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The ground hog w ~..,intewien saw his shatdoiw.. t. -il n o9, No. 17 --- PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASSACHUSETTS February 9, 1966 ean Resumes ~~~~~~~~~~ :-~~~--~~~ Trustees Plan GI Me morial;_ Daily Chapels Expand 'Schoolboys Abroad'; TeBy Anthony Alofseind VoeT o pe etQ a poaysuspension of daily VoeToC mleW s Q a chapel ahd assembly, required by Mark Allen telwras physiar The PA Board of Trustees approved further planning lseand lower caspyia oo ectinMonday because under fr the expansion f the Schoolboys Abroad Program, the present health circumstances there construction of a war memorial, and the remodeling of the ino justification for upsetting West Quad in meetings here last weekend. Headmaster hesystem. Kme' eomnain ----- r- Dean of Students G. Grenville Keprs rco mnain - enedict said the modification in - for faculty salaries and ap- -s schedule was lanned to reduce pontetsfr h nx ,a ftgein the student body and pitlet o h etya vuneabliyto the current flu were also okayed by Ithe i- epidemic. The number of ccasions board.___ eor ts Te pannig Vf awar memorial reduced, and the administration to honor PA graduates who have sugsted that teachers - and died in military service ince oae~esnot ovrworktheir stu- World War II will begin with - deniB~ theadministration felt the board's endorsement. Although wihonly 30 flu cases anc a nm- 1l~ il the trustees have been planning er of other winter ailments in iluI Epid mic AtM E F lls I fUirm51ary such a monuffent for a long time heinfirmary that the epidemnic - e- now, neither- its location nor its threat has passed.- Hospital Tou hens Admission nature has been detdrmnined. Mr. Benedict commented that 9I.UI.~ Planning for a supplementary, if again threatened by a particular 'By William W. Robinson tightening in the admissions pol- Schoolboys Abroad program in virus epidemic, the school would Numerous students and faculty icies of the hospital, and students France will continue following the quite possibly alter its.- schedule members were hospitalized last were encouraged' to rest at their trustees' approval. The program Bishop Henry Hobson by reducing mass meetings and week in what Dr. Julian Kaiser,- dorms to relieve strain on the 55- -will be managed jointly- with Ex- . Trus tee President oesrnous activities, but would PA Medical Director, called an bed hospital. There was-a notable eter as is the present Barcelona, only a few changes in teachers' retain compulsory breakfast and "epidemic of sorts." The Isham increase in those studernts treated Spain, program. salaries, faculty leaves of Iab--- perhaps move serving time from Hospital housed an average of in the out-patient department for The. remodeling of the West sence and the retirement of Rev- 7:20 to 7:40. ~~thirty-five students per night dur- colds and other ailments associated Quad has been approved and will A.G. Baldwin at the end of the Dr. Kaiser has nevertheless ad- ing the epidemic, more than twice with the flu itself. continue 'with work on Johnson,i year brought about major changes vised the student- body to take the normal patient average. "Taking the- measures we did,, and possibly later, Rockwell Hall. in faculty positions for next year. precautions. The influx of. patients caused a Dr. Kaiser stated, "made all the Although the trustees institutedI Robert Maynard, presently on difference." The epidemic had a Ileave f absence, was appointed ~T 1 ENT - CONGRESS TO STAGE relatively mild effect on Phillips I acting chairman of the math de- Academy as compared to other Sri OCK SIVs Ci ld partment for next year when the ELECTIONS FOR NEW SESSION eastern Massachusetts schools. present Head, Mr. Richard S. th- oi'o hl students shuffled down -PiTro gh ters will take his leave. By Chitpe S hnr presidency, Advn:- izags Th o g DrAltnHCaspeiuy Representatives for the second open to senioir candidates. If' any- the Infirmary corridors to the TV edo tecascsdprmn session of this year's Student Con- thing like last year's upper-lower- room instead of taking thirmi gress willi be electe .. -. ~ ~ ~ etedterm- tests, be-ridden teachers in Fevel me tnow on leave, was -appointed toa beeetd tonight at junior coalition can be expectedd P pstono heIdpedne on -6:45 PM, Congress president Mike loecase aea good chancegaefecus - tonTchgEdwm tvc- -. Tompkins announced. The balloting t capture up to three of the four The Infirmary was, for the dtoTecigE owgnva- will be conducted in dormitorien officerships. most part, quarantined and the ted by Rev. Baldwin; Mr. Harper Sby senior proctors. Dean of Students-G. Grenville whole school was kept apart by Folansbee, itra'tosiin. Boothe The elections will differ from Benedictr- commenting on the ac-- the ban on daily chapels and as- Sameoveyt aylo ondtion h those of the first session in that complishments of the Congress, semblies, meeting together only ½ta a enhl yD.Cae -juniors will be allowed to vote. In noeIht I em om htonce to hear Dr. Spock Wednes- t-__hihpdbeenWheld,-pysir.Cse.n an additional change,-~junior day the Congress has been addressing day. - -~ chemistry teacher, was kranted students will now elect a represen- itself constructively to matters of cthe George . Peabody Foundation, tatve, giving the juniorL class a well oncen at heIshool.Theya science teching endowment, in total of seven votes, one more than are trying to make the school a Powel W i--. plceofMrNFalnsee they had last year. better place rther than tryingIch arh A a d- s Leaves of absence were approved Election of the new Congress to grab more privileges." (S h lrhi w r for Mr. George K Sanborn, bio- - offcer~is -he frst iem o the A number of representatives By cooter Libby - .~ logy teacher, Mr. Robert E. Lane, agenda for Mnday's initial -meet- hold the opinion that the Congress Sno e oel a o ai n usa ecemt ing of the spring session. At this does not have the full support of Sarenior shpom hwo a Ltiand Ruclssiand tea er, ath time Tompkin says he doesn't lareesholrshp fom he a- eacersEcceennd ietrsan plan to ru yo thrautyae sudn oy tional Achievement - Scholarship English teachers Hughes, Roehrig,- rnfrr-election to the Tompkins feels that, "A lot of stiz-Prga.owlcmptdgintndD ge dents attempt to. measure the Negro boys across the nation on The trustees also - allocated renc~~~~~~~~ worth of- the Congress in terms the basis of personal record which Pediatrician Spock money to back new procedures re- Fr _c Players of what actually gets done; a truer includes all aspects of the contest- The-,Zigzagging Path commended by the Student Con-- ~~~ ~~measure would be what we attempt ants' lives.-Powell was one of two Photo by TOP gress Commons Committee, for a Put On 2 Sh w to do or are concerned-with. Many hundred boys to be picked from -ByMrRd - trial period. LJZL~VYIJfaculty members are firm'ly con- B akRe tdn omn omte vinced that student government one thousand twenty-five final- Nationally famous pediatrician Stden o mmginon sami te won't work - that it's absurd." He ists. The- final decision ismd and bestselling author Dr: Benja- chaea LoinluLincol sing the with respect to geographical di- mi M. S ktae chageeicldeithgsrvnggo noted, however, that the situation visions. - - nn M. of aceid' tshe olzgzag seconds on some meats and deserts, is- iproving. "Th e facut usedt~na -~h n gco ing penath" obchld' pschologyth addition of three new milk ~to - pass measures and then wait -- ThNaioaAhivmnScoinWdeaysLbletu. te frour reaction. Now we can larship Program ia division of In the child's early years from machines, and the purchase of cnie thi prpsl-bfore National Merit founded- by the orfe to three, Spock began, the three new sets of glass racks to consier thir prposal -befre Fod Foudatio. Beteen $50?lothercabringo thedelowerad classthhallsrclupshtolsup t they act on them, he added. ForaFondtio:iBtwen 250mohercatrstorishemndsan Dean Benedict sated that, "The 'and $1500 are presented by the there is no -real relationsliip be- dt ihtesno al faculty on the whole believes organization to .each- winner. tween the two. Dr. Spock went on - - ~ strongly in student government, diT h e National Achievemnent to say that, in years three through C -~~~ and the more the Student Cngress Scholarship Prograuii i a grand six, a child realizes and-appreciates atndar- concerns itself with general -mat- institution," -said Powell. It helps his mther's devdtion to- him. His ters' of the school, the, more the finance the college education of main romantic feelings are focused Wednesday, February9 faculty will support them."- 200 boys each year. "It makes the on his' mother and, in his eyes, rlayc vL. oheama La. 1:30 F' ~~~~~~~~~~Despite the allege& lack of sup- difference for mne whether I go or there is no other woman -compar- Basketball - vs. Bridgeton 2:00 port Cogress ccomplihmentsnot. Th high uitioncharge of able to her. With a growing aware- Hockey vs. Bridgeton 2:00 6-sesi~q-ar _r____s -most-collegeis puts a good educa- ness. of his father, the child finds WIVcstlisig vs. Biddeford High 3:00 s~~~-' -~~~~~~ tion ott~~~~~hreacho-manyNe ~ reat-deal--f-respect-for-him,- Fd Fbur'1 _anmn e om rds n gro -boys, and it is ere thatYhZ Spock said. -aLn~ ck eis -33 Rank, and trins -programdoesagrt service"-- As th6 child reaches the years of ovie: Moll Flanders- Bob Quffy in "La Le~on", the first committees, hdve been formed in Powell planstoaen Wesleyan six to nine, he beginis to gain an Saturday, February 12 oftwo French-plays presented -last TopisUveit Connecticut next icesdkolgef-.sx.Th Mve-i 7he Family Jewels Photo by Lux lConitinued on Page u) year.-(Cniudo Lg~VenaeknDaln :0

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The ground hog w ~..,intewiensaw his shatdoiw.. t. -il n

o9, No. 17 --- PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASSACHUSETTS February 9, 1966

ean Resumes ~~~~~~~~~~ :-~~~--~~~ Trustees Plan GI Me morial;_Daily Chapels Expand 'Schoolboys Abroad';

TeBy Anthony Alofseind VoeT o pe etQ apoaysuspension of daily VoeToC mleW s Q a

chapel ahd assembly, required by Mark Allen

telwras physiar The PA Board of Trustees approved further planninglseand lower caspyia ooectinMonday because under fr the expansion f the Schoolboys Abroad Program, the

present health circumstances there construction of a war memorial, and the remodeling of theino justification for upsetting West Quad in meetings here last weekend. Headmasterhesystem. Kme' eomnain ----- r-Dean of Students G. Grenville Keprs rco mnain

- enedict said the modification in - for faculty salaries and ap- -s

schedule was lanned to reduce pontetsfr h nx ,a

ftgein the student body and pitlet o h etya vuneabliyto the current flu were also okayed by Ithe i-

epidemic. The number of ccasions board.___eor ts Te pannig Vf awar memorial

reduced, and the administration to honor PA graduates who havesugsted that teachers - and died in military service ince

oae~esnot ovrworktheir stu- World War II will begin with- deniB~ theadministration felt the board's endorsement. Although

wihonly 30 flu cases anc a nm- 1l~ il the trustees have been planninger of other winter ailments in iluI Epid mic AtM E F lls I fUirm51ary such a monuffent for a long time

heinfirmary that the epidemnic - e- now, neither- its location nor its threat has passed.- Hospital Tou hens Admission nature has been detdrmnined.

Mr. Benedict commented that 9I.UI.~ Planning for a supplementary,if again threatened by a particular 'By William W. Robinson tightening in the admissions pol- Schoolboys Abroad program invirus epidemic, the school would Numerous students and faculty icies of the hospital, and students France will continue following the quite possibly alter its.- schedule members were hospitalized last were encouraged' to rest at their trustees' approval. The program Bishop Henry Hobsonby reducing mass meetings and week in what Dr. Julian Kaiser,- dorms to relieve strain on the 55- -will be managed jointly- with Ex- . Trus tee President

oesrnous activities, but would PA Medical Director, called an bed hospital. There was-a notable eter as is the present Barcelona, only a few changes in teachers'retain compulsory breakfast and "epidemic of sorts." The Isham increase in those studernts treated Spain, program. salaries, faculty leaves of Iab---perhaps move serving time from Hospital housed an average of in the out-patient department for The. remodeling of the West sence and the retirement of Rev-

7:20 to 7:40. ~~thirty-five students per night dur- colds and other ailments associated Quad has been approved and will A.G. Baldwin at the end of theDr. Kaiser has nevertheless ad- ing the epidemic, more than twice with the flu itself. continue 'with work on Johnson,i year brought about major changes

vised the student- body to take the normal patient average. "Taking the- measures we did,, and possibly later, Rockwell Hall. in faculty positions for next year.precautions. The influx of. patients caused a Dr. Kaiser stated, "made all the Although the trustees institutedI Robert Maynard, presently on

difference." The epidemic had a Ileave f absence, was appointed~T 1 ENT -CONGRESS TO STAGE relatively mild effect on Phillips I acting chairman of the math de-

Academy as compared to other Sri OCK SIVs Ci ld partment for next year when theELECTIONS FOR NEW SESSION eastern Massachusetts schools. present Head, Mr. Richard S.

th- oi'o hl students shuffled down -PiTro gh ters will take his leave.By Chitpe S hnr presidency, Advn:- izags Th o g DrAltnHCaspeiuyRepresentatives for the second open to senioir candidates. If' any- the Infirmary corridors to the TV edo tecascsdprmn

session of this year's Student Con- thing like last year's upper-lower- room instead of taking thirmigress willi be electe .. -. ~ ~ ~ etedterm- tests, be-ridden teachers in Fevel me tnow on leave, was -appointed toabeeetd tonight at junior coalition can be expectedd P pstono heIdpedne on

-6:45 PM, Congress president Mike loecase aea good chancegaefecus - tonTchgEdwm tvc--.Tompkins announced. The balloting t capture up to three of the four The Infirmary was, for the dtoTecigE owgnva-will be conducted in dormitorien officerships. most part, quarantined and the ted by Rev. Baldwin; Mr. Harper

Sby senior proctors. Dean of Students-G. Grenville whole school was kept apart by Folansbee, itra'tosiin. BootheThe elections will differ from Benedictr- commenting on the ac-- the ban on daily chapels and as- Sameoveyt aylo ondtion h

those of the first session in that complishments of the Congress, semblies, meeting together only ½ta a enhl yD.Cae-juniors will be allowed to vote. In noeIht I em om htonce to hear Dr. Spock Wednes- t-__hihpdbeenWheld,-pysir.Cse.n

an additional change,-~junior day the Congress has been addressing day. - -~ chemistry teacher, was krantedstudents will now elect a represen- itself constructively to matters of cthe George . Peabody Foundation,tatve, giving the juniorL class a well oncen at heIshool.Theya science teching endowment, intotal of seven votes, one more than are trying to make the school a Powel W i--. plceofMrNFalnseethey had last year. better place rther than tryingIch arh A a d- s Leaves of absence were approved

Election of the new Congress to grab more privileges." (S h lrhi w r for Mr. George K Sanborn, bio-- offcer~is -he frst iem o the A number of representatives By cooter Libby - .~ logy teacher, Mr. Robert E. Lane,

agenda for Mnday's initial -meet- hold the opinion that the Congress Sno e oel a o ai n usa ecemting of the spring session. At this does not have the full support of Sarenior shpom hwo a Ltiand Ruclssiand tea er, athtime Tompkin says he doesn't lareesholrshp fom he a- eacersEcceennd ietrsanplan to ru yo thrautyae sudn oy tional Achievement - Scholarship English teachers Hughes, Roehrig,-

rnfrr-election to the Tompkins feels that, "A lot of stiz-Prga.owlcmptdgintndD ge

dents attempt to. measure the Negro boys across the nation on The trustees also - allocatedrenc~~~~~~~~ worth of- the Congress in terms the basis of personal record which Pediatrician Spock money to back new procedures re-Fr _c Players of what actually gets done; a truer includes all aspects of the contest- The-,Zigzagging Path commended by the Student Con--~~~ ~~measure would be what we attempt ants' lives.-Powell was one of two Photo by TOP gress Commons Committee, for aPut On 2 Sh w to do or are concerned-with. Many hundred boys to be picked from -ByMrRd - trial period.

LJZL~VYIJfaculty members are firm'ly con- B akRe tdn omn omtevinced that student government one thousand twenty-five final- Nationally famous pediatrician Stden o mmginon sami tewon't work - that it's absurd." He ists. The- final decision ismd and bestselling author Dr: Benja- chaea LoinluLincol sing the

with respect to geographical di- mi M. S ktae chageeicldeithgsrvnggonoted, however, that the situation visions. - - nn M. of aceid' tshe olzgzag seconds on some meats and deserts,is- iproving. "Th e facut usedt~na -~h n gco ing penath" obchld' pschologyth addition of three new milk

~to - pass measures and then wait -- ThNaioaAhivmnScoinWdeaysLbletu. tefrour reaction. Now we can larship Program ia division of In the child's early years from machines, and the purchase of

cnie thi prpsl-bfore National Merit founded- by the orfe to three, Spock began, the three new sets of glass racks toconsier thir prposal -befre Fod Foudatio. Beteen $50?lothercabringo thedelowerad classthhallsrclupshtolsup t

they act on them, he added. ForaFondtio:iBtwen 250mohercatrstorishemndsanDean Benedict sated that, "The 'and $1500 are presented by the there is no -real relationsliip be- dt ihtesno al

faculty on the whole believes organization to .each- winner. tween the two. Dr. Spock went on -

- ~ strongly in student government, diT h e National Achievemnent to say that, in years three through C-~~~ and the more the Student Cngress Scholarship Prograuii i a grand six, a child realizes and-appreciates atndar-

concerns itself with general -mat- institution," -said Powell. It helps his mther's devdtion to- him. Histers' of the school, the, more the finance the college education of main romantic feelings are focused Wednesday, February9faculty will support them."- 200 boys each year. "It makes the on his' mother and, in his eyes, rlayc vL. oheama La. 1:30

F' ~~~~~~~~~~Despite the allege& lack of sup- difference for mne whether I go or there is no other woman -compar- Basketball -vs. Bridgeton 2:00

port Cogress ccomplihmentsnot. Th high uitioncharge of able to her. With a growing aware- Hockey vs. Bridgeton 2:006-sesi~q-ar _r____s -most-collegeis puts a good educa- ness. of his father, the child finds WIVcstlisig vs. Biddeford High 3:00

s~~~-' -~~~~~~ tion ott~~~~~hreacho-manyNe ~ reat-deal--f-respect-for-him,- Fd Fbur'1 _anmn e om rds n gro -boys, and it is ere thatYhZ Spock said. -aLn~ ck eis -33

Rank, and trins -programdoesagrt service"-- As th6 child reaches the years of ovie: Moll Flanders-Bob Quffy in "La Le~on", the first committees, hdve been formed in Powell planstoaen Wesleyan six to nine, he beginis to gain an Saturday, February 12oftwo French-plays presented -last TopisUveit Connecticut next icesdkolgef-.sx.Th Mve-i 7he Family Jewels

Photo by Lux lConitinued on Page u) year.-(Cniudo Lg~VenaeknDaln :0

Page 2 -The Phuipian - -' - February 9,j

- - A...... 1 A-I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~have it right in the'stomach." peara~nces, it well might have bIii.diover in' A nd~lover, .3: "One townie once asked me to fight The school is nestled comfortably This ar ticle, W2 etten in the fall, was ning Study Program, which "led to a with him," sadaohr IwsaHlbti ny' e-minute w

~to have appeared in the late North- great deal 6f town and gyn inter- throwing apples at him-from a win- away from the town below. Do- chage." he Pogram iniiatedjustdow. Townies are chicken at heart." town is a bustling shopping disheast '66.",cag. h rgaiiitdjs Who or what originally caused the occupied by--stores with names I-

'-'by JAMES S. KUNEN before the war, enrolls over 1300The Town of Andover was incor- adults from surrounding communities tension-that exists* between preppies The Andover Shop, The Acd

porated in 1646. Phillips Academy. in its courses, most of which are adwneisaustoofpredTabrSpAdvr -Statiollenrolld its lrtt tirtee boys n taugt by h6 -reular Adoverence between chickens and eggs. Andover Bookstore, and so -on.

1778. -Thus it is an historically docu- Faculty. An Adersnosa:"Ihv AdvrintetoeamS 6f COmented fact that for 148 years the The heavy enrollment seems to sup- nohn gis oneecp elrfr otetwbttestudtown existed without the school. pr noe ihSho rnia resentment that they beat up kids half believe that-.it refers to th'Today this is hard to blieve. The Philip Worm~wood in his assertion fo u tdn oy ftwisshoprasi rttd o hAcademy has always been so closely that "The town of Andover is har- wudty t efinl o.u t-ptoae ihu hcte associated with the town that it monious to an academic atmosphere. shden't yrIei oeasnwyw temrhnt olno uvshares its name - Andover. After 187- The fact that the Academies (P.A. shud' eirctIn fact, the Town of Andoveryears of liviiik With each other, An- and Abbot) are here labels Andover4. T ' Tila.- population of over 20,000,dover the town and Andover the as an academic town. - 'Phillips Academy's 856 students'

- ~school might be expected to enjoy an "The relation between the Academy n~ot as potent an economcfreextrem~ely amicable relationship, and and the Toivffis excellent," he said, - ' they would like to think. Overesrtina-this they do, on the institutional level. "largely-as a result of good two-way ing their importance as they do,

The local skating club and hockey communication. As far as your age __.`.b~smgtbeepce

league iPse the school rink and boys' group is concerned, although there ~trwterwih rudi clubs use the pool, and one- school may be less communication than - stores, 'but, according to one nebuilding becomes a town church on among the adults, -certainly the;re is DN' chant, "They're just like any ofSunday. The Academy's Addison- ro evidence of hostility.-When P.A. BLOCK th~rkd h oei eeGallery may be; and is, visited by boys go 'downtown on Wednesday nothing different, except maybe th~townspeople at any time, and the afternoon, your administration knows leave a little morey'money.")Archaelogical. Museum- is visited by there won't be a-fight;- or at least A salesgirl, also a junior a

almost no one else. ~they're-pretty sure." -dover High, said "I find a lot th--S'uch familiarity was unheard of Why only pretty sure? Because, '-sobnoxious, and then others are )es

thirty years ago, when the town was -although the School a-nid the Town ~"fect gentlemen. It depends on vlcrigidly divided into the Hill, the Till, may get along famonsly, the school tthey are,- and how they regard di

-and the Mill. (The school, 'the busiL and the town do not. Actually, there ,town. As a total group, maybe this rather distinct evidence of hostility s don't feel it, but they're just like otherTh THl1b!ten1h preppies and the townies. i' ''' -human beings, and I don't thinak the,,

- -, The .ui~~~~~uiP.- betwee have been jumped by teen-feli.age groups riding around at night OnPA os eltoswt-o

I 1ip~ four times this year. The "muggings" girls, she said-: "They-take-advanta~fle may represent mere thrill seeking, On the otfier side of the town- an of the High School girls, but thei

ST.1TT8' but hostility is oppressively present Andover High School girl placed the some of the- High School girlsta- - ~~~~~~~~~~~in less violent forms. Academy boys b~lame on the P.A.. boys, "We'd like advantage of them. The townbo

-- - - walking downtown often get the feel- them perfectly well if they wouldn't naturally have a feeling of jealousying, justified or not, that they are be so stuck up," -she said. "They call if their girl starts going out 'with8treading on enemy grotind. For their us townies'; they think we're low b~y from P.A."part, the P.A. boys or certain fac- class." "I don't like the idea of P.A. bo-

/ _ - - ~~~~~~~~tions of them talk whinrsically of a Although several preppies inter- swiping Andover girls," said anoth-massive and perpetual rumble; which viewed felt that "townies have a per- High School Junior - a boy. "GirL,

, ~. - many think "would be- a ball." They secution coiplex,` others providedd/who act in the P.A. musical becomawent so far as selecting a date and living evidence to support the town PA. kirls.' Th4Ly're'too Put on. Theyasking the school rdio station t6 girl's opinion.__Said--one: "Townies talk differently:

- -- -- ~~~announce- the time and place. The I've-met rethnnk are grogs-Tlfey're 50 Advrsosudns codnradio station did not make the an- uncultu e and:- uncouth,- sort of. Of to this junior, "try to act suave witinouncement. Over a hundred prep- course, I hate their accents."th aisbuarsoalyocs-pies did turn ' out, attracting the Dean-Benedict said "I suspect that- First of all, they don't hang aroundlpolice,' but in the words of a disap- there is some basis for the local teen-wihuanmoe'pointed student, "there wasn't an-y a-gers t~ think that a good many of us A da sten paiedw-

-- action."- ~~~are stuck up. Ohie--of our character- "Onc ame htuent Ifunxlied twheness section, and the factories.) GG. Each side has committed its share istics here is that we tend to-beat our kidnhe mucheer, a ond' 1 niedteBenedict, P.A.'s Dean of Students of -unprovoked- -attacks. Said one chests." kidasciaede with bther o ndkI aftersince 1930, points- out -that-there- has--prep:'Thefirsttime-I-ever-went By-no--mea-ns did all of the townies tsince been "extraordinary osmosis," downtown a townie asked me if I ge ihtegr-ta h lm that. I'll say hello to them and leave-thanks largely to the Andover Eve- we ~~~~~~~~~~~~at that. I 'care' what their soci~-thankslargelyto i~heAndoverEve- wet to P.A. -I said -yes, and he let me rested1 on the preppies. One of her liei.Iv`gtm w.

- ~male companions contended that "It'sthe town' -kids' fault. The P.A. boys Pay students, as an institution,

Flick~~ ~~~~~~ probably "' can't stand us because may be one of the causes of resent

everybody gives them so much pit." ment--against-theschool-by-th--lodAll What's New Pussycat? fans have another frolicsome sexfest in store for Bytesm~tkn ay-i o eenagers. In -1965, of,400 candidates

them this Friday when Mall Flanders makes her appearance. Kim Novak stars as a d3oll indeed most - .A. boys_ are sym for day student' positions,- 25 wereMall who would have made a great bedfellow for Michael James, editor of a famous -pteitowrthkdsntetw. acpdroieinixeweesfashion magazine.' -ahtctwr lqisi h on -cetd roe nsxen hra

The story - or rather the framework thereof - is taken from Dahiel Defoe's "Townies are basically O.K.,"1 said t h e oerall application.acceptancEtime-warn classic about a young rphan girl who~makes good in a bad way, - or vice o -esa. Either way it doesn't really mattei, inasiuch as Director Terence Young (of Dr. esuet Itikte'e'en ai wsaotoei ie hsI

No and From-Russia with Love fame) has pretty much done what he pleased with antagonized by a group up here."' simply because only about one nDefoe's seamy, wicked, and spicy characters and episodes.

' The novice abounds with good performances: besides the aforementioned Miss "I'm completely indifferent to- thirteen plac'es in the schobl is alotd Navak,' -Bbo-nd11ke Richard Johnson, who becomes so enthralled with. the lass that he wards townies," eplained another, to day students. Thus, iherej are 01"marries her for real, lecherous George Sanders ad a wealth of such veterans-as- Lilli 4td a tiPalmer and Hugh Griffith± -all--of these are much worthwhile fun to watch as they travel ad Itik, for th-e most part, proximately 375 disappointed' towili ;throughout the ups and downs and ins and outs of a very witty bawdy niovie. ' -t6W*nies are tow ard : xette walking around, manyo hmqai

- However! Saturday's celluloid sacrifice is z£time-waster in comparisan - unless havacetiimonofjluseyhudhvebnyou are aong the fans' of the redoubtable Jerry Lewis,- who is his usual tedious self - eacrtiamutojalsyfled, who think theysol aebeiifact seven f them - in The Family Jewels, the history of a "wacky, young" family, About us being in the town. I'm quite admitted but weren't.-

Therefore, recommended: for Friday night, The-AmorousAdventures of Mol-0gyscmn-_Flanders; for Saturday, The Education of Henry Adams (a book) .- f alsure d resent it - 0 uscmn n Conceit~on the mr-t-ofthe-prepPl1 -

- === -and-acting-~-ikethey--owne-; reeteto h atof theTHE PHILLIPIAN is pbised wekly-throughout the school year by the'students e n nteprof Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts. Editorial and business correspondence should e ' P.A. boys do tend to feel that the townies, competition for girls - theeaddressed to THE PILLIPIAN, George ~,WashingtbnrHall, Andover, Massachusetts. Price: town wasbulexictyf hirmyalbeatosnteaioiy25 cents per copy; $5 per year; $7 per year for mail subscriptioi Entered as second-class-- bulexictyfrthrmaa1beatosnteaioitmail t Andover, Massachusetts. -'--convenience; which, judging from apm (Continued on Page Three)

eriarY9,16 The Phillipian - -- a

ANOVER IN ANDOVER -the-school and intend to go there. the-townies is through the-waitresses ship."(Contirnued from Page Two) "Th&Ws'- lot&- of -plac es up there, like their 9nack-bar and public school par- One P.A. senior' suggested meetings

etween school and town, but, when the hockey rink, and it's a gooid in their snack-bar and public school between Andover's Student Congressllis said and done, the problem boils School,~' explained a third-grade stu- participation -- n the P.A. spring-and the crres~poniding group at the

donto a lack of communication be' dent, This admiration which be- musical. Going agains~t greater per: High chool. Measures such as in-twen te to sdes Prctiall evrygins so young lingers even through sonal- contact between P.A. boys viting High School students to attend =

prpinterviewed, however' opinion- the supposedly hostile age. "We're and town residents-is the closely-knit- P.A. Senior Seminars were also men-atedon lie~harcte an peronaityproud to-have P.A.: inf the town," said set-up of the school itself. As said the tionedi-s stept toward a solution.

a ninth-grader. O'Princip-af of- the High Sf6ol, "the As said Dean . -G.- Benedict: `"IThe-way things are now[-the main regimen, of P.A.'s schedule precludes hink that probably we can do some-

contact that P.A. students have with much. opportunity for close fiend- thing, and we ought to do something."

riot know a single boy from the town Steel rection Co.well, and the town boys didn't reallyknow any boys from the school. -- __

Of course there are some basic dif-ferences which could probably. neverREN be entirely overcome, but~ at leastRE N O C G A Dcertain misconceptions could be clear-ed up. For instance, one ninth-grader-considered preppies fairies because STRUCTURAL STEEL ERECTION-

thyfling their ties over their should-ers "to try to look cool-j" when in factthe wind just blows them there.

Increased contact would bring to --

the forefront the good will towardsthe school now overshadowed by the I e S lef treW kfid-manifettosofhsiiywhich are, aW keilof course, more interesting. ----

The little children of the town like

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Page 4 " .The Phillipian February 9,1

Cartoonist Visits Drama Review Goo eaosTpPuo

Spanish Classes F~~~~~~~ren'ch, Comedy PAHssDana. Hall Cne______________________________________________________________ In its-first interscholastic debate bitration boan under theT

By Steve Mc~~~~arthy By Jeey Kahn ~~~~of the year Andover- bowed to the -Hartley Act.Euen Ionesv c arthy By pro A mo e tha n caaiycodpolished delivery of a strong Gro- Barr Potteir, first speae

se InI the Drama. Lab, -was an audience was treated to a thor-"tnea thtad emredisrriaio as'iatrayo -Erw-nn su~sadpo-ogl noal n uoosspeeches. The PA team of Michael that an atterrpt by Kansas eo

ises a great future for foreign performance in Kenmper Auditor- TneCalsDe,-Calsigmnaoy-rirto ~jlanguag produtions 't PA. h~ ium riday vening s the rench-Lucas, and Rebuttalist Doug Cas- ly failed, caused a period ofvildi~a rct onsb -Messrs. T DepFrarten een the rnch sel lost with the negative side of strife, and was eventually-fplay,dietdyMessTaltDprmnprsne ncO "The United States' co'mmitment unconstitutional."

-ad Seward of the French depart- le Triompe de a Medicine. Twen- to support South Vietnam was - Lisa. Nelson spoke secondment, is an example of contem- ty-one cast members participatedrih.-teafrmivmpszd,1porary theater of the absurd and in the play by Jules Romains. Byrgh.'Smith ted afiratie emphtasizedprojects serious themes through By-Uie Stencntafdausurface humor. James Paoletti starred in the -An affirmative team__success- wide and varying economic o

surface humor. ~~~~~~lead role' of -Dr. Knock, a doctor -fully defended the resolution "Re- as caused by strikes."The basic plot of the play is a with a particular adeptneas at solved: The Federal Government Ned Atkins~n, the-secondsp

Pacheco, a Salvadlorian politiclatmtt5maighsptesil;SodEtbiha Compulsory er for the -a gative, said,"Tcartoonist, visited Spanish classes and innocent student by innuendoes Arbitration Board -For ettling cornpulsory,..Toaards would fodemonstrated his work, hown here, and careful direction of his in- Mine. Alma Grew, wife of French Disputes in the Basic Industries"~ labor and management to acce

Photo by TOP struction. He always ends by fren- Department Head Dr. Grew, last Sunday in Bullfineh Hall, in the unreasonable."SPOCK ~~~~~~~~~~zily murdering his unwilling pupilsoeteso it e iaiu PhIlo's second debate of the trm Mary Jackson, negative rebut

SPOCK ~ ~ ~ ~~ repents, hen repeats the process portrayal of the hypochondriactic, with another school. The teams ist, concluded, "A cmpl(Continued from Page' One) with his next victim. The rith- selfpitying ariatocrat. Mme.-Grew'a mixed debators from PA and Dana board will bring distruco

thought of sex somewhat abhors metic lecture early in the play motions and tone o voice greatly al eunean nta-o nhim and he tends to shy away derides man's attempt to commun- augmented this farcical role. Thfisspaefo the affir-eqanimstes, itd ilndre tefrom the opposite sex. Soon, how- icate or impose his own thoughts Other members of the cast in- mative, Harriet Dubin, said that Rebuttling for the affi rmtever, the child becomes interested on others, presenting him as a luded Stephen McCarthy as L'in- mandatory conferences would curb Fran Klein stressed tat the pin sex and in the early years of hopelessly self-centered and irra- stituteur Bernard, Andr6 Spears strikes, an "inconvenience to the sent means of arbitration are "

---adolescence, he will most probably tional being. As the play progres- as Le docteur Parpalaid, - Miguel American people," stop violence adequate. There is a need f-becomes enraptured with a girl, ses, the lesson seems to be at best Marichal as Le tambour --de ville, resulting from strikes, alleviate something more flexible and a-with whom he has practically noth- an affirmation of man's potential and Lowers Joel Ristuccia, George the troubles of an economy plagued fective,?P said Philo's presideting at all in common, Spock con- corruptibility and unwillingness to Wolf, Vincent Crowley, and' Caleb .by strikes, and replace the inef- "Strikes are not, in the natioacluded. face his repeated failings with Warren as L'automobile. fective and inefficient existing ar- interest." 'Klein concluded.

After his talk he Answered - objectivity or to- subdue his ego-informal questions by students. tistical cravings, though they- leadAsked if 'being removed from his to the destruction of others.*,,, gifts & accessorIesparents at an early age made the _______________' Old. Andover Village -e i upi'ep ' school , boy insecure, Spotic thute rhasaid that because the student was I.'"j hrtharhaindependent of their influence he ,Vl'li~am1 Lotended to become more creative. J~UAndover Mass.To another question he commffented FNEE ERthat h thought boys old enough -FN -EW~Y to be drafted were old enough -

to decide whether or not to smoke. Olde Andover Village-- iBut, he urged, the habit was highlyinadvisable and one, e added, Andaver, Mass.y~ - o that had taken him two years to give up. te- Tel. 475-2782

-Spock,' h former President ofMO R L DGSANE and a nationally known MOO OD ENL RESTAURANT.-pacifist, touched on politics once, CLASS RINGScalling the U.S. the aggressoragainst Red China because it was for immediatedeindnthicoprbem nrWashington who first threatened delivery. whiich has made Howard Johnson's famousthe recapture-of the Chinese main-deiryland, as "Host of the Highways. ----

CONGRESS VALENTINE- GIFTS.(Continued from Page One) - ' COMPLETE FACILITIES - FIREPROOF-

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ebr~~~~~a!~~~Y ~~~~ 1966 ~~~~The Philipian, Page 5

Suash SmnashesExetr ae- Froshciske ballSmases Sufolk-resh en, 9-71*Injury-ridden Squad- Cramps IRed,' 5-0

ketball Smashes Suff-61V--7Freshmen'_- B9Frank6hrl71hSaturday, February 5; New11. ru - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Wednesday, February 2; Exe- Haven - Though still'hampered

11.4 To A St o g M .H r o o e a k 9 - ter-Despite the loss of three var- by illnesses, the Blue squash team

sity players, the Andover squash- won their fourth match in a ow,By Juan Segarra - team shut out the Exeter racket- this time over the Yale freshmen,

Wednesday, February ;. An- men, 5-0,' dropping only- three 5-2.over-Pacedby Captain John. games. Fernando Gonzalez r e p a c edi~ly~s15 del gbals, the An-- Captain Fernando Gonzalez, tak- Farlow Blakeslee again as topoebasketball squad romped man and defeated Ed- Bartlett,vrteSuffolk University Fresh- ing- over V'arlow Blakeslee's top 16-14 11-15, 15-7, 16-14. Gonza-

enfor their second victory, -of position, downed Peter Wilson, lez' steadiness was too much forheseason, 96-71. 15-10, 11-15, 15-10, 15-9. Wilson his capabl6 opponent. In the secondAfter a slow moving first period who won a game from Interscho- position, Don Ross up from the

,whicili bo~~~ffi~t~eams exercised ball ~~lastic champion, Larry Terrell, fourth spot, crushed Dave Bar-ntowith Andover working the. recently, seemed slightly out ofj nard, 16-14, 15-12, 15-7 for his

to Hilley for the shot, An- ~~~~~~~~~~touch, whereas Gonzalez playie-d tenth victory this-- year against -over began to fast break and his best match in several weeks. I no defeats. Ross's accurate place-

ediately moved from a 22-17 In te se~ond position, Don Ross metwas again the deciding fac-stperiod deficit to -a 23-23 tie. extended his undefeated record ~by tent

nohrfast break and a couple overpowering his opponent, Hall orJohn Spiegel contained a fastffoul shots by lower Bruce 18-17, 8-17, 15-10. Hall, new to hard hitting, agressive opponent,

eaewho scored 15 points, put'- squash this year could not win Jeff Graham, 10-15, 15-12, 15-12,ahead 27-23. Then An- ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ te ecsive oit.18-1q'-~vith his outstanding agility.

ovbegan to press. A 30-foot- Third- man -o h le John In the fourth position Andover-uniper by Hilley got the Blue Spiegel taking Dave Johnson's po- alum~nus Dave Roe showed tre-oling and Andover was never sition, eked out a five-game- vic--- mendous determination to -beat

eaded -again. Andover capitalized tory, 4-15, 15-11, 15-12, 2-15, 15-12 PA's Erich Wise, 15-5, 15-11, 15-n Suffolk ball handling mistakesovr HwR ice. iky12

heb~ra u -tesoe o3-0a took an early lead in the first and -Davis Everett, fifth Blue play-buzrsounued to end the half. fourth games and did not let pie- er, fell to John Stewart, 15-11,

-The second half saw Andover~ gel get started. Erich Wise, up 10-15, 18-16, 11-15, 15-6, but ac- till pressing and forcing Suffolk from the sixth spot, ddvned Exe- cording to Coach Hoitsma played

make costly-mistakes. Hearey ter's fourth man, Peter BassetI quite well. Sixth man A. . Es-nd Hilley combined for 10 15-14, 15-14, 15-10. Wise, enjoyingi courela. downed Yale's Pitt,_ 18-14,tright points to make the score the attention the extremely large 12-15, 15-11, 15-7. Lower Paul

9.30 before Suffolk connected on Exeter crowd was- giving him, Brown, taking -over for Chrisfoul shot. Andover set the pace came from -behind time after time Keppelman, played his- first var-

-r the remaining minutes and to pull out the victory. sity match as seventh man andnded the third period with an un- defeated---another Andover alum-

urontable lead of 71-4871In the A.J. Escourela, replacing Davis nus, Bill Call, 15-12, 15-11, 11-15,atquarter Coach DiClemente Senior Steve Sullivan gets off a ump shot as Elwyn Lee sets for the Everett, found -the Exeter courts 15-14. In a non-counting matchped the bnch and the subp rebound in Wednesday's win against Suffolk. PtobTO tohslknad - isuu the eighth Blue player, Rick Kirk-

et the Blue-lead at 23 points as PhotobToptohislikng,-andwith hsuulpatrick, a lower, topped a thirdeyforced Suffolk t work the foi-wd_ by John Hilley who come the paralizing press by, finesse crushed Stanley, 15-10, 15- Andover alumnus; PYaul' Henry, '

alaround and lose valuable time, Isced 3.-Mon er nadfltohe1,512in the fifth position. 15-11, 15-7, 9,15, 15-14. hegame ended with a decisive Saturda, February5 on eme fe edn ttehl

6-71 victory for the Blue. 4 (Hemo- he Andover --basket- 40-3 5.The victory gave the cagers a balrersnwere unable to fight off a The Blue went- ahead in the Si mi m ers Edge D eerfield , O n

-6 recordand snapped a six-game well executed zone press by Mount first half on Greg Bruce's 12osing streak. The high scorers I Hermon, who overcame a half poits. Running a fast- break L* lU

bored34 ponts fr theloses, -asecon halfteam col ntovr heneHerie poffiblne nde kep Fi aRelay; Blue Sets Rec d-the game were Godfrey, who time deficit to win 95-4 Andover, Whnvr osblAdoe p

ored 4 poits fo theloser, -a econdhalfteamcouldnot oer-whenHemBysToddblaCohend ByersyTotouchenBderstotcDeeorfDeeridloppo-oforced to slow the pace Andover Saturday, February 5; Veerfield, nent Phippen to- cop second place.patterns against a man-to-man - Andover's final 400-yard free- I Deerfield's Clark came within

1TUI At T Z.Lll ~~~~~~~UtIlon; defense worked well as Bruce con- style relay team of Lee Eddy, Jefone-tenth of a second of the schoolS~ers iulru ixuiuiau ~ nected frequently from the high Ryder, Rainetl-MacGuire, and Doug 100 free record clocking a 50.4.pot The half ended with the Blue Crichton today churned to a 3:27.6 Rainer MacGuire and Paul Wiskeake SPS, Proctor Tn-meet ~~~~ahead-40-35.Take- SP S, Proctor Tri-meet P's ~ ~~~~~~~~Andover school and Deerfield pool finished two, three for the Dol-

in theSlalo was ead b Dick in the second half, the Hermies record to clinch-- the Andover- 'phins in that event. Clark hadby Baxter-Lanius- nte tlal e evetswthIpt-on-a-zone-press-and-scored-14- -Deerfield -swim--meet---53-42.---The- -o--h-20-re-erir-with-at

SuraJanuary 29; Kim ball Trafton, who won th vn wt traight points to make the score Mermen trailed Deerfield for-most 1 60-fot-eaig-ota nnion Carnival - In PA's best time of 67.2. Jim- Platz edged Hank 440before the Blue knew what of the meet, but one-two victories 11:56.0l f Aort er.ng-os n

ki 'showing i~ several years, An- Pfiefle rseodpaebarzo-hit them. Andover lost its outside in the 100 yard back and 400 yard Another key first for Andoverover Placed third in the famous slim margin of .05 seconds, threat and its big rebounders when free ignited the upsurge whichI came in the 400-yard freestyle as

imall ion Carnival. Holder- The Downhill produced the same Greg Bruce, Bob Campbell and climaxed the relay and the team Bill Bostian and Alberif Raurell

8R.3.96o frthe witur eventsta. oer story. Trafton and Platz finished John Hilley fouled out. When An- victory, picked up eight points. osta'-refu vns 1-2 and four Andover skiers dover broke the press, Mount -

ont Academy' edged the Blue forfiihdi th to te beidHr n'tw 64"20pudo- Jon Noll, the only double victbr winning time was 4:27.8.-'Thec bynsh.08 pointstn bhid with'stwa6 365.7pun for t ____

ish.b KUA Dprieswi a t5.7 them. wards permitted no second shots frte Blue, took the 100 back double win placed the MenrmenIrish. KUA, Deerfield and St. ~as they swept the boards. For the stroke with a 56.8, setting a Deer- ahead of Deerfield for the -first- ~

a'srounded out the field. PA walked off with the combined rs ftegm noe a field pool record and missing byI time, a lead which they neverThe Nordic -events proved to be championship with a total of 392.4 unabl o tge ga Allnde the jus to-tenths of a second his: surrendered. -

dover's forte, but PA could points.- This final- score included- game ended 95-74.- own school record which he set last In the dive, Deeflield's Burnsanage only a fourth in the Aliethe meet of January 15. Proctor's year. Noll also won the 200-yard acciumulated an 83.40 point total,vnts. - 368.7 score was- good for second, fBruce Hearey was high scorer individual medley, clocking 9 taking the event and missing byAndr6 McMullen placed second- -place. Ifr the Blue with 18 points. 2:13.8. In the 100 back, Bob (Continued on Page Six) -

11- the jumping, while -Jimmy- latz took third for a major-up-atin that event. Richard Bush,a

__ PA Hockey Stretches- Undefeated String To 10-fihe irt~ihto ay ___

liifs Catan obift Hogen help -_

d te Bue ithan eighth.-

1.4 ovry Dikarato'sA Winchester High, DartmouthiFreshmen Falltime narrow course1

8.8 oodforsecbnd place. Chris affrty--pacd sixth. Andover By Jhn Williams 40 feet out on the left side. Skip ~ ;'r g~OfteNordic combined by three Wednesday, Februaryl 2; An- Frreeman next converted a Turco -

insover Holderness.'-- dover-The Blue pucksters coasted pass and Pete Franchot stuffed -

The Alpine events were dis- to an 8-0 victory over Winchester in a perfect center from Warren8 . ~itng. Captain Hogen took High today, as goalies Wayne Baker. Chris Gurry wound up the o- -

nhPace in the two run slalom TracyjLanLiiiL)4unroe comnbine~d scoring for the first period, knock- - -

t-a time of 84.3 seconds. for Andover's first shut out of ing in his own rebound after aCale Sawyer followed in tenth the season. This same Winchester pass from Freeman.le.The Giant Slalom was very team had beaten Melrose 1-0. For With 131;32 to go in the seconds. as Hgen again paced the An- the Blue it was a different story period, Dick Delaney grabbed the

ove skiers; -unior Hank Pfiefle from the Melrose game as they puck off the left boards and skat-as second high niar-for PA. jumped OJT to an early 4-0 lead and ing around behind the goal, - --

Saturday, February 5; Proctor kept theWinchester defense busy squeezed i in the right corner. - -

cademty- Andover today- over- for the 'rest of the afternoon- with Ford Fraker complemented this --- - - - . ~ - -

hlnd St. Paul's and Proctor in A barrage of shots. -performance, racing right up the-- ---- ~- ----

the Scol' annual t-et Charlie Samson opened the middle to tally.-In the third per- - -'---- KI2.striking eversal of last scoring with 13:21 to go in the iod, Jack-Turco and Dick Delaney Wnhse oledost i ne obokso yBu etwn .I

Weksform, the Blue dominated first period, bouncing the puck each lit the red light, Turco with Clit as Eddie Wright struggles with three Winchester players.!l jie eents. A 1-2-3 sweep into the right corner from about - -(-Continued on Page Six) Poob O

Page 6 - The Phillipian F'ebruary. 9,

Mt. Hermon)- Topples Wrestlers 24-17, PA -Tracksters-Cop Trt-meet; Mt. Hermon DoDespite Craig Miller, Rob COnlin Pins Defeat Boston English, Tech. Ando-ver Riflelue

Saturday, February 5, 14It.;Her- Mike Bradley worked his way -AY Evam Thomnal lish eipied Andy Abbott's effort P w l . ,Dmon-The-Mt. Hermon wrestling to a 5-2 advantage in the first per- Friday, February 4, Andover Ias the-Blue captured a second and Pow ll eads JJI~

-team overcame a 17-13 deficit to- iod, but-~eventually lost 95. Roger The PA tracksters with -Well- a fourth in the broad ump. StraFbur ;Aday, innig th las thre mach- mithcompletely outclassed his balanced team effort, swept a tri- In -the mile, a strong showing Hro lmatigt

es, and defeated the Andover var- opponent and won easily 12-0. mieet with Boston Tech. and Boa- by Andover's Earl McEvoy, Greg season l, tt nue masity 24-17. Craig Miller and Rob John Abernethy, wrestling his ton English, -today-Andover 42, Myers atnd John Clapp, topped onlyseonslwthBu- Conlin both pinned for the Blue, first match after being in the In- Tech. 281,, English 25%. Fine by Tech.'s Konovan with a 437.9 fellotoPMt.Helmon tod, ide

Miller; ahead 4-1 early in the firmary 7-sveral weeks with hepe- performances by Rick Noble, Paul time, allowed the Blue to jump to BrnPwl 10,poiesecond period, turned his maxj titis, was ahead 5-1 with thirty Miller and Ike' Lasater paced a f0-pofint lead. The highschoolers only bright spot of he matchoover and pinned him with. a half- second& remaining in the last the Blue, then dominated the 600 with an a score that tied forhghonelson. Conlin,, still undefeated, frame, but gave up a takedown In the opening event, Paul Mil- English first and a Tech, second with Hermon's Margeson.built up a substantial lead itrthe and a predicament to tie 55 ler heaved the shot 44'9"1 to win and third. (178), Key (175), Weil (174),first two periods and finally got -

his pin at the end of the tiv AdHenway was una -th shtpt-Wiea' Jo-o-~llade-(-170)-stagdifperiod, just as the buzzer sound- contain his opponent's switch as chelis took _a_ third in -the competi- tance runner, out raced Zedros of round out the Blu scrng. Wed. he dropped his match Uprtion. T !ech, in a thrilling 1000. Dave a 1-2 record- now, including a p

Bob Waters, substituting fpthe In the 45-yard: high hurdles, Porter and Derek Rainey also ouseqnpitvcryvrHOCKEY ~~~~~~~first two men in his weigh cass - Tech.'s Thompson raced to-victory placed for PA. Lower Ike Lasater vossvnpitvcoyoe

Captain Sam Miller and Artie with-a 5.8-time as Andover's Eric cleared the bar at 6'2" to cop the Hermon, the team should still(Cnthiented froml -Page Fie)sn Harris, both in the Infirmary- Almquist ripped off a second, and high jump as Cai Urodfvrdt aeteItrco

his hirtenthgoalof te sesonwrestled a good match but lost Captain Jim Fabiani took third, leaped 5,10,' to take second. Despite much individual excelle-- Saturday, February 5; Dart- 6-0. - Boston English's Jones- outran In the -final event of the meet, no efetv em obntomouth-The Andover hockey team - Tech.'s Kiley, with a 5.7 time in a PA team of Fabiani, John-Men- nefcieta obntoextended its undefeated, untied Dee van- Wyck -was-leading-his- -the-50 --yard-dash-'while -Fabiani--denhall-Aimquist-nd-Chris-Mar em-erge-as- of-yet,-and-this-streak to ten games today, dwz- man 5-3 with only fifteen seconds again ran a consisteht third, was trounced by both English and be the decisive factor in the ing the Dartmouth frosh 7-5. Ed- to go, but was switched and had A 20'6"1 leap by.Roberts of Eng- Tech. teams in the relay, three weeks. --

die Wright's second hat trick of to settle for --- 5 tie. Mt. Her-the season was the big gun in mon's captain then caught ByronCoach Harrison's arsenal. - Powell in a "head figure-four" -

Dartmouth- drew first blood- with and pinned him at fifty-nine sec--- Jerry Cann firing in a fastbreak onds of the final period to put the _ I t ea f e *I L-shot at 10:04 of the first period. Hermies ahead to stay 18-17. -b a fr4 t l

Five minutes later Wright evenedthe score with, an assist from Ford Kit Wise followed with an 8-5 -T

Fraker and Peter Franchot.- Cap- loss, making it 21-17 and putting In~troduces " H I D tain Gurry took the puck from the pressure on Ray Hudak in the behind his own cage with :39 left unlimited. division. Hudak had toand stuffed it past'the Griengoiflie get a fall in order for Andover to- O eD for the tiebreaker. - win, but despite his efforts, he Deal O eD a Two

The second period was all Blue lost a 4-3 decision. Rg 12as Skip Freeman and Wright each Reg $.2hit the, nets-once, while the Turco-SW M IG-RAK ST * -Delaney combination nicked the (ContIN frmPgBiv)2HmuresR E FSposts many times. twotns o agtte schoolabugrsjuc

In the rough third period Dave Cerealhsof &pinCreamcoo-- Goodenough scored for the Green record he set earlier this year. FrenheFies2 o Cam1eSecond and third in that event Eggs Fieafter three minutes. D e I a n e y werePeteAlla andEaraBrus

bounced a slapshot past the ofr Anoer AlCoke ordFrenchBToasgoalie for --his first goal and Largevr o-FechTosWrightjfollowed with his last tally One of the most exciting races -LwthrausgeCroBco

on an assist from Fraker and of - the meet was the 100-yard Coffeasae or eaco-Franchot. Delaney tobk advantage breastroke. Out of the last turnCoferTa

of a one-on-one fastbreak and it was still neck and neck, but-

Goodenough, Treadway, a n d winner-with a 1:10.2 clocking. Ed -5c -- 95 t~ Fahey scored successively for Dart- Davison and- Stu -Sessions-touched-mouth, but the comeback fell right behinid foi the Blue.-short. THE ILICOFFEE MILL __ - 12-5 Main.Street __

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