T HE G R EENI E
L . S. U. vs TULANE
•
C(lpyright l!l:15, 1'he Arnc1'icnn Tvbacco Olmpany
S aturd ay,
N ovemb er 30, 1935
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Vol. 5 NOVEMBER 30, 1935 No . 9
HORACE RENEGAR Editor
Oficial Souvenir Football Program oi Tulane
University, Published for Each Home Game
CONTENTS
Editorials . . . . .
L. S. U. Pictures
L. S. U. Pictures .
L. S. U. Pictures .
"Team Records'' .
Alma Mater (songs)
The Cheerleaders (pictures).
"How it Began" . . . . . .
"All-Time" L. S. U. Team .
''The Flame Still Burns''
(historical) . . . . .
The Gridiron Roundup . . . . .
"Under the Baker" . ..
The Line-ups . . . .
Football Cartoon . .
"Time Out" (jokes) .
Tulane Pictures .
Tulane Pictures .
Tulane Pictures .
Tulane Pictures .
Tulane Pictures .
Tulane Pictures .
3-38
4
5
6
7
7
8-g
10
13
14-15
16-17
IS
20-21
23
24-
25
26
27
28
29
30
Tulane Pictures . 3 I
The Rosters . . . 32
"Men in the 'Press Box" (feature) 34-35
Tulane Sponsors' Pictures . 36
Tulane Pictures . . . . . . . . . . 37
TIGER-WAVE RIVALRY
There is no more colorful rivalry m
Southern football than the long standing
but friendly feud of the Louisiana State
University Tigers and the Green Wave of
Tulane University.
Dating back to 189 3 , the Greenies and
Tigers have played every year with few exceptions.
Only the finest of sportsmanship
has predominated in the series, especially
over the past decade, when not an untoward
incident has marred the game.
3
That is as it should be.
Both are great institutions in which
Louisiana may take a natural pride. The
great outpouring of fans today is a tribute
to the game of football as played by these
universities.
The fans are partisan to the 'nth degreeno
middle ground when these two old rivals
meet. Yet, ever have the boys who play
the game been fine winners and good losers.
Since the series began in 189 3 , Tulane
has won fifteen games, the Tigers have won
thirteen, and four have resulted in ties.
Past scores of the games:
1893-Tulane 34; L. S. U. 0
1895-Tulane 4; L. S. U. 8
1896-Tulane 0; L. S. U. 6
1898-Tulane 0; L. S. U. 37
1899-Tulane 0; L. S. U. 38
1900-Tulane 29; L. S. U. 0
1901-Tulane 23; L. S. U. 0
1904-Tulane 5; L. S. U. 0
1905-Tulane 0; L. S. U. 5
1911-Tulane 0; L. S. U. 5
1912-Tulane 3; L. S. U. 21
1913-Tulane 0; L. S. U. 40
1914-Tulane 0; L. S. U. 0
1915-Tulane 0; L. S. U. 12
1916-Tulane 14; L. S. U. 14
1917-Tulane 28; L. S. U. 6
1919-Tulane 6; L. S. U. 27
1920-Tulane 21; L. S. U. 0
1921-Tulane 21; L. S. U. 0
1922-Tulane 14; L. S. U. 25
1923-Tulane 20; L. S. U. 0
1924-Tulane 13; L. S. U. 0
1925-Tulane 16; L. S. U. 0
1926-Tulane 0; L. S. U. 6
1927-Tulane 13; L. S. U. 6
( Continued on page 38)
THE RECORDS
1935
LOUISIANA STATE
7 ....... ..................... ....... Rice ................ ............... .... 1 0
18 ................................. Texas .......... ...... .............. ... 6
32 ........................... Manhattan . ........ ..... ....... 0
1 3 ......... ..................... Arkansas ............... 7
7 ........................... Vanderbilt ....... .... ......... ..... 2
6 .............................. Auburn . ... ...... ........... ......... 0
28 ......... . ... .......... Miss. State ................. . ...... 1 3
1 3......... ......... ....... ... . Georgia .......... ........ ....... ..... 0
56 .... ................ Southwestern La. ..................... 0
180 38
L. S. U. ALMA MATER
(Sing as the Band Plays)
Where stately oaks and broad magnolias
Shade inspiring halls,
There stands our dear old Alma Mater
Who to us recalls:
Fond memories that waken in our hearts
:· A tender glow,
And makes us happy for the love that we
Have learned to know.
All praise to thee our Alma Mater,
Moulder of mankind,
May greater glory love unending
Be forever thine.
Our worth in life will be thy worth
· We pray to keep it true,
And may thy sp-rit live in us forever
L. s. u.
7
TULANE
44 ..... ....... ............ . V. M. !... ...... ... ... ....... .... ....... 0
0.............................. Auburn ........ ........... .... .... .. 1 0
1 9.. .. .......... .. ............. Florida ....... ........... .. ........ 7
0................ .. Minnesota . . ...................... .20
3 3 .................. . Sewanee ........... . ... ............... 0
14 .......... ........ . Colgate ........... ... ... 6
1 3 .......................... Georgia ...... .................... .. 26
1 3 .... ..... ........ .......... La. Normal . . .. .................... 0
1 3 6
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
69
Thou leadest them to dreams and actions splendid!
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!
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!
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 usl
As we proudly sing to thee I
Take from us our hearts' devotion!
Thine we are, and thine shall be I
HOW IT BEGAN
T. L. BAYNE
Io
Two football teams in November, 189 3, battled
it out before an enthusiastic crowd of fans. One
was the team of Louisiana State University and the
other the team of Tulane University.
The unusual in that picture was the fact that the
umpire in the game was the coach of both teams I
T. L. Bayne was the coach and incidentally the
father of football in Louisiana.
"Nervy" Bayne, they called him while he starred
at Yale in the middle eighties as quarterback. He
had returned home with his interest and enthusiasm
in the game close to his heart and as a student in
the Law School at Tulane he had gathered a team
and coached it.
"I met Dr. Coates of L. S. U." Mr. Bayne said,
"and we got to talking about a football game between
the universities. He agreed to get a team
started at L. S. U., and I agreed to organize one at
Tulane. So we started work."
Mr. Bayne said Dr. Coates was thoroughly
familiar with the technique of football but was a
bit short in actual grid experience, so Bayne used
to go to Baton Rouge every once in a while to help
his friend along with the team. And he had to take
the one and only ball up to L. S. U. on those trips
so L. S. U. could get the hang and feel of it!
But in New Orleans Mr. Bayne had his hands
full. All the preparations for a game he had to do
himself. He had to find a park, erect the goal posts,
mark of the field, pick the school colors, make up
a yell, entice an audience at fifty cents a head, rig
his team out with unifo
,
rms and then umpire the
game!
He did it all. He made arrangements to use
Sportsman Park. He measured and marked of the
field and built the posts. He decided after much
consideration and discussion that Olive and Blue
would make a good color scheme. He made up a
yell : Rah, Rah, Sis Boom Ah ; Rah, Rah, Tulane!
He made a house·to-house canvass and gathered an
audience.
Thus was born intercollegiate football in Louisiana
and a traditional colorful rivalry was inaugurated
that lasts and grows even to this day.
On the Tulane team were three former Southern
Athletic Club players, (Judge) Rufus E. Foster,
Walter Castenado and Hugh Bayne, brother of the
coach. Jack Dowling and Allen Mehle were on the
team and played star ball, according to Mr. Bayne .
.John Lombard was captain. The captain of the
L. S. U. team was (Former Governor) Ruffin
Pleasants.
After the season was over the Tulane University
presented Mr. Bayne with a token of appreciation
for his services. The present was purchased by
popular subscription. It was an umbrella.
"! lost it the next day," Mr. Bayne said.
Mr. Bayne died only a few months ago. He was
interested in amateur sports and fair play to the
end.
A salute to him from L. S. U. and Tulane!
May his spirit of 189 3 carry on today and
through the decades!
Riled by a Raccoon Rah-Rah?
. • . light an Old Gold
AT TRYING TIMES
• . • TRY A Smooth OLD GOLD
Best Wishes,
Green Wave!
•
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All- Time All-Star Team
Louisiana State University
(Baton Rouge, La. )
By George Trevor
John Kent '33 _______________ ___________ CENTER_ _________ Thomas Dutton ' 19
Norborne Wilson '28 ________________ GUARD ___________ Roy Wilson '32
Orren Noblett '09 _____________________ GUARD ___________ William Hillman '0 8
Justin Rukas '35 _______________________ T ACKLE _________ "jess" Tinsley '2 7
Jack Torrance '33 ____________________ TACKLE _________ Marshall Gandy '09
John (Bill) Seip '09 _________________ END ______________ .. Otto Weaver '24
Ray Edmonds '2 I _____________________ END _______________ _ _ Walter Flemming '32
George (Doc) Fen ton '09 ________ QUARTER ...... L. Thompson Godfrey '2 7
Abe Micka! '35 ........................ BACK .............. jesse Fatheree '35
"Mike" Lally 'I O ...................... BACK ........ ----·· Newton Helm '25
Lawrence Dupont '13 .............. BACK ______________ C. Albert lves '22
Founded in I 860 as a Military School with General
Bill Sherman as its first superintendent, Louisi·
ana State sent its first graduates into conspicuous
roles with the Confederate Armies. The Tigers of
the Bayous had played football since the 90's but
they reached the pinnacle during the regime of Bif
Jones in I 923-33.
It is almost impossible to choose between Torn
Dutton and john Kent for all-time L. S. U. center.
Dutton, a towering shot putter, starred on a postArmistice
team of I 9 I 9. Many Baton Rouge observers
prefer Kent who snapped the ball for the
I 932 team. He had the \vider lateral range though
less driving power.
Norborne Wilson weighed 2 I 8 pounds yet carried
it so speedily that he was sometimes shifted
from guard to end. Orren Babe Noblett was the
key :'man in the memorable I 908 line, playing
ofensive tackle and defensive guard. Carrying the
ball on the tackle-over-tackle play he averaged 9
yards in I 0 successive plunges against Auburn that
season in the game that decided the Southern title.
Coach Bif Jones considered Roy Wilson one of the
hardest running guards he ever coached.
Jack Torrance, the man-Mountain from Oak
Grove, might have been the greatest lineman American
football has known had he possessed a more
aggressive temperament. This good-natured, easygoing
behemoth weighed 2 7 5 pounds and stood 6
feet 4 inches tall, yet was nimble enough to break
the World's record in the shot put-an event which
requires agility as well as sheer strength. Torrance
had such unusual speed for his size that he played
end one year and by reason of his basket ball skill
became a good pass receiver.
justin Rukas was not a showy type of tackle but
he did 60 minutes worth of damage in every game.
13
Jess Tinsley, now a professional star with the Chicago
Cardinals, developed into a master tackle in
senior year.
The South has had few ends to rival Bill Seip,
giant wingman of the I 90 8 steam-roller. This spartan
broke his arm in scrimmage before the final
contest with Tulane but insisted;on playing with his
arm in a cast. He lasted the entire game and held
of the Greenies with one arm. Ray Edmonds beat
Tulane in I 920 with his consistent catches of flat
tosses. Going down under kicks he forced many
a fumble by his ferocious tackles while his teammate,
Cooper, scooped up the loose ball and ran
for touchdowns.
Doc Fenton, quarterback of the memorable I 908
team, was L. S. U.'s headiest field general. His
rugby punts on the run are still remembered at
Baton Rouge.
Abe Micka!, a protege of Bif Jones, developed
into one of the greatest punters and passers the
South has known. His overhand pass was so deadly
in precision that the receiver had only to side-step
his foes and the ball would drop into his arms. The
stocky Syrian could place his 50-yard punts on a
dime, frequently kicking out of bounds on the
enemy's two-yard mark. One of his greatest kicks
covered 60 yards against Rice in 1934 and was
grounded on the one-foot line.
Larry Dupont was a 60-rninute player in a tough
ten-game season. Mike Lally, key man on the 191 0
back field, cannot be overlooked though the modern
generation of L. S. U. grads may prefer Jesse
Fatheree whose average gain from scrimmage exceeded
that of any of his mates last fall.
Copyrighted 1935 by W. W. Wells.
Th e FLAME
(Mr. Green is an authority on Tulane's early athletic history although he is a comparatively young
man in age. He was Director of the Division of Records and Research a number of years ago and made an
intensive survey of the Green Wave athletic history.-Eds. Note) .
BY THOMAS GREEN
• Those of us who were fortunate enough to se a production of Shaw's "Dark Lady of the
Sonnets" some ten years ago remember how Will Shakespeare went about, note book in
hand, jotting down things of merit for future use. Had a Shakespeare been behind my note
book and pencil, in the good year 1935, then would these gleanings of mine receive the publicity
that they merit?
One of the stories is about a migratory athlete. And how he did migrate. He had the
pleasure of playing against Tulane three times in one season, and starring each time--in
football, in basketball and in track. The unusual feature of the story is that he was playing for
a diferent institution each time. Then there is the Tulane pitcher who pitched a no hit
game and lost it. Another one is about a Tulane baseball player who was put of the team
for hitting a home run. (The answer to that one was that he was sent to the bat instructed to
bunt.)
Here are a few glimpses into the past:
THE FIRST GAME
Once upon a time (Saturday, November
25, 1893, according to the files of The
Times-Democrat), about 2, 000 people
turned out to see a game of football between
Tulane and Louisiana State University,
played at Sportsman Park, New Orleans.
This game was the first intercollegiate
game in which Tulane took part, and I believe
it was L. S. U. 's first game. There
was even then the brilliant gathering and
enthusiasm that to this day has made this
particular game the feature on the schedules
of the two universities.
Both teams were encouraged by the
cheers of their supporters.
.' The T ulanians were yelling RAH I RAH I
SISS!-S-SI BOOM! AHI RAHI RAHI TULANE!
The Tiger fans were consuming their
energy on:
RAH! RAHI RAH!
RAHI RAHI REE!
LOUISIANA, LOUISIANA, U. VI
The officials were Captain T. L. Bayne
(the man who coached both the first Tulane
and L. S. U. teams.-Eds. Note); and Dr.
Coates of Baton Rouge.
Tulane scored in the opening minute
after rushing the ball down the field. and
Hugh Bayne crashed through the L. S. U.
line for a touchdown. The Tulane fans
went wild. The cheering died down. Bayne
had been hurt. He had landed eye first on
14
the wet, pasty lime, marking the goal line,
and the game had to be held up while the
lime was washed out of his eye. He continued
in the game and starred.
The second, "A Sad Story," comes from
the 1903 Jambalaya. College opened late.
The team played only one game, that with
L. S. U., and entere<;l that with only a small
amount of practice. Quoting from Jack ·
Chambers, the 1905 captain:
"At first L. S. U. swept Tulane of its feet,
and it was only by a desperate defense that
Tulane's goal line was not crossed in the
opening play. Five times the ball was
brought to Tulane's ten-yard line, and each
time it was punted out of danger, the kicker
standing sometimes with his back against
the fence. But as the game progressed, Tulane
gradually forced her opponent down
the field, and the half ended with the ball
in L. S. U. 's territory.
"In the opening of the second half, Tulane
seemed to have things her own way.
Weak points had been found in the opponent's
line and they were hammered until
L. S. U.'s 15-yard line was reached. Here
was the turning point of the game. Tulane
lost the ball on third down by inches. L. S.
U. then started the long march and finally
shoved the ball over in the final ten seconds
of the game, after twice losing the ball inside
the 15-yard line only to march back.
The score was 5 to 0 for L. S. U.
Another glimpse shows us a football
crowd that turned out Monday, December
12, 1898, to witness the Tulane victory over
---- -------------------------------------------------,
Still Bu r ns
Footbal Was a Great Gam e in
1893 and It's a Gre at Gam e Now.
Mississippi. The Olive and Blue (student
publication of that time) on December 14,
1898, is the source of the quotation:
"Too much cannot be said of the enthusiasm
and support of the student at the game.
The academics were present in large numbers
and made the afternoon lively with
their artistic productions on tin horns.
"For the first time in the history of the
university, the faculty of the medical department,
chiefly through the influence of
Professor A. L. Metz, the popular professor
of the Medics, suspended session, and the
medical students, led by President Ayo, attended
in a body, and proved themselves
our most vociferous adherents. The law department
was not to be outdone, for, with
President Gleason in the vanguard, the lawyers
presented a solid phalanx and cheered
every play of our men. Here and there the
grandstands were dotted with sweet feminine
faces, and the many young girls who
were present evinced their love for dear old
Tulane by thei beautiful display of Olive
and Blue."
Here are a few high spots regarding the
early football history of Tulane:
This story was told by the late T. L.
Bayne, Tulane's first football coach, concerning
a game in which he played at New
Orleans in 1888.
It was during the Christmas holidays, and
Mr. Bayne, a member of the Yale varsity,
was home for the occasion. The game was
a charity afair between the Orange and
Blacks and the Red and Blues with the proceeds
to go to the Charity Hospital fund to
buy horses for the ambulance.
"During the game I sufered an injury to
my thumb," recalled Mr. Bayne. "We had a
scrimmage and a very good friend hit me in
the eye and I let him have it. My thumb
worried me a great while.
IS
"Pretty soon I got away and ran for a
touchdown. We lined up to kick goal. The
ball was kicked and away it went, over the
fence into the canal. We got it out after
swimming for it, but the bladder had ben
punctured in some way and we had to call
of the game."
Mr. Bayne was called "Nervy" at Yale,
where he starred in 1884 and 1885. After
leaving there he kept playing and coaching
until 1908. In those days an amateur coach
was eligible to play on the team and he took
advantage of the rule.
While at Yale, Mr. Bayne was considered
as the best player in the country for his
weight, which wasn't high. He played quarterback
and was often too slick for the opposing
team. He invented the center to
guard to quarterback play that wrecked
Harvard and others in 1885. In his day,
the ball was rolled on the ground from the
center and two players had to touch it before
it was legal.
"We had no times out," he recalled.
"There were two halves of forty-five minutes
each and ten minutes between the
halves. No subs. If you were knocked
down you were given one minute to get
back on your feet or they threw you out of
the game.
"It was considered a disgrace to be
knocked out and very few were. Black eyes
were common in those rush days. There
were sixteen black eyes in one game that I
remember. You couldn't aford to get
knocked out. There was nobody to put in
your place. We had five subs during the
two years I played at Yale.
"We had forty signals at Yale. Each was
a sentence. If we said 'Move up a little
closer' it meant something. We first started
the series of plays that later became prominent.
I would call a signal which regulated
several plays in succession without more signals.
"All in all the old days were as thrilling
to us as modern football games are to the
crowds of today."
THE GRIDIRON ROUNDUP
The Score to Date:
Col. D'l'h'f'r
Picked
96
Winners
69
David Dabster Dingelhoffer,
erudite demon of
dope (the kind football
experts manufacture), was
found at his usual street
corner Friday morning.
He was outfitted as a
country gentleman, wearing
a soft felt hat, hip
boots and a corduroy
overall suit with bow tie
to match.
A very striking sight indeed l
We circled the Colonel cautiously, listening
all the while to the casual and modest
remarks that he was lending to an appreciative
audience, made up of two ebony bootblacks,
a monkey with the picturesque organ
grinder attached, and two alley cats who
were waiting for him to drop some of the
grease from the hot catfish sandwich he was
devouring.
The Colonel was so absorbed in his hot
catfish sandwich and carefully chosen verbal
prose that he showed not a whit of interest
in the addition of one to his gathering.
It seemed that the catfish was a little
warmer than he liked although he was obviously
in too great a hurry to permit it to
lose temperature. (The Colonel is that way,
a man of sparkling energy.)
Stepping on a loose shoestring, to avoid
the greyish black cat which was jumping
almost to his waistline, the Colonel all but
lost his balance and fell into a garbage can
of fish heads. With remarkable poise, however,
he regained his equilibrium by grabbing
a heavy pair of red union suits which
were suspended to the alley clothes line.
We never believe in interrupting the
Colonel when he is in the midst of weighty
discourse. He is a man of forceful thought,
in fact a human locomotive with a one track
mind.
16
Losers Ties
24 3
"As I was saying," Colonel Dingelhofer
was explaining to his audience, "there's no
better grubbin's anywhere than catfish when
it's hot unless it be 'possum and 'talers or
cracklin' bread and croakers."
The ebony boys with the half-filled bottles
of light tan polish, nodded approval.
In fact they appeared almost as interested
in the fast disappearing catfish sandwich as
did the cats, although they seemed far less
hopeful. A wonderful thing, the human
mind.
The monkey and the quaint organ grinder
showed little interest in the hot catfish but
did perk up at the rattle of the pennies
which the Colonel held in the unoccupied
right hand. (Yes, the Colonel would be left
handed. )
"And as I was saying, catfish cooked in a
skillet of grease on charcoal or wood is better
than this new fangled gas the people are
piping into their houses nowadays. "
The fish had now disappeared and the
cats were almost kicking up a furore with
their heavy footfalls, so utter was their disgust.
The Colonel was now counting the coppers
and looking to the beer counter across
the street. Obviously, he was shy five, as he
didn't move a peg.
Just then the monkey spied a prospective
customer and began tugging his organ man
down the street. It would be amiss not to
recount the scene which occurred at this
juncture. The monk tipped the tin cup and
a copper rolled out. Only a trained eye
would have noted the slight movement of
the Colonel's foot. I didn't and neither did
the rest of his audience.
The Colonel, without moving a foot,
joined in looking about for the coin. The
haste to get to the promising field of other
pennies, however, soon ended the search
but the Colonel didn't move even a loose
shoe lace.
Hardly had the audience dispersed before
the Colonel had retrieved the copper from
THE GRIDIRON ROUNDUP
beneath his neatly dusted shoe and was
headed into the beer parlor.
No more admirable character could be
found anywhere unless it be the estimable
Mr. J. Wellington Wimpy of Hamburger
fame. The Colonel, shrewd, game and a
gambler of small parts, had taken a chance
and won.
It was here that he recognized us. With a
magnificent gesture of his hand, blowin g the
suds of the glass, he invited us to a stein of
cold beer.
But no, we were familiar with the
Colonel's forgotten pocketbook yarn which
we knew would only be related after he had
made away with numerous glasses.
Big hearted, lovable old Colonel Dingelhofer.
Generous to a fault: and he had
many!
"My good fellow, " he drawled, "you're
looking for the winners."
We nodded.
"I have them for you," he nodded modestly.
"You have only to call 'em and I'll
name 'em."
Here they are, direct from the Colonel:
NAVY-ARMY - "When there's the
homeland to be defended, give me the
Army. Yes, everytime. But if there's an
ocean to be crossed, give me the Navy."
(We assured the Colonel that the Gold
Reserve was perfectly safe and that the 12-
mile limit was far enough to take the Navy
just now.)
"Well, then, I'll take the Marines, " he
hedged.
"That won't do, Colonel, " we retorted,
"you must take the Army or Navy."
'The Army then, " the Colonel replied,
nonchalantly.
"Why ? " we asked.
"Because they have
'
more man power."
"Yes, yes, Colonel, " we answered, "but
have they ? "
The Colonel looked at me with disgust.
"Of course," he jabbed, "they have two
million and the Navy has only a hundred
thousand or so."
The Colonel, of course, was thinking of
the war time strength of the two branches
but we let it go at that.
So, it's the Army.
FLORIDA-AUBURN-"Well, how about
the Florida Alligators, Colonel ? "
"I likes Florida, " Colonel Dingelhofer
came back.
We almost swooned.
"You can't mean that you think Florida
will beat Auburn?"
"Oh, no, " says the Colonel, "I mean that
I likes Florida better than California. Why
the nights in the California mountains are
downright cold and -"
We stopped the Colonel by ofering him
a cigar.
MISS STATE-OLE MISS- "That' s easy,"
says the Colonel, "Mississippi State beat the
Army and the Army won the War-"
"And so you'll take Mississippi State," w e
said, cutting him short.
"No, Ole Miss!" he replied, briskly.
•••
GEORGIA TECH - GEORGIA - "I'll
take the Crackers there," says the Colonel,
looking around the counter and picking a
few saltines out of an open glass jar.
"You'll take the Crackers," we parried,
"listen, Colonel, you can't hedge like that.
Both teams are made up of Georgia Crackers
but neither team is called by that name."
"Oh, I was talking about these heah
crackers," he said, munching two.
"Well, say Bulldogs or Yellow Jackets?"
we demanded.
"I don't like Yellow Jackets," he replied,
scratching his head.
So, it's the Bulldogs, although frankly we
don't think the Colonel got the drift of that
one.
•••
PRINCETON-Y ALE-"We have a Yale
lock on our barn down home," says the
Colonel. "I likes Y ales."
We were sure the Colonel thought a
Princeton was another type of lock so we
are venturing to veto his selection.
•••
DARTMOUTH - COLUMBIA - The
Colonel recalled "Columbia' the Gem of the
Ocean" and thought it was another branch
of the Navy, insisting he had already selected
the Army.
He said Columbia must be the second
team and therefore he would take Dartmouth.
•••
HOLY CROSS - BOSTON COLLEGEWe
felt sure the Colonel liked Boston baked
beans and feared for the worst but were surprised.
With a reverential air, he selected
Holy Cross.
WESTERN MARYLAND - GEORGETOWN-"
If I can't take the whole state of
Maryland, I won't take any part of it," declared
the Colonel. "It's small enough as it
is."
So Georgetown it was.
An all-South football honor roll would
have to include:
Ends-Galatka
(L. S. U.); Buck
(Duke); Geny
(Tulane).
(Miss. State); Tinsley
(North Carolina); West
(Vanderbilt); Memtsas
Tackles - Whatley (Ala.); Paterson
(Auburn); Rukas (L. S. U.); Eubanks
(Georgia Tech); Nevers (Kentucky).
Guards - Johnson (Georgia); White
(Alabama); Fitzsimmons (Ga. Tech);
Helveston (L. S. U.).
Centers-Gilbert (Auburn); Sabol (N.
C. State); Gould (Tulane).
Quarterbacks-Smith (Ala.) ; Schwerdt
(N. C. State); Treadaway (Ga.).
Halfbacks-Pickle (Miss. State); Mintz
(Tulane); Jackson (North Carolina); Rodgers
(Miss. State); Bond (Georgia); Chase
(Florida); Davis (Kentucky); Fatheree
(L. S. U.).'
Fullbacks-Hutchins (North
Andrews (Tulane); Appleby
:'
Tech).
•••
Carolina);
(Georgia
If you had to select your composite
eleven from that array, this might be the
most efective combination:
Ends-Galatka and Tinsley.
Tackles-Whatley and Paterson.
Guards-] ohnson and White.
Center-Gilbert.
Quarterback-Smith.
Halfbacks-Mintz and Fatheree.
Fullback-Hutchins.
•••
Fordham's Rams are taking on an ambitious
schedule in 1 9 36. Their chart includes
S. M. U. , Purdue, Pitt, St. Mary's,
Georgia and N. Y. U.
rS
Walter Gilbert, Auburn's great center, is
bigger than his dad, who is a "smart" size
man. Wally is said by his father to be a
throw back to his great grandfather on the
father's side.
"The old man-my grandfather-could
pick up a barrel of water and tilt it on his
knees, and drink out of the bung hole," the
great center's father told 0. B. Keeler of the
Atlanta Journal.
Mr. Keeler points out that a barrel holds
52 gallons of fluid. A gallon of fluid-say
water-weighs eight pounds. A barrel of
water, then, by simple calculation, weighs
4 1 6 pounds-not counting the barrel.
I
Mr. Keeler thought that was considerable
energy expenditure for a drink of plain
cooking water, which could have been had
from a gourd just as well. He asked the
elder Gilbert if he were sure it was water.
"Well, they told me it was water," said
Mr. Gilbert, "it seems that it was a stunt."
It was a stunt, all right.
• ••
A "Greenie" fan comes up with the fol-lowing
mythical eleven:
End s-F rankenstein and Dracula.
Tackles-Toar and King Kong.
Guards-Buck Rogers and Daddy War-bucks.
Center-Uncle Willie Mullins
Quarterback-Moon Mullins.
Halfbacks-Pop eye and Joe Palooka .
Fullback-Tarzan.
Coach-Mr. Wimpy.
The expert picking that team points out
there isn't a weakness except brains.
H EAI>QUATEr?S
IN NEw Or? LEANs-ktJIJM
bATH
JN .7k oosevelt
SEYMOUR
WEISS
Managing Director
Open from 10 to 2
..
Dance and Dine
Entertainment
Circular
Bar
00
Ul>
Football fans from everywhere
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
aford The Bienville.
inville:
I JJJ
TULANE SQUAD
TED COX, Coach
Henley, e
2 Carnegie, h b
Tull, c
4 Wight, h b
Neyland, e
6 Weaver, c
7 Daly, t
8 Hillyer, e
9 Eddy, t
2 4 Flettrich, f b
3 2 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 C oli, g
66 Loftin, c
3 5 Dalovisio, e 6 7 Freese, c
38 Henderson, h b 68 Buckner, g
39 Nichols, h b 69 Hall, g
40 Manteris, h b
4 1 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, hb
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
7 7 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 hard
and hit it square
Play the game
and play it fair
Crash right throughdo
or die
You've got to be good
to SATISFY.
L. S. U. SQUAD
BERNIE H. MOORE, Coach
10 Carroll, t
14 Brown, A, g
15 Brown, E., c
16 Reed, h b
1 7 Lester, t
18 Myrick, e
19 May, q b
2 1 Strange, t
22 Bumpers, g
2 3 Cofee, f b
24 Tinsley, e
25 Nolen, t
26 Blakeman, h b
29 Warmbrod, c
31 Wroten, t
32 Baldwin, g
33 Manuel, e
34 Rukas, t
35 Stupka, t
36 Humphrey, e
37 Dumas, e
38 Crass, f b
41 Walker, h b
4 2 U rbanic, g
4 3 Mihalich, e
45 Calhoun, t
47 Rohm, h b
50 Morton, f b
51 Knight, c
52 Helveston, g
53 Wixson, hb
54 Magness, A, g
55 Magness, W., g
56 Friend, t
60 Springer, q b
62 Barrett, e
63 Plauche, q b
64 Rauchenbach,hb
66 Brooks, g
69 Bowman, h b
72 Lawrie, q b
76 Seago, q b
7 7 Fatherree, h b
82 Leisk, g
84 Micka!, h b
No.
59
74
65
60
L. s. u. vs. Tulane
THE STARTING LINEUPS
(Subject to Change by Coaches)
TULANE L. S. U.
Name Position Name
Memtsas ____________ ________________ L. E. _______________________________ Tinsley
Moss __________________ ________________ L. T . . ______________ _ ______________ Carroll
GolL __________________________________ L. G. _______________ ________________ Brown
Gould ____________________________________ C. ________________________________ Stewart
No.
24
10
14
44
69 HalL _________________ _______________ R. G .. _________________________ Helveston 52
76 Pace ___________________________________ R. T . . _______________ ________________ Rukas 34
5 I Preisser__ ___________ _______________ R. E. , ______________________________ Barrett 62
50
66
Pa ge __________________ _______________ Q. B . . ______________ _________________ Seago
Mintz _________________ _______________ L. H.---------______ __________________ Reed
Odom ______________ __ _______________ R. H. __________________________ Fatherree
Loftin ________________ ________________ F. B. _______________________________ Mickal
•
OFFICIALS
Referee-Harry Viner (Missouri)
Umpire-Jas. Y. Perry (Sewanee)
Head Linesman-0. W. Severence (Oberlin)
Field Judge-Roy B. Striegel (Tennessee)
76
16
77
84
I
I I I
A. G. SPALDING & BROS.
Oficial Football Equipment-134 Carondelet St.
RAM ELL/,
Inc.
RAymond 6188-6189
•
\VASHING POWDERS,
LAUNDRY AND
DRY CLEANERS SUPPLIES
CHEMICALS-ALKALIS
•
COAL and COKE
O'Shea ...
.,
(
A name synonomous with
the bPst in athletic knitted
goods from Coas t to
Coast. Tul ane's G1·een
vVave and every other
le ading institution uses
O'Shea goods.
Ask any coach-he will
tell you that O'Shea is
the best.
O'SHEA KNITTING MILLS
2414 N. 8acremento Ave.
Chicago, Illinois
The Thinking F ello Calls a Yell ow
TO AND FROM GAMES
35c
ANYWHERE WITHIN CITY
(Outlying Points Excepted)
FIVE can ride for the price of ONEClub
together!
Phone
RAymond 3311
TOYE BROS.
YELLOW CABS
"AW, FOOTBALL AIN'T NUTHIN' BUT A BATTLE OF WITS!"
TI ME
Portraying scorn mixed with the utmost contempt,
no actress (not Bernhardt herself) could
reach the heights attained by a woman returning
from a summer vacation when she views the house
which, during her absence, has been kept by her
husband.
•••
Marie : "Are they in love ?"
Mazie : "They must be. She listens to him describe
a ball game and he listens to her telling ho w
her cousin· s new dress was made."
•••
A junior reporter, frequently reprimanded for
relating too many details and warned to be br ief,
sent in the following :
''Last night, Sir Dwight Hopeless, a guest at
Lady Panmore' s ball, complained of feeling ill,
took a drink, his hat, his coat, his departure, no
notice of his friends, a taxi, a pistol from his
pocket, and finally his life. Nice chap, Regrets."
•••
The return of the hop·picking season recalls the
convict whom Captain Spencer, when senior prison
missionary of the Church Army, once visited in his
cell.
"Well, my man," said the captain, "and what
do you do when you are out of prison ?"
"Well," said the convict in a philosophical manner,
m spring I picks peas, in summer I picks
fruit, in autumn I picks 'ops, and in winter I picks
pockets.''
"And what happens then ?" asked the missioner.
"Then," continued the prisoner, "I comes in 'ere
and picks oakum."
•••
Boob : "Is insomnia catching ?"
Simp : "It is when , your baby has it. "
•••
Molly : "This magazine writer says some of the
movie queens are ·putting on airs·."
Cordelia : "Well, I'm glad they're putting on
something."
•• •
And dames endowed with pretty legs
Make soft a lot of hard-boiled eggs.
•••
Miss Catnip : "What do you think of matrimony
?"
Mr. Dogbone : "Sorry, but I don't choose to answer
; you see I've been married."
OUT
Boob : "How is Bill getting along with that airship
he is building ?"
Simp : "Just so -so ; he's got the a1r all ready t o
fly it in , though."
•••
Molly : "It took a long time for you to give that
message to your chum over the phone. What
were you talking about ?"
May : "Oh, I wasn't talking ; I was just listening."
•••
Miss : "What 1s the best way to preserve
peaches ?''
Mr. : "See a druggist ; he can provide both the
information and the materials."
•••
Mr. Henpeck : "In me you see a henpecked husband."
Miss Lovejoy : "Well, at least you can be glad
that you're not a bigamist."
•••
A girl is considered beautiful these days if she
looks as good after washing her face as she did
before she washed it.
•••
A lot of sheiks who think they are Heaven's
gift to womankind turn out to be the answer to a
squirrel's prayer.
•••
First Mrs. : "Susie's husband Eays she is a wonderful
cook."
Second Mrs. : "Well, she alway• did know where
the best restaurants were located."
•• •
Housewife : "You promised to saw that pile of
wood for me. I gave you your breakfast and now
you're going. What's the idea ?"
Tourist : "I've declared a moratorium."
•••
"I don't see why Jack should get sore because
the school paper announced he was leaving at the
end of the semester."
"Oh, it wasn't just that. What made him sore
was that they put it in under the 'Campus Improvements'
column."
• ••
A candidate for the police force was being verbally
examined.
"If you were by yourself in a police car and
were pursued by a desperate gang of criminals in
another car doing forty miles an hour along a
lonely road, what would you do ?"
The candidate loo ked puzzled for a moment.
Then he replied : "Fifty."
JIMMY - McGRATH_
TACKLE
DOUGJ E JOHN SON
t:!A FBAK
RAY NUSSBAUM
TA C KLE
V I C LAROCCA •
. E N D
TULA N E ROSTER N1o-. HenPleLyA, YCEeRci-L. --------- HOME- 35--NTueylll, aPnodr, tDeri. e..t.r..i.c..h... ............................................·..·..-..·..·..-..-..-..-....-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..·..·..·..·..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-.. N SRheorwsee vOdearplleoe,ar Mtn,s iL .s.as.. ..................................... ..-..-..-..-...·..·.·..·..·.....·...·...·...·..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-. .-. -.-.-.·.-.-..--.-.-.-..·
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-
L U C K Y S T R I K E
F A S H I O N S
Can now be part
of your wardrobe
Luc k y 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 y l e s , i n
colors that sparkle.
Lisbeth was commissioned to design
them , and it has been O U R 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
col lection that we are most anxious
for you to see.
Come in any day next week.
TOWN & COUNTRY, Inc.
1 432 St. Charles Avenue
Afte r th e Ga me- .. ..
'
Dine ' tn Holmes Restaurant
r In the Vieux Carre on Bourbon Street ll
just of Canal JU
D. H . HOLMES CO. L I M I T E D
33
MEN IN THE
Stanley Woodward wrote a very interesting
article several years ago which appeared
in the Harvard A. A. News at its
Yale game. It was about the men in the
press box or "Imp ortant Fell ows" Who Are
Unnoticed Until Sunday Morning. "
Mr. Woodward a dmitted in the final
paragraph that he had stolen the idea from
John " Red" Moore, a talented Yale law
student who served his paper, the New
York Herald-Tribune, as corresp ondent.
It was an interesting article and a little
more larceny seems p'roper.
It is funny, once you think of it, that nobody
seems to pay much attention to them
a t a football game. They climb our rookery ;
ascertain who wins and, if possible, why ; bat
out their stuf ; and run for the office or the
train.
The "men m the press box" scan the
crowd for color and human interest features,
looking for silly gals and students foolish
enough to fight over goal p osts. Now and
again they mention them in their stories.
They write several million words a game.
Occasionally they pan football teams and
coaches.
They are, in short, damned important
f ellows, and yet if they went on a strike one
day and failed to show up at a given football
game, nobody would notice it until Sunday
morning.
Honest, Mister, they are interesting. They
have q ualities and characteristics that never
get into the paper. Here are some of them :
Ralph Wheatley, Associated Press : A
gentleman who gets as much kick out of
the game as d o the freshmen. An erudite
rep orter who is j ust as much at ease reporting
a fire, flood, Central American revolution
or a hanging as he is a football game.
His left hand never knows what his right
hand is doing-yet h e gets th em done. And
after the story has ended, he can sing a
lusty Irish tenor and eat as many h o t cakes
as the next o ne. He is manager of the As-
34
sociated Press in this section of the country,
in charge of an area covering several hundred
miles in radius and embracing several
states. He is the fastest worker extant on
a sp ot news story. He served with distinction
as a Washington correspondent o f the
AP for years. He travels light when on a
maj or assignment, usually having two stub
p'encils, a few envelopes and perhaps an old
letter o r two in his pocket for note paper.
His pipe is an old standby and his service in
tennis is most wicked.
Wm. Mc. G . Keefe, The Times-Picayune :
The last word in smoking compartment
raconteurs. Also has a very fine drawing
room voice on "Football Specials. " Knows
all choice sp ots to eat anywhere in the country,
especially in the Ozark Mountains of
Arkansas, the real fried chicken emp oriums
of Iowa ( yes, Iowa ) , and all of the Louisiana
restaurants that should be known. He
carries more duffle than any other touring
rep orter, invariably arriving in p ress b ox
with suitcase, brief case, typewriter, glasses
and enough copy ppper for everyone.
Always knows what is going on but won' t
write it if it is going to hurt anyone. He is
a leading j ournalistic authority on bosses
and baseball and knows about as much o f
a n y o ther sport a s anyone you' ll name. A
big two-fisted bachelor for scores and scores
o f years but j ust another h ome-man now.
Charles L. Dufour, The Tribune : Appreciates
opera and apple pie. Has
toured France and didn' t bring back any
p ost cards. His philosophy of life : ' There' s
more ways of curing a cat than feeding it
milk o f magnesia . " His Gallic temperament
is most inspiring to his friends, especially
in mid-August when the alumni are
l o oking over the prospects as to all-Americans
among the sophomores. Has no sup
eriors in writing football and knows all
branches of sport thoroughly. He is now
the oldest bachel o r among Southern sports
writers. A good "hearts player"-one of
the few wh o can take the coaches over during
their "in" weeks ( those dull periods j ust
PRESS B OX
a fter their team has taken a licking and they
can' t afford to be seen on the streets, even
at night. )
Harry Martinez, The States : An enormous
worker and one of the kindest, most conscientious
men in the business. Always on
the j ob and n ever of the key. Has never
missed a train or an appointment. Unless
under pressure, will read over everything he
writes three times. Studious l o oking but
·d o esn' t use a pipe. D oesn' t go in for trick
leads to his stories or crimson sunsets and
blue hazes but packs the news into his
stories. Kn own as the "Grey Eagl e" of
Sports in the South. Calm and unhurried
amid the worl d ' s greatest rush h our-that
period j ust before edition time. Yet, he
n ever misses the story.
Fred Digby, The Item : He can think of
all the words when the time comes for "p;utting
on the brass band , " i. e . , covering
these high-toned intercollegiate brawls with
fitting glitter. A highly praised sports
writer who says what he thinks. Knows the
old-timers since he
'
has been in the game
since he was big enough to get to the place
where the events were being held, whether it
was b oxing, baseball, racing or football. Has
a knack for news that makes blood hounds
envious. Has a large family which includ es
one son who is at Notre Dame and who
p romises to b e a sp orts writer since he is
now on the editorial staf of his university
publication. Serious minded but an interesting
conversationist.
Merlin ( Scoop ) Kennedy, The Item :
Here' s an air-minded reporter who travels
th e sky-ways to all football games. A lot
o f people think of him as a statistician of
football. Well, he is, and one of the b est
in the business. Yet, h e' s a lot more than a
statistician. He is a very capable writer of
straight n ews as well as sp orts, a feature
writer of ability and a demon for getting
facts. He is a born crusad er, ever ready
Important Fellows Who A re
Unnoticed Until Sunday A . M.
35
with constructive criticism. He stays up
nights figuring out things that would make
life more Pleasant for the masses. He was
instrumental in getting overcoat racks for
the p ress b ox. He would rather worry
over thinking up things to benefit others
than eat or even fly. The world always
n eeds it' s Merlin Kennedys.
W. I. Spencer, Baton Rouge Morning Advocate
: "Sp ence" is a youngster who is an
oldster in writing sports. He really covers
the waterfront - ( beg pardon ) - battle
front of the Tigers and everything else in
Baton Rouge sports. H e is a sentimentalist
at h eart, quick to recognize and boost the
kid along who needs a b oost. It is n o small
wonder then that his column carries a "pep"
talk for the Tigers occasionally when h e
feels the urge. Spence knows his amateur
sports thoroughly.
;
M. G. ( Mickey) McCann, The State-
Times, Baton Roug e : One o f the b est in the
business, and that takes in the metropolitan
centers. An afable Irishman who battles
for his friends but who is big enough to see
their errors, if any. He is the type who
would write the stories for the drunks and
lend money to a guy. He played football
at L. S. U.
Wm. Gaud et, Universal : A real Hearst
man ! That covers a lot of territory. His
chief ambition is to p'ick a winner. He d o es
most of the Southern football reviews for
his service. He served the United Press for
a spell. An egotist who has flashes of appalling
modesty. A sentimentalist with a
past. He was a Mexican corresp ondent for
a while. The Senoritas were very b eautiful
and the Revolution was warmish.
]ames Russell Baird, Times-Picayune : H e
might "double" f o r t h e Prince of Wales if
His Highness ever decided to take a Hollywood
whirl . Or he could "d ouble" for
Robert Montgomery. We know nothing o f
Pete' s histrionic talents b u t he can b a m a
typ ewriter with the best of them.
TI GER- WAVE RIVALRY
( Continued from page 3 )
1 928-Tulane 0 ; L. S. U. 0
1 929-Tulane 2 1 ; L. S. U. 0
1 930-Tulane 1 2 ; L. S. U. 7
1 93 1 -Tulane 34 ; L. S. U. 7
1 932-Tulane 0 ; L. S. U. 1 4
1 933-Tulane 7; L. S. U. 7
1 934-Tulane 1 3 ; L. S. U. 1 2
• • •
Incidentally, Tulane' s 1 3 to 1 2 victory
last year was the narrowest margin ever to
mark a triumph in the long series. In all
past games, with the exception of the ties of
course, at l east a touchdown ' s diference had
separated the teams at the finish.
• • •
L . S. U . has won only o n e game from the
Greenies since 1 926 although they have two
draws in that span.
•••
Ten o f the Wave's fifteen victories have
been achieved since the war. Since the year
1 9 1 9, Tulane has won ten games, lost four
and tied two.
The first touchdown ever scored in the
series was mad e by Hugh Bayne, brother of
T. L. Bayne, first coach. That was in November,
1 89 3 , when the Olive and Blue
;on, 34 to 0.
RAZZLE DAZZLE-PHOOEY !
What' s happened to all of the magic we
were to have seen in collegiate football in
the good year 1 9 3 5 ? The broader rules
p ermitting all the d ownfield laterals and
backwards were supposed t o have turned
the game inside out. It was to have been a
spectacle that would make strictly p ower
football look tame. It was to have resembled
streaked lightning, striking where least
expected. The nation' s football was expected
to glimmer with legerdemain-a
good $5 word that caught the fancy.
Instead, it' s been a dud.
Where razzle dazzle has succeeded m
American football once this year, it has
failed often. Instead of p1oise and trickery,
we have usually had j uggled passes and
dribbles. The d efensive teams have gained
more by laterals than the ofensive teams.
The best o f teams in 1 9 3 5 didn' t win
maj or games with magic. Colgate, a very
fine football team and the leading exp onent
of h ocus p ocus, didn' t pull three maj o r
games o u t of t h e fi r e with it. Canny Andy
Kerr, realizing the limitations o f razzle dazzle,
didn ' t dish it out except in the dying,
d esperate moments of two of the three
games his team l ost .
Tom Lieb, coaching at Loyola of Los
Angeles, summed it up when he stated that
some o f the finest forward p asses thrown
by his team were nullified when the backs
tried to lateral before being tackled and instead
threw the ball to the opposing backs.
Charlie Bachman at Michigan State is
against the laterals beyond the line of scrimmage.
Minnesota ' s all-sweeping Gophers had
none o f it but proved that p ower goes before
the ball very well, even in 1 9 3 5 .
Wallace Wad e ' s Duke Blue D evils using
good old tackle smashes did right well
against Carolina. His Rose B owl teams at
Alabama fared satisfactorily on the old time
football, too.
So, with most of the 1 9 3 5 returns a t
hand, it l ooks like American football will
get along a while l onger on fundamentals
and an occasional unexpected j ab or pass
here o r there.
The o p en shuttling and tossing of the ball
may eventually be brought to perfection in
th e high school teams. Then, and only then,
will it be satisfactorily introduced as an asset
in the college game.
T U LA N E · S H I R TS
U A Loca l Prod uct of M e r i t H
L ALL AMERICAN I
TO UCHDO WN
A GREEN WA VE R
N COLLEGIA TE T
•
E Consistent W i n ners S
--M A N U FA C T V R E D B Y--
J . H . BONCK CO. , Inc.
Time O ut ''
DRINK-
PA USE-RELAX--
309 N . R a m part
S t reet
REFRESH YOURSELF
View on Campus, looking South.
The Tulane University of Lo'uisiana
NE W ORLEA NS
The UniversUy emb races the following depa rtments:
The College of Arts and Sciences
The H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College
The College of Co mmerce and Business
Administration
for Women
Tile College of Engineering
The Graduate School
The College of Law
The School of Medicine
The Graduate School of Medicine
The Courses for Teachers and for the General
Public
The Department of Middle American Research
The School of Social Work
The Summer Schools
For Catalogue A ddress:
R egistrar of the Tulane University of Louisiana
Gibson Hall, New Orleans