Page 51 - 1931 VES Meteor
P. 51
BISHOPS NET 5 FIRST DOWNS AS TIGER
GRIDSTERS GET TWO
(Continued from Page 1.)
dust. The absence of this pesti- lence facilitated the football a great cleal.
Captain Robert LaLance, full- back of the Garnet and White team, was the,outstanding player of the afternoon, being in all the important offensive plays of the Bishops and backing up their for- ward wall capably. Wollen of W. F. S., who was playing quar-
terback for his team, followed LaLance a close second for star- ring distinctions.
The game was exciting in every aspect, but only once did either team threaten to score. This was
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USE BOTH GROUND AND JERIAL ATTACK TO WIN 18-0
(Continued from Page 1.) no-gain. Bost took eight yards around end. LaLance gained two yards to complete the required yard- age.
At this point the cadets held and the ball went over. Luck, fullback for the Shenandoah Academy team, only made two feet through the Garnet forward wall. Arais, M., hit the line, but with less success than his teammate, as he was held for no gains. Luck punted to Richard Smither, V. E. S. quarterback. The remainder of the quarter was
marked by the frequent punts of both teams and by the line plung- ing of LaLance. S. V. A. failed to
gain a first down.
LaLance made the first counter
of the game early in the second quarter, after a succession of passes by him and Smither, R., which brought the Bishops to the 20-yard mark. The most spectacular of these passes was one from LaLance to Baskervill, W., substitute end for Fonnwalt, which netted twenty-five yards. The try for the extra point was not good.
S. V. A. decided to receive and
McNulty kicked for the Bishops. At
this point Shenandoah made their
initial first down on a well executed
pass from Luck to Taylor, H., which
was good for 180 yards. The at-
tack of the Cadets wilted here and
Rozell kicked the best punt of the
day, covering seventy-five yards. At
~his point kandolph, second string
quarterback, substituted for Smither
R. The half ended with the ball in .
S. V. A. territory in the Cadets' possession. Score: V. E. S., 6; S.
V. A., 0.
In the third quarter the Bishops
in thP
\. J
to \c.u
sPrnnd - ']Harter when •rl..eJ 't ay clown
\ 11;1rclstripe. I Ir,rt ·eclowns
pass.
.
(Contmued on Page 4.)
Jnterest.in the )1o.b.by was further Terriers, plunged over the goal line. ment was go!}d. heightened by the announcement Clagett ·tried an off-tackle run f01 'V. -:£. S., 0. lJ
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and then LaLance tnecl to kick a
field goal, but failed. !he Bishops managed to hold thetr opponents
well away from the goal through- BOST, V. E. S. HALFBACK, MAKING A LONG RUN AROUND END IN THE WOODBERRY
out the game.
McNulty kicked off to open the
game. Wollen returned seven yards with the ball before he was
clowned. In the next play a Wood-
berry back fumbled and Form- of the Lynchburg Junior Stamp
BABY BISHOPS TAKE fiRST OF TWO TILTS
FACULTY BIOGRAPHY
(Continued From Page 2.)
at the University of Tennessee, be-
ing in the same graduating class as Mr. Joseph Banks. Mr. and Mrs. Banks have a daughter, Margaret Moorman, nine years old. During the summers of 1927, '28, and '29 Mr. Banks worked at the Univer- sity of Virginia for a Master of Arts degree in Eng:ish literature,
which he obtained.
Mr. Banks is now the faculty ad-
viser of THE METEOR. He takes a great deal of interest in this organi- zation, and all those who are in any way connected with THE METEOR are very grateful to him for his services. Mr. Banks has two hob- bies: Hi s work bench and his music. In thi s latter connection he is choir master and plays the organ in the Langhorne Memorial Chapel.
The game with Fort Hill was un- returned the kick to the forty-two cloubtedly the hardest fought mid- yard line. The Bishop's first pass- Lynchburg. The collections are to get game so far witnessed on the Smither, R., to Formwalt-was in-
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INTERESTED COLLECTORS VISIT JUNIOR CLUB
LAST MINUTE JERIAL ATTACK BRINGS V. E. S.
FROM BEHIND TO SCORE
(Continued from Page 1.)
(Continued from Page 1.)
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awarded the owners of the best the Parksters. Fishburne kicked off to Young, who
.unior stamp collections around J
be judged by their neatness to a P"reat extent and not by the com-
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V. E. S. field this year. V. E. S. complete. Two complete passes Bost kicked off to Captain Justice of to Young, gave the locals first down
pleteness. Many of the V. E. S. boys have announced their intention
iveFmonl-~ DRY CLEANING and
DYE WORKS Unvarying quality
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See our V. E. S. Representative
(Continued on Page 4.)
and the ball on the Cadet's twenty-
five yard line. Another pass, Smither to Formwalt, placed the pigskin on . the visitors' seventeen-
yard stripe. The next pass was in- complete, but Bost passing to
ISmither, R., put the ball on the
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V. E. S. JEWELRY Make This Your
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VISIT
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Football, Baseball, Basketball, Track, Tennis and Soccer
ALSO
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FOREST GAME, AT ORANGE, VA. --------------- ------
walt, V. E. S. right end, covered Club, where another meeting was Win Opener From Miller Park,
the ball. LaLance and Banff were held similar to the one held at But Lose to Fort Hill
held for no gain. LaLance kicked v. E. s. They were amply rewarded
to Wollen who was downed by for, Clyde Jennings, one of the The V. E. S. Midgets lost their Martin hit the line for two
Formwalt on his own twenty- V. E. S. students, was elected presi- second game of the season to Fort yards; Dutrow went off tackle for yard marker. W. F. S. immediate- dent, and he has fair prospects to Hill 13-7 after defeating Miller six; a pass was incomplete, but on Iy kicked bac~ to the .V. E. S. make a good one. Mr. Dietz, of Park 6-0 in the first game. Good- the next play 1Martin hit the tackle forty-yard stnpe. ~here were no Richmond, nationally famous as a win, captain of the Baby Bishops, for ten yards and a first down. Mar- spectacular plays 111 the rest of., stamp man, spoke in Lynchburg, was outstanding in both games, tin gained a scant yard over guard the quarter except a pa~s from, and several of the boys as well as while Leigh also showed up well. and two yards across tackle while
LaLance to Formwalt whtch net~ 1
a good sized crowd were fortunate In the Miller Park game, the only on the next play, he broke off tackle enough to hear a real authority on a score came in the second quarter for the remaining seven yards and popular and ever growing pastime. when Captain Goodwin, of the tiny touchdown. H is kic . :r-•n 1 'are-
ted eleven yards and a first do\\ n. and a twelve-yar~ broken. field by Wollen after mterceptmg a
e~:;ion of the :<1 .,....,st ·of th time, and 1 .d the advantag i
~·core: . ; \ " s , 7 ; that a few valuable prizes are to be the extra point, but was held by With only fi>e miH'Jtes t p ay,
cpt pos
yardage a!Jd m·ct do vib. Iht~
The Cadets started a drive from the V. E. S. twenty-five yard line, where Young had punted outside.
and SCHLOSS BROS. CLOTHES
WILLS-CAMP COMP ANY Incorporated
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"The Daylight Corner"
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.-a~ marked by several ! 'ls. e with LaLance doing the tossing and by this route and his plunges the ball was advanced to the S. V. A. five-yard line.
At the beginning of the last quar- (Continued on Page 4.)
Cadet five-yard line and another first down. Here Johnny Bost hit the line twice for six yards and on
the third play he smashed through guard for one yard and a touch- down. A short pass from Bost to Smither, R., netted the extra point. Score: V. E. S., 7; F. M. S., 7.
There was just enough time for another kick-off, Y oung kicking to Martin, who returned the kick
to his own forty-yard line as the game ended.
V. E. S. gained only forty-eight yards from scrimmage while Fish- burne amassed one hundred and fif- teen yards via the same route. The Bishops attempted eight passes and
completed six, while the Cadets (Continued on Page 4.)
perioJ

