aawriter - phillipian archivespdf.phillipian.net/1963/02261963.pdfby bill semple a fire,...

6
N N~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ TAKE IT 87No. 8 PHILLIPS ACADEmy, ANDOVER;, MASSACHUSETTSFeray2,13 radate Novelist Acquaints P.A. Hopefuls p.A.'s Mac- The Knife; With The Dis couraging Story Of A Writer by Jeff Garten views on the life and hard times yon can e a writer with of the oung novelist, sharing. his Joso tabheod, wbreaks. You need a lot of writing experiences and giving by Allan Johnsonth entirely new surroundings. The idne,"f Novelist Anthony suggestions to P. A. authors. "' - Directed by Mr. N. Penrose Hal- late arrival of equipment has fur- jfSfP.A. '49, spoke to a "It's a real handicap, writing lowell, a ast of inexperienced but ther hampered the progress c'f the P of aspiring authors in Bul- your first novel-; you've got to dedicated Players will present Production. h Thusdaymorning on his think big to do it. You have to P : Macbeth, Shakespeare's. shortest Mr. Hallowell is still optimistic. ressons f wrtin and "get- know what's going to happen at - tragedy on the George Washington "They're enthusiastic,"y he says. out a novel." - ~the end. Where do you start from "' stage this Friday and* Saturday Despite their lack of experience, e Andver-Clumba raduate if you don't know where yu'reevngsthyaePualoitohirwk before te filledgoing?"Admittedy, it ishard toFrom the beginning of rehear- and hve- ~rogressed' far since ting allexpounding his write a book, ut according to sals, the production has met with their first meetings. Their enthus- Rtobinson: "You have to plow " numerous setbacks and inconveni- iasm is matched by that of their D~~n,..h roug that novel ... get those , ences. With the G.W stage only director who has successfully dir- mper nd Plu t pages down . .. and finish." "A - nearing copeinM.'Ilio- cedfn prouctons year after Aawriter has to be in good shap- too, well's actors and stage crew had Year. cussMord because it's a lot of work. But if to make use of the space available, Acting amidst well designed sets you enjoy it, you work and work which proved to be very little, on a stage with great otential, and work - - -. In cramped quarters t h ey Mr. Hallowell's enthusiastic cast rAble NeICgroes In his two novels, Depairture were unable to accustom themsel- should make this year's Shake- by Bryce Muir from the Rules and The Easy Way, yes to the vast area that the new spear production a well done, suc- Robinson faced the problenrz of stage would afford them. With cessful effort. Energetic efforts by Richad lout, President of endless writing, loss of ideas, and only a week to go and- the. stage Pete Johnson, (Macbeth), Craig Ntoal School Service and "not writing a word that can't be just completed, Mr. Hallowell had Moody (Dunc-an) and Eric Hey- dfor Negro Students, spoke understood by everybody." Appar- Anthony Robinson the task of orienting his players to worth (Macduff) will mark the- reentatives of 15 independ- ently, getting a book published is AprtdPrdcin secondary schools in Peabody as difficult as writing it, especially PB y w rr v r A b tr'oe SSFNS places able Negro stui- sat close to a year in various pub- For Wj lt in secondary schools and col- lishing houses and, "the monthis t o o d rf lP 'w aeke lay under an editor's desk. iI %_OuwrBon recent years the NSSFNS sweated. halfway through my Mas- by Seth Mydans Promptly at' 7:55, the boys from Mr. Joseph Nold of the Colorado neddadditional funds to con- ter's" At 7:00 last Friday night, about' P.A. all leapt up and ran back to Outward Bound School showed a Me operation. Robinson spoke of grammar, 25 PA Seniors and Uppers stole their dorms. The Abbot prom was movie and conducted a question ten schoswihprii clear expository writing, and dial- down to Abbot Academy. They on! period for interested students and in theplaceent pogramogue as "~your kit, your bag of were greeted by an equal number As soon as their classes were faculty in the White Auditorium e NSSNS ra, shot of undstools," as he moved quickly from of stealthy girls. They then pro- over on- Saturday morning, the last Thursday night. He explained (Continued n Page Four topic to topic. ceeded to the smoking room. eager students all ran down o the that the school; located i the high iron gates - in broad daylight, country of central Colorado, U ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Then, up the icy path they took teaches mountain limnbing, camp- enty-T wo Initiated In o Cu m Laude Society;their dates to the log cabin for a ing, survival, and physical fitness liver-curdling lunch of cold ham- to boys 16-22 ears old in a 26 day- assicist Traces Composition Of Md Epic ~~~~~~~burgers and Russian dressing. The course during the summer. The icist Traces Composition Of Modern Epic~happy couples whiled away the benefits are not merely physical, by Bill Semple a fire, spontaneously transform a The epic retold this incident by afternoon singing folk songs. for "the boy gains greater confi- going to involve you in a factual incident into a lengthly epic switching leaders from a British At 5:30, after a sort of "free dence in himself and a broader ap- wheretruthis stangerthancharacterized by perfect 15-syllable 1 agent to a heroic inhabitant who time" period, Mrs. Potter smiled preciation of the world in which 'Whe" Mrt Jams ot pouge s thambcves? met the car on horseback, and invited the promenaders in helvs"The fee for the course is atthe Cum Laude Assembly The facts of the war incident in' The epic transformed the facts to a "delicious dinner of roast ribs." $350. Scholarships, are provided. W neday. question were that a famous Ger- stratigically to include heroism She set the mood for the prom. tdued by Mr. K~emper after man general was kidnapped in his whenever possible. The boys and girls filed into the R inn Lude roceding, Clssi-automobile by a band of guerilla "What was particularly pecu- I smoking rom to smoke. uissiani Club otopoulos discssed theecana and two Bristish agents. (Continued on Page Four) (Continued on PagFor The Russian Club latwekpe ofuansepisc ssDr.hecB. sented a 20th Century television an epic. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~m .)n brainwashing. The film going to a small town in .A llen B o'o O pens Z51m Lecture ; oeator a otrwsthed Coin- Mr. Notopoulos observedoprtrad thr teCn- alnidst the now traditional whinst had-tepe oban dWar Idn weeeprse Reveals Cinese Relations With Neighborswmsts Thadetepedt ri. dWaIIspirit, the true facts eVictimsweepti colrfl hnien er ep essan Las by Ben Beroblum intense study of Eastern Asia and which they are the leaders sur- prison for different reasons, but olbrdu, hri pcb~ n Ls Wednesday evening in the is a master of both Japanese and rounded by lesser powers, and all of them suffered approximately bard. ~~Kemper Auditorium Dr. Allen B. Chinese., they feel sensitive to any form of the same tortures. These they de-- isobservations he was able Cole opened the Stimson Lectures As he pointed out, the great outside superiority.UniCha scribed to Walter Cronkite. The opaetoday's epic with by giving a talk on Communs age and history of China have a has become highly developed econ- radio operator, brainwashed suc- ers iddifferences, and draw China. A professor at the letche direct bearing on the present day. omically and a leader in othercesuyws agh inCn. Unsas to the probable ori- School of Law Diplomacy of Tufts The Chinese have always felt that fields, our relations with her will After a few months of high life in ndcnstruction of the Iliad University, Dr. Cole has made an rthere exists a "natural realm" in be cold. Hong Kong, however, he lost all- e Odyssey. Dr. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Cole pointedota ed traces of brainwashing. NotoPoulos exclaimed, "How China's policy toward the rest of 'A ~~~~~~~~~~~~Asia is one of neutral coexistence, an aateur bard, sitting a oga h te onre enPy ~5t tonspeole in front of asln steohrcutisla towar comunis in heirneu- Pnyx's doors opened to all Tues- tralty. he wll atemp no oreday night for a critical discussion. Z~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~oqesbtsewl i e r debate, subject: The PHILLIPIAN. ganizations, especially, revolution- BrcMuroedthtakb from 6:45 to ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ists. For example, China hopes to Posing "questions from the stu- 5,Prfessor Richard E.-'Johnson gain some territory froan the Indi- dents" concerning the "scrappy Ipektsenior math students an crisis, but she hardly wants to (otne nPg or Wi Adtrium. The subject take over all of India's problm hstkwilbe "The Coloring ' by all-out assault. Calendar Graphs." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Although the rest of Asia wat- rfurJohnson teaches mnath- ches China with uneasiness and Wednesday, February 27 B'ketball: Worcester Acad. 3:30 cs',t the Univcrsity. of Ro- anxiety, most countries are i' Philo-Pnyx vs. Mt. H{ermon 6:45 Hse.Te has written books on pressed by the achievements of Macbeth: Dress Rhearsa: GWH 7:00 Cllsand Abstract Algebra. He , Red rule and are more - at ease Friday, March cl5 h co-author of the Algebra " with the Chinese thanwihWs-S used in Math I here. Sc~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~haticMrc in Mkh I here. ~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ern powers.Asfra Chtee e Aptitude Tests: Uppers 9:00, Ineetd stud~nts are invited Russian differences go, the conm- Swimming: Exeter 7:30 Casm toil ae n wl Wrestling: Exeter 7:30 is talklk 1ey wlhv petingan rift wl always exist, Macbeth: GH 80 chnet speak with Professor but the bonds of cconomy and Basketball: Eeter 83 hitninforually zf* the lec- o4etot- Sna, 8:30h I I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~dcl ilChapel Rev. John Maguire, 4on, Dr. AlnBCol talks, on Communist China. idcolory wilhl tet Sun a UMc 31

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Page 1: Aawriter - Phillipian Archivespdf.phillipian.net/1963/02261963.pdfby Bill Semple a fire, spontaneously transform a The epic retold this incident by afternoon singing folk songs. for

N N~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

TAKEIT

87No. 8 PHILLIPS ACADEmy, ANDOVER;, MASSACHUSETTSFeray2,13

radate Novelist Acquaints P.A. Hopefuls p.A.'s Mac- The Knife;With The Dis couraging Story Of A Writer

by Jeff Garten views on the life and hard timesyon can e a writer with of the oung novelist, sharing. his Joso tabheod,

wbreaks. You need a lot of writing experiences and giving by Allan Johnsonth entirely new surroundings. Theidne,"f Novelist Anthony suggestions to P. A. authors. "' - Directed by Mr. N. Penrose Hal- late arrival of equipment has fur-jfSfP.A. '49, spoke to a "It's a real handicap, writing lowell, a ast of inexperienced but ther hampered the progress c'f theP of aspiring authors in Bul- your first novel-; you've got to dedicated Players will present Production.h Thusdaymorning on his think big to do it. You have to P : Macbeth, Shakespeare's. shortest Mr. Hallowell is still optimistic.ressons f wrtin and "get- know what's going to happen at - tragedy on the George Washington "They're enthusiastic,"y he says.out a novel." - ~the end. Where do you start from "' stage this Friday and* Saturday Despite their lack of experience,

e Andver-Clumba raduate if you don't know where yu'reevngsthyaePualoitohirwkbefore te filledgoing?"Admittedy, it ishard toFrom the beginning of rehear- and hve- ~rogressed' far sinceting allexpounding his write a book, ut according to sals, the production has met with their first meetings. Their enthus-Rtobinson: "You have to plow " numerous setbacks and inconveni- iasm is matched by that of theirD~~n,..h roug that novel . . . get those , ences. With the G.W stage only director who has successfully dir-mper nd Plu t pages down . . . and finish." "A - nearing copeinM.'Ilio- cedfn prouctons year afterAawriter has to be in good shap- too, well's actors and stage crew had Year.cussMord because it's a lot of work. But if to make use of the space available, Acting amidst well designed setsyou enjoy it, you work and work which proved to be very little, on a stage with great otential,and work - - -. In cramped quarters t h ey Mr. Hallowell's enthusiastic castrAble NeICgroes In his two novels, Depairture were unable to accustom themsel- should make this year's Shake-

by Bryce Muir from the Rules and The Easy Way, yes to the vast area that the new spear production a well done, suc-Robinson faced the problenrz of stage would afford them. With cessful effort. Energetic efforts byRichad lout, President of endless writing, loss of ideas, and only a week to go and- the. stage Pete Johnson, (Macbeth), CraigNtoal School Service and "not writing a word that can't be just completed, Mr. Hallowell had Moody (Dunc-an) and Eric Hey-dfor Negro Students, spoke understood by everybody." Appar- Anthony Robinson the task of orienting his players to worth (Macduff) will mark the-reentatives of 15 independ- ently, getting a book published is AprtdPrdcin

secondary schools in Peabody as difficult as writing it, especially PB y w rr v r A b tr'oeSSFNS places able Negro stui- sat close to a year in various pub- For Wj lt

in secondary schools and col- lishing houses and, "the monthis t o o d rf lP 'w aekelay under an editor's desk. iI %_OuwrBon

recent years the NSSFNS sweated. halfway through my Mas- by Seth Mydans Promptly at' 7:55, the boys from Mr. Joseph Nold of the Coloradoneddadditional funds to con- ter's" At 7:00 last Friday night, about' P.A. all leapt up and ran back to Outward Bound School showed aMe operation. Robinson spoke of grammar, 25 PA Seniors and Uppers stole their dorms. The Abbot prom was movie and conducted a question

ten schoswihprii clear expository writing, and dial- down to Abbot Academy. They on! period for interested students andin theplaceent pogramogue as "~your kit, your bag of were greeted by an equal number As soon as their classes were faculty in the White Auditorium

e NSSNS ra, shot of undstools," as he moved quickly from of stealthy girls. They then pro- over on- Saturday morning, the last Thursday night. He explained(Continued n Page Four topic to topic. ceeded to the smoking room. eager students all ran down o the that the school; located i the highiron gates - in broad daylight, country of central Colorado,

U ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Then, up the icy path they took teaches mountain limnbing, camp-enty-T wo Initiated In o Cu m Laude Society;their dates to the log cabin for a ing, survival, and physical fitnessliver-curdling lunch of cold ham- to boys 16-22 ears old in a 26 day-assicist Traces Composition Of M d Epic ~~~~~~~burgers and Russian dressing. The course during the summer. Theicist Traces Composition Of Modern Epic~happy couples whiled away the benefits are not merely physical,by Bill Semple a fire, spontaneously transform a The epic retold this incident by afternoon singing folk songs. for "the boy gains greater confi-

going to involve you in a factual incident into a lengthly epic switching leaders from a British At 5:30, after a sort of "free dence in himself and a broader ap-wheretruthis stangerthancharacterized by perfect 15-syllable1 agent to a heroic inhabitant who time" period, Mrs. Potter smiled preciation of the world in which'Whe" Mrt Jams ot pouge s thambcves? met the car on horseback, and invited the promenaders in helvs"The fee for the course isatthe Cum Laude Assembly The facts of the war incident in' The epic transformed the facts to a "delicious dinner of roast ribs." $350. Scholarships, are provided.

W neday. question were that a famous Ger- stratigically to include heroism She set the mood for the prom.tdued by Mr. K~emper after man general was kidnapped in his whenever possible. The boys and girls filed into the Rinn Lude roceding, Clssi-automobile by a band of guerilla "What was particularly pecu- I smoking rom to smoke. uissiani Club

otopoulos discssed theecana and two Bristish agents. (Continued on Page Four) (Continued on PagFor The Russian Club latwekpeofuansepisc ssDr.hecB. sented a 20th Century televisionan epic. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~movie .)n brainwashing. The filmgoing to a small town in .A llen B o'o O pens Z51m Lecture ; oeator a otrwsthed Coin-Mr. Notopoulos observedoprtrad thr teCn-alnidst the now traditional whinst had-tepe obandWar Idn weeeprse Reveals Cinese Relations With Neighborswmsts Thadetepedt ri.dWaIIspirit, the true facts eVictimsweepti

colrfl hnien er ep essan Las by Ben Beroblum intense study of Eastern Asia and which they are the leaders sur- prison for different reasons, butolbrdu, hri pcb~ n Ls Wednesday evening in the is a master of both Japanese and rounded by lesser powers, and all of them suffered approximatelybard. ~~Kemper Auditorium Dr. Allen B. Chinese., they feel sensitive to any form of the same tortures. These they de--isobservations he was able Cole opened the Stimson Lectures As he pointed out, the great outside superiority.UniCha scribed to Walter Cronkite. Theopaetoday's epic with by giving a talk on Communs age and history of China have a has become highly developed econ- radio operator, brainwashed suc-ers iddifferences, and draw China. A professor at the letche direct bearing on the present day. omically and a leader in othercesuyws agh inCn.Unsas to the probable ori- School of Law Diplomacy of Tufts The Chinese have always felt that fields, our relations with her will After a few months of high life inndcnstruction of the Iliad University, Dr. Cole has made an rthere exists a "natural realm" in be cold. Hong Kong, however, he lost all-

e Odyssey. Dr. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Cole pointedota ed traces of brainwashing.NotoPoulos exclaimed, "How China's policy toward the rest of'A ~~~~~~~~~~~~Asia is one of neutral coexistence,an aateur bard, sitting a oga h te onre enPy~5t tonspeole in front of asln steohrcutisla

towar comunis in heirneu- Pnyx's doors opened to all Tues-tralty. he wll atemp no oreday night for a critical discussion.

Z~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~oqesbtsewl i e r debate, subject: The PHILLIPIAN.ganizations, especially, revolution- BrcMuroedthtakb

from 6:45 to ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ists. For example, China hopes to Posing "questions from the stu-5,Prfessor Richard E.-'Johnson gain some territory froan the Indi- dents" concerning the "scrappyIpektsenior math students an crisis, but she hardly wants to (otne nPg orWi Adtrium. The subject take over all of India's problmhstkwilbe "The Coloring ' by all-out assault. CalendarGraphs." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Although the rest of Asia wat-

rfurJohnson teaches mnath- ches China with uneasiness and Wednesday, February 27B'ketball: Worcester Acad. 3:30cs',t the Univcrsity. of Ro- anxiety, most countries are i' Philo-Pnyx vs. Mt. H{ermon 6:45Hse.Te has written books on pressed by the achievements of Macbeth: Dress Rhearsa: GWH 7:00

Cllsand Abstract Algebra. He , Red rule and are more -at ease Friday, March cl5 h co-author of the Algebra " with the Chinese thanwihWs-S

used in Math I here. Sc~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~haticMrc in Mkh I here. ~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ern powers.Asfra Chtee e Aptitude Tests: Uppers 9:00,Ineetd stud~nts are invited Russian differences go, the conm- Swimming: Exeter 7:30Casm toil ae n wl Wrestling: Exeter 7:30is talklk 1ey wlhv petingan rift wl always exist, Macbeth: GH 80chnet speak with Professor but the bonds of cconomy and Basketball: Eeter 83hitninforually zf* the lec- o4etot- Sna, 8:30h I I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~dcl ilChapel Rev. John Maguire,4on, Dr. AlnBCol talks, on Communist China. idcolory wilhl tet Sun a UMc 31

Page 2: Aawriter - Phillipian Archivespdf.phillipian.net/1963/02261963.pdfby Bill Semple a fire, spontaneously transform a The epic retold this incident by afternoon singing folk songs. for

Page 2 The Phillipiart February 26, '

F L 1 ~~~~~~~~that they are a definite minority. WeIm ecile -. ask that the rest of the student bodyLast week studeft~tg here made a move impress this minority with the advis-

assembly on Wednesday, apparently for "Imbecile" is too adult a word for Tno other reasons than simple and un- people who boo under the protection reasonable viciousness, a small student of the mass. Even "cowardly" implies -KENNET C KUSTERER

ght ~~~~~~~~~~~~~Pfsdngroup in the audience hissed and booed a certain ability to choose between righ COLIN McL. CAMPBELL EDWIN S. GARDNE!tthe -efng fth u LueEditor Managing Editorproceedings ofthe Cum Laude and wrong. The word-is infantile." WEBSTER B. PHILLIPS

BEN EMRT PETER B. EAKLANDSociety, guest speaker Professor James ~~~~~~~~~~~~~Editorial Directors Sports Editor

N pspes, a kter Premsor. M.ROBERT M. BURTON JAMES K.' BROWNNotopoulos, and th Headmaster. Mr. roject Proedu e News Director Buiness Manager

Emory -Basford, stating the purposes of the Cum Laude Society, was dis- Recommended Procedure for Ob-Tu tracted enough by the inattention and taining Exemptions for Independent - Le ttue r-noise in the audience to forget part of Projects.

a spechhe has given for years and To eliminate confusion and wasted I am having a hard time sus-- omissions in this year's list of

whic he nowsbackardsand for- effort, seniors who wish to obtain taining, any other impression of Laude initiates. These are iwards. Few noticed the slip, for the either of the exemptions provided for the Cum Laude Society than that students, brilliant scholars

low whstles nd contant oises hat inependet wor are avised o go t is a. great, big, galloping farce, who have taken advantage olow whisles andconstan noisesthat inependen work ae advisd to goThere is no implicit honor con- these extra-curricular at

now have become an integral part of through the following steps in order. nected with the Cumi Laude So- and who consequently have nschool gatherings distracted everyone. 1. Discuss with your housemaster ciety because it represents nothing the'time nor. the inclination to

in itself, nothing but the routine gage in th~ date-memioriingA few months ago a low whistle th diaiiyofyu netkn faculty approval of the names of gloss'ing, the "close reading,

amused a good many peopleas a student the program.those students with the highest one-day retention of insi

with a humorous announcement drew 2. If his response is favorable, dis- scholastic averages. Thus it is fact and formula, and all theapplaus or laghter rom thecrowd. cuss yur projct wit the tacher othing but a statistic; and 'I re- busy-work and innemonics thaapplause or laghter from thecrowd. cuss yor project withthe teacher ~ fuse (and shall continue to refuse, tools of grade-seeking, thne

The gimmick very soon became stale. under whose direction you wish as long as I can) to be represented sence of every grade' overCertainly, few faculty and students work -and ask him to request the ap by a mere statistic. I awarded at Andover, and the

are now amused. To hiss the Head proval of the department head.The fallacy of the Cum Laude pair of the educator whoaare now aused. To iss the Had- prova f th e eeptment head. sSociety is partly the basic fallacy is trying to inculcate somehn

master is rude enough. To hiss a guest 3.I o ekeepinfo ce-~ of Andover's whole grading sys "the great end and real bsnis shocking. We realize that the same uled athletics, explore with Mr. E~ar- tern. No physics teacher could just- living."people make noise at every assembly, rison the possibility of substituting i fy the use of two 4ignificant digits But what I am saying ha

in any course grade (and for Cum course been noticed beforesome form of regular exercise. It 1is Laude elimination averages are faculty has very practical nCongiraA~~~ations up to you to propose an alternative. computed to three and four for retaining and emphaCongratulations~~~~~~~4 Iftee eoiain apa po- Places). Granted that this ritual grades. There are of coursete

a serie of PHIuP~N 4 If thee negotationsappear rom- ~ may be necessary for the very busi- mnands of college admissionsLast fall term, eisofPILPA ising, draw up a description of the nesslike mattir'of college admnis- flcers; but a school like A

editorials made a plea for more free project and include a request to be 1-sion (though -this seems an incon- can hardly be bullied by anytime for talented and creative students. excused from regular athletics witgrosaumnfranittule;idedheclgs

t ion which seeks to be something probably appreciate a simpleThe Student Congress took up the a statement of how you propose to more than a stile into the Elysian tative reporL from Mr. Bematter, finally making a proposal to get your exercise or a request to drop ' fields along the bank of the far more than a bulging brie

the faulty.This as tabed, bt dil- a spcifie mino cours. Hav yourCharles) ; but there is no need to exact grades. The more cornthe faculy.no th ato tabe budt atsecifedt enor ors. he your make this ritual into a fetish also, motive for the faculty's relu

gent lbbyingon thepart o the Sudent tatemet endosed toshow te ap- Yet we persist in inflating these to modify our grading sseCongress Committee revived a modified proval of: gr1ades, these mere statistics, and that grinding and grade-s

plan. a. your housemaster~~~~~~~~~~~~o inaccurate statistics at that, out are, after all, work: theyplan. - a. your housemaster ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i oi- all proportion to their small afraid that without the in

Saturday, the senior class heard the b. the teacher who will direct and - '%cry specific signilicance, of grades student effortwolresults -of the faculty meditations. Lou the project whichlp i'I` to indicate, like a baro- To this I ami tempted to makeWiley, chairman of the Student Con- c. the head of the appropriate -eentsau u cag.Ytsm el tha myfte i

we grant free-day privileges to Mr. Kemper's; mnamuscgress Committee, and Mr. Hyde, chair- department. (The teacher honor roll students, give them first ing our class party: If theman of the Faculty Committee, an- will probably be able to take choice of dormitory accomodations, has so little trust in the nonounced that any senior may apply for this step for you, but if he and withal tempt students and fac- intentions, and ethics ofan excus from hi regularathleticor has aready obained orl a - o~ulty to become even more involved whose characters it has po

an excuse rom his reular athleic or has lready obtined oral p- in the great end and real business ably been molding for fourhis minor requirements in the spring proval, he may ask you to do ' of procuring and computing then it is time to examine notterm. -,the leg-work.) -GBgrades., students but the system.

laid downthe folloing condi 5. Bringthe appioed -propoal to i~ Of course the farce of farces, The obvious solution to theTlhey lidontefloigcni .Bigteapoe-pooa tothe ultimate concession to grade- lem of effort, if there mustbe

tions: me by noon, Monday, March 4. I'd seeking, is the insidious practice a problem, is a solution whith.1. The initiative, from inception be interested in discussing each pro- of awarding departmental prizes solves many inequities in the

of the iea to cmpletio of posl, but ou musthave a roper ~ on the basis of final averages. The ent system: to have grades of theidea t compltion o posal but yu musthave aproper Biology Department awards three dependent on effort. If there

the project, must be the boy's. write-up for the committee, and if annual prizes, which have always be an incentive, here is an2. The boy must present to the you wish, you may rest your case on gone to the highest student of each tive even fol the bright but

chairman of the committee tht o ilb oiido h o- b~Of the three teachers. Thus the student who has been co(Mr. Hye) by oon Moday, ttee. approal noriie diaova bye com prizes have no real honor connected along on 5's heretofore.-(Mr. yde) y noonMonda, mitee's aprova or diapproal byto them, they are merely a routine who maintain that effort

March 4 a plan for a project the following Monday. recognition of grade-seeking prow- are too nebulous to be aceapproved by: For the Committee ~~~~~~~~~~ess. But, if the Biology Department determined do gross inustic,a. the department u n id e r S. HY~i, JR. ow awarding these prizes for spe- the P.A. faculty. Of course

whose direction he will work. ___________________cial examinations, projects, or es- distinction between an 84Approval signifies that the de- sitofhebysforsad says, they would not only stimulate mark and a 76 effort marspiritof th boy'seffors and interest, they would also be doinig be a little tenuous (thoughtpartment and the teacher the substance and quality of the only fair thing for the prize- tenuous - only more avunder whose direction the his accomplishment. These re- winners: makting the prizes some- tenuous-than the differenceboy will work feel that the ports will be important to an thing to be proud of. tween an 84 and a 76 in our.

What surprises me is that the ent grading system) ; butboy has the will And capacity evaluation of the program. ~ rest of the students are not more tainly we know the differenceto make the project profit- 4. If an exemption from athletics resentful of the faculty's attitude. tween A, B, and C effort, andable to him. is sought, thecommittee Even the more enlightened honor- distinction is all that wouldhousemaster, which includes the Director f ollers realize that the process of needed.

b. Th boys hosemaser, hichinclues te Diect0 of grad-eekin is but an odious As for Cum Laude, I a1wvho must _ be assured that Athletics, must be sure that necessity to be put up with only that our present initiates'

time spentis in thebest in- he boy's prformancein ath- ~ long enough to snow the colleges but feel either a bit guiltytiee titntebssi-tebysprfracnah surprised howalitl te oleges ait theifryat hey mustnortrsAof the boy. *ipisletics (spirit and effort-rather (andisby heoway witl ewoldgbe bit sthilyat whavin thonmuor

3. The teacher's approvalimle than skill) justifies the ex- are snowed). At best, grades are science admit is nothinga willingness, to follow the emption and that he has made s etldsiln;btIshudhnrbeta ubro~boy'.s work and to report in poiinfreglrxrcs. be hard put to justify a slavish paper. Granted, in many C5Gproviion or rgula execise adherence to that discipline, espe- is the culmination of fourwriting his progress and ac- The committee may take the '~cially, since such a school as An- of hard Work: that is whY

complishmen to the char- positionthat the bo has not ~ dover is rife with the possibilities such a shame that thethe committe-speci- yet ulfilled hisathletic re- f more improving disciplirtes, should not represent sI1

man of ecmiteseiyefufle hiatltcr- mainly leadership in athletic, so- more important and nefically, at the mid-term, on quirement satisfactorily. cial, and, intellectual extra-curric- than a statistic. The probelwhether the boy is keeping up 5. The dropping of a minor ular activities, and in such schol- this: How cn jt~e honor be

arly activities as our- grade-ori- tained for the-'- h eehis end of the bargain, and at course will be approved only ented and unliberal curriculum al. pect, and 'eitadtthe end of the term oni the (Continued on Page Six) lows. (CorPaei)

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ei~ay26, 1963 The Phflipian Pag e 3

Pucksters Come BackTo, Down Harvard, UJNH

by Morrfson Bump ducked, only to find that the shotWednesday, February 20 - The was not so high after all. Ando-

Blue sextet came from be- ver's passing became more precisehind to edge out the Harvard as the resurging offense almostJ.V.'s 4-3, last Wednesday. Charlie hustled Harvard right off the ice.(Chunky) Kessler, P. A. '60, high- Doug Brown then tied the score by~~ -~~~~ ,~~~~-' ~~~lighted the Crimson team with ramming in an unassisted gVal to

* ,, ~~~~~~~~~some fine defensive play and make the score 3-3. The game turn-~~,, ~;'-• -~~ heavy checking. Jack Morrison ed into a wide open battle untilsparked the Blue comeback late in the well-tried scoring combinationthe second period by flicking a of Morrison and Smoyer taffied,short pass from Warren into the the latter scoring. Behind by onenets. goal, the Redmen pulled their

Playing sub-par, the Blue pouck- goalle and made a last ditch efforterrorse t capitalize'o a-t wipe out Andover's lead. Morri-yard'serosan evnmdasn responded the extra man

few th.emselves. With fine team- with some fantastic stickhandling*~work and dead-eye passing, Har- through the startled Crimson team

v ard broke into the scoring column amid cheers of the crowd. AIar-halfway through the first period. yard got off one last shot beforeThey continued to dominate the the puck was iced to end theperiod with their hustiling and game. The Crimson coach comment-spirit. The second period saw them ed, "Your boys didn't get discour-drive in two more through the lag- aged and kept plugging and lug-ging Blue defense to makc' the ging until you beat us !' Harvardscore 3-0. One goal came on fast has yet to beat the Blue puckstersbreakaway by Pete Sahlin after a at Andover.

PhilSorta fiesup werethe air !~ ar. face-off. Andover's first sign of by Dick Hannonits potential came in a sudden flur-jeld Events Spark Trackmen To 6044 ~~~~~~~~~Win ry of sprt umntdb Morri- Satdayh, February 23 - In aeld Events Spark, Trackmen To 6044 .9 ~~son's goal, wt eod to gcinhrfogt roughgae Arndo-the period. ver's hockey team squeaked by.I.T. Fr. Downed As Parsons, - Hekemian Star o~~~ ~~~~~n the third period Andover not U. N. H. Frosh, 54, in vrmeby ana Waterman in the, 1000 to MIT's Brown, who i total of nine stitches. Forced to tallied three times to salvage the 2-0 lead on two-thirds of JackWensday. February 20 - A also took the mile. The winning Ished his shoe because of a slit victory. Morrison's hat tricks. U. N. .agperformance in the field time was 2:25.5. 1 heel, Baumer ran the remaining Only three minutes had elapsed came back in the second period

I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~with one goal and in the wildtshelped to power the P.A. At the first curve of the 600,1 three and a half laps in his best before Chris Gurry slamnmed a i-esquad to a decisive 60-44 vic- P.A.'s Bill Baumer was spiked byI time ever, to finish a close second shot from behind the blue line.tir period scored three goals.over the MIT Freshmen, a man cutting in front of him too to Epps of MIT, who broke the Wade Welch, the Crimson goalie, 5-4ovat 1:52 o t sudn egamhccParsons, clearing 11'6" for soon, cuts which later required a tape in 1:20. thinking that- the shot was high 5 ovetm peri2 on tesden dceut-betshow' of the year, and h vriepro nDnyM~lnkHekimian led the Blue to ~~~S ~ 1 lough's successful rebound neartesin the pole vault and the NarlivardLI .- UJerst L X M SAuu mpinp JJ a the goal mouth.tu.Joe McGirt and Gene e The game ~vas marred by 131copped first and second in wnh-ich Com es H m For LastT wo ame penalties and questionable callsweight and Mike Kaiser wonLa t T o ' *-- ' by the referee. Morrison scoredhihjump, clearing 5'8". by Doug Mansfield team, showing their P.A. counter- shots from the outside with good his second goal -while Andover had4.dvrsJeff Huvelle won the Wednesday, February'2 - The parts an excellent combination of accuracy and employed a fast a two man advantage and hisin a time of 5.7, and then fell Harvard freshman basketball height and skill, coasted to an easy break to increase their ld. third goal while U.N.H. was downOn The Sidelines . ~~~~~~~92-55 victory. The Blue was able For Andover, the high scorer one player. U.N.H. ao benefitedOn The Side~~~~~~ines ~~to keep, even with the Crimson was Pete Pappas, with 12 points, by penalties as Jdiies scored onauntil the score reached the 20 mark. Following him were Hank Wilmer Power lay while Tony Bryante re Trem endouser At this point the Andover shooters and Vic Petzy with 11 each. Wil- was out for slashing.bgnto cool off, and Harvard liams, Harvard's 6 ft. 6 in. center Goalie John Stableford playedpoured in basket after basket. (Continued on Page Five) on of his best games of the season._________________ By PETE EAKLAND _____ In the first half, Harvard used.Ridig o a lrgewaveof ptimsmickyTaf, a em-an offense which had their bigSke F lRidngona lrg wve f ptmim,'icy aft ame.-men screening for each other, and kirs M i~ nus ivMeck Fal Toof the ExQnian sports department, recently predicted they consistently set up short, highsailing swi~~~~i~~-njng percentage shots. This offense wats~S ow esiigfor Exeter's basketball, wrestling, sw .ng so successful that the Harvard D b i . t a ls S o metrack squcads in upcoming A-E encounters. A realistic coach was able to lay his second by Dick Wolf took third with a combinedi time'iiainof his statement is in order. Squash and hockey string for the entire second half. Skiing under the stress of two- of a second slower than Traftcn's.wnwith little trouble. Swimming should win and wresti- The freshman seconds. popped meets in one weekend, and without The Paulies captured the second,Captain John Meck who appears fourth, fifth, sixth, and eighthimight. IP...11 1) to~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ be out fo the season, the Blue places, however, which gave themFoExeter's swimming team, there are indeedi rough BJurton-led Boxers snowmen managed to turn in nly the meet on points.ahead. I oubt iha it willbe able t buck th wa es amediocre performance this week. The Dublin meet was aso aahead. I d ubt that t will be able to b ck the wa es. M aijn 1"~ ~ ' R~ They lost to St. Paul's and came in rather confusing spectacle. Mike' wimming team has tested strength in every event and Maunch 6-1 B-y second at the Dublin quardangular Garvan poured on the spee tothe important home pool ad',jtag must be considered1 i meet, beating the Yale and Har- outdistance his closest compotitorlgtfavorte Tm aahoney itedvSu inte SL. Paul Punichers yard Frosh while losing to small by sixteen seconds. Three other.i~~e. Mahoney in the dive, Stu Davis in the ~~~~but powerful Dublin, 378.26 to Blue skiers, Barnes, Smith, and~Yd. freestyles, and Jack Sartore in the 50 yd. freestyle, by Tom Carothers 372.30. The meets served to point Cooke, also finished within the topseella headed for sure victories. -Exeter's strong events Saturday, February 23 - The up Andover's lack of depth. In the ten XC-Country runners.the 10 yd. ackstrke le by AlLincon and he inivi.-boxing team, without a win St. Paul's meet Junior Joe Trafton Mike Gar-van took a third i thethe 00yd. acktrok le by l Lncol an theindvi-against St. Paul's on record, was won the slalom with a combined jump, as well, to give him unoffi-1Medley, Co-Captain Steve Teaford's specialty. The re- stopped cold in the SPS ring time of 53.0, while Van Hawn (Continued on Page Five)ugevents should be close - very close. Exeter calls its again. Lower Joe Bond produced

Andover's sole decision, and Upper"tremendous". I think ours -is tremendouser. Dave Gang and Junior Carl Steu-leWrestling, the sport of calorie counters, will have its ernagel drew with their opponents;bes against Exeter. The- lightweights, Andover's weak but s'ix Paulies emerged victoriousthisyer will pri"-'-' make 'attle headway against to improve on their earlier 5-4'Y-year, prvua~~.~~ay £LL~ie victory over P.A.OPPOnents. But the middleweight divisions led by Chip vThei deciding factor in the matchUSand Eric Chase should make up miuch of the ground was the SPS' flailing, Gene

l0se. The heavyweight matches will robably decide the Fullmer style, which Andover, try--eli.kick oomi and ave Dvis ave a edgeon .ing to box, couldn't evade in theRickLooms an Dav Dais hve a edg onexperi- small St. Paul's ring. ''k'"\'*"',but Andover could well pull the match out. Despite the loss, Coach Mkula, ''

Track and basketball are weak only because of a factorthnsislreyudcassudis beyond the control of any coach - injury. The Blue's (otne nPg ie

etalcaptain, Joe Belforti, has been out of action forJV S oeseason because of an ankle injury that was first

ed in the Lawrenceville football game *And reinjured Wendov eru Oponet 20 -- '-'Weeks later against Williams Frosh. Andover's answer Bosketball 78 erwvick Academy 67Hockey 2 Berwick Academy I \ speey Bil Grd, ArdyCahiners, who tied the Saturdcty February 23d.dahcage record and set a record in the low hurdles, Hoazkeybi 40 Exete 4,',"

-Swimm~iing 45 Bunker HillBo' Club 50',(Continued on Page Six) Wrestling 19 Sanford (Me. High 21 Bear Barnes bombs down Boston Bump.

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Page 4 The-Phillipian 'February 26,,

Campus NotesInabinsmetglho Abbot Prom Asia SocitOa e(Continued from Page One) president u Wiley awarded the (Continued from Page One) Milr

litepaper ... doubtful inancial Prize to Philo Topic Contest win- Then the dance began. The P o ~ A d J 1lrf r oposition . . charity advertising .. ner, David Wilkinson-Newsholme, theme of the dance was "Paris Pr .~y n J, H r equestionable news - coverage taste for his topic, "Resolved a happy caff." The decorations ortrayed by Rich Bissell New York,, secretary. They

... and non-definitive editorials." fool is better than a sad philoso- Paris night-life; spiced with post- The Asia Society held its -annual places Hugh Emory, John GoJim Frenzel defended the, paper, pher." Philo announced a policy ers by Toulouse-Lautrec. Ruby elections last- Sunday, electing and Rhidian Morgan.blaming its problems on a lack change-te ilhl nyaotNlo - a big socialite -played Johnathon 14iller '64, oif Roxbury, The purposes of th sitymoney and support" three major Friday night meetings "Dry Bones" and "another good Connecticut, president. He replaces year, according to Mille, ~

A general volley of constructive, per term, with most of the club song." He also played the Huckle- Tony Obst. The Society also chose to continue- introducing Asi'if not always practicable, cti- debating Wednesday nights. buckle a few times. The Intoxi- John Herfort '64, of South Law- P.A., and to bring more sp cism. followed with some first hand Iae n he8' an.TeNwrence, New Jersey, Vice Pfresident; of Stimson lecturers' caliber.

insight into the problems of the NSSFNS Invictas, sometimes known as The Jeffrey Wright '4, of W.-rsaw, At the meeting, the Asia SPisihtin gien prbylesidtet BameSSrFNSp ccson, the In- New York, business manager; and also showed two, movies, ill

Kusterer and manager Burton. -(Continued from Page One) victas, also played. Despite Dick Ames Nelson '64, of Tarrytown, ing daily life in southern met last week to renovate the Gould's finger injury "the group _______________system really came through with an all- CADEMY

Rifle Club Mr. Kemper is going to appoint right job." After milk an d donuts, Wed. Ass. RifleClub commtteeto further investigate the tired but happy boys returned (CniudfoBaeOe -,.NARE SHP

The varsity rifle ta tpka the problem of-funds. to their dormitories. liar," tisad rm otPouges One)wVSNER :second place in the EsenNw NSSFN's efforts have brought liar,"_saMr.____________OOD_____

England Prep School Rifle Tour- talented Negroes from depressed that this poem was spontaneous 4 BARBERS -GO EV

nanment at St. Paul's last Satur- areas and small urban high schools Mike your Plane & Cruise ain" fahoe9ih6op a Mai Airee Codiine nday, losing to Exeter, 882 -897. to PA. R'evto hog r oools rsnl aPoother schools competing were Special consideration is given Reevainshouho.r Notopousoss at init prol- 9 anSreTabor, St. Paul's, and Belmont to Negroes with outstanding class ANfE eg ss olassc at rinton-Hill. High scorers for Andover records but College Board scores aADndRee usevad to teah aut PrincetonDIPACHDwere Hayes, who fired a 183, and to low for college entrance. TRVLBUREAU adHrad ehstuh .. sRDODSACEEverett, 182. In earlier meets P.A. NSSFNS places Negroes with low TRVLathletic director, Mr. Fred Harri-had beaten both Exeter and Tbor, scores in rep schools that offer FREDERICK CHEEVER - Manager son.'ADVR~V ri

while losing to St. -Paul's. s cholIa r s hips. After talate Te.45One of his many sidl~ interests IA LY_________ ~Negroes receive college acceptance, 3 Main Street Andover has been his work on a new col-

NSSFNS supplies them with tui- lection of old and new American

Science Club tion and spending money. I folksongs. 4 50 1By invitation of John Kessler of ______________OFFICE AND

the M.I.T. Lincoln Laboratory, Mr. BUSINESS FORMSKimball and twelve members, offrthe cience Club journeyed to the tine one-Time Carbon Snap-Out Forms Dialtons SPECIAL Sericefamous Millstone- Hill Research Paper Ruling - BookbindingONTISsOuRadar Site- in Westford last Sun- finest - COMM ERCIAL-day afternoon. inAND .- Pharmacy To N.Y.C Fought

The Millstone Hill Radar was -JOB PRINTING

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Page 5: Aawriter - Phillipian Archivespdf.phillipian.net/1963/02261963.pdfby Bill Semple a fire, spontaneously transform a The epic retold this incident by afternoon singing folk songs. for

ray26, 1963 The Phillipian Page 5

uted 'Harvard Frosh Rout Exeter'Dominates BNMaie Tube, 5-utlassed Blue Swimmers. Squash Tourney; P.A. Grapplers Score 4 Pins

yudCl, Febntaryr2j - TUnex- -its five point lead for two more I *by Rick Timbie Hartman, who turned in a fine los-

y eid28-23 after the div- events. After the 100 yd. freestyle Stve s To S ms Te'Amtnn nterls n Harvara freshmenthe meet was no onger a contest.dual meet of the season-before the Leary, making his -first appear-

bctosmash the Ando- Henry Welchel, swimming the back by Bob Marsh Exeter match, showed exceptional ance at the 138 lb. berth, lost a

swnfigteam, 61-34. stroke in 59.3, Henry Frey who Unseeded Godfrey of Exeter de- strength in the upper four weight -dell-fought battle, 1-0. Tim Wolf,

aradsmdley relay of Wel- set a freshman record in the 200 feated first rated Heath-of Deer- classes and turned back Bwne Ed Quimby, and Bing Sung also

FoWler, Klaussman, and free with a 1:54.8, and Brc field to win the New England and Nichols, 25-18. Although lost by decisions. -

although finishing %4 of a Fowler led Harvard to the squash Interscholastics. Browne and Nichols -won more Down by ten points, Andover

'ahead of Andover, was dis- straight sweeps. The Red cele- Losing to two teams which it matches than Andover, Andover's turned the tide and made the fish

je hnEric Klaussman brated the victory that was as- had previously beaten, Andover victories were- fortunately-all of -swimn the other way. After Rocky

pe~to son.With these seven sured in the breaststroke by taking finished in third place behind Exe- the five point variety. Avery, Chip Nevius, and Eric

Blewas able to keep the free r~a.The one bright spot ter and Deerfield. After having forfeited- the 110 Chase had contributed pins to thedistnceof a-aft r a diigwsBbKlyslb. match to Chuck Rounds, B&N cause, PA was five up. Mike Fran-

fortheeary parts of the performance in the breaststroke. Three PA. candidates partici- wrestlers stormed back to sweep cisco, Andover's 177 lb. man,

He broke his own school record by pateO in the tournament, which the five lower weight classes from wrestled well, but lost to a strong

im ahoney took the only indi- .1 of a second, although finishing was held at St. Paul's School in 115 to 138 lbs. Undefeated Cap,- and experienced adversary. Bob

afirst for Andover as he and third. Concord, N. H. Both Matt Hall tain Gremn outmaneuveted Bill Wilbur pinned his man to end the

butswept the diving. This Saturday Andover will end and Court Dixon were unable to match and ensure the victory.

dover could only hold on to its season of dual meets when ted te col nee n Basketballmeets Exeter at 7:30 P.M; The cluded Deerfield, Choate, Middle- enabled the tall frosh to limit An-

4) ~~~~~~teams appear to be equal and the sex, and Brooks. '(Continued from Page Three) dover's offensive rebounding to the

meet will be a close one. Andover's big hope, Bob Stevens, led his team with 17 points, al- barest minimum.

contiued from Page Three) - reached the semi-finals before though he only played the first After a slow start, Wilmer and

nodcSkimeister. Barnes, Mc- Boxing ~bowing to Heath in five close hialf. Sawyer each scored a basket to

~,and Palmer all finished 1-games. Stevens had previously up- Once again height hurt Andover even the-ball gie at 16-16 mid-

the top ten. (Continued from Page Three) set third rated Black of Exeter. badly. The freshman fronteourt thog tefisha.Re

teslalom, Chris Cooke was has come along very well this year, The match was decided by one averaged about 6'5", wvhereas three waythog tefishl.R-highest laced Anover sker thank especialy to Bb Burton ointof Andovenl'sa five starters fiwereartebounde shotsunbysots by Ahmherstrtcenter

d the p der six feet. ~~~~~and forwards and several fine

Me fiihdfourth in a corn- the great driving force behind the ozlzscubdt heotokfrteEee aedrvsofsresgv mes

tieo 7.1. Garvan and team as w asteBu' o e Gnae ucme o TeotokfrteEee aealmost a twenty point gap to enjoy

& finished eighth and sixth, boxer. Heath in the second round. Win- remains bleak, since captain Joe at the halftime buzzer.. ely ning, the first game 15-10, Gon- Belforti's ankle injury will defin-

1etBvlue's orst performance zalez nevertheless dropped the re- itly keep him sidelined. Andover began the second half

eday was turned in o the MR A N mairning two. The Andover basketball team wt oedfne u hni

slalom, a Barnes as the CAD SHOP I other Anover acton, Cap-lost its third consecutive game by' saw that the margin was not sig-

stscoring_ Andover runner more than 25 points when ite-niiataes nd nsed.t

only a fifth place finish. Only OLDE ANDOVER VILLAGE tain Jim Brown was downed in cutered the Amherst Frosh Sat- a pressing mnan-to-mndfse

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Page The Phillipian '-Februar 2 11

Editori ~~~~~~the faculty action aims to develop the Letrthe faculty knows about eaaEditorial Lette didate's general accomplisijm(Continued from Page Two) itrsso nstdt.Ythelbal(Continued from Page Two) in short, on how well he has

if the course is not required plan released last S8aturday was only same time the stain of grade-seek- himself known. No candidateto make up units necessary 'the first step in an even more compre- ing be removed? object to having himself ju

for grauation-hat is one hesive pogram t be intiated ext ofThe solution is faculty election by his academic reputation afor gaduaton-tat is one ensie proram t be nitiaed net ofinitiates on the basis of what men with a keen sense ofof the sixteen major units, September. scholastic achievement- ealltoward, which a combination This plan, imaginatively executed, . euainaogbilatof minors is allowed to count promises to., double the value, of the FIORI'S DEPOT hastefo ag bline. onThs

in the exceptional circum- ~ Andover Program facilities. For years would insure more accuratestance of a boy's ente-ring now there have been hints tat some- I.,o~ ,3 9nc.- tion, remove an undue signi%

is wrong with - QUALITY - attaced to grades, recogn~short of major credits late in thing - something basic' iwrnwth-QAIYthe student-teacher relioi~his school career--and if the Andover. Somehow the emphasis has USED CARS essentialUy and also ideal-hboy's effort and achievement been too much on turning out materially toualtrespectke of two soarsin the course have been satis- 'successful alumni. The definition of suc- mean mitch more to toesfactory. cess is too often "getting along with Tel.' 688-6004 ored.

6. If the committee considers the boss." A faculty report has termed ROBERT STUART Mciluoy

that the number of applicants ,hi tendency, "the school's failure to 15 Parker Street Lawrenceis excessive, its duty, will be to contribute to society more than a small STEAKS, CHOPS and SEAFOselect the projects and the number of scientists, artists, writers; ., , ~PIZZA and SPAGHETTI"boys most likely to realiz6 the and other creative persons." .Aennelh P'Jnhr ..- wivalues of the program. Next fall's combination of new facili- C.

We can't help but admire the faculty's ties and new opportunities should rem- Io~io o eataurantresponse to the Congress', and THE edy this failure, pushing Andover toSCOLUPIE19ssxSetPHILLPIAN's challenge. Not only has it- the forefront in still another area of AndovSPLIS 9 sex Ss.eemet' the demands of our editorials, but "Prep School Educafion." We congrat- STATIONERY -GIFTS AndTer 475 .it has gone far beyond. -- 'ulate the faculty on their far-sightedTe.4591

Whereas we were primarily con- solution to a comparatively short- GREETING CARDS "All Foods May Be Put Up Tocerned with helping talented students, sighted problem. 48 MAIN ST. ANDOVER - Take Out"

Sidelines ~~~~~~~~~~~TAXI SERVICE(Continued from Page Three)

encountered the- mononucleous bug And will not see action; - To Or From-neither will another PA point-'getter, distanceman Bill LGNAROTC IT YBaumer, who was severely spiked in the MIT meet and, much for only $11.00to his-credit, still finished strongly.- For Reservations-

The track team, although anticipating a close Exeter CALLr &D it journeys to the north Wednesday. The 600O' is Andover's Charge-A-CabPak Srebest chance for a first place. Exeter, with four 6 ft. leape s, 43 P r StetAndveerratic though they may be, and' three 12 ft. vaulters, will T436probably sweep the high jump and pole vault. AT____ 4___3060 ___

Success at basketball depends on having more shots totake at the basket than the opposition, which in turn depends S~wa f c iupon good rebounding which depends on height. Andover Sam s S pecial -Dis~co~utdoesn't have height; Exeter does - in abundance. Exeter's O ushooters for -their height are no better than Andover'&~ but BOrbeOShorebounding will make them look better.Ba b r S o

If swimming is only a slight favorite to win, hockey, atHigh QultAndover's other water sport during the winter, is a cinch to atalitextend its consecutive winning streak over Exeter. The up-surge of the hockey team following four consecutive defeats THE ANDOVER INN Dry-Cleaning Andcame about after several line changes and a change to a flex-ible line-up that finds some players at varied positions duringLan r Sevcthe course of the game. Forwards Bill Smoyer and -Jack TravelLa dy SevcMorrison often play defense when their line is not on the iceand Dan Warren, previously only a defenseman, now centers Anywhere Inc. for allthe second line. This version of musical chairs has been suc-cessful, especially when one considers the recent scoring AIRLINE TICKETSPsAcd Su etpunch provided by underclassmen Gurry, Warren and STDNHOERA S calls the toughest in the school's history, is still only moder- BUS TICKETSately tough compared to Andover's, yet the Exeter pucksters Rpeettv tteTb~T1'fCare still floundering around at the .500 mark. Rival teams S IST that had previously played Exeter have remarked without Cmos-MNAhesitation or exception that Exeter will provide little trouble. 92 Main Street GR 5-2614

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