LT v Legu - The Phillipian

Transcription

LT v Legu - The Phillipian
1Y
Colle,
g,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~e.
/
igures
In
Sho
.,~
r~~~~~~r
7Iccpan
Smok ing, Trial Parietals
v
In its meeting last Tuesday night, 'he faculty's decision, "Two imthe Phillips Academy faculty voted potantireasons for the decision are
*down the Advisory Committee's ban that the revised smoking rule will
on smoking, and ammended the brin A bt into the community and
poosal to read that the school will reliev e t epressure on those students
torbid smoking, "Except for those who w uld havp smokesl neverwho have completed a PA 'smoking theless.I According to lDr. Sizer,
ieducation' course and received. "The vote was very close, it could bave
parental perimission to smoke, this to gone eit~ er way."
Itake place only in a number of apPrior to the final decision, the
Jrp~t designated areas." The faculty voted against a proposal,otofsxenPmn
'faculty also passed the AdCom's submitted by the cluster Deans which
revised stand on parietals,' changing read, "Smoking is forbiddep to all
only the phrase "if 'their experience studentsi with the following ex-onofte.1Advrsniswh
suggests such steps the Clusters may ceptionsi those who are part of a
approve limited, planned exceptions smoking withdrawal' program ai~d
to the rule in the winter and/or pring who havoq permissipn to smoke as part
teiins" to "plfanned exceptions in the of this pogram; and those who have
latter half of the year."
completed an educational program on
Narrow Vote On Smoking
the physkcal dangers of smo~ing and
Victory andtne visited PA lat
oid~y.
~~The
amendment of the AWlom's whose parents specifically request
proposal on smoking was one of four that they be pmitted to smoke.
Director of Collegb Placemelit nine more thar last year, admitting 31I
alternatives which Headmaster Persons who are thus excepted may Robert Hulburd announced last ek out of 43, while Cornell chose 11 f
Theodore Sizer proposed to the smoke
nly in designated areas. that Harvard University has accept d 'the 31 Andov.-r applicants, putting
faculty. In a memo outlining his Students1'violating this s kigrule 40 out ~if128 Phillips Acaden~ three on its
~itin I Columbia
position, Dr. Sizer said that the may be reqie toji hs"mking applicants, an increase of o ~s took seven of the13 Papint
proposal leaves room for both student withdrawal" program; reae in- comparedlto last year..Yale Universiy with one on
e*waiting' list, while
and paetlai
prna op~tions, and reinforces fractions will be conside ed
major accepted
out of 81 applicapts, a Stanford acce ted 18 ut odf 49.
the school's stance against smoking. offense!. Math instrudtor Frank drop of nine from last year, a
putting 1 on t e waiting ist,
He continued, "The proposal creates Eccles, next year's West uad South Princeton admitted 27 out of
~ Amherst, Williams, and Wesleyan
a problem for housemasters andClseDanrmrkdoth new seniors, a jump of 12 from 1972
took 11I,' 15 and 7 out of 27, 23 and I5
'cluster deans concerning students soigrue
Ia
apehnsiv Sixteen students were placed on te applicants,
espectively,. Vassar
permission to smoke, and brings in abu aigprnsdtrierules
Harvard waiting list flowed b Ys~
azlmittc~i cight out f 22 with two on
the problem obutt rooms." Abbot taapltohesunsatschool, with 12 and Princeton with six.
thewai~injq lisl and six of the 10 PA
Dean. of Studies Carolyni Goodwin, Alsuetshldb
beto live
Other Ivy LeagueScol
Whowll beDeanof
th Acaemy nxt uder one set of rules."
Dartmouth accepted 18 of the
year, commented, "I think the issue is
Parletals
seniors applying, placing two o t
so complex that it's wise to try a Concerning parietals the faculty waiting list, while Brown took 1
picnstMT
-~
j
workable
compromise."
Associate passed
Headmaster Simeon Hyde- outlined
the' Adtom's
iosa
(continued on page 4) -
in- 'of 48, placing six on the waiting list
Thle University of Pennsylvania toot
eracped
o th Carolinar ad 10 Uensts
on Nth aroglist, pac't eightuts
ofr25 and six ot of
Duke University accepted 12 of the
fro PA wile the
University of Viria adited nine1
tokou
of1.ocn sxo
a
ti15
of1.lcn sxo h
aiigls,
while Occidental turnd
down only
apied. h 3 ~dv seir
h
Colgate admitted seven out of 19
'26applicants
/
Legu
LT
putting four-on the waiting list while
sueve ok
itwaitin lit.o 2n aing'Colby ook it
of1puting
ditn
e
othwainls.LstyrDk
accepted 10 out of 24 Phillips
Academy applicants, while Colgate
took nine of 16 seniors.
Mr. Hulburd commented that there
were 175 Ivy League, acceptances,
~nine more than last year. Hie added
that although the Princeton figures
were up, Yale acceptanc~es were down,
"Becauie they are cutting the size of
their freshmen male class." He added
that about 50 per cent of the PA
seniors will be accepted at their first
ghoice school.
G
e t uts
dois o P rod
GI reek
l y er e ro - en 'i 1/Jy
Bo rCNm s Kas r Needio - n Chief; ~ThePhilli
h
caeyplayed
sAadm Greek
Also Next Year ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Department
I produce passages
PrentkisCrawford W l Aso Serve
Perlceiromene, as the spring Classics
l/irrro
by senior Per Fernberger,1
while upper Bill Crawfdrd will assume,
the role 6f a shifty slave. The wise old
Senior George Van Hzna
Mirror
Ehrlich
Co-editors
and
~~~~~~ Th ie.,
~~play.
which exists only in
The comedy was written in the year
I~~~~' Ted Pease recently Kpnen
Man.
o
hanesfragmer
ts, will tkplconhesps
32 dJ.C. by the playwright Menander.
KaKisesaeTh MasapoitedPalnFrmtoCangshe
Kaierloossfrwrdeotisienuesheuay'entin
hisonMay22-3.
o1S973 Phl74
isa treten sudetsfttetAisoteia
MenThe
(42-91y.C)
wssorthei97-74
V1i schd6l year. A second board position
as The Man, or Editor-in-chief. I-e'oit!ad
etr
rudtre
pioohr
and
botanist
on the magazine, facetiously tefmed
commented, "We plan to release houses! beloiiging to Polemon, Theophrastus, who is best known for
Me-Jane, w'ill be held by a girl chosen
separate issues each term-a larie Pktaicos, nd~ Myrrhine. The plot his book The Characters, Although
by Kaiser,
one for prose and pictures and la revolves arounilG~ea whose over scholars have proved Menander to be
Other 'Men'
smaller one for poetry, since I Pep Polemon catche h~rksing another the oiriginator of, European for m~d
Tony Prentakis will serve as Thec
sonally feel' that poetry reads mo e man and in, in!hi ae uts her hair, comedy, very little~of his work exists
Money Man, usually known as
smoothly on a page by itself. We also off. Translated, ercelromene means today. Up until 1905, there was no
~~~~~~~~~~~~~Busines~
s Manager, while Jack
hope to expand or other activitie , "She who was sh~rn."
evidence of Menander's works and at
-'Crawforol will assume the respon- fr example, like sponsoring t
PA senior Gecdrge Sumner will 'p~esent all that is known include one
'at
'
*
sibilitieslof The Meany Man, a special
~~~~assistant editor in charge of personnel. The board will also include
Mary Ileson in charge of layout,
Robert, Preston and Karin Tulis as
Contributing editors~ and John
Friendenburg as Public Relations
_J
U~~er
Kaiser
Paul
recent "Feast Your Ears" concert. I
'direct Perice omene, while senior
all, I feel there is a ~reat deal of Ilaten 'Travis isset ill sprve as producer.
literary and creative talent within th
The part of Poldmon, a bragart
PA community and I hope it, wil
soldier, will be paybd by senior Tom
enrich next year's Mirror. Perhaps Ch am brs.
bbdt senior Alex
some literary giant will surface on our
oidfswlprta
Gyea.
pages.
a ong playboy, will be
*Moschion
complete play, and fragments of four
others.
When asked about the nature of
the humor in Pericelromesfe Director
Sumner quipped,' "Wine, Wom en,
ndog!I'apayojut
t c
and enjoy!"'
Andover
Students Boycott' Cla~~es 4f-Am Sbciety Reapp~oi, ts Henderson As Chairman;
in' Protest Of Ruling On Parietals Padial, Googer .1 Seve As Vice -Chairman'Secretary
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I
Over
I
9
one
hundred Phillips numbered over one hundred
hlisAaei
oit
Academytudentsboycottd
classs When tey finaly reaced GW t
e
ppontedupper IrvinfAHendersb
Acadmytudntsboyottd
casss Whn tey inaly eaced W1 heychair man for the 1973-74 school
year.
Wednesday morning in protest of the met with Doctor Sizer and other UprFlxPda
ilsrei
h
facuilty's rejection of unlimited administrative officials for about one npeyfrexPdipoiio
ofrve parietals. Strikers milled around the hour discussing the parietal issue. chimn
hl uprGe
ogrja
.
-
.1
I
hsscn
as headthis
of the
'He
staled, erIthough
yearAf-Am.
hasn't
been perfect and we haven't acopihdaIo u ol ei
a
bhemsen
year, w rep atel
sen
aitc esn
h
entered Morse Hall, occupied the dissatisfaction over lack of provisions repSeceAtarrVnss
ry
n
e
1 fhv abakcm
steps
and ofSam
spke toPhi,fr parieals overthe nex year.
any Junir er
etatvemunity
and ebelieve that Andovers~teso Se
itelobbyd soeGW. were ioant ofe the facutyeciMay
;Jno
Rpeettv
Angel can serve a p rpose for black people.
Dter s
n imith e o mmn
o
weperimeorntalf
f
ptealty deion
Larriuz, Lower Representative'Tyrone There are t I many things at AnThereas noimmedite
coment
f expeimentl paritals n thePolk, and- Upper Reprpsentativoi -dover that sh ulci not be a part ofa
from the administration concerning second half of next year.
Wli oisnec
oeu ote
on lc ~e u eaeotmsi
the arlyi'rnorniig- protest.
One pIrotester, who asked to remain WileRbnonec
roes~pcte y'
black
uwaeotmsi
of prtestes
anoymous
firt statd "Th protsters Lower
Upr
and
Senior' and look for ard to iproving the
small nucleus
i dfpoetr
dntthnsheracin
wud Representative positions, repciey'bakAndove comnty. Relations
appeared utside Commonsat
'a.71
7:5 change the rule, u thoped- itwud
twud In addiinupr
dtoup
Bill Lewis will ill at PA s a woe mutimprove with
and proceeded to recruit students as increase debating on the subjecto the newly conceived post of Social - cdther . com nnte,
especially
they' entered or left the building. parietals. We felt that students hantFunctions Committee Chairman.
minority comn unte nd this again
Within minutes the body of students been allowed a voice in the decision."
Henderson expressed optimism fr is one 6f our ain goals."
.
.
IJI
Upper Irvin Henderson
. ry~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
APRILL19I1973
PAGE TWO
Judge Gesell E~~~pr'sellViews OnLw
something socially
accmls
want
he PPIAN~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~desirabe
what a ayer can o if he puts himself to a
them a little push while b ing consistent
with the law, you may often do this, either
consciously or unronsciously These are not
problemworks at it, and has the necessary petty premises ,ye're talkingiabout. Let me
give you an illustration: I happen to believe
energy.
Q.Oliver Wendell i-olmes. another very strongly in sexual equality-I think
distinguished alumnus here' stated that aw~ women ought to get payed the same as men,
you see law as for the same job.. I suppose if I ever did aj
Will gow! with society.
case where that issue is present, L"will be
in the 70's, ,and i so,-'where?
~~~-,T
I don't
ADAMg LERNER
President
~~~~~~~~~.AD
~~~~growing
BETSY
there's any limit to
affected to some degree in interpreting the
statutes. There isn't any way you can put life
th 9rWhat-are we, remember to-.put the law before your own
s~~~~~~trtbumIng ito eh
o o aboutopollution Our court now predjudices.
Business Manager
Q. Dring your years~ on the Securities
jammei full of litigatioi involving tl~ie
THOMAS LENAGH
was
ExchangefieldCommission,
on the
programsgoing
o various
impact
Executive Editor
in the nation.
of concern business
to and
the principal
owyo'r
and federal
environment
confctn busi esand social Do you think that Currentdmsicise
W~~~~~~~~~baancte
Cit pan Igsi e and more in reflect a change in this field of concern?
Larry Kemp
A. When I got out of Andover, which was
re throttling
inds. On iis
peole'
Brad Geier
I
th ems elv e and m re ener tic steps are before the depression, there was a great deal-'
GERHARD GESELL
_.rcuia t'u"- managerb
Adrvertiing managers
~~~~~~~~~~~~~being
o osed to clean out r slums, move of discussion on the freelent'erprise system.
Keith K 'a
The Honouraole Gerhard A. Gesell, the peopleffo uburbs, nd perptaepossible Today, we still fortunately have the free
KeitKoa
Margaret Downs
ibffis, law enterprise system, but I'm not sure that
systems o mass trahsit-. In
recipient of P's Claude Moore Fess
Mark ei gri~
Tom Sulcer
for distInguished alumni, wa n serves asth fulcrum of econflicting people getting out of Andover, collegqs O,
Eitor Ptioograhy f~darsAward
Assisant
times. I coming into the law are quite as
campus last Wednesday and Thursday forces. Ithikthesle are etig
think, that we've had a materialistic in their interests as when 'i got
visiting classes and giving a speech. 'Judge, don't reall
ouofshl.Itikhresmreneet
PA 27, has been the United States
Gesell,
EDITORIAL BOARD
ouofshl.Itikhresmreneet
terofre fre
in
reugnef
lDitctJdefrteDsrcofClbi
ater
in becoming involved in aspects of the
hoe
rciiterst
al cqality;
speech'and
general
welfare ete scroaeofcas
always
with
away.
They'te
aren't
goin
tgo
ligsas
ath
dsin 1968. Amng hriscn
Chris Finn, Richard Hersh, Richard KIMball
In the ~~~~~
us. Furthermore, the weproblem of certainly business itself is much more conwh~~~~ch
legal made
decision
abortion
I
~~~District of CQoumbla, anothe~ which accomodating our constitutio al rcsses scious of these areas than they were forty
to changi ng technological and social years ago. I think a lot more people want to
restricted use of FBI fngerprint data to the
developments is going to Iea recurring give more of their life to others than in those
utcnda
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~administrateo ofeea
issue. Thefe's never going to be dull time if earlier years.
to issea n'n nsopn h
aLI
lrfsa
Q: Asia federal judge are you expected to
you're a lawyer.
from printing the Pen~WashngtonT Post
Tuesday's
faculty meeting
in any single legal issue?
Q. f it is true that humans re incapable excel
The following s a Phillipian
tan Pap
Last
~~~~~~~~~etigfavorably
A.uN.sOdcorsesIfainaubgtctyape~
Las
i iyae
A
o fcusImi
decsions,
Icomplet~y
unbias'
at of' making
eel odce
=nere o Jug
irprised many with its decision to adopt a limited
anme fcleauseu vr
a-adIhv
ten
'stroking rule, but the decision to partially restrict Thursday;,oyutytocu.t~i
bias case I get comes to me by lot, anti over the
tempting to ascerfain yr priulr
ot ofallthemetods
Q. Dthtyofee
period of a year, I get every kind of catse you
before giving a opinion?
we have at our disposal, the, law offers the
Custer experimentation in parietals seenms to inAE
EdRITOPR
t of all) we've gta
A F
ManagY
EOToRA
Editor
Managing Elditor
Sports Editor
SotEdorgoing
(1A-1P;'4OPHERiGANNON
Associate Sports Eitor
WilliamCanriing
WilamCnnnlemans
William Butfenweiser
lot
f
prolilems to d alowith. What's
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~technological
'is
SJelf-DJeil
d cate a continued lack of trust on the part of the
,f culty over the clusters' ability to snake wise
d cisions independently,
Thertu
greatest opportunity for social change?
o
hn tgysa nroscac
beA
becreative. As sciety is becoming more and
~more complex, solutions are less, and less
~cisionsindpendently..obvious. Alawyer is able to bring to bear on
~a
problem a understanding of noi only theI
careful
Through
~~~~~p~anning
ulAndoverisand a mini mum of political f es but also our cons titutional
,
a
are through the
ndovr'scluster system survives as reqieet.Orcages
leitusiam,
eas
tte
a
etrb
lao
tI
original
a adequate social btnit. YetI the~ cluster's
in lotsf
nthe streets, we'll be
~ ~ ~ wemk h
prpose has frqetybeen envisioned as that ofoftube
A lawyer i theman~ wlho can b a erce
"commnity."
* *s rvingautonomous
as a~relatvely
a point of view,' and yt
poaoito
istainms
I this
t& succed,
idealis the admi
ork, in the 1good sense of the word, within
tileclusters
togrant ome degreeof selfwilling
sstem r ther thantrying to tear it down.
-, wllig
tle custes
tograt sme dgre othes
I think law ers have always been a great
d-termination. nywe h lsesrcieti
creative for e. After 'all, all judges are
ptre
wer will
sensea ~of com unity begin to lawyers. Most legislators are lawyers. Many
d velop. Previous attempts at self-determination, in the execitive branch have been lawyers,
and it emsas if he breadth of thiriig
s ch
Quad
as theWest
orth Charte fiasco, wr
and the habits of thought that you learn as a
whil still in
s uashed
adminisration
bythe
te lawyer are 'u~hat people turn to when they
experimental stage.
'
"The whole probl
of accomodating our constitutional
po ess t chan igtcn~o a and scild eomet wilbeaicrrnjsse.'a wlls ve sth
fulcrum for 'of the onflicting
rces."
could drean, of. There's no specialization.
in many places, a Federal judge is the only
federal, judge in 'his particular city' or
and verything I comes to him.
Actually I think the theory is that the'
diversity of a judge's experience may add in
some way to the common sense of the
judgements he makes in a particular area.
This way, he doesn't get comnpletely diverted
by all the expertise and can see the' larger
picture.
A. Thisl is wuiat Holme 1called the
bviously
"inarticulate major prms"
try not to 1e4 my bias leadime as ray. I know
tinswchIfllocality,
tathr'resm
strongly about; I don't think th e's a man
,on the bench who doesn't feel str ngly about
something. Afer a long career o the bench,
uv been
you're the pioduct ofieveryhin'
You have to balancetswihyu
obligations as a judge aildyoriwfth
law. If you have biases, andyucngv
.through.
dven the
p rietals ruling are steps in the ight direction. Now
D
is the time to prove once and for all that the cluster
a
'fz
i n
A I
ei h
Mn u i n A t r
J~he present disciplinary system and
-o
O
w
lt
N 'h
ellarg
I
I;By Peter
Thursday, April Sth, sixteen stud ns and toss well and there you have it-Twelfth Night,
four teachers ar~ived from the Ma chester 'or What You Will, with the latter title perhaps
o~umt
hspao
more appropriae
School; to complete a teatr
~Grammar
hd in \~~~~~~~~~~~~~
eiseven prompted the fastidious diarist
ewe h MGS ~n A
e a
eer a lxhnepora
anuvet
s
detemnn
isiaoivrecomaitte
They brought with them a supeltie Samuel Pepys to comment, after seeing the play
minor reg~~~~ilations
a general ~~~~
d terminingunder
Pwboe"production of Shakespeare's Twelft Ngtfor tIoe third time in 1669, "one of the weakest
egri
ft rnework established b the faculty as a w~hole; 3) Sace
plays that I ever saw on stage."1
with which theyI tounded PA audie csls
13,:4 &Pawnrokm r
clster comittees or Satdaye A ntige
student-acult
'You'd have a hard time getting the majority
Friday and S a y evenihgs, playin to full
SaudyA rl1,64&8:0pIn
cutrcm itefo
E tablish
of persons present at last week's performances
houses both nights.
Kemper: T e Pawnbroker, directed
et forcement of these r es.
si stemn can stand up on its own: ) Revise the
p esent system for discussion of community issues
tc make way for "clusterlCoops;-.2) Createl cluster
1tdetfau
man who strives to survive the
hisaelrsw uder persecuiion as Jew by the Nazis. Rod
Steiger, .wh stars as thelpawnbroker,
the e tt:"Everything I ever
loved was tknfom me and I still
didn't' die."
Owning a dismal shop in Spanish
et Harlem, te pawnbroker wor ked
under the ugly face of corruption.'H
ment in such a system would increase tdn
pect of rules and generate a realI sense of was cont nu ally harassed by
munity
inolvement Respectand involvement prostitutes nd thieves who simply
two elements sorlely needed at PA, 'and only his past. By blotting out the past and
present hor rs, he slowly softened t
i them as a basis will clusters finally emerge
his young, troubled Puerto Rican
fr
asmpaper-tigers.
the~lr role
hi me Sanchez), only later
fromstheir
paper-tigers.assistant
role
to destroy t e boy by sayirng, "You are
nothing to 'Pe."
H-is
me mories are ad roitly
dramatized with frequent flashbacks
to his earl er years. n a teeming
subway, h sees the boxcar-prison
allow
sucti
systema
sue a systememorieso'
Once
way,
under
and faulty toevaluate
s allofstudent
goups
r onnsolutionsand
vote othe
sml rgrobles
their ~ Icarves
subsequent
enfotce ter
i~,dependently
re ulations. While such rules would have to accord
wth previous school-wide policy, the pesnal
el
re
ar
.N
'and
'finds
.-
-Erratum-
i
~where
his son was
trainpled
un-
derfoot. A another point, he is
The April 12 PHILLIPIAN erroneously~reported
asPresient o the reminded y a Negro harlot wvho
t CarlesGalbiti
e eectio of
strips to the waist enticing him to pay
II
Ntural History Club. In actuality, Peter S.,'Cohan double for a golden locket that he was
replaced John Oldham as President, while albiati 'orice forced to watch his naked wife
to Nazi.
to.
submit
as treasurer.
reained
hisposition
~~I
sub
treasurer.
Nazi.
retained his position as
'
,
typical seventeenth century fluff in t cin-audience thoroughly enjoyed themselves and
indicated those sentiments by giving the casta
media del'arte tradition with the p pit
disguises, double takes, mi~istaken id nttestanding ovation-and for good reason, too, as
this was some of the best theatre to have ever
snarled love affairs. The PloI elwt
somewhat coy fittl~coquett~ nameVi' a who appeared at PA. Perhaps some specifics on the
itself would be in order: first the
has just been resdued fro~ a sipy e k. She
herself in I rna and,~u snger twin cat
it is best to start withi thelonly sane character
rished at pese assu~es his
brotherto have
tei
heetr hw Fse h ese.Ti
identity, presentin herself as 4uuc
e ester Thpar
entreshw:Fetet
the
sn~wt whmshtoheinwaplydb
oa od on
who was immeinsely entertaipiin. Pdriticularly
I
'love,'
amusing were his impersonations of ot e'r
as a go-between YAhhim and the objecof his pompou~ steward. He also did a marveloss
is trg
op-ito
Fhe
lvLd'Oia.tfvihsanversiontth
dkebu vop asIonfrhsm egr singing, and laying upon the guitat Iand
recorder.
boy who is, in realitiy of course,. a girl,
From the moment they walked onstage: Nigel
In the meantimrd, Viola's l6rother, Sebtiazq,
been RoesanJrmy evonSiTyBlc
suddenly appears n the scene-havi
reoscu e om i ntehgay He mineten and Sir Andrew Aguecheek) had the audience
n
h asatiAdukr
nterhns
sisstter ha be
aotthcocuinht
drowned and so, ith that in mind htakes the cthmsi vre euiul oehr
Antonio- sailor who volunteers t er him,kepnthauicerlngnteasess
anid prbeeds tohgoinhsarchof hs fae.an
tiswtanl
The Barmtih'cat peen
fortune in this new land, Illyria. He and Viola
ithAnb a
estdthis
Thle Brtcast
are, of course, clad~identically. Four act later,
mcst-soet hing nwat pA-bunt ai'n
ns'u
aridt Oii ndVoa circun
Shakespeare's day and, which one suspects was
marries Orsino.
idwe'htendti
rsn ntebr'
Sprinkle geilerously with diverse omic
present
ew son
onjss ad
and frce
season lightly with a few
carater,
characters, sesonligtlywit
on pagethis~~~~~~~~~~~~
6)
face. in the bard's mind when he penned
-production
interhnsThFasafa dukdad
'.
.(continiued
The PH,ILLIPIAN
APRIL 19, 1973
Reflections On A Year
Need To StoplAnd Question.
0
f
YALE:RECINT
Two roads diverged in a ellow w~oodI
during my year off from st ool-even i
And be longI
oe traveler,
.tood
I spent he whol yer 'wt hnTV.
And loked
dwn on as fr as!I could
it would still be bte tha going off
To where it bent in the undergrowth:
toI Yale right after Andover. And,
(ironically), there I was oing little
Then toak. the other, as just as fai,
more than watching TV. ut then I
And, having perhaps the bete claim,
came to realise that it was good that
Because it was grassy and wanted wear; the work had' "fizzled out , for I had
Though as for that the passing there
been depending too much n the film
Had worn thenz really about the same,
job d Kevin to see me rough the
And both
that
~~~~~year.'
fhe job had been a seurity, and
morningequall
lay
had fallen into a routine--a routine
in leaves no step had troddent black,
tha I probably would ever have
Oh I kept the first.for aother day,
broken away from had ther still been
Ye;knwigkn
wwaowingoorsofPAto2wh
t viay
wokavilbl.
available.t-fgue
1 doubted if I soumld ever cne back.
~~1
Now... for the block of time from
Itellng
I sall
tis wihb a sgh
up tl nw:sce'titution
Isehere aesnd aesiheascgh
January 15 I've been wo king at a
Two roads derged in a wvood, and Iknow damn well that if so eone had
I took the one less travelled by,
offered me a job nine months go at
And that has m~ade all the difference.
.Sage's "fine foods" st e as an
By David Ware
I quote. "What were your expectations of ale and notchi musicians, athletic supermen, and blah blah woof
what is the reality?" That question shows one t ing that woof. They were selected from probably more than
will be wrong with your feature. I can't tell yo6 te reality 40,000 candidates, most of them probably as qualified if
of Yale because1 don't know what it is. If y)ouL elieved not more so ("Yeah, well, Dad does know te birector of
what I said, you'd be loading yrself with false ex- Admissions, but..."). This is to say nothing of those who,
plectations. An article attempting to describe Ivy League out of fate or perhaps better judgement, 1iqver applied at
schools will create expectations and its a bad idea to all. There's no way that one. student can feel that he's
enter an institution with a lot of prec oncei'ed 'notions having any effect on the insitution, so all the pats 6n the
about that istitution. I suspect that any Ivy League back you received in high school are quickly forgotten.
provides enough freedom so that th¶ individual One seldom feels that he is being patted on the back and
student controls his experience there. So expept ations are often feels that he's being kicked in the arse. But as I said
inapplicable at best and misleading at wor~t. The old before, the individual creates his owril experience here, so
prpis-adjust-to-college-better myth is an example of it's hard to develop a persecution com~plex. At Andov-
,College
'I
iayepecleads
heme
wahd.
cealydeknd
yp
msedn
xettos
h
ebr
fP 7 v$w
a
lal eie ito
uhrt-iuetyp
were placed in my residential college scored five out of scapegoats.,It
was easy to spot The Enemy. In an in-'as large and anonymous as Yale, there are-no
M"~~ or scapegoats.
Frsmnyerhs'abenh.foloe nwage
adventure in freedom that stereotyped expectations
said
itwudb.Iwaaltleisponngofndutht
ging ol Ya t aatle dis
acallytrngmeto n ulta
'mid-January
'
.eos
The Rand Not Taketi by Robert Frost not only have flatly refu ed, but I
At first
experiencelof
not being
treated
like parietal
a child
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~was
very the
novel:
no housemnasters,
no dorm
hours,
yJ
probably would have rrgnlyrlscas
y laughed
it off, muttering sc mething to
By Brian Rafferty
today, ws faept
IYale, and for
~es,
thecinebuou inataenwtbnd
puro eI conducive to craiiy(you il.~
K
* decided
tha Yale was
the place
But over these past few oinths I've
where I'd further tobe
pursue
my
come
to
learn
a
number
o
things:
forthprSie
education. It wasn't until by-brother,
-.
'
Kevin, asked me to spend the one, I've lost a greai deal of
David Wa~e
following year (this- year) in Cam- euitene-iteatua ano
sial,I
five in adjustment problems: one tok a leave of absence
bridge, .helping him- with . his spoeta
ayo
'pses
after one term and didn't plan to 6~me back if he could
documentary film work, that I when we graduatefo
Ph~llips
possibly avoid it; three moved ou~ of quadl rooms and
decided to 'defer my' enrollment for a Aaey
To
may
ppl,
into singles (two of these moving into the college annex,
.year, and pack u my belongings of a espeiciallytincthe cT
i areSd
which is often regarded as a storage area for
few darned socks, some books that
trgceitne.Terlvs
r
scoah) n-a uh ir'iedaigwt
i
- haven'
stil re~d, nd a re velvetcontrolled by punch-in arsAnd
roommate
that the college 'dean intervened and moved
chir hat liemyl, ad
urvilved geared towards 15 cent rieiind
the roommate to a single.
four years at Andover.... and move to days off from work. My y ahee, in
Now in spite of myself, here are some generalizations
the city. Film definitely seemed to be Cambridge, has given - e a better
for yo play with: I found Yale to be beneficially egoa deeent, tangible (real) alternative to kolde
fth'cy;fheu'deflating. It made me realize the isignificance of what
a year in school. I knewvery, very thot do-eat~dog
aura hat subtly
seemed to be major victories at Andover. There are~abou"e
littl
film abou
havng no evenshotmanifests itself from ti e to time.
A4000 undergraiduates at Yale And most of theni' were
so much as a foot of film before. In WoknIttegoeysoehsbe
,Wufiderkinder in high school; cim lude members,
addition, I knew equally little about ral
odfrm.Iv
drama stars,' newspaper editqrs, lass plesidents. topmy brother, so both, he and film some cse relationsh p eeoe
hr
~
offered some new and unexplored ranging from 15 to 65. Anc hey really
territory. I worked with Kevin from aroe a exceptll un ost 'goodec
temiddle of September up' to pepeadIfv h tot'epc
Thanksgiving: syncronizing the sound for almost,' every one of' them.
with the picture, transferring the Nevertheless, there are definitely
-
/
'
FRESHMAN YEAR,
-
And sorry!I could not travel both
'5
THREE
-PA9E
attendance records and that unconscious
ru~~~~~~~Enland
hlasee e ee rm eetet
etr
rul
a f1eeln tha ~ksyuwonder whether New,
Puritan ethos. But you ave'to remember that I'm from
tepeSzrera a whdle one year ago, and things have
probably losened-up2s nce then. Still, the most tangible
forms of freedom didn't make Yal~ noars adn
Instad of feeling vy pature I started to feel very
adolescent. Part f that 1eelifig stems from a tendency on
the par fthe underclass membersio make a distinction
betwen "feshman" and "human". Whenever anyone
askedmI, was a freshma, I wondered, "What did I!
dowrong tis time9 " Bu( my feeling of recurring
adolescence had ther Icauses that I really can't ariculate.
d
Now a few survival hi'nts and miscellaneous rhttric:
ale is presently overcrowded and even i you thought
y u were going to kill your roommate at ndover, Yale
I test your patience even more. If you want to avoid
IV rk, take large lecture courses on an introductory level
inany subject that amuses you. If you want to keep the
(continued on page 6)
-
Interns': Envelo e-kin And N ude Senators
'
4
quarter inch tape (sound) on to the 16 some psychological rif
between
For some, the Washington Intemn my boss if he can bor ow her intern, 'is expected of me but hard, tireless,
mm magnetic tape (sound), and doing myself and the other wo kers: first
has been an opportunity
and. request granted, free to use nie and mindless work; no one wonderi the store hasbterlie
been, and w I Iieiantd
probabl
learn about
Satsbthe government
b
of te
h
however
rad
he choses. Aost of these whether I am capable of more. Ascotnet
know I don't like to be an instrument vaiu politicians in action, and by retrievin messages t roughout he sense of humility, cast in a role of the
~'~~'t'-4,~'+. ~-of
"big business, where I can't do contributing to their work in some Senate building. Othe , though, have great majority of Americans, workipig
anygoo
otersandt
fo
ire s vry form or other. They have met their been many and varied: returning used for little personal satisfaction and no
little meaningful
contact with
ecive Congressmen or Sen atois, lunch trays to the Sen te dining hall, direct fulfillment, slaving for someone
lipetle mangl
ctoaot itan
travelled about the Capitol ith themn buying :ten packsl of Muria]
cause with nothing 'to showv for
wh~ I ossble
an
sef-pdfiing to attend hearings and 'conferencds, Coronellos at a disco nt cigar store elses'
it, no recognition. Rather than
capitalistic endeavou'rs in the future. some close to the general public, twomieupPnbakgi'telmorfthsal
Is hatposibl,
yu a 0
do'tread constituents' letters and carrying four fo
ur
itr
facet of the government which the
know, I just thought of eaching or responded to them as representatives frames to the sri
~atet
general public studies so persistently
dnocutry film
ugh
apossible of their offices, obtained a wide bringing seventhun evlos I am a part of that
much greater side
'careers'. But who, knows.!
spectrum of jobs and responsibilities, frm a ti
krd nt h
alo
h oenetwihn
n er
NowIske
ws tocli pre hiand,1 in many cases, established rfoomn, taking at
onab
about and no one cares-about, yet
Now
askedto
I ws c mpre this themselves as integral parts of their Maryland to pic
w page without which it could not begin to
year with wat I might, or might nt cifflces~earning the -respect of their documen on revenueharing. I have function. Mine is no an uncommon
have done t Yale. Realistically, it is Congressional collegues. The rewards met the Sena tor oncestark-naked in role. Mike Fitzgerald, a laborer in a
iposil
o--e ogeswa
of such an experience are plain to sed, the United States Sen te Steambath. steel mill in
Virginia, has thIs to
Brian Rafferty
things would be like in college thiS5 not to mention the'enjoyment. For I stood by while he igned two air- say about aWest
similar predicament:
some work with raw. film for ABC (A year. I know that last year I put very dthers, th'ough, including myself, the plane tickets; he did ot ask' me my
"I felt like the guys who built theBetter Chance) (shot at Andover this little thought into places I applied to. endeavor has been of a different name,
pyramids;
somebody built "em.
Ifall).
As of the beginning of (I had all of my interviews at PA), and nature. A silent few, usually working
So,
thus
far,
the
ork
itself
has
Somebody
built
the empire State
November, the work became less and apyn oclee thnwsmr
I
for Senators, have established pbeen somewhat lacki
in verve and Building, too. There's hard work
les~s consistent, to the point where it of a mechanical procedure th~an not. maet - residence in the bu~y excitement; an absens
of intellectual behind it. I would like to see a
fiz~tle
mddleoutofthe
ner the Th studen (the Adover sudent, mailrooms of their offices, frantically stimulus has lent itsel tco long, taxing building, say the Empire State, with a
month.' In retrospect, the time bet- that is), is brain-washed into thinking openinig incoming mail during
the________________________
ween mid-November and mid- that, his whole future depends on morning hours, stuffing and licking
Janu ar& was a weird time for me. I getting into college-a good college, outgoing letters to round out the dy.
"I met tme enator once, stark-naked in the United
'rgrm
."
)
.
'
know there
-l
-'
were times when I at that. Seldom is the alternativeof
Leaving these lowly confirles oly
Yale, at those same times, seemed likeevnm tiedInaiioppl'
little of the Senate when it is actually
a paradise in comparison. I was ut of don't want to be tripped of their in session, failed to meet anyone more
~~~work,
and yt I made very little effort securities and comforts schl?ol can sinfctthnherspiicbsapae
to find a job. The days were endlessly very much be security). The reut susually one of a host of colorless
long, 'and I'd ocdupy myself with just thavr
e
tdnshvn
secretaries in a staff of close to
keig "busy"I yet cr'eating or graduated from Andover, spenda and had little opportunity to forty,
w e
producing very little. I couldn't relate "ya o oe wy rmclee n
even their owi names. For the m t
to anyone: my brother, my friends, my many too many students go on to part the job has been a dismal o :
family,-for I had to feel good within college, mechanically, -3with little endless and monotonous, not n
myself before I could feel strong and thought behind the action. When least bit challenging yet fatiguing in
share some of that strength with things become mechanical and its own way, demanding no mre
others. I guess I freaked out ajittle; if. routine, things become dangerous. I brainpower than that of a six year old.
you want to call it that. I realised tl~at thn '
iterlee htIdd'
till, such a task, boring
a lot of my'secu
away.
go
on to schoollotthis
I justp'laying
might degrading
as it is, does have its 0wn
'T+
wa~~~½
o9 ties ad eateni
he
worst
havespent
of year.
mytime
merits.
Itwsatime
of,isolAtion
T
havoasyt.
kind: isolation ithe heart of the city, gin-rummy over a few beers, Who
Two chores, opening' mail in' tiie
of Andit
acivity ws
of tim
~i~nd.knos?
yeraaIrmsho
Tht's hw I assedsomeof
ayntatron
forI ha
me.to there-evluate
time at what
An over.
planned to do with myself, where I
was going, and why. Ironically, Kvin, merely be a break in the norm; a time
the
bfore
spingspring 197,), ha
fsrecuirofings
mo e ols er-o
said to me that no matter what I did spcieo
hns
fpolo
S
~~~~contin~uedonag6
epm
thrugl
Sttsta
to
t
btIsod
le idntakIemy
kt;leddntakm
ct,
1'
wieh
.
Oarln
a e"
ynm.
hours. A relativ neop yte in an office foot wide strip from top tobotm
ofPDsadlwyersIhvbenstadheam ofvryrikaern
in a position at the bottom of the it, every electrician. So wvhen a guy
totem pole with now ere o look but walke&,by, he could takb his son and
p Rather than wvitnsin landmark say: "S~e, that's me over there on. the
leislto
nte
aiFhv
ot-it
lo;
u htselba
leinselanin h
akng Seaver'
I
foifthe flsoornIopu
t thaolba
desk chair is reup olstered in th~ painting. I think I've done harder
government repair shop in the' -'vrk than Picasso, and what canI
basement of the Capp tol. atr
Ratherif than
to? Everybody
should have
his point
smtigto
point
getingtotsowtheentrad
smhigo.
clswsoieIhv
ntad
Iwr
o h
oenet
u
'
clheoeats o
te
'seve 'elead
oIts
woroheoever
thinksaot t
morning a a sending it oueinatheiestablihed
nlasting
r
sltionships
with
hen
opeopleltalkaboutggovernmen
cupied from nine to six. But thie Rather, than being the subject of crummy envelope-licker in the
tedium is punctuated by a steadly constant reviewa
concern, as I mailrooim up on the fourth floor.
series of errands. At times, a staff would be at And Wrr. I am per- There's'hard work behind that, too.
member comes into the office, asks forming in a situatin where nothing
Bv Bill Berkeley
'
-
I,1 ~~~~~~~
The PHILLIPIAN _ ______APRIL
PAGEY.OUR
~~~~iI~~V~~VI~~~U
i
An~dover Aumnus
Heart Atta k
B.
In- W
19, 1973
ThomasDies
Of
53
shington At Age
SissonBook
Jesse H~~~~ur,,ss- Thomas, PA '3,died of "congestive"
tendance. Hethen went on to Harvard where he majored
hear filue on Wednesday, March 28, upo witnessing
in history and languages. After graduation, he attended
the looting of his life's belongings after they wqre trewn
Kings Point Maritim Academy on Lng slanc~an
on the street by an eviction crew. e was 53.
I
served in the Merchant, Marine during World War, II.
According to an article on Mi. Thomas'
Hewoteavlhitryfrih Nvlaearmn-ad
pearing in the April 9 editio oTmemaga e
w
s erte avahis
tor for
Naval eparn and
"cmplsv
Nihor
on~ete. tm ed
sente ay shipp
aiingtrouahoyo nhewpprd Hed
~"pack rat" and an "eccentric, eligious fanatc"Hs
wrefoapidasaabrvr.A
ngm yohe
collections ranged from handt ted Japanese slides,
talents, M'. Thomas spok~ six languages fluently, in[first-day issues of stamps, Orie tall altardpieces, and
cluding Japanese.
nuia hrst
rknunrla
n l otg
nyMo
cheese containers.~ He hrN en a maritime editor, a
Accordin toh Washington Post of. March 29
urudng theeitotre
gya
naval historian, and had travele the world as a sailor.
wtesssi
hr
a a"lc-at"amshr
Thomas had not paid his rent fo several mon hen
passers-by, at first surreptitiously and then blatantly,
hslnlr
otie
or odrfrhse
tion.
began looting and destroying Thomas's possessions.
Thomas was not home when a e
us Masa
da
Neighbors managed to save some of Thom~s'5
crew of a dozen men hrdby
rdbelongings
thed
for his, wife, who is ,separated from him.
eviction. A crowdl g athered and bgan to wanol lot
Deputy US Marshal Anthony Papa, in charge of the
the pile of junk and valuables strewn about tesrt.
eviction, said police were responsible for protection ofWhen Thomas returned to his apartment to find his
Thomas's property, but a police spokesman said he
treasures being ransacked, he coll psd onthe pavement
received ni report of the" eviction.
a heart attack.
Tragedy
"Many'Talen
~~~~~~~~Many
felt bitterness over what they considered to be an
Mr. Thomaswas born
nht Pipnsomsinay
avoidable tragedy. One neighbor said, "The looting was
parents. He was educated in the U and graduated frdmn
such an insane thing. The looters are the ones I really
I
,~~~or1737
aI
Andover magna cum laude after for years xqend "Many
blame.". ..It was so weird," another neighbor remarked,
cording to former head senior Bill Crawford. He will be responsible for the
Tlet"Hiwhelfeasclcintig.Hejt
and
he chedlingof
poducion to e p~t o in he Dama
Mr. Thomas was born in the Ph' lipines of missionary
dead of the shock of seeing it all destroyed." Time
Lranexati ya. shdlnoftLepoutostbeptninheDaa
parents. He waseducated in the U and graduated,from
lamented, ironically, that the looting "had simply broken
Andover maprna. cum laude aftei four years of athis heart."
living
in
Anove'sSYAI~program, Stephen hasI
man
prducios, including Every an, Rosencrantz and.
I.
Antlgone, andthe Spring Musical Guys and Dolls. A
T1
1
revew
f Atl~ne lauded tephen'~ performance as ex- MVaciNeil R
c
i e
r n"-.---T u te
- W
e t T
Anthropology instructor Edward B. Sisson! recently released his new book,
entited
nnua
FrstReprt o theCoxc'tlanR Project. The study details the
first two years of his projected four year project Mxcudethaspeso
thePeaodyFoudatonand outlines a number of tentative hypotheses
coflcerning nthrbtoloeical data preseritly ainassed.
Mr. Sisson stated that the study was highly detailed, cornmenting,"This is an~
informal report on two years of work, building and expanding on Dr. Mac-Neish's earlier research in the Tehucan Valley during the early I960's. Here we
a~e studying the social, political, and economic organization of the city-state
Coxcatlan at roughly te time f the Spanish conquest. From looking at the
physcalarragemntssuc asthe ways in which they treated their dead, we
beysaabl nemcntrib u
astradrtnigo
o hseltl ttscm
can formulate a hypothesis as to te nature of their society. Eventually we hope
tobe. One theory might be that they were createdg to control the salt production
and the irri atipn of this very dry desert environment.I
..
Thelbof
excadvaed.$sit conplimentary sections, and includes detailed
illstrtins
f xcaatd~lsies ndphotographs ofcollected artifacts. Fll
accounts are also given of, surface collections conducted- at six sites. Srfae
cplecions ivv
th ytmtcmpigo
ieadte
h olcig of
MlWble structures on theys~rface. Through studies of the distribution of these
struturs.,
i posibl ttodetemin th socal nd1 functional contrasts beteen the sites.
,,from
-
"
.
Drama Lab Head
R
clet,"impressive," "a brief tour-de frce.".
Crwodindicated that the Drama Lab plans to present more student
When asked about the significance of the Drama Lab a
reains nxtyear.
anorganization, Crawford commented, "We are one of the most unique
in uezince
on campusi, because we ae completely student-run and not
iuecdby any real bureaucracy. The Drama Lab is essentially a place for
anynewhoiscreative to come and prform in front of an audience. '
Exeter
M'
eeIn
h
'
t'-r
p
y
raIrtt
D1
B 'k
D ic
Abbot Photography instructor We dy Snyder MacNeil'
On Wednesday, April 18th, two faculty members and four students of the
Plilflips Exeter Academy, will confer with ttembers f the PA cornm-unity
about our present cluster discipline system. Exeter is-planning a renovation
of their present arrangement and they see~decentralization as a possible
solution.
IAssociate Dean of the Academy William F. Graham made arrangements
for Headmaster'Sizer. PE-e noted, "Exeter lans to discuss and only discuss
our Cluster system. They have made no deint
ans as yet." Exeter senior
Chris Stone will chair the committee.
'i
Votes
-TFor
rial Room
Jfotes
7'nal
For
liO~~~~~rn
3-'
4
lB udd ee
they will review in detail the budget for next year.
awarded grants amounting toe53,852M 0to 339 scholars,
scientists and artists, for research and creative work
purposes. Gordon N. Ray" found atimnresident+ tated
in a New York T~es aticle " e ellowships were
awarded on the basis of 'demonstra ed accomplishiment
h atadsrn
rms ot
uue"examples
Photography oo
Iff her statement of plans submitte to the foundation,
Ms. MacNeil cited, "or the past fe Ygeirs I have' been
making portraits of my family anc friends, collecting
snapshots of them from their alb ins, and r6rding
their stories for a book, tentatively e titled, Blogra' he.
Essentially my aims are to docume t the spirit f one
Faculty
Ratifies Limited Smoki
person's private world of acquaintarces, and to e
Fw~~~ulty~~~~ati~~~fies
o gn Lro
, ~~~~~the
effect o time on the. relations ips between
s
Phillips Academy:s Trustees will meet here on April
T~~~~~~~~~hoph
imsro atraoeyrlavofbnc.
,
..
For
ei es"TF
The TIiustees' Finance Committee will review the
restricted endowments in order to determine whether or
not the school can realize greater profit from themi.
Headmaster Theodore Sizer pointed out the Cochran
and the'1 Addison Art Gallery endowments as two
of grants to-be reviewed. He also noted, "The
Pinance Committee will review the restricted en-.
dowments and make sure that the way ty are now
invested is most consistant with the purposes the~y ver'
originally intended for."
The Trustees will also prepare a real estate report
concerning the consolidation of Abbot's properties with
lore
those of PA. Mr. Sizer commented, "They will look at the
hes
mmnetary value of the property and its aesthetic values.
people."
While they form a general policy for~real estate with
regards to suich things as sale of land.?
Visiting
~ ~~The
book, a combination of ortraits and' 'tranJ~~istttng ~scriptions
of tape recordings of their subjects' life 'his-
AdvrsBrha
.
tories, will be published in 1974-75. Ms: MacNeil will
(continued'~from page one)
seemed to leave room for the
spend the summer interviewing nd photographing
Trustee Gerard Piel. will head the Committee on the"I
evolution of rules. It lets the school
people in the wesfern states. Durn the balance of the
Bicentennial Celebration, which will begin long range
stitutingonly, a' minor change. build its rules on experience in a
year she will reside at her home in Lncoln, Mass.,'while, planning for Andover's 200th birthday. According to Mr.
ls wee the Aom
fchaymtnge it sit"M'anya ied Feis"
finishing the book, including its design and layout. Her
Sizer, "The -Committee will begin brainstormiig,
last chnged
eek te Ad~m
ts'
"any
ixed e~ellgsltpreviously published works include Haymarket, "a book
tfiinking of ideAs and ways to celebrate. They will be
complete ban on parietals to read "If
Dr. Sizer felt that the meeting had
of photographs and tape recordings of the peddlers and
particularly concerned with fund raising, keeping in
their experience suggests' such steps, accomplished a great deal. "Most of
customers in Boston's only surviving open market,' and Imind the school's objectives, and the fuunds necessary to
clusters may approve limited, planned the decisions,"he comi~ented,"were a two portfolios entitled Camera Pl
adAperture.
reach these b ectives."
exceptions to this rule in the winter act ot faith. T1here is no quest~en that
and/or Spring terms." However, if mishandled and not taken.leridusly
according to AdComn member French by the faculty and studedn, sn e of
SCANfON H R W R
instructor Henry Wilmer, the faculty these steps could h be
iakes.
MORRISSEY TAXI
ANDOV ER INN
"Eryhn patilrewrote the ammendment changing I am hopeful, but I thnat'~ kEeyhigpaaia
"in the Winter and/or Spring terms" lot of work.."
mebr'SotTwo
Way Radios'.' Instant Service
BAB
HP4
an
Practically vorythin"
t"in the latter half of the year." Mr. Student AdCom m br
OtB
5Manstreet
Andover
Wilmef stated that the faculty did Mead reacted to the faculty meeting
Telephone 475-3000
this, "To relieve the definite time- with the comment, "Their decision
32 Park Street
AndoJer
8:36 A.M t 6 P.M.
table on room visiting." He added, reflects the fact that the faculty finallyr_______
"The new clause lets 'the faculty paid some credence to an issue in
experiment as late as they wish which the students are intensely
BK
N
LA
without being pressured." Mr. interested. I se6 the smoking vote as a
BK
~
LA
_________________
______-
Winmer
continued,
"The
faculty step inI the future t better faculty.
p~assed the entire proposal because it student relations."
A-N
'
TOW N
&
ARN SHOP
PRINTING INC.
MAROUGAFNANC
SUMMER
TR AFLOAT
IN FRANCE
rCARD
OLdJE AND OVER VILLAGE
_____
'.a~~~~AAA41.
t/L~~~~~s~~e)~~4
UN
Letterpress
P. printers
W~h.T
*AAI~V~
44566
Offset
Q. quality
C. creative
fam i onwrkingcn boat.
71Pn/ulntn
emn
701
ine/urligton Veront
EX
histepes
A~
IJ~
ANZ.UU
Toulouse & Paris. BIKES along for
sidetrips. SHARE the spirit o a
O
T R
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~6
week coed trip for Am. & Fr. H.S.26EsxSre
COMPLETE
PRINTING SERVICE
Ofe
PLORE the-, backcountry, chateaux,
cities along, canals, rivers between
Students. Directed by Fr.-Am.26EsxSre
couple. Write 'SUMMER TRIP
Old. Andover Village
AFLOAT,, c/o B.C. Law School,
Brighton, Mass. 02135. Tel: 617-7834970 eves.AdveMs.7502
~
a
~
r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ms.'4502
ct
Andover, Massachusetts .
r
/
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I
e H-HILLIP'IAN
* APRIL19, i973
PAGE FIVE
Crew Upsets Powerf u Kent Squad;
Oarsme n Break Seven
Year ioslng Streak
LAndover
0~~~~~~~~
ATHLETES OF THE WEEK
b
V
-
-
Andover's t erei~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I
varsiyfwm let to rghtl--Cap Lesesne, John Coffee, Max Steinhardt, Dick Kauf man lUave
Captain Bill Kerins, Rome Arnold, Charlie Orr, and Phillip ikitler.
[respons
Excels
Goal
rettegrifli
ifl
''
lue
Lac'rosse
o
rs
the second time since the Andover crew
program was initiated seventeen years ago, the PA oarsmen have defeated the
powerful Kent School crew. Andover ha%sxperienced a succession-otfde'eats
during this time, but the latest losing streak, which had reached seven. was
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~dramatieal
f broken when the Blue took the lead thirty seconds into the race
and held or o finish a length and a quarter ahead ot'Kent.
Blue Takes Early Lead
Coming ff an excellent start, the two boats remained even for the first 13
strokes wit h Kent running at a torrid pace ' 41 stroke% per minute and
Anov slightly ower at 40. In the next 10-I15strokes Kent took a hall' boat
length leac
4w0W
After~o h crews had settled to a
racing cacdence o 36 strokes per
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~minute
j~n over drove t6 a quarter of'
a lengtH
filea by the first 500 yards.
Kent
th destroyed1 in the secondl
q~~Iuarter as he Blue cloclked the
tVlde, amain~, timeo'105i[i t
a
;lce for a three quarters of' a
length I~a by tly half' mile tlag.
~~~Satu~day,
April 14; Andover-For
F
____________________
An~~~~~~~~~~~~d
er Maintains Lead
I
T
-LLI.U~kJ
Yaewreshi
rresflii'i
U
LIJI,,
m~~Aove
iaae
power andl balance
-Ii-remainder
otanan(i
throughout
the
of' the race. Tlhe Blue
I ~
~ mvdout in the third quarter. 'and.
Openig' wth
te
seaon
a
ernai andpumpd a~hrd %ot i
thgousantg play ot goatie Mark, despite Kent's 2t) power strokes, held
,isapointing loss, the Apdover
the upper corner, ying the score at
PeI~rn.Mkng 14 s'.e,
ny of aIcommanoing lead of' two lengths at
lacrose' team fell to a wea Yale two goats apiece.
te
ponhak, and Žle1arnn'
te
stro
'h'fuhqate.Kn
freshmen squad. 4-3. After getting oil'
Te seoI
al
fnse
a
if
ofidence,! PetI grini thcea st't
the
sti uto quarinra finl
to a low
he Ble
sart,conrolle the comeback by thie Blue, as Andover provided
I
a trong backbone t r il surge.y as~tcigan to print early.'
_
* all throughout the second' hallf, yet
''r
(lmntd hepa.
om otherwise b wieak team. Tlhe o-Ad~r
oeersoddwt
cleanaga
naeP ati-2 laislri TornhinPoiin
rnalso
hrovedre repanc wh
remained tunablel to penetrate the
VIaiaa gae14,
- ct, %frtp~to'
niidr
opoe
gradually increase
aewiet
potent Yale defense.
'o'h om
i screaming bouc
outstandling, ,Is hie. oo. mia(
1 rokved t hr( ugh thie final qartr*i
shodIearly in (lthe haltf.'' Although %,,)V
command if the race.
Yale Opens Scoring
Anlover ontvrilled the rest o t he
P CernInfeiv
garie, thie rosh surprisingly tied he
jAlthoughi
the
PA
oarsmen
With the'first go'al late in the initial score in he fourth quarter, and fired
One apect of' PIA's' game which relinquishedf 3/4 length in the final- Charlie Orr's emotions reflect' hose
period. Yale took an early 1-0 lead. horw the winning,score with just over niehs to be improved
its clearing, quarter! it still finished six econds
of the entire crew.
TIhe score was soon tied, though, as two minutes remaining in he game.
Hai~lperedf by the loss of an excL,11lenf and one h d the quarter lengths
Andover's
ScottClems~on dug a 'The Blue had several opportunitice5 to clearing (leensemnr,
Da~ve
iclor, ahlead ,aordKetboa(.dervrettonasleayhi
groupdl hall out of'thib crease area an
i h cr le h
rs'slUr
who wa', injurled early'in te s~conld reording a ime o 4:38.4 seconds.
Blue
few effective
made
.I
spring Kent has det'eated the Coast
fired it past the Yale goaltender. After goal, but they were unable'to take qutarter, fieue
e
fetv
sd
even Long Years
Guard Academy and los( to Yale's
the Frosh once again had f'orged
advantage of' them.
clears. 'Ilihe vast mlajority of fiAe t.
vastnihwisb'oescn
ahead, upper Mike Coreoraii, on an
xcltmt
Iolewereityh'eckedebyt
pbsses, 4secon
excellent
rive. c'liided hlis defenOne bright pot or Andover was% werC- either of-agtor intercep)ted.
Tel-ersa
ewe
le'fe
itn
w
us
last Blue victory over Kent, which
7)
D
L II
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~came
nl%,and
this year's,
"Tfhis win has been a long time in
dkiplay(nd as(ide range of' results; coming. and it should give uts thc
there vIero numerous close finishes, drive to mak&t this a reall
Teat
71.
yet ther~ w~a% the ime when, in 1970, season," remarked captaintl
hris
a
Tol'YAndover
s~topped before the finish Tlhomas ater the 1905 victory oe
line. Kn'series of' riumnphs have Kent. T'he quote is till 'applicable
a fine
K~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ereth',osmnaprnilj
ody
W.ednesday, April 11; Andover-Despite a ie
Saturday, April 14, Andover-Plagued tiy
r ea(x
ne te ase
eenayttdy
performance by first baseman Jorge Sanchez., who
fielding, the varsity baseball team sucecumbed to a strog
iBro ne,& itchols Stunls
Pook Fi li
Varstty Baseball,
Plautges - Ai In 12- Loss
Fielding
figured in three of' the our Andover runs, the varsity.
*baseball team dropped its season opener to a strong
04f
.
Yale freshmien squad. 12-5. In the field, PA dommittd
six errors, which resulted in ive Linearned ru is%or the
opposition.I
Browne & Nichols sq'uad, 0-4.
BamnVitmof Wfnd
Starting pitcher Dave Bauman breezed through the
forge Sainchez had three RBI's in last week's
I
Carroll, Zech Open Blue Scorog
D b f
ck
-
Brown&Nichols-1
'
I
~ ~~'
*
pe e er
Wenesday,,,April 1 1; Andovr-The Andover varsity tennis team opened
its seasohi w~ihha convincing victory, crushing Browne and Nichols. 7-I1-I1. Of'
the six singles matches, PA won four, lost one. and ied oIne. while indoubles
comlpetitionL the Blue swept all three matches.
'Rockwell,
Gomez Excel
Playing in the number five position, Steve Rockwvell'empldyed hlis excellent
backhan~d f(~ perfection, as he crushed hlis opponent,. allowing him only oine
game in two sets. Mike Comiezl,.
lae -'-cIel-t i% i
m~
i
g ,1y
onepr, 0 6.as
lydLc
sh mse
i
T
lhe Blue tallied it fia three ru n tho
,jo)
1l
oft(he seet nig
ihone
Lary
thownayor, Joal
Coner and Keith Weidemain filled the bases on the
strength of three straight wulks. While grounding out t
the third baseman, Mike Takvoi'ian drove in Giiynpr fo6r
theall.
hir Pstin
PA
hi seond it f te day, Iloh
afrl kwkedm n Cnrwt astds
itet Id,
After
Weideman cored on a Yale miscue, Zeef fanrd
to record the last out.
i
Aided by thle fhst hardlcourt surface, upper Ned Baeon, in the number three
.~pot, orp~wered his opponent, 6-3, 6-2. In addition. Senior Bfrooks
Innfei~tnisith
iteastino ialry
I_6
lhB wnadNcoscah had
rragdty
mth
Asfrtee
igusTh
rBF~we and Nichols. caueh had
ragd ths
s tchof' tw first-yer
quperstAt 6, Mike Counihan and'Chris Greg~y, who playet in (the iumber oiiie
and iwojIpysitions, respectively. Sandy Wood, playing number one for PA
gis
~uiadopdtefrtst -3. buf'rallied to; take the second by
dfie ident ial score. Unfortunately, Couhihian and Wood were unable (o play
the
(decioing~third
stI
aln~ e n
I C'apta'n
IlB, Kaplan.
seasdrnssti.
lplaying i the second pot verstis Gregory. 'lost both
Yale Records Eleven Hits
first wo innings, but ran into problem i hthird.
Browne & Nichols capitalized on costly walk 'and
hackto-back wind blown doubles to get on the, scoreb~iard
early. Bauiman finished the inning hut was forced to leave
with two out in the t'ourth, charged with four yearned runs
in his, 3 2/13 inning stint.
''third
Lasting only tour inning%, tipper pitcher Dave Baurnanl
waItuhdfr
ee
and runs and two uneard
runs. Yale grabbed atquick 4-0 lead in thle first inning, as
Bauman gave up three ist% and a base on halls. increasing its margin to seven, Yale struck again in te
for three more runs.
PARalles In Fourth'
I
PA
The Brue roared back in the f'ourth, as captain Mike
'Iakovorian led off with a shqrp single. After catcher Bob
Carroll flied to left, singles by Bill Zech and Jorge'
Sanchez sandwiched around a walk to Joe Coner
produced two runds with Sanchez collecting the R13I's.
Tlhird baseman Paul'MeNicol reached on an error while
Coner raced home with The third run. Relieiver Dan
Diloratr'singled home the Blue's final run of'the (lay.
On a brighter note,, Mike Takvrian hurled fivein
n~~~~~~~~~ings
(of four-hit ball. His exc~lent pitching debut
however, was marred by Ithe Ihet' that Yale registered
three ieirned r
Browne & Nichols conti¶U'Ed their torrid hitting
throughout the contest, raking reliever Dilorati for six
runs, including two'windf-aided home runs,
1K9nverer
With is bytam tailin
/-Uscor, caltainIv~ie
'lakvorian received a one out, fourth inning, base n
balls. After Bob Carroll reached n a fielder'< choce
and Bill 7ech walked, upper lorge Sanchez lined atsh~ip
sigeto drive in the Airst Andover run, while' onlthe sa~n
play, Zech scored] on a throwing error by. Yale. Tlhird
baseman Paul McNitol hit
giound ball that fqrced
Sanchez at second 6 end the rally.
CanS.
-
A
~
PA Acecord Stands At 0-2
sets by the close scores of' 7-5 and 6-4, respectively. In thie (ltes conmpeiin 1oeKplnpie
sfhWo o(eLa'uia
n
rgr
in an ~ ight-gamne pro set by ant 8-6 rhargin.
-'
The loss to Yale, ~ouplcd with the earlier defear to
Browne & Nichols d~r'opped the squad's record to 0.2.
With games remaining against the perennially strong
HarvArd freshmen' squad, a well as the 'Tuf'ts and
Dartmouth reshn4 ehn teams, it appears hat this year's
squad vWill bie unable to equal last spring's excellent 10.2
record.
Senior Sandy Wood Is Andover's number one racketman this spring.
'
The PHILLIPIAN
Oarsmen
Down Holy
PAGE SIX~
On Te Sdelnes
19, 1973
IAPRIL
Cross;
Wednesday,
V F ls
April I11; T
Andover. Andover
e JVt crew Swas defeated
h oby
Wednesday,
ete
Aprll 18, Andover-Plagued by hazardous
watherconditions and he PA cut system, the
varsity strikers opened their season on a losing note as
they fell, 12.0, o the faculity. In defeat, the Blue
displayed an awesome grotind attack, although Its,
flnability to eiecute lb "eruclaIsituations led to ts eventual
downfafl.
I I Faculty
Scoring Opens
The faculty hacltyens Sorl1 ng
nTusa
had
ealy
takn
1.0anead on uesdayto
night, but the Blue, in an attempt to rebound from this
deficit, quickly etaliated. Nearly one hundred and fifty
loyalists assembled on the steps of Commons, and began
their march downfield.2'
During
thestrengt
his drie,
of PAs runnig gameAlthough
became apparent, s the Blue marched from CommonsB
to Sam Phil on the stren~th of three trai plays through
Morse Hall. The faculty s defense proved, totally ineffective, as Andover collected four first downs n the space
of just four minutes.
Keep Off The Gr~ass
Here, however, PA's momentum was stopped,
attempts to sweep around left end were tiwaited. by te,
I
numerous '.Keep Off The Grass" signI. Gasping, for,
breath, the strikers fin ally came within scoring range as
they entered George Washington Hall, but here, due to
the stalwardteensie ffotdofufaculy saftyen Solize
and,
wre
ichads,
hatedteyust sy ofthe gal I he.one
* The
ookacult
oer then
offnsiv~~r, an scord theSenior
touchdown which secured its 12-0 triumph,
Rain,Blue
Cuts Hinder
The Blue was greatly hindered in its attempt for
revene
bythe revalink rainy w eather conditions, which
Iconvinced many prospective strikers that they would be IAlthoug
wiser
watch
to stay
rather
inside
than and
wiserto
ad wath
sty insde
rater tan paticipte
and catch a cold. In addition, others decided to attend
classs
soas tosaveheir cuts for a moeopruitcpetitors
casion.s The
to ralie
tte
soesorwstust
beginning.
'
'
Rowing under extremely rough
strong Kent s uad. Kent showed
conditions with a strong tailwind,1 the amazing depth, as its second boat
Andover crew crushed a weak~ ~-oly finished only four seconds slower than
Cross freshman team in a 2000 meter the varsity boat, to complete the one
race, dThe wind, creating huge w ves, mile course in4:48, Andover finished
offered fast but very difficult oig
in a fine time of 4:57, two lengths
conditions. The Blue, however,I ~c behind Kent. Members of the team
ploited these conditions and ju npdincluded Tyron~e Polk at bow, Kurt
an early lead, which it hl Schwartz;l Livirngston Johnson, Tom
hogotterc
n iihd12Buh
~I ~ni CrsMita
seconds, or. three leri~ths, ahead ~fand Duke Burnham, in the middle of
Holy Cross.
-the boat,1 with Buzz Tarlou in. the
Saturday, April 14; Andover
toepsto.Cxwi
hi
-
_______________
rkLeTolue dG
l;lf
Chiiase, Bu
Linksters acel D ifficulit Season
(continu2d from page three)
Saturday, April 14; Andover-T e Andover varsity gt team will open its
season on Wednesday, April 25, against the Har~'ard freshmeu. The team is
anticipating a Winning season, although it feelsthat t will take a strong
'erformance to equal lp~ f&,l'v rnrf
ir11~
ChsBrlet ea emlucky
The two top players ofthi seasr 'stelve man squ rdwill be Gus. Burke
and team captain Dave Chase. Thewill be jockeying eetween the number
and two positions on the team Iladder, hich will .b&set up this week.
Bill Gifford is also expected tob nte runni g for a top position
along with Jack Cahill, John Hines
ithl
or nTmMitchell. The
~~remainder of the squad will inclu eitChip Burke,"Saone Citron, Larry
Howard, Dan Katz and Mike Aitk n.
old gears turning, you can get'
advanced placement in a lot of
courses and even arrange tutorials
just by being a little pushy, a little
and capable of displayigsm
evidence that you know what you're
doing. Foreign language courses will
probably keep you on your toes, too.
From what I hear, pre-nied is a sort of
bloodbath designed to separate the
'pharmacists from the neurosurgeons.
There are indeed women at Yale.
it did play
PAlElets
ugh esnYuv
wellalastifallth tamis
1expectin a greater challenge
from, this spring's more demanding'schdue Among fhe stronger com are the Dartmouth and Harv rfieshmen squgds. The schedule is
also made more challenging by te e m's five away matches as opposed to.
only three home matches, wbich willb played at the Andover Country Club.
One of the away matches Hbepae tTbowhosei course is one of the
most difficult in New England.
~.
o bottoyast
or
about your majbr, so don't be a monomaniac! about nything when you
enter. And I hope that anyone going
through college decision crisis ill
consider te possibility that what
you're doing is infiiitely more iportant than where you are,
it rowed extremely well,Ith Mullen guided the shell._________________
.
ate.i
-a
Year-Off More Valuable Than Col1e eMncetr GrammrSho
A ctors Sparkle. O n G VV Stage
*
(continued from page three)
following fall, if I so desired. I've since ofsudden fallmyel
truhad
iol
time to immerse yourself in the things decided to go to Hampshire, if the sdelfndm
efuhaphre,I
that are important to you; and you grace of the Gods should fall my w~y couldn't justpag
casttheposoffniando
also have the- freedom to abandon on April 16th.
I'd have to ask myself, if I wer only
those things that- may' not be so
But I can't emphasize enough the foln
yef fIwr uttyngo
importan to you.~. eed for break n one's cademicfill in the gap by keeping busy ad on
During the fall I w~as inclined to say education. Schools should in- the move. Maybe that questi n is
that
scholearwas't
of fro fo co'rorate breas int thei ownunanswerable. You () have to~ "dig
nottalingdown and stop and rest..
(, for one, was woniderinl separate etworks ...I'm noyakn
whethe
for it e).wsNw
rigt
abot vaction, ut raher vriatin,
I guess that's the teme ofill.
wthk it wld rte fo
e owen
abourity.
baking
u awayerfromitheo
letter: the need for us all to sto ad
thin I Yud tlaynntopnravre
.. 'beaigaa
fo
hThere
~~year no matter Ott;
what one did or norm ad~ risking exposure'as,
and
qusinorevsln,~
~
~
~
~
~
~
~
~
~~~~~
~eauto
n
otb
omcaiali
!
where one went, I think anyone would vulnerability. Risking a re eautobn
o esomcaia nmvn
benefit from such -a year. Even if the of the self.
right ahead to college. One pon o
suetis planning on ging to
I wrote to a friend this past fall, tileerhsbntoeaysme
'graduae schol-intom~icineor "..if I hd gone on to Yale this- year thoughts and feelings about this~year,
law bt.
tilwud'tseteyeradnrjn
mslfuhpy
not the "city", working America about
as a wasted year. I see it as a necessary accomplishing anythini I would have thFotn vru h
ed o
year ...an education in itself, and truly undoubtedly blamed tn Yale, the break, etc; the second point,! and
a more valuable education than I ever instituition; and maybe Iwud have more importantly, is the underlying
~received at Andover.
thought about moving b oa dif- hypothesis, the understanding,' that
I did'tmyslf
toallyofferet
strip' plae. I'e com to dscove onenone of those same thoughts would
seuiies wheoIta metoi" workl in veryn pcusn ande yoetd
veyraitchave, nor, could have, existed ~dI
Cambrige.
guarnteethe
Ihad th asect aout m life ere i Cam-gone right ahead to college this yer.
sCumriyth I cod egoartoeYal the bridet adotht is_ifethnsshudrl What nore can I say?
-
.
-everyone.
1
*
i
'
*1
F -
'
securiy,
I coudgooYalethebrdge._ndthaisifthingcomnmended
tha
-
~~~~~~~
GIFT
HOUSE '
~
475-8543
30 Park St.
~
II M i St.
~
~
~
AS.chi
BOSTON.S.
2
475-1822-
Andover
-KENNETH P.
____________________________________
Visit and enjoy
,
W. H. Brine o.
ANPOVER
EDoTHE
~~~~~so ~
Ihorn
Thom
pson
u-
. . .
OUR GIFTr SHOP
-
-not
COCkTAIL LOUNGE
'~COFFEE
r.n Wyld affreto
and hois
for their
bch
congrd. te o terefot, hc
I hope will continue to present us infuture years, as. this exchange
Pro"an s el worth'
inun.~s
the orininal, meianing
being
con- scholayr
at.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sider-M&artin
Lewis,
however,
plyrsanatd
proceeded to rotate in a very earnest
and di~ruified wa~j. This sort of thing
alway§ brought-A laugh.
The staging was interesting and
suggestive enough -to effectively the eer-6`hva1rus
auflgmn
the play, always preseniing a
picture with; excellent composition
only in terms of the set, but also
ir Ar
ueek
ctI,"nsotoiwrtinvy
gaiu oln at.ih.
-F
,~INDOOR - OUTDOOR SWIMMING POOL
SHo - DINING ROOM
SL~~~~~~~~1NA
BATH -,PAR 3 GOLF COURSE
100 BEAUTIFUL GUEST Rooms
if
theactos)on
(cntnedfompgeto)
te positioningnof theactors).ia
'Peter Davidson was incredibly anVil
couple
oft
e ssbtoeea
iviaor
funny as MAaria, Olivia's lady in adVoacud~aesodabtmr
iYaiting. HeIwas another natural ham movmenht, satc time theylsbecae
and 'pis stage presence-which was sichtsaiadtcls
cn
amaziing considering the fact that heteddodrgbuovalhepcn
wl eat-s 'ldomlfe
was very good. In short, the per+s
wlea y
- mp
captured the audience, His (Hr?) formance was polished.
were several reasons why the
yld
hl tie
oduction succeeded. First and
hm"dliee
ihabod
grin,
him!"ostdthevBriidhwithtoaobroa
brou~ht down the house.
nfoeot the Brtiers thoroglayn
Cve Spsn'
0liva ws ejydteievsinhepyad
astounding. He carried h~self like a were all very enthusiastic about what
woman and ad an amazing fmnn
hywr
on.Te
a
oa
eivery-a's pOranse wrt lofi comtent
o t thl o shwhaig
ie
Finci'.Oii'
twr
av
stha goo deual mren iment
wvas played hy Martin Lewis. Malvolio thanmi aruull sent. inso mainstge
is a particularly popular character
d
aroud here. lso, Dirtorl
with audienzes and Mr. Lewis took DaviWydchsaplyttwod
advantage of Shakespeare's extended appqal to a high school audience (not
characterization and milked the parttonetnplydbahihsoo
for all it swas worth. Also to be cast) and he therefore filled the show~
was Paul Murphy, who, with various drolleries intended for
as Viola, had some very good that audience. Those are two elements
~~~~~mom~ents."
which are largely missing in many
Throughout the perfordiance, the productioris at PA, and without the/
players augmented Shakespeare's
eirlement washowctntwseorkd,' a
lines with
n
enormous aowcanoyor
frofA udene
various sight gags, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~et
al.
s nerauch
cando
,
wioutfo the suec
.'
dvious to
sk advantage of art)n any event, ',the Mancunians
wrs hchhvecmet nw cellainly presented a welcome admeanings. Case in pbint: When ditioii to the local mainstage fare with
Malvolio is 'reading Maria's men- their highly polished performance
dicious missive he comes to the line, which was absolutely -amazing
"If this fall nto thy hand, revolve," considering it was done by a high
-
-,F
SCHOO~L SUPPLIESTPW IE
TPWIE
-
SALES, and SERVICE
-
ANDOVERAINN
77 MAINSTREETWELCOMES PARENTS,'STUDENTS,
ALUMNI
ANDOVER, MASS.
F
-
F
SHERATON-ROLLING GREEN
MOTO*
lolIet
Nx
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Chapel
Ave. Off Rte. 28
'
otePs
otePotOf
fi
Tel. 4750
F