Page 29 - 1954 VES Meteor
P. 29
Alumni Letter
(Continued from poge 14, col. I)
l~d with anybody from YES for years ..~s indirect. One of my senior stu- dents last semester turned out to be ·he daughter of a YES man, a fellow ·amed Houghton who was even be- Tore my time there. He sent me a 'Tlessage through his daughter that iES was still there and functioning.
did hear of Mr. Ladd's death. What of Mr. Mattfield? I heard that \e had left. Did he ever return? What about Mr. Banks and Mr. Bond? And *ho is headmaster (or rector?) now?
I hope that this letter finds your ·amily well. Would you convey to ·hem my very best wishes.
Sincerely,
PAT. (Patrick W. Riddleberger)
Ole Astrologer
(Continued from poge 5, col. 3)
and neat. "It must be Kimball," says ·he old man. But it turns out to be Brooke. " BROOKE?" BA TH? Say, ;omething's wrong here.
C. C. is throwing something away. What is it? Oh, yeah, it's that picture of Rosenbluth. C . C . must still eat 'P Wapp-eh Mapp.
The "great" P. Bubbles is not talk- ng about himself, and Baby Bunche 1 bragging for a change. How odd.
Two figures are sitting under a tree, drinking "soda." They pat each other on the back. They must be good friends. Hmmm! It's Hose and Mr. G. This time the old man is sure some- body slipped him a mickey.
Bunche and Mr. F. come up and G. and Hose. Looks like Bunche and F. are on good terms again. Won- der why?
Suddenly a whole parade of events passes by the old man:
Dr. B. confiscates Mr. M.'s demerit pad.
Hose Nose drinks water for a change.
Mr. G. buys a new tie as Dirty Don b u y s a s e t o f b r a c e s f o r h i s rubber legs.
The Texas Kid gets his suit cleaned ~nd borrows a pair of pants from Compbell until his suit gets back.
The old man is by now so befud- dled that he doesn't know what's coming off until he sees J O J O heading his way. Mr. B. bumps into the old man and hastens away. The Old Astrologer opens up the notes that were crammed into his hand, ~nd says: April fool!
WHO'S WHERE
(Continued from poge 14, col. 3)
Archibald Henderson, Jr., 721 East Franklin St., Chapel Hill, N. C.
Capt. C. M. Henkel, Jr., P. 0. Box 761, Groves, Texas
Richardson Hillier, St. Andrews School, Middletown, Del.
Walter E. Holberton, 218 Jepiter Road, R. F. D. 3, North Star, Newark, Dela. William Eugene Holmes, Timber Ridge, Va.
Alfred Edward Hopkinson, P. 0. Box 141, Lynchburg, Va.
Robert T. Hubard, Hampden-Sydney College, Hampden-Sydney, Va. James L. Hutcheson, Boydton, Va.
Stewart D. Johnstone, 4106 Greenridge Rd., Pittsburgh 34, Pa.
lvey Foreman Lewis, 1729 Johnson Rd., Petersburg, Va.
William Tunstall Long, 705 Riverside Drive, Lynchburg, Va.
Dr. Hunter McClung, P. 0. Box 1160, Lexington, Va.
Howard A. Mayo, 1516 Clairmont Drive, Druid Hill, Hendersonville, N. C. Wharton Mellor, 1995 Foothill Rd., Santa Barbara, Calif.
Caskie Norvell, II, Stonewall Jackson Hotel, Staunton, Ya.
William C. Pitt, Jr., 1603 Longview, Tarboro, N. C.
Francis H. Pretlow, 310 Bank St., Suffolk, Va.
Robert N. Rust, Jr., 301 N. Edgewood St., Arlington, Va.
Paschal G. Shooi, Jr., Rt. 13, Box ISO, Birmingham 9, Ala.
G. Gordon Shurtleff, 207 West Fifth St., Lynn Haven, Fla. Thomas W. Smith, Ill, A. V. Rio Branco 137-9, Caixa Postal. 160,
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
W. Byrd Smith, P. 0. Box 53, Rehoboth Beach, Del.
Francis J. Snook, 244 Addison Place, Paramus, N. J. Cornelius H. Sullavan, Jr., 728 Westover Ave., Norfolk 7, Va.
Warner L. Tabb, Jr., 3042 Pine Needle Rd., Augusta, Ga. Lamar S. Wilkinson, 1349 Graydon Ave., Norfolk, Va.
W. Conroy Wilson, Rt. I, Boyer, Va.
John P. Withers, 200 Norwood, Allenhurst, N.J.
Dan 0. Worthington, Ivy, Va.
Richard Wright, 210 N. Hubbard Lane, Louisville, Ky.
>R THE METEOR
15
SPORTS
So, once again, the old man leaves the campus to the sound of "Aloha" a n d u k e l e l e s , a n d a s t h e YES b e e r ~arden fades out of sight, he looks homeward towards his stellar Willa rd
Inn; there to retire for another month.
Bishops In Double Win
Virginia Episcopal School checked a long streak of losses on the road by blasting A. M. A. 60-37 at Fort De- fiance. Augusta was held to one point in the first period, and V. E. S. led 26-14 at the half.
The Bishops, led by Jim Woolery's 14 points, had no trouble whatsoever in solving A. M.A.'s man-to-man de- fense, and three people hit in double figures. Behind W oolery in the scor- ing column were Blair Farinholt with 13 and Shaw Smith with I0. Brent Nash and Jerre Parker, although held down on the scoring, played great games off the boards. Guards Bob Atherholt and Deac Daughtry turned in 8 points apiece and good floor
games.
In the preliminary game pitting the
JV squads of the schools, the Bishops again won going away, 54-28, as Ranny Turner hit for 20 points. Mel- vin Long, George Ross, Head Rollins, and Fat Man played exceptionally good ball, and Pete Way turned in his usual brilliant performance under the boards. Elvey Thomas, although held down on the scoring for the first time this season, played an outstand- ing floor game.
The box: V. E. S.
Smith, f
Forinholt, f ...... Porker, f ....... Moye, f ........ Lowson,c Nosh,c......... Woolery, g Atherholt, g ..... Doughtry, g . . . .
G F PF TP 42I 10
534 13
0I5 I 003 0 0 2 0 2
2 4 2 2
0 5 4 6 3 14 4 4 8 4 I 8
Totols ........ 19
A.M.A. GFPFTP
Cox, f ......... 3 Clements, f . . . . 2 Fletcher, c ...... 3 Genou, g ...... I Boch, g ........ 0 Beomwell, g .... 0
Totols ........1.9
5 5 II I 2 5 7 3 13 0 I 2 I 3 I 4 3 4
18 17 36
22 26 60