TEXAS A. & M.
vs.
TULANE
TULANE STADIUM
· Sat., September 3.0, 1933
PRICE
25c
fJlie
Greenie
Tulane University of
Louisiana
NEW O R LEA N S
•
The University Embraces the Following Departme11fs:
The College of Arts and Sciences
The H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College for Women
The College of Engineering
The Graduate School
The College of Law
The School of Medicine
The School of Pharmacy
The Graduate School of Medicine
The Dental Clinic
The College of Commerce and Business Administration
The Courses for Teachers
The Department of Middle American Research
The School of Social Work
The Summer Schools
For Catalogue Address:
Registrar of the
Tulane University of Louisiana
GIBSON HALL, NEW ORLEANS
TEXASA.&M.
vs.
TULANE
AMERICAN FOOTBALL
OPENING 1933 SEASON
TULANE STADIUM
Saturday. September 30, 1933, 2:30 p. m.
CONTENTS
Cover Design, by Jack Fagao . . . .
Title Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...
Texas A. & M. Pictures. . . . . .
The Rosters . . . . . . .
Tulane Pictures
Under the Baker . .
Tulane Pictures. . . . . . .
The Line-Ups . . . . . . . . . . . ...
Signals from the Oficials . . . . . . . . ..
Campu5 Page, Misses Mathis . . .
liscellaueous . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The New Rules in Brief . . . . . . . . .
Tulane Squad Picture . . . . . ..... .
Alma later . . . . ... . . . . . ... .
he
yo!. 3
Cover
3
4•5
7
8
JO
12
14-15
lj
19
20
22
24-25
26
(l;reen ie
No. t
Oficial Souvenir Program of Tulane University
Published for .Each Home Game.
flON!OON
COFFEE
ROASTED ENTIRELY
BY HOT AIR
·'The Best For Less''
100 FREE PREMIUMS
EVERY TENTH POUND FREE
A Product of
AMERICAN COFFEE CO., INC.
New Orleans
Complete service for yozw car
*SEE US*
F reret Service Stations
Robert and Freret
Fern and Maple
Broadway and Pritchard Place
Accessories
UPtown 9116
WAlnut 9107
WAlnut 7795
Cars Washed and Lubricated
Texaco Products
Free Tire and Battery Service
Cars Called for and Delivered
6
AFTER the game-Go to a
M ovie-bui be sure il is
one of the SAENGE R
Theatres I
•
NOW SHOWING
SAENGER ....
JANET GAYNOR
WARNER BAXTER
in
"PADDY, the Next Best Thing"
•
'fUDOR ...
CHESTER MORRIS
RICHARD ARLEN
in
"GOLDEN HARVEST"
•
GLOBE ....
MARLENE DETRICH
"SONG OF SONGS"
PORTE R•s
6\h£rrl££tt
CLOTHES
With Two Trousers
$25
Carondelet and Gra'Vier
TULANE ROSTER
No. PLAYER- HOME-
15-Born, Tboo. . New Orleans
19-Hillyer, H. H. . New Orleans
2G-Allain, Daniel Patterson, La.
32-sundbery, Frederick Houma, L:>.
36--Rea, Edcar (Ike) N . w Orleans
37-Nicbols, William Orlando, Fla..
36--Henderoon, Ju. Clarksd.,le, Min.
39-Mence. Francis (Pete) . --·····--· ··-· · · . N e w Orleans
4G-Kyle, Chaa. •... .......... ..... . ... New Orleans
41-Feathern iUI, Wm. ····-·· - Independence, Kan.
42-Tbomaa, Farrell ........................... Ft. Smith, Ark
43-Philllf.•• Miho . New Orleans
4-Weat eldt, Ceo. (Sonny) New Orleano
4 5 -Ciark. Aucuatua (Cus) Macon, Ca.
46--Loftin, Joo. . .... Baton Rou1e, La.
47-Simona, Claude (MoLk) ....-. ... ----.... . N.. w Orleana
46--RobinJon, Homer ..... -..... -.............. Lake Charles, La.
49-Pa
t:
e, Richard .. ... .... • ................ .... ... New Orleana
so-Roberts, Flo
y
d (Preach
.
er) .. .. ... ... . .. Stigler, Okla.
51-Henriques , Edouard . . ...... ...... . . .. ---------- Ne:w Orleans .. .
52-Stroble, Chu. (Bunnie) .... ....... ............ ........ ...... .. Covington, La.
53-Schroeder, Wm. .. .... .............. . ................ .. Donaldsonville, La.
5 -Brownaon, B. C. (Lefty) ...................... .. New Orleano ..
55-Smither, Chaa. .. ... .......... ... ... .................... N"'w Orlel\ns ........ .
56--Mint•, Barney .. .... ..................................... . .. New Orleans ................ ..
57-McDaniel, John .... . . ........... ................................ CI\mden, Ark ... ...... .. .
t:.c::.· ti:!rd
...
____ ::.
.... .. .... :.
::.��::::·
: .. ·:::::::::::.::::: :: 8:::::::.::::: · ....
.
60-Could, Erncat .. .. .. . ....................................... New Orleans.. . .. .
61-Bryan, Howard (Bucky) ......... ............ ................... .Shreveport, La.
62-Teoaier, Ceorse .... ........................-. ... New Orle&ns. ... .
63-Paddock, Alfred ........... ................................. Ft. Smith. Ark . ...
6-Bruno, John .......... ..... .............. . New Orlean• .. .. .
65-Hardy, Richard .. .. .. .... ...-............... ... .. Hattieoburg, Mlu.
66--Mcllhenny, Paul . .... ..... .. .......... ........................ New Orleans ..
67-Pare, Cromwell (Piney).... ........ ... ........................... Dover, Ark . ..
68-Hartoon, Wm. .. ....... _ ............ ... .. New Orleans ...
69-TeuierRobt. N.,w Orleans .....
7G-Simon, t<obt. ... ........ ... New Orleans
71-Linam, Albert (Tex) Ba.y St. Louis, Min.
72-Poltevent, Edward . ............ .......... --........... . New Orlean•
73-Ary, Roy ............................ -..... ... Stirler, Okla.
74--<:a lhoun. Chao. . .. .. ........... ............ Bastrop, La.
75-Lodrlgu: es, Stanley .. . ....... ........ .......... . New Orleans ..
76--Hall, Tboo. (Whitey) .. .. . _______ ........ _ ....... _New Orleans
77-Sample, Wm. .. Shreveport, La.
76-Lawoon, Thos. . .. .... ... ................................. . New Orleans
79-s
p
role.s, Arthur .... ___ .,... New Orleans
8G-Thameo, Louis. ... -----·.. Natalbany, La.
TEXAS A. ®. M. ROSTER
5-Strinrfellow, Jack ... .... . ............. - . . Terrell, Tex.
0-Martin, Sid . ............ ............ ................ Climer, Tex. .
7-Thompaon, Nash Fort Worth, Tex.
tD-Couaer, Wm. L. Breckenridge, Tex.
11-Randow, Wilbert Hallettsville, Tex . ..
12-Witkowaki, Leo Plainview, Tex ..
13-Collins, Denny .... ... .... .... ....................... . Crockett, Tex.
:t::rJ. 'j;.;lr"e
c
y
k..
.. · .. :::: . • :::::::::::::::::::::::::::: .. :::::::::: g;;·tr"itl. Tex.
16-BI.lrlield, Rue .. . ..... ................................. ....... .. .. Port Arthur, Tex.
17-Domlnrue, Cliford . . ............................................... Port Arthur. Tex ..
18-Crlrler, Phillip ..... .. ... ....................................... Crawford, Miu .. ..
19-'Fowler, Odell .. .. .... ..........- ....................... Fort Worth, Tex .. ..
20-Crow, MMion... .... .. .... ................... _ ............ . Milford, Tex.
21-Maxwell, Sta
p
p ..... ....................................... Leonard, Tex.
22-Reichardt, Ed. ... . ....... .. ..... . ................ .... San Antonio, Tex.
23-Staeh, Stanfield .. .. ...... ..................... .. .. .... Cameron, Tex.
24--Crerory, John (Crandpa) .... ... .... ..... .. . . . T yler, Tex. .
2 5-Conoley, Odell .. ... .. .. ........................ ...... Amarillo. Tex. 26--Kimbrouch. Wm. R. ... .. • ............. ........ ..... Haskdl. Tex.
27-Breedlove, H. M. (Flip) . • ..... . ....... ......... ..... . Smithville, Tex.
26--Woodland, Sull y .............. ·-............ ... Edna, Tex.
29-Merka, Jeremiah (Peck) ... • ... .. ...... .... ... ..... .. Bryan, Tex ..
3G-Haynes, Cliford ......... . .. -.... ..... - ... Fluvanna, Tex.
31-Murra
y
, Ray .. .. .. ............................ .... Mercedes, Tex.
32-Conneley, Robt. -............ ............ ......... Fort Worth, Tex.
33-C..IIahan, Paul Dallas, Tex.
3-Nolan, Emmit (Bud) .. . . ............. _. .... Santa Rooa, Tex. 35-Cumminca. Charlie • .. ........ .. ................ ...... Bryan, Tex. ..
36--Kenderdine, John . ..... ...... ... ............ ... Fort Worth, TCJ<.
37- Colaainski, Joe (Buddy) . ..................................... Houston, Tex.
38-Crow, John ... .. ----·· ......... .. Milford, Tex.
3-9Robertson, J. E. (Pete) ...... .... .. ...... ........ .. .. Austin, Tex.
4o-5pencer, Ted ........... -........... Cilmer, Tex.
41-Wilkin•. Taylor ...... ......................... . F..,nklin, Tex.
42-5eward, Oscar .. ...... .. ..._ ...... .............. Amarillo, Tex.
43-Codwin, Crady .. • . .... ...... ...... Lometa. Tex.
44-UIIrich, Crady .... . ........... ............... .... Hallettsville, Tex.
45-Tohlino, Max ........ .................. ..... .. Fort Worth. Tex.
46-speed, ca .. teY. .. .. ... ................. . ...... ..... Corsicana, Tex.
47-lrwln, B
ce (Honk) . ...... .. ............. ... ___ ....... Kosse, Tex. .. .
46--Jordan, harton (Stumble) .... -....... .............. • .. Fort Worth, Te>t.
7
POS.
HB E
T
E
c
HB
HB
HB
E
T
HB
E
E
E
FB
HB
c
QB
HB
c E
c
HB
QB
T
E c
HB
c
c
FB
E
c
T
c
T
T
FB
c
T
T
FB
E
c
c
T
E
HB
QB
HB
QB
QB
HB
HB
c
FB
HB
H.B
c
c
c
c
FB
c
HB
c
c
T
E
E E
FB
T
T
E
c
c
E
FB E
c
c
T
E
T
c
T
WT.
160
156
180
165
173
16 3
152
165
16 5
199
170
174
179
180
188
187
180
1 65
176
165
182
185
172
182
172
190
176
167
18 0
166
191
170
170
188
189
187
187
208
184
185
20
201
198
175
178
205
230 19·3
160
155
146
155
155
156
157
163
176
168
165
166
164
168
165
185
167
175
177
180
175
186
174
188
168
178
180
181
190
188
190
175
181
177
190
172
161
195
197
186
197
196
220
GRJlEIE
Cllll/fLES CllLIOU#
TAeKt.E 1 PRc/I
CHEI('�08E�f5 CAPf'AIN
Wl'f. .Sef/,f!OEOE.f.
G/1/JI?P
WAYE
i3A C!(;c! ELO
0 0
,f08EI(l:.J; 1/.IJL/"811(,(,·
5; !1()1/.s_ 1/ILJ= 8AD(;
f!! J//.41/fL 1J//A.:P/Eifi.9it'li.'ll LO!II
\\VAVJIE
"Time Out"
Pause,
Relax,
Refresh
Yourself
DRINK-
9
e When William Gummere, a Princeton student,
started football in 1869, it was with the idea of
giving a few fellows a chance to kick a ball around
a little. The experiment has wound up by giving
everybody a big kick.
e Gummere died only a few months ago, being at
the time Chief Justice of New Jersey.
e As a student athletic leader at Princeton 64
years ago, Gummere conceived the idea of starting
a game to be known as intercollegiate football. He
interested a Rutgers athlete, William Leggett, in
the project. These two met and drafted a set of
rules, scheduled two games and proceeded to organize
their respective teams of twenty-five players.
e Thus. on November 13, 1869, the first game of
intercollegiate football played either in the United
States or England was held. The game was played
at New Brunswick, Rutgers winning, 6 to 4. The
second game was played two weeks later at Princeton,
the Tigers winning, 4 to 0.
e The rules were a modification of Association.
then played and named as now.
•••
e No sport has ever taken the popular fancy as
did that conceived by Mr. Gummere. 1t is seldom
that a man lives to see an idea grow into such full
bloom as did football, stal'"ting from that day at
New Brunswick until today it attracts millions of
people into magnificent stadia the length and
breadth of a nation. Football has become the
recreational outlet of hundreds of thousands of
men and women becau.se it is a game that embodies
courage, manhood, combat, physical condition and
alertness.
e It is a sport that sends great multitudes home
to a Saturday evening dinner with a more conscious
conception of sportsmanship, the relief from
the humdrum that is so rare and a quick acceleration
of the red blood that so often has slowed down
in the every day living. It is a sport that makes
better men for having played it and having watched
it.
• • •
0 Only a few, it is true, may be strong enough
and skilled enough to play college football but it
gives the chance to every student to develop into
a better man. Its revenue has borne the freight of
not only providing skilled and high charactered
teachers in football but in track, tennis, basket·
ball, boxing and a broad intramural program. Its
revenue has built stadia, has transformed inadequate
gymnasiums into comfortable quarters for
the student body as a whole to exercise in good
weather or bad, with large locker rooms. shower
10
rooms, and a hundred other facilities. Its revenue
has built tennis courts for men and women students
to play on. And as the new facilities become
popularized, football may gradually be reduced
from a standpoint of gate receipts in order that
new thousands may be attracted to its wholesome
recreational advantages. That trend is already
definitely in vogue. Gone are the days when the
lowest price seat in the stadium was $3.00. Today.
Tulane for example, ofers good seats for as low as
eeventy-five cents and a dollar at most games.
When everything else; including sporting goods,
was on the incline in 1933, football prices were
being trimmed voluntarily to from ten to twenty
per cent by most of the universities. In 1932,
another reduction of thirty to forty per cent had
been made at Tulane.
• • •
G Quite naturally, any sport as popular as foot•
ball must find criticism. Most people have a false
idea of the gate receipts. John Public usually reads
in the morning paper that fou'rteen thousand fans
saw Podunk defeat Oshkosh and he knows that he
paid $2 for his seat. He immediately multiplies
14,000 by $2 and that makes $28,000. There you
are, he says, twenty-eight grand. He doesn't know
that the figures to begin with were probably exag·
gerated unintentionally. Few crowds running into
the thousands are ever underestimated. Ten thousand
people look like fifteen thousand if they are
scattered over an area of a few acres. He doesn't
know that approximately 4,000 of those fans were
students and faculty members who pay a slight fee
for the seats. He doesn't know that perhaps aa·
other two or three thousand of those fans were high
school boys and girls who paid forty or fifty cents
each. He doesn't know that another thousand
were knee pants kiddies who paid two bits. He
doesn't know that another portion of that crowd
paid on an average of $1.00 or less for general
admission seats. He doesn't know that the travelling
expenses and hotel bills ran probably fifteen
hundred dollars and the equipment of the two
teams divided amonj1.' nine games probably figures
another thousand dollars a game. He doesn't know
that the four officials for the game after their travelling
expenses and fees are paid runs another six
or seven hundred dollars. He doesn't stop to fig·
ure the cost of ticket printing, ticket sellers, ticket
takers. oolice. special watchmen, upkeep of the
plant all vear around, initial cost of the stadium,
medicinals, tape and gauze, scouting and salaries
figure into it all. And he rarely ever figures that
the surplus, if any, is divided between the two
(Continued on Page 22)
Stop at the
Georgian Hotel
in Athens, Ga.
Where Tulane Football Teams
Always Stop.
Make Your Reservations Early
and Avoid Waiting
for Rooms.
LUTHER W. NELSON,
President and Manager
II
lr·UI .LA
G/(f£11/E PLINTl!lS
WOI(K OUT
LEFT co 16-HT.'
fOBEer.5, S/MOA/5, 1'H0/>1Ar 0/Cf PAGE
S/!10t Y1 I(YL E,
M.£ {)ANIEL
LOORIG-UEf
BRYAN
1'1/NTZ.
GR.EEIY WAVE
BRAIN TRUST <><><>
L£FT to /(t&HT."
COACHES UPTON,
MAILH£5. fLOIJI(!IOY,
COX, LAUTEI[()ILAEvEI(,
BAN R/CiAR(}JOIY.
AHIJ TfA!Nff( Sll1tJ/If
LES
TALKS WITH
QUAI(TE/213ACKS
Did YOU send HER a CORSAGE
to WEAR lo the CAME?
•
We Supply Flowers for Campus Occasions
•
J. C. QUINETTE
\tbe jf[oral Shop
1345 Lowerliue St. at Willow
Phone WAlnut 0451
jus/ Five Blocks up Willow Street from
flu Stadium
You'll Cheer 'em fool
MAYER ISRAEL'S
Two Pnuts Snits at 82. 50
Get Your Football SUckers-Main Floor.
Enrich the Joy of Motoring
the MOTOROLA Auto
with
Radio
All Electric
Super
Heterodyne
Sensitivity and Seleclh·ity
LhaL bring!' in distaut stations
with umvle volume • . . Full
Dynamic Speaker . .. Splendid
·ron . . Automntic \·olnme
Controi ... Airplunc Style Dial
• . . Steeri ug Post One Butlou
control.
Model "44"
This compact, Single Unit
l\lotolola gives performance
you cannot renli>-e unt•l you
see nnd hear iL 5 opt>rnting
tulws. Speaker, Kndio Set and
"B" Power Supply all in one.
l.)u1rkly, fasih hulalled. Size
7}{" :< S" x SU" to fit under
dash of nuy car
$44.60
Other
Models
$54.50
and
$69.50
MAISON BLANCHE Club
Plan
Terms
MAin 2000 Greatest SJore South Canal at Dauphine
13
I TULANE SQUAD
TED COX. Coach
IS Born. h S7 'litcDamel. q
19 llillyr ... 58 Boasherg. l
20 Allain, l 59 Memtsas. e
32 Sundbry, e 60 Could, c
)b Reo. g 61 Bryan, h
37 Nlchol•.h 62 Tessier, C. . g
38 llcndcrson. h 63 Paddock. g
40 ,.Joyl. • 64 Bruno. (
41 F.. n thHngill, t 65 Hardy. e
42 Thomoa, h 66 Mcilhenny. g
H Phollipo, c 67 Page, C. . t
H Wutfddt. 68 Hartson, g
45 Clark, e 69 Tessier. R. . t
46 Loftin. r 70 Simon. t
47 Simons, h 71 Linam. f
46 Robln•on. c 72 Poitevent, c
49 Page. R . . q 73 Ary, t
so Roberta, h 74 Calhoun. l
; I llenrlquu. g 75 Lodrigues. f
52 Stroble. e 76 Hall. e
53 Schroeder, g 77 Sample. g
54 Brownson. q 78 Lawson, g
H Smither, e 7'1 Sproles. I
56 Mint7, h 60 Thames. c
TEXAS A. & M. S QUAD
MATIE BELL. Coach
Stringfellow, h 28 Woodland. 1:
6 Martin. q 29 Merko. l
7 Thompson. h 30 Haynes,
10 Couser, q 31 Murray. e
II Rondow, q 32 Conndlcy, c
12 Witkowski. h JJ Calltthon, r
13 Collins, h H Nolan, l
14 Rooch. c 35 Cummings, t
IS Reid, f 36 Kenderdinr. e
16 Barfield, h 31 Colasinski, 1
17 Domingue, q 38 Crow, J .. 1
18 Crigler. h )9 Robcrli'Jon. t•
19 f'owler, h 40 Spencer. r
20 Crow, M .. ( 41 Wilkins. c
21 Maxwell, g 42 Seward. N
22 Reichardt. e 43 Codwln.1
lJ Stach. c 44 Ullrich, t
H Gregory. f 45 Tohline, r
25 Conoley, g 46 Speed, t
2o Kimbrough, h 47 Irwin, g
27 Breed love, g 48 Jordan, l
ste
No.
Texas A. ®. M. vs. Tulane
THE STARTING LINEUPS
(Subject to Change by Coaches)
TULANE TEXAS A. & M.
Name Position Nome No.
44 Westfeldt..... • . . . ............ L. E. R................... .. .. Robertson 39
70 Simon.. .. .... ... . .... L. T. R.. .. ... .......... .. Cummings 35
62 Tessier, G . . L. C. R.. ... ... . ..... Crow,]. 38
48 Robinson
53 Schroeder
74
40
57
Calhoun
Kyle ....
McDanieL
.. C........ ....... . . .... Stach 23
R. G. L... . ........ Merka 29
.R. T. L. . .. ... .. . .
R. E. L. ................
.. .. Q. B .. ............. ...... ..
Irwin
Murray
Domingue
47
3 I
17
6 I Bryan..... ...•. .. . ............L . H. R .. ....... ............. .Barfield 16
50
64
Roberts .. .
Bruno .. ..
.R. H. L... .................. ..
.. F'. B ..... ......... ..
•
OFFICIALS
Rosco Minton (Indiana)
Lt. john Murrell (Army)
Capt. M. V. Fortier (Washington Stntc)
Ben Lee Boynton (Williams)
Fowler
Spencer
19
40
r
SEND HER A STYLISH
CORSAGE
For the GAME
ORCHIDS, ROSES, MUMS
Fo11ntlcd
188;
From
C W HICIII,IXG. SR.
II" i I h 1/u·
Fo1ntler
stil at lite
Jie/IJI.
Eichling' s Avenue Floral Co.
Phone jAckson 3 I 70
3442 ST. CHARLES A VENUE
New Orleans Corrugated Box Co.
INCORPORATED
•
GAYLORD
CORRUUATED
HIPPING CONTAINERS
•
Telephone (iAI>ez :21:>±
X ew Ol'lean;:, La.
16
"SPALDING• Jootbalt equipment
mtainly is popttar, eb Joe?"
'Scores in all large ciries.
Breen's Drug Store
"NEFF" BREEN, Prop.
Opposite Charity Hospital
Headquarters for years to the Tulane
downtown medical students because they
have found it the home of quality and
servic.
Complete line of Sheafer pens, pencils,
loose-leaf fillers, binders, and Physicians
bags at most reasonable prices.
Phone MAin 9177
Tulane Ave. at Villere
, , ,J
A80V-Holdon9..,.
. st· HOLDING !Po"
•fy-b y oflt"'''· •
ye rds· bw deftttt
<tcls.l
ABOVE- Hond• on
hips OffSIDE (Po.,.
oy $ yorcls.)
NEW SIGNALS USED BY OFFICIALS
"BOVE- Pushong
"•nds fonw•rd ftom
shoulder.: INTERFER.
ENCE W I T H FOR·
W"RDP ASS,O R PASS
TOUCHING INELIGI.
BLE Pl" YER. iPenahy, a
it�+tr4trtt�ce by ofei'\St,
IS yerds, oth..,-wise, bal
to ojponeth •t point of
foul.
;(".t� "tt IMtl'l+fOft o f
co,.,;,;"'9t.....,.,.sty
•• h.tewith pttM •
9ftphci <p. . ...._ fo
•he ,,,;,, of ·�
th.ofr. J.o ..
de..aed +o tel th. de.rw:lt
theo -..+ur-t of •-"\'
ohy:mpo<..t
BE l O W-A rms
fold.!: FlYING BlOCK
OR TACKLE {Ponolty
6 vords.l
BHOW-Wovong
hone! bohind bod
IllEGAl FORWARD
PASS
ABOVE-Swinging
orms horirontafty. USED
TO INDICATE INCOM.
PLETE PASS, MISSED
FIElD GOAl OR CON
VERT ETC
lEFT -H...!s above
h.ocl· SCORE. (U.cl
tfter touchdown. Fi.td
90tl .,. ,., .. ,. Pafnu
?I l.oncls l09elhtf ;,d;.
co los a . lotv.·l
"80VE- Pua!ung
"nnvement of t..nds to
ftOI'If wah t.fl'n) in • Vlf•
rico! polilion. CRAWLING,
PUSHING, OR
HElPINGB All-CARRIER
lf'enahy, t.lp:q
b•ll·c•"i*'· IS yards:
ot"'->io. s y. ds .J
A80VE-M;ttory w
Mo: UNNECESSARY
ROUGHNESS, ILLE.
GAL DEFENSIVE U S E
Of HANDS. (Ponahy,
1 S ya rd'-l AlSO USED
F O R f A G R A N T
ROUGHING (Ponohy,
hal clisionco ot qalo .r. .
and clisquor.fooalior>.)
f
M
0
0
E
L
No.
510
Be Ready!-
F or all the Football Games
And a World of Year 'Round
Entertainment
!NV ALl OS AND THOSE WHO CAN'T ATTEND
the games will enjoy this model 510 Atwater Kent
10 luhe superheterodyne. Silent aud shadow
luning. Automatic ,-olume control, tone control.
Small
Down
Payment
Convenient
Monthly
Terms
HOLMES RADIO SALON -Second Floor
HOLMES
CANAL...DAUPHINE ... BOURBON .. .IBERVILLE STREETS
Misses Hettie and Etta Mathis-or is it Etta and Hettie-of Blackville, South Carolina. Tiley are a set of
twins who add charm to the Green Wave campus.
r
TIME OUT
Teacher: "And why did Noah take two of
every living animal into the Ark?"
A skunk sat on a stump. The stump thunk the
skunk slunk, and the skunk thunk the stump stunk.
• • •
Bright Child: "Because he didn't believe the
story of the stork."
Que: "How were Adam and Eve prevented
• • • from gambling?''
Prof.: "Every day we breathe oxygen. What
do we breathe at night?"
Ans.: "If you must know, their pair o'dice was
taken away from them."
• • •
PupiJ: "Nitrogen."
• • •
Ann: "Why did you
buy that referee's whitle?"
Doris: "I have a date
with a football player tonight."
• • •
Boss: "Where' s the
cashier?"
Clerk: "Cone lo the
races."
Boss: "Cone to the
races in business hours?"
Clerk: "Yes, sir. It's his
last chance to make the
books balance."
• • •
A church bulletin an-nounces:
"The women of this congregation
have cast of
clothing of all kinds. Look
them over in the basement
any day this week."
• • •
She frowned on him and
called him Mr.
Because in fun, he mere-ly
Kr.
And then for spite
The following night
The naughty Mr. Kr. Sr.
• • •
1933 Tulane Schedule
Sept. 30-Texas A. & M. at New Orleans.
Ten Questions
1. At what Southern university did
Glenn Warner coach?
2. What college for women was the first
to become affiliated with a university?
3. Did Howard Jones ever coach in the
South?
4. Where were the first levees built?
5. Who were the two backs to form the
greatest ofensive combination in the
history of Georgia Tech athletics?
6. In what university was the first business
economics established ?
7. What football player was known as
"The Gipper ?"
8. What was the denomination of the
first Confederate coinage and where
was it produced?
9. Where was the first "White House of
the Confederacy" located ?
10. Who was the Tulane student who
twice won the national intercollegiate
golf championship ?
(For answers, see Page 2 2)
Oct. 7 -University of
Georgia at Athens.
Oct. 14-University of
Maryland at New Orleans.
Oct. 2 !-Georgia Tech
at Atlanta.
Oct. 28-Auburn at
New Orleans.
Nov. 4 -Colgate at
New York (Yankee Stadium).
Nov. II -Mississippi
State at New Orleans.
Nov. 18-University of
Kentucky at New Orleans.
Nov. 25 -Sewanee at
New Orleans.
Dec. 2 - Louisiana
State at New Orleans.
• • •
Past Tulane-Texas
& M. Scores
I 899 - Tulane
Texas A. & M. 22
1902 - Tulane
Texas A. & M. 17
A.
0;
5;
Hubby (Arriving home after midnight) : 'Tm
tired. I've had my nose to the grindstone smce
early morning. •·
1906-Tulane 0; Texas A. & M. 18
1907-Tulane 6; Texas A. & M. 18
1910-Tulane 0; Texas A. & M. 17
1912-Tulane 0; Texas A & M. 41
1917-Tulane 0; Texas A. & M. 35
1929-Tulane 13; Texas A. & M. I 0
1930-Tulane 19; Texas A. & M. 9
1931-Tu!ane 7; Texas A. & M. 0
1932-Tulane 26; Texas A. & M. 14
1933-Tulane ?; Texas A. & M. ?
Wife: "Then you'd better get a grindstone that
doesn't get lipstick all over you."
• • •
It was Billy's first trip to the country. Outside
the farmhouse he saw the farmer's wife plucking a
fowl for dinner.
"Pardon me, Ma'm! But do you undress them
every night?"
• • •
Co-Ed: "r want you to tattoo a tiger on my
knee."
Tattooer: "Nope. I'll tattoo a giraffe or nothing."
20
• • •
T u!ane has met Texas A. & M. eleven times.
The Green Wave has played the University of
Texas nine times. The Creenies have met Rice
four times and Baylor twice. The Wave also has
played Arkansas cf the Southwest Conference on
two occasions.
Football Headquarters
in New Orleans
Here at The Roosevelt, you'll meet football fans from
everywhere. 750 beautiful rooms, each with private
bath, prices ranging from $2.50 a day. FAMOUS BAR
where every and any brand of 'good ole beer' is yours
for the asking. The FOUNTAIN ROOM, popular rendezvous
for lovers of fine food, music and dancing.
Plan one party at the Fountain Room and you'll come
again and again.
Famous
BAR
FOUNTAIN ROOM
Dine and Dance
The
BIENVILLE
l"nder Rosevelt mnnnge.
meut. Fl'w miuulch wnlk
rr()IU hU!'iiiCI)S section.
Oppo•iie J,ee Circle.
Knies hegiu at $1.50
JAS. PAT O'SHAUGHNESSY, Manager
2!
f
The New Rules •
tn Brief
By
JAMES E. I-BLLIGAN
Southeastern and Southern Conference Fotb:tll Oficial
The Southern Football Oficials Association is
probably the first Oficials Association in the
United States to adopt the SIGNAL system of
flashing the reason for the penalties that may occur
in the games. It is probable and likely that in due
time all the Major Oficials Associations will use
these signals. It is the wish of the Southern F oatball
Oficials Association
Just before the game starts one of tbe oficials
will point to the captain of the team, or to his
bench, denoting the team which won the toss and
his selection of starting options, namely, whether
he will rece1ve the kickof, kickof, or goal to defend.
• • •
to do everything possible to
make college football more
interesting and understandable
to the spectators. The
referee is the oficial selected
to give these stgnals,
Ten Answers UNDER THE BAKER
1. University of Georgia. (Continued from Page 10)
which will be given after
the penalty is charged and
just as the offensive team
lines up for its next play.
2. H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College,
established in 1886, and first
organized in 1887 in conjunction
with Tulane University.
teams and if the receipts
aren't big enough, money
must be in hand to meet
the bills. 3. Trinity College (Now Duke University}
in 1924. e We might add that the
surplus, when there is such
a handy-man, goes back
into the physical education
plant to build badly needed
facilities such as a gymnasium,
swimming pool or
other needed units. So, as
long as the colleges are
gradually trying to reduce
the gate receipts football is
on the right track. Nor is
it being over commercialized.
It requires funds to
do all of the things enumera
ed. It wouldn't be the major
sport that it is todaythe
fun valve for students,
alumni, friends and neighbors,
if it wasn't what it is.
In a lesser degree, football
It's what you make it.
The changes in the foot-ball
rules that football fans
should know concern principally
the OUT- OFBOUNDS
rule and the
SUBSTITUTE rule. In
order to give the team with
the ball, namely, the offensive
team, more playing
territory when near the side
line. it has been ruled that
4. The first levees were the Mississippi
levees, built at New Orleans in 1 724.
They extended 18 miles above and
18 miles below the city.-{Thomas
Ewing Dabney, The Indestructible
City.
5. Joe Guyon and Everett Strupper.
6. At Tulane University in 1849 and
conducted by Professor De Bow.
7. George Gipp of Notre Dame.
8. Silver half dollar at the New Orleans
mint in 1861.
any time the ball is dead 9·
within ten yards of the side 1 O.
line, the haJJ must be
Montgomery, Alabama.
Fred Lamprecht.
brought out to the ten yard line and put in play at
that spot. This change will save the team with the
ball from throwing the baH out-of-bounds as has
been the custom, and also save this team the loss of
a down.
The SUBSTITUTE rule permits the field captain
to take three times out of two minutes each
during each half, without penalty. Any more times
out taken costs that team a penalty of five yards,
unless a player is injured and removed from the
game. Should a coach send in a player at any
time when time is not out, that team is charged
with DELAY of the game, which is a five yard
penalty and a FIRST DOWN if the defensive
team is charged with the delay, and if the ofensive
team caused the delay it counts as a loss of five
yards.
22
is like everything else.
• • •
e I know often one wonders why the big equipment
bill? We are prone to think of football as
merely the thirty-three or more men who trot out
on the field on varsity day. We don't stop to recall
that the varsity had to scrimmage against the
scrubs and freshmen or that they have to be properly
equipped and protected for the play that goes
in preparing for the varsity games.
• • •
0 It's a great game and one made possible by the
love of it. It would be just as great a game if no
one saw it except the students and officials on a
Saturday afternoon. That was the case back in
1869 when Bill Gummere and Bill Leggett led
their teams on the field. But we all liked it so well,
we wanted to come out, get a seat in the Iresh
October air and enjoy it: consequently we had to
provide our seats and the facilities for enjoying it.
Proof of that is that we are here today and that
football has never stopped growing.
Tickets
•
For all Tulane Games
Now on Sale at
221 Baronne Street
•
Phone RAymond 797
After the Game . . .
Follow the Crowd to
Broadway
Pharmacy
•
Broadway and Maple
•
H. C. RICHARDS
Proprietor
23
Are You Old???
Or are you still interested in the Collegiate
Viewpoint obtained by reading-
The Tulane Hullabaloo I ! I
This student weekly carries the inside story of
Tulane activities, athletic or otherwise, of men
and women who are to become community
leaders.
To receive a HULLABALOO, merely fill out
the information requested in the form below,
turn it in at the Hullabaloo box, seen at each
gate as you go out, and a representative of the
paper will call upon you .
Name ·------------------------·-··
Address-·······------···-·-------·-····-···--
Telephone -----·-· _ -----···--·····-··
O'Shea ...
A name ynonomous with
tbe be t in athletic knitted
goods from Uoast to
Coast. Tnlane1s Green
W a,e and every other
leading in tit.ution u s e
O'I..Jbea goods .
.Ask any coacb-be will
tell you that O'Shea is
tne hest .
O'SHEA KNITTING .MILL
2414 N. Sacremento A''e.
Obica.go, Illinoi
1933
The squad pictured below represents in the main
the men who will go to wars for Tulane this fall.
A few stalwarts such as Joe Loftin. John Bruno,
T ex Linam and one or two others are missing from
the picture.
There are eighteen lettermen listed in this array,
a numer of reserves of last year who are expected
to shine this fall and a Rock of ambitious sopho-mores.
Many of this number will get in today's game.
Some will not for one reason or another, including
injuries suffered in scrimmage, illness and so on.
It might be interesting to keep a check on your
roster page as to men wbo get in the game. Watch
them from week to week.
Tu lane
Another point that might be watched to advantage
today as an educational slant on the game
would be that pertaining to the new signals used by
the oficials in denoting penalties, the kick-of.
etcetera.
The new signals are made easy for you with an
illustrated page showing just what they denote.
In addition, we secured a short article by James
£. Halligan, veteran Southern football oficial, who
explains clearly about the new rule changes and
oficials· signals.
• • •
We intend to turn every e !fort to keeping the
program interesting. instructive and original. The
copy will be changed throughout each week with
BoTTOM Row, left to right-Simon, Mintz, Schroeder, Gould, I,odrigues, Smither,
Brownsou, 1\lcDaniel, Roberts, Dick Page, :\lenge, Paddock, Henriques, George Tessie r,
Ary, Simons, Robinson, Bob Tessier, Hardy, Manager Helion Dickson.
24
Football
new art layouts, new features. a short. short story
by a well known writer for one of the issues, and
many other things.
Our purpose is to make the program interesting
enough to take home to the family to read just as
you would a magazine. We want enough new
photos of both institutions to give it a souvenir
value to keep or send to some friend who was unable
to attend the games .• We want to give you information
that is vital to enjoying the game, such as
complete rosters on one page so that you won't
have to turn from one sheet to another. We want
to give you more compactly in the center of the
book a complete arrangement of players by name
Squad
and number, names of oficials and the most authentic
possible guess at a starting lineup.
We also plan many interesting features to entertain
you during the time-outs and after the game.
• • •
Public telephones for your convemence are located
beneath the stands on each side of the field.
• • •
On days where the general admission gates are
crowded on Willow Street, the fans might keep in
mind that they can also secure general admission
seats on the Barrett Street end of the stadium.
High school students also will enter from the
center gate on Barrett Street to the wooden stands
at the scoreboard end of the field.
ToP Row, left to right-Head Coach Cox, Coach Mailhes, Coach Upton, Killyer, Kyle,
B >rn, Wcitfeldt, C. Page, Pvitevent, Thames, Henderson, Lawson, Sproles, Allain, Mcrlhenny,
Hall, Stroble, Nichols, Verlander, Thom1.s, Clark, Calhoun, l\1emtsas, Bryan, Hartson, Coach
Richarrlson, Trainer Simons, Coach Flournoy, Coach l,autenschlaeger .
25
I
Jt LJ1. A .MATE
1'\ .. I I f... 1:-.. 1.. "' 1:>
l+l"'r-t .
. I . -· - - -
WE !>RAISE TilE FOR Tl\'1' I>AST, 0 AI.·MA MA-TERl n'{ t1AI'II> HAT\i l>Of.)E ITS \NO'Rl< 'FVI.I. l'"IT\I ·rOI.·
.. . • • .. .. .. - l : . .
I I) r v r If' V v I I I l IJ lJ l p l
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-v - · - . - -a-
l '1! ne tjii·GfNSE OF Til'{ 5PI·IT HAT I /IS·CED-ED ,O.NI) 'flt..LED A·ME · I · C., "FROM SEI'o ro SEA!
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I I v F v v v V v I I v IJ v l> I
c'it 0'RUS.1 .. .j. "' I I " "'
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OL • tvE coRE�: Ill ,o.r-�» a1..ue . E L.OvE TI\EE ! l'I..E"'(TE W E NOuJ OVR l'E .. I..·T'i T""'e
... . - • . ...
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I v v v y p IJ l) v I
n I "' L b _b 1::. I I I b t"l D I
I v•
WIIE'Rf TilE n:\E'ES AlE EV ·E'R GREEN· ET, V\I£RE TI:IE S1<.\E .. ltE "PUR ·£ST 81..UE !
- !: u. . $.2 .. L
l r r r I I I f I r r I
I .I- 1. bb j.. h 1::! I
0 -- l
1\fAll, us NOUJ, 0 TO·l.ANE, IE"AR OS ! t,f, uJE l"i>,OIJI>· 1..'/ 5tC:. TO TI\E E !
.. - ... .P..·
I r r r r r I I 1/ l) v
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I-' v v v I I l v p p - Bl f'fRMI.SSI O N OFTULA N f A LU M N I A 5 S O C J AT I O N .
D n n l .ap
SPORTING GOODS CO., INC .
•
ATHLETIC SUPPLIES
GOLF TENNIS
SPORT CLOTHING
GUNS AMMUNITION
FISHING TACKLE
•
DISTRIBUTORS
A. J. REACH, WRIGHT & DITSON Co.
138 Carondelet Street MAin 6660
H A U S M A N N/ I n c .
New Orleans'
Leading Jewelers
•
SPECIAL DEPARTMENT FOR COLLEGE
.A ND FRATERNAL JEWELRY
Sold in the Stadium
at All Home Games!
NEW ORLEANS ICE CREAM CO.
1320-1322 Baronne Street
TULANE
COOPERATIVE
BOOK STORE
"See us for
your every
need"
1\f •
O p e n 7 : 3 0 A. M . - 1 0 : 3 0 P . M .
BAS E M E N T, G I B S O N H A L L
'
• A.M. WILKINS bas flown the night air mail
over 150,000 miles for TWA. It takes healthy
nerves to hang up a record Uke chat!
IT IS MORE FUN TO KNOW -
Camels are made f�:om finer,
MORE EXPENSIVE tobaccos
than any other popular brand.
They are mil de�:, richer in flavor.
They never tire you. taste
or get on your nerves.
e WILKINS joins a fellow pilot, W. Niedernhofer, at
Newark Airport, for a chat and a smoke. "Camels never
rufle or jangle my nerves," Wilkins says.
STEADY SMOKERS
TURN TO CAMELS
A. M. WILKINS, air-mail ace, says : "It's a
steady grind, all right, living up to our tradition
that the mail must go through ! That's
why I' smoke Camels. And I smoke plenty !
Camels never t•uffi e or jangle my nerves, and
I like their mild, rich flavor. "
Camels never tire the taste-never get on
the nerves. Yottr taste and your nerves will
confirm this. Start smoking Camels today and
prove it for yow·self.