded third place in the rankings.

Alumni Association Benefits Students A brief report recently published in The Technique shows

that four different projects which the Georgia Tech Alumni Association is working on, are of direct benefit to the under­graduate. All of these services are rendered without charge other than the small annual fee collected, for membership upon graduation.

The benefits to the students were listed as follows: 1. Employment bureau service without charge, following

graduation or withdrawal and thereafter as needed. (All interested will be notified to register with the Alumni secre­tary on or before April 1st.)

2. Membership and card as an active Alumnus in the National Georgia Tech Alumni Association and subscription to the GEORGIA TECH ALUMNUS for one year without dues.

The privilege is extended in case of sickness or unemployment. The Alumni card is a membership to the various local Tech clubs and an introduction to Tech alumni throughout the country. I t also gives priority over inactive men and out­siders in the purchase of tickets to athletic events after gradu­ation.

3. Funds are raised for scholarship loans, researches, home­comings, buildings and endowments. The Greater Tech Fund, begun by the Association in 1922, has produced and spent more than $628,000 for new buildings and equipment on the campus.

4. Finally, a new Alumni Foundation, Inc., founded more than a year ago, is functioning on the life insurance plan to begin more scholarships for students, and it has set as its goal the construction of new buildings on the campus.

Page 8: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 11, No. 04 1933

56 T H E G E O R G I A T E C H A L U M N U S March-April, 1933

Employment Activities The Georgia Tech Alumni Association in Chicago has

obtained some very fine results in response to its latest activities for the employment of Georgia Tech men, and it is a pleasure to congratulate the association on its great and timely endeavors.

I t is also encouraging to report that the work of the Chicago club has extended beyond its immediate territory to the benefit of our alumni elsewhere.

Georgia Tech clubs in Philadelphia, New York, and other cities have done important and constructive work along sim­ilar lines and they, too, are to be commended for their meritorious activities.

The local clubs, of course, are interested principally with the alumni in their own districts and when an inquiry is received concerning an opening in another section, it is usually forwarded to the National Georgia Tech Alumni Association in Atlanta for handling.

While the alumni office in Atlanta has made more place­ments during the last three months than it has in a similar period of time for the last three years, it is not to be assumed, unfortunately, that this brighter condition has de­veloped into any large proportions. So, we again request our alumni, their friends and business associates, to give every consideration to other Georgia Tech alumni and the coming graduates for such openings as may be available either now or in the future.

Strange as it may sound at this time, we are on the thres­hold of a business revival that will all but astound us within the very near future. Mark that as a prediction, if you choose, although it is almost an economic certainty. Figuratively, rusty nickels and dimes are tearing holes in good socks and stockings in an effort to circulate, and the circulation period is now upon us. Our good, sound American money is demanding and will receive immediate employment on maintenance work, rehabilitation, education, new projects, some luxuries, and a lot of necessities. Tin cans and tea pots have reached the disgorging state as a matter of safety and necessity and, as a result, there has been and will be a wholesale discharge of outstanding obligations tempered with some deserved and wholesome self-indulgence; hence, we repeat, prepare now for the em­ployment of Georgia Tech alumni and our June graduates.

May we add that our association makes no charge to anybody for its employment bureau services. It is and has always been greatly dependent, however, upon its employed alumni for support through the payment of dues and maga­zine subscriptions; so, please remember that your checks on your deposits are good for all of us, in whatever banks they may happen to be placed and this is written on March 7, 1933. Any payment to us by check or otherwise will, of course, be credited to you at one hundred cents on the dollars; therefore, stay with us if you're employed and if not, we'll "stick with you" regardless.

" R a m b l e " on, Georgia Tech, and " l e t our victories sound through the a i r " with those of our great nation.

Jacket Coaches Receive A . A . U. Positions At the recent meeting of the A. A. U. board, Coaches

Alexander, Chambers and Griffin were appointed to fill official A. A. U. positions.

Coach Mike Chambers is well known in boxing circles and will assist in the annual national boxing tournament. Coach Alex has been connected with the A. A. U. for sev­eral years and will hold the position of one of the head offi­cials in this section. Coach George Griffin has been elected to assist in the amateur meets held in this section.

Governor Talmadge Commencement Speaker Plans for the 1933 commencement have been completed by

the faculty, and embrace many changes over the customary order of ceremonies. The principal address and commencement exercises, that have formerly been held on the campus in front of the library building, will be held in the Rose Bowl Stadium. The address will be delivered by the Honorable Eugene Talmadge, Governor of Georgia. A speakers' stand will be installed on the field and the grand stand will be used to seat the audience. The exercises are scheduled to begin at 9:30 a.m., Monday, June 5th. Those of us who have followed the recent gubernatorial race will vouch for the ability of Mr. Talmadge to deliver a talk that will be very beneficial to the graduates and intensely interesting from start to finish.

On Sunday, June 4, at 7:30 p.m., the devotional services will be held in the Fox theater. The services will be conducted by Rabbi David Marx of the Hebrew Temple, Atlanta. I t is hoped that this change in time and location will afford a larger number of people the opportunity of being present. Rabbi Marx is a very noted lecturer and Tech should feel proud in securing such a man to conduct these services and in obtaining the Fox Theater as a location.

It seems at present that this year's graduating class is vieing with the class of '32 for the honor of being the largest class ever graduated from Georgia Tech. Records show that there are about 375 names on the list as candidates for gradua­tion, excluding the Evening School of Commerce, which will bring the total to about 425.

On Friday, June 2nd, between 5:00 and 7:00 o'clock, Doc­tor and Mrs. Brittain will hold a reception for the seniors.

To supplement this series of events the final dances will furnish the social climax to the graduates' college career. No plans have been made as yet concerning the dances, but if precedent rules they will be held Friday and Saturday, June 2nd and 3rd, with the closing dance, the all-night social, coining on Monday the 5th.

Blue Print Wins Cup Permanently The 1932 edition of the Blue Print, edited by Gordon

Wells, of Savannah, has received an All-American rating from the National Scholastic Press Association and as this is the third consecutive victory for the respective volumes, the Annual will also receive the cup donated to the associa­tion by the Photo-Process Engraving Company.

According to the rules concerning the beautiful skyscraper model forty-inch loving cup, it becomes the permanent prop­erty of the school. Winning of the coveted trophy by its excellence establishes the Annual as one of the best in the nation. The Blue Print of 1932 is an example of efficient editing; black with graceful silver lines and portraying a mechanical idea throughout. Familiar views of the campus are reflected in color drawings and rotogravure photographs. I t was dedicated to the late Dr. Kenneth G. Matheson, president of Tech from 1906 until 1922 at which time he was succeeded by Dr. M. L. Brittain. The book is a beauti­ful portrayal of the combined art of the printer and the engraver.

In receiving the award in behalf of Tech, Dr. Brittain said: " I cannot commend too highly the excellent work of Gordon Wells in editing the 1932 Annual which has given Tech one of the most highly prized trophies it has ever received."

Fred Lester, of Atlanta, was business manager and Jim­my Griffith was art editor for the prize-winning book.

Page 9: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 11, No. 04 1933

March-April, 1933 T H E GEORGIA T E C H A L U M N U S 57

Rockefeller Pleased With Tech Y. M . C. A . Progress

*t

Some twenty-one years ago, there was a need felt for a place that would serve the social and religious wants of the students of Georgia Tech. Up until that time there had been no building where the student body could gather under some sort of an organization, and with the increase in the enroll­ment the necessity for such a place was more keenly felt.

Among the first Teeh men to become vitally interested in this organization was Gene Turner, now a missionary in China, who collected an appreciable amount of money towards the erection of a Y. M. C. A. building at Georgia Tech. To this was added a very generous contribution from Mr. John, D. Rockefeller, and the vision of many students became a reality in the form of the present Tech Y. M. C. A. building. This kind gesture on the part of the wealthy philanthropist made possible a very active and beneficial organization.

Prom the very birth of the Y. M. C. A. it has been an organization which has made its presence on the campus keenly felt. The leaders have done their very best to make the building a meeting place and center of campus activity. Prom the basement, where are located the offices of the dif­ferent school activities, to the top, where there are rooms for students, the "Y" is at all times at the service of the students. In the last decade, especially under the leadership of Mr. Cashion, and under the present General Secretary, Mr. Hubert T. Quillian, the "Y" has taken many great steps forward. The student president, P. U. Maxey, is entitled to much praise for the manner in which he has made the student body " 'Y' conscious."

On its twenty-first birthday the Tech "Y" sent twenty-two letters to Mr. Rockefeller written by the presidents of various organizations on the Tech campus expressing the appreciation of the students to their generous benefactor. A special roto­gravure section of The Technique, commemorated the event and copies were sent to college Y. M. C. A.'s throughout the country.

I t is quite a privilege for us to print Mr. Rockefeller's very fine letter to the Y. M. C. A. Secretary, together with some of those that were written to him, as follows:

Mr. Hubert Quillian, General Secretary, Georgia Tech Young Men's Christian Association, Atlanta, Ga. Dear Mr. Quillian:

I am just in receipt of the beautiful Book of Remembrance which you have kindly sent me, with its wonderful collection of letters from the heads of the different departments of the Georgia School of Technology. I am deeply touched by and very grateful for these most unexpected and generous expres­sions, and am happy indeed to have had a part in the good work carried on by this institution. Be assured of my ap­preciation, and of my every best wish for each and every one at this glad holiday time and for the years to come.

Sincerely yours,

* * * My dear Mr. Rockefeller:

In the strange conditions of an altered world we look in­creasingly to our colleges to provide us with new leadership.

If civilization is to be guided successfully through the storms and stress of the difficulties ahead, then our leader­ship must be grounded in those foundational tenets of char­acter which the immediate past has undervalued.

Your generous gift of twenty years ago, toward the found­ing of a Young Men's Christian Association on the campus

JOHN

D.

ROCKEFELLER

Benefactor

of the Georgia School of Technology, has already borne valu­able fruit in its influence on the lives of thousands of students. At this critical time its value is enhanced and we have faith that in the future it may be used even more effectively in helping to mould boys into men whose characters will make them leaders such as the world now so greatly needs.

Sincerely yours, (Sgd.) C. L. EMERSON, Chairman, Board of Directors, Georgia Teeh Y. M. C. A. * * #

Dear Mr. Rockefeller: Twenty years ago you gave us $50,000, making possible

the building of the Young Men's Christian Association at the Georgia School of Technology. Through the years, it has been the center of student life and activity on our campus, and from it has radiated constructive force of great spiritual value to our twenty-five hundred students.

As this Christmas season approaches, in remembrance of your generosity, we desire to express to you our grateful appreciation with the hope that many more years of continued usefulness will be yours.

With cordial regards, I am, Sincerely yours, (Sgd.) M. L. BRITTAIN,

President, Georgia School of Technology. * 5ft *

Dear Mr. Rockefeller: We graduates of the Georgia School of Technology feel

that we express too rarely the sincere appreciation which we continually feel for your generous contribution made years ago which made possible the building of a home for the Georgia Tech Y. M. C. A. We are certain that you will be happy to know how valuable it has been in promoting the right kind of thought and activities among our students for all these years.

I desire to express the gratitude of the Georgia Tech Alumni Association and to wish for you continued happiness and good health.

Most sincerely yours, (Sgd.) ROBT. T. JONES, JR.,

President, Georgia Tech Alumni Association.

Page 10: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 11, No. 04 1933

58 . T H E G E O R G I A T E C H A L U M N U S March-April, 1933

Engagements and Marriages Beckham-Woods

Mrs. Florence Watkins Beckham announces the marriage of her daughter, Louise, to Mr. Don Edwin Woods, the wedding being solemnized in March. Mr. Woods graduated from Tech with a degree in Commerce.

Bush-Marshall Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bush, of Atlanta, announce the engage­

ment of their daughter, Mary Lucile, to Mr. Thomas Alfred Marshall, Jr., of Westfield, N. J . Mr. Marshall received a B.S. in M.E. degree with the class of '32.

Davis-Trosdal Mrs. Edward Campbell Davis, of Atlanta, announces the

engagement of her daughter, Maria Nelson, to Mr. Einor Storm Trosdal, Jr., of Savannah, Ga. The wedding plans are to be announced later. Mr. Trosdal, class of '28, gradu­ated from Tech with a B.S. in E.E. degree.

Erwin-Bamett Mr. George Ashford Erwin, of West Point, Ga., announces

the engagement of his daughter, Edith Elizabeth, to Mr. Jabe Hugh Barnett, the marriage to be solemnized in the near future. Mr. Barnett is a member of the class of '22.

Fitch-Hudson Centering the interest of a wide circle of friends is the

announcement of the marriage of Miss Margaret Fitch to Mr. Scott Hudson, both of Atlanta. Mr. Hudson received a B.S. in Com. degree with the class of '32.

Gayle-Pye A marriage of cordial interest to hosts of friends was that

of Miss Alice Ingram Gayle to Mr. John Cornelius Pye, the wedding riles being solemnized in Atlanta, February 4th. Mr. Pye graduated with the class of '20 with a B.S. in M.E. degree.

Hook-Kuhlke A wedding of interest to many friends was that of Miss

Lillian Clark Hook and Mr. Edmund Hill Kuhlke, the rites being solemnized at Augusta, Ga. Mr. Kuhlke graduated with the class of '28, receiving a B.S. in Arch, degree.

Hunting-Duncan Mrs. Herbert Bruce Hunting, of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, an­

nounces the engagement of her daughter, Helen, to Mr. Charles Freeman Duncan, of Savannah, Ga. Mr. Duncan graduated from Georgia Tech in 1919 with a B.S. in C.E. degree.

McGinnis-Aiken The marriage of Miss Roberta Claire McGinnis and Mr.

Hugh Fraser Aiken, of Brunswick, Ga., was solemnized De­cember 1st at Cartersville, Ga. Mr. Aiken received a degree in General Science with the class of '28.

Wyche-Atkinson Mr. and Mrs. L. P. Wyche, of Atlanta, announce the en­

gagement of their daug'hter, Rowena, to Mr. William Joseph Atkinson, Jr., the wedding to be solemnized in the early spring. Mr. Atkinson graduated with the class of '30, receiv­ing a B.S. in M.E. degree.

Death Mr. Theodore S. Dunn, for twelve years a professor of

mineralogy at Georgia Tech, was recently killed in an auto­mobile accident in Palo Alto, Cal. Professor Dunn moved to California two years ago to become connected with Stanford University.

Alumni Mention Thomas E. Bell, B.S. in E.E., 1925, has recently been as­

signed to Atlanta as district manager for eight southern states for the Flor-Meter Company. Mr. Bell has been with J e company since his graduation from Tech having been with the Chicago office for the past two years.

Clyde A. Byrd, B.S. in E.E., 1912, resident manager of the Florida Power and Light Company at Sanford, Fla., for the past eight years, has been promoted to the office of general manager of the large Daytona Beach division of his company.

Because of the transfer, Mr. Byrd was forced to resign from the city commission of Sanford upon which he had served for the past three years.

Earl O. Dunlap, B.S. in M.E., 1931, captain of the Golden Tornado for 1930 and member of the championship football team of 1928, has been appointed coach of boxing and as­sistant coach of football at Riverside Military Academy, Gainesville, Ga. He will succeed Raleigh Drennon, another former Georgia Tech star and one of the line heroes of the Jackets ' Rose Bowl victory of 1928.

Julian H. Harris, B.S. in Arch., 1928, was awarded a signal honor recently in having his work placed on exhibi­tion with leading sculptors of the nation in the 129th ex­hibition of the Academy of Fine Arts in Philadelphia.

For the past three years, Harris has been studying at the Fine Arts Academy in Philadelphia, and since only four students' work was included in the exhibition of the year's outstanding art, he is to be congratulated for his achieve­ments.

George M. Hope, Jr., B.S. in M.E., 1912, has been ap­pointed General Agent of the Atlantic Life Insurance Com­pany for the city of Atlanta.

C. L. Huey, B.S. in Eng., 1928, is now located with the Babcock & Wilcox Company at their Barbertown Works. His address is 608 West Market Street, Akron, Ohio.

W. H. Kwilecki, B.S. in Arch., 1915, who has just taken charge of the Kwilecki Hardware Store in Moultrie, Ga., has opened an office in Moultrie for the practice of the architectural profession. Since graduating, Mr. Kwilecki has drawn plans for numerous schools and homes in the states of Georgia and Florida.

John T. Phillips of the class of 1931 announces the forma­tion of the Phillips-Brown Sign Company in Atlanta. Mr. Phillips will have charge of sales and collections for the new company.

M. 0. Ohlman, class of 1901, though he studied a course of engineering at Tech, has become known over the entire country because of his activities in both the American Philatelic Society and the Society of Philatelic Americans. For the past eighteen years he has been holding public stamp auctions and is recognized as an authority on rare stamps. His address is 116 Nassau, New York City.

Tom M. Salisbury, B.S. in E.E., 1922, has been promoted to the office of Southern Division Manager for the Missis­sippi Power and Light Company with headquarters in Brook-haven, Miss. Mr. Salisbury, a native of Columbus, Ga., worked with the General Electric Company for four years after his graduation, then went with his present company where he has since enjoyed rapid promotion.

L. M. Tomlinson, B.S. in M.E., 1930, is at present teach­ing mathematics and coaching basketball in the LaFayette High School, Mayo, Florida.

J. P. Traber, B.S. in E.E., 1926, is now with the Ameri­can Telephone and Telegraph Company, Jacksonville, Fla. His offices are at 908 Lynch Building, Jacksonville.

Page 11: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 11, No. 04 1933

March-April, 1933 T H E G E O R G I A T E C H A L U M N U S 59

Many Thanks 1932 Class Memorial

f r

The Alumni Association wishes to acknowledge with many thanks a recent editorial as published under the caption of "For the Students" by The Technique, the students' weekly publication. Our alumni will be pleased, too, with the article which is reprinted as a matter of much interest to them, in the following paragraphs:

"Calling to your attention, you men of Georgia Tech, an Alumni Association which deserves far more appreciation than it gets. On other pages of The Technique will be found an outlined account of the work being carried on by the Georgia Tech Alumni Association for Tech students and the account speaks for itself.

"Certainly among the most notable of its activities is the well-organized attempt to secure positions with reputable concerns for graduates of Tech. Such aid should be appreci­ated now more than ever, and most assuredly will be when more light is thrown on the subject. Seniors will not hesitate to make every effort to co-operate with the plan and thereby derive invaluable benefit for themselves.

"It is an item of interest that the Association has spent almost none of its money for its own interests. Although hundreds of thousands of dollars have been procured through efforts of the Association for Georgia Tech, the organization still maintains a too meager office in the east tower of the stadium.

"An organization which so obviously is working for a better Georgia Tech cannot be given too much praise. The Technique again doffs its hat."

Enrollment Shows 2,995 Students Georgia Tech's catalogue for 1933 will contain names of

2,995 students enrolled during the '32-'33 term, in all depart­ments, including the University of Georgia Extension School, this is some 490 less than the total enrollment for the '31-'32 term.

Students representing every state in the United States and twenty-four foreign countries are listed in the new bulletin, which will be off the press early in April.

The enrollment in the regular collegiate day courses is 2,082 this year, against 2,298 last year; 498 against 600 in the Georgia Tech Evening School of Commerce, and 333 against 583 for last year in the Evening School of Applied Science.

An increase is shown in the enrollment summary of gradu­ate students. There are forty-five this year against thirty-eight last year; these are enrolled for the University of Geor­gia extension courses given at Tech. This department was established only last year and no figures for comparison are published.

The strength shown in Tech's enrollment stands as a signifi­cant mark of approval for the achievements of the institution.

Tech Naval Officers Win Awards Commander Edwin H. Gillam, Lt. Commander Ryland D.

Tisdale, and Lieut. Philip Womble, staff officers of the Tech Naval R. 0. T. C, have been awarded the Yangtze medal according to notices recently received.

The Yangtze medal was awarded to a number of other service men at the time, according to the Army-Navy Reg­ister, service publication. The Register comments on sev­eral of the more important engagements and describes briefly the actions which led to the award of the medal. Included in these is an account of the engagement for which Lt. Commander Tisdale was decorated and for which he was later awarded the Navy Cross, also.

Dean Skiles Points the Way

A new addition was recently made to the campus, con­sisting of a very beautiful and complete bulletin board, and possessing an inscription to the class of 1932. The board, electrically lighted, will be used exclusively for news about the school. It will be impossible to place advertisements of rooming houses or dining halls on the board.

The design was made by Professor Bush-Brown in accord­ance with the winning drawing which was selected by a contest. The board is built in a structure of gray granite, and sets the academic building off rather attractively.

Need for an official campus bulletin board has been long felt by students. School authorities expressed much pleas­ure on receipt of the gift, and congratulated Randy Whit­field, president of last year's Senior Class, on the fore­sight of his classmates in presenting the school with such an appropriate gift.

It is traditional for each Senior Class to give to the school something that will be left behind as a memorial to the class. Various classes prior to 1932 paid for sections in the Dining Hall Memorial Window. Hugh Gooding, head of the 1933 class, stated that since the class had as yet held no meetings, he did not know what this year's gift would be.

Some members of the present Senior Class, however, have expressed their desire of building up a fund for the ultimate purpose of installing modern drinking fountains at conven­ient points about the campus.

Anak Society Institutes Scholarships The Anak Society recently announced that it would give

two scholarships each semester to worthy students picked by them. These scholarships are not in the form of a loan but each is an outright gift to the student chosen amounting to $37.50 apiece. The total scholarship amounts to $150.00 per year.

The basis upon which the scholarships are awarded are: (1) scholastic standing, (2) character, (3) financial need, and (4) that the person considered has received no other help from the school.

The first awards from the Anak Scholarship fund were given at the beginning of the current semester to J. A. Fife, Co-Op Textile, and to Frederick S. Perkerson, Chemi­cal Engineering.

Page 12: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 11, No. 04 1933

60 T H E G E O R G I A T E C H A L U M N U S March-April, 1933

Sports Curtailed Notices posted at various points about the campus re­

cently by Coach Alexander telling of the curtailment in spring sports activities brought a smile to the face of more than one student as affected by the reductions. Clear think­ing and optimism mixed in with a bit of humor and philos­ophy in the announcement of curtailment of major sports and suspension of several minor ones served to cause every­one concerned to enter into the new program with a spirit of co-operation.

Reduction in athletic activities of the school were made necessary by reduced gate receipts at football contests last fall. Tech's reduced athletic program compares very fav­orably, however, with those of other southern colleges suf­fering under similar conditions.

Boxing and lacrosse are the only sports to be entirely abolished for this year. Players in other sports have raised sufficient funds to carry out practically their entire program, schedules of which will be announced in the press.

The notice of curtailment as posted by Coach Alexander follows:

"Football starts Feb. 20, equipment limited to fifty men." "Baseball starts Feb. 20, equipment limited to forty men." "Track starts Feb. 20, equipment limited to forty men." ' ' Trophies—no money available—play the game. ' ' "Banquets—no money available—good for digestion." "Tutoring—no money available—study ha rd . " "Other sports—no money available—tough luck." "Tr ips by flivver or day coach." "Coaches, half or no pay for six months." "Students , be good sports; griping won't he lp ." " T h e way to end the depression is to cut to the bone

and pull together."

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Creo-pine Products Include:

Poles Piling Conduit Cross Ties Cross Arms

Floor Blocks Sub-Flooring Bridge Timbers Structural Timbers Guard Rail, etc.

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PITTSBURGH

CHATTANOOGA

1933 Grid Schedule Completed The grid schedule for the 1933 edition of the Golden

Tornado has at last been definitely completed. Tech will play ten games. Seven of the ten will be played at Grant Field, while the Jackets will journey to Lexington, Chapel Hill and Nashville to play Kentucky, North Carolina and Vanderbilt.

Seen of the ten games scheduled are with members of the Southeastern Conference while the remaining three are with members of the Southern Conference. This is the first time in man}' years that no interseetional games have been carded and is entirely in keeping with the policy of retrenchment as adopted by the athletic association.

The newcomer on the schedule is Duke University; Cali­fornia being dropped to make room for the Blue Devils. A home and home agreement will doubtless be drawn up with Wallace Wade's gridmen. For the first time, too, since the renewal of Tech and Georgia relations on the gridiron, the Bulldogs will not conclude Tech's southern games, the Geor­gia game being moved up to allow the Bulldogs to make room for a game with Southern California.

The complete schedule follows : Sept. 30—Clemson in Atlanta. Oct. 7—Kentucky in Lexington. Oct. 14—Auburn in Atlanta. Oct. 21—Tulane in Atlanta. Oct. 28—North Carolina in Chapel Hill. Nov. 4—Vanderbilt in Nashville. Nov. 11—Florida in Atlanta. Nov. 18—Alabama in Atlanta. Nov. 25—Georgia in Atlanta. Dec. 2—Duke in Atlanta.

Midnight Show Solves Sports Problem Golf, tennis and other minor sports were made possible

this spring because of the loyalty of Tech supporters in promoting a midnight show at the Georgia Theater on the night of Friday, February 18th.

There were absolutely no expenses attached to the per­formance, everything from electric power to talent was given free of charge. An elaborate program including the Tech " Y " singers, an action picture of the Notre Dame-South­ern California football game, a one-act play by the Tech evening School Dramatic Club, and a regular feature picture was presented. In spite of a heavy downpour of rain at the time of the show, approximately two hundred and twen­ty-five dollars were made.

George and Charles Griffin, in charge of the show for Tech, wish to express their thanks to all those loyal friends who so kindly donated facilities which made the entertain­ment possible.

Aeronautics Commemorated in Building As one enters the Guggenheim Building, home of the Tech

Aeronautics School, he is apt to be attracted by a circular plate set in the floor, bearing the names Daedalus, Da Vinci, Langley, Wright, around its periphery.

On investigation we find that this plate tells us, in brief, the history of aviation. It is true that this history progresses by leaps and bounds; centuries are covered between Daedalus and Da Vinci, between Da Vinci and Langley, but it is a history composed of the four concrete contributions which made the modern airplane possible, and mechanical flight by man a reality instead of a dream.

Page 13: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 11, No. 04 1933

March-April, 1933 T H E G E O R G I A T E C H A L U M N U S

Kentucky Wins Conference Basketball Championship

61

Upper Bracket ALABAMA

SEWANEE MISS. STATE

BYE GEORGIA

TULANE VANDY

BYE Lower Bracket

L. S. U.

AUBURN GA. TECH

TENNESSEE FLORIDA

BYE

\ ALABAMA, 41-28

} MISS. STATE \ MISS. STATE, 30-25

\ TULANE, 46-22

\ VANDY

} QUARTER­

FINALS L. S. U., 57-33

.VANDY, 28-25

SEMI­FINALS

,L. S. U„ 55-43

J MISS. STATE, 48-36 „

FINALS

I TENNESSEE, 30-24

\ FLORIDA

MISS U.

KENTUCKY

L KENTUCKY, 48-24. \ KENTUCKY. 49-31

..KENTUCKY, 51-38

KENTUCKY, 46 to 27.

After "knocking at the door" over a period of years, Kentucky finally won a conference championship by bril­liant and aggressive playing and fully lived up to its pre-tourney championship honors.

Georgia Tech made a fair bid until the last two minutes

of play when Tennessee forged ahead to make the Gold and White team spectators after the first round.

In the games before the tournament the Jackets won 7 out of 12 conference encounters, among which were two out of three from Georgia.

Husky Grid Squad Begins Practice When Coach W. A. Alexander sounded the call to the

initial grid practice for the spring session, some 48 husky Jackets reported for action. Basketball duties kept a few of the better players away from the early drills.

Because of a limited supply of equipment, only players whose names appeared on Coach Alex's preferred list were invited to participate in this period of practice.

When asked for his opinion of Tech's prospects for the 1933 season, Coach Alex replied with reserve: "P re t t y good—our line will be stronger than it was last year, and we have a good backfield." These few words from the re­ticent Tech mentor may be considered to carry a lot of weight concerning the Jackets ' prospective performance on Grant Field and other gridirons next fall.

Long strenuous workouts will not be in order, the prac­tice being mainly for the purpose of keeping the boys well acquainted with the pigskin and its uses. Much of the time will be spent in conditioning the gridders and giving them a thorough drilling in the fundamentals of the game. Con­siderable time will be used, also, in teaching the Alexander system to the freshmen, who, though not wholly unacquainted with it, will need more instruction than those already con­nected with the varsity.

As usual the faculty knife severed the connection of sev­eral players from the eligible list for next year. Tom Peeler, dependable halfback, is definitely out while Gonk Gardner and Mutt Morris, valuable reserve linemen, may have trouble in receiving permission to play next year. Some doubt was expressed as to whether or not Norris Dean, promising sophomore back of last season's varsity squad, and " S p e e d y " Martin, freshman luminary, would be able to answer the call next fall, but this fear of their eligibility has been allayed, as each boy passed the required number of hours.

Prominent candidates for the various positions are listed below:

Centers—Poole, Chance, Lyons, Agee, Shaw, and Brewer. Guards—Wilcox, Lackey, Laws, Warner, Walker, Gilpin,

Susong, Gravlee, Kidd, Swift, and Rutland.

Tackles—Williams, Tharpe, Eubanks, Brittain, Lindsay, Heard, and Miller.

Ends—Sloeum, Spradling, Gibson, Katz, Barbre, Stacy, and Slaughter.

Quarterbacks—Galloway, Boyd, Roberts, Ferguson, Mc-Kinstry, and Perry.

Halfbacks—Davis, Peterson, Street, Martin, Jackson, Per-kerson, Criehton, McKinley, and Felton.

Fullbacks—Dean, Philips, Wilcox, and Black.

The spring practice is open to the alumni, faculty, and students at the Rose Bowl Field.

B A S E B A L L S C H E D U L E April 7-8—Auburn in Atlanta. April 14-15—Oglethorpe at Oglethorpe. April 21-22—Alabama at Tuscaloosa. April 24-25—Alabama in Atlanta. April 28-29—Auburn in Atlanta. May 1-2—Oglethorpe in Atlanta. May 5-15—Georgia in Athens. May 12-13—Georgia in Atlanta.

TRACK April 8—Clemson in Atlanta. April 22—Kentucky at Lexington. April 29—A. A. U. at Tuscaloosa. May 6—Georgia in Atlanta. May 13—Auburn at Auburn. May 19-20—Conference in Birmingham.

Page 14: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 11, No. 04 1933

52 T H E GEORGIA T E C H ALUMNUS

DIRECTORY SUPPLEMENT

March-April, 1933

1912 Hope, George M., Jr., B.S. in M.E.,

Gen. Agent, Atlantic Life Ins. Co., 701 Citizens and Southern National Bank Building, Atlanta, Ga.

Irwin, Ralph D., Underwriters Salvage Co., 913-15 First National Bank Bldg., Dallas, Texas.

1913 Brown, Llewellyn L.B.S. in T.E., Mal­

vern, Ark. 1915

Simmons, J. A., B.S. in T.E., Gen. Manager, Lanett Bleach and Dye Works, West Point, Ga.

1917 Long, George V., Fire Companies Ad­

justment Bureau, Tampa, Fla. 1919

McEver, W.L., B.S. in E.E., M.S., Deciare Incinerator Corp., 155 E. 44th St., New York, N. Y.

1923 Hudgins, B. B., State Highway Dept.,

Milan, Mo. 1924

Freeman, Donald, B.S. in C.E., Agent, Travelers Insurance Co., 601 Ten Pryor Street Bldg., Atlanta, Ga.

Matheson, K. G., Jr., B.S. in M.E., care Elliott Fisher Co., 63 Vesey Street, New York, N. Y.

1925 Smith, J. F. Downie, M. Sci., Instr.,

Harvard Graduate School, Cambridge, Mass.

1927 Colyer. C. M., B.S. in M.E., Ponce

Electric Co., Ponce, Porto Rico. 1928

Asbury, D. TV., Jr., B.S. in E.E., West-inghouse Electric and Manufacturing Co., 4 5 0 0 — 1 7 t h Street, New York, N. Y.

Freeman, M. H., B.S. in Engr., Berner, Ga.

1929 Cannon, Samuel A., B.S. in E.E., 14-20

Alexander St., N.W., Atlanta, Ga. McCutcheon, T . E., B.S. in Cer. Eng.,

Hood Tire Co., 40 East 50th Street, New York, N. Y.

Whittenbug, R. E., B.S. in Cer. Eng., care Waterman Brick and Tile Co., Was-kom, Texas.

1930 Crisfield, Alfred P.. B.S. in Cer. Eng.,

Ceramist, Warwick China Co., Wheeling, W. Va.

Hall, J. R., B.S. in E.E., Graduate Student. Ohio State University, Colum­bus, Ohio.

Harvery, John TV., B.S. in T.E., Stan­dard Oil Co., Kansas City, Mo.

Perry, TV. J., B.S. in C.E., Junior Engr., U. S. Geol. Survey, 630 Power Bldg., Chattanooga, Tenn.

Johnson, E. TV., B.S. in M.E., Co-op., 149 Clinton Ave., Port Richmond, N . Y.

Johnson, TV. H., Sp. Tex., 1305 N. Broad St., Rome, Ga.

Johnston, F. M., B.S. in E.E., 1762 Albert Street, Alexandria, La.

Joiner, TV. H., B.S. in E.E., Co-op., Coleman, Ga.

Jones, E. S., B.S. in M.E., Lula, Ga. Jones, IV. E., B.S. in Com., 1046 W.

Walnut St., Springfield, Mo. Jones, R. L., B.S. in Chem. Eng., 339

Hardeman Avenue, Macon, Ga. Jordan, TV. D., B.S. in E.E., Rich-

burg, S. C. Reiser, A. C, Jr., B.S. in M.E., 1091

Briarcliff Place, N.E., Atlanta, Ga. Kelly, J. H., B.S. in Com., 24 North-

wood Avenue, Atlanta, Ga. Kennickell, A. R., B.S. in Com., Savan­

nah, Ga. Kiley. TV. F., B.S. in Arch., 138 E.

50th St., Savannah, Ga. Kimble, E. L., B.S. in M.E., Ameri-

cus, Ga. Kimbrough, G. C, B.S. in M.E., 77b

N. Boulevard, Atlanta, Ga. Kittrell, J. A., B.S. in T.E., Tryon,

N. C. Kokal, A., B.S. in E.E., Marvel, Ala. Kmght, TV. W.. B.S. in M.E., 729

Fowler Drive, Atlanta, Ga. Kroner, F. R., B.S. in Com., 2744

Memorial Drive, Atlanta, Ga. LaForge. C. A., Jr., B.S. in Com., 210

Dennison Street, Little Rock, Ark. Lampton, T. D., B.S. in\ Com., Mag­

nolia, Miss. Langford, R. M., B.S. in M.E., Gas-

tonia, N. C. Lanier, J. TV., B.S. in Com., Co-op.,

Sylvania, Ga. Lanier, P. D., B.S. in Chem. Eng.,

Forrest City, Ark. Lawrence, TV. C, B.S. in A.E., 506

E. Cambridge, Ave., College Park, Ga. Lawson, T. E., B.S. in T.E., Co-op.,

86 W. Wash. St., Gainesville, Ga. Leach, P. S., B.S. in Eng., Newnan,

Ga. Lefkoff. L. R., B.S. in T.E., 528 Grant

Street, S.E., Atlanta, Ga. Leonard, TV. L., B.S. in T.E., LaFay-

ette, Ga. Lesley, H. G.. B.S. in A.E., Clayton,

Ga. Lester, F. F., Jr., B.S. in T.E., 1149

Gordon Street, S.W., Atlanta, Ga. Lewis, D. M., Jr., B.S. in M.E., Co-op.,

Tallahassee, Fla. Lipscomb. C. L., B.S. in Chem. Eng.,

845 Oglethorpe Avenue, Atlanta, Ga. Little, L. L.. B.S. in Com., 321 Gor­

don Avenue, N.E., Atlanta, Ga. Lucas, P. H., B.S. in E.E., Co-op.,

Junction City, Ga.

Ludl, I. A., B.S. in E.E., 320 Temple Avenue, College Park, Ga.

Ludwig, TV. £>., B.S. in M.E., Co-op., 301 Thorn Place, Montgomery, Ala.

Maddox, J. C, B.S. in Arch., Bain-bridge, Ga.

Manning, T. J., B.S. in E.E., Co-op., 3820 N. 27th Street, Birmingham, Ala.

Marcovitch, H. B., B.S. in E.E., 12754 Broad Street, Augusta, Ga.

Marshall, T. A., Jr., B.S. in A.E., 545 Hanford Place, Westfield, N. J.

Martin, B. W., B.S. in Arch., Picay­une, Miss.

Mathes, E. S., B.S. in M.E., Jonesboro, Georgia.

Mathes, F. A., B.S. in M.E., Jonesboro, Georgia.

Mathews, A. A., Jr., B.S. in E.E. 15 93 Rodgers Avenue, S.W., Atlanta, Ga.

Maner, Fred, Jr., B.S. in Arch., 134 W. Gibbons Street, Linden, N. J.

McCain, J. I., B.S. in C.E., Colfax, Louisiana.

McCamy, R. J., B.S. in T.E., Lindale, Georgia.

McCarthy, H. M., B.S. n E.E., Brook­lyn, N. Y.

McCarthy, G. S., Sp. Tex., 708 N. Dartmouth, Chattanooga, Tenn.

McClain, T. E., B.S. in Com., Paris, Texas.

McCollum, N. TV., B.S. in Com., 1025 Kentucky Avenue, Atlanta, Ga.

McConnell, H. Z., B.S. in M.E., Co-op., 33 S. Peninsular Dr., Daytona Beach, Fla.

McCook, J. TV., Jr., Sp. Tex., 520 College Street, Macon, Ga.

McGaughey, J. E., Jr., B.S. in Sci., 45 Dixie Ave., Brunswick, Ga.

McGinty, Stewart, Jr., B.S. in Com.. 25 Palisades Road, Atlanta, Ga.

McGowan, TV. F., B.S. in Chem. Eng., Co-op., 1086 Rosedale Dr., Atlanta, Ga.

McGregor, J., B.S. in E.E., Co-op., Ailey, Ga.

McKee, J. TV., B.S. in Com., Ellen-wood, Ga.

McKeever, D. A., Jr., B.S. in E.E., Co­op., Box 669, Orlando, Fla. _ „ _

McKenzie, N. P., B.S. in C.E., 916 W. 7th Street, Birmingham, Ala.

( T o be continued)

ALUMNI NOTICE It is important for us to keep organized. Pay your dues now; if unemployed,

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CATALOGS FOLDERS

T E R S a r i d P U B L I S H E

JACKSON 3467-3468

146 Marietta Street OFFICE

STATIONERY

Page 15: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 11, No. 04 1933

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lhis is the pause that refreshes Here's the drink that gets a hand from everybody. A taste thrill. A happy answer to thirst. Wholesome, sure-fire refresh­ment — It means so much. Costs so little—only 5 cents. Takes but a minute. Hence, millions pause for ice-cold Coca-Cola, a n d a r e off t o a f resh Start . The Coca-Cola Company, Atlanta, Georgia

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I T H A D T O B E G O O D T O G E T W H E R E I T I S

Page 16: Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 11, No. 04 1933

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