FcbtyAcet N - Phillipian Archivespdf.phillipian.net/1971/11171971.pdf · -Anove won the third...

6
N, ~ - Exeter Pblice -7 ... Odov r-O -4 * (See~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ) November 17, 1971 "New Attitude' Causes act~ty~ Chooses Five o Aid In e~ction Of' Headase DecfineinA4piain . n~~ Tr-uste members will meet with the ne ly-elected WICATIONS , DECLI~~~~~~~~~E .20 PE CENT ~~~~~Facilty dvisory Committee to the Tru tee Head- Paid" applications to P~~~~~~~~~ have dropped by ~~~~to discu s various aspects of headmaste selection. 20 percent since last year, i according to Dirbctor ~~~~The ele tion of English instructors William Brown - Applicants so far (comparel to 657 at the same Hm odadRcadPees ai eno time last year) 'is up from this August, when the IJsipsl the loss s pirnarily one ofi students from publicinio lndymrngthcmite etdM. lkather than piv~te schools. -'wn 3cairman and discussed briefly he uc6in- New Caution Ing Stud nt Headmastershmitelip ns Mr. Sides commented th t a new attitude of Sixteen PA upers will ,parti ipac inti igs Washington Inier Po- cor tur Ac fn HeadmasterSi nHye caution on the part of appl ca'nts has caused ther gram.,- (Left to right, top row) eschs, Ehrl h Morin, awrcnc , Meller, thoQ n o ci~HamatrSmo * dcrease. Students applying no longer rush into Jordan, Standish, Johnston. Bo torn row) o r, Sumner, Sommetfield, Fox, the'two groups will hold no further nme ngs until 4decision, Several years ag~, when the ratio bet- Hatton, Ferris, Sheahan, Aronowi th arlt.di y omte hstm t dfn *een applicants and thdse , ccepted was ne to iTn thQ I nat re of headmastership Mr" flyde' alsci seven, people attempted ~ apply early. Ti J..i e UpJp :rs Ti4 o artc pa e as~erted that the committee has' it yet stablished pressure no longer exists: - - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~its e"' c role in review ing spcic cand dates and A lack of. prental pressu're is another factor t, ~ ~ ,~i- h its tatus' in this respect will evolve fom future that late applications, some f which arrive after Sixteen upper middlers will' verk, c mmented that out of 42 hN it's eetlng on Monday, the committe discussed the anuary 1 deadline, have become commonplace. participate in jhe Washin ton final applicants, far more thafie t ducmn lcinofre tdn mse TFhis trend points toward an increase in later ap- Internship Program this sung 16'ered to be srongly quommit e and its subsequent importat ce as an p 'liations whc EAstdnsih deatetav cosdrinto adia will compete for five postiti n' on the Recruiting Program ofieso nited Statesisen tors the a plucants' over-all ca eic tuntdioyCm teenelcosoay M.Sides plans to counter the admissions problem awdebiso h os o efracs h odt Thec mittee will meet aii today order to wihthree major steps which he, has already Representatives in order to Iral in fHistory 30, general i-e od, t tepsto t iltk hncnern initiated. The admissions office is presently striving abuthoprinofhefdial oeasr reomndto with te trustees this Saturday. Each m mber will -m ones. maycompensate or the lackof term, Thse students ill ork In el cting . piyiregy lo they restnof thof studnttopinios ndpsenti Ts upgrade v'ariou pbiahns about the school government. antici ated lt nintere t inetoth eto an'thus reshape Andover's- image. Secondly, Ad- Andoverie elaevsicioiantbsiinovthei politicc missions Officer James G.[ Leaf andlyop Alurmnindve n - Secretary Joh H.Odnrcnl ordteU Ite p-ogi-am, whc sol pi'to As f lastyaAdvrn tion ofi a adatler.gtheincommiee to 'en daiscussi stesreruJting.student aecntlsetinge the sted uppeirs taking American His oiy longe- c~ i-eres its, Washirigton tnevei asdar at gt uiforde to ctaiteair sttsI eriigsuet n stigtesae 30, include Geoffi-ey fAro oW, iniern to attpnd a summer se~rin mrt riea nfr n opst ai for the Studen-t Alumni Assocition to cnplete re- ichael lI eschloss, leu ELhr ich, to mke up'~ spring term c urse of agreement compatible to the opinions of all the cruiting work. Fnally, the admissions office has tried Chri Ferris, Robin Foster' N ike credit -hbut expects the students mn~e h omteewl umtt pno to' appeal to the applicant himself rather than his Fox, Greg H-attoli, Ned Joins onl,- to ma c uip missed credits drn to th tr stees for disc'ussion.' paients; a radical change from several years ago. Fred Jordan, Rogei Lwec. tereior year, Interns wil live Peter Moirin, lleiiiy Mellpr, nn- 'in a comtyo n t ,cAmpuS of P ILO WI 'S N U L NEXT PHILLIPIAN -ON, DECEMBER 8 - ~Sommerfield, Casey Shea a, the N tional Cathedral School or J,.- 1 Ut A NEXT HILLPIAN-OR ECEM ER 8 Myles Standish, and. Ge rge giils. I D -EBATEi- TO~UTUNiA 1 %T -Because a large part of the student body is Sumner Started by Exeteir leaving before Phillipian's normal publication date AbilitN and Intcrest' - Iip5 xtr cdm -next Wednesday, the next issue will appear- on History insti-uctor, Mr. Dor al~d init'iated-the Washington Intenhp -~- - Wednesday, December 8 The paper will cover Gardnei, dinector of the Wash g Progrpam in 1966 and PA became - ' __ all impor tant activities o the inteivenihg period~ ton Internship Progiam for Ai o a co-sponsor in 1969. 4Stephen Wins ., - FcbtyAcet N \'Fist Prize In hpsayWe, Phlip cademy's faculty, meeting on November D raper Cont~~~~~~~~s I ~~9, appiove the evised report of the February- Week Draper Contest ~~~~~~~~~~~~Committel.1 The group also discussed the role of >eu aetdAdvrdbt em 1f orgt Lower John Stephen took first "-n reotswich teachers write at the e d of the! fall imefae noe eae'em J-t'orgt place inthe 105h annua Dra~ e and sprin r . D Suisman, upper Ned ohnston, ecniorMark Prize Declamation Contest in Bl- Februar~ 1%eek Guidelines Bro n,.a uppcr Arnon Mishkin. finch Hall last Monday Steps en ~~~~~~~~~~~Aftei a lngthy discussion, faculty emnbersi ep- - Anove won the third annuql Philo athean In- recited Jonathan Swift's "A od-' dorsel a ceries of twelve guidelines jubmitted by vitational Debate Tournam'fent last Sunday Iin Morse etProosl"astrwhcad the Febiu ry Week Committee to govb rn Febr uary Hall.,-' Drpmatically reversing last ye 's debate vocates anrqabalism as a rerndy Week this year.' resuliis, PA placed first out of a field f n e schools. for tl~e -hbuii'dance of children in - , The ma or contenuio of the gudlnsis that Onf,.th~ affirmative team, upper Ne' Johtist England. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~February Week pe ts (whehi rou or in- plcq i~t'and senior Doug Suisman t ok se~od Look Back in Anger - ~~~~~~~~~~dividual, 'whether oc puls o ~ off-campus) shiould a~'i rk Brown received second lace ~asa Senior Charles Dough~~~~~~~~~~~~rty won ' ~~~~~have anl educationl oal, demanding total in- nega h've peaker. second prize for his petrformance - o te tuenes( iitngPoultindrot 'A rin to the iep i-t every project should at n topic of the debate was "e vd hat of John Osborne's "Look Backlin Loe -,frt co I utrlo ntie~a Anger", in which he orta~~~LowerJohn Stephen t'o k frt least "e 4 ttimullating in ~one luaoritlelU Con s shoul1 ake steps to limit popul tion -an ngry mn whoh he as place in this ycar's Draper Pize Dc- manner-, ivolv a ttalv new or srnestito r " eaieadafraieei f~ an anry mn wh, whn hewas lamaion ontct. o conr taiboik -ea eal - xpe4ience in eve- ,school had one hour for each of four debates. ter'n et.- cutbfr en et cdt h indivi dualts gro%th r elf-awai-eness, or o e St. -aul's, Exeter, Middlesex, Loor is, BaverI. - ~Third prize went to upper Ned death.' of service to others.'! ' C~ountr-Day, Belmont Hill,'Lawrence Academy ad lohnston fo his delivey of 'a se Classics Instructor Alasn Gilling- '[he app roved gideline require that every prbiject Der'eld finished behind PA. -,op ~ffirmativie lection froim Edward Albee's "Zoo ham, modern language i ivsn hae a f culty' ad~iso- or - spo'nso'r who wil I "in spI~si h oraet nldd~elJhso Story". n Johnson's- reital~ a chairman IJames Grew ail Eng- son-ec imae at his 1 discretion evaluate tho success and-- boug Suisiflan of PA, Exdter d aters R. '- I youngman, i an atempt t c~m- ish Fellow John Faggi, J n. were of those projects h sponsors." TheI facultyI also Fi ~~adN aot n .Bono municate ~vith eople, tries to the udges for the contest Eng- decided t each student spend a minimum of Law dlie Judges named PA debaters Mrk Brokvn cmerrtoaterm with dog.est lish Department Chairman Willianm three hour! daily put-suing his poject.' and lArnon Mishkin, M. Hawkins q Beaver Birown served as Presiding Judge., Teacher Rports Colin t" Day, and B. Ferguson of Exe er as the John Brown's Body Arthur j1. WcntWorih TI-i facly al dscssed the uses of tauher top r eX-ative speakers.I Senior g&'sell Graham, and Se- Last year, James Bakker, Jr. repoits. :ig eamster Simeon 1 Hyde, Jr. 'He iotnaster Simeon Hyde presehted th Acver nioi Jonathan Tucker also com- '71, Gary Gittelson '72, and Russel commuente 'hthd ecSion served to "reaffirm teamn ?,,ith the fir~t place trophy i n awards I -~~~~~~~~ cited General George Patton's Bakker recited H. F. Ellis' "Ar- 'reports to fcv savc for counselors. lie aded, Room.:'Tournarnent Chairman Jhn Hof man. and, speech to his troops be fore the thur J. Wentworth, Bacheloi of "writing eports makes teachers thinklmr alout Philo president Russell Graham cornducte theday's invasion of Europe, a humorous Arts," which depicts the comical their stud nts than Iimply giving then~ oeg-d. acti ti. ad confidant talk to World War chain of events which led to Went- Mi-. Hyde cautioned, howver, that counselors ms noe'Udfae II soldiers. Tucker related Stop- worth's throwing an object at one l'egard te cher reports in light' of everything es atxa out I o a field of 1I schools, P -finished hen' Vin'cent B3enet's "Johnl Browns of his students and knocking him' known ab ut a stud(ent because they are sometimes in eih& lc.IThis year, however, the PA team Body", a slave's speech to the out.! useless an csily sunderstood. went udfae in the tournament.

Transcript of FcbtyAcet N - Phillipian Archivespdf.phillipian.net/1971/11171971.pdf · -Anove won the third...

Page 1: FcbtyAcet N - Phillipian Archivespdf.phillipian.net/1971/11171971.pdf · -Anove won the third annuql Philo athean In- recited ...

N, ~ -

Exeter Pblice -7 ... Odov r-O -4

* (See~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~age ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~(e'rg )

November 17, 1971

"New Attitude' Causes act~ty~ Chooses Five o AidIn e~ction Of' HeadaseDecfineinA4piain . n~~

Tr-uste members will meet with the ne ly-electedWICATIONS , DECLI~~~~~~~~~E .20 PE CENT ~~~~~Facilty dvisory Committee to the Tru tee Head-Paid" applications to P~~~~~~~~~ have dropped by ~~~~to discu s various aspects of headmaste selection.

20 percent since last year, i according to Dirbctor ~~~~The ele tion of English instructors William Brown -

Applicants so far (comparel to 657 at the same Hm odadRcadPees ai enotime last year) 'is up from this August, when the IJsipsl

the loss s pirnarily one ofi students from publicinio lndymrngthcmite etdM.lkather than piv~te schools. -'wn 3cairman and discussed briefly he uc6in-New Caution Ing Stud nt Headmastershmitelip ns

Mr. Sides commented th t a new attitude of Sixteen PA upers will ,parti ipac inti igs Washington Inier Po- cor tur Ac fn HeadmasterSi nHyecaution on the part of appl ca'nts has caused ther gram.,- (Left to right, top row) eschs, Ehrl h Morin, awrcnc , Meller, thoQ n o ci~HamatrSmo* dcrease. Students applying no longer rush into Jordan, Standish, Johnston. Bo torn row) o r, Sumner, Sommetfield, Fox, the'two groups will hold no further nme ngs until4decision, Several years ag~, when the ratio bet- Hatton, Ferris, Sheahan, Aronowi th arlt.di y omte hstm t dfn*een applicants and thdse , ccepted was ne to iTn thQ I nat re of headmastership Mr" flyde' alsciseven, people attempted ~ apply early. Ti J..i e UpJp :rs Ti4 o artc pa e as~erted that the committee has' it yet stablished

pressure no longer exists: - - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~its e"' c role in review ing spcic cand dates andA lack of. prental pressu're is another factor t, ~ ~ ,~i- h its tatus' in this respect will evolve fom future

that late applications, some f which arrive after Sixteen upper middlers will' verk, c mmented that out of 42 hN it's eetlng on Monday, the committe discussedthe anuary 1 deadline, have become commonplace. participate in jhe Washin ton final applicants, far more thafie t ducmn lcinofre tdn mseTFhis trend points toward an increase in later ap- Internship Program this sung 16'ered to be srongly quommit e and its subsequent importat ce as anp 'liations whc EAstdnsih deatetav cosdrinto adia will compete for five postiti n' on the

Recruiting Program ofieso nited Statesisen tors the a plucants' over-all ca eic tuntdioyCm teenelcosoayM.Sides plans to counter the admissions problem awdebiso h os o efracs h odt Thec mittee will meet aii today order towihthree major steps which he, has already Representatives in order to Iral in fHistory 30, general i-e od, t tepsto t iltk hncnerninitiated. The admissions office is presently striving abuthoprinofhefdial oeasr reomndto with te trustees this Saturday. Each m mber will-m ones. maycompensate or the lackof term, Thse students ill ork In el cting . piyiregy lo they restnof thof studnttopinios ndpsenti Tsupgrade v'ariou pbiahns about the school government. antici ated lt nintere t inetoth etoan'thus reshape Andover's- image. Secondly, Ad- Andoverie elaevsicioiantbsiinovthei politicc

missions Officer James G.[ Leaf andlyop Alurmnindve n- Secretary Joh H.Odnrcnl ordteU Ite p-ogi-am, whc sol pi'to As f lastyaAdvrn tion ofi a adatler.gtheincommiee to 'en daiscussistesreruJting.student aecntlsetinge the sted uppeirs taking American His oiy longe- c~ i-eres its, Washirigton tnevei asdar at gt uiforde to ctaiteairsttsI eriigsuet n stigtesae 30, include Geoffi-ey fAro oW, iniern to attpnd a summer se~rin mrt riea nfr n opst aifor the Studen-t Alumni Assocition to cnplete re- ichael lI eschloss, leu ELhr ich, to mke up'~ spring term c urse of agreement compatible to the opinions of all thecruiting work. Fnally, the admissions office has tried Chri Ferris, Robin Foster' N ike credit -hbut expects the students mn~e h omteewl umtt pnoto' appeal to the applicant himself rather than his Fox, Greg H-attoli, Ned Joins onl,- to ma c uip missed credits drn to th tr stees for disc'ussion.' paients; a radical change from several years ago. Fred Jordan, Rogei Lwec. tereior year, Interns wil live

Peter Moirin, lleiiiy Mellpr, nn- 'in a comtyo n t ,cAmpuS of P ILO WI 'S N U LNEXT PHILLIPIAN -ON, DECEMBER 8 - ~Sommerfield, Casey Shea a, the N tional Cathedral School or J,.- 1 Ut ANEXT HILLPIAN-OR ECEM ER 8 Myles Standish, and. Ge rge giils. I D -EBATEi- TO~UTUNiA 1 %T

-Because a large part of the student body is Sumner Started by Exeteir leaving before Phillipian's normal publication date AbilitN and Intcrest' - Iip5 xtr cdm

-next Wednesday, the next issue will appear- on History insti-uctor, Mr. Dor al~d init'iated-the Washington Intenhp -~- -Wednesday, December 8 The paper will cover Gardnei, dinector of the Wash g Progrpam in 1966 and PA became - ' __

all impor tant activities o the inteivenihg period~ ton Internship Progiam for Ai o a co-sponsor in 1969.

4Stephen Wins ., - FcbtyAcet N\'Fist Prize In hpsayWe,

Phlip cademy's faculty, meeting on NovemberD raper Cont~~~~~~~~s I ~~9, appiove the evised report of the February- Week Draper Contest ~~~~~~~~~~~~Committel.1 The group also discussed the role of >eu aetdAdvrdbt em 1f orgtLower John Stephen took first "-n reotswich teachers write at the e d of the! fall imefae noe eae'em J-t'orgtplace inthe 105h annua Dra~ e and sprin r . D Suisman, upper Ned ohnston, ecniorMarkPrize Declamation Contest in Bl- Februar~ 1%eek Guidelines Bro n,.a uppcr Arnon Mishkin.finch Hall last Monday Steps en ~~~~~~~~~~~Aftei a lngthy discussion, faculty emnbersi ep- - Anove won the third annuql Philo athean In-

recited Jonathan Swift's "A od-' dorsel a ceries of twelve guidelines jubmitted by vitational Debate Tournam'fent last Sunday Iin MorseetProosl"astrwhcad the Febiu ry Week Committee to govb rn Febr uary Hall.,-' Drpmatically reversing last ye 's debatevocates anrqabalism as a rerndy Week this year.' resuliis, PA placed first out of a field f n e schools.for tl~e -hbuii'dance of children in - , The ma or contenuio of the gudlnsis that Onf,.th~ affirmative team, upper Ne' JohtistEngland. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~February Week pe ts (whehi rou or in- plcq i~t'and senior Doug Suisman t ok se~odLook Back in Anger - ~~~~~~~~~~dividual, 'whether oc puls o ~ off-campus) shiould a~'i rk Brown received second lace ~asa

Senior Charles Dough~~~~~~~~~~~~rty won ' ~~~~~have anl educationl oal, demanding total in- nega h've peaker.second prize for his petrformance - o te tuenes( iitngPoultindrot'A rin to the iep i-t every project should at n topic of the debate was "e vd hatof John Osborne's "Look Backlin Loe -,frt co I utrlo ntie~a Anger", in which he orta~~~LowerJohn Stephen t'o k frt least "e 4 ttimullating in ~one luaoritlelU Con s shoul1 ake steps to limit popul tion

-an ngry mn whoh he as place in this ycar's Draper Pize Dc- manner-, ivolv a ttalv new or srnestito r " eaieadafraieei f~an anry mn wh, whn hewas lamaion ontct. o conr taiboik -ea eal - xpe4ience in eve- ,school had one hour for each of four debates.ter'n et.- cutbfr en et cdt h indivi dualts gro%th r elf-awai-eness, or o e St. -aul's, Exeter, Middlesex, Loor is, BaverI.

- ~Third prize went to upper Ned death.' of service to others.'! ' C~ountr-Day, Belmont Hill,'Lawrence Academy adlohnston fo his delivey of 'a se Classics Instructor Alasn Gilling- '[he app roved gideline require that every prbiject Der'eld finished behind PA. -,op ~ffirmativielection froim Edward Albee's "Zoo ham, modern language i ivsn hae a f culty' ad~iso- or - spo'nso'r who wil I "in spI~si h oraet nldd~elJhsoStory". n Johnson's- reital~ a chairman IJames Grew ail Eng- son-ec imae at his 1 discretion evaluate tho success and-- boug Suisiflan of PA, Exdter d aters R. '-I youngman, i an atempt t c~m- ish Fellow John Faggi, J n. were of those projects h sponsors." TheI facultyI also Fi ~~adN aot n .Bono

municate ~vith eople, tries to the udges for the contest Eng- decided t each student spend a minimum of Law dlie Judges named PA debaters Mrk Brokvncmerrtoaterm with dog.est lish Department Chairman Willianm three hour! daily put-suing his poject.' and lArnon Mishkin, M. Hawkins q BeaverBirown served as Presiding Judge., Teacher Rports Colin t" Day, and B. Ferguson of Exe er as theJohn Brown's Body Arthur j1. WcntWorih TI-i facly al dscssed the uses of tauher top r eX-ative speakers.ISenior g&'sell Graham, and Se- Last year, James Bakker, Jr. repoits. :ig eamster Simeon1 Hyde, Jr. 'He iotnaster Simeon Hyde presehted th Acvernioi Jonathan Tucker also com- '71, Gary Gittelson '72, and Russel commuente 'hthd ecSion served to "reaffirm teamn ?,,ith the fir~t place trophy i n awards

I -~~~~~~~~cited General George Patton's Bakker recited H. F. Ellis' "Ar- 'reports to fcv savc for counselors. lie aded, Room.:'Tournarnent Chairman Jhn Hof man. and,speech to his troops be fore the thur J. Wentworth, Bacheloi of "writing eports makes teachers thinklmr alout Philo president Russell Graham cornducte theday'sinvasion of Europe, a humorous Arts," which depicts the comical their stud nts than Iimply giving then~ oeg-d. acti ti. ad confidant talk to World War chain of events which led to Went- Mi-. Hyde cautioned, howver, that counselors ms noe'UdfaeII soldiers. Tucker related Stop- worth's throwing an object at one l'egard te cher reports in light' of everything es atxa out I o a field of 1I schools, P -finishedhen' Vin'cent B3enet's "Johnl Browns of his students and knocking him' known ab ut a stud(ent because they are sometimes in eih& lc.IThis year, however, the PA teamBody", a slave's speech to the out.! useless an csily sunderstood. went udfae in the tournament.

Page 2: FcbtyAcet N - Phillipian Archivespdf.phillipian.net/1971/11171971.pdf · -Anove won the third annuql Philo athean In- recited ...

Page 2 TH PH L I .N oemIi1,17

I - .'' .. CI-S~e fo ue n'

I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=eI*Page 2 Novembe~~~~~~~~f rsetngPilisIA y n caaoge fen 17,197

The .byWRZ trctv:frmo dua a DAVvDrDOWNSchave ritcerjs angedtuand ctribu nhsas.Haesue d tc

President arisen Applications rose to an a time tions. He added that the catalogue's futic- Berry com'mented that this ptsenitationhigh in 1965, when 1497 studqnts a plied tion is not as An advertising publication, is not a hard-sell, but merel an honest

DAVID WARE MA~RK HELLER for admission. But since 1967 . a- The catalogue, with pictures of buildings ,one.Editor Managing Editor* plications have decreased at the tate nd imie descriptions of student activ- 'Fra

MARK LAWRENCE' H. GERARD BISSINGER 'Of almost 100 per year, and b 0971 ~ties could tend to dsuade candidates 'ethorToeBusiness Manager, Sports Editor only 1015 candidates finally applie for rom applying. Campus tours, a majorp rt ofth

admision. pplictionsjust ropp an Recruting~ Tours admissions process, have cha ed in twoROGER COHEN . DAVItP McCRACKEN additional 20% this fall, compared t lost Andover is Repnigto the recent important respects this past er ni

Executive Editor Associate Sports Editor year' s figures at the same time. d_ c I Ii n e in applications through last year, seniors would takthca-As fewer and few estuderits eress Recruitirg eff rts aross the, Un~ited didate. and fiis parents onatorf

interest in all indep ndent schools , PA States. This represent a major intensif- the',schoollt ogether. This.'p~ac fe-- ~~~~~~~~~~~has recognized the need. to dispel\ the ication of recruiting efforts over the past resulted in the parents' dorai of

Sa C__ iifi~~~~~ces? ne'gative myths commonly associ ted years .und MrI ae drac.Ti the cqnversation, - the igod boyThe number of applcatiops to Andoveras with private schools and catch the n ds system is alrq ady beginning to demon- lagging three pace bndNo he

of intelligent and0 esourceful candid tes. strate its effectiveness, as an increase Admissions Office pairs acnitewithof this dte is far lower than in previous TeAmsinOfcewokgdolya guide of his own age to attract the

years,. If PA is to take these figures a any wvijh the Alumni Office', the Stu et~ student rather than his parents. Ac-indication of a growing trend, it is not going Alumni' Association (SAA), adcording to Head Studene Guide. Berry,

Student Guides, consequiently :Initlae . thisI procedure allows the canididate toto have many qualified applicants in the radically inore active publict c'm acquire a more personal feefing for the

years to come.' paigns, adding to the old word fscolanatheam tielowthThe reason for this rend ~a~e ifficult iotith' system. -. guide to, accurately eyaluat the can-

--for- the-schoocl -to accept. Students are not Gae oad h o However, tours should not 'overwhellm

attracted by the advantages PA has of- The Admissions otfice now gedrs Its thb prospective applichrnts.,One applicantfered in'the' Ipast. AlthIoug ihaaei presentation toward the boy, rather t n - . * who had just completed a our coin-

hi, parents. According to Directorof -- ' end,"h school is confusingly lr standard is till important to many students, Admissions Robert Sides, thd emhai -~.- ~and hard to comprehend~. I' doubt if IthelIsocial structure of the school is so rigid is shifting because "mor enmoe -. I hvlardaltee is to lknow about.

to deter qualified High the candidate h f is apt to m it." An ideal tour wotild as6hvteast ee many aiedindiyiduals.Hg the final decision to-attend P A or ioi Stdn ud t~ . applicant attend at least onel class atidschool students do not want to be hassled Presently, the officer attemptsuidtogvesrtou to prospectv a meal in oirder to inci ease hi§ un-

by the' strict ehforcment pf rules against the human aspects of the s ool, r~at r plcnderstanding of the'school'slassets.

drinking and smoking. They also want a thntemrIa~ila css4h iapiain a enntdfo h Selection 'of Guides as the physical plantl and eaircle ties toured by Ad1missions Offiecoeducational living -situatidn in which they matriculation,. wh ichl'characterized A J1mes Leaf and Assistant Alumni See- Housemasters are asked tp select h

will not be jeopardize if they have girls in as a ihyefcetasml ieto -try John Odden. Although Messrs. Lleaf Junior Key guides while Berrythe outside wurld, I .' ad Odden agree thai their efforts 6ire' nominates the remaining guides on the

o1tgoto a school vWhere thle rules are more Almiulen c ssfully make up for lost time by tuish frte colbi lleiet go Andover uses its Alumni B len, tablishing a vast communicat i, nS nominations re subject to aoval by

I ~~~~~~~mailed to parents a d alumni, to' llp ~'i twork acrosL the, country, t i i h disos fie er omneThis trend should not be interpreted as publicize the academy. The'mg~n arch for a diverse student, body, that guides don't necessarily represent

an, anti-intellectual one. Students are merely includes articles by snsfchty They noted that prospective applic~ ts ani accurate Cross-section of the studentunwilling t sacrificelivin~ conitions for and administ-atoi-s on toisrnln y lectured 'and interviewed on. tir body, in order that only the strongest can-

acndw icg sririy. hi~ xectsnaicinge frmteSerhad ecerrgar'1 est tour were enthusiastic abocit' ec- didates are attracted to PA.~ A otteryac deic suerioity. his lflecs a cange coeducation.: Pictures, te o tres on the outdoor education' exttra r- 'selection of volunteers, however, would

nIsocial values, wherein Many dolescents avoid controversial aspet oftes 1o, ri ular activities and off-campus~'opp rt- provide a coss-section of enthusiastic.,feel -thatthey are mture enoug to handle and, student disconten is vr 1al u ities. The slides emphasizing Andov r's guides, and also eliminate any possible

situat os. - Rigtl~' or ignored, leaving the reader vith i lressive. facilities also elictd n stereotyping of the guides.themselves in adult siuaiosRihl r misconceived notions of school life. (frhe th siastic reactions. Butth le sje Although PA presents itself reasonablywrongly,'&this trend doe'sI ex St. f the school presentation of more realistic pic tres pi marily gives an impeso ofh' accurately to the public; several flaws

of recognizing of studecnt life could increase I the pysical atti-ibutes of tec~ps exist in the present~ system!-. Andoverdosnot make the- sacrifice eonzn bullkin's advertising value. 'wihout showing' student ne n lacks a public rel' tions officer! who couled

dois it will have to sacrifice x~nuch more. The catalogue also serves as a orin 'ro tineclassi%-ork.r- oversee -the various efforts f groupsaypeo'ple fear that admia- of publicity for the school.',Major ch nges Senior To aeg' tdn l i sc s the' SAA 'and the Almsin

I will dwindle in in the catalogue over the past two ear's Assocation alsol hopes to raise he leiel Office. The academy also could use a -

bility of Andover students illdidei include a new cover fo~mat, of'I awareness f Andover. This year-' cheap brodhure containing pictures of-the corring. years. TIs i ou to he h diino oepcueadte Pi-jects includ 4 compiling a slide t pe active and enthused students With livelyif the -schpol cannot draw Students from a rmvlo 1 acty ndadminit~alion o liea novrfrdsibtntp qttos from them, to paint a more

rosters from the front sect ions. Hoever, va'rious regions of the US, and h~ realistic and attractive 'picturei of An-larger- pool of applicants than it now does passages describing situdent act ~ities maintenance of a file on all candida e dover. -

-- A1 massive advertising camrnpaig'n will not 'r

incjrease this, pool if the school itself does 'I -L T Enoi change.THEJUN LETo th Editbrs of ThePHLIAN

I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Las 'we k an outsider' close to thle schoolBlue 1-lumor I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~remak ked hat student initiative seemed' ~tai.AuNVEBER1 ECMBE 4, Thisvs poor choice of- words; "saIciser

,Tisyerthe Andover student body de- - ~-I EMERI DCMBR.4t airily map ropriate. "Dead" would be m'ore ac-- -~ ~~~~~~~~t curate.-

parted from its usual ingenious trickery on We -lnm-~sday, November 17, 1* 3 portunit es out wvest seem t At rese t there are two things which requireE~ceter wekehd -ad decidedto give riday's ni., Thi sday, November 18,, 2:O(C dwindle, the tyo settle in newly imeatsudn repneThc mteeo

Friday's grim saga of war seen from~~ m ae Jnl ' suet iar soucompce he r commitefoedt'n of pervrsion: Thechane p.?i, F~it~ay,- November 11 iil ii, hr hyty~ studert re ponsibility, chaired by-'Doug, Suisman,

aivities oeo9evrso. h ne 8:00 pan. and Saturday, November' regain their) formerl stature as snltyn odtriewa oesuetwas not for the better. - I2.80 ~ nKme-AlQi~scesI~nrbe shoulc `pla in the governance of the school. IfThe che~r~eaders' skit in assembly onl the Western Front (930) is ' }I s p

-, best described as gross. Never before has QGerman viewvpoint. Director Lewi~ [ Wdedy ee r1 10 ihhirrsn oe hr sn ed o hMilesone bsed is irovieon '1ri an 8: per-When cormittee o meet. If, however, there a re some -

the George Washington Hall taepresented MieIi~bsdhsmveo ee n :01m epr hn who el'canswilbbnfcathey should~~tage - - NinMria Reniarque's novel of eve mail-otdeir bridie leanor Parker-such a tasteless combination of transvesti-. boys~who join the Imperial Armyi ' arrives at his Sout American aroius he selves sufficiently to express-their views

A e~~~italia in Naked Jun le (1954) ~~~~~~~ to Doli rnother committee member.

oalleits vulart giafdrt faculty lite andepl Andl on d dea-n ifilthefeaselectionheadis being elected. advishe Of20-oddall ts vlgaity h it itepa wasn't cs aNoha er 1,33 and org s her to leave. Naturally, stiet 0 hav~ decided to run, five must be -

1, Wednesday, Novempe~~~~~r sh1-e7esn tetw3eai e3c~ by those energetic enough to vbie. Theseeven funny. 'm~~~~~~~~~~~fid 8:00 p.m. in Kiper- Joset to ward off billions of voracious fv IIth ~n solicit student. opinions' oni the func-

IThe' prega~'ne rally was more refined, but von Stei-nberg directed and wrote sode nswihatc h in d personality desirable in a new head-it' 6nded witN- the auctioning-6ff of a pair of thplglshnaraiotfr baatn. ImatdI Ijop thtsm tdn pino xss

(1953), the story of 112 apanes' - tus frnonb has been expressed.A1~bct cheerleaders as "Gloria", the Andove- silors isolated an a tnle ilnd Cool Hand Luike Finally, tlj ere, have been only two Coop' 'meetingsE~eter ex objet of 19'Yi0n student's corn- locniu obl~eta h Saturdzy, December 4 645 ad this trmn oq student nitiated issues. This' does not

ment that the rally was "a sexist orgy" is ~ not over. S xual. desir~ 9: 00 in .W. -Cool HnLue(67 tris'~ lack o issues. If anything,: there arequ tite fitting. orovilles the film with its mai stars P ul Newman as Luke, who too i ~fny ~-ssues, ' 1what - with the qwen and'

quite fitting. ' I theme, as the twelve~~~~ !f gtt et is sei-vir a two-year il sentence Cuy~llr',r' ipports nd the' prospects pf further~'eekenA ha alwa~'s ben a time over a compellinglig beautifu fo a o ee obr.Atr cordN ,td~..But no student has expressed, -an. in-

"' for humor, but not pervers~~ humor which 'woman. I ~ ~ . - Luke he rs of hisemht ier'sfdeathotereststotoheheCCoopboarddinndiscussinggtheseeissuee.isr totally poites Ift therchesrlead'e want-h Butch Cassi Y' -'he ruis ampant,,esca ing several -In bort, the student body is enveloped i a

-~~~~~ ~~Saturclay, November 20, 6:45 anc bmes nly to be recaptured. Profo dapthy If'tpiis is ah apathy borne of con-'ed~to channel their sexual hanguips~somehow, 9: 00 p.i n. inI G. W. - PI ull Newman Director Stuart Roseiiberg builds tenm , Iad'pd. But' if this is an apathyj

* ~~th~y should, have done so witfiout subjecting adRbrRefd tar a ~~ a stron, contrast beenre'o eigain-fd conce-n, as I suspect it is,1outlaws who journey -' to South~ prisoner- respeciing Lool, tough tlesunt e victims only of their own inertia.

the entire school to the process., -America in Butch Cassidy aend tl ue adLkega ing at the ' ' Sincerely, I- '~~~DAVID WARE, Sundance Kid. (1969) Whn~p feet of h s tormentors. Andy Tfiurman, PA '72

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IL~ ~ I7~~$

L ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ .\ ~ -L.5.AI

November 7,1971 - THE PHI l IPIA- N, r Pag 3'

Poet S dney-Fryer Jtmiors Elect 777 'Johnson Will TalkTo' Re ieSnaLiinAHadOn Red China Trip

Donald Sidney-Fryer, a poet who "st~idid At P's Summer .eso Christopher Lilien polled 31 SRu s s e I11 Johnson, Program

in1952, will Iread and act ut votes in an election on Monday,Set etrfo th Ne Enld

various poem~ in the drama lab November 8 to become PresdntOARioofte mrca Find

of GW on S nday, November 21 Of the junior class. liRunner-up Service Committee (AIFSC), vyillfrom 6:45'to 7 45 p m. Wila aaagh took the vice- '. . A' bu is Kme

Songs an .,t Atata presidential ost with24vts-reetrpand So net Atlantian Bruce Carlisle had 23 votes for 'to the Peolile's Republi~ of China.

Mr.- Sidney-Fryer is the author third place, followed by JamesMrJonnwilaodscshsofacollecti n of, works entitled elo n rde ee.Aotvisit with Cambodian Chief of State

Songs and Soi nds Atlantian, parts 30ofapprxmtl 4 uir i Prince Noroidomn Sihanouk, who

of which he ill read at his per-' not vote at all. now resides in Peking.'!

formance on unday. He will alsoiorRight Communes, Factories and Hospitalsread and at. out poetry from JunorRiht While in Communist China, Mr.Edmund Speiser's 16th centuryt Lilian ran on a platform em-, fic.e.

Faere Qeen nd therwors' pasiin luser oganzatin Adm ios Ofcr- Assistant- Alumni Seetary. Johnson visited the cities of,

farom mden and othersc works. phasizio utr ohs"Hrganiatio and John Odden '- Canton, Peking, Chengchew, 'Sian',from oern San Fancisco pot.huirrgt. eprpsdt I - .A Nanking, Shanghai andea. H

The poet wi con~lude is show' utilize petitions to demonstrate In'w i ceAp l c PkewtpastsiIna ou rualwith' a, mee of short, romantic, suprt for rule changes, while ' c e rusomme viestd sei a ag

Californian p ems. Kavanaugh dvocated consultation Admissins OfcrJames G. admissions functions' wit those Of hospitals and toured! factories,,Mr. Sidney- ryrclebrates the with Cluste~chairman H. Schuyler L e a f and Asitn lun'ni the alumni. For a long time, the talking with workers and their

"era of the trpubador" through his Royce along w~i"i'ebate in cluster Secretary John IHOderturned two Departments have had various families.public appearances and costumed meetings. Brad Ge'ier stated hIis to Andover late1 s~we rqm 'functions which -run co eurrently 'Mr. Jlohnson held atrehumanners. He is virtually a one- intention to eliminate junior a tour around thantdthritin i rmechte.Or'dscsinWt rn ee-hournt~

manplytking no alsis ando'P segregation from thug retohe in which they ivil~'ited schools and 'job 'Was to interview students, visit while in Peking. Accordiing to an

worki n wit neoastac onopA tfrt n commuityeathog hetdid aluimni while i 1terviewing can- 2schools and 'see variou~ alufni. A S C F iewsletter,i opI~riinestage apd en~y few pops. ' notput forth ny concret method 'didates for PA. 'I Both left i theli Among the latter were home who Sihanouk exprse hi tiin

"Ls f~eCourtly Poets" ofe acoplsingtis oal.dae hed middle of Octol er, spendirg' ~i, often interviewed studdnts from about the grown sti-ehgth, f his

A native C~ionaMr. Sidney- .Tepeieta ad~ae ed month in over 15 major - itics' around their area, so i was im- forces in Cam'oi and his d pairFryer alls ~iisl the last of a ou nTusa ihO- rang ng from Pttsburgh to Los portant to keep them up to date..oethplgtfhipol.Te

tM courtly pets" and "aI-toher2 Winm Hl comonx rom f Aneesy "The scond theme othe trip :Prince asserted that tslirFrancisco's onynoElizabethan' prsne theellims a fomsx They Visiting It Midwest was' to ,upgrade thle public- from South Vietnam wer muc

poet." He ajrdi French at' pee~e hi ltom n Mr. Leaf visited sev'eral midwest' awareneSs of Andover,' bringin "' more of an asset to his vermtUCLA and graduatedin the late1 answered questions from theco pfosaotntohtof-nNo eue

U950' andsrvda amrn voters. Few juniors attended the citieE in an, effo to see alt mni, some the miscocp~osan 1 hnt hto Ln o easmariel oru, bt mny f tosewhodid stud nts and JW, ious school ad- a modern prep s6hool oa an end. of their rampant misbehavior to

before under aking his career as formbuimnyofahoeohodis. lseattleWsin- e wanted to. show the hf ide the Cambodian ople.' thought that Carlisle, Geier, anid~ iitaos a n- W ~ ~ a e

a poet. __________'Kapelson hr their chne wttn.emtit) r Odden wl~o ofAzdover, were rve e ,akrun nAia fis

~~~~unimpressive presentations. had just come o ,m Des Mc ines, event, people weeamaz Tenwlte sae h rVoice n GovenanceIowa. They'theni travelled through they heard and saw. H-oepuly he Johnsonl has a considerable

Ode Ainclover Village r I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~fr til 10 de Andover Village r After his victory, Lilien stated, frtr willuoent thve wa

cl'us4~ m~eti~g 0 Fr m Los Ange es Mr. Leaf ent ute tdn vle'n n'h has visited South Vietrnam 2 timesl~~yu archway rese pln tocl Mr.Roclwith'a pettin' up aicatLaos',odCambodia1

~~~~~e Oil ~I lnt cl.~nsiin hn to San D ywhere h set aplcainspoedure includn 'sinice 1, and spent two months.

psind by. allyte juiors. We payfi Jam sSCoe the owner of a process but also a fo o-usby ~and Vietnam in 1970. Ir. Johnson

fi I almost $3,000 to -go to this school, chair opaes nd financE r of the SSA (Student Alum iAs ia- 'will visit variops colleges in this

I ~~~ accemi~~~~rieS ~~e're entitled to some oice, in the pleyWn.A his oi t't-' ~~~~~te rlstagoenus." - I heAs okdi'otepsi'iisSAA Takcoi'el .taying at thle home o PA

rules tl~~at govern of trig afoff-campus ex- Asta oth Hedaer chemistry instuctor Thomas Rees

'could spn eieeks abard ~a of absence, made sevpral trips like

Rufu Pavubc~~~~~u~~is & Friends ~~~~ ship studyn ' m ine biology. Both that of Messrs.Leaf ind Ocfden Alligation'to' StartRuf u Pavubdlis Friends amrenitietos bef rvld e r eilt in the past. M.Leaf~ explainbd itr ur m tcJI I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'that he did not inten4 to repeatne ra afc

I ~~~~~~~~~Andk ver. -the trip again next' falI but that IIPOST OFFICE A V ~~~~~ N U E -~ AN D'0VE IO Dual 'Iurposc the SAA wXouId take ver in the Upper' Chris Haney ~will direct

Mr. Leaf poinj d out, "Ou trip cities that-,lie and Mr. Odden, had L a w r e n c e'- Ferlinghetti's play'

- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~had dual purpo e: First, to leiid already visited. ~ A lligat~on in te GW drama lab____________________ o~~~~. n Irhursday and Fridaty,

RECORDS 'TAPES "December 2 and 3 at 7:00 p.m.

The show is a humorous analysisHARTIG~~~r~4'S the sexual mores of present day

- L~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~H R IA ' merican culture. '

.111 . . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Alligator arid Blind Indian

USED CLOTHIG 'H RM (AF IO TSigation as an alligator named' ' ' ' L'eather Jackets Headgear '~~~~C I rH RMFY pprDaiUDwStrEi

S hooky. lenior Sheridan Liu willLeather Jacket's' Headgear p~~~~~~~~~~~NDOER lay the i~ole of a blind American

- '' K ' ' ' 11 Main St. 475-. 822' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~66 MAIN ST. portr ndays Abbot senior Nancy Pinks- ' ' ' L~~~~~~~~~~~MiS 7-182 oayid the- third character,

Jeahs P-Coats Jewelry Ldbr.Senior Marc Chardond-I' ' I_________ I will bd in charge of lfghting.

Shirts and Mor Ie~~~I Lawrence Ferlinghptti became.Shirts and More . - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~prominen~ as a poet I and'

Y77F7~~~~~A - r ~~~~playwrig`lin the 1950's whqn h~Ill/I j' I ~~~~~participatlld in the San 1trafii~sco

PGSTERS CANDLES ' '~ ~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ li z "I beat pod - movement.- His 'most[ ' ' IOSERSC i'S ecent work i Tyrannus Nix, a

I TTT~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~A, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~satire of the presidey of chhard

Op~~ 1 0-8 ~Tel. 475-8391 ' . ~. 4 J 1~' Nxn

Next to My Bot 'er's Place -yri n Su is Regular 'u s J A D ER N2 ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~BARBER S~i'OP

~~~Gy R E .. :30 ANM. to 6 P.M.

' Pizza ~~- I~~eg ilar & Family Size -~MORRISSEY TAXI

NDOVER ~~~~~~~~~~~~~Buy three1 Ir~~~~~~~~1N . ' ' TWQ Way Radios- Insiant Service~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~w9Wa ltoio nsan Sryc

PARENTS, ' ~~~~~~~~Ge t Reg Jar dheise 'Pizza FREE!3'PakTlpne45OO

WELCOMES PAETSTUDENTS 2ALUMNI HInh.rfI ' Do s-rrn nure Ird " - ar

Cha~f AeOff Rte. 28 ~. Tel. 475-5903 EKAIE A L 45944W .BiLe C .

. . - 'II - ' ' - I'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~LI E Y ERV.C

.34 Park S~i et h Bo .l Alle

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- Page 4 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~T EPH iNovember 17, 1971

AD)DISON GALLERY EXHIBITS*CALLIGRAPHY AND SC`JLP TURE KENNETH P.

Internation ly-k,' wn violinist night, along with stu ents froPierre d'Arc amb au will present Andover and Dana Hal

SHEET~OF ~22~i1~graphv: this Friday t 7:00~ p.m. Trhe hour T op olong p wllrbginwit Abbot's Social Committee, willi' e an cfr sponsor a dconaudynih Wolfgang Pozart s sonata in B- 8Olt 10 p. urdbndh

3' Fran Schubertto and0 . schflat Mapr follwe by te Rondofrom the Berklee musi 1d~ will -SCHOOL SUPPLIES'-Brilliant bylfra plycthhedacebwicrtil bathe Sonata i D-Mi or by Johannesplya-tednwch bBrahms.. Miss G e Benriis will inete h bo DvsTYPEWRITER ~accompany IM. d'Archambeau on Hall. .the piano. there ~vill be no ad- ' HueD co Dn SLSad EVC

lHer~Witi will present a mult -mediawil Id an Icountry.. musc i Grh ousDana Halt il"oda interest ~ ih a ukad -77 MAIN STREET

night from T: 3 t 10:30 t~, his SaudyfoP:0t . ."Saturday, icludingj a dance -in its while senior Louis, Ten nbaum A~NDOIVER, MASS. dining center, a cffee house and will run a pahcake onuse in the

I Edg5-- Alle1 ~~~~~~~~Poe:~ movies Underwood Rqom. Ten tnbaurn -

entitledofTerror. plans to serve . pota o pncakes NetothPstfic- ~~~~~'~~~~"' ~~~Students from Broos Governor 'graced 'withi sour cream and a.p- ett h otOfc

ast~i-s of Calligraphy" opene Friday at the Addison Gallery. Dummer, JMiddle~e and Stb plesauc6, and bluebei ry pancakes"Mas rso alirpy an "Masters of Calligirapy fa Mr'sil.ate the interest topped with blueb~erry sauce. .'

exhibit f italic script writing and tures works from the collections of ''

another show, "Recent Sculpture" William2~ King and P. Williamby Nich las Elmonds, opened last 'Filby. Te collection inclulies theFrid~ t the Addison Gallery of penmanihip of B. F. Stimer, aNDOVEAmeric n Art.' Harvardf psychologist, famous'Pt

"Batiful Writing" calligraghi~t John Howard Benson -.- U d Accorpngtou Addison GllerY and Raymond F. DaBoll. 'al reie UN i-456

rd co Gerne Pyle, the Chicago art des gner. 'BOOK(STOREcallgapydisplay examines . 'Lffrpes ffehighly stylized writing form I Mowing Man Lett rpedevelop~d during the 16th centu~y. "Recent Sculpture" by N4icholas-- Q. quality'The originators included Italians Edmonds, an art instructor at C. creative Olde Andover VillagePegir Arrighi,, Tagliente, and Boston University-, includes six I rnes71Pn/ emnPalatino. Arrighi, who is often m a s s i v e wooden sculptures. P rnes71PnBurlingfon, Andoermoassconside r ed, the greatest Dowels interconnect portions of all

*calligrapher, published a book on the structures which consist of _____ ________________

the subject in 1522. Mr. Pyle added i rough-hewn wood. These abstractthat the literal translation ' of forms depict various subjects such .

"calligraphy" denotes simply' as the Mowing Man, Fishermen' "beautiful writing." and Hunters.

Chieck YourIHockey Needs At)Thip r u dR t e'ANDOVER Remodeling 0 rSpeciialty

AHOCKEY SHOP BIDR n TATRjT 5ALOWELL ST. SHAWSHEhN SQUARE .

475-7474MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 4TO 9 IRpis f 1Kns

SATURDAY 9 TO 5 ReardfK

'Cool idea: Pepsi-Cola In Pi11-0peq cans! 'T1F

A snap to open-jtist lift and 'pull Cans chill quicker, stack T elephone 6S2-498~. easier, go anywhere you gc~. And they're no-deposit, no-Ireturn. nsioe? That famous Pepsi-Cola taste-taste tat 75 flay State Road Lawrence

comes alieintecold. Only now, there's anew ring to it!

-'WE 'GOT RIPPED OFF!,- IT HAPPENED LAST SATURDAY NIGH~ N FRON- OF FRENC H JIQUSE

4~ ~176 WHEN-jWVE LEFT OUR:CAR TO'DELIVER AN DER. TWO CHEESE- EK ERE LIBERATED FROM OUR CAR.--

-WE'RE FLATTERED! BUTTWO OF THE GUYS, FROM STIMSON HC USE WENT

II HUNRYNOHARD FEELINGS, FELLOWS WE W OUR STEAK-/ SYB~~ICHESSUBS AR. REALLY

WO~THS EALI1N G- - ~~~~~SO ARE OUR PIZZAS

*tas~te that atthe others co~~~~~~~~d..g~~~~:i~~s~~1 t ~My Brother's Place'

I~~ ont J475-9699 FO DELIVERIES (ANDOVE

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November 17, 1971 .THE PHIILL P A N P~ge 5

Exeter'Sep And e ar ity ~a~

-oft "4 4'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'

tDon Ward scored Andov'er's ol Barry Cjn24) un back an interception for a TD as ~ Murphy(76), Mike Keta(77) andJo Alt- Flalierty-rail- well in PA's 27-28 -

goal'in7~~~ 4oly lonis, runsanAwen s30, 2Jon ss to a strong Exeter team.goal in~~~i 4-1 loss to PEA. ~~wood(70) bloci. The play was nullified d PA weton to1SC -0

Exeter Scores Twice In F~inatl H rir ~1 ,2-Period To Top Football, 30-20 Wednesdy Nvme10Anor-frwnig a'ystng Ex te em, 19-45. Although~ xee

Saurav, November 13: txl~r second quarter with the score 20 3 the Intei-suchols ess than a week ago, the Exeter to the meet, t e Andorhairsmd ou-N.H. Th Anove vasit fotb ]] in favor of Andover. Barry Croni crsscohtry te m et the PA harriers and 'edged .' starding improve. ents over their previous records

N.H.- The Andover varsity football ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~out a 27-28 ictr ormiunefeated f6~ the on ecure.1 , ~~team nded its season Oil a intercepted a Lynch pass on thei sao..disappoin ting note cis Exeter came Blue 15 yard line and t~an the ball seon Exeter's firstc an won the race i 13:37, buft-3dfctt ae bak 5 ad o atuhon i organ co ed second place five secondback from a' 20- deiittotk bc'l5 yrs o atucdwn reaksf RecordJi M

a 30-20 win over th~Bide. Ld very questionable clipping penalty In' aeta a ls rmt' trP u- behi d, t impro his best time by 27 secondsiby the pinpoint passing of quar- nullified the touchdown, however, nesBueWlea ognFaetadEctr Exe er then took t e third through sixth places before

nergBrue! olfean4Moran Fahetyand xetr Mk urph shcterback Mike Lynch and tie bringing the ball back to the PA competitors And~ W , an onhogt n f finh in 14:06 for seveit parunning of halfbacks Peter Foote 13yr ieconstantly for le d. Wolfe passed aler 'a iscrssdtny4:8 oreighthand Rai~dy Lombardo, the Exeter Th~ series of plays that turned pasdWakrthry Mur hy improved by twenty-two seconds whil

ofes ildu atoa'o39 th gaeaon caewhsi yards from the inisP and held the lead, crossing H-ar is tooIk twelve off his best time.pile up toal ,f 39 th gam -'rundcamewithsix in 12:36.5, ane school record. Walke fiiselydrds while picking up 16 first minutes gone, in the third period next in 12:40, and (ushrwscoebidin B toen Exeter hadwo eaiy btAno'

downs .~~~j -' when a fum~~~le gave Exeter the ~~~ 12:42. Flaherty, sti ll hampqred by a weakening continued': to turn in: 'good times.! Upper ToPern ties, Turnovers Hurt Blue blontePA 3 yad ie, virus, captured fourth place with atineo i244 Ch e rse ekadnck with a Ex

-Two plays later a pass interference the eodsofhsI ettmin 1:17, breaking his record by thirteen seconds.For the. second game in a rowv penalty against lower Mark te thios Mrf hisfestthmI

a number 'of key penalties and ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t tispoint! the1 meet could hav goeeihr a -inger ws te ast scorer, recording u mer-'oine evy chnanie a ellegrini put the ball on the, four' wy u o Rbrs nexyer' Re eihern tim of 14~24. A o running for the Bue but no

had to ut the game out of reach. yr lieadteepasaer held a close lead oer John Rogerson to take fifth scrn nti twr ayLe horaThe fi -these uc~~~~~~ quarterback Lnch scored to cut plc n1:2 o ~nrna xetoa ae 14:4), RaY. Petzold Bob Oates and Joe haw.

crecie sfofr mnue mihap PA's lead- to 2-16. Finallyinte dsteake injuti which had troubled~him beforeI Ex~~~~~~~~~~~eter vs Soc er

jV1 I . ins Ta e Stvr Pinhu Execer ied umble Captain Stan Carsc n, who ran a fantastic race lastIGridders Ta Sintfvor ofnhu Exeermddle gfuabhlntecosa ishdsxh n1:2124~~ Win Over PEA on the Exeter 17 yard line only ~~~~Saturday, at Taft, ocked of tirty-eight seconds 'r al e on Over P to have an offsides penalty nullify 4 psigatmo 25.ltvrbr1;Advr tfe

WedipLsday, November 10; Exe- Exeter Dominates last Quarter' After Carson, Ex ter pickedi 'up eighth pla e as a tight Red defex~se the Andover varsity socceteitHialgm o h Exeter carried its momentum Jo ikrcde atme f130,an atlht tearm fell to Exeter, 4-1. With the score tied t

seeaoth V fbbll'emithe hexforth priodsas itscore point t score was tied, 18-18. The meet was' thus 1-1 mridway through the third period, the Red brokethe Exeter JV'~, 12-6 two more touchdowns while con-I plcfishTh coIs satdofwelfr taigteluofesefcivy. deci-led by the ninth plc iihr; unfortunately, thro gh the Blue's defense and tallied what provedThedon e'st strcted awl PEA SpitednFuningteBu fespu effe tery Exeter do-captain '~ dd Looney utdistanced lower to b the decidibg goal of the game.~~~~~- r ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Matt Makigan, crossi g'in 13:11. Mangan took tenth' 'PADmntsF~tProfumbl cnthe 33 yard. line. PA 'in the lead for good two minutes plcPihatEeA 3 8 nescn rn hs I h is periodExter cl eryodomntdt

soon !noed intoscoring ositi ' into te periodwhen hecaught Personal record. Kevin Threadgold was Andover's play Passing an4 kicking with precision, the Reias a pass front Chris Coyer to his fourth pass of the day from 'sixth manfiihdeentovrlaseorn eetesypuddwyatheP ga.fullback Scott Clemson brought the Lynch to end a 63 yard drive. With - nadfn~ lvnhoeala eota tea rlitesypudd wya h Agaba~ll down to the one. Randy Cuth. less than two minutes left in the' an Exie at the fini'sl, tying his own record of 1:3:45. Finally, late in the period, one of the Exeter shot;,bi~rsn tPen drove over the goalin e game; Exeter closed out the Joh Muasilreoeigfo i nuy nae ast tenacious PA goalie Steve Rot 0 11~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~a s &l as he ould bu t could not m tcl his well, and PEA's first score was on'the board.to gi ve A dover a 6-0 lea-J. Scoring following an interception record of 13: 38. Des ite the loss, it was IclealI'that Th Blule team perked up in the second perioI

Exeter ame back to tie upt by cornerback Jim Curry on the Advrrniuh[etrta nteItr n iga~ne on a brilliant 96 yard drive, e 0yr in.TeRdte Wolfe, the sixth fin sher afpae ahe d ofdegtmntsrmiigi h af

Taking t e kickoff to open the sec- marched 90' ~yards in 13 'lays, the thInesh~ hmpoadFa xh retaliated (ihaga fison Alf afaond half Andovergained psses- 'big play a 48 yard bolmb from fiihdsxenhaTatbaRbrs tWlt Char le Hirschler lofted a penalty kick over tha

Sion on its own 27 yard line. Coyer, Lynch to Fournlier gorniersn place finisher in the ew England's. headft ie Redk defnsemen Doord the balad ble'~i,displaying his finest passing of the Curry were the lednircierneto the tk cntrol ohe te bal aendf bthfeld t'yea,,, brought the ball down to the in the gamel with Fournier getting Wednesday, Novernher 6; A n d o v e r - PAIS JV Int h ~e~e h em etoftefedExeter two. The lower quarterback (Cont. on Page 6, Col. 1) cross-country team, hopelessly outclassed, fell to halft me w'ith thee score tied at 1-1.Ithen capped off the drive, running '.-''' ''Red Deals Crushing Blowin for the'game-winning score. 77'D~pitethBlescmeedoiaonftet

With le~~~~~~~~~~s than a minute left, the I I~~~heBle'~cmpet dmiatonofth tiWith less than a minute left, the 'i ~ ~~~~c~.tttit11.ItL~~V' penicd, Exeter still ,managed to tally the lonegaRed made a final desperate at- - ~ of the peribd, a goal which proved to be the winni tempt to tie up the game. The' goal of 'the' game. The Red's left insi* took contrPA defcnse dug -in, however, and of a loose ball on the left side of thllnet, dribble '

forced Exeter to give up the ball *arou d PA fullback, Stuf Sawabini: and fired a shoon downs.' past R6ckwvell into the net for' the 'score.The R'~

.kemp, oscoe Excel .defer se held strong from that point on and imitethe 3lue o only five more shots on goal for th

Blue offensive line played an ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~remz inder of the gahie.Buestoffiniv le, p rlyed ant Two more tallies: went up on the board for thfbuot precisio ' Red' in the final period and the disheartened An

Upper Brooks Roscoe also played doveT tea s left the field at the final buzzer orafine game at ti ht end. Def en- .the bttom side of a 4-1. score. -

sive tackle Mark Schaefer and out- 'Pruden 'Ends Career Iside linebacker Fred Hojrne spear- Foi senior Bill. Pruden, the game was a confusingheaded 'the defense., one. Despite playing one of his best games for

The J]V's finished the year with PA II1 season, he also helped out Exeter, scoriga respect ble 3-1-2. record, ,losing; the ed's third goal. The mainstay of the BluEonly to Jhe Holderness arsity . d'efen e, he has been a strong' and consistentf per-'Against Deerfield and Andover form r all~ season long,' playing every minute ofHighN PA was forced to settle fdr ever game.6-6 ties. 'For the first time in A standout on Andover's forward line for the

aforyas agans te Pctor u .w "Seven Andoverians, apparenily disturbed by the relative lack ofite'rest in te game appeared past three' seasons, captain Harland Chun waia vctoy ~gaist he rocorvar- here (Exeter) last night hoping to give some color to th a u al Yary. They Ivere stopped equally as' impressive at left'-wing. He was given 'J sity, one of the better prep ,'eanis by campus police. The reason ? They were toing I eand brushes and had planned fine ~upport by Ward and Tom -Beaton, PA's right

inNe England. to "decorate" Exeter's stadium." (eprind from the New York Times.) ind.

in 'ev E'nsi

Page 6: FcbtyAcet N - Phillipian Archivespdf.phillipian.net/1971/11171971.pdf · -Anove won the third annuql Philo athean In- recited ...

Pagk 6I T HE_'PHILLIPIAN\ Novembar 17, 1971

ynch Pitsses I, or' 226 'Yards -PE~ HQ AHLTE 'THE.WEEKT W

To Lead PEA Football Past PA SUIMMARY-PITN O(Cont. from Page 31 Col. ) for the third straight time as theF 0 B L

102 yards on five eceptions -and JExies were forced to punt. ThisCurry 70 yards on sey~n ches. time Flemning retuirned the ball 22 pcfilB nls~ Choate

PA Takes Earl) Lead- yards to the Red 38 yard line and Lea by halfba kDwight Nal], CMLT RNI EVCD PA haesEal, I CMLTEPINIGSEVC

,Dring the first ~Ithe Blue lafter a pass to Thomson and' a the Derf Id vrty football teamc~nilfetely dominated the scoring, Personal foul against Exeter, Me- routed1 ~Ch at,2-,to up its seas"n

behind te fine Candless fired a 10 yard pass to RecordI to -2. Ne Iground out 147'taking, a 20-3 lead bedhe fine'~ Leiterpress Qffsetrunning, and~ passing of Peter RikHlgvn noe n18-3 yards toin twenty carries scoinMcCandless. Shortly After Exeter lead. The two1 point conversion one *tuc wn rid setting uphad scbred an early field goal, the was good and the Blue had what' another v iha irty yard -uin.

Blue wet 68 yrds in13 plays ~eemed- to be an insurmountable The Green do i ae h nie--4502

to take theltiad. Twol passes chch ledi game, as it talliedi in every quarterto ends Tom Fleming and Scott Offense, Defense Falterbuthla.'2 Ese S tThomson covered ms of tI In the second half both the of- TheMtHeo arity footballh e

-yardage- the touchdown came on fense and the defense felt apart. ThMtHrovsiyftbla 14 yard end-around .to Fleming The offense picked up ust three tea fello a me iocre WorcesierAnoeM s ueswith two minutes leftinthfrs first downs and 115 total yards Academy squad, 4-9, for~ its fifth Andover,____ Ma ___________

quarter. i n the half as the Exeter secondary lsoft season Senior fullback* Those twominutes wee all that Jimited the PA receivers to only Paul An stasi s ored all three

theBlife needed to score'again as rpurj receptions~ in the final two Worcester tchdcwns, the longest BRUC 0'f -FEPAl took a 12-3 first quarter lead. periods. 'owhccaeon 21 yard run. Running! thI2 rc f i aer

The touchdown was set up when Exeter, on the other hand, came Bruce Wolfe efeat d Interscholsthe 'defens held and Eeter was alve in the scond half a it SOCCERwinner Andy N. Iker o finnish first

the 'defense hld and Exeter a doiei 'theedn af s ~S C E in the Andover- xcter mteet. He alsoforced to punt to Tom Fleiting. adptd D'artmoiuth's policy of G rqen Topt es Choate stanwsho eod Fltpming returned the hunt 27 ~taying on the ground. Lynch did DorTinsetplafomthent-t _________ r ______o

S to the Red 38 line and t o ¶hrow three passes in the half, ru erI~l a t ocrta iv ' iEL W ~~~~~~~~defea ed hoate, 3-1. Rob Magee

)-T ~~~~~~~and ~Rob Stone led the GreenHLS AR W E r*scorigg one a ¶1 two goals,

A ~~~~~~~respectively. Nit. Heri on Wins

In at lo~ely con.esled battle, the SPORTI G GOODSMt. mpn varsity soccer team i

-. ~edged Williston, 1-D. Young-Il Choi *' PhnSsAoAPRJ ~ "playeoi anloutstan ing game in thegoal or tl~ eHerm es.Football (overall Records) Soccer % ICEWR OL

(6-1) ~~Exe er (5-4-2)(3-2)~ Deerfi -id (4-4-3) GA GETS

1 - Nit.__ ___He_ _r_ __on_ _I

-~ ~ i ?L~td-IL~nnt kMotor L~ g

Oper ing his Week'A Gift tore That .'

Peter tMcCandles set to' thirow as' 11arry Gaynor'('2) fights off Exeter Bi ~ s-a little of the IT t. Andoverdefensive end Dave Fullerton. . I- plays I later cCandles~ 'swept a- completihg all three for 72 yards. ' OORUi BLNKE-TS, A CHOS,

roud rigt nd ora.3 ~ard !touch.- he pass rush of Mike Kaseta,WO -ARE PIN NGG D EYSdown n. I An Murphy, and Jon Atwood wasAN MEI NSHR

1-*cTdes h a egh lwddw yEee' reu-i N EIA HRcarries for 97 yards oh the-day. use of the draw play and,. in the SOME OF THE THINGS WE HOPE Y U'LL-,LIKE. - Interstate9tried for a two-point cohversion. It 'final quarter Exeter- was able to -' P E E C Mfailed however, leaving the Blue cret lrehesiteBleline.SE with ainine point lead. ' Thej secondary' -was Just as inef

The final PA score iame 4,vtY fective as Lynch wvas able to hit V tes and., MlVa i P eminute's inothe second quarter, open receivers almost at will,I

1this t ebehind the asigof pikn ftp 15 completions in 25 16 PA K STREET -~--JUST OFF M IN-SyEEMc~ dlss.Thedefense held atte pts or an impressive 226

Exeter ~deep in its own territory, yards.BHN TO N AL

' CALENDAR I -VR1 il1l

Wednes lay, November 17 Sunday, No mber 21OU GF S

Chapell - 10 00 am Chona cse22- - DO~l DOOakR

Flick isKeme Grn iiale 00Is 'I- CCTI Lu G xt3AIt !4Uien the Weiern Front 1.30 P~m ot- Rcadi rnm Diama Lai)CCTIbotG xt3

AnaQhatn the Wster Ft

on 00 p so. Dlaidssso Scdie sFoU.r I Ipr AN A~ A O OUS ______

v 1 Ser vicew inMonr hac - T day, Nov ember 30ID01 UDORSV I1GPO

IoIr opkn ColeetevicsIecbr Rocthsesrn Interviess Chadoel

Univ ~f ew Hmpsiz einteview W'dned Nvngl be- 24O. COFE 8:P0 DN5 10A

Thrday, November 1 Thunrsa), Dccesmbei, 2 2 CAR0&nARN HOAll uet on the Western F ront 21'in .TaynDgna -6.4n,00pmSUABAH PR3 GL'CUS

Flinckn Sevien e er 00 p ss TuesatisNo Labe fl 30~lrksn Intrviess Ts-sn esc nKme

Moacoolef e Intervis F`eritay, De'cernbr 10 7B0A m *uN OLDE ANDOVESt.An ess Istrviss Ih i Drm Lab ) IP0 ;mM R AN LLS

Saturday,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~FIi Noeme 2 Exiam Nemdsbein 800a9 STursda%, December2 4-

Fli n Kemper. 64N&90 p y iool Hana Lai) CARD-43'YARN HOAll Quiet on the Waretl Front 8 00 p ti Sundiat flcc4mcrp5 in,_ I

Mclouite enebiurns Friks isnrin Noda, December 6 ' g OD NDIE R IL~

St.SCHOOL J InterYi- I " Play'inaD'ama -LAndove4, painSaturS, Andovee r 2 -tr 475-075ge I'nteiv-i___s

Exm o, egn 8- -

Flc i I Ia rd- Dec -r

- - ' I ,'- * ~~ - - - .~~"s ' -Colleg Board1Examination

But Sundance Kid Flick in GW is~~-i