-a music, ream motif will spring term entertain dancers at...

6
ith hei ?a 78, NO. 16 PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1954 FIFTEEN CENTS 14 CUM AUDE Bur ra eds -a Music, "ream" Motif Will A a meeting of the Andoveriv a nu u ptr of, Cum Laude held on th flown titenIn Spring Term Entertain Dancers At '54 Senior Prom rweeelected to membership the Society. R. N. Beilenson, W. C ro u to Harry Marchard and his popular Boston Prom, reports Prom Committee Chairman Bragg, J. M. Carlimith, W. R. G ro u to outfit will provide the music for some two Bob Feldman. Construction of the sets has whr, J. J. Curry, J. B. Ger. Two performances, on April 23 hundred couples expected at the Winter 'progressed vell, and the Chairman reports nG. D. Mackenzie, C. J. Ober- and 24, will bring Gilbert and Sul- auiser, K. A. Pruett, D. B. Ryder, livan's "Mikado" to the Andover that the decorations this year will H. Shapiro, D. C. Sith, J. A. Musical stage. differ considerably from the tradi- *Spencer. -A combined group of Abbot and tional black, white, and grey set- Andover players will sing in this ting of previous winter promns and miaste operetta, In the past years will be done in a far greater- num- orn lia Skinner Gilbert and Sullivan pieces have eofpsleshd. I tieleb. Series ~~di-awn capacity crowds here, and Suspended from the ceiling will In C lblS re Director Schneider expects the be balonssraes and mobile. same this season. wietewlswl ecvrdwt This Saturday evening, Cor In the past the number of tryouts whviedh asil ber ovedreswith nia Otis Skinner, actress and for leads have always been quite apared as.Te flaes i and utoress, will make her first small. This year, however, forty- various moderns, abstract paintings NwEngland appearance of five boys came out for the five on them wih h omte oe he season on the stage of leads; by the middle of the fallf ety wih, "thevcommitte hopes eogWashington Hall, er- term the field was narrowed down gination of the couples". Designer riigaco'mpletely new show to two or thre~ competitors for Whithouse has said that more of or the students and the each part. the gyrm wil be decoi ated this year twnispeople of AndoveP. FINAL TRY-OUTS than ever before. The daughter of the famous Theefialttr-outs ereircentlyThe ststar atr, Otis Skinner, Miss Skin- held and the winners approved by by the art blsein ctru ctual ner hasacquire quite repu- the faculty. The following are the drawing is clses ante actuala atonas a acress ant a monu- male leads: Jones, Feldman, and Whithouse. ologuist. Miss Skinner also NUnderstuoy.Joh..K n Bundrron ' Feldman, John Foote, Ted Probert, Understudy.Ken Sanderson -, -~~~~ndHaes leen ar hndin writes many short stories, hu- Ko Ko ............ Bill Haggernan ~adHysCeetaehnln orous esays, and verses; she Understudy ....... Jim Curry "''' the business of the production with Feldman coordinating operations in ontributes frequently to the Pooh Bah .............. Tom Rose CHAIRMAN Bob Feldman daubs with committeeman Strat Jones, getting his role as Chairman. eiw Yorker. Under'study ....... Max Potter ready for "the big event of the P. A. Social Season." The "Dream" is comning Her versatility is applied as Mikado............Dave Paresky uonFebruary 12th. (Photo by Gould) The Prom itself comes on Feb- eI to the theatre; not con- Understudy .......... Jack High UPOlruary twelfth and thirteenth, and fning herself merely to acting Pish Tusk...... John Maxim tickets will be on sale7 from Febru- _ ~~~~~~~~~Understudy . G ... reg Dickerson Friistt ith nte wlt and monologue, she has written BlHaemnis a Junior who Phthe ~T I r fitb tofit. One twefthe and produced plays as well, won his part in competition with 11 l W ~ V u e aeu ytheroil be aea ance before She came under the influence several Uppers and Seniors. He has te" prmeand lo ah gaulaee e ofacting at an early age, and, -already done the pCart before Wal- W ith Fa u ty Wives; Mrs. Bens sye"malfrth ouls inher senior year at Bryn nut Hill and Rogers Hall audiences D , uring the prom the 8 in 1 will Mawr, was elected president of and receivdd encores at both spots. PeteShin In Stl~emate whichhed nrevebenti e r nube-s te college dramatic club. Af- Mr. Schneider says that he has P t a m hc aenvrbe er e ter graduating from Bryn never seen a better lead cast" for LatFiyevnginaacl Ro fledocpct, fore by the P. A. students plus ter grduatin from Bryn aGilbet and ullivn workhere. ast Fiday eeningin a FcultyRoom flleseveralaifromsvetheirom standardnda rereer- Mawr, she went to the Sor- ahiGilbertd ts and deSullivan Wntework ad hertir. one in Paris, where she stu- FEMAh LEAD~s Piopeetdisfrtdbt fteWne emadistie died drama, and appeared in The female leads, f rom Abbot, first "novelty" debate of the year. Mfrs. Bensley, Mrs. Mr. Simeon Hyde has replaced Mr. Stage roles as well, Having have also been selected. They are Pitts, and, Mrs. Hallowell upheld bate. Mrs. Bensley continued by Whitney as faculty advisor. His competedhereductionshe as follows: the affirmative of the question, "Re- stating that their good influence sriehsbe naubet h compleed he Ucain -she Yum Yum ..... Paula Prial and solved: Faculty children are a good lies in three principal areas of de- sevceh seeivlumable in the returned t the U. - . Her Molly Young (Each is to take the influence on students of P. A. velopment: social, moral, and in- committee, say Fedaia- father helped her get started part one night.) against a Philo team comprised of tellectual. ranging the many details which are on her acting careev in 1921, (Continued on Page Two) Pete Knipe, Pete Jaquith, and Dick (Continued on Page Two) I necessary for a successful prom. ex (Continued on Page Two) Culliton. The judges were Messers. 10 MIRROR CANVASS haim.sn ee~sn n iln Dr- Aston Hurd Chase Announced r.W Winfield Sides day r will be a canvass this Fri- After a short speech by Dr. Gil- s H a f N wy o m d Casc a day evening of all dorms not ~pre- lingha-m abobut debating oedrA e d O e l o m d C asc oTour Europ ean viously canvassed for those who Mrs.. Bensley took the speaker's D p r m n s T ute o v n !o wish to ~~~~purchase the Winter Term stn.Beginning wt eiiinD p r m n s T u te o v n d ducat"./ al Cites Mirror and the 100th Anniversary, of the word inf luence: the act or LaAgx l1 1 J0e Edition, appearing this spring. All/ power of producing an effect with- On Thursday, Friday, and Saturday of last week the Mr. Winfield M. Sides, Chair- students will have a chance to buy out apparent force or direct auth- rec 0of the P. A. niathematics de- the Mirror in the Cor~mons begin- ority," she stated that the children Phillips Academy trustees convened on the Hill for the second rtinentbegan a eave of bsence ing Mondy, Februry 8th. obviously must have some influ- of their four annual meetings. The merging of the Greek and enar t is aleave wil abene n ing_ Monday,___February______ ence because they inspired the de- Latin departments, reappointments he til thebeinigv of l textend5 to vai-ious Foundations, and the ap- thebegnnng f te 5425 pr-oval of a new boiler for the power il year. In A-~nswer To "Bck and Stripes" patwr mn h eiin RE~~~~tACEMENTS ~~~~~xe erreached during the recent gather- D uring Mr. Sides' absence, Mr. 1r i iC ning. ' son will take over his 8:57 F rAonw ClssicrDepatmennwil tatic 5 four section and M. CHASE CLASSICS HEAD rnard will take over his 4:45-AnwCascDeat ntil tematic 5 section. Mechanical The 76th anniver-sary issue of the "Exonian," way hit "Tea and Sympathy;" Charles B. Flood, au- soon take the place of the Greek aingswillbehandledbyMessers reputedly the oldest preparatory school paper in Am- thor of the recent novel "Love is a Bridge;" and and Latin Depai-tments. Dr. Alston xaiid Drake, and Mr. Maynard erica, is taking the form of a literary magazine en- Dwight MacDonald of the Neu) Yorker. Steven Do- Hurd Chase was appointed head of IIbecomne Acting Chairman of titled "Canto." hanos will do the drawing, and Robert Osboi-n, the the new department. D. Chase, a e epartment. It has not et been Rprsfo xtridct htpors a cover., graduate of Har-var-d and Cam- ided who will proctor Prench Rprsfo xtridct htpors a bridg-e, has been eaching Greek at uein Mi'. Sides' absence, been made toward the magazine's completion. It is CONTRIBUTIONS NEEDED Andover since 1934. TeSides' leave, of absence will to be distributed on March 1.- At present, Dick Robinson,-editoi of "Canto," is Mi-. Benton has been appointed kethe form of a motor trip in need of contributions from prep schools. Other to the Elizabeth Millbank Anderson rough the United States followed CONTRIBUTORS schools are sending in material, but it reportedly Foundation, effective September, trip abroad. - So far,"Canto" has a guaranteed cir-culation of lacks talent and much of it cannot be used. Robinson 1954. Mr. Peterkin, the present trip abroad. So far, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~head of the Latin Department, will Inthe near future Mr. and Mrs. about 3000, and it will be distributed throughout feels that Andover could help supply- some of the ma- vacate this foundation when he r-e- de Will start o a motor trip of fox-ty prep schools in the East. It will include con- terial that he's looking for. The current rates for tires at the end of this year. Dr. nny a~, Washington, and the tributions by such celebrities as John Steinbeck, pro- prep school copy are one-half cent per word or about Gillingham has been appointed to ~trtrning t P. A. n Feb- minent author of the best-seller, "The Grapes of five dollars a page. For poetry the pr-ice i's higher-. the John Charles Phillips Founda- ar 4 hey will sail for Europe Wrath;" Kenneth Roberts, writer of "Northwest tion which Mr. Benton will leave bruary 26 on the Queen Mary. aaiew LaeWinter and early spring wijll Passage;" Al Capp, creator of the caitoon "Li'l Ab- The min e IllI be printed on glossy paper, when hie receives his new founda- SPent in Portugal and pain, ner;"' Nathaniel Benchley; commentator Tex McCra- eight by elev~ inch es, and it will be sold for twenty- tion. (A (C41ktinued n Page Two) ry; Robert Anderson, writer of the current Broad- five cents. /(Continued on Page Two)

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Page 1: -a Music, ream Motif Will Spring Term Entertain Dancers At ...pdf.phillipian.net/1954/02041954.pdf · th flown titenIn Spring Term Entertain Dancers At '54 Senior Prom rweeelected

ith

hei

?a 78, NO. 16 PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1954 FIFTEEN CENTS

14 CUM AUDE Bur ra eds -a Music, "ream" Motif WillA a meeting of the Andoveriv a nu u

ptr of, Cum Laude held onth flown titenIn Spring Term Entertain Dancers At '54 Senior Prom

rweeelected to membershipthe Society. R. N. Beilenson, W. C ro u to Harry Marchard and his popular Boston Prom, reports Prom Committee ChairmanBragg, J. M. Carlimith, W. R. G ro u to outfit will provide the music for some two Bob Feldman. Construction of the sets has

whr, J. J. Curry, J. B. Ger. Two performances, on April 23 hundred couples expected at the Winter 'progressed vell, and the Chairman reportsnG. D. Mackenzie, C. J. Ober- and 24, will bring Gilbert and Sul-

auiser, K. A. Pruett, D. B. Ryder, livan's "Mikado" to the Andover that the decorations this year willH. Shapiro, D. C. Sith, J. A. Musical stage. differ considerably from the tradi-

*Spencer. -A combined group of Abbot and tional black, white, and grey set-Andover players will sing in this ting of previous winter promns andmiaste operetta, In the past years will be done in a far greater- num-orn lia Skinner Gilbert and Sullivan pieces have eofpsleshd.

I tieleb. Series ~~di-awn capacity crowds here, and Suspended from the ceiling willIn C lblS re Director Schneider expects the be balonssraes and mobile.same this season. wietewlswl ecvrdwt

This Saturday evening, Cor In the past the number of tryouts whviedh asil ber ovedreswithnia Otis Skinner, actress and for leads have always been quite apared as.Te flaes i andutoress, will make her first small. This year, however, forty- various moderns, abstract paintingsNwEngland appearance of five boys came out for the five on them wih h omte oe

he season on the stage of leads; by the middle of the fallf ety wih, "thevcommitte hopeseogWashington Hall, er- term the field was narrowed down gination of the couples". Designerriigaco'mpletely new show to two or thre~ competitors for Whithouse has said that more of

or the students and the each part. the gyrm wil be decoi ated this yeartwnispeople of AndoveP. FINAL TRY-OUTS than ever before.

The daughter of the famous Theefialttr-outs ereircentlyThe ststaratr, Otis Skinner, Miss Skin- held and the winners approved by by the art blsein ctru ctual

ner hasacquire quite repu- the faculty. The following are the drawing is clses ante actualaatonas a acress ant a monu- male leads: Jones, Feldman, and Whithouse.

ologuist. Miss Skinner also NUnderstuoy.Joh..K n Bundrron ' Feldman, John Foote, Ted Probert,Understudy.Ken Sanderson -, -~~~~ndHaes leen ar hndinwrites many short stories, hu- Ko Ko ............ Bill Haggernan ~adHysCeetaehnlnorous esays, and verses; she Understudy ....... Jim Curry "''' the business of the production withFeldman coordinating operations inontributes frequently to the Pooh Bah .............. Tom Rose CHAIRMAN Bob Feldman daubs with committeeman Strat Jones, getting his role as Chairman.eiw Yorker. Under 'study ....... Max Potter ready for "the big event of the P. A. Social Season." The "Dream" is comningHer versatility is applied as Mikado............Dave Paresky uonFebruary 12th. (Photo by Gould) The Prom itself comes on Feb-eI to the theatre; not con- Understudy .......... Jack High UPOlruary twelfth and thirteenth, and

fning herself merely to acting Pish Tusk...... John Maxim tickets will be on sale7 from Febru-_ ~~~~~~~~~Understudy . G ... reg Dickerson Friistt ith nte wltand monologue, she has written BlHaemnis a Junior who Phthe ~T I r fitb tofit. One twefthe

and produced plays as well, won his part in competition with 11 l W ~ V u e aeu ytheroil be aea ance beforeShe came under the influence several Uppers and Seniors. He has te" prmeand lo ah gaulaee e

ofacting at an early age, and, -already done the pCart before Wal- W ith Fa u ty Wives; Mrs. Bens sye"malfrth oulsinher senior year at Bryn nut Hill and Rogers Hall audiences D , uring the prom the 8 in 1 will

Mawr, was elected president of and receivdd encores at both spots. PeteShin In Stl~emate whichhed nrevebenti e r nube-ste college dramatic club. Af- Mr. Schneider says that he has P t a m hc aenvrbe er e

ter graduating from Bryn never seen a better lead cast" for LatFiyevnginaacl Ro fledocpct, fore by the P. A. students pluster grduatin from Bryn aGilbet and ullivn workhere. ast Fiday eeningin a FcultyRoom flleseveralaifromsvetheirom standardnda rereer-Mawr, she went to the Sor- ahiGilbertd ts and deSullivan Wntework ad hertir.

one in Paris, where she stu- FEMAh LEAD~s Piopeetdisfrtdbt fteWne emadistiedied drama, and appeared in The female leads, f rom Abbot, first "novelty" debate of the year. Mfrs. Bensley, Mrs. Mr. Simeon Hyde has replaced Mr.Stage roles as well, Having have also been selected. They are Pitts, and, Mrs. Hallowell upheld bate. Mrs. Bensley continued by Whitney as faculty advisor. His

competedhereductionshe as follows: the affirmative of the question, "Re- stating that their good influence sriehsbe naubet hcompleed he Ucain -she Yum Yum ..... Paula Prial and solved: Faculty children are a good lies in three principal areas of de- sevceh seeivlumable in the

returned t the U. - . Her Molly Young (Each is to take the influence on students of P. A. velopment: social, moral, and in- committee, say Fedaia-father helped her get started part one night.) against a Philo team comprised of tellectual. ranging the many details which areon her acting careev in 1921, (Continued on Page Two) Pete Knipe, Pete Jaquith, and Dick (Continued on Page Two) I necessary for a successful prom.

ex (Continued on Page Two) Culliton. The judges were Messers.10 MIRROR CANVASS haim.sn ee~sn n iln Dr- Aston Hurd Chase Announcedr.W Winfield Sides day r will be a canvass this Fri- After a short speech by Dr. Gil- s H a f N wy o m d Casc

a day evening of all dorms not ~pre- lingha-m abobut debating oedrA e d O e l o m d C ascoTour Europ ean viously canvassed for those who Mrs.. Bensley took the speaker's D p r m n s T ute o v n!o wish to ~~~~purchase the Winter Term stn.Beginning wt eiiinD p r m n s T u te o v n

d ducat"./ al Cites Mirror and the 100th Anniversary, of the word inf luence: the act orLaAgx l1 1 J0e Edition, appearing this spring. All/ power of producing an effect with- On Thursday, Friday, and Saturday of last week the

Mr. Winfield M. Sides, Chair- students will have a chance to buy out apparent force or direct auth-rec 0of the P. A. niathematics de- the Mirror in the Cor~mons begin- ority," she stated that the children Phillips Academy trustees convened on the Hill for the second

rtinentbegan a eave of bsence ing Mondy, Februry 8th. obviously must have some influ- of their four annual meetings. The merging of the Greek andenar t is aleave wil abene n ing_ Monday,___February______ ence because they inspired the de- Latin departments, reappointments

he til thebeinigv of l textend5 to vai-ious Foundations, and the ap-thebegnnng f te 5425 pr-oval of a new boiler for the power

il year. In A-~nswer To "Bck and Stripes" patwr mn h eiinRE~~~~tACEMENTS ~~~~~xe erreached during the recent gather-

D uring Mr. Sides' absence, Mr. 1r i iC ning.' son will take over his 8:57 F rAonw ClssicrDepatmennwiltatic5 four section and M. CHASE CLASSICS HEAD

rnard will take over his 4:45-AnwCascDeat ntiltematic5 section. Mechanical The 76th anniver-sary issue of the "Exonian," way hit "Tea and Sympathy;" Charles B. Flood, au- soon take the place of the GreekaingswillbehandledbyMessers reputedly the oldest preparatory school paper in Am- thor of the recent novel "Love is a Bridge;" and and Latin Depai-tments. Dr. Alstonxaiid Drake, and Mr. Maynard erica, is taking the form of a literary magazine en- Dwight MacDonald of the Neu) Yorker. Steven Do- Hurd Chase was appointed head ofIIbecomne Acting Chairman of titled "Canto." hanos will do the drawing, and Robert Osboi-n, the the new department. D. Chase, ae epartment. It has not et been Rprsfo xtridct htpors a cover., graduate of Har-var-d and Cam-ided who will proctor Prench Rprsfo xtridct htpors a bridg-e, has been eaching Greek at

uein Mi'. Sides' absence, been made toward the magazine's completion. It is CONTRIBUTIONS NEEDED Andover since 1934.TeSides' leave, of absence will to be distributed on March 1.- At present, Dick Robinson,-editoi of "Canto," is Mi-. Benton has been appointedkethe form of a motor trip in need of contributions from prep schools. Other to the Elizabeth Millbank Anderson

rough the United States followed CONTRIBUTORS schools are sending in material, but it reportedly Foundation, effective September,trip abroad. - So far,"Canto" has a guaranteed cir-culation of lacks talent and much of it cannot be used. Robinson 1954. Mr. Peterkin, the present

trip abroad. So far, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~head of the Latin Department, willInthe near future Mr. and Mrs. about 3000, and it will be distributed throughout feels that Andover could help supply- some of the ma- vacate this foundation when he r-e-

de Will start o a motor trip of fox-ty prep schools in the East. It will include con- terial that he's looking for. The current rates for tires at the end of this year. Dr.nny a~, Washington, and the tributions by such celebrities as John Steinbeck, pro- prep school copy are one-half cent per word or about Gillingham has been appointed to~trtrning t P. A. n Feb- minent author of the best-seller, "The Grapes of five dollars a page. For poetry the pr-ice i's higher-. the John Charles Phillips Founda-ar 4 hey will sail for Europe Wrath;" Kenneth Roberts, writer of "Northwest tion which Mr. Benton will leave

bruary 26 on the Queen Mary. aaiewLaeWinter and early spring wijll Passage;" Al Capp, creator of the caitoon "Li'l Ab- The min e IllI be printed on glossy paper, when hie receives his new founda-

SPent in Portugal and pain, ner;"' Nathaniel Benchley; commentator Tex McCra- eight by elev~ inch es, and it will be sold for twenty- tion.(A (C41ktinued n Page Two) ry; Robert Anderson, writer of the current Broad- five cents. /(Continued on Page Two)

Page 2: -a Music, ream Motif Will Spring Term Entertain Dancers At ...pdf.phillipian.net/1954/02041954.pdf · th flown titenIn Spring Term Entertain Dancers At '54 Senior Prom rweeelected

Page 2 The Phflhpian, Vebruary 4,~

j ~~~~~~~~Celebrity. Series Mr.. Sides, Trusteesfl ~(Continued from Page One) (Continued from Page One) (Continued from Page One)AX M 14 L L P i'a n ~ ~~~~~~~giving her a part in Ibanez' and with the corming of warm. wea- NEw ,BoxLRA~n ADHRI

Blood and Sand. She made her thrM.adMs ie ilpo- The Trustees gave authoridebut at the Empire Theatre abY journey to France and taly. for the installation of a new

THE PHILLIPIAN is published Thursdays during the school year by THEPHILLIPIAN board. Entered as second class matter at the post office at in New York. TeMATHEMATics ABROAD in the heating plant. WorAndover, Mass., under the act of March 3, 1879. Address all correspondence -'After spending a sort time Th irnal leg of the trip will be to start on this project during

Switzerland, Austria, Germany, summer/vacation. The total coconcersing subscriptions to Jos6 R. Dubon and advertisements to Frederick W. in Hollywood, making'a movie Denmark, and The Low Countries, the operation is expectedtobClemens, care of THE PHILLIPIAN, George Washington Hall. School sub- wihhrftesertreenteecutisM.Sdse-poiaey$8700scription, $4.00. Mail subscription $5.00.wihhrftesertre InteecutisM.Sdsx-pomaly$800 oI

THE PHILLIPAN is distributed to subscribers at the Commons and i to Broadway, and appeared in pects to make an unofficial survey It was announced that M.for sale at the Andover Inn. THE PHILLIPAN does not necessarily endorse many plays for the next six of the work that is being done in field Sides, head- -of the math

the Communcations tht appear i its Editoial column - years.mathematics in schools of the An-th ie ofmuication twpper inis Edioriaa coun years.eAnoer ovrlee and age group. partment, is 'to be on a leatOffic of pblicaion: own Pintig Comday, ParkStree, Andver. Around 1929, she dverdlevel. absence until Septemnber, 1954_______________________________________________________ found her After the completion of the trip, Lawrence Shields is also ona

forte in monologues. Here she Mr. and Mrs. Sides will return toofasnermnwutlSesaid help the student to think a lit- combined both her literary and P. A.- in time for Mr. Sides to begin herMr a seldsfro isw currntlyS

11110 ~~~~~~te more than he ordinarily would, theatrical skills to write and teaching at the start of the '51 ,5 trip to the West Coast,' finon(Continued from Page One) With reference to the 148 chil- act solo sketchep. Among the Fall Termi. h ilrtr nmdArl

She then cited a hypothetical dren, ("A productive faculty is an most popular have been, The Mr. wiretersn instructoriincase of a terrified prep just meeting Ienterprising faculty,") Mrs. itts Wives of Henry VIII, Empr'ess xvwil be on a leave of a~chis housemaster. The terifled prep ended her speech. yearkitwaslso annuce."walks into the housemiaster's apart- Pete Jaquith, second speaker for Euge~ie, and The Mansion on yai a loanuttce

meat nd isconfrnted ith te thenegatve, bgan b refering the Hudson. Later i 1929, (Continued from Page One) that time he will be a visitinghousemaster changing diapers. This back to some of Mrs. Bensley's she traveled to London' to-act Pee Bo ........... (To be taken by turer in math at Princeton

situaionsaidMrs.Bensly, ceate staemens. "I thefacuty hve i Candida, and received con- whichever of the two above girls versity.a topic for conversation, or a lead- children- which seems to be the - iderabje aclaisi forjie'r per- dosnt lyYumYchiECAGESSEing remark, such as - "what a cute trend - they will employ baby-' 'formance. For some time after 'Pjtti Sng ........... Linda Jones The Trustees also authorizedbaby I" for example - thus serving Isitters." The student, Jake remark- that; she toured America with Katisha ............. Rethel West participation in a faculty hilas an "ice-breaker" for the new ed enjoys sitting with the baby sit- her monologues. In 197'Miss Many critics have agreed that exchanged among indepenstudent. This situation, remarked, ter, and if he is-caught he is liable Skinner rnfre th be tistis onerof ilbr andh-sullivn hool.TirrgrmineMrs. Bensley, falls under the head- to probationary action. "Is this trnfre h et iet hr smc'utehmrauspices of the Secondary Ed

igof "Social Development." good?" he asked. Jaquith went on selling novel, Edna His Wife, in this parody on Japan and in con- tion Board, and it would meaning aonsomn chlrntteloaprpwoianoeby into a full-length play for one trast to the "Pirates of Penzance" Andover might have as many a

prepares the student for father- an ill-clad faculty child.- The prep actress, calling for the portray- which has a weak finish and "H .M. yen sons of faculty memberhood, a preparation he needs, be- tells the child to go away, the tot al of a woman at three differ- S. Pinafore" which is afflicted with other schools enrolled in its sticause, quoting statistics, three hun- curses back, and the prep quite nat- ent stages of her life. The a flimsy plot, the "Mikado" has body.

dre an thrtystdens wo ga-urally wonders what the parents of 'ply however did not invoke bad the good fortune to have been AlsiteTrteswedred and thirty students who gra- ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ rgiven a fine ending and a fairly AlsxenTute e'duate have to provide some five this "creature" are like. A certain unmixed admiration; Miss logical fast-moving plot, sent at the meeting.hundred and fifteen children, disrespect for the faculty, he said, Skinner had 'yet to aptivati" 'Sources from te Music Depart-

Setting a good example around inevitably results. Jaquith finished Broadway. She returned to the ment report that the "Mikado" hasthe dorm for the child teaches the by saying that faculty children "in- road, and traveled thivty been chosen to climax a half-decade T Istudent moral development; and, terrupt" studies rather than aid in motsprsnig oolue sanfGlbtadSlivnpr- BgAotet conversely, concluded Mrs. Bensley, the enlargement of a student's men- mthos, prsnting smonologwes. esand a G it iSllivan ther-as FULg AssrtEn OF Alumwhen a student hears a child tell a1 tal capacity. atshosadiPsaltwsHtaO n hti ilbetels LNOPH 33 45 lie to his parents, he sees readily The negative rebuttalist, Dick In 1939, she played Candida G and S performance to be played POORP EODhow "futile" his own excuses must Culliton, took the floor after a brief again at sunmnmer stock thea- here for several years. 85 MAIN ST. TEL. 117sound to his housemaster. intermission. He related an incident tres. _____________

Pete Knipe, speaking for the neg- in which his housernaster's daugh- In14,secodlefrsative, asked, "What is a faculty ter took his cigarette and coffee, htoBrawysarignchild?" - and then answered in spilled the coffee and ate the cg htrn Broadway sot in REIN H OLDterms of the "twenty-eight under arette. "Personally", he, said, " Teae. hepywsnoatwelve." He then announced the enjoy watching little girls eat cig- good one, and Miss SkinnerMESFUNHIGresults of an "extensive" pl of garettes, but I realize that this is was 1,raised for adding so muchMNSFU IHNGtwenty-five seniors: "Twenty-one wrong." Culliton stated that t is to its success with he-w' acting. /FOOTWEARwere oblivious to the fact that the natural that one works better with-/,faculty children had any influence out noise than with it. MoercnlMs kne 6''Cleaning, Pr'essing andwhatsoever, one thought that they IMrs. Hallowell then attacked the has appeared in her latc'ri pro- ~Aieainproduced a good effect, and threelnegative viewpoint.,-She said that duction, "P was Ninety'j. aAleainfelt they produced a bad effect,Ithe sight of half-clad children smash hit of he 1952-3 seasontherefore 75 per cent of the liberal arouses sympathy, a helpful and that ran for seven months onthinkers in this school feel that sometimes necessary attribute in Broadway - a record for a AndoverST faculty children produce a bad ef- the student. one-woman show, and then REDUCTION

These little monsters, he went on, she replied that the very fact that performances in 63 cities. R c e tomake their resence known at athle- a student does not visit the sitter S Ltic events by tripping the play- increases his self-control and Miss Skinner is no newcomer ofers, squirting helpless people with strengthens his character. Mrs.- to the George, Washington Center 1/4 - 1/2. fwater guns, and causing general Hallowell concluded the debate by stage. She appeared in a bril-havoc, saying, "As someone wiser than liant performance in the Cele-13M I.S E

Mrs. Fitts then took her stand we once said, 'a little child shall brity 'Series here in December, 34 PARK STREET 1 AN SR Efor the affirmative. She opened by lead themn.'" 1950. ----------__________ -X__________

asking, "How can 148 (faculty) _________________________________________________

children go unnoticed?" Mrs. Fittsthen attempted to prove how the POSTAGE STAMPS FORchildren stimulate intellectual de-velopment and prepare the student COLLECTORSfor the "real" world. The student,she said, learns to concentrate by U. S. and Foreignt

working while being bombarded bythe common noises and annoyancesof the outside world. She quoted S H A W SI "comic book brigade" which she STAMP CO.19 h AN I E S R

-PATRONIZE-

ANDOVER CRAFTSAcademy Barber HBYSO REGULAR. 64 PAGE WINTER ISSUE,

Shop ~~~~~~~~~~HUGE spring anniversary issue with the-best96 MAIN STREET (Near A & P) 37 ENMORE STREET Z

3 Barbers Good Service Telephone 1682-W of the past 100 year~s of the MIRROR:

All Spalding Hockey Skates SHO AVS RDYNT33 1-3 off SUBSCRIPTIONS

W. R. HILL HARDWARE ON SALE IN COMMONSAthletic Equipment and Supplies

45 MAIN STREET TELEPHONE 102 NEXT WEEK"Between the Banks"

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e~~aY4,1954 -The" hillipianPae3

Story Of Experiences -With Dutch' ad xas

rime Committee Scours' Underground Movement During War TeaDanE rOwd~~UTO11Thehigh point of the FV A.The Hub; P. A. Near Panic Told To SuetBody ByMr. wixie soci eoerpdlstS-

o Mr. Valleau Wilkie, instructor in American History, urday, when the blossoming)e ~~~by Tom LAwHENcE used as the topic for his speech in Philo's Wednesday assem-. floweis of American woman-

Dowdy old Boston was shocked recently by th'e discoveries of bl rga h con fhseprecswt h ne- hood, as seen through the eyeshe U. S. Senate Committee on juvenile deliiiquency in the Hub. bypormteacuto i xeine ihteudr of P. A. socialites, were es-

Such disturbing facts were revealed as: two teenagers wer6 seen in ground in Holland during World hind a fake wall and shared the corted down the blizzard-sweptge afedurng eceber vndas cst ostnilns War- II. agony of the Dutc fmlunder- sidewalks of Phillips Street in-

.5 renth eVeri eodlwyteybytemllaevrko) Mr. Wilkie stated very simply going German interrogation, to the blazing glory that is the58 ent evrysecnd whythe bu thm Ill eve knw); that on January 11th, 1944, his' After his three-month stay, Mr. interior of Peabody House.

he Alibi Restaurant'is at 176 Main St. in Charlestown, more cops 'plane crashed in Ger-many, and, Wilkie was taken south by another BaddrcoM.Wlfcrnatronize the Mardi Gras than any other cafe; and most cafe pro- reasonably intact, he began to walk link in the underground's escape Badi-etrM.Wlfcmrietors have been arrested on an average of 46 times. Such lists towards the bordei, 'of olland. chain, a girl who had lost bed whole mented that, in spite of previ-

ye been revealed as: Novelty, 51; Louie's, 5; Tivoli, 92; Melody, When he was going through a sniall family at the hands of a German ous indications of a much

24. This is the number of minors seen in cafes during' December. town in Holland, he was arrested firing squad. They traveled by train smaller gathering, the numbernewly-released list reads something like this: Novelty, 84; Louie's, for being five hours late in violation to Arnhem, during which time Mr. of dancers was "just about

ID 19; Tivoli, 141; Melody, 65. This is the nuimber of members of the of a 10 p. m. local curfew. The of- Wilkie forsook chivalry o pretend right."ig oston Licensing Board seen in cafes during December (checking ficer that arrested him, seeing that sleep and avoid giving his seat to In addition to their time-

p, of course) ~~~~~~~~~only spoke English, immediately sleep. This was necessary since he honored selections, the Acesup, of course). ~~~~~~~~~~turned him over to the under- knew no Dutch and a conversation

However, something of this magnitude makes us look at our- ground. would be too risky played 720 in the Book" and

les and wonder: is P. A. free fom this moral stigma? This This officer was taking a terrific At', Ar'nhem, there was a little "Tenderly," both of which wered ustion leads inevitably to such puzzles as: what has become of risk, stated Mr. Wilkie, since, he delay before a second guide was extremely well received. "The

he distilling unit that seems to have disappeared from Mr. Weaver's .could not be sure that Mr. Wilkie fou nd, Mr. Wilkie said that he and Bunny Hop," a sort of tribal ri-ceistry lab? What about the Senior with the closet full of molas- was an American because the another American who had joined tual popular in Greenwich,

er s Germans Had Planted English him were forced to endure a de- Grosse Pointe, and Southhamp-sWho is the Junior with the unmistakable stagger? What is speaking Germans dressed as Am- lightfully cosy ride in a double sent ton, was initiated in the P. A.

e guy in Taylor who brushes his teeth eight times a day with chlo- erican flyers in Holland, principally facing two German soldiers. dance world to add to the rau-a pyll trying to hide? Of course no formal investigation will be to find out about the country's un- Ti

el ade into these matters, for fear that someone will tie one end of a derground system. The speaker in- Ticrisis passed and a new cus atmosphere.

oe to a lamp on George Washington Hall, nnd the other end to the terrupted his tale here to comment guider was fo gundwh took theyt Immediately following inter-

'er bumper of a passing auto, resulting in the loss of the facade on the gratitude and admiration manteri Bgium. where theyr misinth"AmtTersf the administration building. which he has since had for the loy- mehaotergid woaj.asi m thes"AlostBu Thers

P. A. students rhay look scornfully upon the Boston hearings, alty and unflinching bravery of the Wilkie stated, "Preferred cooperat- hl a eso.BdLrut no at lastthy kno wher to g, whe in Bston.Dutch patriots. ing with the Germans to being son and Tony Pratt, the lead-

now a leat-thy knw whre togo, hen n Boton.He was taken to a house where shot." This guide took them to an ers, performed on the trumpet**0*he was interrogated by the under- apartment where they were "enter- and trombone respectively,

ground leaders; then he was moved tamned" and asked a sufficient nuin- Greg Miller played the clarinetnorth where he waited for three ber of questions so that Mr. Wilkie and Stban McDonald and TonyAINDOVEIR INATION.AIL BANIKI ~~~months for the escape route down scmainbaesuii- Price alternated on the banjo.

Dl ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~through Belgium, France, and ous of the motives of his supposed- Bob Edgeiton on piano and7 Andover, Massachusetts Spain ~to be organized. ly "friendly" interrogators. From Rog Whitcomb on the drums

Andover, Massachusetts SpaMr. in kesi htelvdwt this apartment the two were taken ruddottegop hiCHECKING ACCOUNTS REGISTER CHECKS a r ikesi hth ie ihby car, not to their next "contact," ruddottegop hi

aDutch family, almost as a mem- but to'Gsaohadures only competition for the spot-

SAVINGS ACCOUNTS THRIFTI-CHECKS ~ber of it, for three months. He Gsaohaqatr.lgtcm rmNwyL~y9 SAVINGS ACCOUNTS THRIFTI-CHECKS was unable to leave the house at Here Mr. Wilkie concluded his lgtcm rmNwyL~y

EXPRESS TRAVELERS CHECKS any time, and only once was the speech. After being brought to ad his date, Abbotteer TuckyAMERICAN EX R S R V LR H C S house searched, during which time Gestapo Headquarters he was sent Monroe, who gave an actuated

3 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Mr. Wilkie concealed himself be- to a German concentration camp. exhibition of the Charleston.

$ WILLIAM HOLDEN says: "My Dad, a chemist,0 I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~wanted me to follow,, in the business. But

I got the play-acting bug in school and," college. I was in a small part at the Pasadena

~~~, // .'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~" ~~~ Playhouse when they picked me to test- _____ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~for 'Golden Boy'. I never worked so hard in

4 ______________________ ~~~~~~~my life. But the success of the picture0 m~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ade it worth it!"

TIl

~~~' ~~~~" "' ~~~~~~I'M FOR CPAMEL! I'VE FOUND

for youselfwyCame s a ool mildnesr Fandrclavrage

with more people than any other cigarette!

AMELS AGREE WITU MORE PEOPLE~~~~THAN ANYOTHER

' i- wa CIGARETTE"

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Page 4.TePilpa eray4,1

Tabor Cagers Top SPORS~~~~~~D~ Andover Hockeymen,, Hampered B LOSs

Blue With Second Sat., Feb. away ThreeStarsLose.ToStrong S.aPaul'Hall Surge, 61-53 ~Sat., Feb. 6 ae'7..... away The Andover hockeYmen's six-game unbeaten streak f b n o i

A fighting Tabr Academy five Sat., Feb. 6 - Yale '5 ..... away came to an end latSaturday when a pwr-pace Paul'i

broke throug in the thid stanza toSWIMMING sudwokn wihm hnekepcsosord able players, Woody Harris, Hugh Ma4inelli, and

wipe out a slim Blue lead and pile Sa. e.6-Yl 5 . wy tretmsi etcscn eidt onte Whittlesey, because of scholastic difficulties, proy

up a six-point advantage of its own, HOKYBu,41 ntePuis c.to be another valuable asset to the hosts.

and finally staved off a last-minute StFb6-Hern .. hre Sparked by the stellar play of wing Harry Roul- GooD-PAuLIE DEFENSE

P. . rllyto queze y te DkeSQUASH

men 61-5rlon the lsers' b ct. Sa.DebekeYl ds wy o-Miller, St. Paul's grabbed an early lead which St. Paul's veteran first defensiemen,, who lhi

men, 61-58, on_________the___lose___they never lost. The Blue's loss of three indispens- been playing together for three years, gave the El

BLUE ON Top trouble from the first. The first line, true to.-the Paulies' traditl

The Blu cmltloulasdpounced on every mistake that Fred Harrison's men made, and e

what seemed to be a weak visitingvetdfuofhminoalesqittin the first period, but theirveedfuoftminoale.

quie uaegaulyfl f St., Paul's got off to a fast start, grabbing the puck at the ope

while Tabor's picked up. Spear- face-off and driving into Blue territory immediately. GoalieJerry Jo

headed by guards Tom Karam and thwarted the first feW~ scoring attempts by the hosts, but Roulon-Mi

Dick Power, the visitors began hit- finally slipped the first score past Jones at 4:08 from about eight

ting with disturbing regularity, ot

and erased a six-point deficit to tie R dFrom there the game reverted

the game in the second stanza. Af- R Relay, W i~ltS a fast defensive battle around I

trtehalf it was all downhill forter the ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ . ,, ice. Blue defensemen Mike Han

Deke's understudies, save for a few InB A. A. tiefL and Beez Morton kept St. Paul'si

tense minutes in the game's dying '

of the danger area for the rest

moments when it appeared that -In the first Exeter contest of the period.

they would pull it out of the fire the winter term, Andover went GAME OPENS Up

after all. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~down to defeat at the hands of Thgaeoe uant

AGEE BIG GUN Thgm opnduat theec

Bill'Agee, a surprise starter, was a stronger.Red relay team in of the second stana ai be

the big gun as the Blue jumped off ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ * their annual B.A.A. clash. This harder, faster, and more offen'

7 ~ lad esak.traditional grudge race was in- as the period wore on. Sam Sylv

tovan intmdity ondeadlyjum cluded in last Saturday's 65th ter put St. Paul's ahead by

seven points, mostly on deadly jump ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~edition of the B. A. A.'s, held shortly after the beginning.

shots, as P. A. ran up a 12-6 count Anovrstrtda

-,hrtl

and finished the period ahead 'by '.in the Boston Garden.Anoe strd*ahr-l

15-11 Big Haykes, Cleen ontrib- The race kicked off at 9:20 when George Robinson slapped

one-bander from the corner whicn p. in., with dash man Steve puck past the home squad's go

opened the Blue's scoring. Guard CO-CAPTAIN Pete Behn (right) and Dave Glendinnn respn tothe gun Snyder fighting Casey Ben- with 7:49 gone for the Blue's

Frankie Palumbo swished a beauti- in Saturday's Portland High meet. Behn placed. second clninigtied for singer, on the pole, for the in- .and only counter. -The. Pa

ful setshot fom outide inaddingthird as the Blue went on to win die meet 48'/2 to 37. Pht yGould) sieln.Bnigrhl n- struck right* back. Ed Har

his two. der off however, and when the gabdtepc ntecer

A ehtfo six more in the sec- ia d ~ i ed ahead of P. A.'s. defensemen,

Agderitor su mohKaa and Herm en Sink P r l n -H gIbaton was piassed, Lower Jm let loose with a beautiful shot f

ond period, but both Karam .~~~~~~~. o r- Lorenz was trailing Exeter's ten feetorez outrailihardetand high einto

Paul Zavorskas of the Purplethranhihnojmp t ihed he ot latemin ot p- i A#, D d y 4 8 3 , F u o W in second man, Pete Mellini. corner of the net, to make the

Saturd",%p 48-37, Faurot Wins ~~~The Blue never got the lead, ~~

riod, and another by Zavorskas - -a as the Blue's third man. Fritz STARIRATT JUST MISSES

gave Tabor its first lead, 24-22. Pa- l nrli'2 lumbo's set and Clement's tap push- £VC.'(W'

ed into the final quarter in the men came close to cutting the I

ed the Blue in front again. Karam'sshot knotted the score again aste TeAndover swimming team won its fourth consecutive dust of Exeter's. Gately. to a lone point. Dick Star

period went ino its fnal minu, swimming meet. blnasing e muc-ayhoe Potln Hgh Anchor-man Dave Gooan slhearbonsotowd.t t flu 'te ~ ~~~~- ~t. th hbllhooed Prtland Hih din ~~~~~~~ perfect spot for a score, the II

but a slick offensive play with twen- School mermen last Sauurday, 48½ o3½i eti hc tried in vain to catch Pierre de corner of the goal. As St. Pa

ty seconds left gave the Dekemen aVehantoghereitr. olefllwyfomtepuk

halftime lead. Palumbo foiled two several excellent times stood out, him and his rival. Junior Mike Ma- Vehadtogherisr- olefllwyfomhepc

ball-sealingattemps with some In the fifty freestyle, first place honey was third for the Blue. ed the unofficial best time of stick went up in the air and dell

fancy dribbling, and flipped to co- was copped by Sanford of Port- The Andover medley relay team either team, crossed the final ed it out of the net.

captain Pete Jenkins while Tabor land in the time of 24.9, with the lost a heartbreaker to a Portland. line behiid' h e em h Shortly following the BI

was preoccupied with snatching Blue's Co-captain Pete Behn a team Composed of Litrocades, registered the winning time of near-goal, Roulon-Miller went d

the ball. Jenkins scored easily, and, tenth of a second behind, him. Dave Counts, and Conroy whien the two 3:42.2 for the mile. (Continued on Page Six)

after trading foul shots, the~ teams Glendinning and Conroy, of the vi- (Continued 'on Page Six)

left the floor at halftime with An- sitors, tied for third place which

dover ahead, 29-27.- accounts for the half point in the Under "Deke":TABOR GRABS LEAD soig

orm ond eBles deense aigt te placed one, two in the hundred-yard Cl b Hoop System Expanded..Kora nd Poer weente rigt toe TomastBuke and Dve ZBun aigin

second half's starting whistle. Af-bratroeogieheBuegtter about three miuetwo free more points. Counts of Portland by F. A. COOPER -5MINUTES A DAY- Mr. DiClemente has recently

throws gave Tabor a 32-31 lead. was third to make the score of. the The 1953-54 Club Basketball Four days.a week,, the teams. wi- furd leguesk ps t thetadinof

-brek lyup andanohermeet eleven and a half to six and set-up, more an extension than any- thia each class, or leage aegvnflea esclub.h tadn

K. Two fast-beklyp adaohra half in favor of Andover. The thing else of Frank F. DiClemnente'seue r gie c lb

foul stretced the advatage toi37 was, 1:10.3. club program, has been modified oiyfvmnueofpangPresent standings show the

e managedwas to be used for either competitive, 5 oce y.XJV e

31. Jenkins and Ageemngdt In the two-hundred yard free- this year to provide equal playing eorpaciensrfre cemp e d bil TuckV mo en

bring P. A. back to 38-36, but their seplcrdiilmTckatgb

shootig begn faling of, whie thestyle upper Al Faurot and Mike time for four groups of basketball tmkeeand scorekeepe arou.ifotwth1wnsashooting began falling off, while the timekeeper,. a er arete . A leagu, th

visitors got hotter. Nevertheless .Wihos swptefrttoaprns.provided-.for each club game, re- with Taylor of Portland coming in The original set-up,. part of Mr. gades fislvli h lbloss in te"l ege h

the Blue fought to regain the lead, for third place. The time war DiClemente's extensive rejuvena- heirarchy. Each student partici-lege .hih asicer

and Jim Prston's fou shot with2:14.8. Faurot has since filled the t'ons of the club system which be- paigi h ytmi sue fte original. Club nms h

Later esto tied it agie a t 4- shoes of John Graf capably; Graf ~an several years ago, and was inptignthsyemsasudofccedb ikCronwh

Latr' reson iedit gai at42-has replaced the sidelined Kent doctrinated last year under his 'di- 'ofisin pk i ipevos baeballs mark, the Greeks' and the Rc

42, but Kaam's jump hot in theMcKamy in the 100. rection, in a comparatively .abrid- olwinta rer edn

closing secondstsentCTaboreintoutheexperience. To supplement the folo itatoer Laingd

seconds sent C-captanrChnroy Faurt won ged form; since then,oee,Mrdaldilsndcimg, MrM. makers in thisgopinld

final canto with ah-4ead:b 8 h hundred yard backstroke in DiClemente has expanded the pro- DiClemente frequently gives "board Platt of the' Gauls; DickS

The Purple pushedthe good time of 1:05.9. Frank Pier- gramn irP proportion to the number tak"tChe""ad"Carus re Grimm,' all of th ow

42 at the outset of the final quarter, ce of the Blue tired after the first of boys out for basketball; and the otliningo the "B"lmntl and ru saxonev squaBllt olkande

but Palumbo and Agee clicked on outl~~~~~~~~~ baicin requnaenas n

two jump shots and Jenkins and fifty, allowing Litrocades and favorable concensus of opinion bai euiremnents of offensive and ofathe Greek; Bad Frddl A

Preston sank foul tosses to bring Westcott of Portland to take se- which has been ~expressed by faicul- defensive basketball. .sn of the roms;ans.re'dyA

cond and third, respectively. ty and students is a clear indication nothRmm.

the host cagers to within two points, Sanford of the visitors garnered of the progress the system has, Several statistics 'are seif-evideiit "B"? league competition is el

50-48. Deke's quintet kept breath- a well-ear-ned first in the hundred made.' as to the advantages of the present outstanding players so 'far

ing down Tabor's neck, but the vis- freestvle with the excellent time of THE SYSTEM system- Before gym construction, been Bob Birch, presently the

itors to able to ~~~~55.9 Graf and Colby captured se- Th ai rnilso h lbtettlnme fpriiat nder in the scoring column, '

scr ualays gt ietokepT ai seemedlesbe'th the sytmwslmtdt 10, play-DaioFnkRch Ni

score jus at the rght time tee cond and third places for the blue. system have remained unchanged es o, the lurste r a iie olds 240 vKmy, an iloe, KNeppl

Andover a little behind. The hostss otecu otrhld 4 ay n ilDvK

trailed, 54-48, midway in the period, Twn alt hwn in f lhugthnubrogopsa- boys; -further'more, compared to the

with Palmbo almst singlhanded-recovery following a two-week lay- ticipating has been increased. Ev- foi'ier, 90 minute-a-week' playing (Continuedton Page ie,

iy keeping themos ineagae. off, won a creditable performance ery prospective candidate for club ttl h 935 lbpae a

The dminutve gurd talied ~ineof 53.7 points, his best total to date. ball is screened .and promoted orexcto

of P. A.'s next ten points. Borst of Portland was second with demoted according to his ability, to a week, twice the former amount.

Tabor, however, just couldn't Keith Brown of the Blue taking one of four groups. The net result ''D lo 'miss on the crucial shots. They had third place ofteprlmnay"utiglpoe

(Continued on Page Six) Co-captain Charley Faurot of the dure is four 4-team, leagues: "A", An Blue captured his second first of "B", "C'", and the Junior leagues.

the day when he won the individual Each team carries approximately Art Studio ' PharmacyMORI SSE1Yi. medley in a solid 1:42.3. At the eight or nine players; this is, re-

end of the backstroke leg Faurot portsMr Dli~ mne eraei 12a.MAIN STREET 1 an$re

TAIXI found himself a body length behind the number of boys per team which

TWO-WAY RADIOS Portland's Westcott but he put on corresponds with the co-odinate

-Instant Service- a terrific f reestyle sprint to over- increase in the' total number of- Portraits

6 CARS S 32 PARK ST. ~haul Westcott of Portland and fi- teams in the system.. rXXX

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~~j~~~4 t - ~~~~T&e Thipan Page 5

rapplers Remain Unbeaten; Hopser Defeate

On The Sidelines I ~~~~~Andover Wrestlers Decision Milton, 18 -13The.Andover wrestling team extetided undefeated Milton Academy in the Borden

their winning streak to three victories Satur- Gymnasium last Saturday. Once again,by PETE MOHR day with an 18-13 victory over previously strength in the lower and middle weights

Along about mid-summer--or whenever, the Yankees won for Coach Pieter's charges.ye com~pleted their annual ascendancy to first place in tByilgupontinheeayerican League-the U. S. baseball fan screams, "BrealFast W orcester A gg-regation peids, Orrin Hein won a decision___________________ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~c oerWhitney of Milton in the day's

up the Yankees!" Cleveland Indian i-tmatch. Although Whitney rodefront office moguls begin to quietly hmtruhu h ia eidutgumied Brooks ta hi h imn Bands Blue Basketball Squad'hmtruhu h ia eidtear their hair, and the diamond ~~~~~~~Hein's early lead was enough toworld in gealis beset with a 1- CJ " J ~f~assure victory.ockeymen Lose severe attadk of envy. For all the6 43 Loss On Victor's Court In the first period of the 3commotion, tihe result will probably I pound match, Skip Elsas and

Sektk be what most people had predicted by SAM REA Thor-ndike circled cautiously, look-o Blue 3 X~ after the last World Series: an- -Allowing themselves the privilege that all basketball ing for an opening. Then, in theother Yankee championship, after second period, Elsas gained a pre-

Coach Harrison's men complete- the Bronx Bombers have deposed teams enjoy at least once a year, the Andover squad fell apart dicament and stayed on top for theoutclassed the Brooks varsity of the National League entry wi- last Saturday against Worcester Academy to lose 61-43. Al- remainder of the match to garnertWednesday to register a shoc- thout much to-do, Change the dira- though the Worcester team, playing Br o s a 6-1 decision.

g 11-1 victory. matis personae to the St. Paul, on their~ home court, by no means Dn.yrndUJlMAXIE DEciSIONSDGoale Gery ones.plyingtheand Andover hockey teams,' and lacked skill in offensive and e- Powerfl Br o s co-Captain Max Bloom met Joe

ts well, was fortified by the you get a similarly frustrating pa- fensive drive, their Andover oppo- ~ . Noble, one of Milton's best grap-og Blue defense of Captain rallel although not nearly to so nents decidedly experienced anai e s.r plers, at 130 pounds. The matchehgroe sman gd Motoad serious an extent. For that matter, "off day" in every way, The chief Sq adB at1. * was fast-moving and even through-sg this sho wallgin the irs substitute the name of any New difference between the teams lay in L Tout, but Noble gained a slight ad-

st this solid wall in the first mi- England Prep school for Andover, agility, in alert team play; that the vantag on points. and wom-nEglan Pre schol fr Anover aglity in lertteamplayhthade-tes o play the rook~teamand the comparision remains un- visitors were bigger but less theu cJuA.Z. ataon pitad o h e

s destined to play the rest of changed,.aewst ocetrsavnae In the second official squash F'n tlacniudhsscVentire game without another SINCE 44 jut was o battlespth avnafi match of the year, the Blue racquet cess k by ll winnin dh s 137-pon

As usal, he Bue tem go off However, in the Andover story power is defenseless when con- me ott yugbtwl o-match from Grinnell. Featuring thea sl trt in tea firt rod, the case is somewhat different. It fronted by most any smaller, swif- 'ched Brok sudlast Saturday by fireman's carry, Stella held the up-

a sow'tar inth fist eridwas back in 1944 when an Andovrer ter craft. Coach DiClementi found a score of 4-1. The visitors had prhn hogottemtht a oalby eftwng tarattice outfit last skated- to victory his players sluggish on driving, lax three Lowers on the team, but des- scoi ing eight points to Grinnell's

tod Chri Calrosbyng shote pas the over the "Paulies". This year the on shooting, nearly rooted to the pite their youth the trio was fast one in maintaining complete controlokrsaltCdrob fo adove perennial hope that "this might be floor on rebounding they just could-an obiul welxprncdthuguthemc.ondscr goftee doAy dve' the year" arose again; but the n'tmove."All lwantisfundamental SEARS LOSESSOTTosCA INTh e fn pherda satw abundance of ma'terial that graced basketball,", he told his crew bet- Larry Sears was matched with C OTi Donny StMOwete

ick oalswfor thero Blue oneb Sumner Smith Rink last November ween halves. But that day good Brooks' No. 1 man, Gerry, a dimi- interscholastic y champion eBenny* os ohr bye Bltarrateb provided substantial support for fundamental basketball was every- nutive lower. Gei ry won the first ilslasati14 poundsin onnoAso y dhe ensema Harey. that hope. Andover hockey fans will thing that he lacked. two games 15-11, 15-10, and Sears thelibes atches ond the afenon.o

sisted by Morton on just have to wait another year for the next two 15-12, 15-6, but Gerry After an even first stanza, Stoutinger Ge oren, e by second- that long hoped-for event; for des- After several minutes of slow executed some fine i'ecovery shots sordo arvra ntescn

nge GergeRobinson, and an- pite a great effort, the Blue lost opening play, during which the in the deciding'game and managed peroed.Ha on toera o the Meco-to by1 HArdve , brugt the scdoe out at Concord last Saturday, 4-1. home team moved cautiously and to get back almost everything Sears ton captain for theduainoth

ethird period. They were-not trying to detract the P. A. five fed 6'5" Hayes Clem-i could hit. Gerry showed terrific match and -won a hard-fought 4-0Heavy sleet made accurate pas- from St. Paul's victory-in all fair- eat in the center, Chelo, Worces- speed. in recovering Seai s' drop decision.g difficult during the final ness to a good Andover hockey ter's big gun, sank a couple of free shots, and was pariicularly adept I te17pudcasAnor

team, helped along by a series of throws to open up the game a little, in returning aliliost impossible Inte17pudcasAdornod, but aggressive play by the, unfortunate circumstances. Scho- Chelo continued to register, while shots that grazed the wall. The increased its lead when Jack Kohl,~e team still continued. A goal lsiwostkafurmnolJenkins and Palumbo hit on foul match was characterized by long woni another match by his superbtabyrit-ing Bill tyle u anstd and then injuries loppe~d off an- shots for the Blue. haid vollies with the deciding fac- defensive skill. He held the advan-

s b riht-ingBil Tyer ndother valuable man in the third tor being sp-eed and Geriy's elusive tage over Sawyer for most of theis 'bogttecount up to liesadu ilTlr iha Behind, 11-3, at the outset of the shots Gerry eventually won the final two l~erods and scored two

'bouh.telinte st-eanotill Tyrom th a second period, Andover jumped vital'fifth game, 15-9. points for a reversal in the thirdLate in the game, Coach Harrison itherman the game might have back into contention as Clement JONES WINS MATCH period.tthe three defernsemen-Morton, 1been switched to home territory, shot a long pass to Bill Alsup who In the number two slot Mait Pete Moses stai'ted fast in theittlesey, and Harris--into one Ibut no assistance was in the cards' easily drove in for the lay-up. This Jones took the only match of the 167-pound match with a take-downrardtin and stuck in o h e-e and so Mr. Harrison's men hauled stanzea, pointefrsit, ws a day for the Blue. He, too, played in the first period. His opponent,ie'isn Hombination odthe e p to Concord to do battle with moeeulta h isa Lower~, Emmet, who had good Knowlton, was strong and fast but

Se. his ombiatio proucedthe representatives of the hockey Briefly ~inspired by Coach Di- low shots, but Jones' drop shot Moses continued gaining points indthe' score remane of- ihtay playing element of St. Paul's Clemente's half-time talk, Andover' proved to be the deciding factor in ,h second and third periods,tthe pcoe rmwite. ih (which incidentally doubles the came back strongly. Ryan counted (Continued on Page Six) (Continued on Page Six)

to th perid whitle.number of Andoveir hockey candi- on a set and Alsup was good fordates) on one of the institution's two a second later on a lay-up. "The

ly ub System - six natural irinks. You simply Worcester advantage was narrowed U t f ~~~~~don't make mistakes against St. down t6 25-18, but that was as di 'fff4~5jls

gP (Continued from Page Four) Paul's and as Mr. Harrison cn- close as the Blue quintet could itS MIU~PIIIIIIuF t RENTiifo, Phillip, Maurhoff and Pa- mented, "We made four mistakes, come. Woircester suddenly becameky ae also up in the soigthey made four goals." An intended uncannily accurate from outside,

umn. i corngclear" backfired into an opening and increased their advantage in a formal w enar!.eaders in the "C" group are period goal for the Blue's ungra- matter of minutes to 44-21.

aS bBusbnell,-Bill Cox, and Phil cious host, and two of the remain- ToyWte PareOHrnk. ea "1 -ead tisleague, ing three were racked up during ToyWiePare 'H rn

dk bteams2 1 'lad 7 is that penalty situations. The other was Cooke, Schulz, and Agee formed EX RTITNGer. a beautiful solo by Roulon-Miller, the, Andover lineup which took theVEX RTFTNG

he unir Al-Sars coche bywhom hockey followers will' re- floor for the second period, but * REDLVR he Jnio AllS dscusshed inby e'fo at ersS.Pu' Worcester was still able to pass /FEDLIRY

Josh Miner and dicse inmebr rmRatEer' t.PulIChKistngfvesll.Cocptiweek's Phillipian, have con- win on Andover ice.The Andover thevistinEfieIslly Cocapai

ued their inig wybyd n-skaters had many close ones, but as Jenkins dumped in a quick eleven3) Punchad latWdedyb-some astute philospher once crack-ponsiabatdcrngbrae

arth shoinlfat dejy. ed, "Close. only counts i horse- which narrowed the final count11 the Junior League, the Gauls, shoes." George Robinson pushed down to 61-43. No need to keep a

ons8, Greeks and Romans now home the only Andover score, and complete:;formal wear~n11 d in that order. Gaede of the completetin foermavlyweainons, Valldejuly, Wheeler and a 'fine adjustment to, his -new de- F'IE-LDSTO1NES ~' wardrobe on hand!

el urgeon of the Gauls, and 'Mc- fensive chores, and goalie Jerry Whatever younedkey of the Romans are the high Jones played great games. So the B al owl~~e h- ,Paulies" extend their hockey do- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~whatever the occasion-leit ~nen inthe JPuunioetndthirhckyeo-BgSue.Bdwlb erin atoJunr Mr minancy over Andover to a decade Rte. 28 Andover Tel. 1996 we can outfit you correctly,

lenente has this year provided but not without a fight; and to 1-% Miles South of P. A. atdosynfehycae,unprecedented number of out- adopt the ancient war cry, "There'sI t~i i'~fte fra eregames for club teams. The always next year." rT d'UU 'AC smoothly pressed, precisiondover-Exeter "all-club" policy OUTSTANDINGfitdorawel

also been altered to provide The'hiost outstanding of the twoDI es between squads of equal abi- bright spots in the most dismalD N ERfrom both schools. athletic weekend thus far was the Buffet Lunch Daily

imediate 'evidence of the in- wrestler's triumph over Miltonase in outside competition is the Academy. Ranked almost equally Buffet Suppers Sunday lba*&~a n~nesive schedule which the club with Choate, always a wrestling6m rS% n*

cer teams played this past fall; power in New England Prep cir-....alProbabilities this plan will be cles, in pire-Interscholastics ratings, Closed Janyary 3rd

liaed this winter. The Saxons Milton was. the Blue's first real'fored ysteray against 'the test. So in remaining with the until March 20th 56-58 MAIN STREET, ANDOVER, MASS.

thun 3 V.and h-ave a second swimmers (who decisioned Port-'idgaescheduled for- next land High withlbut too muhdI _______________ ____________________________

nesday. ~~~~~(Continued on Page Six), ~ ~ S~SO 33S3

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St. Paurs Basketball lumbo and Power hit for 16 apiee, W restling mnt og ntemth

(Continued from Page Four) (Continued from Page Four) in nine'and Jenkins seven for the j (ntudro PaeFv)Once- again, it was a care ofon Jones alone and whipped the a 58-51 lead sliced to 58-55, but the Blue: The lineups: perienice vs. inexperience inpuck past the P. A. goalie to close Blue couldn't hit on the most need- APo va TABoR enough for an 8-3 decision. heavyweight match. Darrylthe scoring for the day. ed ones which might have made the Jenkins, rf ........ rf; O'Connor Ken -Pruett of Andover met Ray- Vivo, wrestling for the Blue,

Andover took the offensivd in the difference. At one point they nis- Agee, If ................ If, Roche mond, one of Milton's best in the outweighed by about thirty poufinal period in a desperate try for sed about five taps in the space ofthe tying points, but couldn't seem a few seconds. The final buzzer Clement, c ............ I.c, Orozela 177-pound class. The match was when he fought Scullin of Mi]to get set up for a good shot other sounded with P. A. still scrapping Cooke, rg ............ rg, Power even for two periods, both boys The match lasted until miUthan one of Chris Crosby's early in desperately for those elusive three Palumbo, Ig............It, Karam picking up- points for reversals, through the second period, wthe stanza, which was blocked. The markers. Preston ............... ZavorskasTeintehrdpioay ndD ivwspnedb'isdiBlue defense tightened up, too, with A6a o ~om 'Hearn bean t e weardw prett quickly, sary, bringin e the fialBobby Karle, Morton, and Rarvey Agee copped high-scorer laurels for A lp fignally achievret ucky sr rning atfllwihfihafnalS count,

breaking up St. Paul's drives the day with an 18-point total. Pa- Ryan inlyaheigaflwthaaf1813around mid-ice.

In the JV hockey game, goalies Ned Washburn and Jim Moore had 1a full afternoon spping flyingpucks, as the St. Paul's Jayveespoured on the pressure to hand Mr.Weld's Maple Leafs an 8A0 pasting.

Although they played as well asever, the Blue JV's were just out--classed by the more experienced er Paulies.

(Continued from Page Five) To cao as this match. The match went fivee 0a oaS games; 13-15, 15-9, 15-8, 13-15,17-15. The game was fast and low,abut Jones managed to out-maneuverErmmet and put the ball away in the contest's decisive plays. 'OR more than thirty years we have used For four years we have maintained in the -

Chuck Fagan, playing against 'AeBrook's Holland, went down in F-research yin and yout lernngabout smoker's interest an intensified lre.scalethree straight games against thedady ernglgrvisitor. Fagan was not up to his tobaccos and cigarettes in the public's interest, diversified research program. A half-million usual form and lost to Holland on Chis own errors. Continuously we and our consultants have dollar 30-ton machine, the world's most t

Bill Blunt dropped one of the clo- analyzed, experimented with and smoked all powerful source of hih laeelectrons,sest matches of the day to Fred hi.voag Holbrook, 7-15, 15-8, 12-15, 17-15, kinds of tobaccos ... especially Southern Bright, designed solely for our use has tested tens of ~ 15-12. There were many long vol-lies, but Holbrook came out with Burley, Maryland and Turkish cigarette' to- thousands of cigarettes. This program has ~ 1

several spectacular putaway shots baccos. aled ie to us direct and sigrnificant n- lithat won the last game.araygve

After beating Brooks' Shiff by O ro ncgrte n o pttv rns omto fbnftt h mkn ulc15-4, in the first game, Fred ByronOu ow ciaetsadcmeiiebad. frainobnfttohe mkngpbi t;

lost the next three games of which have been .submitted to the most exactingOu coslatinud-rhrD Little,two went to deuce. Byron had comn- u oslat nld rhrDplete control of the match until he scientific scrutiny including thousands of anal- Inc. of Cambridge, Massachusetts, "one of the ilost touch with his serve, which p1then became setups for his oppo- yses of millions of pounds of tobaccos. largest and most reputable industrial research t

_________From all these thousands of analyses, and organizations in the country" (From Business

Sidelines other findings reported in the leading technical Week Magazine) and eminent scientists from a

(Continued from Page Five) journals, our Research Department has found leading universities.culty) as the only unbeaten teamson the Hill, the grapplers had a no reason -to believe that the isolation and Today the public can confidenily choose ttough row to hoe. They racked up eiiainNf eeetntv iaet fL y ~ tebs clsix wins out of a total of nine, all elmntoo any:eeetntv to ciaete for a varlety of rands -b far thebesof the decision variety, which pro- tobaccos today would improve smoking. cigarettes ever ade by the tobacco industr. avided a five point bulge at 18-13. sh.Captain Don Stout was the leaddman once again. Don took the matagainst Ben Williams, winner ofthe ' Interscolastics in the 147lb. class and captain of the Miltonsquad. Doni's decision made him thesecond member of the present squad Mn cetsswti uto defeat an Interscholastic champ, lbrtre r nlznJack Kohr having turned the trick!cgrteobcsevydaagainst Sid Baker of Exeter in~ Vlast winter's A-E meet. Both Frank -- s

Stella and "Skip" Elsas traded the/ -. .

comforts of Isham Infirmary for .y 4¾2I-the wrestling mat, and both took .- "

decisions. Pete Moses also wrestled,,-well, in copping his match as did j. AR

Co-captain Max Bloom, even though Max dropped a decision.

Andover is entering the Inter-Itscholastics this year, held once eagain at Browne and Nichols. Nonpredictions from this quarter, but --- ---...... it yvould seem as if the squad'schances hinge on the further de-velopment of the heavyweight clas-ses. No one will dispute the ability,of Andover's lighter classes, but A-tcjust how much depth the Blue ac- 'tually possesses will naturally meet V q aits test in the forthcoming compe-tition with the leading Prep squads eeof New England, March 6. t

(Continued from Page Four) Tested an p rvd y- lnished with open water betweenfirst place judges called it a split -c

decision only to have the second 30Y ar f lenivplace judge say that the Andoverteam finished a split-second too S !~

late; The decision went to Portland. Tobacco Re-search 0The two-hundred yard relay team

of Tom Dent, Art Kelly, Zurn, and Terry Zug won their event with half a pool lap between them and Portland. The time was 1:45.0. Ccppgbz 194 t~ourua Nim To&%=