Page 18 - 1926 VES Meteor
P. 18
I
THE METEOR V. E. S. DEFEATS BED-
FORD IN SLOW GAME On Wednesday, April 28th, V. E.
THE METEOR
~~ ll'eut to lir~t and immediately to s e c o m l . ~ o u t h a ll i n g l e d , s c o r i n g Lewis. Pinky was put down by
s t r m : k o u t , b y B urke~, l : J ; b y ~pruill, ;:lw"'ott balb,~pruill,2;Graham; I1it by 1JJt<"hed ball, ~pruill, 4; hits, of( Burkes, !) ; off Spruill, 6; passed
ball-, \\'illiam'; umpire, Ballard.
THE PENDLETONS VISIT
011 :\lay1,Dr.andMrs.Pendle- to n an rl t heir little daughter went to \\'arrenton to spenrl some time
11·ith l>r. Penrlleton's family. Dr. l'emlleton stayed only for the week-
l\In 14, 1926
Issued by the students of the Virginia Episcopal School, Lynchburg, Va.,
semi-monthly during the session of 1925-26 Member of the School Federation
Subscription, 15 cents per copy; $1.75 per year . . .
Bo11·en.
Withrow singled and scored on an
VoL. X
R. B. EMBREE,
No. 14
the whole game, with the exception of the eighth inning, when they came JR..................................................................Editor-m-Chief Ifrom behind to score six runs, giving
-~B Barber, 2b. ........ 4
R H PO A E
Ed1tor-m-Ch1ef . . . Associate Editors
0 0
Boyd, 3b........... 5 0 0 2 2
A. B. PINKERTON AND B. Z. GoRDON................................Assistant Editors
W. B. DEw, JR.............................................................................News Editor
R. F. MASON, JR.....................................................................Athletic Editor
A. _K. LoFFLER, JR.........................................................................Meteorites an error. Gilaspie walked. Nichols
T. M. FORSYTH........................................................................Alumni Editor singled to left, filling bases, and
G. H. BoYD.................................................................... Circulation Manager i'lfichael tripled, scoring Gilaspie, Spruill, p. ........ 4 0 2 0 0 0
--------------------------------------------- Goode and Nichols. Lee was thrown x Payne ............ 1 0 0 0 0 0 out by Belt but l\Iichaels scored.
- - - 0 - - -
90 PER CENTERS STILL GOING STRONG
In spite of track, baseball, spring
F. E. BOWMAN
B. GilDERSLEEVE J.D .
N. T. GREEK, JR. READ
F. H. MILLER
Business Manager J. MOYLER, JR.
Faculty Adviser
MR. H. w. MATTFIELD, JR.
AB R H PO A Efe1·er,the80%listofthepastmonth
Yick, 3b........... ::l 0 1 1 1 1 was Yery creditable. The young in-
English, rf....... 3 0 0 0 0 1 tellectuals are Belt, CauS'ey, For-
Rosser, 2b......... 5 0 0 1 0 O syth, D., Gordon, B., Heald, Lamar,
\Yilliams, c. ...... ± 1 1 13 0 1 :.\Ioyler, Raymond, Read, J., and Withrow, S's. .... 4 3 1 4 6 1 Rl1ett.
Assistants
Parish flied out and Hogan fm1ned. In our half of the inning we made
a •1ice comeback. Barber singled. Boyd flied out to left and Barber "·as thrown out, hut Luck singled and stole second. Loffier doubled to cen-
ter, scoring Luck. i::louthall singled, advancing Loffier to third, and Lew- is singled, scoring Southall and Lof-
Totals ............42 7 9 30 14 8 R.-M. A.
EDITORIALS fler.
The game progressed in this way
Burkes,p.........4 1 2 2 2 0 Bowen,lb.........4 1 0 8 0 0 Graham, cf....... 5 0 1 1 0 0 Stanley, If......... 5 0 0 0 0 0
±
l\Ir. :Uattfield: "Little Boys should be seen and not heard."
Benjy: "\Yhat do you think I am, a movie actor ?"
HAIL! THE CHAMPIONS
until the 8ighth when Bedford came
from behind to score six points and
take the lead by a single tally. Par- When the track team, after taking the South Atlantic Championship ish singled and reached third on
at College Park, \1'011 the State Meet by a score nearly twice as great as Luck's error. Hogan singled, scar- that of its nearest competitor. a truly great season "'as brought to a perfect ing Parish. Wright sacrificed Ho-
Totals ............37 6 6 30 9 x batted for Barber in 9th.
close. In the course of two years, l\Ir. Costolo has deveIoped a team that
!!'an to second m1d he scored on Log- u
THE NEW IS HERE
.. ..
Designed especially for V. E. S.
wood's single. Goode singled to any school in the country would be proud to claim. However, although right. Gilaspie flied out. Nichols
the.great deal of credit should go to the head coach, the team itself and singled through short, filling the l'lfr.Johnston, the instructor in weight throwingalso deserve a vast amount bases. Michaels again showed up well of praise. Our champions have trained, practiced, and fought for us. "·ith the willow in a timely hit which
'I
- · oen o 1 '
· h · 'bl
The lea t that we can do Jt to S' ow them m every possi e way
th t
a we
droYe in three runs and placed lum fi t L ft ~r· h d
1on rs. ee, a er 11 IC1ae1 a scored, was walked but died on base A team such as ours is no every-day occurrence. It denotes months Ia second later when Parish struck
of labor and effort on the part of both the coaches and the members of out.
the team. We who have done so little towards winning the meets, have a Tn our half Y. E. i::l. rallied. Boyd
are grateful.
'cl Th e repai .
f was thrown out. Luck struck out. ere are many means o Loffi . d S tl all t · d t
commg from the school for wluch they have worked so faithfully. This singled, scoring Southall, and he is something that must be clone, but it is more or less taken for granted, himself crosserl the plate on an er- while other things are apt to be forgotten. Would not the track men ror. Pinkerton 1lierl out. .
appreciate real, personal, man-to-man congratulations, and would not In t~,~ mhnth tmnkmg Htogadn Lsm- .. . . .. gled."ngtsrue·ouanog- hearty cooperatiOn m their varwus tasks be even more pleasmg? Respect w·oou after numerous fouls followed
and thanks not so openly shown are often more effective than public felici- suit. Goode flied out to Barber, who tations in which every one engageS'. Since this is true, let us see if we seized the opportunity to make one cannot do something to make the remainder of the session lighter and of his thrilling catches.
·
great debt of gratitude that must
b
. . .
domg this.. One, of course, IS to award the tean1 tokens of remembrance, right field, scoring Loffier. Lewis
more pleasant for those whose efforts have placed the V. E. S. track team before any other in the South.
As a last word, let us not forget amid the fanfare of celebration, the boys who were unable to make letters, even though they worked as con- scientiously and hard as those who gained the monogram. These also deserve their share of the praise, and, since this is all they can get, let every one in school se·e that they receive the honor and respect that is
due them.
V. E. S. TRIUMPHS OVER R.-M. A.
00 00 00 00
~~
00 00 00 00
~~
00 00 00 00 00 eo 00
~~
00 ~~
The University of Virginia
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA
Edwin A. Alderman, President
"THE TRAINING GROUND OF ALL THE PEOPLE"
___
oeoeoeoeoeo•oeoeoeoeoeoe~o•oeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeo~~o.oeoeoeoeoe ~0 ~
,0,-
THE CHIV ALRY OF
o
TO-DAY The chivalry of to-day is but a sarcastic phrase.
Graham failed to make the
initial
~ ~i • o •i
~i i~
I, personally, am in favor of less democracy and more religron, a quality which is very essential to chivalry.
and Bowen geared as Stanley failed to make the first sack. Vick was
eo •o
ii J. P. Be11 Company g eo eo
~§
oe ~~
~~
" Dick"
Walcott,
mother was here on the week-end of the 25th.
ALUMNI VISITORS
VISITORS
On the 30th of April, Mr. and l\frs. Winborne (Dick's parents), l\Iaud, his' sister, and his aunt, Mrs.
~~ 00 00
Gamble, Jimmy
H eath,
Blakeman's
grand-
o• t 2
eo oeoeo• oeo• oeoeoeo.a• a.oeoeoeoeo.aeoeo.oeoeoeoeo• o• oeoeo• o.oeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeo.o.SI
--
~oe :g•oeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeo•o•o•oeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeo.aeoeoeoeoeoeo•o.aeoeoeo•oeoeoeo.~
The days of Knights and Cavaliers are past. No more does the man fight or look out for the
women and the weak.
The men of to-day think of nothing but money, the women of good
times and women's rights, and the children of prohibition and jazz. Each person has his own separate ambition, and he tries to carry it out despite the feelings of others.
In the face of this decline, however, in America to-day there is little
chivalry left in the South, less in the North and none at all in the West,
which is too democratic. Democracy and money are chivalry's worst Withrow fanned. Burkes singled enemies, for where democracy and "the money craze" come in, chivalry
goes out.
o• • o
li
o• ~
l\Irs.
o.oeo
Pinky was thrown out on the in- itial sack, and Gordon flied out to short stop. Spruill reached first but died there as Payne, batting for Barber, struck out.
English sillgled ; Ros:>er struck out. Williams flied to Boyd and English was put down by double
play, Boyd to Southall. Tenth Inning
Boyd struck out and Luck made first, then went to second on a pass- day, but ''Willy" himself. Drop in Mr. London was here last Sunday eel ball. Withrow caught Loffier's and see us again sometime, old boy. to visit his two sons. fly. Luck scored on an errot. Lew-
eoeo•oeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeo.oeoeoeo•oeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoe~ •oeoeoeoeoeo.oeoeoeoeoeoeoeo
Roy Knight, and Gordon Peyton
again ventured forth in their ever-
faithful university Fords, and
strange to say, arrived and weighed
anchor safely at V. E. S. last Fri- 1\"ood, motored from Norfolk to
day. Their visit was thoroughly en- Hollins by way of V. E. S. Dick joyed. j oined them here, and spent the It was beginning to look as if we week-end with them at Hollins, see-
would never again see our beloved ing May Day there.
PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS Mention "The Meteor"
- i t identifies you •
Billy West. However, they all come back sooner or later, and so who
l\Irs. Wilkinson was also a mem- ber of the party, but spent the week-
should come strolling up last Sun- end here with her son, "Billy."
failed to reach first. Graham sing- the score of 13 to 11. Belt pitched led aud Burk0~ ll'aS put out. Stan-
::l. defeated Bedford High School by
a nice game for the home team while Michaels 11'as easily the outstanding player of the visitors·. Belt helcl the Bedford team under his control for
ley fanned. One run. Summary
V. E. S.
them a one run lead. Summary of the Game
Luck, cf. .......... -± 3 2 3 0 0
Lotl-ler, rf. ........ 5 1 1 0 0 0 RECTOR SPEAKS TO BAPTISTS Lewis, lf. .......... ,) 1 2 0 1 2 Dr. Pendleton on the night of
Goode reached the initial sack on
Southall, lb..... 5 1 2 13 0 1 :1[ay lth, g~ne a talk to the Friend- Pinkerton, ss. .. 5 1 0 3 6 3 ~hij) class at the College Hill Bap-
ersmg1e. ou1 np1e o
IN CLOSE GAME
(Continued from page 1)
eel third as second baseman put out
Gordon. Spruill singled and reach- ed second, scoring Pinky and South- all. Barber reached first as Spruill died on third. Boyd was' thrown out on first. Two runs.
B:o•o•oeoeo•oea.o•oeoeoeoeoeo•o•oeoeoeoeoeoeoaoeo•o•o•oeoeoeo•o•o•oeo•oeoeoeo•oeoeo•oeoeo •o•oeoeoeoeoeo.oeoeoeoeoeo•o•o•oeo•oeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeo•o•o•o•oeoeo•o•o•o•o.aeoeo
and advanced on Bowen's single.
oe ~0
Two runs.
error. Burkes singled but Bowen
Gordon, c. ........ 4 0 0 7 1 O ti't Church.
oea.oeoeoeoe~a.oea.oeoeoea.o.oeoea.oeoeoeo•o•~
2 4
0 eJl(l. ')
"'
•o.a•oeo.a.o•oeo ~eoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeo•oeoeoeoeo~oeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeo~
•o~ sack. Stanley fanned and Vick oe o• 00 00
walked. Spruill hit English, ad- Yancing Vick. Rosser reached first, Williams flied out to Luck.
ooD printing is largely a ft ~~
Eighth Inning
i~
i~
il
matter of good taste. Good il
taste is knowing what to il
use, and as well, knowing what i*
Luck walked and went to second
as Loffier fanned. all struck out.
Lewis and South-
not to use, to promote effective- H eo •o
li
*i ness. 1;' ~ 00 00
oe
eo eo
oo ' ~- 000
Graham reached first and Burkes eo eo o• oe
thrown out at first. Ninth Inning
Two runs.
L YNCHBURG, VIRGINIA
---0,---
0