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I N C O R P O R A T E D
A D R . JAMES R. KILLIAN, J R . , the pres-
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ident of MIT, isn't a man to pull his punches when he makes a speech. Now on leave as President Eisenhower's scientific advisor, the Georgia-born head of the Boston institution hit a few long-neglected nails smack on their heads in his initial speech on his new job. The respected educational administrator told a dinner meeting of the Women's National Press Club in Washington on Jan. 7 that recent Soviet missile-satellite successes have not deprived this country of its overall scientific-technological superiority. He then proposed a four-point program to insure that the United States will retain world leadership in science and technology. Two of the four points that Dr. Killian outlined were not surprising to anyone who has happened to read a newspaper or magazine in the months that have followed the Russian scientific upset. They were (1) a plea for colleges and universities to raise their entrance requirements "to exclude the ill prepared and incompetent applicants," and (2) to increase the emphasis on the value of intellectual discipline. A I T WAS in the other two points that Dr. Killian must have shocked all the newspaper and magazine columnists and editorial writers and the letter-to-theeditor bugs who have become educational experts recently. The first of the shockers noted by the new missile czar was that educators and the public must rid themselves of the idea that science is "materialistic" and in competition with the socalled humanities like literature, languages and philosophy. It has long been one of our pet peeves that a great number of educators and writers in this country have continued to foster the misconception that graduates of our engineering and scientific schools are a group of dull clods unable to appreciate anything but the material things of life. Every engineering and scientific school in this country gives its students a solid dose of the humanities. And we have never heard a single technological or scientific educator say that the humanities should be
sacrificed for more materialistic courses in their own curricula. In fact just the opposite is true. They are constantly trying to find ways to put more humanities in their required courses. In today's world, the engineer and the scientist are no more materialistic than anyone else. Most of them show just as much or more interest in the good things of life as any other educated group. A T H E OTHER POINT made by Dr. Kil-
lian was to us the best of the lot. He said that this country must achieve a "high degree of scientific literacy amon^ the rank-and-file of Americans." For a man can not be educated for modern living "unless he has an understanding of science." This brings up another moot point. These same people in education who have made it a point to criticize the scientific and technological schools for not teaching more humanities have in their own institutions allowed many men and women to get a Liberal Arts degree without taking a single course in science or engineering. How, in this day and age, can they call these people educated? Sure, Georgia Tech and its fellow institutions do not educate the whole man. But then what university does? For another man's view on engineering education, take a look at Tech senior Karl Johnson's article on "Educationeering" on page 10. A A N ARTIST at any trade is always a
welcome sight. Tech has a new one around the campus. He goes by the name of David "Duke" Denton, and he is a basketball player by trade. Although the Duke is just a sophomore, he has already taken over the crowd at the Big Dome. Unfortunately the Duke is not an artist with the books. And keeping him eligible may be the biggest problem facing Whack Hyder in the next two years. For more about the Duke and the Tech basketball team turn to page 20 of this issue.
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FEBRUARY 1958
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VOLUME 36 • NUMBER 5
CONTENTS 2. RAMBLIN' — the editor sounds off on the subject of engineering education and its critics. 6. BUILDING BOOM — a report on the coming campus expansion, biggest in Tech's history. 10. EDUCATIONEERING NEEDED — a student takes a look at teaching methods of today. 12. WITH THE CLUBS — reports from everywhere. 13. THE LOOK OF FEBRUARY — The proudly presents its first photo essay.
Alumnus
20. THE UPS AND DOWNS — for one brief week, the Tech basketball team was at the top. 22. NEWS BY CLASSES — an alumni gazette.
Officers of the Georgia Tech National Alumni Association Charles Simons, '37, Pres. I. M. Sheffield, '20, V-P Charles Thwaite, '33, V-P Walt Crawford, '49, Treas. W. Roane Beard, 40, Executive Secretary Staff
Bob Wallace, Jr., '49, Editor Bill Diehl, Jr., Chief Photographer Bob Eskew, '49, Advertising Mary Peeks, Assistant
The Big Expansion
THE COVER GEORGIA
IN THIS DAY AND AGE of space satellites, guided missiles, and proposed trips to the moon, it might seem rather old-fashioned to write a column about helping others. But there are some things that should never be outmoded, and lending a helping hand to another Tech man is one of them. I know that at one time or another in the life of each of you, a fellow Tech alumnus has gone out of his way to do something nice for you when you really needed help. It may have been a business or social favor, helping you find a place to live, an introduction to a local civic or business club, making you feel at home in a strange and lonely city or one of the many other helpful things that one man can do for another a long way from home. One of the fine memories of my life grew out of an incident that happened to me in a strange city soon after my graduation from Tech. It was a period at which my spirits had hit a new low. Eugene D. Hill, II. whom I had just met in Louisville, Ky., invited me to have dinner with his family. Just the chance to talk with someone who shared a common experience lifted me out of this depression. Out of this seemingly insignificant incident came an awareness of how much Georgia Tech had come to mean to me. Helping another Tech alumnus in this manner is just one more way in which you can help Georgia Tech. The man you aid will surely become a bigger Tech booster for knowing you. Try it, you'll see what I mean.
TICK
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Portraying the particular look of one month on one college campus was the job thrown at photographer Bill Diehl in this issue. The starkness of February at Georgia Tech can be found in the cover picture while the month's tendency towards loneliness and curiosity are pictured on pages 13 through 19 of this issue.
Cover Photo-Bill Diehl, Jr.
Published eight times a year — February, March, May, July, September, October, November and December — by the Georgia Tech National Alumni Association, Georgia Institute of Technology; 225 North Avenue, Atlanta, Georgia. Subscription price (35c per copy) included in the membership dues. Entered as second class matter at the Post Office. Atlanta, Georgia under the Act of March 5, 1879.
On page 6 of this issue is reported for you the greatest physical plant expansion in the history of Tech. Within less than three years, over $10,000,000 will be added to a plant that less than 15 years ago totaled but $4,500,000. The solid support that you have given Georgia Tech has had a great deal to do with this physical plant expansion. The Governor of Georgia, the General Assembly and the Board of Regents are well aware of the type of support the alumni of Georgia Tech and industry have been giving the institution. And they have acted accordingly to increase State support to Tech. Your continued support of the Roll Calls has borne fruit for Georgia Tech in many ways. (_^\J^AJLJ-
<2JI*~<**~3~-~ Tech Alumnus
What is the Bell S y s t e m ? -#-.
The Bell System is wires and cables and laboratories and manufacturing plants and local operating companies and millions of telephones in every part of the country.
BELL SYSTEM
The Bell System is people . . . hundreds of thousands of employees and more than a million and a half men and women who have invested their savings in the business. It is more than that. The Bell System is an idea.
It is an idea that starts with the policy of providing the best possible telephone service at the lowest possible price.
The thing that makes it work so well in your behalf is the way the Bell System is set up to do the job.
But desire is not enough. Bright dreams and high hopes need to be brought to earth and made to work.
No matter whether it is some simple matter of everyday operation â&#x20AC;&#x201D; or the great skills necessary to invent the Transistor or develop underseas telephone cables to distant countriesâ&#x20AC;&#x201D;the Bell System has the experience and organization to get it done.
You could have all the equipment and still not have the service you know today. You could have all the separate parts of the Bell System and not have the benefits of all those parts fitted together in a nationwide whole.
And an attitude and spirit of service that our customers have come to know as a most important part of the Bell System idea.
Bell Telephone System
THE GOVERNOR AND THE PRESIDENT
BIGGEST BOOM IN BUILDINGS Georgia Tech's biggest expansion program gets into high gear with a groundbreaking pictured above are engaged in the ancient and honorable ceremony of breaking ground for a new building. Taking place on January 23, this particular ceremony was in honor of the long-needed $2,100,000 Classroom Building now being constructed South of the Price Gilbert Library. It was a most significant groundbreaking for several reasons, chief among them being that it heralded a new era of construction at Tech that will increase the net worth of the physical plant by almost one-third in three short years. During this year, the groundbreaking ceremony should be repeated at least three times as Tech begins to expand to get ready for the onslaught of students which is expected to drive the Institute's present enrollment of 5,500 up to the 7,000 mark by 1962. The Electrical Engineering Building, the Nuclear Research Reactor, and the Radioisotopes and Bioengineering Laboratoryâ&#x20AC;&#x201D;the other new buildings definitely set to be addedâ&#x20AC;&#x201D;are marked in white on the adjoining aerial map which includes the new planning boundaries for the campus. Tech also expects to get new dormitory facilities to house 1,000 students through a loan now pending with the Public Housing Administration. And the new Georgia Tech Motel and Southern Regional Education Board building, though not strictly Georgia Tech buildings, reflect the increased construction on the campus. For more about the new buildings please turn the page.
T
6
HE TWO GENTLEMEN
Tech Alumnus
BIGGEST BUILDING BOOM continued
Tech's new $2,100,000 Classroom Building as envisioned by the architect. The front of the Price Gilbert Library is on the left, here
CLASSROOM AND EE: LONG-NEEDED BUILDINGS ON THE WAY for Tech faculty members and students in many a moon should come to pass in the summer of 1959 when the building sketched above will be ready for occupancy. For, from that time on, the IM's will no longer shuffle down the hallowed and antiquated halls of Swann, the Math classes will be held outside of the dreary Old Shop, the English courses will no longer be taught in the oldest building on the campus, and the Psychology Department will come out of the temporary structures where it has been in hiding all of these years. All four of these departments will be housed in the sleek, air-conditioned, 137,000-square-foot building with its 68 classrooms, 23 special-purpose rooms and numerous faculty and administrative offices. Connected to the Library by a two-story corridor, the new building will be of reinforced concrete frame, brick veneered with aluminum windows. The site drops off so that the building will be four stories THE BIGGEST PSYCHOLOGICAL LIFT
high on Hemphill Ave. with the three top floors supported by columns. It was designed by the Atlanta architects, A. Thomas Bradbury & Associates. Financing for the building came through a bond issue under the University System Building Authority.
Electrical Engineering Building In its most recent bond sale, the University System Building Authority included the cost of the new Electrical Engineering Building. A tentative architect has been appointed for the $3,700,000 structure, and design plans are now in progress. This building will take over the load of one of Tech's largest and oldest schools which has been occupying its present outmoded structure since 1896. The EE Building is expected to be completed late in 1960. It will be located north of the Textile Building in the new campus area (see map on page 6 ) . Tech Alumnus
i\'at Browne
RADIOISOTOPES: A YEAR AWAY
I
MAJOR LECTURE AND LABORATORY COURSES in Tech's nuclear graduate program are being taught in temporary locations on the campus awaiting the completion in early 1959 of the building shown above. This Radioisotopes and Bioengineering Laboratory, which will also be used for research, had the distinction of being expanded by 60% in Iloor space and $231,000 in equipment before it ever got off the drawing boards at the office of John Cherry, the architect. The additional funds for the expansion came from the National Institutes of Health ($125,000) and the Board of Regents ($69,500) while the equipment funds came from the Atomic Energy Commission.
NUCLEAR REACTOR: A CONCEPT below represents a concept of what in 1960 will be the equal of any Nuclear Research Reactor located at an institution of higher learning in the world. Its value is $3,800,000, and $2,500,000 of this amount has already come to Georgia Tech through the Board of Regents from the Governor of Georgia. The remainder of the funds are expected to come from various federal agencies. The reactor will be of the heavy-water-moderated, heterogeneous, enriched fuel type, and its conceptual design was done by Dr. Walter H. Zinn, dean of reactor designers. THE ARTIST'S SKETCH
Drawing by Frank Bate, Atlanta Journal-Constitution
February, 1958
Magazine
Photo by Bill Diehl, Jr.
One of the key courses in Industrial Engineering, Time and Motion Study. Author Johnson is the student in dark shirt.
by Karl G. Johnson, IE '58
Educationeering Needed has just been jolted out of its complacency. L In spite of our smug belief to the contrary, we now know that Russia is definitely forging ahead or us in some branches of science. Even allowing for the fact that Russia obtained a great deal of her scientific knowledge from the secrets stolen from the United States by the several spy rings that have been active, and allowing for the tremendous help they have received from captive German scientists, still we must recognize that Russia has made tremendous advances on her own in the past few years. At present everyone is making excuses for America not being the first to launch a satellite. The Army is blaming the Navy; the Democrats are blaming the Republicans; the Integrationists are blaming the Segregationists. In fact, almost everyone is putting the blame on everything and everybody except where it is due. The sad fact is that there have not been enough qualified engineers and scientists to complete the task. What is the cause of this shortage? Why should a country which is perhaps the most mechanized in the world have a shortage of scientists? My belief is that America has advanced in every field of scientific endeavor except one of the most important: the science of education.
A
MERICA
10
A TECH SENIOR HAS HIS SAY ABOUT EDUCATION IN TODAY'S COMPETITIVE WORLD The methods of higher education used today are fifty years behind those recognized in all phases of business and industry. This is a serious charge. Yet I feel that I can back it up. In industry, engineering has weighed, studied, classified, analyzed, and scrutinized all phases of human reaction to working conditions; i.e., type of work, quantity of work per person, and periods of industry, the purpose of all this being to maximize human efficiency and thereby to maximize production. But what efforts have been made in the field of education to study techniques to maximize learning efficiency? How does anyone know what type of training aids or what particular teaching psychology should be used to maximize student's learning efficiency? The problems of industry are immensely complicated. A manager must have at his disposal all the talent that he can muster in practically every field one can imagine. The deadlines are sometimes seemingly impossible. Yet with all these problems, industry is capable of fantastic production and is able to offer a product at a fairly reasonable price. Why is it impossible for institutions of higher learning to operate just as efficiently as industry? The well known Scanlan Plan is an example of maximizing human efficiency in industry. The plan was designed to get a floundering business back on its feet, and Tech Alumnus
the first step toward accomplishing this was the definition of a goal for the business. In the case of the Scanlan Plan the goal was simply but appropriately "production." Why not define a goal for higher education in much the same manner? Perhaps the wording could be something like this. The goal of higher education in the United States should be to prepare young persons for handling the problems of life, not only those that involve accomplishing creative tasks (and thereby earning a living), but also for those that involve being good citizens and making good lives. Once a goal has been established, there must be an elfective means by carrying it out. This is the next problem we must face. Perhaps the most serious problem in higher education today is the need for teachers who have a superb command of their own particular subject matter. Too often people of this calibre are snatched up by industry, and they find it financially impractical to give up a high-salaried position to return to teaching. in many schools, however, there are teachers who are literally giants in regard to command of their subject matter. Yet they might as well be speaking in Arabic for all that they accomplish in communicating their knowledge to the students. What they desperately need is a knowledge of training techniques and teaching psychology which would transform them into highly effective teachers. These, then, are the two main problems that stand, in the way of accomplishing the goal that higher education could set. First, a teacher can accomplish nothing regardless of how well he can teach if he has limited command of his subject. Secondly, a teacher can accomplish February, 1958
nothing regardless of how well he knows his subject if he fails to communicate his knowledge to his students. It logically follows that there is a need for very great progress in the area where knowledge of subject matter and teaching strategy come together. To plan and carry out an effective course a teacher must know how to instill a reasonable amount of enthusiasm in his students. This can best be done by giving the students a goal toward which to work and by giving them additional motivation along the way in the form of special assignments and quizzes. In other words, a student must be shown that the course is of real and personal value>to his life. A solution to this gigantic problem could not be laid out neatly on one page, or even in one volume, but a suggested plan of action would necessarily follow from the previous remarks. A conference must be held to determine what methods should be used to bring into closer agreement subject matter knowledge and teaching strategy and to determine what other action is necessary to improve higher education. This meeting should be a selected cross section of the top-flight men in our universities, colleges, and technical schools throughout the country. The number should be limited to perhaps one-hundred men representative of all major fields. The breakdown of percentages for each field could be determined by percent of first degrees granted in the various fields. In the case of one-hundred men this would imply: Engineering, Eleven; Arts and Sciences (including Physical Sciences), Forty; Business Administration, Fourteen; Education, Fifteen; English, Five; and All Other Fields, Fifteen. There should be two meetings, one per year, and they should last a minimum of two weeks each. Prior to the first meeting four or five papers should be prepared for presentation, and these should be the basis for further research of the group. An extended educational research program, broken into many phases, should be started at the first meeting and continued throughout the year. At the second meeting findings would be presented and a further course of action plotted. The location of the meeting place should be carefully chosen. Possibly the meetings could be held at the Arden House on the Hudson, or some other very pleasant place. It is obvious that such a long and confining meeting of the nations' top educational leaders would be impractical were it not for the urgency of the need for such a conference. The goal of improving higher education must be reached as quickly as possible. An idea is of no use unless it can be tested, and yet this proposed plan would seem to require national attention and cooperation to be put into effect. Yet, there is no need to build an entire plane to test the aerodynamic properties of its design. A scale model of an educational research plan could be tested at Georgia Tech. 11
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CLUB CALENDAR FOR THE FUTURE DATE CITY SPEAKER Pittsburgh, Pa. Pres. Edwin D. Harrison Feb. 27 Feb. 28 Baltimore, Md. Pres. Edwin D. Harrison March 6 Chattanooga, Tenn. Dean Griffin, Dr. J. E. Boyd Columbus, Ga. March 6 Pres. Edwin D. Harrison March 11 Houston, Texas Coach Dodd, Coach Graves March 13 Baton Rouge Bob Eskew Richmond, Va. March 14 Coach Tonto Coleman March 14 West Palm Beach Coach Dodd March 14 Dallas, Texas Bob Eskew March 19 Chicago, III. Pres. Edwin D. Harrison Indianapolis, Ind. March 20 Pres. Edwin D. Harrison March 21 Louisville, Ky. Pres. Edwin D. Harrison ALBANY, GEORGIA—Alumni from Albany, Americus and Moultrie turned out on November 26 for a meeting of the Southwest Georgia Tech Club at Radium Springs, Georgia. President W. E. "Gene" Broadwell, '43, acted as toastmaster for the evening's entertainment which included talks by Alumni Secretary Roane Beard and Athletic Business Manager Howard Ector and films of the Tech-Duke game. C. T. Oxford, '30, presented a report of the club's Scholarship Committee which he heads. During the business meeting the following officers were elected for the coming year: Neil M. Cavette, '41, president; Leo T. Barber, Jr., '47, vice president and William W. Pace, Jr., '40, secretary-treasurer. * * * CHICAGO, ILLINOIS—Sixteen Tech alumni from the Chicago area met for luncheon on December 6 at the University Club to hear Alumni Secretary Roane Beard present a briefing on campus and alumni activities. Ben L. Crew, '28, is president of the Chicago Club. * * * KINGSPORT, TENNESSEE—Assistant Football Coach Whitey Urban was the featured speaker at the December 13 meeting of the Kingsport Georgia Tech. President Jim Hudson, '48, introduced the popular Tech coach who briefed the club on the 1958 football prospects at Tech and reviewed the film of the 1957 Tech-Duke game. During the business meeting the election of 1958 officers was held. They include Bill Snyder, president; Walter Earnest, vice president; D. P. Templeton, Jr., secretarytreasurer; and Bob Beard, director. On a motion by Ted 12
Clubs...
Hagen the club elected to have a special DODD-DAY for their next meeting in the spring of 1958. MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN—The Milwaukee Georgia Tech Club held a combination dinner and business meeting in early November at the Ambassador Hotel. President Aubrey Phillips, '36, presided over the meeting. Elected officers for the coming year at the meeting were Tom Bloodworth, '29, president; Bill Lefferts, '28, vice president; and Bill French, '51, secretary-treasurer. In addition to these officers Bill Schroeder, '51, was elected program chairman for 1958. Movies of the Tech-Pitt Gator Bowl game and "The Expanding Frontier" were shown to round out the program. * * * NEW YORK, NEW YORK—Over 130 members and guests of the New York Georgia Tech Club turned out in inclement weather to hear new Tech President Edwin D. Harrison, at their December 5 meeting at the Reeves Sound Studio. Dr. Harrison spoke on the forthcoming changes in secondary and college curriculum. During his talk, the Tech President complimented Tech alumni on their loyalty and support and stated that this quality of Tech alumni was very influential in helping him to accept the challenge of the presidency of Tech. A lengthy question and answer session followed Dr. Harrison's first talk to the club. Special guests at the meeting were three members of the Board of Trustees of the Georgia Tech Foundation; John P. Baum, '24; Ben R. Gordon, '25; and W. J. Holman, Jr., '28. The guests were introduced by J. F. Nicholl, '28, president of the New York Club. * * * PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA—Over 35 members of the Georgia Tech Club of Pittsburgh were in attendance at the December 16 meeting. Elected as officers for 1958 at the meeting were Charlie LeCraw, '40, president; and Glenn A. Wilson, '43 secretary-treasurer. John Lasch, a member of the 1957 Tech football team, narrated the films of the Tech-Duke game for the group. President LeCraw appointed the following committee to arrange the spring meeting for the club: B. G. Davenport, '50; Harold E. Matson, '52; and George Phillips, "36. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA—Tech Placement Director Fred Ajax spoke to the Georgia Tech Club of Richmond on November 14. Robert M. Lester, Jr., '48, president of the club, introduced Dean Ajax who spoke on "The Present-day Georgia Tech." Tech Alumnus
The Look of February at Georgia Tech Eugene
Quails
Eebruary is a month with a look all of its own . . . A month with the look of bleakness and loneliness . . . A month in itself a paradox . . . The very shortest of months . . . Yet, coming as it does in the middle of the school year, it somehow is also the longest . . . It is the month of changing weather and of changing moods . . . At Georgia Tech, February looks like this.
An Alumnus Portfolio of Georgia Tech Photographs by Bill Diehl, Jr. February, 1958
13
February is the curiosity of a sophomore physics class intent on listening and learning.
14
Tech Alumnus
And February is the loneliness of a lab cleaning detail. February, 1958
15
February is a month dedicated to the inquisitive.
Who might wonder what the future will hold for them.
*
Or debate the proper procedure for grading a paper. 16
TÂŤeh Alumnus
Or discuss the myraid problems of teaching.
Or fire the inevitable question at the teacher.
February is also a month for the lonely. Who work out the complicated lab problems into the late afternoon.
18
Tech Alumnus
Or run off a quiz for tomorrow.
Or work day and night at the Drafting tables.
Or prepare for the teaching of the coming day. February, 1958
19
THE STUDENT SECTION MAKES THE BIG NOISE AS THE JACKETS RALLY AGAINST THE KENTUCKY WILDCATS.
The Alexander Memorial Coliseum packed them in this y e a r to see
Photographed by Dick Thompson
THE UPS AND DOWNS OF WHACK HYDER'S BOYS in late January, Georgia Tech's basketball team was the little train that could, sittin' loftily on top of the SEC in a tie with mighty Kentucky. But two successive beatings by Alabama and Auburn knocked Whack Hyder's boys back into the middle. Tech had attained its top ranking by whipping Adolph Rupp's Wildcats, 71-52, before 7,600 people, the largest crowd to ever witness a basketball game in the State. It was the fifth crowd of capacity or over at the Alexander Coliseum this season. Oddly enough, the Jackets won every one of these big games. Mississippi State (undefeated until Tech beat them, 78-61), Vanderbilt, Tennessee and Georgia were the other victims of the crowcf-conscious Jackets. At this writing with four games remaining on the schedule, Tech's record is 14 and 8. In the conference, the Jackets are 7 and 3. The Jackets who were supposed to be a year away pulled the first surprise of the season when they won the Motor City Invitational Tourney in Detroit over the Christmas holidays by beating Marquette and Detroit. The Mississippi State, Kentucky and Tennessee wins were the other upsets pulled off by this team.
F
20
OR ONE WONDERFUL FIVE-DAY PERIOD
Stars of this year's team have been the great junior guard tandem of Blemker and Randall and the Duke from Bowling Green, Kentucky, Dave Denton, a sophomore. Sophomore 6' 1" center Frank Inman and seniors Gary Phillips and Jimmy Johnson are the other Jackets who have alternated as starters. With a top-notch, high-scoring freshman team which has lost but one game, Tech stands to be a mighty rough squad next year. Of course, the success of next season may well rest on keeping the pro baseball scouts from signing Blemker as a pitcher and Denton's scholastic average. No matter what their won and lost record is at the end of this season, the 1957-58 Jacket team will go down as one of the most exciting of all Tech athletic teams. They have the ability to excite a crowd like no other team seen in this area in recent years. And their victory over Kentucky brought on a shirt-tail parade and a day's holiday from school for the Tech students. Basketball has caught on at Georgia Tech. And future years will probably see the sellout crowd at the Big Dome the rule rather than the exception. Tech Alumnus
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Fabulous Tech Sophomore Dave "The Duke" Denton grabs one of his 22 rebounds from the center of three Kentucky players as Tech won 71-52.
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In the postgame celebration, Duke and Terry Randall on the shoulders of students cut down the nets from the Coliseum's baskets.
High scorer Randall leaps above a Tennessee man to add two points in the Jackets' thrilling 82-79 win over the Volunteers.
Deadeye Buddy Blemker sinks one against Mississippi State as the Jackets tumble the Maroons from the unbeaten ranks, 78-61.
February, 1958
21
' Q C Thomas P. Thompson, ME, of Nor30 folk, Va., died June 12, 1957. N o further information was available at this writing. ' f l f l Frank M. Butner, owner & operator " " of the Pioneer Riding Academy for the past 25 years prior to his retirement in October, died January 3 at his home. >1^ Hugh Thomas Barron, EE, retired I • Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co. employee, died of a heart attack Nov. 25, 1957. He lived at 3120 Eton, Berkeley, Calif. ' Q O William Callaway Summers, of 744 LL Kennolin Dr., S.W., Atlanta, died Jan. 18 in a local hospital. He had been with the Ga. Highway Dept. since '27 and was assistant office engineer at the time of his death. '04 E. C. Hammond, Com., secretary of '•'I the Georgia Power Co., has been appointed to head Georgia's 1957-58 Teacher of the Year program which is sponsored by the Georgia State Chamber of Commerce. »OE Brig. Gen. B. B. Talley, US Army fcJ (ret.), EE, has been elected a vice president of Raymond Concrete Pile Co. in New York City. General Talley has been with the company since 1956, serving in the Brizilian subsidiary as president. Prior to joining Raymond he was Division Engineer, Mediterranean Division, Corps of Engineers. Albert Mell Wright, ME, died Nov. 23 in an Atlanta hospital. He was a mechanical engineer with Gulf Oil Corporation. His wife lives at 727 Button Rd., N.E., Atlanta. '9R fcU
W'Uiam Anderson DuPre, TE, of Rome, Ga., died April 22, 1957.
'00 Bolan H. Boatner, EE, has been *-\t made vice president in charge of sales of Westinghouse Electric Supply Co. in Pittsburgh, Pa. ' O Q Guy Henry, CE, is now president of Lit Providence Gas Co., 100 Weybosset St., Providence, R. I. Prior to this appointment, he was president of the East Tennessee Natural Gas Co. in Knoxville. The Rev. Frank Alfred Mathes, ME, pastor for the past 11 years of the South Highland Presbyterian Church
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22
in Birmingham, has accepted a call to become pastor of the Granada Presbyterian Church in Coral Gables, Fla. »QO Ivan Allen, Jr., Com, president of 00 the Ivan Allen Co. in Atlanta, has been listed in the 1958 Who's Who in America. Mr. Allen is president of the Georgia Tech Foundation and a former president of the National Alumni Association. ' Q T Ernest S. Tharpe, GS, has joined 01 Tharpe & Brooks, Inc. as vice president and member of the Board of Directors. He assumed management of the Columbus, Ga. office Jan. 1. L. F. "Red" Anderson, Jr., IM, is Southwestern District Manager for Devoe & Reynolds Co., Inc. with headquarters in Dallas, Texas. His home address is 3901 University Blvd., Dallas 5, Texas.
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J. T. Bayer, Jr., IM, former district engineer with Southern Bell in Jacksonville, Fla., is now division engineer of North Florida with headquarters in Jacksonville.
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R. E. Morris, EE, has been appointed manager of the St. Louis district of Allis Chalmers Industries Group. Prior to this appointment he was a sales representative in the Washington office.
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Mc ' A R S' RusseU Gee, Jr., IM, has been •" appointed Superintendent of Agencies for Piedmont Life Ins. Co. of Atlanta. F o r the last 3 % years he has been manager for the Connecticut General Life Ins. Co. in Charlotte.
'iT Alfred H. Guritz, IE, has been ap•f' pointed assistant plant manager of the Macon, Ga. plant of Armstrong Cork Co. He has been with the company since 1947, serving as plant industrial engineer in the Macon & Pensacola plants and chief industrial engineer at Lancaster, Pa. »4fl Married: Roy Cox Burdette, IM. to ^0 Miss Eliza Shirley Dec. 2 1 . Mr. Burdette is with the U. S. Rubber Co. The couple reside at Winnsboro, S. C. 'in Robert H. Barge, IM, has been ap" 3 pointed regional services manager for Allstate Insurance Company with offices in Roanoke, Va. H e has been with the company for 5 years and prior to his recent appointment was regional operating manager in Jackson, Miss. Engaged: Junius Clyde Bell, IM, to Miss Margaret Duke. The wedding will take place April 19 in Pelham, Ga. Mr. Bell is with the Technical Services Div. of the Coca-Cola Co. W. G. Denning, Ch.E., has been promoted to section head in the Technical Services Div. at Humble Oil & Refining Company's Baytown, Texas refinery. Mr.
Albert S. Williams, ' 3 2 , Is First Alumnus Named to Magazine's Distinguished All-America Albert Sidney (Syd) Williams, '32, became the first Georgia Tech graduate to be named to the Sports Illustrated Silver Anniversary All-America team when he was selected for the 25-man squad in December. This is the second year that SI has named such a team. The 25 men, who were senior collegiate football players 25 years ago and were among the hundreds nominated by their alma maters for outstanding career and community service records in the intervening years, were selected by a panel of distinguished judges. Williams, who went from Bethesda Orphans Home in Savannah to Georgia Tech on a football scholarship, is now regional manager for Coca-Cola Export in London, England. Tech Alumnus
and Mrs. Denning live at 1601 East Fayle St. in Baytown. Capt. Linton D. Stables, Jr., IM, has graduated from the officer advanced course at The Infantry School, Ft. Benning, Ga. Born to: Mr. and Mrs. John M. Ziegler, ME. a son, Carl Malcolm, Dec. 31. Their address is 8803 Weldon Dr., Richmond, Va. ' C O Born to: Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. J U Bottoms, Jr., IM, a daughter, Beverly Claire, Dec. 30. Mr. Bottoms is with the Coca-Cola Co. in Jackson, Miss. Brian S. Brown, CLU, IM, has been promoted to the official staff of the Guardian Life Insurance Co. of America in New York as director of field training. Prior to joining Guardian's Holcombe T. Green Agency in Atlanta in 1952, he was manager of alumni activities for the Georgia Tech Alumni Association. Mr. Brown and his wife reside with their two children at 565 Broadway, Hastings-on-Hudson, New York. T. M. Davis, ME, Chief Test Engineer of the Thiokol Chemical Corp., has been elected to a two-year term as vice chairman of the J A N A F Solid Propellant Rocket Static Test Panel. H e will also serve as chairman of the Special Devices Committee. Samuel J. Jordan, IE, has been promoted to chief engineer of the Craft Fabrics Division of Pacific Mills at Halifax, Va. William Lee Queen, IM, Jacksonville, Fla. insurance executive, has been named a member of the Duval County School Board.
D E S I G N O F BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY BUILDINGS BY H U G H STUBBINS.
Two Firms Headed by Alumni W i n National Awards Designs submitted by two architectural firms headed by Tech men were awarded national honors in the Fifth Annual Design Awards Program sponsored by Progressive Architecture, a national magazine. The Boston firm of High Stubbins & Associates won an award citation in the Education category for the proposed business and student administration buildings at Brandesis University and the Memphis firm of Mann & Harrover with Leigh Williams as associate won an award citation in the Public Use category. Hugh Stubbins and William Mann are both graduates of the School of Architecture at Tech. F I N E A R T S C E N T E R A T M E M P H I S BY M A N N A N D H A R R O V E R
Born to: Mr. and Mrs. Maurice H. Furchgott, IE, a son, Kenneth Roy, Nov. 26. Their home address is 2795 Queensbury Lane, N.W., Atlanta, Ga. Loyd M. O'Guin, Jr., TE, has joined Chemstrand as a senior representative in the Technical Sales Service Dept. at Decatur. Ala. He lives with his wife and son at 419 7th Ave., N. W., Decatur, Ala. Born to: Mr. and Mrs. James C. Taylor, EE. a daughter, Rosemary Lynn, October 28. Mr. Taylor is section head in the Electrical Engineering Dept. with National Cash Register Co. in Dayton. Their home address is 5310 Flamingo Ct., Dayton 3 1 , Ohio.
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t F O Paul Edfelt, Jr., IE, has been transvL ferred by Stockham Valves & Fittings from Philadelphia to their Baltimore, Md., office. His home address is 1711-A Edgewood Rd., Towson 4, Md. Engaged: Lt. Archibald Little Griffin, USNR, IM, to Miss Alma Whitfield. Lt. Griffin is serving in the office of the Chief of Operations at the Pentagon in Washington, D . C. Engaged: Thomas G. Moore, IE, to Miss Janet Knox. The wedding will take place in March. Mr. Moore is vice president of the Atlanta Utility Works. James D. Reeves, Ch.E., is now with George Armistead & Co., Engineering Consultants, at 1000 Connecticut Ave., Washington, D. C. His home address is 1307 Burleigh Rd., Lutherville, Md. February, 1958
Married: Samuel H. Scott, Jr., I.M., to Miss Martha Jo Smith. Mr. Scott is president of O'Flanagan's, Inc. in Atlanta. The couple live at 23 Woodcrest Ave., N.E., Atlanta, Ga. Lt. James E. Williams, Ch.E., was graduated second in a class of 15 from the Ordnance Guided Missile Course (SurfaceAir Missiles) at the Ordnance Guided Missile School, Redstone Arsenal, Ala., and has been assigned as commanding officer of the 15th Ord. Det. ( D E Nike) at Loring A F B , Maine. ' E Q Lt. Richard Lee Clement, US Navy, Jw IE, was lost on a night fighter interceptor training mission near Fallon, Ne-
vada Sept. 18. He was a jet pilot. Memorial services were held in Atlanta Jan. 11. Lt. Clement is survived by his parents, Col. & Mrs. Coleman C. Clement, of 1360 Springdale Rd., N.E., Atlanta; 2 brothers, Capt. Coleman C. Clement, Jr., US Army, '48; Capt. Robert W. Clement, USAF. Quentin C. LaPrad, EE, US Army, has been promoted to the rank of major. He is an instructor in the corporal missile div. of the Dept. of Material at Ft. Sill, Okla. Freddie H. Wood, Jr., TE, IE, is an industrial engineering consultant with Kurt Salmon Associates, Washington, D.C. consulting management engineer. His home address is 210 W. Green St., Milledgeville, Ga. More News on Page 24 23
Alumnus Renamed Regent Howard H. Callaway, '47, center, was sworn in for his second term as a member of the Board of Regents by Governor Marvin Griffin on January 8. Callaway is president of the Gardens Ind. Inc. of Hamilton, Georgia. Mrs. Callaway is at left. Other Tech men presently on the regents include Freeman Strickland, '24, of Atlanta; Morris Bryan, '41, of Jefferson and David Rice, '29, of Atlanta. The Regents are appointed by the Governor for a sevenyear term and are the governing body of the State's University System.
Born to: Mr. and Mrs. Camilo L. Castro, EE, a daughter, Carmen Annette, Nov. 15. Their address is 6350 N o . Hampton Dr., N.E., Atlanta, Ga. Born to: Mr. and Mrs. Forest Fowler, Jr., IM, a daughter, Virginia Claire Dec. 22. Frank M. White, ME, former technical director for the Atlanta Housing Authority, is now associated with the Ga. State Highway Dept. as a highway engineer. Theodore M. Williams, Midshipman 1/c, CE, has been selected as a speaker for this year's "Operation Information," a program initiated at the Naval Academy to maintain a high level of interest in the academy.
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JCC Durwood V. Cason, Jr., M E , was uu drowned Dec. 18 while swimming in the surf at San Diego. He had accepted a position as assistant professor of Drawing & Mechanics at Tech and was to begin work in January. While in San Diego he was with Convair. He is survived by his wife, 2 daughters, parents and 2 brothers. Born t o : Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Cobb, ME, a daughter, Janet Arlene Nov. 26. Their home address is 2021 West Dr., West Palm Beach, Fla. Born to: Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Compton, ME, a daughter, June 10, 1957. Mr. Compton is with Combustion Engineering. Their home address is 4 1 9 % Haney Dr., Chattanooga, Term. W. C. Morrison, IM, is with Allis-Chalmers Industrial Group and is currently attending training school at Norwood, 111. He will then train in Milwaukee for 6 weeks before being assigned to the Southeast. Married: Lt. Kenneth F. Read, USN. ME, to Miss Sondra Duvall, Dec. 2 1 . Lt. Read is currently with the Dept. of Marine Engineering, U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md. Lt. Charles Leon Sherman, IM, U.S. Army, was released from active duty at 24
Ft. Holabird, Baltimore, Md. on Nov. 15 where he was an instructor with the U. S. Army Intelligence School. He is now an industrial engineer with the Associated Garment Industries. Mr. Sherman lives at 4954 West Pine Blvd., Apt. 602, St. Louis 8, Mo. ' E C Ensign Carter T. Barron, Jr., IM, *IU is now stationed aboard the USS Saint Paul (LA-73), in Long Beach, Calif. He is serving as disbursing and ships store officer. Lt. James M. Blankenship, IE, is executive officer aboard the USS Crestview (PCE895), F P O , New York, N . ' Y . Lt. James I. Giddings, U. S. Army, IE, has graduated from the Officer Airborne Course at The Infantry School, Ft. Benning, Ga. Lt. George R. Greenacre, USAF, Ch.E., has completed a special 1-yr. graduate course in meteorology at Texas A&M and is now stationed at Bergstrom AFB as a weather forecaster. His address is 451 McWirk Blvd., Bergstrom Village, Austin, Texas. Lt. Perry L. James, USMC, IE, has qualified as a Naval aviator at Pensacola, Fla. H e is now undergoing helicopter training at Ellyson Field near Pensacola. William D. McCurry, CE, has completed his tour of duty with the Army and is now back with Plantation Pipe Line Co. in Baton Rouge, La. He was married Dec. 8 to Miss Margaret Ann Stacey. Their home address is 235 Granpre St., Apt. 4, Baton Rouge, La. Pvt. Robert C. Moore, U. S. Army, has been assigned to the U. S. Army Headquarters Co. at Ft. Myer, Va. Lt. John S. West, U. S. Army, Ch.E., is an administrative officer for the Ordnance Supply Training Division, U. S. Army Ordnance School at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md. Jack Worrell, CE, has been promoted to
first lieutenant and assigned as company commander of " C " Co., 806th Engr. Bn., Ft. Rucker, Ala. I C 1 Engaged: James Monroe Barker, IV, 3/ CE, to Miss Virginia Barrett. The wedding will take place Feb. 15. Mr. Barker is with Magnolia Petroleum Co. in Alice, Texas. Engaged: Carl Miesse Baumgardner, Arch, to Miss Patricia Welding. Mr. Baumgardner is currently serving with the Air Force at Harlington A F B , Texas. Engaged: Patrick Edward Bolger, IB. to Miss Elizabeth Cauthen. The wedding will take place March 1. Mr. Bolger is with American T&T in Chicago. Navy Ens. Donald C. Brown, EE. recently made his first solo flight at Pensacola, where he is, in basic flight training. Barry W. Coats, IE, has been commissioned an Ensign in the Navy after completing Pre-Flight School at Pensacola. Ted H. Cook, IE, is now with BabcockWilcox Co., Refractories Div., in Augusta, Ga. His home address is 2565 Henry St. Navy Ens. Richard E. Cossett, Ch.E., recently made his first solo flight at Pensacola where he is in basic flight training. Born to: Dr. and Mrs. Phillip M. Dangherty, Chem, their fifth child. Louis Gerard, Nov. 5, Their home address is 353 Eastland Dr. ,Decatur, Ga. Lt. T. W. Gilmer, ME, has been presented a letter of commendation for being elected honor graduate in the Basic Officers Military Orientation Program at the Army Ordnance School, Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md. Pvt. Ivan H. Gordon, U. S. Army, has completed basic combat training at Ft. Knox, Ky. His permanent address is 340 Brookline Manor, Reading, Pa. Navy Ens. Grady L. Gothard, I F . recently made his first solo flight at PensaMore News on page 26 Tech Alumnus
Apart, they're liquid. h4mi0^iogether,
they're solid
. . . helping make parts for your car, your television set, and even your tableware TWO LIQUIDS flow as freely as water. Yet when poured together they quickly turn into a solid — without the use of heat or pressure. Harder than many metals, the resulting plastic is called epoxy. THESE
D e l i c a t e parts for television, radio, and other electronic equipment are embedded in epoxies to protect them from moisture and vibration. And, in durable tableware, epoxy adhesives seal knife blades in their handles with a strong, permanent bond. —
CRAG Agricultural Chemicals
M a n y i n d u s t r i e s are now looking to epoxies to make better things for you. Developing and producing epoxies —as well as such plastics as vinyl and polyethylene—is only one of the many important jobs of the people of Union Carbide.
STUDENTS AND STUDENT ADVISERS: Learn more about career opportunities with Union Carbide in ALLOYS, CARBONS, CHEMICALS,
GASES,
and
PLAS-
TICS. Write for "Products and Processes" booklet G-2. Union Carbide Corporation, 30 East 42nd St., New York 17, N. Y. In Canada, Union Carbide Canada Ltd., Toronto.
VCCs Trade-marked Products include
B A K E L I T E , V I N Y L I T E , and K R E N E Plastics
SYNTHETIC ORGANIC C H E M I C A L S
Epoxies are s o h a r d that they are used to make the huge dies that stamp out automobile trunk lids and hoods, airplane wing sections and other varied shapes. These dies are molded in about half the time it takes to shape all-metal dies . . . and, at substantial savings.
PYROFAX Gas
L I N D E Oxygen
NATIONAL Carbons
P R E S T O N E Anti-Freeze
PREST-O-LITE Acetylene
U N I O N Calcium Carbide
U N I O N C A R B I D E Silicones
H A Y N E S STELLITE Alloys
EvEREADY Flashlights and Batteries
Dynel Textile Fibers
ELECTROMET Alloys and Metals
N e w Tech P u b l i c a t i o n Stresses I n d u s t r i a l D e v e l o p m e n t A 1 0-POINT PROGRAM for optimum industrial growth of Georgia was released today by the Industrial Development Branch of the Georgia Tech Engineering Experiment Station in the initial issue of Weas, a new Georgia Tech publication. Based on 18 months of basic and applied research, the closely-related 10points of the program are all considered essential by the Tech research group if the State's urgent and long-ranged industrial needs are to be met. One of the key points of the program was that an independent, non-political committee of business and industrial leaders is needed, both to add prestige and to provide a central, authoritative body which could concentrate on the elimination of existing weaknesses. This optimum program was prepared at the request of Governor Griffin in order that Georgia could move rapidly toward a more prosperous economy through an intelligent industrial development program. IDeas is a bi-monthly publication designed to pinpoint needs and disseminate research findings to the industrial development and business leaders and general public of the State. Alumni may receive it free by writing to IDeas, Publications Office, Georgia Tech, Atlanta 13, Georgia.
More News by Classes cola where he is in basic flight training. Navy Ens. Ronald F. Hanna, AE, recently made his first solo flight at Pensacola. He is in basic flight training. Married: Ben L. Hading, Jr., IM, to Miss Dianne Lewis Dec. 28. Mr. Harling is currently serving with the Army at Ft. Bliss, Texas. Engaged: Lt. Robert Winnfred Harrell, Ch.E., to Miss Virginia Lindsey Corry. T h e wedding date will be announced later. Lt. Harrell is serving with the U. S. Army at Ft. Stewart. After completion of his tour of duty he will go with the Ethyl Corp. in Baton Rouge, La. Engaged: Charles Jefferson Hollingsworth, EE, to Miss Nancy Cook. The wedding will take place in the summer. Mr. Hollingsworth is attending the Columbia Theological Seminary in Decatur, Ga. Born to: Lt. and Mrs. Richard E. Len-
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holt, EE, twin daughters, Anne Leslie and Mary Elizabeth, Oct. 16. Lt. Lenholt is serving with the Air Force at Eglin A F B , Fla. Their home address is 193 Seminole, Valparaiso, Fla. Married: William F. Leslie, IE, to Miss Dianne Morris Dec. 25. Mr. Leslie was separated from the Army in October and is now with Magnolia Petroleum Co. at the Beaumont, Texas refinery. Their home address is 2290 North St., Beaumont. Luther S. Lott, Jr., IM, has been commissioned a Marine second lieutenant at the Marine Corps School, Quantico, Va. He is now attending the 9-month officer basic school at Quantico. James D. Phillips, EE, is with the engineering department of Monsanto Chemical Company's Inorganic Chemical Division at St. Louis, Mo. W. H. Rogers, Ch.E., has joined the staff
at the Institute, West Virginia plant of Union Carbide Chemical Co., Div. of Union Carbide Corp. Navy Ens. Peter R. Tatro, ME, recently made his first solo flight at Pensacola where he is undergoing basic flight training. Born t o : Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. Taylor, IM, a son, Richard Albert Taylor, in Pittsburgh, Pa. on January 5. Mrs. Taylor is the former Barbara Jean Rhodes, daughter of long-time policeman for Tech athletic teams, Dick Rhodes. Engaged: Thomas Madison Taylor, Jr., CE, to Miss Glendora Boyce. The wedding will take place in June. Mr. Taylor is a junior engineer with the New York Central Railroad. Born t o : Mr. and Mrs. Martin Torrance, IM, a son, Michael L., July 14. Married: Edward McAdam Frisbee, CE, to Miss Mary P. Dwyer Dec. 28. They reside in St. Louis, Mo. where Mr. Frisbee is associated with McDonnell Aircraft Co. Engaged: Richard Norfleet Lawrence, Jr., AE, to Miss Elizabeth Anne Boyst. The wedding will take place in early spring. Mr. Lawrence is with Douglas Aircraft in Santa Monica, Calif. Married: Lt. Michael C. McAdams, IM, to Miss Sandra Gay Dec. 27. Lt. McAdams is stationed at Ft. Bliss, Texas with the U. S. Air Defense School. Engaged: Lt. Frank L. McClung, USAF, EE, to Miss Joan Mumford. The wedding is scheduled for June. Lt. McClung is presently attending the University of Utah at Salt Lake City. Joe S. Payne, IM, is on a 3-year training program with the Lamp Division of General Electric in Cleveland, Ohio. His address is 24394 Garden Dr., Apt. 1001, Euclid 23, Ohio. Cadet Michael W. Tierney, IE, is undergoing preflight training at the Naval Air Station, Pensacola. His permanent address is 42 Bellview Ct., Delray Beach, Fla.
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YEARS OF EXPERIENCE TO HELP YOU SOLVE ELECTRICAL SUPPLY PROBLEMS
For a third of a century our organization has worked closely with electrical supply wholesalers to help them meet their problems in serving the rapidly expanding electric industry. This experience is at your command to help you.
EDGAR E. D A W E S & CO. E. E. DAWES, '18, President
405 RHODES BUILDING STEEL CITY ELECTRIC CO. WAGNER MALLEABLE PRODUCTS CO.
26
JAckson 4-7571
ATLANTA 3, GEORGIA SPANG-CHALFANT (Conduit Division) PLASTIC WIRE & CABLE CORP.
Tech Alumnus
Two Leicas, some Conte Pencils and a Typewriter A special art-photo-text treatment of "The Role of Fraternities at Georgia Tech" will be the feature article of the big 35 th Anniversary Issue of The Georgia Tech Alumnus. Now being prepared by the Alumnus team of Wallace (Jane), Diehl (Bill) and Wallace (Bob), the article will show how fraternities help and hinder the educational programs in today's universities and colleges. Also in the same issue, Dr. Edwin D. Harrison returns to the pages of the magazine for the first time since his July interview prior to the time he became president of Tech. Now with six months experience in leading Tech, the president will take a long, hard look at engineering education as practiced at Georgia Tech. Other features of the March issue will include a special profile on Tech's famed placement director, Fred Ajax. In this case, photographer Bill Diehl will turn to the typewriter to write the story of "The Man with 20,000 Jobs." We hope you'll be looking for all this in Jk MARCH, 1958
jiltmtuu February, 1958
27
A
Refreshment to You Through the Years ?s to good times d good friends . . . may you always have an abundance of both
BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY
THE ATLANTA COCA-COLA
BOTTLING COMPANY