Proposd i'lleebruary eek et- Santon apdf.phillipian.net/1972/02051972.pdf · 2008. 9. 9. · I I...

6
I I (~~~~~~~~~~~~~Pilps cdnyAd i Massacusett Volume 96, Number 16 Phlis ca y nov aschstser ary 5, 172 riStees Approve Proposd i'lleebruary eek eac et- At eekend Meetig ts0?r Santon a Phi! s caern'sBordof rutes et S eruryWeek, cderny's activities discuss~~~~~~~~~~~~~sk ei officiall b s next Mon ay. According to toth( state of the- chool. Although the trust es Associate lQean of Students Carroll Bailey, ap- d( nomjr eiino tebdete roximately 300 studm~ts have of-campus projects. qgree( not t elimin te funds for PA's nume s Mr. Bailey, who organized Febraary Week, noted to ~~~~~~~~~that this ear's projects are mo-e diverse and in- E, c inic Problenis ~dividuay oiented t n those of Ik t year 4 '1he Budget I tee, which met in a separate Berniuda and Hono ulu essio on Thrd afternoon, recognized e French instructor Samuel An erson will escort iio neonic problems facing the school nine students, to Bem a o examine the udge1, llowng to maintain its prograrls Wells Bacon plan to go to Berrruda'to photograph Exchangestudent from te Rosebd 'Ind a Rese L:(Ioft ,n rng ajorl cutbacks.of Theacommitbaeesunderwater.ee undrwater.evperRocke eocke willicomparei Ncdi Black Spoticd Horsi. t~~~~~~~~~~~~~he adminiistrat on to try to limit expenditu es Phillips Academy to the Punahou School in Honolulu, Nedi Black Spotted Horse. ~~~~~~er possible. I Hawaii. While Be~muda,I Steve Trott will Abbot Begins I~~~~~xchan e JJ~~~~"hh ~~, ;~I;hl Utdget Comteeas ascertained that A take a marine bidology course giv n at the biological wil rion smll~e~fcitnext abtthe ex ct station on the island. gure w'ill not be ~-ertain ntil the Trustees' Aril History instructor ~il Sewall will dri~ee a group R oseb'ud Indian Ries va t nceti . Regardless. f the deficit, the tru~tees pan of dents in hisV lkswagen an to the Florida Hudson, d tina tion crease over the $350 raise in Ke,'s~during February Week. Ba d on a houseboat, A b b ot initiated Clem Marciil aisd ~~~~~ext ar's tition.- the 1 students will tudy the semi-tropical an exchange program last month Libby Yoakum, A juniors Nancy The rustees ailso eed toaciteevrlpn - yirpriment. with thd Rosebud Indian Iter BisiSa H4ad ad eg oStt ult he sch nI's enrollment. Acting Hd- - qurator of the Peabody F undation foi Ar-' vation in South Dakota; Accordling Sturges will traxVe to th e sbud astci Simeon Ilyd Presen~ted the plans for i haeoloy Edward Sisson wil demonstraje' ex- to Assistant to the Principal Peter reserva tion latqit ~is month 'Vhe 'reas g the public a areness of PA, which incde cavatinl tcnq n A cco eut Stapleton, who coordlinated te gop illv w iIdanfmle . ipclatu g publications such as the catalogue a d sen~iors Bill Heidrich, Kerit DuBols and Dan Wofsey.. project Abbot is conducting the and ttend tw odrea schools; St. hiifinl the focus o the Alumni Association to MlL Sisson has revily con cted excavat ons excpan~e iA cojunction with Fran~is Mission chool and -Todd on00( to the imis of the Studenit Alun ni on that site.I I Cncord Academy under the Coundy H-igh.Sch 1d, foi a month. Seniors Bija Amni antI ogRcadon dir~cton of he lntrcultual - Holard Bad had omr I rgesrpit to the full board, the He; d- uppers Ian Fawcett and Mark 'Russell will tr el St I i e s Group. Intercultural resid nt of th Rosebud reser- ns~ eeto omte niae hti s(otne nPg ,Clmi1 S I dies IGroup pmte vaIn an tdta atot !Stabli bied the set of riteria necessary for choosing relations betVeen Indians and non- Colle~e, will a t as the project hoiixt eadmastei and will now consider ii- p Tn~d iansprimarily in New conshltant. He wilitouetePvd-Icniae h omte a eom - RNKSTER HIDE COM M~ONS P~oscbu Rcscnaion faml'ie~. He 41~~ inrdceuh ai d heoetdianty e heamasiteeLa rAIcnrmmeLd England. 'Abbot girls to I. Oth Dakota Id BUILDING'S t~ehedmstr- da r I eo Bordeau, Sheryle Dllc~ic C(:uliuc E~duatiomnal Polic)V#l~E~ ()I Co pton, Krista Everson, Nedi Aording t Mr. Stapleton, Onl Ft iday morni g, the Educational Pol c BIlack Spotted Horse, and Mary Abbo ipleme. tied the exchange comin- ttee conducted a review of all faculty p, ElnSwift arrived in Andover p~in wihCbcroAaem unti cutts and sala ies. According to Mr. Hyle (approximately two weeks ago from aft r Abbot Pincipal Donald Gor- fihe c mmittee agreeI to maintain a "top-riot'1 thej -- Rosebud reservation, which don roposed it tolIthe two Rosebudt salar9 progiam co sists mostly of ioux Indians. sch I boards Mr-. G~ordon comn- I- Tbe ~ioup will attend classes at mei ted that An~ican students ei Ab ot-adpitcpt in o- havf ,numlerous opportunities' to ~'*'N ferences in the N~ew E nglhan stu y foifeign u ures, but little FILI1FBUR durin~ their monthl-long stay cha s~ie to exE mine domestic Dr to the depai-tti e of The PHILLIPIAN'S E- b b o senior-mids Mary ccl ures. eu4eBoard during February Week and the Wi ter on eknidte resulting news va(!- uu n c eated afterl'thiase events, The PHIELIPIA orn Rush 11~~~~~~~~~~jll . ~~~~' ~will~ t ublish agai until February 23.P l rform At PA ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~B T D) AMA CLUB T St deiitsfotind'missn Commons utensils on roof. his tt ~~~~~~eekend A £ T~~~~~~~~~~t. BY J[J ~~~~~~Vandals Cok i ntons and Benner House Folk artist Tom Rush will per- . AbI ot Academry's I)oia Club will present Gilbert Someone entered Commons betwe 700pm form in concert-6tomorrow night- and ullivan's 111.moi0 Us one-act musical Trial y Thursday night, Jaruary' 27-and 500 .m. Fr day at 00 in George Washington Hall, Jury i DaviswHall n Thuisday, Februaiy 17 at morning January 28 and hid $6,800 worth of glase, ' Co cluding theP events of PA's 7:15 m FiidqV' 18 at 'B 00 p m., and Saturd y, trays~ and silverw re. According to Comnon Winter Carnival weekenA. The IFebi ivy 19 at 2 00 p in Admission is free nd Di rectolr Robert A Leete, the pranksters p ced weekend's activities will also in- oPenl to the public. -65 lass racks, 950,i tray's, and the entire stoct of' cidde a dance'tonight and a- car- Alto1 eietav:o uyMaili nca-e slewr n h uligsso-oee of and 'film presentation Folk artist mrn Rush ofAbtaot reidetav mJn caili ncag vrreetioon th eldin sBsowe ovredroo. It A~~~~~~~~~~~~fs~e ieto. bbot msic depaitment h ad Cacllhecaf~ to orrow morning. wit a Cmm n9 cookout in Crijine Johnson is the plaly's musical director Th apretlsofhsemeilsocdte 1 safCourt lunchtime today. and \bbo't English nstirnctor M.A. Johnson ill Rusls onicert )lt5ssyea wl u from Iev stemai -~nelto f rafs rdy onn hl r A~ tyle da ce wilrnsiea h inlcopn~.Lel, assisted by' I students, teachers, nd ad- The weekend will climptx wit 83Ito 11:00 to ~iht in the Old'II ministrative prsonn~l, se'arched the building..Ione a concert tomorrow night faturmng ciIhe ee etuei 'rotis Judge stdn inlyte.Ihc h fo singer Tom Rush. Ru n - Th eve will fauesdntialysugpested that te.chc 1 h prsently i'ecords othCoub thd dy swcbaes te aSt, which feare si major roles. Sefiior Although the attic! search lyiddth Ia el. His music is mostly folk la niga ndmd memnscn o e ve tshii' a tne Abotsudents makheru ti builin's atti d roof yisntinh ad sideburns, and hbt rods. Studei; i tvn ilp .h ugaIce'u ii hn lr ftesi reflected on the silver greeted J~~~~~~iblsnodiaoi. LuieCrns wl asme the goup when they' peered out onto the Commons PlI ys acoustic guitar, but is often pdiemsca~ ne'anet the ile of the bide~ whoe atterrpts to sue hn ofmda througl the lunch hour. The search pr(Wide musical entertainment. er n- r~~goup maeras othdiiga ac ompaniedby electric guitar. oley Iious6 ill serve as the gatroiuro.ply h al quickly return; d Ithe mtcouil t hesue'difor Mst of his. songs are original b octin foi a tea ri h ac. Sen i Jc Zain mh i will pa th high-li in halss htrglrsrieicudrsm-efr halot performs intei-pretations htoflckwllb Cacy0 whom boththjuy he als To ht's flic will be Charley, a g'oo ,aintyand th judgeI di- the cod of lunch. th, works ofsuch pominent folk TotI en igndCni'Pet i aeite M.Leecomitdtai ists as of .~~~~~tl about a n etally retarded i'c i'ba.Sno~i one PtywlakthMi.Leecm itdtat on Friday mornin- James Taylr and Joni mA who sudenly becomes i'ole f the usher I wh le senioir Andy Olson will *act th ch1 had imediately orde*e~ 1plastic kves- Ruhllirst gained notice as abilat u ~if will pay the part of. t e jury foreman. to obtain a refund o hese utensils since the vandals attending ad pe'iod. ~ iyfra h oni o~.hdfn& pe e Isi an dd ork forall mea. owvi' h s~h o be pe~re tthiendig1arvrTh ot concerns ayoung bride who brings' her 'ddntatal tl the origipal'silver-ware.. a~d playing at Cambridge's- Club l~i, - -- l~titk~i~~~ would be usband to coui't foir his broken roise Candy n ~ke 471 In 1963, he record~d his first T, morwm Ing will feature of in. rriiage. Fr'o theire on the hourlong oprtta Bob Pendei'gast, Pr( riti f ener House, the alb)um' for!1 Prestige Folklore Hie an 3houi' ofcron n ubr Spoof. predjudice igeialndegal piceill - school's on-campus shop for acsndiietl, laser prodUcpd three records fdr of. sr cre flsbgnig Victol an England. t iepoi'ted thatvandals stole he6 e 20'and 30 dollars Elektra. His most irecent aumns at 10:00 in Kem per Auditorium. All H -il1(;icat .JudgerI worth f'-candy and ckie lst Tuesday nikht. Trm Rush lan Wrong End of the The' Marx Broth s and the Three '[epa1icue uite ibetad alli The thieves evidently ente ed through Ian open. R ~a i b o i, , ar on Coumbia St4 9 oges highligh this collection of songs of which~"'When , Good Friends, Was Called window,', ransacked the ca4 one,,adte R i cords.eonCoumi brief flicks. Te Sunday. night TT ea Bar" and "llHail Great Judge"aret' exedhiog te frn dor curi n t Mr I I ~~~~, Fabulous Fiftics Ml jse will be Bnanas, a comedy ni ost fmous. Gilbei't wrote the lyrics and Sullivan Pendergast, the vandals did not take any mopey he wveekend's events will begin st rring Woody Allen. conmp sed the music. from the cash register. - .-. - I - - '2.~~

Transcript of Proposd i'lleebruary eek et- Santon apdf.phillipian.net/1972/02051972.pdf · 2008. 9. 9. · I I...

Page 1: Proposd i'lleebruary eek et- Santon apdf.phillipian.net/1972/02051972.pdf · 2008. 9. 9. · I I cdnyAd (~~~~~Pilps i Massacusett Volume 96, Number 16 Phlis ca y nov aschstser ary

I I (~~~~~~~~~~~~~Pilps cdnyAd i Massacusett

Volume 96, Number 16 Phlis ca y nov aschstser ary 5, 172

riStees Approve Proposd i'lleebruary eekeac et- At eekend Meetig ts0?r Santon a

Phi! s caern'sBordof rutes et S eruryWeek, cderny's activitiesdiscuss~~~~~~~~~~~~~sk ei officiall b s next Mon ay. According to

toth( state of the- chool. Although the trust es Associate lQean of Students Carroll Bailey, ap-d( nomjr eiino tebdete roximately 300 studm~ts have of-campus projects.qgree( not t elimin te funds for PA's nume s Mr. Bailey, who organized Febraary Week, noted

to ~~~~~~~~~that this ear's projects are mo-e diverse and in-E, c inic Problenis ~dividuay oiented t n those of Ik t year

4 '1he Budget I tee, which met in a separate Berniuda and Hono uluessio on Thrd afternoon, recognized e French instructor Samuel An erson will escort

iio neonic problems facing the school nine students, to Bem a o examine the

udge1, llowng to maintain its prograrls Wells Bacon plan to go to Berrruda'to photographExchangestudent from te Rosebd 'Ind a Rese L:(Ioft ,n rng ajorl cutbacks.of Theacommitbaeesunderwater.ee undrwater.evperRocke eocke willicomparei

Ncdi Black Spoticd Horsi. t~~~~~~~~~~~~~he adminiistrat on to try to limit expenditu es Phillips Academy to the Punahou School in Honolulu,Nedi Black Spotted Horse. ~~~~~~er possible. I Hawaii. While Be~muda,I Steve Trott will

Abbot Begins I~~~~~xchan e JJ~~~~"hh ~~, ;~I;hl Utdget Comteeas ascertained that A take a marine bidology course giv n at the biologicalwil rion smll~e~fcitnext abtthe ex ct station on the island.

gure w'ill not be ~-ertain ntil the Trustees' Aril History instructor ~il Sewall will dri~ee a group

R oseb'ud Indian Ries va t nceti . Regardless. f the deficit, the tru~tees pan of dents in hisV lkswagen an to the FloridaHudson, d tina tion crease over the $350 raise in Ke,'s~during February Week. Ba d on a houseboat,

A b b ot initiated Clem Marciil aisd ~~~~~ext ar's tition.- the1 students will tudy the semi-tropicalan exchange program last month Libby Yoakum, A juniors Nancy The rustees ailso eed toaciteevrlpn - yirpriment.with thd Rosebud Indian Iter BisiSa H4ad ad eg oStt ult he sch nI's enrollment. Acting Hd- - qurator of the Peabody F undation foi Ar-'vation in South Dakota; Accordling Sturges will traxVe to th e sbud astci Simeon Ilyd Presen~ted the plans for i haeoloy Edward Sisson wil demonstraje' ex-to Assistant to the Principal Peter reserva tion latqit ~is month 'Vhe 'reas g the public a areness of PA, which incde cavatinl tcnq n A cco eutStapleton, who coordlinated te gop illv w iIdanfmle . ipclatu g publications such as the catalogue a d sen~iors Bill Heidrich, Kerit DuBols and Dan Wofsey..project Abbot is conducting the and ttend tw odrea schools; St. hiifinl the focus o the Alumni Association to MlL Sisson has revily con cted excavat onsexcpan~e iA cojunction with Fran~is Mission chool and -Todd on00( to the imis of the Studenit Alun ni on that site.I I

Cncord Academy under the Coundy H-igh.Sch 1d, foi a month. Seniors Bija Amni antI ogRcadondir~cton of he lntrcultual - Holard Bad had omr I rgesrpit to the full board, the He; d- uppers Ian Fawcett and Mark 'Russell will tr el

St I i e s Group. Intercultural resid nt of th Rosebud reser- ns~ eeto omte niae hti s(otne nPg ,Clmi1S I dies IGroup pmte vaIn an tdta atot !Stabli bied the set of riteria necessary for choosing

relations betVeen Indians and non- Colle~e, will a t as the project hoiixt eadmastei and will now consider ii- pTn~d iansprimarily in New conshltant. He wilitouetePvd-Icniae h omte a eom - RNKSTER HIDE COM M~ONSP~oscbu Rcscnaion faml'ie~. He 41~~ inrdceuh ai d heoetdianty e heamasiteeLa rAIcnrmmeLd

England. 'Abbot girls to I. Oth Dakota Id BUILDING'S t~ehedmstr-da r I eo Bordeau, Sheryle Dllc~ic C(:uliuc E~duatiomnal Polic)V#l~E~ ()I

Co pton, Krista Everson, Nedi Aording t Mr. Stapleton, Onl Ft iday morni g, the Educational Pol cBIlack Spotted Horse, and Mary Abbo ipleme. tied the exchange comin- ttee conducted a review of all faculty p,

ElnSwift arrived in Andover p~in wihCbcroAaem unti cutts and sala ies. According to Mr. Hyle(approximately two weeks ago from aft r Abbot Pincipal Donald Gor- fihe c mmittee agreeI to maintain a "top-riot'1thej --Rosebud reservation, which don roposed it tolIthe two Rosebudt salar9 progiamco sists mostly of ioux Indians. sch I boards Mr-. G~ordon comn- I-Tbe ~ioup will attend classes at mei ted that An~ican students eiAb ot-adpitcpt in o- havf ,numlerous opportunities' to ~'*'N ferences in the N~ew E nglhan stu y foifeign u ures, but little FILI1FBUR

durin~ their monthl-long stay cha s~ie to exE mine domestic Dr to the depai-tti e of The PHILLIPIAN'S E- b b o senior-mids Mary ccl ures. eu4eBoard during February Week and the Wi

ter on eknidte resulting news va(!-uu n c eated afterl'thiase events, The PHIELIPIA

orn Rush 11~~~~~~~~~~jll . ~~~~' ~will~ t ublish agai until February 23.P l

rform At PA ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~B T D) AMA CLUB T St deiitsfotind'missn Commons utensils on roof.his tt~~~~~~eekend A £ T~~~~~~~~~~t. BY J[J ~~~~~~Vandals Cok i ntons and Benner House

Folk artist Tom Rush will per- . AbI ot Academry's I)oia Club will present Gilbert Someone entered Commons betwe 700pmform in concert-6tomorrow night- and ullivan's 111.moi0 Us one-act musical Trial y Thursday night, Jaruary' 27-and 500 .m. Fr dayat 00 in George Washington Hall, Jury i DaviswHall n Thuisday, Februaiy 17 at morning January 28 and hid $6,800 worth of glase, '

Co cluding theP events of PA's 7:15 m FiidqV' 18 at 'B 00 p m., and Saturd y, trays~ and silverw re. According to Comnon Winter Carnival weekenA. The IFebi ivy 19 at 2 00 p in Admission is free nd Di rectolr Robert A Leete, the pranksters p cedweekend's activities will also in- oPenl to the public. -65 lass racks, 950,i tray's, and the entire stoct of'cidde a dance'tonight and a- car- Alto1 eietav:o uyMaili nca-e slewr n h uligsso-oee ofand 'film presentation Folk artist mrn Rush ofAbtaot reidetav mJn caili ncag vrreetioon th eldin sBsowe ovredroo.It A~~~~~~~~~~~~fs~e ieto. bbot msic depaitment h ad Cacllhecaf~to orrow morning. wit a Cmm n9 cookout in Crijine Johnson is the plaly's musical director Th apretlsofhsemeilsocdte

1 safCourt lunchtime today. and \bbo't English nstirnctor M.A. Johnson ill Rusls onicert )lt5ssyea wl u from Iev stemai -~nelto f rafs rdy onn hl rA~ tyle da ce wilrnsiea h inlcopn~.Lel, assisted by' I students, teachers, nd ad-The weekend will climptx wit 83Ito 11:00 to ~iht in the Old'II ministrative prsonn~l, se'arched the building..Ionea concert tomorrow night faturmng ciIhe ee etuei 'rotis Judge stdn inlyte.Ihc hfo singer Tom Rush. Ru n -Th eve will fauesdntialysugpested that te.chc1 h

prsently i'ecords othCoub thd dy swcbaes te aSt, which feare si major roles. Sefiior Although the attic! search lyiddthIa el. His music is mostly folk la niga ndmd memnscn o e ve tshii' a tne Abotsudents makheru ti builin's atti d roof yisntinhad sideburns, and hbt rods. Studei; i tvn ilp .h ugaIce'u ii hn lr ftesi reflected on the silver greeted

J~~~~~~iblsnodiaoi. LuieCrns wl asme the goup when they' peered out onto the CommonsPlI ys acoustic guitar, but is often pdiemsca~ ne'anet the ile of the bide~ whoe atterrpts to sue hn ofmda througl the lunch hour. The searchpr(Wide musical entertainment. er n- r~~goup maeras othdiiga

ac ompaniedby electric guitar. oley Iious6 ill serve as the gatroiuro.ply h al quickly return; d Ithe mtcouil t hesue'diforMst of his. songs are original b octin foi a tea ri h ac. Sen i Jc Zain mh i will pa th high-li in halss htrglrsrieicudrsm-efrhalot performs intei-pretations htoflckwllb Cacy0 whom boththjuyhe als To ht's flic will be Charley, a g'oo ,aintyand th judgeI di- the cod of lunch.th, works ofsuch pominent folk TotI en igndCni'Pet i aeite M.Leecomitdtai

ists as of .~~~~~tl about a n etally retarded i'c i'ba.Sno~i one PtywlakthMi.Leecm itdtat on Friday mornin-James Taylr and Joni mA who sudenly becomes i'ole f the usher I wh le senioir Andy Olson will *act th ch1 had imediately orde*e~ 1plastic kves-Ruhllirst gained notice as abilat u ~if will pay the part of. t e jury foreman. to obtain a refund o hese utensils since the vandalsattending ad pe'iod. ~ iyfra h oni o~.hdfn& pe e Isi an dd ork forall mea. owvi' h s~h o be

pe~re tthiendig1arvrTh ot concerns ayoung bride who brings' her 'ddntatal tl the origipal'silver-ware..a~d playing at Cambridge's- Club l~i, - -- l~titk~i~~~ would be usband to coui't foir his broken roise Candy n ~ke

471 In 1963, he record~d his first T, morwm Ing will feature of in. rriiage. Fr'o theire on the hourlong oprtta Bob Pendei'gast, Pr( riti f ener House, thealb)um' for!1 Prestige Folklore Hie an 3houi' ofcron n ubr Spoof. predjudice igeialndegal piceill - school's on-campus shop for acsndiietl,laser prodUcpd three records fdr of. sr cre flsbgnig Victol an England. t iepoi'ted thatvandals stole he6 e 20'and 30 dollarsElektra. His most irecent aumns at 10:00 in Kem per Auditorium. All H -il1(;icat .JudgerI worth f'-candy and ckie lst Tuesday nikht.

Trm Rush lan Wrong End of the The' Marx Broth s and the Three '[epa1icue uite ibetad alli The thieves evidently ente ed through Ian open.R ~a i b o i, , ar on Coumbia St49oges highligh this collection of songs of which~"'When , Good Friends, Was Called window,', ransacked the ca4 one,,adte

R i cords.eonCoumi brief flicks. Te Sunday. night TT ea Bar" and "llHail Great Judge"aret' exedhiog te frn dor curi n t MrI I ~~~~, Fabulous Fiftics Ml jse will be Bnanas, a comedy ni ost fmous. Gilbei't wrote the lyrics and Sullivan Pendergast, the vandals did not take any mopey

he wveekend's events will begin st rring Woody Allen. conmp sed the music. from the cash register.

- .-. - I - - '2.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Page 2: Proposd i'lleebruary eek et- Santon apdf.phillipian.net/1972/02051972.pdf · 2008. 9. 9. · I I cdnyAd (~~~~~Pilps i Massacusett Volume 96, Number 16 Phlis ca y nov aschstser ary

b - .1` 2'IHE PHI, -IP ANFerar , 92

DAVID N CHWARTZidenit

T3~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~DAVID'WA E Mick Students Face Inaeute Curicu~umEditor ~ s mosbi o nwppe ~'-.~ , oming,"The A-T~~~ie P 3IPIAN Editor f ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~' JOHN~~~1 AYLOR separ- o enind

1RK HELLER ,is mclsibAm ~M ner as existed quite wellMaai~Editor Su h as he PHILLIPIAN, which in t peet situation. n order

~~~ 1w~~~h a a white staff, to present for it to be rkable, it must bePHILLIPS ACADEMY MAIRK LA~tVRENCE an occur te view' of the h~luck sepa "te

-ANDOVER MASSACHUSETTS Biness Manager. ex qurience at Andover wtithout At any r te, the report statedH. GERAR k ~~~~~al w~ting (tncbae oetrit that the e istence of Af-Am~ is

BISSINGER re o~nize our in oener weoesnta n "the comniunity aPHILLIPIAN is jublished ~~~~Sports-E itor th tep:tng esowevernt weathe PIIPA.i ulse eonz u epniiiya a asocial grolp and as individuals

wceekly thrpughout the school year ROGER COHEN newvspape to assemnble he facts ' transcend rcial, class, and otherby thc students of-Phillips Academy, Exetv dtrcO cerinil this inp'ortaontjsituationdifrne.AnIoer, Massachusetts. o s objec ively as I" possible and The fina proposal oqf the

DAVID McCRACKEN, prsn het oteP corn- Curriculum Committee cceirledAso-aeSot Editor in nt. an increase i the recruitment lof

Cartoon by Fritz Drury , -lj bakfrm 1ovrh4.Utd

un;suitabI( academically ~cor bII ck Teaching 'elo esge Vaughn Boston are~a. Over the pastl everalstudetits. Accoirding, to Associate language tuy as courses wh years,. there nas -been a gradual

,-~~~~~~~~r'~~~~~~~~ ~~In tructor in English, Ray Shepard the schoo ouId re-orient. his decrease in enumber of blacksSchoolboyJ C~ode I th situation is 'lpathetic." Th oldivjvteicro-tnofa PA. This yar four blacks halvecurricu I for the entireI school black contribu ions into PA Courses already left A, leaving only a

cotau n'ly one 'ourse, English' as. opposed o the creation of ttlo 4b lsa h colTe lak of trust between 'faculy and std't~ with re- 43 whie deals wt the 'black' distinct cour es. Black teaching- L-I.ss of Identity

gad loaicilneithprdcof nyatr It~ inev it- m 4l's contribut~ to the fellow Jess V uhan elaborated on One point w ich the Curriculun,,able result is~ the "schoolboy ethic:' a student should never wrd nadIo thrIr hscnet Pol pa o omte e to covee'is the

I - ~~~~~~~~~~~only thre black faculty m~embers often of ed cating blatlks ad :'ffect on the b ack studentsIf PA'sturn' in a fellow student for infrat n of rule unless an here, and only onelis a full-fledged educating wes. The school has predominantly white t osphere -

emnergency s tu~tion can be handled i no otherwyintuo the responsibi't ofedctnth ad educa t * he joint PA-Abbot Curriculum total student; al tdnsmut TeeC e no dobttataThe reasons 'for this lack of tru1 aref diff~~icut to define. Sid C mtee a group con- '-learn abou al1 sects ofexistidg Phillips Adadem~y, blacs are

Th& bas~~icciutonteprofsu nt em rmaer si ting 1 I white faculty mem- in today's ol . learping to rile in a whitd 'world.Th~,basi ditrus on he art f St( ets pems roma fe! r b rs -fron~ both sckiools, contained The secodfr of curriculum Mr. Shepha d aidded, ":T~ onlyof ~he disciline ~iroces of the s'cho~ .which bya~y estimate inI its ret oit sevei-al suggestions change which the report suggests- kind of edlL c~ion carredj on at

- ' is iiipersonal and unsympatheticS dents are rig htly afraid aild solutions to~ this academic is the establisihment of coursels PA is the ir:d ceted for; otherd tj~~~~~~esbpny faout ebr. hy pbi.I The re~iortwihte nhsoy ga institutions cep:The pinoblernko iscussing problesoel ihauiymmes hy cdhmitteO ~ e during the music,. -art, ad social science for the blakIstdniedfo

knok that most faculty member 'fe obligated to bring any 19-0-1 shot 0 year- and summer, which fueniryontebck ay tdntt'P,-s keepinginfr action of a rule in front of the disci l1ine committee. ' cod isid e rteu"black experience" experience, an 4 which a~fe taught 'PA from s ighs identity. It

-' ~~~~~~~~an he eirculrIoehr entirely by bfack facul t1"Mr takes a sti( n identity to uivFaculty 'members themselves sare -the sarpe tyerfhe re hurt recommended that Vaughan also spoke in ao-fsuh er"MnpepeeltatP

-- distfiis~t. They know that a lot o ruie-breaking ges on and th first Iriolrity . in the aea of courses for Asianan ato as ,it exists o' may not be for* is not reported because of the schoolboy ethic, Thus, they ~th blac'i experience a d PA's students at PA an de'a black a i provement ove- his

I- ~~~~~~cu rICLu Utb h eriiep f "hs ores osdtsyte home enviionent culturally orfeel 'somewhat resentful that more students do not consult b k f'culty, incuig day SCcol's diploma reurr- t.Frsiiualb~Mr hpadd~ehr-d t ingcldi ih nsace coreiremts. FoAmr spiitully uirf Sehrdddthiam.,aout personal problems, probl ms which might render ech n ai eachg felwwt ntne orei aiAe- cmet,'IfaIperson recognize

* - - . th goal of hiri~~~g ten PA and can l~Ieituetught in Spanish the asur ove structure of thetestudent liable to disciplinary 0 botteachr wihntenetto wud aif udent's anguage world-and va ts to be a part ofl

Because most faculty members feel that their 'hands are ye rs. T4 st~ggesin m be too requirement." B I a c k students' it, then this kilid of education mav1

op inistici, howevr It iginores the genei-ally agree that such ourses be xtrem el 'im-portant." -

tied when it comes to meeting 9ut, ciscipline, students have difficulty involve in c nvincnig as black literature and Afro- ToI ;Fn iroriiiient.

created the schoolboy ehic to Ip'rot(Ct themselvels from an qld hfis black ntuts that American histo stild be taught( The r-eport oncluded, "We must\h mechanical rlisci line But student ~~~~~~AI love isa good place for them. by blakatach ho 4t~il educalioal Lin-in umane, FtP. ~~~~~~~~~~~P would hai-dly be an ttractive ers are,,not found that easily. viomnwich akspsbl -

also hav& their hands tied when it cornes to discipline. ai osphei-e foi- a black tache- to EsaeFo l-ht ocict~ ,re grwt n all the .qialities \ The students who i-ecently urn d 'in a fellow student p. ce his family in;, the Andover- In its report th cimmtt~efound(whc maeII man beings humane

pu lic schol have few black the Afro-Ane an 5cety "a an ws nd gentle and strong.'broke the schoolboy ethic. Not only did thyy fail to consult ch dren, nd ab black family ould valuable aid to the incomning black Vale, tt~is n cions are

te student beforie turning him in, but they also fail~d to real- probably feel totally alienat6d student as he ll~orks throdugh the vitlinrdes of the communityitcl~prietelc ft~utIhrn f h htlp fro in the social lif6 at P early days and we~k:3 afhssay evisticlly,,,apprise te lac of tust nerentin th Phillips -Orie'imtio here " It is, m rtant fbak Att hlip cdm.Aademy community. . 'sto tU e curriculm th eot studenCS to have p lacA t h ois t, PllpeAodTeAc~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~F'frtu lc og is inatanisitionalpeidThAs this school now stands, the is ~~~~~~~~~~~de Is witi two typeoftpsd to get away from the ascJyfr such a total en-

As tis ~hoo no stadstheschoolboy ethic'is ar un- coarse offeiiings. tIget all-white society 'o P A.- Hoevr VP -rnmn i heeIA o needsfortunate necessity for PA sti~~~hents. Perhetps the chool will the re-orieŽntatmon ofmnco-e it is also mporta tfor bI cs and ope-mindness and initiative on

see the r(3asons for this ethic. Hopefully it will tak~e~positive pistyofed tPACncue wtstolantiv gth-, he "part of elvery member of the-' I an hone~~~~~~~~~~~~~stj preslentato of~ebak and Af-Am could be us d as a community, 11black and ?white,

steps to make the discipline system a more personal, mean- ox erieneje, the rpr ynentions tool to help reach this difficult teachler and student, to achieve theingful institution. Only through frank, openidiscussion can Htorleatescal gipa I . Mathematic structor (desirned and necessary Educational

the problen~~s 'which face students ~~oday, pa~icularlS' drug sc ences, art a muSic, and Warren Young oposed tf is idea, experience.

us'e, be solved.' If the school will only allow for this kind of '

opepiness and trust the schoolboy ethic will die. - ELY ' - S~T hI ' \\ 1-10~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'H ' A BEHIND To-Tte ditor

TI lOSE~~~ ~ RTCNTthe Editors of The P' wh1I aLdistessenal'st' Eth'cs 'F OSE~ ~~~~~~~~~I I'm sitting at my type9writer trying to figure iutwhIamdsrsejournalistic Ethics I - I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"\\ NIE" UG ING6. over The PHIZ.LIf IAN ai~-ticle on. diljug Use t ig not because I'm com- \

The feature The PHILLIPIAN ran last week on drug u~e - I many abou~t the situatio4 so I heavesome kncwledge of its existence1. ~~~~~~~~What 'is it about that artj IeIt is not- tha The PH-ILLIPIAN shouldn't

at PA raises'several questions about the nature and pur ose ~Iwieaottepolm~Itikt~ysol hyhv hi at~~~' s~~traight. Perhaps 'I'm up toe~hdangerou! inaccurate statements

ofth apnerwinpgeeral Th PHLIA mutview itselfa such as "LSD is sfuptthl3h'rip." vosyWy h uAs a newspaper, The PHILLIPIAN must I . ~~~~~~~~who is selling it says s.IYucntus that ki d of authority like you

a journalistic venture. It has an obligation to print the truth - can trust a used-car sal~~a. 'I.

as-it sees fit, to give its readers v lal nihit o ehpIm mtr~db h ef-right ousness of statementsblmsan sit~ton afetigthe soho'c mntinit such as:: "beskiles, you nhet the w~-n idi epedaigi ob em and im p uo in hs e ffec ti s d m nty an " s i' .good g y pushers ar a o e al that. It is a stancehope of improving these situations. - ' ~~~~~~~~,,j otit unlike the prostitute v~~~~~nho sells therroititu for aeundredre dollais hhlddi

I I ~~~ ~~~~~~I herself as moral tspro oone who s~l e- ffrfive. n However, since 'the paper remains one. of the most' re- -Pras ' iobeib h elwju l~ seti hc

liable sources 'of information about the school for the butL the shocking quf s~~eby someuko iue but dvryside - community, it- is forced into a dual role: Ithat iemains anonymu, msterious odvr ittle light. I~

-¶ ~~of the newspaper and that, of the public relations- no ~ nesadwy i orsudgntiofsl-iyta deisth- - letter. . rationalizations f~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t the i~~~~~iaking of a quirk b ck.atioali'tiosi mustf ck- mut gettingin

article, Th~~~~~~~~~~ PkI takes l~~~~~~~~~~~oth ' ~~~~hard-hearted in'my old ate b I fin itdf'cIt to squeeze' out tearsIn printing any arilTePILLIPIAN tae ohfor those poor, little elitet boswho iaetttend secondary school

these factors iflto consideration: In t' caeo teduuse - In a world 6f guffering tePAsttidet uferg is artificial at best-article, the negative effects the atcemight have -on: the -- or is it "at worst?"I - - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Pem-haps, I'm 'pet' o r the image it cetesohssho~sipublic relations of the school were considered secondairy to - trevyoewhtemtiehaifhre itoey inf 'then tcoa helthe positive tiffects the truthful pu lication of the iarticle 'thr everyone elw hsooLi iode isuet oehgl

would probably have, The PHILL INwill never neglIect - m6tivated than th~t. I - I Iwhat it considers its journalistic responsibility for the Sake - Perhpstits jheam uiinsu nat fe i othosg hoiI ~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~"I %%ard toepnks ilo t is argue that giving Studen s more re ponsibilit fr onutng hi

of maintaining an artificial public image. ' h il tantiu" I Cni dOa ,Cln4 th i il wc -(oitm n '~ 3 ICo .n4

'

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AFebruary 5, 1972 ~~THE PHI LIPIAN Page 3

'1-~~~~~~~~~7AFFECTIVE EDUCATION, ~K1LtesT h ~ io

Student Capitalists Liq'ar n Re I us~ O f. Livipg I(Continued fro.1 Page 2, Cal 4)

Student Capitalists L 'am ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~a o work. "I ye0y wi lives is foolha ry. It certainly strerdgthens tat uet

...to learn the great end and eal buiesmaaesd it, e said Perhaps, it's Ite pain a teacher fedi for, a upil'sick enough to

business of living.bsn mngr it"esad deal ust tesuet n tl o Jd isl sbigsm

So reads the Constitution of ~~~R cords and Elephansdustotestetsadsilo eudhiefasbngomPhls Aceademy.' omsttudntsf In ornmons, many stud L'iS post kind of a saviour. ~

Phillips Academy. Some studendts If1 use This is a tedesignie proaby toose frien s and not influenceade-iEments fo 'sdrecords . letr dI.bl

attempt to learn the "real business av o1 is un ho m uch itole stck thrader sad i o b ihns eas hi

of living" by, studying miith- and books. This practic i u- mn epe u o ohv adi ol eds etbcueta'

Oters, thbioregy raiti ones, ' -ped having soldJ to a. junior a Iic eyyu

lter, th dire w aismin book th t has nod' been used at Jam s Aae, W yte -

learnthes diecgy w andb mart.g deibyI akt. j eir'thrives on the PA ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Phillips Academy for fi.{ years. Schol Inster

money. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Also; o e' should be creful -of To the Editor of Th PH-ILL IP'IAN:

campus in many forms. Even if ~~~~~~~~~~~ bu-yi g sed records, wh ch hav, ' I can only c done informn whn stdet rights or safety is

ore the less legitimate "~~~~~~~~~~onI ir een played on , by being endangered to an extettati unn'rol 1 bleg on the student

in the last issue ~~~~~~~~~~~twer ty eople. 'to-student level. hether or noenon a nda gered in the recentCE tai ly one of te more bizarre informing case is'-secondary.' h !mot a tuet

of The PHILLIPIAN, we still have buie-s oav rts inCr- ddoteeat p o n act i that Th s stuens

the PA Subscription Service, a buietsthavriei or- ddnte e _att p tohiandl h iuto n eron hi~a

successlul food service, the Record ~~mon i senior rian ~1hagnot's "a mistake on thi at hchte-o ~rtsuccessful food srvice, the RecordAfri an arts and1 crafts trade The fact rmIns, however, ttn one was eing endangered t

Club of'Aeia n eerlls ' Amngthe iesChg t offers an extentucot lable by the St dnts The infoimer claimns tht~~

significant but nonetheless popular deaetheue fitemsratd msagnraeachthatecu unt

businesses, such as used book and Stud capitist Cha les FOXw I are carved turles, elephant-skin daesueofdgscatdm istti er1adRsu nt

record sales. irecteh by Ralton ~a d p ss match oks, ostrich eggs, walking This is true. But oes telling-'a fa ulty em rhsrelctetst

Widesrcad rowthassisailtdirecor Ge f' ud ch 'Sticl sad spears. His pri es raoge 'No. Confrontation' n the student level could very we I have beeni resol~vedWidesredGrowt assst. drectris e , ur ' h, ron 2 spears for! $4 to skins at this conflict, It was not attempted. As a resul o dllings'the faculIty'

The Phlis'Aaey Sb iepapeby a . n $15. 0 ach. Chagnot st ted that ,m beinovd ore harm~r was doeth;an goo . The udent sPys

s c rip i on Seyice (PAS), the orning ad 4el~vepap~rs, his prices are low "when ou now that his intention was not to heive hislefllowlstudent expelled, it

r e p r~e s e fiti h g' the most hoping to be appoite -0a pig- con.,ide- the work that~ ent into was for the good ofihe Search and Resc ue unit. St ent level confr~nt-

widles reald growth of student money position theflo ng yar. maigtetig. ecnies ainwudh v IS I

cap t a Ii S ni in -, the school, Howevdr, PASS pash labciei' a n h hns"H sdrs anwudh v oide this resuli.

distri utes each day about 140 well; one paperboy receiye~ about his gr atest achieveme t in the Some may s the dleali~r harmed one stude by selling 'him -a-

copies of thet Boston Globe, 88 $10.50 ~ week.' busi es to be the 'sale of a copper tab of acid. Thelfacts are th'at' he sold the di a friend who con-I , E h ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ba, ele t cting Dean f Faculty , sequently gave it! to the student who flipped du.Tis student tok the

copif of theL New York Times. A o rft ebsns etrc 1Mc ee. Iwhole tab against the strongl'y stressed 'advc oftleast three people

and ~ copies 'of the Boston Herald escapade at Andove i aust one-'algy

Tra lr Aqcording to PASS service' run by two e eri~ n Fr-e 'cords -to take js n-af

dieirr rdealtnthosric lwrsrTedhrlsRowealastoene ar aso utidhhesaeseleews'trndcnbyehsf lo0 oabinigd Ttnflalso offers subscriptions to an PeterLeTer Charles~i supis cap ali tic -influences on the vial of cognac on! a winter hike. The an ount consu ed could not have

unli ited number -and variety of many types of I oh stu ~nti of PA. On hihhs affected the stu ts performnance at All. This ac ion endangdred no '

a u a t ed the canipus with one, yet thttuethflan eesytmag zines, many at less expensive perishable and nonp r is ableocto 'poaS d sth eodCu f ask hmnth tu cna el oi othesr tourn im in rather ta

stud( nt rates. The operation is ,students in the Will all com lex proabndripgh Iw~e ee~nd trips. I

extr mely profitable; Ralston said and th~ West Quad S u cur A nc (RCOA). Teicompany None of the students involved in thenfrin d1esrdtexp-

that PASS grossed over $2400 last T h e organizatio h en offe iefree recor s for a Sion of the stude~t. Tlhe students made a giss r r in judgmentl by

ter , $400 of which Ralst6n operating for only ti re w~s, ' e'esi e f$.0 h tunnn haelr otefculty. Had they assess the'situation and

rece ved himself. and th two founder rdyhave mid fleman betwe R fanPA seen that iio harri was done! beyond the 'Scolie of sudent control, 'and

Ralst'on said that PASS was made aou $30.00. Le te n sp rA ail,.h eevs that no good would come from faculty ~nteiv ntion, perhaps wet would

forme abot twoyqqr ago y Fbwellhave hreeo her stu'ent a crtin number! of r cords for one brilliant, but1 scared ex-dealer still wit us,l n\three stuts

a group of four students, among working for them, w o, accord1ing eac ~Astudent -who b~ecomes a ,not ostracized by the commimity as, they re n w.'

them t h e 'greatept campus to Lest r, have so fa be n willing 'maesbem- of theVlb. Dnsie ' 'SicerelyI

capitalist -,of all time, Andy to wor for nothin but an uc- Il~tost h Mo'tar;he Tote dioro TeaHLLPIN

Bridges. The only competition at, casionz I pop-.tart ., Toth diofo I.ePRLIPA

the 'time was1 a, now-forgotten 1 "'The~~y lk c" '' sai tI at he gives ayo h When a person divulges information or anot r Ipersqon'~ ovtuet w anaNe Yor Letrsi ht thoranizz tion records away on lhis Eriday night I

Times distribution gevcBig~ has coltacts with fod comp lies rad owan adsetniy what he says wvill be taken in the right' way, proc s~ thlrough 'th(

contro over he ~evice..Bridg's wit the acti i ersoal recrd ~olecti~. goo, ' heassdnes a pecaeiuonapoitiecord- etakelhecchace h

and his boys bought him 6ut. Since in Lawrence, Methun and F am' t right channels,! nd end up with the -rght solution.B not' going t

then, PASS has held copee ingha .lie added th the et erthese ' stdentrears studeots in a student matter,1the'informruaadmit anfdsesalcconro ovr hedistribution of all specialj connection~ gtrustch anbetdntret cofi'& e There i1- also an aismption o nowing the righ

p e r i o d i c a 1 s , except The Hs.tes Company, b cause " hey or heir, own best interestsis tutadcniceIP e r i o d iik e. Hcc met athtInis0 aexcTeyepftrvalabe, procedure regardless of the opinions of al~ those involv d

PHILJlIPIAN. lieun anir aualIn short th infomer a 'imsa g w-ie~rl ich~ he! Ikan

Bureaucratic excep for the origi I rganization -ands etimes eccentric, services 'or t ad-ikerol

PASS is a complete bureaucracy. of ~the corporation h has ohe to t eA community.boyesintqulfdtotk. Snery 1

A To the Editor o The I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~John von Schlegel, PA '72

1 ~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~~ ~~~~~~~~A RTIGAN'fS To thfdto / h PRILLI IAN~ I I' E-J* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Since the Jnuary 29th ublication fa'news ite concerningm

L E'-.' N A KA CVresignation of mid-January, haye received 'anumbr of letters an(

~~-WTU'~~~~~~~A1't AlIT I. ''""'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ comments which indicate th ty6ur mistaken use of t e 'ord "retire'

I'1'A~~~~~~~~lAI~~~~~ ANDO VER ~~~~~~~~~~in the captio t'tat item haseerniedng TII 6~~~~~~~~6 M INS.My depart re fromn Phi lis' cad mywanoin'ysee

~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~ ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~retirement, wh h may Im n sitaeporta hlhIc

SANIDW I S 'Iof interest-et etera. It was in eirery sense :a re~ig tion, and corn

FREE Delivery To Phillins t~~~~~~~~~~~~aemy ANDOVER INN - ,I will ap eciate your printing this in your lett rs 'column asIS '. N ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~public correcto of the error. Thak you'

Call Biefor 9:30 BARBER SHlOP - Ieey,

'1 I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 'Lorene Banta

475-9678.tL30 A.M. lo~ 6 P.M.- TH CE ULI JNGE'Open 7 Daysand Eveni 2S Saturday, February 5,' 63:45 ahcl 9:00 p.m. in GW- Cliff.Robertson

stars in Caley (1969) as 4t retp rded man tempora y~ transfrne

46 M ain Street I o er ' into i genius. Through the i~e~of modern medical tee nology, 'Charley

________ - - ~~~~~~~1LLIN G S r C is cured and begins to appreciate the world abOut 'h m However,[hT * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~soon learns that he must faceanaoiigmental re ression ~vhenit

- ' ' - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~is discovCered that the cure is only tempo ary.'

~~~~~'~~~~~~~~~A1TAI -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Sundny, February 6, 8:00 i' in G - In the fill s'atir~ Bananas

C 'A JEJVE~LERS&0 qA S (91,drco-rti o41,ilen st rs as 'an A erican weakling

LI.. ~~~~~.~~AL'I~V A1 L PTIiANvo1971) direaco-wit -Woo a rev 1ution. Allen tirizes.a numler-' II ' '~~~~~~~~~, H ' of subjects ranging from med a tb holitic in Banansubecs rngngfro m .a to blii i Bnanq.11

SCH OL JWELRY'- Monc~iy, February 7, 8:0 0 .1 in GV - Vincent PIce stars in thetitle role of The Abomninable Dr ~ PbsSeekin reve gefor the death

AIN ' ANDOVER ~~~~~~~of his wife at' the hands of s e ~gi tdoctors, 1) . Phibes system-

Z i..aflda.'capet 3rdST. atically plans and executes adti eise for 'eac physician. The

at' -.- ' ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~to be outdone for sheer horro

ANDOVER Tuesday, February 8, ~~~~~~in G - Mia 1 Far stars in Rose-

ANDO ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~mary's Baby (1967), a film ased on IrA Levin' betphn ovelTh picture is a- aeostnic ower at A4rk 'in a Mnatnapartment

'1E ANDOVER building. Ma II Wednesday, February 9, 80p..i W- Richard Hars and Alec

/-' 1 . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Guiness take th' lead roles! nCrwll(1970). Thei 'fm is set in 17th

I~~~t¶ ~~~~~ T~~~rT~~~~ T-rA-'-~~~~~~~~TTC'r' ~~~~~~ century Eng in amidst th piicltrbulpnce of ivil war.1 HarrisG~~~FT'L HIOUSY~JI- potys Oliv r rm lthdy mi aer of the po uliSt insurgents,C f, ~ ~ #4while Guiness pe forms as Chre ,Kn fEnglpnd.,

\Letterpress ~~~~Offse ' W. H , rine-:ORSSYTX~~~d. quali 70 rumn~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~e - I Two~~~~~~~~~~~~~ay Radios - Instant Service~~~~~~~~~~~ITw-Wy aici nsan ~rvc

creqativ Pr/B .'i fS. ' 475-1 822 1'Tipo, - - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 anS.I;

ee-o~530

p. printers ~ ~ ~ UN ~, ~ I BOS N, MASS I 1~~j ~32 Park Siree , Andove

prites 01PiI Burint , ero)

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-f'

'Page". 4 P H I LI I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-FebPi ary,15, 1972

1l9 i,7 2 FEBRUARY LWE~EK 4Ilowl o tgTO : BEGIN ON MO NDAY English instructor N. P. Hallowell 'Jl on his S~Vord ~nE s Upon

(Continued From Page 1, CoI' 5) wl produce Antigone asI this returning home Creo finds tat

the ilderness. February 25 and 26. Written by himself lead fromn th town into

Phol Ptography comprised the most popularl project .Sophocles, the play deals with the exile.,II ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~conflict betweeh man-made laws, Other cactrinlude upperarea for February Week this year. Subjects will and the higher callings andofhe thee Phillings o ReadPhasRelad messa messg and'na

rang . from a pictorial essay of Boston's Loga'n----- human soul and the gods. sentry ad senior Wat r~ MaroneyjInte atitonal Airport to illustrations of a New York I sa le ftec

'I 'T City slum.. About five students. will take pictures Defiant Burial will the chorus,..Abou wie ichens..ill akepicuresantBural r0 te cof February Week activities, Pingree senior Amanda 'oye ofil leadlthconsistsW c

Ro fc seniors Bob Roulstn' and Gus1Se ~~Presidential Campaigns takesitfie role as a Theban prin- Smith ~n oe Cri ShW.

Seeral PA students will spend the week working ceswoebohri ildi bo ~ rLnaH rwizwill.to ~uppot presidnt~al cadidates.Senmor Bill an attack against Thebes. She' bo eirLn o

pport presidential candidates. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~* take the part of antg'ssister,Pru nAitedstodeelpe hpoheiclImpigPru hetical ~~~~~~~~~~hmpaign ~~~~burie's her brother in direct Ismene.plan forSenator dmund Mukie of M h.Upper defiance of a proclamation from

Michael Beschloss and lower, Ted' Nace Ill join Creon,- King of Thebes. ruce SeirAd ie ItastMrW ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Hallowell in directing the play~the cqmpaign, forces for South Dakota Senator Rogers plays the King's part.,: nls ntrco evtGeor7,e McGovern in Illinois and New Ha pshire. -Antigone's deed is, discovered and Enls istuorHtLavt

I Creon. banishes he-r' to die in a ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~will supervise the stag~ ~e an2Several other projects are based iuponjl political Creoutbaises he to dsie inha senior Marc Chardon Iwiltake

'1 4ctiviieos. Lowers James and Tobin Arms ~ong will Charoutsde te tonigdspitnthpleaing ofhe~r betrothed Haimon, chreolgti.

work for their mother, who is the co-ch rman of -Photo raph Rosarris in the exhibit showingn Crpeadns ofpae y oe u Fitts Translatio~

Febr ary Week. Upper Mike McLaughlin rill work GleyBacon. 'slation wvritten by 'oer~Fit-for oston City Council member Gabriel iemonte. Ad io h t Later an pid blind prophet,, gerald" and the lateDdy Fitt

M n sudets. illseve n usnes iaciie A disn p n P o0 Exhibit portrayed by lower John Stephen, a forme{ English teceat PAM n~~ students. Will serve in business pacities ~~~~~~~~~~tells the'King that he has offended' He sae ta ecoeti

duri g February Week. Local businesses e ployingstedtht e oetstud ts include the Purity Supreme sup market, Anddvar's Addison Gallery of American Art the gods by his recent action and' translation because it ollows th16Mac rtney's clothing store, and the Andover opened a new exhbit featuring the works of must makeamns Creon goes ,ideas alditent f SophoclesBoolstore. A Boston advertising agency, a textile j3hotogr pher Ross Frris last Tuesday. According qucliorlaeAtgn u ahr'hnteltrlmeaning,factory, several law firms, and stock rokerage- lo Mr. Harris, the hii s" etrospective of finds that she has hung herself.- and preserves inudh of-th subletiesfir m -will also eniploy PA' studehts. ten yea s of my work froffi 1961 through 1971." 'Hssn ooecm yte~ee fteoiia re.

Yale Polo Club Stable Boy Natu and Portraits Se ior Tom Brown has abandoned his ~opes of Mr. arris explai ed that the 'photographs are

hitc-hiing o bco~i th' Yae Plo Clu 's stable divided nto two them s. The earliest pictures, which AbPrn i aand exercise boy for he week. Senior BiIWih eal ost entirely hots of nature comprise the otVeo s ew P Ital, will study pld West rniches' and the pres( 4t cattle ~frst t me of the exhibition. Mr. Harris took Abbot Principal Donald A. of' privacy for certain idividuals,busi ess. 'Senior Bernhard Seibald intend! to visit ?ractic Ily all of the e scenes along the coast of Gordon recently vetoed a'proposal no matter how few, was im-several of his prospective colleges. I 4iaine nd its' outly g islands. His more recent to allow open dorms on specified menselyliftiportant. I

Several dozen students will participate medical )ictures which' are osty portraits, make up the weekends between lunch and Mr. Gordon's objectiois to t eprojects.These wil feature pecialty ~ork and econd part of the 'o.All photographs in the dinntr on Saturday and SP Ppsl inlddte ctors of

observation in surgery, radioisotopes, path logy, X- 'xhibit epict New Er land. In a Town Meeting on Wednesday, peer pressure, security roll's,ray, ' Pharmacy, and orthopedics. The mrijogity of Mr. Harris, Who gr duated from Harvard in 1960, ' Jaur 26 tdnshdpse n rvc.TepIi ~ o'thes~l projects are off-campus. Gr~up pr~jects in- taught photography at, Palfrey~ Street School in the proposal almost unanimously, that he had found no isporfrelude. the Roxbury Low-Cost.-Housinig proj~ct and Vatertcwn, Massachi etts, from, 1964 through 1070. but many of the faculty and staff the p-roposal among admi trtrsthe loucester Community Service~ program. These He is presently m iting book on teaching had opposed it. ' and littlie from the resi ntadisend dvors will refurbish and repair parts of hcttography. " n Good Intentons ors.bull ings'. Ph tos For'alce meot the Abo Oewe min ajo itji

~~Computerized Animation ~Mr. arris stated t at he will comb to the gallery' Community", Mr. Gordon reasoned He a~ ded that perbh'p notf AllJ nior Edward Heller plans to create Lmtd later t is mi'onth t speak with- any interested that while the points brought up of th udnsprsn1 'dispoiken

I ~~~~~~~~~~~student about the s w, which is-his first one-man against the proposal were both their opinions because of hecartoon sequences using PA's PDP-11 computer. exii.-e as nind tJ l f h vrosadraitc hs o "bewemn aoI~ o teTwc or three math instructors will teach computer hxii hH its ered forhal a ouldh "it uadneletd mlstie ghosorn ~ "Pehei oritype foses onthe ry, from elementary to advanced levels. photog aphs on,,exh itwr o ae n ol thdrfetd"~ego nproposal[Proi p1 Iosso

S veral pojects 'wll involv musi~al1 studies. be bou ht from him rthrough 'the Addison Gallery tentioris than likely realities." Hde special occasions will con inue, butJun or c6'tt Pearson -will assemble a clavichord, 6ffice. he exhibit wIl remain'open until March 1. stressed the point that the problem this will ~not be a ~eiular natter.a kebadisrmnwith th sitneof music Vst ne~oinst ctor William B. Clift. English teac er Jerry '

Fos er will give banjo' instruction~ while I -

ma heratics instructor Warren Young will hold jazz ITIR GIFT SHOP -. PzI~wor kshops throughout the week. ' . - I -iP Z

Thee Black Seniors Qa1 lify'-CCTILLUG VILLA T ir. INDO0OR - 0 TDOOR SWIMh1ING POOL

A~~ National Merit1 Fh it ~ COFFEE HOP - DININ(G RPOOM Syrian Subs:!-- Reg ar'SubsS~niors Gerald C. Bryant, Chester T Lymn, and

Edwar(I J. McPherson recently qualified a fialistsin the National Merit Scholarship Corjoration's -SAUNX BA" I -PAR 3 GOLF COURSE -Pz a- e ua iySzNational Achievenieht Scholarship Program 'for

Bryant, -Lyman 'and McPherson are aong ap- ,a d .1

Jr proximately 1000 finalists in the program, who were1 1 (a di. chosen on the basis of their scores in thd National \re

Merit Scholarship Qualifyng Test. Each ifiI fittalist will with m at al~(no saus.now' compete for orle of 225 National Achiievem~nt' i A L,

$1000 scholarships which are one-year grants, o __LL~

for one of approximately lop independently sporn-__ rn h- sored Achievement' Scholarships which are HERATO -TROLLING GREEN ui m u g rs i o -renewable for up' to our years of college. The' OTOR INN C T National Merit Scholarship Corporation' will an- CALL. ' 475h9404nounce' the winners -publicly on March 1.,I

___________ ____ - - - 1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~FREE'D'ELIVERY SERY dETOWN KENNETH P. ANDOVER

' BOOKS~~~~UORE ~34 Park St. -7Next To The Bowling Al'PRINTING CO""hmn leAdve ilg

COMPI~TE PRINTING SERVICE I..SCHOL~ SUPPLIES -Andover, Mass. I

Letterpress~~- Offse! ' TYPE~ RITER ANDOVER INNSALES and SERVL DDICLEM 5

475-0626 77 MAuL STREET PAET, TDNS LMNI\ANDOVER, MASS. . II

26 Essex Street '*Chapel Ave. Of Rte 28 - Tel. 475-5 3

* I ~~~Andover, Massachusetts WNx otePs fc PakSt. 'Andover ' ''/. -

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'February 5, 1972 THE PHILL IP IA N P,#_________ ~ge 5

Varsity Squash Defe ts 'ale, Choate ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~PA Swimm ng Tips Dart oith;Ando~~~ier ~~~u~rm~~ui Topple . ~~~~. - , Ka Ian Pace Kaziekas $ets '~~~~~~~~' Sehools eco l c rd

Yale~~arsity -~ A- oppleSaturdc-y Jnuary 29, Hanovet the meet. In this eent, P'Per"B" Team ~~~~ -.-~~.. -- -~~~-~~ To 6-1 Win 0 er hat; r-.H- - Andover's varsity imming A~ro a u dt a~be

As Bloomfield Stars ~ k~~--'~Record Stan sat 7-2' temto t lss eet of h toce, out bv Dart not'S~~~tyrday, January 29; New ~~~~~seso, s t owed t~eDart- Steve Hutton. However,Dat

Sat rday, January 29; New ~~~~~~~~~~ ---~~~~~~- -~ Wednesday, Felruary 2; An- mouth JV-'s, 48-47. In a battle which mouth's automt tiespodHaven, Conn.- The Andover varsity mati themer

squash team crushed Yale's var- -~~~~~~ Z"~~'~.kŽ~~ -~ kdin ~~ Extending its undefeated saw Dartmouth take an; early lead, the judges to,~ be rong, as Ander-

t 9 *st~~B~sud 63 ocpur t "~v e r varty squash team to fight back, winning th e one son timee ofe 51.69 etteredfIastcondssixth traight victory of the season. apuseen tce, A- teAovr wm es me n b treoeo eod5~ J

1 ~ ~ , aiqihda potent Coate the final event.. In the following eent, The SquadCapt in Bill Kaplan, in the number - -qrad, 6-1. Tom aleigh, in he picked, up still miore points ontwo position, had the handiest win - , ,' er four positi nI for the Blue, Early Losses *-Drmuh s ye tds,of the -day as he held his opponent I- von b th mStcviig Afelsing 'the first ,two events cruised to win in te 400 freestyle, to just 21 points while winning his j rIn of the day as he held his to the' Big Green, the-Blue found with a time: 4:01.2.' Stitndish wasmatch-~in the minimum number of .-- ppnn tojs tw ty ois-1 .-pponent to just twenty points ~~~~followed by Blattner in third place.games. w--hile taking his match in theKaicaIt W p

Bloomfield~ Victorious ,ninimum number fgames. ' -I h 0 aktoe noe'Playing at number one for An- nmber on for Andover, Inte10 ak 'oe Advi

dover, Brooks Bloomfield encount- -. '' ~ ~ k~omilrl I'ohi All-Americani teani of List ad ei-ed! little troubld as he asily Asiinerfu ac naTn costntgud troke, downed %-c ,,, . Kaik tre'tIirwyonA's number four ack~tnia, Toni onsistent groundeasy sweep: Inj the proce s,disposed of his Yale counterpart R leigh has won sevebin iuches. i less experienc, -1 opponent in.,, ail~s bteed hs rc

in thre games. Ken Ehrlich, PA's g~eMk Cril or games. Capt ah Bill Kaplan, erformans of ast week trniornum~ber nine man, also played gaematch to ood, Ciste erfoumer twhirn ane of54.6. Fow ing, It e

li captured hsmac F'71) while tid'oube e tm won6 olowngtwithou losig a: arpe.number see oiinsustained fourth straight mat- of the season hikrdoac IGeert Geisterfe 's

in three games. ' 4~~~~~~ tford thec finalh otcoe feastoeRaleigh Wins Sixth the Blue'sfnlos f the day rthree games. rslso h 0 reIn the number four position for in hre;hase Vit riouls fre h fnlotoeb i

the Blue, Tom Raleigh overcame n hope of vn'n an early Resuming his WvI ing ways, PA ste h gut fte 0 rea2-0 deficit in games to take his sesn61tosaynsolheme hee rcema ae-relay.-

sixth straight match of the season. C t imison, the An ov rvaisity ase us~ed an e clIent variety In the last relay OthaMoyBlair Richardson, at number five, -S as emwl aeIearad tuhsosa i led off f or -PA and gainedalso captured his sixth straight win J I s this Comling Wid sday. re ponent in four ams nth ' - a body-length I e a cf rrof the year as he 'took his match Blue squa hsga-inEd a ,great, fI ~er five positi( for PA lair - Andover. In the second leg. ),sI-in four games. Breaking into the a r-iount ofex eede over the l~ihardson took hi! atch in thi-eq 'Ptr nern oth10arl ferson extended the Blue lead,varsity lineup for the first time pitsvn ace Pnsol e gims whl a~ od feer Ando ea AI bse Dn rthniouth utting the relay out of reach orthis season, Scott Mead, after get- di fcttoba. .'Ijimher seven,' car Ll~ed the Bilie sho the Big Green, arid enabling

ting off to a slow start, ca~~ine ~, ~ * ~ ~ ~ ..~ i~iaI ~vin~o'f the da n four games. its'elf onfthenethe oftai13-3 Standish andtKazickasndoKczicsaback to take his match in. four I 3 ..Mret I)f I) C had Neh't, play ginumbe score. However Andover soon, in, with a winning time of 3: 25.9.tJames at.his number eight position. 11 12 os fr2A came back an a ea ing 19-15 tecusqfhem tBo

3. Ulaw ~Ii i12 I I , I (',Irs 'i Standish and Mark Li tite 200 .upyas,

Playing Witlli a borrowed racket. "1 1 12Ii~-,(i.t- a h ie nsves by Myl sBottrerd Mikt. orte le.BIl tt-P1X I 6scs 1h-r~~ ~ ~~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~e II 1i I i individual maad Aefola sweaty shirt arid a iiiitt pii ' medley' coredlesweaty shirt, arid a pa~~Eirlo iz Da:,nIi 16 13 I i,,

1,i0) 7~.lxaiks n th ob ner's ponscame in - the 200

giA'sneakers that were a isize too .) a (Ii ... tt .~ iit I 0IfreetyleIn ' einthe freestyle, as he finished in' seco dlarge, PA number three racketnmdn a mmd. I t II 10 Nt:; 1(1d ti ev et vtelnxteo, pytokatid oN-iit ' i8 iii 12 ~~~~~I(.t-~i - .In -,,~,' the 0 a be place. Murphto hr o

Dave Chase lost his second con- eventsi howevert '~~ th B a alovertime in the fifth game Ch~~~~~~~~~~d 1 lb Andover in the- itbitterily2 A s

secutive match of the season as I, NdI I 6 ii ' I. lie d,,ItIi to pick ip only two points, while Anoeinte10btefy.AsIi I ii ''''i V)Di otheie 4 swimming well for the Blue w rehe felto his Yale opponent uI. M~d1 it Ii -, 15 .'.I DarIi ' h nexut race. 100 Stan Carson, who took a fifth p1 ce

overime n th fith gme..h i:Iid 1111 l- 11 I'll -it Ten-traeh 0 fi'eestyle, in the 0t) fly, whilil Andy ThurnNehrt, at number six, lost a f e iauf:a ii II ii '-4 l ii 5IJ i pi-oved to be the deci'oing one of did well in the 200 freestyle.I

Hockey ~~~~~~~oses 'To Yale Fresh ei ON THE ~IIELfES '-

Saturday, January 29; Iqew __-Haven, Conn. - PI t ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~At 3:00 a rn.,p g il-o~dsI be seen from the, dmissions off cesecond consecutive overtime, gani~~~~~~~~~~e, of Mount And e er 'cdm.I he roomn were two ren, aged in th ~ir.the varsity hockey team fell to --- early fifties.. n w t neeer director of admni.sjoni. -The otqerlsofteya.Wtjutoe--ofteoo vathe Yale freshn-en, 7-6, for its first was the head foo ballcaho hefabled-Andexie ele, n. In the cordertoso mntes left. inth tent minuer --- ~ -- of the fiv tohihbsaoa upon which, was scri bled-the-na, es,two minutes left i the ten minute of the fschool football players in Massachasetts. Fr m reovertime perid Ylscrdte --.. . *',t than eight hII 1-s owt hese' two men had been in cobstant argum ntwinning goal on a shot directory ove- , r which tse "stu!dent athletes" should be admitt d to the sch 1.in front of goalie Barney Bupeiri. IThe following sar exilr't of their conversation."'The main factor in the defeat waks .Ithe PA defense; throughout te Coach: L00l4 Iidn't pyeWhat you say, he's got to eaccepted. e'sfirst two periods the Yale forwards Nsix feet, six' i II hs, weihs260 pounds, and plays all the positions tiatcontinually skated through the e- Iwe need help t. i. fense unmolested and movedI ino~IDirector: Well I just dnt know. We're just about filled up, and we*'position to get off good shots, -tIs- miIght not baleto ac Amodate another person.ually from .within 20 feet of the Coach: He c ppn house.PA godl. ,.Directo:B I-Cah r et s pwythat's irrelevan We canl WorryYale Takes 4-1 Lead --- about that oi ce

three goals ins. the Yale reshiiien and a vs. dii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Andover managed fo take an (I Director: l-Ji e Cards?.early lead in" the gamne wheh, .i,-ICoach: 610.-imiday int'o tde fisth prod Catin Dann Bl i led tlhe II crigti i% etl)i g Director: 610 wht-e math or the English? captain Dan 'Bolduc stale the po. k al) ~~~~~~~~~~s e BU Frosh. Coc:Nihr h 'his combined Clotal. He would have gotten anfi-om a Yale defenseman aid 810, but he srwee his nam wrn.scored.Žl oefhsbsgass P Wieti So s W ilso ' c d m * Director. Are you kid1 iig o want me to accept s me kind of n or-.this season. Bolduc was the leadi I I -onic imbecild who can~ tiIe pl his narrie right?scorer for the Blue with three goa~. Reynolds, O' oi G ,t Pini* Bjflii Coach: I guess hat's }vat I'm tryingm to say. Now IeL's be logical forand two assists.Yale'tied it up txy .1 k. momentins -ood la r mean gbod football teams, and good foot allminutes later' however, and th n ' iwent on to take a 4-1 lead aft - Saturday, January 9; Andover- givin PA a comiy anding 19-0 lea'd -teams mean Witi ing selns~ight?16 minutes of the second period. I Dominating theme frm te aejjutotrbus - I. oiactoI: Riow --Near the end of the second p r- opening maotch, the varsity As expected, - he Blue mi - Coc:Nwwirningseon mean appy aLumn a -~py! p u nniiod the tide turned as PA started to wrestling team smas 1ed ilstn-dlew ights contir ued h ou enol a hn,~k htsmny'skate - well. In t~~e span of 69 Academy, 53-6. I awesome' redording four pin in thielnext fis~ Director: I ie Iei, thouh about it that way.skatecondslthenBlue so fhe display of power, thE Blue grap- bouts. In quick uccession, Ru s Coach: Well I glad thats settled. Now that we kow he's in, wegoals, -tying the 'game at 4-4 ~pler-s-recofded five pi and didn't Gral am, Craig R ynollds, and Pat .can get down to pecifics such as scholarship.Bolduc and 'rpm Fleming h~~~~jh allow~ Williston one in 4 vidual point O'Coninor all pined their owl c' rnkh ee?-scored shorthanded goalsbeor until the tenth match. I -pone ts, Reynolds' 'after, only 30 Coaj l:,FullBcord c a dup withahs hr oi * Eigc.I jcd - seod ftefrs-eid at+ Dirtor: Full!. Tere's ijt that much money left. -of the day with just~ 22 ~seconds PA's Mark fNhg~e,, 'wrestling in Kevin McCall won an 8-0 decisioi~ Coalh- What do you n n there's not much money left. Tell some kid,left in the period.. ' ~~thse 110 lb.' weighft c ss, set the but lower Phil- Elias, wrestling in V who~ls supposed t' conk th ese on full scholarship that he'cah't come.trend for the match ~arly as he his first varsity atch, piked u Dire tor: I cati"t o th't - .Burke Scores i\'icce embarrassed his opl en,16-0. the slack by scorn a ~4nin te~ Coa4I: Sur-e ~'qi ciiWhat's more important? Taking in some kidKevin Burke added two more -Andover then record d e con- thirl 'period. ~ I , who probably' d esnting buit play chess and debate, or takiri in~oals early in the third[ period.o t6 Secuitive victor-ies, be Gorge H-eavyweights Jir Ne ~mnad sam oiie who -W!ll eeiulybring money into the school. Laok,Ithegive PA a 6-4 lead as lieae hurch wzds pinned t.bekthe Trravis Bissett thel gage Andovdr kid ho plays c s ilyb smart and he may want ~tq learn, bu heBolduc and Craig Brickley iiicked Blue chances for a rare shutout. its en t and eleventh straight wins sui- as helwn ahi~ rftup assists on both goals. With. just' IRon Lacey began t 'c-victorious andi an incredible 3i-0 lead with 'Dir ctor: IC~~yur ih.Fotball's prletty important around ereover half the perfod gone, however, -treak by p~inning 'his counterpart 6- d16-6 vjhnoF- nk resp ectiel' .in' it? 'Yale scored two quick goals to t~e in the first period~ After Dave InI the' unlimited weigllt clas,' Coa7 with ttotball1 there wouldn't be asehool. Bring in the iextthe game, thus sending it into over- Kawano w~on by d fault, 'Tom Wil i'ston finally' broke -into te foldes i st eet ten, 295 pounds, pla ys Jight nd and de'~time. .- Sommerfield took an *asy victory, victory column by inning Churc . feniv tac ....

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L t~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Page 6 T_________ IiLF I'l-L IA N ___February 5, 19 2

Cronin Scores Two Goals As lue Track Falls oT Northe asternBL.t[ Hockey Crushes Afndover cnesday, Februar 2 . An- Lventsi Rick Hall tossec th~ eight' excellent time Of 4~20, ~tlt e

* ih Facing a s rc ng Nor- 50'2i/2"I for a first ad' t the seconds behind the winner. Liethe. rn freshmen tea , the PA shot 4'41/_" for scon .i;,,E Mc-, Murray, one of Andover's nidttrai squad suffered' is second jPherso, long ju mped 0134 " versatile performers, collected s Ixloss by a core of 57-4 . or. a win and placed ~seA nd in points with a third in the hi h

Wth n chance of' winning after the 600, with a good ti of : I.0. jump and a second in the IngI - ~~~~~~~~~ele A vns ndo rr could, In the 50 yd. dash, he pp third jump. Mike Kaseta' captured t o

-- x~IIoN ~er, ie the core ith a win place. ~i~ ~ns thirds in the weight ev~nts, as erelay., Barry C6ilin ran a Bill Pruden .cileted'I Ig pte put the shot 47'1" andjI threw te

bla2 nj first leg only t have a as he took second in th 'higI jump weight 45'0". Bruce Bruckmarnbad handoff lose the ad. Trom and, led a -Andover ee ' th took a third in the lonjmp

#4 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~aers took the bogg e handoff pole vt clearing, IT6f Don FahryWlfExcand be~gan to close the gap. Scott llayden! vaulted 10'6-' a~'dNick Northeastern showedJ amaziiigGill giy, running he ird leg, Hadley went 10' foI~ It other strength in tte mile and two mile

a pra tic~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ally' evened it for An- pons I events, taking 14 out ci a possibledov r, butld McPhers , ru,'nninfg Captain Sam Butle a ed a 18 points. Bruce Wolfe fought ha dthe rcho' leg in 35 c nd, lost strong field in the 'A dhigh for eleven laps and f nallyt k

dover-Sustaining its second II~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~ vict~~~~~~~~ri~~~~s~~~~i~~~r three out f fiv~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ field second place finis it an c oc e 9:49.2 for s THE WE~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~d~pedhudl.1bt angetae oin cloerace as AI pd hrlsbbtmng otk a third in the mile, poting~

its 'E and decision in fiv meets. second in 6.1 scondi In e 1090 4:29.0. Morgan Flaherty was moe-Ai dovor took an earl leao with Butler sped along t iaothebr s ccessful in. the tw?-mnile, ase'18 i~~~~~hen be tallied a shori-handedic goal agahienoust the Vfeld secnd plaeafnisanilocedro492hfr scon plce

Second-leading scorer on the teani, Tomn F cming upped his goal 0 tput toWedielay Fl~rar 2;Al- wrist shot in the' upper ri.r'nd bid AT *T1O1HLWdoer- usaiin is ecnd corn r. The frosh't took a I1 lerfaeadps kiing iCoA HLT

*straight loss in college freshmoen thre minutes later but Dan Bolduc IIcdmpetitiori, the PA varsity hoke tiOr he game up with a Iw shot A d v rb l n W ne h

"team felto the strong Bso for 13tfi goal of the year VUniversity freshmen, 7-3. Greg In the seclnd period Boynton's S turday, January 29; Old Sunday, Jnuary 30; 'lpor s outh,'Cronin and 'John Bynton led PA, play was superb as he macfe 15 Dee-field, Mass. -In of its N.U. In sp te of a seep n vic-for the first two periods as thle, save , many on good shots from wora showings of the Eason, the tory i cs.cnt WI or oeteam' managed to skate to a 3-3 clos in. Both teams scored once, And ver varsity bask t all team ini slalom andju irgg e thetie after 40 minutes of play. In, how ver,1 Andover tallying on a lost its fifth. consecu ie game, Antcover varIty k t hrthe final period, however, lU' Greg Cronin backhand from the falli g o the 'Deerfield riy 89 placerin theimalUiI itrdticitally outchassed the Blue, scoring left aceoff circle. In both t e ficst 58. Ilt 'ough the Blue 0 ed sme Carnivalj Placn fis i the *four goals while limiting PA to and econd periods, the B ue did r m) r v e m e n t in defensive Carnivall 'as theI KUA teamj~st eight shots on net. ' atrtaingly well to play evn V.ith reb unding, the PA attack was followed b *Vermont" Acadein

TLe Cronin Scores ',so a tm tlaa( is probabl tle best stifl Id Deerfield, orin& its yeod rd eril nf~ th nA ndover: defense stopp~ed it hs faced during the p to lwst oit total of the ason. Andovdr co etel'if dorn nated

*period, but the Blue offen'se' rarely The th'Ceid a olmo~~t BU. rushes during the first 'year~~. *third penod was corn- Tbo gre e rs lla, the crwfr~l.os-cou try e~en. im4

initiated an aitttack of its' own. Te pletely difterent~ story, thorugh, as TI iihL hefr af te Cafr to fIrt Io bifros delnse Nyas excelen thefroh scred essthantwo Blu orfise was shut ff by the came ~in second 'andl Alex

frohodu e a xclet the fro adP mntsh snor s th eidand to Yh re o dPrarely controlled the 'puck unless tr~~~~~~~~~oll~d periodfiecon a tGreeniado 99:P a alled 99f a t possiblpo1sb0e"10it ely acmn-alldnae ' the p&uls trld the plaS' for the rest of millt m, number 6frots Wvhile 3it In, the- event. IIn ju ng ,

it ad mn-avanag. te eriod. Pa~sirng crisply, the, un~OitGreg Cronin finally opened the BU offense was superb wieits a t samentie i3ted on Kord tw i ~afo

scoring midway through the first defenise w~as lalso whoutsanding," it-yo~fes.~nlvrJr r od ALEX KAZICKASperiod, wherf he stole a pass in never unce !allowi g 'PA a heda orpo eda vn bkscn I~d~ Ynhput ,-~ppdtuni .one meerly in the I t quarter, Ila c e s respectively. Ai oe Captain of the -winrning the BU zone, skated in and pt breakaway buoppfedqucldgmdthiciv ny hr pae tog, Alcx Kazickas Nisas uistanding S

mo t ituniand brst i t( te led. beaus eo I, lackof! the lDarinouth "B" varsity. HebrzI mor efiturnand burst i tthe lead, becuse o~ a lacko¶: dept . A the school record in the 100 Iek-

T i~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~l I L'Ath end of the 'A arter, the nexperienced slalom teom fi se strohe, N~on the 0 freestyle, aindii, Gre n held' a nine oi ' ' ead, 18-9, fourt asolaoe lse~ nt anchore~d the wsinning freestyle re-JV Hockiey Routs Lowell H*1 GeI e&anj o ad 89 ut sol oeTT1 1~~~~~~~~~~~)A ~~~~~whi h it retied rugh the finished i the top ten.'l lay team.riign ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ sec,~~I the final half, the Blue was I

Wednesday, Jnuary. 29, 1972; . SuayFeruary 2, 1 72, An- nIC to sh~foten this inc point C o da ~s- oak ulO e a s Andver - Led by senior-Doug Bill- doe aprd by a w 'ak de- deiit and late in the th r quarter,id a

man, the Airdover JV hlick~y team fes~ h A~ ockey t am fell th~ Green actually midened it's A snap to openH stlft and pul. Cans chill quicker, stackoverpowered the Lowell High toaebahr~ High varsity, e agis 'the dej t( ed Blue easier, go any~'r ou go. And they're no.-deposit, no-Schbol JV's 4-1. Billman picked tip 5-.Upr Hi -i lboldt anI senior - otcedfinal iha f Andover return. Inside Tht mous PpiC6tsetsetatwo- goals and'one assist to lead the Dick~ Ioan sco'red te lorie goals ws In 61-32. 'PpsCoat teatehascolting with three points, his first for "A. I ISawod hadidifficulty comes alive in th a Only now, there's a new ring to it!

igoal proving to be the game- Se iior Bruc Poliquin, who c-p~aiigo r'any his fieldwinner. The solo tallies' for PA played 1vel fo one and a half ga 1 atmt a~ es held towere delivered by seniors Dick periods in the Andover gL was 2 oithslwest Itpu hi -

contirnued to roll, taking 26 shots bra I' following the third Artlover S e m problem on ofen scoringon and Daven el. ThHigh'~eece gaftLoer inctng Andmajor yla ewowes expe fecedsth

Goalie Peter Anderson played cam3 on to finish up, le'tting in 0 ¶5 did Comine up r'sm

an ekxcellent game, stopping 21 two goals whilel making saves. p art defensive reonsshots'and letting,in only one goal. TheJ game was riddleI with Ce Heaiey was hIt e It was Anderson's first entir~ pen Rlies, a total of 22 mutes p ii while captaiin Bu ra'e

-t game for the JV's this season. wr for both teams. if an ged four points Sin he game.

PREP SCHOOL SUMMA%~R CSit rALebrar It-. ~' .

K O F I~~~~~ i n l ' h t I I I Fr, I. ,,, G W - ii ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,, I 9 It) p iii.~~'kl , , , y

f~~il li ~ 'Iarby Lai, Ol l 7 'if) i

B-BALL ga ~~~~as it held the Pa~ilies to I'll Melts, if, itager,,I', B-ALuttnig hogounh a) Februa, t)i i

L~xeter Falls' just en shots on 'goal. I n y era idUfull ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~IC! Ilid Sp,'ak,iaIiUnable to cope with the fulD eerfield Goes -1I ' , . jilm, ti1~ sch ...I filitcourt press of the Tufts frosh, the Pl ying in one of its wors It gamtes Ilk niu G4 ).Exeter varsity basketball team lost oftesaoteDefield'varsity (:, IN,,-Ii (01

its fourth game of the season by hoclkey team fell to Choate, 4-2. ,

a score of 83-69. Scott Lewis and Wit th re ha tte * ay', ebi na~ry 7Al Jones led the Red's offensive end 'of the second period, hoate's ('i-i ,- ,,, IIIattack wrth 25 and 19 points, ofesIaeslv ndqcldd I .b,,,,b, 1,Isb

respectively.:o he oa~bfr h SaeLIn av bruhiary' lifPibNIH I~~osrs was through, the final sco're ' cw.tn

The Mount Hermon varsity ing fifteen seconds before hie biz l?) BIab "' t se)uu u tbasketball team fell to Williston, zer ounded. I ' , sday, February 2 a)~ ~tase othe b5 Pe si&71-52, for its sixth loss of the Kevin, 'Carvasdfour goals 1,o iithevothiSivd I d pours~i

sesnAfter gtigoff to a slow *th Gre o1s54vct oedn!~ -,na-i i,,season 'getting ~ ~ ~~th ren 5- Vctry over ~ ( I, It%. ila,~ald jv 13il p, rth mrries were forced(o a tog D~tot siie ''iti,~-' Iftgilin,,t.i,,i Sch ,~ I 1 IIIstart, the 'Hei lll- r 3Iziiggu,0Sr,, : ii)

play' catch-up'ball throughout the squ- d. Grady Lake played an Ink ,,, 6,W.' 1, 3 m

Deerfield as h made a number -,] Februai) I I- _______ ____________HOCKEY .> f iportant sa'~es. Rich A derson alkii A'h- I in HILL'SH~ARDWARE .'I

tallr~~~d Deerfield's I)~~~~: ai \,tO l 12', No 1eAdvrIilgE`xefer Roots SS tliIDered'sohly otier goal - I I e ndve ViigThe Exeter varsity hockey team, of t e day.' ~ si y eray 2'~SOTN D

led; by Tom Osenton and Dave I lockey (Overh[I Records) B-ball inn ~ O PA IHNS A APOORGruel, trounced a weak St. Paul's (10J2) Exeter (6.4) niL3 eb r~ary 13 1 ,,--

squad, 8-I, to extend its season (7-4) DeriC 52 - ,nr 4 I I 'il aP iet & oGADGETSerecord to 10-2. Exeter's defense - Mt. Hermon (2-6) It ~, ,,,,,.( Of an _________________________-

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