Page 50 - 1928 VES Meteor
P. 50
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mPnl of thPSP rull's has been points in th e lead. Th e second half • 1n1s c·rammed full of tllfillS'. It saw
Game Opens
The exchange of kicks at the open- Peacock shunted off tackle for the
I
1/.Pir guPs/., thpreby causing dis-
oppointmPnt.~. TltP strict enforce- 1\"ith the C'herry ancl Black team six ing au equal number.
home team, expecting a pass, called First Downs- E. H. S., 9; V. E. time out. When play was resumed, s., 8.
JlETEORITES GO TO THE PEAKS OF OTTER
{Continued from page 1)
m,mnttunet't", the temperature being so that usually he entered seemingly
about twcnt) uegrees aml the wind lle~erted villages. In a country like
THE METEOR the E. II. S. 25-yarcl mark. It saw
l'eacock sidestep and e,·ade hall of the Alexandria team on a +0-yard
Sackett for no gain.
E. H. S. began
I
in the state, Barber and Darden, hit
him from opposite sides at the 11ame
time. The charging V. E. l;, line
held ancl Saekctt kicked a low one down the sideline. Peacock swooped clown, macle a baseball pick-up of the
bein" >Jbout :;ixty miles an hour in
a play that hushed the noisy E..H.8. stands for almost a whole half-nun- ute. '!'he second half also saw P ea-
Shuford Tallies
Chenoweth almost went over for oval aning built a hot burning has to take everything to be used on fir~. and >ing cooke. or will he heard on this earth •
one ,·illage, there wa~ an enormous thirty yards to Barber, ouly to have crowd of natives gathered around the Shuford protect the E. H. S. goal door of his hut. When a keel what with a neat tackle.
P eacock hit guard for
With two min- pass in Barber's clirection, but
a!!alll.
' Came the dawn-and after view-
:3-±-yard line.
three yards, and then Maybank came through with an 8-yard profit. Each
Sac·kett nailed Barber for 110 gain
i n thP
.·t udent here may be r1sked to
scnmmage.
With his line holding firmly in
p't. the three trola. which he took along on his Hoxton Field. Ann it saw a for- philo,.opher~ ~ettled down to a grand trips for amusement, was perhap ward pass go just out of Barber's and glorious bull d'S:,ion the like of the first one the natives had ever reach with a clear field ahead of which in all probability never has, seen or heard. He said that in two him, and then saw Peacock call for minutes after he hacl started it, in the same play, hurling the oval
for a 32-yard gain.
utes to play, Peacock flipped another
in!!' the scenery, the Lle·cent was be-
gun, in which a new trail was blazed they thought of the machine, the V. E. S. Makes Six First Downs
near the sidelines after the two had team .fumbled in turn and the bish- raced parallel to the 1ine of scrim-
the home team.
was nullified by the deadly tackling return. \Yith the ball on the High
ot the Y. E. S. ends, Barber and School's 35-yard mark, JJuck, May- Score by periods;
Darden, and Peacock's long runbacks bank, and Peacock gained seven V. E. 8. ........................ 0 0 0 0-0
runback of one of Sackett's kicks mark. for the longest run of the afternoon,
of the prettiest shoestring p1ck-ups
touchdown. Barber neatly blockecl Sackett's kick for the extra point.
An Aroused Team
Luck returned Steves' kickoff 20 yards, brushing off four tacklers be- fore he was brought to earth on the
'down the mountain side, cutting off natives replied that they thought
se>eral miles. The party finally that there a little devil inside the By tallying six f-irst downs to one yard mark. An exchange of punts pass to Barber on the E. H. S. 15-
reached their summer hawn, V. E. instrument who was flogged and in- for Episcopal High in the second left the ball on the 22-yard line. yard mark went for nothing when
R. and finLhed strong. spired to sing when one turned the crank.
Notice The Bishop's talk was very inter- e:;ting and gave a very good idea of In order to prereni embarra.ss- \rhat the Episcopal Church is doing 1/tent on the occasion of r. E. 8. in Liberia, in the way of missionary
rianc THE ~IETEOR has been work and medical work. His talks asked to publi.sh, for the benefit are mainly to interest people in this
half, the V. E. S. team almost macle Another exchange put it on the 20- the ball bounded off his hands to
up their rivals' big margin of 8-2 in yard line. As the half elllled Glas- Hubbard, an ineligible man. Dizzy
the first half. However, the \lex- rock and an Epi copal High ulayer from the volume of the airworks, E.
audria.ns made two sustained drives, were both on the ball at miclfiel'/J. H. S. was killing time at midfield by
while V. E. S. was able to put Early in the third period V. E. S. line play. as the final whistle blew.
ing bi;,;hops until after the first half marred the contest, both sides draw- called a split formation, and the Touchdown-Schuforcl.
························•****************************
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Agents for
BRADLEY SWEA TERS
HALLOWE'EN AT V. E. S. IS TREMENDOUS SHINE
•I
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•
•
and
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IRJJ!JF£1111
*
Referee, Goff (Jfichigan) ; Um- pire, Trapnell (Army); Headlines- Peacock intercepted a pass from man, Edmund (Ohio) ; Time of
~ within ten yards of the visitors' goal. ~ Three plays netted 8 yards, and then
More Airworks
~ackett on the V. E. S. 28-vard line QuarterR, 12 minutes.
*
YA.
T HERE'S
way about the brim of
this new Knox "Cheney." Snap it down and it dips di~tinctly. Snap it up and it curves with a flair. That'• because it hu a deep curled brim that both new and smart, $8. Other Hatl with labd of Knox to $40.
nothing
half·
•
together only two first clowns. E. H. got the ball and started a real at- S. scored her victory on her attack tack of their own. Luck ancl Peacock
in the initial part of the struggle, gained six yards apiece off guard. for Chenoweth's 35-yard run in the A short aerial to s from Peacock to fourth quarter was their only f1rst Maybank gave a second first down clown in the entire second half. In aml put the oval on the E. H. S.
Line-up and summary:
r.E. S. Pos. E. H. S.
Barber ..............r.e................... Quin Brown ..............r.t................... Coles Hamner ............r.g............. Brookins Hobbs ................c. Witherspoon (C)
Glascock ............l.g................... Holt Deyerle ..._..........Lt................... Okie Darden ..............I.e................. Steves
far away country with its uncivilized native . Did he have any success? Did he interest you?
FIRST HALF DRIVE SINKS VIR- GINIA EPISCOPAL AT ALEX- ANDRIA, .AND EPISCOPAL HIGH WINS, 6-0
(Continued from page 1)
Pnd or on the nights a dance is of the contest, V. E. S. shO\Yecl up Luck in punting. 'l'his advantage ing like a demon, for a 40- yard Luck ..................f.b............... Sackett
of the alumni, the follou·ing rules which u:ill govern these erents:
1. Excepting alumni no visi- tors (ladies or gentlemen) not in- riled through the r. E. S. Hop
Committee u·ill be permitted to
this half the V. E. S. linemen out-
2G-yard mark. Sackett intercepted
charged the
tackle after tackle behind the line of
.
enemy lin e,
a Y. E. S. pass.
through for a pretty tackle and Sackett punted. Again the Alex- andrians intercepted a pass and then
getting
ops had the ball on their own +0- mage fighting for the ball. A final
Here Hamner broke
After Capt. Patteson
(Continued from page 1)