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Boots Six ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Committee Perme 3 T iP -- ILI Surveys Collection NO7 PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASSACHUSETTS October 24, 1961 eP.A. Seniors- Speak Trustees Mg Opera Si e Elias To Fourteen trustees will gather on bout Summer In Eur'ove the Andover campus this weekend bout Sum mer In Europe~~~J toehold their first meeting of the tthe mere mention of disadvantages, and called it "ca deiyarIOpen Celebrity Series 'Summer' no longer wonderful summer." Beaseo M.KmpLI' b eyes among most of "Coldest, Highest, Wettest"Beas ofM. epr'ab body," ban George BilCikrn pn i u-sence, there are no major policy, Metropolitan Opera prima. don- Celebrity Series, starting this Fri- rman of thestudentime Cheintn "thenlt highsu- changes on the agenda. Various na Rosiland Elias is scheduled as day evening.- Born in Lowell, mrite the tmenis metn we tt inutriacldt igal sub-committee will meet on Friday the first to appear in the 1961 62 Massachusetts, as the youngest of re 'itghedtm se , England."nHistEnglsoni " aml" night to hear reports on Student -*. thirteen children, Miss Elias, a about teir sum Ers ad" i ngih"fml"Enrollment, scholarships, college 1 mezzo-soprano, joined the Met ran an old people's home. He lived adisins and suetacademic:svnyasgo adwith this family until - the last mortality. Guided by the architects, Bill Chickering -weeks of the summer, when he they will tour the buildings of the '~ She made her debut in 1954 in onwhoprced took a trip to Scotland. Andover Program now under con- " Wagner's "Die Wilkuiere." During Etaoe.s Representing Country struction. Saturday morning the te15-8saoMs la p En roie.dSrie - "ersnig yu cuty", sub comnmittees will make their e- - peared in "Eugene Oregin" and Bi lived i Germanysaid Chickering, "is good for ego.- Ports t h ulbadi h .a rk nteoea"aes. livd i Grmaytists - wherever you go, you are Henry Wise Hobson '10, President The compser i f the opera w erea. Americn Fiel Ser-the center of attention." Chicker- John Mason Kemper so impressed with her that they ~ of he hoes in the ing then pointed out that this is Jame Phinney Baxter 10e-rtth Soan rleoa any were Ilivedpartially because"you are always John Peter Stevens '15 . Part for mezzo voice, lower than durig th war andsent to a remote area, with few Charles Stafford Gage 21 uespao " saidBledse. Hetourists. This makes yo novelty Robert- Merriman Kimball '29puesrao ore ina relaivelythere ... , to the girls, too." Bromwell Ault '18 4 Under contract to RCA records, erful Summer ~~Great Value Frederick Goodrich Crane 15 Miss Eishsmd ullnt rful Summer ~~~~~Donald Holman McLean, Jr. '28 recordings of "Madame Butterfly"7 &e ud the language a Chickening lived in Europe via~ John Usher Munro '0 r ehad studied the "Experiment in international Thomas Lee Perkins '24 L icna,"h araeo __he ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~iao,"La Forza del Destino", dover. "One of the Living". This cost him about Robert Livingston Ireland III '38 FidgheVediRquem Se p a fthe A.F.S.," said $1000, he stressed the summer's Benjamin Allen Rowland '28 aeared on television several times ~' tha you ave nogreatvalue in giving him a William Butts Macomber, Jr. 40 o ountr - the never"knowledge of the English peo- James Alexander Smith '8 eeyou want to go."1 ple." Stephen Young, Hord '7 dvnaeis the cost SumrI ctadFrank Pray Foster '25 Miss Elias has been praised for -fI#fee for the summer. Dae tro ws t r 1 i as an actress, for several years. concluded that the - I'IV teCo t a t ShwasigeoubyheCr- ig~ far outweighed the volunteer in Scotland this sum- HLa de B rln C t as tiS a sinled Mot as "ae leading mer. He spent his days doing tinSineMnte s" edn ~~I1 1 T "~~~physical labor - like lickig Disc ssnonng-aSum ereher at the Metropoli- riuce mei 0o stamps." "But the main part of tan Triperinterpretation of Ol-~ *the program," said Quattrone was The two dramatic kiid tragic between the Western and the ga in "'Eugene Onegin". Her Por- rj~~iu ~ ~ the night at the youth club." That faces of Berlin, of the past and Eastern sectors. East. Berlin still trayal of Erika caused her to re- eU£L uss£L3i.a, was where Quattrone "got to know the prsent were presented at For- had many World War II ruins peat the role at the opera's Euro- CW~~r~ t the English people." tan's October 18 meeting. From while the rebuilding in the West pean opening at the Salzburg e eW ~~~3ranr ~~Cockney Teenagers the experiences of Frank Hartley had already wiped out almost all Festival. The New York Times '62, one of the first ten to go over traces of the war. In the East, said that "Rosiland Elias as Eri- aid of 1000-dollar "The Cockney - teen-ager", he the border from East to West there was a sense of lifelessness ka, the most affecting figure in te Leadership and said, "is sincere, economically after its closing, and the infor- and gloom which differed astound- the opera, could scarcely be im- So~ project, the Law- poor, but very generous." This is mation contained in the Forum ingly from the sense of prosper- proved upon, so searching is her Ie 001 will this year at- because they quit school early, and film on Berlin, the forty odd stu- ity and happiness in the West acting and so musical and intens- ' tebetter student un- earn spending money by working. dents present were able to get a with its mavy gardens, parks, and ely-felt her singing." A feature on "" the subject of Rus- They asked Quattrone questions clear and accurate pictu~re of what modern, brig buildings. The this rising starlett appeared re- ycontrolled by the on subject ranging from "Huckle- the erlin situation was and is and West Berliners showed little con- cently in Life. To 1 4 ~me Magazine, de mentwill be used berry Hound, Elvis, Bilko, to what has been done in the past to cern over the situation whereas she is simply "the Met's youngebt, a csconcerned with sex, religion and education." cope with it. the East Berliners showed not prettiest singer." s ussian affairs. EuoenTaesonly concern, but a pathetic dis- se program emphasizes EuoenTaesAfter an introduction by Forum pair stemming from the cruel sep- Other events panned for this p pation, much of the Quattrone spent the last four president, Paul Holdorf, Frank aration of families and friends, season's Celebrit Serie&~ include ti ncring the Soviet weeks of the summer traveling. He Hartley gav!%_bis account of his Hartley went on to say that while the first New England appearance distributed by the said he learned to "hate the Amer- trip into East Berlin. Hartley he was in East Berlin for his two of the Iglesias Spanish Ballet on o(r s at Lawrenceville iean tourist, love the friendly stated that access into the city day stay, he noticed little individ- Saturday evening, December 2, I 1 fways. Members of European, and be proud of the was a minor problem-there was unl dfference between himself and and "Dear Liar", the Broadway Club, an organi- principles for which my passport no questioning or searching. He the- East Berliner's except for the hit based on the love letters of Is e in history, will stood." went on to tell of the contrast omnipresent feeling of silent, emp- Mrs. Pat Campbell and George 7, eiver papers on a N ty desolation. Bernadd Shaw, which will play, sian topics. There M tf. L e a t e t r e e t here on Friday evening, January. on Russia, student a h a rt t P e e t The second portion of the 19. ~ certs of Russian Al Forum meeting was devoted to ~xi iitionof Russian N ew Chnges In Al e r 2 the Forum film put out jointly by ib describing differ- i1 g u a the Time, Life and Fortune maga- achievements, and A new element in the teaching boy will realize that the structure zine it was, for the most part, The Music Department will hold s. - ~~~of Math 2 has been introduced this around which all computation is the story of the Berlin crisis as Is department will, year. In contrast to previous- centered is not just connected existed in 1952. The situation at the first of this year's student music a er European His. years, when the emphasis of the with geometry, but with every that time was terrible. The lack recitals at 3:15 P.M. this Sunday sgn work about the course was mainly on the compu- form of Mathematics. The student of- good and varied food-stuffs, uinin order to tationa1 aspects of Algebra, this therefore, with this firmer funda- the searching of personal proper- in the Addison Gallery. The per- ud for further year an effort is being made to mental basis, will .be able to han- ty, the ~deserted streets, the fear- formers will be: Chien Chung Pei acquaint the ,-Math 2 'students dle trigonometry and calculus ful Brandenburg gate - all com- 1be brought to the with the logical and axiomatic more easily. pared with the gaiety of the West with a piano solo, Stacey Langton campus in conjunc- structure of that subject. The The Department has met with Berlin streets, the sidewalk cafes, with an oboe solo, David Knapton i~ rogram. There will change in the course was made in frustration in its attempts to find the small gaily decorated shops, teL.A.W.S., men order to present Algebra in the a commercial textbook which the streets and sidewalks crowded with a flute solo, a string, and flute the Russian field, same manner that Geometry is would embody these axomiatic and with happy and optimistic people ensemble, and Eugene Indjic with - students from presented. It is to give a student logistical principles, and which -emphasized the tragic plight of i Russian students better ideas about the fundamen- would be on a level suitable for the East Berliners then and even a piano solo. There will be no - twith the purpose tals of Math:. lowers. - now. In 1952, refugees were flee- charge for admission. Larries with Rus- Th Math Department hopes Therefore, last year's texts will 1 ing from their way of life at the S rpeople. theabywl raulydee still be used, and mimeograph, rate of more than 2,000 a day - gLawrenceville ta o ilgaulydee notes will be supplied as supple- and were pushing tremendous 1. nferece of schools is onuder sstandin ofdyn the a-mentary material. For most of the problems of food, housing', jobs, and were always willing to help - icipated in other icnurmer system byd stedyin ath course these notes, which discuss and adjusting to new ways of life, those in need. The film empha- in the hopes of termaimndhedasthe axiomatic and logistical struc- The allies, however were success- sized that in West Berlin, there rnew found under- connected with the computation of ture of Algebra, will be used in ful and showed the Berliners that was no predudice, scrutiny, perse- ers. - ~~Algebra. It is also hoped that the addition to the regular text, they were on the side of freedomi cution, or fear.

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Page 1: 3 T iP -- ILI

Boots Six ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Art Committee

Perme 3 T iP -- ILI Surveys Collection

NO7 PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASSACHUSETTS October 24, 1961

eP.A. Seniors- Speak Trustees Mg Opera Si e Elias ToFourteen trustees will gather on

bout Summer In Eur'ove the Andover campus this weekendbout Sum mer In Europe~~~J toehold their first meeting of thetthe mere mention of disadvantages, and called it "ca deiyarIOpen Celebrity Series'Summer' no longer wonderful summer." Beaseo M.KmpLI' b

eyes among most of "Coldest, Highest, Wettest"Beas ofM. epr'abbody," ban George BilCikrn pn i u-sence, there are no major policy, Metropolitan Opera prima. don- Celebrity Series, starting this Fri-

rman of thestudentime Cheintn "thenlt highsu- changes on the agenda. Various na Rosiland Elias is scheduled as day evening.- Born in Lowell,mrite the tmenis metn we tt inutriacldt igal sub-committee will meet on Friday the first to appear in the 1961 62 Massachusetts, as the youngest ofre 'itghedtm se , England."nHistEnglsoni " aml" night to hear reports on Student -*. thirteen children, Miss Elias, a

about teir sum Ers ad" i ngih"fml"Enrollment, scholarships, college1 mezzo-soprano, joined the Metran an old people's home. He lived adisins and suetacademic:svnyasgo

adwith this family until - the last mortality. Guided by the architects, Bill Chickering -weeks of the summer, when he they will tour the buildings of the '~ She made her debut in 1954 in

onwhoprced took a trip to Scotland. Andover Program now under con- " Wagner's "Die Wilkuiere." During

Etaoe.s Representing Country struction. Saturday morning the te15-8saoMs la pEn roie.dSrie - "ersnig yu cuty", sub comnmittees will make their e- - peared in "Eugene Oregin" and

Bi lived i Germanysaid Chickering, "is good for ego.- Ports t h ulbadi h .a rk nteoea"aes.livd i Grmaytists - wherever you go, you are Henry Wise Hobson '10, President The compser i f the opera w erea.

Americn Fiel Ser-the center of attention." Chicker- John Mason Kemper so impressed with her that they~ of he hoes in the ing then pointed out that this is Jame Phinney Baxter 10e-rtth Soan rleoa

any were Ilivedpartially because"you are always John Peter Stevens '15 . Part for mezzo voice, lower thandurig th war andsent to a remote area, with few Charles Stafford Gage 21 uespao" saidBledse. Hetourists. This makes yo novelty Robert- Merriman Kimball '29puesraoore ina relaivelythere ... , to the girls, too." Bromwell Ault '18 4 Under contract to RCA records,

erful Summer ~~Great Value Frederick Goodrich Crane 15 Miss Eishsmd ullntrful Summer ~~~~~Donald Holman McLean, Jr. '28 recordings of "Madame Butterfly"7

&e ud the language a Chickening lived in Europe via~ John Usher Munro '0 r ehad studied the "Experiment in international Thomas Lee Perkins '24 L icna,"h araeo__he ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~iao,"La Forza del Destino",

dover. "One of the Living". This cost him about Robert Livingston Ireland III '38 FidgheVediRquem Se pa fthe A.F.S.," said $1000, he stressed the summer's Benjamin Allen Rowland '28 aeared on television several times

~' tha you ave nogreatvalue in giving him a William Butts Macomber, Jr. 40o ountr - the never"knowledge of the English peo- James Alexander Smith '8eeyou want to go."1 ple." Stephen Young, Hord '7

dvnaeis the cost SumrI ctadFrank Pray Foster '25 Miss Elias has been praised for-fI#fee for the summer. Dae tro ws t r 1 i as an actress, for several years.

concluded that the - I'IV teCo t a t ShwasigeoubyheCr-ig~ far outweighed the volunteer in Scotland this sum- HLa de B rln C t as tiS a sinled Mot as "ae leading

mer. He spent his days doing tinSineMnte s" edn~~I1 1 T "~~~physical labor - like lickig Disc ssnonng-aSum ereher at the Metropoli-riuce mei 0o stamps." "But the main part of tan Triperinterpretation of Ol-~

*the program," said Quattrone was The two dramatic kiid tragic between the Western and the ga in "'Eugene Onegin". Her Por-rj~~iu ~ ~ the night at the youth club." That faces of Berlin, of the past and Eastern sectors. East. Berlin still trayal of Erika caused her to re-eU£L uss£L3i.a, was where Quattrone "got to know the prsent were presented at For- had many World War II ruins peat the role at the opera's Euro-CW~~r~ t the English people." tan's October 18 meeting. From while the rebuilding in the West pean opening at the Salzburg

e eW ~~~3ranr ~~Cockney Teenagers the experiences of Frank Hartley had already wiped out almost all Festival. The New York Times'62, one of the first ten to go over traces of the war. In the East, said that "Rosiland Elias as Eri-

aid of 1000-dollar "The Cockney - teen-ager", he the border from East to West there was a sense of lifelessness ka, the most affecting figure inte Leadership and said, "is sincere, economically after its closing, and the infor- and gloom which differed astound- the opera, could scarcely be im-

So~ project, the Law- poor, but very generous." This is mation contained in the Forum ingly from the sense of prosper- proved upon, so searching is herIe 001 will this year at- because they quit school early, and film on Berlin, the forty odd stu- ity and happiness in the West acting and so musical and intens-

' tebetter student un- earn spending money by working. dents present were able to get a with its mavy gardens, parks, and ely-felt her singing." A feature on"" the subject of Rus- They asked Quattrone questions clear and accurate pictu~re of what modern, brig buildings. The this rising starlett appeared re-

ycontrolled by the on subject ranging from "Huckle- the erlin situation was and is and West Berliners showed little con- cently in Life. To 14~me Magazine,de mentwill be used berry Hound, Elvis, Bilko, to what has been done in the past to cern over the situation whereas she is simply "the Met's youngebt,

a csconcerned with sex, religion and education." cope with it. the East Berliners showed not prettiest singer."s ussian affairs. EuoenTaesonly concern, but a pathetic dis-

se program emphasizes EuoenTaesAfter an introduction by Forum pair stemming from the cruel sep- Other events panned for thisp pation, much of the Quattrone spent the last four president, Paul Holdorf, Frank aration of families and friends, season's Celebrit Serie&~ includeti ncring the Soviet weeks of the summer traveling. He Hartley gav!%_bis account of his Hartley went on to say that while the first New England appearance

distributed by the said he learned to "hate the Amer- trip into East Berlin. Hartley he was in East Berlin for his two of the Iglesias Spanish Ballet ono(r s at Lawrenceville iean tourist, love the friendly stated that access into the city day stay, he noticed little individ- Saturday evening, December 2,

I 1 fways. Members of European, and be proud of the was a minor problem-there was unl dfference between himself and and "Dear Liar", the BroadwayClub, an organi- principles for which my passport no questioning or searching. He the- East Berliner's except for the hit based on the love letters of

Is e in history, will stood." went on to tell of the contrast omnipresent feeling of silent, emp- Mrs. Pat Campbell and George7, eiver papers on a N ty desolation. Bernadd Shaw, which will play,

sian topics. There M tf. L e a t e t r e e t here on Friday evening, January.on Russia, student a h a rt t P e e t The second portion of the 19.

~ certs of Russian Al Forum meeting was devoted to~xi iitionof Russian N ew Chnges In Al e r 2 the Forum film put out jointly byib describing differ- i1 g u a the Time, Life and Fortune maga-

achievements, and A new element in the teaching boy will realize that the structure zine it was, for the most part, The Music Department will holds. - ~~~of Math 2 has been introduced this around which all computation is the story of the Berlin crisis as

Is department will, year. In contrast to previous- centered is not just connected existed in 1952. The situation at the first of this year's student musica er European His. years, when the emphasis of the with geometry, but with every that time was terrible. The lack recitals at 3:15 P.M. this Sunday

sgn work about the course was mainly on the compu- form of Mathematics. The student of- good and varied food-stuffs, uinin order to tationa1 aspects of Algebra, this therefore, with this firmer funda- the searching of personal proper- in the Addison Gallery. The per-ud for further year an effort is being made to mental basis, will .be able to han- ty, the ~deserted streets, the fear- formers will be: Chien Chung Pei

acquaint the ,-Math 2 'students dle trigonometry and calculus ful Brandenburg gate - all com-1be brought to the with the logical and axiomatic more easily. pared with the gaiety of the West with a piano solo, Stacey Langton

campus in conjunc- structure of that subject. The The Department has met with Berlin streets, the sidewalk cafes, with an oboe solo, David Knaptoni~ rogram. There will change in the course was made in frustration in its attempts to find the small gaily decorated shops,

teL.A.W.S., men order to present Algebra in the a commercial textbook which the streets and sidewalks crowded with a flute solo, a string, and flutethe Russian field, same manner that Geometry is would embody these axomiatic and with happy and optimistic people ensemble, and Eugene Indjic with -

students from presented. It is to give a student logistical principles, and which -emphasized the tragic plight ofi Russian students better ideas about the fundamen- would be on a level suitable for the East Berliners then and even a piano solo. There will be no -

twith the purpose tals of Math:. lowers. - now. In 1952, refugees were flee- charge for admission.Larries with Rus- Th Math Department hopes Therefore, last year's texts will1 ing from their way of life at the

S rpeople. theabywl raulydee still be used, and mimeograph, rate of more than 2,000 a day -

gLawrenceville ta o ilgaulydee notes will be supplied as supple- and were pushing tremendous1. nferece of schools is onuder sstandin ofdyn the a-mentary material. For most of the problems of food, housing', jobs, and were always willing to help -

icipated in other icnurmer system byd stedyin ath course these notes, which discuss and adjusting to new ways of life, those in need. The film empha-in the hopes of termaimndhedasthe axiomatic and logistical struc- The allies, however were success- sized that in West Berlin, there

rnew found under- connected with the computation of ture of Algebra, will be used in ful and showed the Berliners that was no predudice, scrutiny, perse-ers. - ~~Algebra. It is also hoped that the addition to the regular text, they were on the side of freedomi cution, or fear.

Page 2: 3 T iP -- ILI

Page-2 ~-The -Phflpian. -- October 24

- source appears to retreat, it may be leading him -At The Galery

through terrain uncrossed by the tread of thought.

The AN~~~TTIT~ Still the mind must take the broad view, as well A tEvii as the deep, perceiving the whole land, not only one by ALEx MALOZMOF

BEJAI W. WHT province. There is more to a continent than the path The exhibit in the Addison Gallery now is a "Survey of theEditor-ia-C~~~ieI of a single river, and a thousand valleys, ranges, anent Collection," and- was occasioned by the meeting of the

HAROLD L. STULTS. JR. FrTGERALD B. BRAMWELL and coasts beckon -the persevering explorer. He will Gallery Art Committee here at Andover. The exhibit gives theGacro Maunager Managing Editor probably make his way back to the main -current of a good chance to view the full range and depth of the galle

CHRMSTOPHER S. ARMSTRONG and THOMAS N. GILMOREl his interest, but there is always the chance that he collection, a collection encompassing the nineteenth and, tweniCo-Sports Editors vlrdaa:nadrce nw tunies.

DANIEL V. McNAMEE LAWRENCE E. BUCK b-lrda yandietdnw. -The most unusual room on the first flo~r is the one opposNJerm Director Business Manager Gallery office, containing experiments in photography. A careful

]EDITORIAL STAFF -When it comes to ideas, there have always been ination of the techniques used on the "pictures" in question rey-Thomas M. Aderon, lr, RichJard H._ Barry, Delnmar Kaien. movements afoot to exalt homogeneity in the name surPrisinigextent of personal influeiice-possible in photography.

~,hnM. LvinAlexs P.Maloemof, Daid J Smih. Mrris of power or discipline or destiny, yet such-movements treme is illustrated-by two colored photograms, in which heZukernian. BUSINESS BOARD are invariably presumptuous but transitory, for the grapher "ainted" with light on light-sensitive paper, and ix

StehenA. anfnas '6, Aan . Rite j2, Alcma,,der B1. Tievor special chemicals were used to give different colors. The res'63,BabockMac~an 63.John R. Salzmanx'i. Robert M. spirit of dissent is a tough thing to box -up. The qetoal ritcvle u tsdfeetayaadi o

BO 63li danger lies in vows to conformity taken while par- half the worth of modern art.Second Class Postage paid at Andover, Mass., under the act

of March 3, 1789. Adrs a11 correspondence concrnn bslscrip tially hypnotized by its poised exponents. The great Also on the first floor, to the left on entering, is a wing w tions to the Business Manager, care of THE PHILIPI George ce n aeclrsm frmral dpnswietWashington Hall, Andover, Mass. School subscription $.00, mail plains are the seat of prodigious bounty, a virtually ce n aeclrsm frmral dpnswiet

- S~~liS~~riptiOD. ~~~5.50. ~unbroken a s.fsi eadnglbrwt ri is a wing with a collection of various and sundry trinkets. ~THE PHILIPIAN is printed weely at the Town Printing exas fsi eadn ao ihfu- The upper floor's most intriguing room is the one co

Company, 26 Esse Street, Andover, Mass. tion.. Yet on one's travels through the region, one "Translucent and Transparent Works of Art.", One work"ATME PHILLIPIAN does not necessarily endorse conssunlca- ought to remember, while contemplating the poten- Mobiles for Light Figures," by James Davis, has colored mobi

tdons appearing on its editorial page.-- - tial of bar-vest on the plain, the solemn refuge of a ing behind..a screen, and a light and a fan directed on the mobile

mountainpeak is not to be-disdained, color jistterns are reflected and mapped onto the screen in

gITA11V O fI Ute.Age changing sequence as the mobiles turn. The almost utter rnR i ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~Finally, one should never deny one's frailties, of design seems to echo the randomness of the universe froz'

The twentieth is the century of speed. Until our for they are likely to come to the surface on any tistsoteningl bt suc disoreran .I radoss amsif the felt "

time, man could measure the developments of his occasion.tHumbe striinggtostraigten ousaomenal thi randomnesswssmhw nutmt han and othey fworld in terms of years, seasons, and months. The n ubesrvn osrihe u etlti admeswssmhwa liaehroyadodr limit of his technology was equally the limit of his block is the only intelligent course. An explorer's Three rooms on the upper floor contain recent additions to -

action. The bounds of his immediate horizoa~ were mpihadly infallible, no matter how carefully dison Gallery's collection. One of these rooms -contains so=Thus had the commander to he has surveyed, works such as: an artist's image of cat passed through a mea

those of his knowledge.Thshdtecmadrt heh sree.mcie(DaCa"bDuyeHtet)aco ininIobserve the campaigning season; thus had the helms-mahn ("edCtbyDaeHtcetaobitonI-

mnever to wateh the shore. In surmounting these At the Academy our immediate objective i lib- hampster cage complete with tennis ball ("The Cage" by, Jo

obstacles, the progress of mankind has been no less eral education a pursuit which implies an intellec- nell (San ht ook lke auf'b portinnofe peyarly etrydmothan ' breathtaking. Instataneous communication~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~cmmncaio talpli("eratsofth un b JaneRena)

thanse bgrhtakng enaltanus s tanprtt attitide like that of our explorer. The myraid After the soul-lifting experience of this room, the visito;

has pi6bed the utter exti -- ties of the planet. Mrmian decisions which summon the powers of our judgment through a rooni of 19th century works (recent additions too).and his ideas may now journey from their birthplace can have few more potent determinants than this 'art is so hard to criticize, for the artist's purpose is so much mnoto prosper or fail in the antipodes. foundation for a structure of thought. Readers will Whether the work is off kilter or blessed with an inner hr

can always rationalize the virtues of the work by saying -

-The frward urge o a Ferari ha an - perhaps consider it all to elementary and object to planned it that way. When we get to 19th century works, we ~ing effect on the pit of a passenger's stomach. Sim- this apparent sermon of advice. But there is good know what the artists purpose was, and condemn him bothilarly, acceleration in the pace of human affairs reason for our stand: intellectual incapacity more purpose and the result as it compares with our idea of what

works n thebalanc of mnd andsense unti o ten than not means intellectual bad breeding, and should be. As a result, these 19th century works seem to have

occasion we find ourselvres longing for a pause to though the problem may bet minor at Andover, it is vnigraimo on etmnaim tlafwlk e

draw quiet breath or suspecting that man is not urgent in a great many other areas, academic and Lie"The interesting lef f es. n aste aley-really swifter, just racier. political alike.'- The scientific-technological abilities Thleos wig torhe leo the landeinas Etellys A,

of mn hae vatly ncresed is pwersfor co llHoetosr ihwrslk.h poeba ih el f~On almost all subjects our capacity for sound ofmnhvvatyicesd ispwrfrcn- oe.-

to becoe stroger i~ structive ends or their doom-fraught opposite: The whole collection, then, is oe of great variety, aswethinking has been required eoesrne nIritspecialized knowledge and more versatile in greadth twentieth-century pace has likewise increased our amaodu qaity the eaie w hoadsuetof ntret ot te

of sudy mor toerat ofsinulaity nd ore collective responsibility to preserve prudence andamtuifheamnsttogtulyownitsindviualfauts.- - oodsese. The loss involved in weak, slovenly, or

ready to ow t niiulfut.-ent I.rmisguided mental effort occurs when this effort fails - o

In every field the dettail of knowledge continues tto aim at definite worthy goals. Of curiosity, there ..Jlotp.4oa o. tileto mutipl; onecannt hoe to eep breas of hese is, to be sure, no peril of vanishing, but the works f linest

advances without investigating what lies beyond the of,- Bismarck serve us notice that one third of the (AivnNesC.

fundamentals. Thus, when the explorer enters the students of German universities broke down from SCHOOL SUPPLIES cso ltzn

mouth of an enticing river, he should'sail upstream overwork; another third broke down from dissipa-

as ar -as possible, in pursuit of the 'zouree; if the tion, and the other third ruled Germany. STATIONERY - GIFTS andi furnishiing~

GREETING CARDS-

The Third Con~~~stitutional Convention 48 MAIN ST. ANDOVER

14 E. 44d, st. New Y.AlPreparing for our first history afternoon milk-bread should set up', suggested one

monhlylat~ unay'nigtwe etmember of the Congress. The next week someoneaboutdeciherig an leaning proposed a committee to assist the Phillips Society - -

-abutdeiperng ndlernng in running the Graham House coffees." SCHOL H~U SE! ANCHORs Am,- - some 106 pages of notes which we Turnig bak tothe mmedite poble, weRESTAURAN3

managed to produce during the Tunigbaktoteammdatrrolmwcontinued: "Reasons for the need of a new constitu- 19 ESSEX STRlast four weeks. As; our study con- tion: The Congress was at a disadvantage in dealing-19SEX TREtinued late into the night, we-be- with foreign powers because it could not compel the Inlc.

-- became drowsy, and our thoughts states to abide by the provisions of its treaties . Tel. CR591- bean t wader romthe on-A question was raised regarding the possibility of FAMOUS FOR OUR amSpget

betgnnlCns to andr rm h an Caous holding three Abbot Mixers every .year, one eachPizanSpgelterm. The Vice-President notted that although the LOSE &STA -- StaCosad

contemporary legislative body: proposal had been made several times in the past,{ ~"Under the Articles of Confederation, Congress the authorities at Abbot were reluctant to consider - (Re# 25-jCaengtPaieof6-

lacked the power to levy taxes, regulate commerce, it."N.Advr.Al odMyB uor coerce the states into obeying its laws .. ,'I've Take Out'been wondering just what the disciplinary powers Diouaewtrdoneginocoetat-of the Congress are', queried a Student Congress-onteoes .A ND ER ID NGCA Dmt~n. The President said that he believed that it had "The Sedition Act of 1798 was undoubtedly anone. In the debate which followed, it wds' decided violation of the new constitution, because it denied Fall Riding -Instruction Starting-that the Congress had the "power of suggestion." the rights of freedom of the speech,jaid of the press,-Ac eyAwakening, we read on: which had been guaranteed in the First Amendment, At Andover RidingAcdm

-- "The administrative functions of the Confedera- and ... the secretary announced that the election On Rt. 114 Northtion were carried out by Congressional Committees. of the officers of the Congress which had been heldThe number of these was continuously increased the previous week were invalid because said elec- -Lessons -By Appointmentuntil it reached a total of ninety-nine. Among the' tions were carried out ini accordance with provisions -- TOl To er e e most imotn fteewere, .'A committee to of the old constitution and those election provisions MU 346552 -

see to it that the Commons is cleaned up after the had been altered in the . .-

Page 3: 3 T iP -- ILI

1961 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~The' ,PhiiPian rPag'e -

ton Scores Six IMtHerimon RoutThe Sidelines Med ford Falls In Sloppy Mid-Week Clash;

inner Never Quits.' Unbeate Mark Pushed- To Twent' aeby CHRIS ARMSTRONG

BY John Kane tbl it's called fair, in football it's called a touchdown, Andvr's ast ocr q ait's called impossible; but -"Budge" did it. Thie butchcut re aes unbarty socce udbidgewood, New Jersey, who looks more natural oii a soccer Psig'nipesv - i

sdwlaccomplished a feat which Nigerian Olympic over Mt. ermon last Saturday.'Hiri would be hard put to equal, when he cored al i The week before, playing under-

nyagainst a Mount Hermon team which just seven days xrneYwtcdiosM.H -,heExeter varsity 2-1. Not only was it a personal triumphmohaoulse Extrb aahas been a familiar face on the Andover starting lineup21scr an cmetAdor

ee years but for the whole team as well. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~seeking a clean sweep over the topyears but for the whole team as well.~~~~~~prp-shol eam. heBlu, owIst two years ago that I watched a young but pronuis-pr-shotem.TeBuow ever, were -also up for the game.

Blue booters fight to a 1-1 tie with Exeter despite two - Captain Budge Upton had a fielddI-would have given anyone 50-1 odds that said I'd seen day agains.t two Hermie goalies,

metof a streak which would still be going strong mid- scoring all six of Andover's goals,the fall of my senior year. Everybody knew last year's ~ 'while goalie Tom Israer held theeone of the best the school had ever seen, but few were opposing offense scoreless.ce anything more than hope and the best of luck on an - .Neither team was able to breakson. When the team of '60 came tough,,however, and into the scoring column during the _

Harvard Freshman team that had defeated the cantab first period. The play was fairly,goals in a practice game and a-player who had knocked ieven but neither Andovdr's: Israeland scored some fantastic number of points, Phillips Aca..- nor Mt. Hermon's Swett wasit had produced a team equal to any in New England. iforced to come up with the bigsoccer player, incidentally, was the Chris O'Hiri mnen- the. throigh of twett Lookinga

etedin the Boston Herald, O'Hiri has been leading tetrwn fSet oknost single handedly to one victory after another this sea- like Bob Cousy setting up a fast

* break, the Hermie's basketballeevarsity circuit and is regarded as a cinch for a spot / ~captain - elect consistently heavedercn squad despite the fact that he is only a sophmnore. the ball over the mid-field stripe

final whistle blew in the Exeter game last season, every- with surprising accuracy. Never-tthe satisfying feeling that he had seen a squad whchteless, the Hermie forwards and

dbe fortunate to produce three times in a century. The T TB ue ?F y1 halfback~were unable to put thishecinderella team were gone, and it was pretty much ux R egisters Lone Bl e iauy advantage to good use.including this year's sports editors, that Budge and Mns ' n tescn eid noe

fotuat t al-dplcaeth 160jefrmnc. yAs.Blue Bows To M. Hermon wasted little time in getting onthriigamount of previously unrealized talent, sheer scoreboard. At 4:50, Upton drib-

to win,, 1961's squad has bettered the record of its Saturday, October 21, - T h e injured and were unable to finish bled piist two defenders and droveeessors in every game so far and has extended its in- game program pictured an adoring the game. Mount Herman capital- -the ball into the lower right-handto twenty games! If this spirited bunch can keep up the cheerleader kissing a fresh, com- ized on Blue defensive confusion corner. Tworminutes laterat 6:50,eaining games which it has set thus far, it will be able pletely unsoiled player in red, who to sweep the ends in the early Upton -picked up a loose ball -about

t question the title of "team of the year" to its already could only be an extra point man. stages of the game. Andover, in ten yards out and to the left ofof the season"s title. Certain of Andover's atletic ef- A more ironic ill omen was im- turn, found- the Hermon interior the goal. His shot rolled across

idrnhave been needlessly discouraging and disappoint- possible to devise. The Blue var- line vulnerable throughout the and into the right.:hand corner fortheeffrtof heDekmenisonewhch an e oinedsity lost its second game of the game. Outstanding in the game Andover's second tally. Andover

~buttheeffrt f th Deeme isonewhic ca bepoitedseason on Saturday by the mir- for Andover were the defensive ef- came back quickly with two otherythe entire school, i fa xrapitt on forts of MartyShlian Jckfepaybubohwr le yeering from the home crowd for the opposing teams, giMoonrxraponitsout ohn.nan ac hine ps ut Th ercae i b

ast has often irked Blue players and loyal Andover spec- Hermon. The score was 8-7.The high st The first cae ontehasbee cospiusulyabsnt n tisseason's cowds game proved a costly one as more Bobo Lux received the Upngrgtng et y'su Jim t R ailey ovter

(Continued on Page Four) players joined the ranks of P.A.'s kickoff for Andover and almost riht win. Rley' sot seealed rareached the midfield stripe beforethgolTeainHrealdahe was stopped. The first Blue drive, passing to Upton who feddrive stalled on a penalty and Bill Soyer on he left- corner.P Mount Hermon took possession on Smoyer's shot was also high. Theamen Rack Up First Coup bcs alSulioe h Her- 14:20. o h corerio kce Ratea punt. Mixing sweeps and line last.O t all orenerid caieya

~~ ~~.L 1~~~~1 Rrnn P ~~~~monites to three consecutive firstsetaoflbinowrthga.au Wdm Le d St Pauls R mD downs. Buz Sawyer hobbled off Upton leaped high into the air andthe field and left-the Blue, al- headed the ball into the upper

ctober 21,- The ready without the services oftyteam swept to Captain Pete Richardson and Joe B u i sE il

- yof the season, Belforti, short another linebacker.B ue W n Ea iauPs by a decisive Then, stalled by a crucial fifteen

The Blue gained yard penalty, Mount HernnO d rd 0

fort. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Wednesday, Oct. 81-The BlueThe Andover drive began to soccer team, now undefeated in its

Baumner won the click as Tone Grant threw to last 19 games, made short workwith a time of George Andrews for a nineteen of- its most recent victim, Medfordtsflat./ Close be- -yard gain. Jorge Gonzalez swept High. Though the team was not

Andoere Van the end and blasted thrdugh the as impressive as it was againstout Anoe a-middle for consecutive first downs. Yale, it proved itself superior at

cora twit aunlas The Herman line stiffened and' a all times and ended as a 2-0Thenttwolrunes f creen pass failed to materialize Victory.

tes, three seconds. . c.so Andover punted. The quarter The first period began as a fair-later Paulie Dave ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ended wth Mount Hermon running ly even clash, with the only reallater Paulie Dave ~~~~~~~~~~the ball. chance at a goal being Budge

eline. Then lowersdDoug Everett fin- TeerymntsothscndUpton's attempt to sneak the ball

es of 14:23 and '~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~'u~~ qu ar lymner o h sawcand into the corner of the goal fromively. Two more ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~uatr awastandoff between the left. Hi' boot was just a sec-Hugh -Jones and ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ '~~*' ~the two teams. After a poor Her- ond too late and the ball went out

um, legged it across ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~man punt, Gonzalez and Lux put of bounds. Then finally, with fiveird and fourth St. - . 'thi team in passing range of the scnsrmiig et hap

kicked the ball into the vacantgoalline. Grant found Lux all Medford half of the field. Upton

niggun, a quartet '~alone in the end zone and~ the and the neaiest Medford defenderners moved out t -core was 6-0. Bob Clift used the had a foot race toward the ball

Baumer, Corcoran, seilkcigteo i het hc a oln otergtoeetheld the leadspcakikn toonhssotowihwsrli-toheigtf

the course. When -'split the uprights and P.A. led 7-0 the cage. Budge reached it firstat "heartbreak hill' '- r-." Iand drilled it across the face of

vig the sanctuary, Neither team could move the the goal into the nets.eetfell back, and - .ball for longer than one series of At the start of te second quar- ~ovdup with team- '" ''downs until near the end of the ter, Andover's offense put theumrand Corcoran period. Mount Herman began a pressure on. Medford could not get

ffuntil the last few driedepi ts ow triobt the ball into the Andover half ofanRoijan speeded nydepiis eiorbu the field. The P.A. halfbacksugtthe P.A. cap- ' T'fumbled on the thrty yard line. A -stopped clearing attempts and fedshline. - (Continued op Page Four) (Continued on Page-Four)-

Page 4: 3 T iP -- ILI

,Page 4 ~ 'The Phuipian 'October24

ii I ~~~~flection off a long, sailing shot by six yard gains, Andover reached arLightmhandi coinerldto therftorwards tbeutermonthreenedfoJ

j~nfnedfrr Pge1 te ilton am o a blas~ frmyr ie h ilwn vrt (Continued from PaeThe -ESSE Xcrossbar. This ended the first-half made a beautiful rolling save on tackle sent it spinning into the air not press the advatitage. ILAIUND 111scoring with Andover in command, the shot. But the Blue was not an~d a red jersey fell on it. Hermon Action reached a high pitch in3-0. destined to be blanked. At 13:45, then began a drive that almost the third qarter when both Bill NWWD.018

Andover talled two more goals Upton took a centering pass from died except for a roughing-the- SmnoYer and Keth Chiappa made NW ED.HO,in the third quarter to move Smoyer on the left wing-and beat kicker penalty that gave it new great tries for goals that both fail- 2:30 - 4:00 P. M.ahead 5-. A third Blue goal, Brown to the far corner. This life. Jack Morrison made the first ed. Chiappa-drove straight up the 2 se'Sreagain by Upton, was disallowed closed out the scoring, and Andov- of two timely interceptions to middle with the ball, fired to the24Esx Srebecause an Andover forward had er had it sixth victory of the give Andover the ball as the quar- upped left-hand corner, - but hisfallen into the goal and was un- season, 6-0. ter ended. shot Was just a little too high.able to get out before the shot. The final quarter found Andov- Smnoyer blazed his shot from leftThe first of Andover's goals came Football e''>''c playing largely defensive foot- wing to the lower left hand spotat 7:50. Upton faked Mt. HermonbalMatShkn veintbuteMdfrgoie aea

fullbac Voorhi insid and'brk (Cotinued ro ofse thre solive the problem of sweeps diving save. During this period e Bli g9Iaround him on the outside. Hi Blue recovery could not relftac.Thswsetpedthutlhse

the ighthit he lft- enalty and yardage lost when around left end. Still, short passes Blue's opposition made its only E EESshnd prosth and h boncdin the ermnlieencugtPrn and quartedback keepers enabled bya JEWELERSwa sopedby& OPTIC

hand ost ad bonced n.TtoHe ass erm cangh bGanta Hermon to control the ball and a beautiful Tom 'srael save to the 3 anSreBlue's second goal of the period tr'g oPas Hranbga hold its slim lead. Even a second right of the goal. 3 anSreand fifth of the game came at 13:10 sustained drive that ended when . cpinb orsnboete TemjreetO h ureRiley sent a low shot at the goal Soule rolled out and cut around Intreiobyorsnbokth Temarevtofheqrter Andover, Mass.which Upton deflected past Swett. end for a touchdown. A second Pattern of Hermon control for was a goal by Keith Chiappa onThe quarter ended with Andover sweep got the two Points that gave only a few plays. The end of the a enalty kick. It was a sizzling GR 5-0742leading 5-0. the Red its eventual margin of game found the Blue deep in its line drive into the right side of

The ourt peiod pend wih avictory. own territory fighting to get the goal that left the goalie nodefenserchangeiforotheederitesa The third quarter consisted en- Possession of the ball. chance___for __asave._

Bron chpace Swetr the verie-. tirely of two long drives - one bytorsoal. hepa Settut he the - each team Grant sent Lux, Gon- Too Ph tSA TN S IZ S A D S

toe gol. he'untitlte inl the zalez, and Rog. Farrar into the L o h tpled scomele ui with eralmiddle on trap-plays from theS NT AS P Z S A D feine, sae.onewai jng de-wit Blue thirty yard line. By five and Finest Camera, Film

fine saves. One was a ~~~~~~~~~~Processing-For All-

HO WARD OH NSONSHOSTlTO :THE HIGHWAYS SPHOTOGRAPHIC NEEDS 12 VARIETIES OF PIZZAS & 20 VARIETIES OF

Route 28 & 125 By-Pass )Lktook

ANDOVER, MASS. 8 Main Street GR 51452-~~--------- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ~~~~G R 5-05 18

A CADEMY ~~~~Sidelines i ARE Y SHP(Continued from Page Three)

BAR AS&OP at Brothers' Field. In fact, half the female crowd has disappeared, but NEAR A & P it hasn't gone far. The girls are watching the winner this year, and 516 S., Main Street

4 BARBERs-GOOD SERVICE they're rooting for it too. Unless the obly thing that this year's football-Air Conditioned - squad wants in the stands for is remaining games are a picture of

96 1A&I SEM, AJno'vjm Fergy and a ready carton of Lucky Strikes, it had better start playing OYIH0191TECACLACPA.CO-CAANCKEREEGSEEh

_________________________the type of football it's capable of playing and giving the school the ''''' -~ "

HILL'S ~~~type of leadership it owes it.

45 Main Street, AndoverTo n airs& Ce es Kitchenware-Tools CLEANING -TAILORING ''

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