THE.
GREEN IE
GEORGIA
vs
TULANE
November 9, 1935
Tulane Stadium
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•
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•
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71 St. Louis Street
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••
811-813-tn9 BIENVILLE ST.
Neal' Bourbon
Ube (l;reenie
Vol. 5 NOVEMBER 9, 1935 No.6
Oficial Souvenir Football Program of Tulan e
Un iversity, Published for Each Home Game
CONTENTS
Editorials .
Georgia Pictures . . . . .
Georgia Pictures . . . . .
' 'All-Time' ' Georgia Team
The Gridiron Roundup .
"Time Out" (jokes) .
The Line-ups . . .
''Under the Baker''
The Rosters . .
Tulane Pictures . . .
Tulane Pictures .
" Feats of Football" (feature)
"Newcomb on Parade" . .
3
4
5
6
9
IO
I 2- I 3
IS
!6
18
19
20
2!
Alma Mater (song) . . . . . 22
BULLDOGS
The rivalry between Tulane's Green
Wave and the Georgia Bulldogs has been
one of the most colorful in all Dixie gridiron
history.
Georgia and Tulane have always played
great games, regardless of which team may
have emerged the winner.
They started the series m 1 9 1 9 with a
7 to 7 tie. They resumed it in 19 2 7 and
haven't missed a year since, always furnishing
the spectacular in the games.
Georgia's championship aspiring team of
1 9 2 7 really scored the most decisive yictory
of the series, winning 3 1 to 0. McCreary,
Hooks, Dudley, Shiver, Nash and Johnson
were the Bulldog stars that day.
The Wave-Bulldog games have always
furnished their heroes. Jerry Dalrymple,
Catfish Smith, Don Zimmerman, Buster
Mott, Bill Banker, McCreary, Big Preacher
3
Roberts, Jack the Ripper Roberts, Monk
Simons, John McKnight, Charlie Rucker,
Maurice Green, Lefty Haynes, Jack Holland,
Red Dawson and many others having
won fame in the thrilling dramas unfolded
between the two old rivals.
The setting has always been dramatic.
In five of the games, championships were
involved. This was true in 192 7 when Geor-
,:.,.
gia seemed headed for the national crown.
It was the case again in 1929, when both
the Wave and Bulldogs were battling for
the title and the same was true in 19 30 and
1931. Last year, neither Georgia nor Tulane
had been defeated in the Conference
when they played.
Georgia and Tulane teams ask no quarter.
They play the game at top speed and a thrilling
game always results.
The score of past games:
1 9 1 9-T ulane 7, Georgia 7.
1 9 27-T ulane 0, Georgia 31.
1928-Tulane 14, Georgia 20.
1929-Tulane 21, Georgia 15.
1 9 3 0-T ulane 25, Georgia 0.
'it :");
1931-Tulane 20, Georgia 7.
1 9 3 2-T ulane 34, Georgia 25.
1 9 3 3-T ulane 13, Georgia 26.
'
1934-Tulane 7, Georgia 6.
The games of 1932 and 1933 did not involve
any championship ambitions and yet
those two battles were probably as thrilling
as any in the series.
Tulane won, 34 to 25, in 1932, with Don
Zimmerman and his mates dazzling the visitors
in the first half only to see the Bulldogs
come to life and all buCqJ<,';ft rerp out of
the stadium in the second half The next
year at Athens, the game was a duel of great
ofensive fireworks.
o<?o <:J
JRfOHANNSOKN
GUARD
All- Time All-Star Team
University of Georgia
(Athens, Ga.}
By George Trevor
A. M. (Bum) Day '21 _______________ CENTER _____________ _Joseph Boland '29
Milton Leathers '3 l .................. GUARD ................ Ralph Maddox '3 1
Eugene Smith '27 ..................... GUARD ................ Hugh Whelchel '22
Joseph Bennett '23 ................... TACKLE. .............. Curtis Luckey '25
Arthur Pew ' 18 ........................ T ACKLE .............. .]ames Taylor '24
Thomas Nash '27 ..................... END ...................... Herbert Mafett '30
Vernon Smith ' 3 l ..................... END ..................... .Ivey Shiver '2 7
David Paddock ' 14 ................... QUARTER .......... .Austin Downes '31
Arston Grant '34 ...................... BACK ................... Frank Dudley '28
Robert McWhorter' 13 ............. BACK ................... George Morton '26
Herdis McCrary '28 ................. BACK ................... George Chapman '34
Cradled in the deep South the University of
Georgia exudes the swords and roses flavor reminisce.
nt of the Confederacy. Its magnolia scented
Campus at ,Little Athens, lined by time-worn Colonial
buildings, is as mellow as a Georgia mint-julep.
There is something about the Dixie air which
brings out the dervish in football players. Georgia
sons still drink a silent toast to the memory of
Vonavalde Gammon who was badly injured in the
Virginia game of 1896. As he was led of the fi eld
totterin g his captain who did not realize how badly
the boy was hurt called out, "You are not going to
quit are you, Von?" "Hell no" was Von's reply.
"I have got too much Georgia grit for that." Those
were the last words he ever spoke. The state legislature
threatened to abolish football but a gentlefaced
lady in mourning weeds made a moving plea
that •aved the game. It was Gammon's mother.
The University of Georgia and Georgia School
of Technology are traditional rivals, \ et both boast
something in common-"Bum" Day, one of the
South's greatest centers. After earning all-America
recognition at Tech, Day transferred to Georgia
and more than lived up to his Atlanta reputation.
Day was a raw-boned, good-natured farm boy who
loved a rough and tumble scrap.
Milton Leathers, known to shirt-sleeved Athens
fans as the wild "Red Head," played with a fervor
worthy of Braggs Brigade. As the Yale players remarked,
"That bird doesn't know the Civil War is
over." Gene Smith, Georgia's little watch charm
guard, was a cyclone in capsule form. Coach
Woodruf called him "the best running guard I
ever saw regardless of size." Rangy Joe Bennett,
son of a Baptist Minister, was a model student and
a model tackle, always in position to side-swipe his
man. Arthur Pew, Georgia's flashiest tackle, graduated
a year before his football time was up and intended
to stow away his jersey for good. He
changed his mind when a referee banished him un-
6
justly in the Auburn game. "just for that I'll be
back next year," he told his Auburn aggressor,
"and we will fight it out on the same field." Pew
kept his rendezvous.
Few colleges boast of a greater end than Tom
Nash, whose post-graduate exploits are still the
talk of professional football. A crack baseball
player he could freeze onto passes that seemed just
beyond his reach. Though lvey Shive.r may have
had the edge on "Catfish" Smith in a technical
sense, no All-time Georgia team would be complete
without that great "money player." Smith invariably
delivered in the pinches. Ask Yale ! When
the Elis dedicated Sanford Stadium Catfish scored
all Georgia's 15 points. He had a genius for showing
up in the right place at the right moment.
Dave Paddock was with Georgia one whole year
before any one discovered he could play football.
Once started this peppery 150-pounder made up
for lost time and is rated a shade above the brilliant
Austin Downes as a field-general and lucid runner.
Both these pint-sized quarterbacks "had it above
the shoulders."
Cy Grant, the "Cornelia apple knocker," was
one of those here-he-comes-there-he-goes climax
runners. His crooked stride and a cross step
enabled him to fade away from tacklers.
They still call Bob McWhorter "Georgia's greatest
football player." This genius, a physical and
mental prodigy, made the Varsity as a freshman
and played four years at halfback, winning all
Southern honors each season. Tech had been top
dog until McWhorter blew into Athens but Bob
quickly turned the tables on the Yell ow Jackets.
Herdis McCrary lived up to his nickname "Bull"
when he plowed head first into the line. Temperamental
to a degree McCrary had of days but when
the mood was on him he couldn't be stopped.
McCrary later continued his line-ripping tactics for
the Green Bay PackerL
Copyright 19 3 5 by W. W. Wells.
Riled by a Raccoon Rah-Rah?
. . . light an Old Gold
AT TRYING TIMES
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Best Wishes,
Green Wave!
•
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•
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THE GRIDIRON ROUNDUP
The Score to Date:
Picked
72
Winners
52
David Dabster Dingelhofer, the Demon
Dopester of Dryades, stalked into the gymnasium
Monday morning, head erect and his
round shoulders pulled back until it seemed
that his galluses would break for sure.
We were not prepared for such an entrance
on the part of Colonel Dingelhoffer.
We felt that he would wear a silly and chagrined
look but we reckoned without taking
into consideration the stuf that the Demon
is made of-pure, unadulterated cement
and ivory.
"Colonel, " we chided gently, "you had a
woeful day in picking the winners Saturday.
Too bad, old fellow."
"Too bad! Why my selections proved
me an expert," he retorted, his dander up
and the dandruf shaking of his coat lapels.
We arched an eyebrow faintly.
"Yes, an expert I am, " he continued.
"Didn't I pick Ohio State to win? So did
all the nationally known experts. Didn't I
pick U. C. L. A. to win? So did most of the
West Coast experts. Didn't the weather man
predict rain last Saturday? Isn't he a weather
expert?
"Did Ohio State win? Did U. C. L. A.
win? Did it rain?"
With such an amazing broadside of facts,
we limply caught Colonel Dingelhofer' s
hand and proceeded to congratulate him.
"Our most humble apologies, " we mumbled.
"You are really an expert. May we
have the first opportunity to interview you
on the games of this Saturday?"
The Colonel was overcome. (Frankly,
after thinking the matter over, we are of the
opinion that the Demon of Dryades feared
for the worst when he came into the gym
santum.)
His courage skyrocketed when we accepted
him as an expert, a fact that he really
proved to us, however, beyond doubt.
"Colonel, " we first asked, "what do you
think of the L. S. U.-Mississippi State
game?"
9
Losers Ties
18 2
"That should be a great ball game, " he
returned. "I overlooked mentioning a minute
ago that all of us experts picked Army
to win last week. Did Army win?"
My gosh, the Colonel really classified as
an expert.
"Well, " he continued, "since Army did
not win, that makes Mississippi State the sensation
of the week. They .were red hot last
week but L. S. U. will cool them of this
week. The Tigers may burn their fingers in
handling them though. That's that."
"That's what?" we interjected. "You
can't sidestep the issue, Colonel. Come,
come.''
The Demon showed strongly in the experts'
eyes as he saw that we had him cornered.
He was a real expert to the last
ditch.
"I pick L. S. U. to win," he replied, hastily.
"Now for the next one. I will take Auburn
to beat Georgia Tech. Jack Meagher
has too many guns for Bill Alexander."
We assured the Demon that the game
would not be decided with guns. He shook
his head in disgust, an eggspert in every
sense.
"And I takes Kentucky to plaster Florida.
This game may furnish a surprise, however,
with the Gators showing themselves right
pert against Georgia."
Here's nine others the Demon handed us:
Ole Miss over Tennessee.
Syracuse over Columbia.
Princeton over Harvard.
Notre Dame over Northwestern.
Rice over Arkansas.
Stanford over Southern Cal.
Nebraska over Kansas.
Minnesota over Iowa.
Michigan over Illinois.
TIME
Mother: "I hope that young man you went out
riding with last night didn't do anything wrong."
Her Daughter: "Gosh, no mother; he knows as
much about necking as I do!"
•••
Two men entered Westminster Abbey, and one
of them listened enraptured to the strains of the
organ.
"That's Handel," he murmured.
"He plays very well," returned the other.
•••
He: "Do you understand what 'knee-action' is,
in a car?"
She: "I dol And don't you try it!"
•••
Fond Mother: "Will the photograph be anything
like him?"
Fed-up Photographer: "Yes, madam, but we can
easily alter that."
•••
"When I put the ball where I can reach it," said
the stout golfer, when asked how he liked the
game, "I can't see it, and when I put it where I
can see it, I can't reach it:•
OUT
The golfer had lost his ball, and, not unnaturally,
was inclined to 1 e annoyed with his caddy.
"Why the deuce didn't you watch where it
went?" he asked angrily.
"Well, sir," said the boy, "it don't usually go
anywhere, and so it took me unprepared like."
•••
They were discussing the bore of the seaside
boarding house. "He would talk a dog's hind leg
of," observed Smith.
"And even then," answered Brown, "he would
go on with the tale."
•••
Discontented Wife: "Several of the men whom I
refused when I married you are richer than you
are now.u
Husband: "That's why."
•••
Charity Officiaf: "Did you investigate the
Browns?"
Assistant: "I did."
Charity Official: "Find them respectable?"
Assistant: "Eminently so! They asked for gaso-line
instead of coal!"
TULANE FOOTBALL SCHEDU LE
Tulane 44; V. M. I. 0.
Tulane 0; Auburn 10.
Tulane 19; Florida 7.
Tulane 0; Minnesota 20.
Tulane 33; Sewanee 0.
Tulane 14; Colgate 6.
Nov. 9-Georgia at New Orleans.
Nov. 16-Kentucky at New Orleans.
Nov. 23-Louisiana Normal at New Orleans.
Nov. 30-L. S. U. at New Orleans.
Proud Mother: "Yes, he's a year old now, and
he's been walking since he was eight months old."
Bored Visitor: "Really? He must be awfully
'tired."
•••
Ferdy: "So your sister has a baby. Did she state
whether it is a boy or a girl?"
,
Percy: "No, that's w,Y I don't know whether
I m an uncle or an aunt.
•••
A business man coming home from work was
telling his family about the new stenographer he
had hired that day.
"She is the most beautiful girl I have ever seen,
just like a baby doll."
His youngest daughter interrupted his conversation
and asked: "Daddy, does she close her. eyes
when you lay her down?"
•••
Little Richard: "Mother, may I have a nickel for
the old man who is crying outside?"
Mother: "Yes, dear, but what is the old man
crying about?"
Richard: "He's crying, 'Peanuts, 5 cents a bag'."
IO
A steward stood at the gangway of a big liner,
and as he stood there he kept shouting for the benefit
of the arriving passengers:
"First class to the right! Second class to the
left!"
A young woman step
.
ped daintily aboard with a
baby in her arms. As she hesitated before the
steward, he bent over her and said, in his chivalrous
way:
"First or second?"
"Oh !" said the girl, her face as red as a rose.
"Oh, dear, neitherI'm only the nurse.
• ••
Magistrate: "What started the trouble between
you and the plaintif?"
Defendant: "Well, yer honor, it was like this.
'E threw 'is beer over me-l 'its 'im across the face
wiv my bag of tools-then 'e cuts my 'ead open
wiv a bottle-an' the next thing we knows we find
ourselves quarrilin' !"
•••
Visitor: "Is that bull dangerous?"
Farmer: "Oh, no ma'am; he's one of the sort
they use for making beef tea."
H EAI>QUATEr?S
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JN .7he oosevelt WEISS
Managing Director
Open from 10 to 2
D�nce and Dine
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00
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Football fans from e v e r y w h e r e
meet at The Bienville. If you come
once, you'll come again and again
to this well-appointed hotel located
on fashionable St. Charles Avenue
overlooking Lee Circle.
When you enter The Bienville, the
home like atmosphere bids you
welcome. You'll like its handsome
suites and the cheerful service that
only a well-trained staf can give.
Even the most modest budget can
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invill«=
TULANE SQUAD
TED COX, Coach
Henley, e
2 Carnegie, h b
3 Tu11, c
4 Wight, h b
5 Neyland, e
6 Weaver, c
Daly, t
8 Hillyer, e
9 Eddy, t
2 4 Flettrich, f b
32 Accardo, c
56 Mintz, h b
57 Payne, W., h b
58 Ott, q b
59 Memtsas, e
60 Gould, c
6 1 Benedict, q b
62 Graham, q b
63 Monk, g
64 Payne, H., h b
65 Go11, g
66 Loftin, c
35 Dalovisio, e 6 7 Freese, c
3 8 Henderson, h b 68 Buckner, g
39 Nichols, h b 69 Ha11, g
40 Manterin, h..>
41 Andrews, f b
42 Watermeier, g
43 Johnson, h b
44 Schneidau, e
45 Moreau, q b
46 Watson, h b
4 7 Flowers, h b
48 LaRocca, e
49 Page, q b
50 Odom, h b
5 I Preisser, e
52 Dirmann, e
53 Evans, g
54 Gamble, e
55 Smither, g
70 Avants, c
71 Friedrichs, t
72 Upton, t
73 Ary, t
74 Moss, t
75 Lodrigues, f b
76 Pace, t
77 McGrath, t
78 Nussbaum, t
79 Miller, t
80 Thames, h b
8 1 Dexheimer, h b
83 Lewis, h b
86 Tolusso, f b
96 Cooley, g
Hit the line ha rd
a !"d hit it square
P lay the ga me
a nd play it fair
C rash right th rough_ do
or die
Yo u ' ve g ot to be good
GEORGIA SQUAD
HARRY MEHRE, Coach
Richards, c
Davis, t
27 Law, B., c
28 Milton, t
to SATISFY.
Geer, t
Wilson, t
29 Treadaway, q b
30 O'Farre11, e
Wilhite, t 31 Wagnon, e
Troutman, e 32 Leeburn, g
8 Martin, g 33 Ho1lis, h b
I 0 .Johnson, G., h b 34 Milner, c
II Ashford, e 35 Jones, h b
12 McKnight, c 36 Young, q b
13 Moorehead, g 3 7 Towns, e
I 4 Anderson, h b
IS Harman, t
16 Candler, e
17 Stone, c
18 Causey, h b
19 Tinsley, g
20 Davis, t
21 Shi, t
38 Hall, g
39 Hartman, f b
40 Johnson, F., g
4 I Minot, lob
42 Harrold, e
4 3 Mafett, e
44 Holland, f b
45 Roddenbery, q b
22 Green, f b 49 Brannen, q b
23 Gatchhll, t 50 Bonner, e
24 Haygood, t 51 Cordell, g
25 Law, W. A., g 52 Hilton, h b
26 Bond, h b 54 Gillipies, h b
No.
59
74
55
60
42
Georgia vs. Tulane
THE STARTING LINEUPS
(Subject to Change by Coaches)
TULANE GEORGIA
Name Position Name
Memtas ...... ------···-··------------L. E ... ___________________________ Ashford
Moss·---------·----··-·------------··-L. T. __________ ___________________________ Shi
Smither _____________________________ L. G ......................... F. Johnson
Gould. _______________________________ ... C ............... ---·-----·--·-McKnight
Watermeier ___________ ___________ R. G .......... ---------------Moorehead
No.
II
21
40
12
13
73 Ary ................................... R. T·-······-··---···-·····-···-·Harman IS
52 Dirmann ............................ R. E.·-·-·········---·----·--·-·-Wagnon 3 I
56
66
Ott__ ___________________ ......... _______ Q. B ....... ______________ . . .. Treadaway
Thames _____ --·-------___ . ... --·--__ L. H ....... ··-- _______________________ Bond
Mintz ...................... .......... R. H ...... -------------------------·--Minot
Loftin ______________________ _________ .F. B. __________________ . ......... Hartman
•
OFFICIALS
Referee-W. M. (Bick) Campbell (Ole Miss)
Umpire-Julius Burghard (Miss. College)
Head Linesman-G. W. Kalkman (St. Louis)
Field Judge-B. Bagley (W. & L.)
29
26
41
39
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----------------------------------------------------------
Eleven major football teams still boast unblemished
records but the list will be diminished rapidly
as November rolls by.
In the East, Princeton, Dartmouth, New York
University and Syracuse are still unbeaten and untied.
Harvard, Dartmouth and Yale yet get a crack at
Princeton. Dartmouth's one big test remaining is
Princeton. N. Y. U. has only Fordham ahead as a
serious threat. Colgate is the only big hurdle for
Syracuse.
The Middle West presents Minnesota, Notre
Dame and Marquette as "tops."
The Gophers have Iowa, Michigan and Wisconsin
to beat. Notre Dame has Northwestern, Army
and Southern Cal to go. Michigan State will test
Marquette to the limit.
North Carolina is the only standout in the old
South. The Tarheels have no serious challenge
other than the possibility that Duke will bother
them.
Southern Methodist and T. C. U. are the national
standouts from the Southwest. The Mustangs
yet have U. C. L. A., Arkansas, Baylor, T. C. U.,
and Texas A. & M. to face-which is asking an
awful lot of any team.
The Horned Frogs have an equally tough lot to
face in Texas, Rice, S. M. U. and Santa Clara.
California, the Far West's big shot, has Washington,
College of Pacific and Stanford to beat, which
1s a difficult assignment.
Thus, it is unlikely that more than three or four
at the most will get through unscratched.
•••
The Southeastern Conference proved our surmise
that football in this sector is stronger than
ever by its showing last week.
IS
Mississippi State and Tulane convinced the East
of the strength of Southeastern teams by beating
Army and Colgate.
L. S. U. and Auburn showed power m playing a
great game at Baton Rouge.
Georgia Tech gave a fine Vanderbilt team a
great battle at Atlanta before losing, 14 to 13.
Alabama continued to Bash power in taking Kentucky
over the hurdles, 13 to 0.
Florida and Georgia played a most interesting
game at Jacksonville.
Ole Miss Bailed St. Louis University m easy
fashion.
•••
Here's one for the book.
George Washington University made 24 fir st
downs to 12 for Rice last Saturday but lost the
game, 4 I to 0.
The Hatchetmen netted more than 400 yards
compared with 3 7 2 for the Owls.
•••
Ike Pickle of Mississippi State appe;,rs to be one
of the standout backs of the Conference, based on
his showing in games to date.
•••
The University of Mexico football team, coached
by Dixie Howell, former Alabama star, has· two
games with American colleges on its November
schedule. They are with Westmoorland of San
Antonio and Louisiana College .
• ••
Pitt hasn't lost to Penn State since 1919. And
they have played regularly.
I-�- I I
TULANE ROSTER No. PLAYER- HOME-
1-Henley, CeciL.... ................ --·------········------------····Rosedale, Miss _____________ --------------------.. ·-------------·-········
2-Carnegie, Stanley .......................... _________ WestviHe, N. J ....................................... -------·-··········
3-Tull, Porter ........... ··--------------·····------- ----·--····--····-------------------New Orleans ..................... -------·------ ---------------------------
4-Wight, Charles............ -----------------·-----------------Kilgore, Texas.......................... ----------·----·-··---·
5-Neyland, Dietrich............... -----------·-------------··--------·Shreveport, La ................. ···---·----------------······-····-------·
6-Weaver, Claude ...................... ·····----·········-----········· ............ Brewton, Ala .......... ................... ...... -----------·-··----········
7-Daly, Bill __ ··----·-----·········---------··· ----·---·-·-·-----·-··-·-------New Orleans ______ ··--------·-----------·---------
8-Hillyer, H. H.___________ ----------··-····--------·····-----·-····------New Orleans .. ------···----·--·--·········------··
9-Eddy, Charles ...... --------·-··-· ----···--------· --·------····--·-------·-···New Orleans ..... __________ ··-·---------··-----
24-Flettrich, Albert_____________ ·-----------------·-···---····New Orleans .. ----··---------··---------····----
32-Accardo, Nick................. --···········-------------------···-·········-··Patterson, La........................... ------····--·····
35-Dalovisio, Pete........... ---····---------····-----·-··-···--·······Lake Charles, La........... ----------·····---···········
38-Henderson, James (Billy) ----------··-----······-·------·-----------Clarksdale, Miss.______ -----·--··---------·-·······-····---··
39-Nichols, Bill·-----------···-··--------- ---·-····------····-·----.. Orlando, Fla·----·-····----·· ---······----·-----····--------·
40-Manteris, George_______________ --------····--··-···········Monroe, La ........... _________ --------·-·····--·· ------·····-··-····
41-Andrews, John ........ ---·-··········-·------ ·········----------·-------····------New Orleans.................... -----------------
42-Watermeier, Dan ....... ----·----- ·········-··-- -------················--------New Orleans..................... ---········--················--·
43-Johnson, Douglas ........................... ------·-···------- .................. New Orleans..................... ------····--------·
44-Schneidau, Hughes................ -------····-··--·····----············ New Orleans .... -------··············--·--·----·-----------········
45-Moreau, James -------------·-·· ----·-·--····-···················-· New Orleans.... -----···---------------·····--········-
46-Watson, Richard_ ---------·---··· ---------···----·-Lake Charles, La. _______ -------·----····-----··
47-Flowers, BilL ....... -----------·-·---- ------············-----·····-··--··Big Spring, Texas........ ---·····-------------·····
48-LaRocca, Vic .. ----··------ ----------·---·· --·------·-·-··-·------····------New Orleans .. ----·-····----- ---·----···-··-------------- -----------···---·
49-Page, Richard............ --------------·······----··New Orleans ....... --------------------·---------·· ······-------------·····
50-0dom, TroY-----·---------·------···-·-----·---··-------- ---------··-----··-----·····Oakdale, La. ________________ -----··-----··-··----- --···---------------···
51-Preisser, Frederick.................. ----------··············--·····New Orleans ....................................... ......................... .
52-Dirmann, John............................. ----·-----------·-----------------··New Orleans ............ ---··------------·--
53-Evans, Bernard.......................... -------·····-----····-··········-···Memphis, Tenn..................... ---·····----------
54-Gamble, Cameron..................... ---------·-·-----------···------····New Orleans -----···········-···· --------·-··········------··
55-Smither, Charles------··---------------- -----------·--·--····----···-······.New Orleans ...... __________________ -··--·----··---------··--··-
56-Mintz, Capt. Bernard ............... --·········-··········--·-------------·····--New Orleans ................................................................ .
57-Payne, William ........ ------·········----- ----------·····················--····Winterville, Miss. ----------------····----· ---·-··--······--·
58-0tt, Wiltz----··----······-- ---····---·-····-··---·-··-----·----------··Osyka, Miss.________ -------·--------·
59-Memtsas, Harold .................................................................. New Orleans ........ -----····-----------···--·
60-Gould, Ernest .................. -----······-·-··········-·-------·-···················New Orleans...... . ............... .
61-Benedict, Calvin ............. -----·····-······---------··············------·······New Orleans........ --·-··-----····--·
62-Graham, Louis.... ----···-··-······-··--·-------···---------····--··New Orleans .................................. .
63-Monk, Marion ................... ----------····--·················----··-····--··--·New Orleans .................. .
64-Payne, Hugh . . .. . .. . .. --··-·-----------·-····------········-····Winterville, Miss .................... .
65-Goll, Carl _ .. _ __ _ --··- ----------··-----· -·-·--········--··-·-·-----···New Orleans .. ----··--------··-··----·--------·-- ------------··--------····-·
66-Loftin, Noel ---········-·-------- ------·····-----------···········Baton Rouge, La ....... --------------------·····
67-Freese, Sam.......................................... . .............. Wheeling, W.Va.. -----·-······--·--·······-----········------····
68-Buckner, Norman.................... _________________ Marshall, Texas...... ---····-·----····-------··--·
69-Hall, NormaL ......................... ------·-··········-······--------···----------Sweetwater, Texas ..................................... .
70-Avants, Mack......................... . ...................................... Baton Rouge, La ........................................................ .
71-Friedrichs, Jerry.................... -----·-·····-------·········-·······-New Orleans ..................................................... .
72-Upton, Miller-···----------··---------- ---···-·---···-----·-----····------····-·New Orleans .. _. ______ .......... ------·-··------·-··---··- -----··----·--··
73-Ary, RoY-----·----·---·· ------------·-··- ---··---··-----··-··--······----··----Stigler, Okla •. -------------------------··--------····---··-··----
74-Moss, William............... ·····---·-··--···-····--·······-··---···· Montgomery, Ala .......................................... .
75-Lodrigues, Stanley........ ---··-···· -----·-····----····-New Orleans ...................................... .................. .
76-Pace, David.................... . ....................................... Monroe, La......... ----····--------····----------····---··········
77-McGrath, James_____ ---··----------···-------------·----------Montgomery, Ala ... ----·----·--
78-Nussbaum, Ray............ . .......................................... New Orleans .................. --------···------------··--------······-····
79-Miller, RaY--····------··· ------······------ -----·---····---------·----New Orleans ______ .... __________ 80-Thames, Louis ........ ----------····--------······ ----·····-··-········-············Natalbany, La ... --------------------------------·------ ......... .
81-Dexheimer, Robert .. ------· --------··----·-----·-······-------·····-··-··------·Abbeville, Ala·--···---····------····-·-------------··---------
83-Lewis, Frank................... -------······--------····-·············-----Baton Rouge, La ....................................................... .
86-Tolusso, Leonard............ . ........................... .Istrouma, La........................... . ............ ......... .
96-Cooley, David .. ----··---------- --····-------···-----········---------Slidell, La·-···--··-··- -----·-···---·-·--·--·-- ----···---··--------
GEORGIA ROSTER
1-Richards, Mark ----------------· ---····---- Decatur, Ga ............................... ............................... .
2-Davis, John ------····-----···-···········-------Valdosta, Ga .. .
3-Geer, Claud, Jr. -------··--------··-Albany, Ga. ----··-·-·---------·-------------····--------·---·-
4-Wilson, Leon........... . .................... ____________ Atlanta, Ga..... --------------···-·
5-Wilhite, Clayton ----··----------····------····-----Milledgeville, Ga .... --·-···---···-···-----····--------·------·······---
7-Troutman, Walter ---····--······--······------·····-Tennille, Ga. ----------·----------·---····--
8-Martin, Bull............... -····----------······----·--------· Toccoa, Ga ........................................ ......................... . .
tO-Johnson, Glenn........ ----------·-······- -----··--·--···········------ Savannah, Ga .............. ---··-----------··---------------·
11-Ashford, Alex. --··-··-------····----··--------------· Athens, Ga·---------·------------··--··----···-·--------------·------------·
12-McKnight, John.......... ----------·················---···········Toccoa, Ga............... . ................... -------------·-·····
13-Moorehead, Leroy... -----··----------·-··---------········-·Athens, Ga ... ··--······-----·····-······-··-----····----·-··----······ ··-····
14-Anderson, Alf. --------------··-- ---------·------·-······-········----------- Decatur, Ga ............................................................... .
IS-Harman, Harry........ ---------------- -----···················-······---Atlanta, Ga ..... ---····---------····················--············-·--·-····
16-Candler, Asa............. -------------····----·-·····--· .......... Atlanta, Ga ......................... ----------····--·---------····--·····-··
17-Stone, Brick............... ----------·-·---·-···-·········-··-··············· Athens, Ga ........ --------·-·········--·--·--·
IS-Causey, Paul. ............. ----------·····----·····-··----·-·······----·· ........ Se ville, Fla ....... ------·············-··----------·-··-··--------·············
19-Tinsley, Pete...... ----------··------····--·····-·········-··--------·-·······Spartanburg, S. Car. ----···-----------··--····
20-Davis, Allen ----------··-----------··------------------------Albany, Ga. -----··------------·-··---
21-Shi, Allen______ ___ -----·------------···- ---------··--------·-·- Macon, Ga ..
22-Green, Maurice... --------·---····· -----------------·· El Paso, Texas. ----------···--···
23-Gatchell. Roy______ ---·-····--Atlanta, Ga. ----·· ---------·-··---
24-Haygood, Tom........... ................ Atlanta, Ga . ..... ----------·----------·-··----
25-Law, W. A................. ----·······------ ------····--Waynesboro, Ga ....
26-Bond. John... _________ Toccoa, Ga·-·--------------·------------··--·--------·--------------···----·
27-Law, Bob............ . ........ Waynesboro, Ga ......................................................... .
28-Milton, Foster........................ ------------··--------------------Lake City, Fla. ----------··-------- ---····----
29-Treadaway, Charles.. ----········----------··········· Thomaston, Ga. ---··············---·· -·····--------------·········
30-0'Farrell, Hugh ____ ---------------·- __ ···---- ----··--------···------·--Athens, Ga......... ---··-·-···--------··--·--
31-Wagnon, Henry.... -------··-------··-······---------··············Bostwick, Ga .... ···---------·····-----------·····-······--····---------
32-Leeburn, Don -----········----·------· ----········--·-······· ----------------Columbus, Ga..... --------------····------------····--
33-Hollis, Jef.... ------·····-··-- ........ Savannah, Ga ......................... -----·-·············-·······-------
34-Milner, Tom __ ·---------··--------- ---------···-··------·-- --·-Albany, Ga. __ -------··--·----··· ---------··--······------·----
35-Jones, John............. _ ·----------·-······--·-··--·· -----··-····--···········-· Duluth, Minn ........................... -------······----·---
36-Young, Lou...... ....... ............ ···--·-----······ ... Memphis, Tenn............. ----------··------
37-Towns, Forrest.. _____ ···-----·····---------------·--·-···-·······-· ........ Augusta, Ga......... . .. -----·-----····----····--·-----·-··-··---
38-Ha)l, Julius._ ----·--------··------ -----····----·-----··-------··· ----·------- Spartanburg, S. Car. ----·----·---------·
39-Hartman, BilL_______________ ------··-------- _ Milledgeville, Ga......... -···-----····---·------------····---···---
40-Johnson, Frank ... ·----·-----------------·------···------------··----------------··· Rockford, IlL_________ -------·---------- ---··--···-----······
41-Minot, AI ...... ____________________ ·-·-··------------·-------------------··---··---·-·----Collingswood, N. J. ------------------- ---···-------------····----------
42-Harrold, Charlie..... .......... --------···········--·-····---·······- _________ Macon, Ga....... ................... -----····-········
43-Mafett, Otis·-----···----··----------·------------·--------------------------·-------Atlanta, Ga·------------····--- -----·----··----·---·-··--------·.
44-Holland, Ward------------·--··--·-- ------···----··------·-· ----···---·----- ______ _ Collins, Ga·------------·-····------·--------------···---·----·-·--···--·
45-Roddenbery, Seaborn.. -------················-··--- ....... Macon, Ga .............................................. -------··-------·····-
49-Brannen, Alf, Jr ............... -------··--·-···- ........ Athens, Ga .................................................. .
So-Bonner, Crenshaw............................. ................ . ..... Atlanta, Ga ................................................................ .
51-Cordell, Lew·---------··-----·------·-··------- ------·--------- -------·Hartwell, Ga·--··-·------····----·-----····- ----------···--------···--·-··
52-Hilton, Carson ---------·-···-·· .................... .... Sylvania, Ga... . .................... ................. ....... .
54-Gillipies, Marion .. ---------------·----- ....... Elberton, Ga... ----·----·-···-···-······ ---------------············
POS. WT.
E 165
HB 160
c 170
HB 180
E 195
c 190
T 200
E 165
T 180
FB 188
c 193
E 180
HB 154
HB 179
HB 160
FB 196
G 175
HB 172
E 185
QB 160
HB 199
HB 175
E 183
QB 170
HB 185
E 175
E 172
G 205
E 180
G 210
HB 180
HB 174
QB 180
E 171
c 182
QB 161
QB 180
G 181
HB 161
G 196
c 205
c 201
G 198
G 199
c 197
T 185
T 195
T 201
T 197
FB 180
T 190
T 201
T 205
T 196
HB 155
HB 170
HB 172
FB 194
G 189
c 170
T 200
T 195
T 195
T 195
E 190
G 180
HB 165
E 160
c 162
G 190
HB 168
T 195
E 180
c 180
HB 172
G 185
T 145
T 200
FB 200
T 185
T 200
G 180
HB 170
c 190
T 200
QB 172
E 19Q
E 172
G 170
HB 180
c 160
HB 190
QB 180
E 180
G 190
FB 187
G 190
HB 160
E 180
E 190
FB 163
QB 160
QB 140
E 190
G 180
HB 175
HB 180
LUCKY STRIKE
FASHIONS
Can now be part
of your wardrobe
Lucky Strike Fashions are at last a
reality. They've stepped of the cover
of this Football Program to form a
gay, dynamic group of s t yl e s, i n
colors that sparkle.
Lisbeth was commissioned to design
them, and it has been OUR lucky
strike to have them confined exclusively
to us, in New Orleans.
This program cover shows you only
one of the models from a complete
collection that we are most anxious
for you to see.
Come in any day next week.
TOWN & COUNTRY, Inc.
1432 St. Charles Aven ue
After the Game-
Dine ' tn Holmes Restaurant
rJr In the Vieux Carre on Bourbon Street l IJL just of Canal
D. H. HOLMES CO. LIMITED
I7
ALV I N EJ<.BEA&,
FAOM SOUTH OAI<OTA1
RAN 60 OR MORE
YAROS FOR TOUC.UDO\iNS
IN THREE SUCC.ESSIVE
GAMES . I N EACH C.ASE THE "CLOSI NG"
GUN WAS FIA.EO WHILE HE WAS RUNNING-.
-
\')\G<r-
Alvin Ekberg, a South Dakota high school student,
ran 60 or more yards for a touchdown in three
successive games, and each case the gun ending the
game was fired while he was running.
The longest punt of the 1 9 34 eason was aided
by a 3 5 -mile wind, but it still rates as a prodigious
efort. It was a 1 0 2 -yard flier, kicked by Dick
Crayne, of Iowa, in a game with Indiana. Crayne
was seven yards behind his own goal line, kicking
to Indiana's five-yard marker. The game was a
scoreless tie.
Kansas had a pretty fair team in 1 9 06, but St.
Louis University gave them by far the worst of two
, defeats they sufered during the season, the reason i being a demoralizing long pass-football's longest
forward pass-of 8 7 yards from Bradbury Robin:
s on to John Schneider. For some reason the pass
'. n ever appeared in the record books until a year or so
i. ago, but it out-ranks the supposed longest pass,
"Brick" Muller to Brodie Stephens, in the Califor-
TH E RECORD FOR..
TOUCHDOWNS I S H ELD GY
JOHN LEECH OF V. M . I .
26 OF THEM I N 1 920 .
nia-Ohio State Rose Bowl game, by 1 7 yards. St.
Louis won the game 3 2 to 2, the worst defeat Kansas
sufered from 1 9 02 to 1 9 1 4 . Curiously enough,
this was the first year in which the forward pass was
legal ( and, according to the rules, was theoretically
limit.ed to 20 yards ) , and nearly 2 5 years elapsed
before the claim was made for the record.
There were 1 7 undefeated teams in the United
States last year-of som 6 0 0 colleges that started
' the season with high hopes. Of the 1 7, only nine
got through the season without a tie, and only two
of that number may be classed as "big time" teams
-Alabama and Minnesota.
The record for touchdowns scored is held by
John Leech, of Virginia Military Institute who, in
1 9 2 0, personally scored 26 touchdowns, or 1 5 6
points. Jim Thorpe, the famous Indian of Carlisle,
holds the record for points, however, 1 9 8 , scored
in 1 9 1 2 .
.,
Four little girls, perched . . . all perfectly happy in the knowledge that their clothes are correct
for campus occasions. Miss Jane Jarman is wearing a sports c ostume in brown and
green. Miss May Hendrick chooses ·a four-piece swagger suit in chartreuse. Miss Edna
Angle likes her reddish brown skirt and jacket with the white angora tie. Miss Amy Smith
is charmed with the softness of her all angora costume. If you want to know what the
"well-dressed collegiate will wear this fall" , j ust ask any of the four young ladies above.
TULANE ALMA MATER
(Sing as the Band Plays)
We praise thee for thy past, 0 Alma Mater !
Thy hand hath done its work full faithfully I
The incense of thy spirit hath ascended
And filled America from sea to sea I
II
We praise thee for thy present, Alma Mater !
Today thy Children look to thee for bread I
Thou lead est them to dreams and actions splendid I
The hunger of their soul is richly fed I
III
We praise thee for thy future, Alma Mater !
The vista of its glory gleameth far I
We ·ever shall be part of thee, great Mother !
There thou wilt be where e'er thy children are I
CHORUS
Olive, Green and Blue, we love thee I
Pledge we now our fealty true
Where the trees are ever greenest,
Where the skies are purest blue I
Hear us now, 0 Tulane, hear us !
As we proudly sing to thee I
Take from us our hearts' devotion I
Thine we are, and thine shall be I
The
Loubat Glassware & Cork
Co.
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and Supplies
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NEW ORLEAN S
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L ALL AMERICAN
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Ti me O ut ''
DRINK-
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309 N . R a m part
S t reet
REFRESH YOURSELF
New Gymnasium.
The Tulane University of Louisiana
NE W ORLEA NS
The University emb races the fo llo wing depa rtments:
The College of Arts and Sci ences
The H . Soph ie Newcomb Memorial College
for Women
The. College of Engin eering
The Graduate School
The College of Law
Tho:: School of Medicine
The Graduate School of Medicine
The College of Commerce and Business
Administration
The Courses for Teachers and for the Gen eral
Public
The Department of M iddl e A mer ican Research
The School of Social Work
The Summer Schools
Fo r Cata logue A ddress:
R egistrar of the Tulane University of Louisiana
Gibso n Hall, New Orleans