8
VO 11,NO. 21 r PHILLIPS AADEMYoANDOVER, I4ASACH JET`S /APRIL,29,1177. Foundation. Grant Boosts By RICK BRADT The Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation minority students and to oset minority A ,~ "i~' -''&A of Morristown, New Jersey, recently students' decreasing role in he technical awarded $40,000 to Andover for the newv fields, as Foster, Director of New Bl summr sesionprogqm,(S) Suare, Prgram, noed: Theminority students. Mathematics and Science for Minority who have been badly prepared for college Students. -. at below average high schools are not Highly Selective! able to, succeed in: rmath ol sience, no Andover will recruit for the program matter how ntelligent the~ mnay be. Math 120 minority students who "have demon - and cience programs today'are just too strated superior acadeniic ability in math sequential for the tudent to catch up in and sciences," according-to Jerry Foster, such little time." the program's founder. Each participant Scholarships in the program will attend the regular Every enrolled student will receive a summer session for fu r consecutive full scholarship whi ch aou :its to S5,500 summers. Iover the four-year period with~ future For the first three summers, the funding for the program coming from student will participate in intensive, six various organizations including the week-long math and science courses Dodge Foundation. The Podg~ Founda- cRL faculty mambers t MOnda 'n etn on BlueBokrtsoe designed to complement their normal tion has in the past ontril~uted to -, high school courses, . In the fourth educational, charitable, ad scientific J JJ - sumer, the student will attend a Short endeavors. The Foundation's caise ist I Pr po a s es n P r batio4 Term Institute of their choice in either "identify' gifted and talented youth, in to al i p math or science.': particular hose culturally different and P he i rn t~ four-week pilot program of (MS)Squared, them with challenging opportunities." t n "' j according to Foster, After, four years, __(MS) Squared, wihile new to Andover,RB /tpossin rue0 iseaofrotinAcodg Andover will examine the achievements ~xss tohrshools. The' KIki yTM INla rbto:1 of the (MS) Squared graduated and then School in Texas es a~ similar day The Committee on R idential Li Alcohol or marijuana; being off bounds Eccles, lDean of est uad otwnk decide whether to continue the progrm porm and the Uhiversity of California (CR1I) unanimously approvl and sent 0 or out of one's drm after hout~ without hours are given o.those students who F"os'ter renmarked, "If only we can at Berkeley also ha a summer program the faculty proposed revi ions onetpermission; violating room 'ris~ing rule; "have been consciemme~o h demonstrate, to all, involved that (MS) for minorities. Iyeak's Blue Boindlud g an less blatAnt case" of dishonesty, or where community and ir pn onsin Squared is worthwhile, ahd productive During the cool year "Poet tree-to-five Probationso toselfishness is not involved; actions dan- straightforward ~n'replie's and sa'e- then we can make the program into a Link" will keep the minority students in and. defining punishments' r ofneof gerous to the safety and well being o ments" at discip ary co mit t- peranntPASume Sssonoffer- touch with (MS) Squared and its summer majobr school rules fess ojmte pen ent P Sumr esIo ' feig."rjc in"wl ala "ti el htcre dsiln others, particularly if calculated; and ings. In. 1 feig."rjc ikwl al I sfl htcr i~piay serious gambling' for money." TeCL toal icse the goal of (MS) Squared is to obtain bi-monthly newsletter containing artidles, .procedures do 'not corrspn wit e 'CnfotigPaensewr duy andithal mosussemd nire co~ge and careez opportunities for mathematics puzzles, and roblems. procedures the Blue Bk aplies. Te e ' History Insttructor Vic Henningsen agreeing that a sitdent who is 4ss1 Named President ~~~~~~~~~~~suggestin ofrvsosaoteps6 commented on the proposed suspension 32 work hours us ally works around 0 rS~~~~~~~fl br~~~~~~ ions B~ ook iinto an, wthm lue Teei ist ofon s'h esnw~suet ontwr An~erson Nam'e'd Presidenf bring the Blue.Book into with wh A clause, "There value foruparentsatonhours.hCitingCiting of properpsu sepvervis W P A A ' A p p o m ts ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~Chipeso o he Cluster Deans, wht parents." AbbotCluster.CRL representa- 'all of the hours ffey,are assigrnedre J~fJIJ LiiI, U." N ew '-B oard , 1 with the Clustei~ Deans residen s tive olly Hoppin remarked that sending' CRL agreed that tricter supervision s originally proposed the~ Blue Bo a stdent home would clear up the necessary. The Cluster Deans e -Outgoing WPAA President Quad and Brian inse. :'changes to the CRL - Wat-oItlmyprnsydoe. pevulydhaahae Wheele. las week nnouned thesel&. As Production Maae,'get ilProposals .Sev&ral CR1. members questioned the~ bersueieth wrinpaeoa tion of upper Gerrit Anderson as nexf be responsible for all taped~ programming A student placed on he pos eaiiiy fsndgsttshmeSreua cwmrit asinentace a year's President. as well as 'WPAA's reddin ae Probation, which would liminate th uring Probation.! "There will be a lot of rPP run h o hours. Andeton wll, i ad~tion o beng lbrary Prorammig Di~ctorButtick ,present suspension, would 'be automa txpense involved;!~vill the school pay for renPobto Technical Director, oversee all aspects of will be in charge of assigniing rock and ically sent home- (or to ot r designate scholarship student to g oe" h rsn'oain ss~tdi the station,_ make final decisioiis on-lts Jazz shows tD'sand '4'rkinZ,.orit-,a , Place-off'-carnpus~,fr a .'r' of,betwee bbit Pond Cluster 'CRL representative the Blue Bok r4s: "'Insted being' operation, and coordixnate'-the activities 6f time schedule. In addition, she will' treadfvdys.oth bertun oet anning studedntRiay rdspnote the seven ther boar members.oversee and assist the DJ's 'to ensure that to~ PA by parent or' oth ~Agent,' f at 80 percent of Andover students live Probation, usually~ for no mor cla ~ Slit Uppers And Two lowers the station-runs smoothly. 'consultation" with the s evt's cluste ithin 220' miles of New York City. weeks, during whi h time the stud~nt h ', Other board members for next yail Serving as Chief Engineer, Lunse will dean., The Probation peri wul la~t eorge Best, Chairman of the R- ad a potnt ojsiyrmiigi h inclue upers ill lgheta, I1ary ut-I aid he Prgramin'gDiretor by recruit- ten weeks and be acomp nie41 by fi p t at students who are unable to go home Academy br attitcde and bhavoin 411 trick, Sarah Slavitt, Jeff Savit, Joe ing and training qualified engineers, weeks On Bounds and at I st 25 worc would have- to, stay with someone areas. n the first weeks of Prba~on the Tattlebaum, and lwers Sidney Browi' While at present every student engineer hours. i f-campus such as a relative or a friend Cluster Discipli r e Committee'usuaily must obtain a license froni the Federal The proposal lists t e followin who will 'atcompany the student back to limits theI studert's activities, f -x'e Communications Commission, next yar offenses for which "a dent shou A ndover. apeb etio.. the oardm'~yinsitute a new progrAm expect to be dismissd, and r which t e Richards, responding to concerns of cnisting of a practical test in engineer- minimum punishm~ent of th new,tough r RL members, sid he anticipates fewer L ci ing that would be given to all new DJ's. Probation would . be impos only 'wh n siudents wuld be placed on the pro. A Sarah Slavitt, 'Director, of the Classi- there, were strongly mitig ting circum p sed Probation as compareo to tne '- cal eeknd, illdirect all classical stances: procuring and ma ing availab e c rrent Probation and added it. would be weekends which begin Saturday at 9 am to othprs alcohol 'and drugs use 6f'hard " served mostly for die-hards.!" and un hrouh Snday hlt ii PM. drugs; calculated dishonest committ' OnRtdn h asssedd ~ eview P L lan$ Business and Public Relations Direc- for selfish purposes; and e rme viol- e~ rlier this year ,agreed with'Ithe idea of tor ~idney Brown will be responsible for tions or other major ruts especiall h ving a stricter Probation, commenting, Ft II i moitoring the station's budget, securing when the rigtan neds fohr ~ " ' odie eas rbto r B grants, and publicizing the, station's violated." For'nve se tBeainyhig Kd wr programs. With, the following orrules, 'a gi ecn stronger penialties because of this." "h nhsa xrse ytj Two New Pos~t~ons first offense would norm ly result ~n -~ Work Hours lmifrteBcetnilClbal~ The ougoing oard cr~ated tw'o new Censure (as a formal fatement uLst May, the faculty accepted plan waenuagg.hyav'saot positions, naming S~avit as'News Director disapproval), accomp nied ya substan- al owing all clusters to adopt West Quad codence on eo y plannig tu and Tattlebaum as Sports!Dirtectoi.? This tial nuniber of or; ho s;arpaSuh'cicpiayorcdr iig nw"ideicko ro n, J Gerrit, Anderson, WPAjstmt(continued on page eight) particularly- within a sho tiegou' ov tdet Sngmrewr hour wth Bietennial Ca sn, ime, Woujid somestu dents 2S or'more workohmirteheBsaidtonnialt weekend's Alumni Coun eetns The' Council rovide tw'ew enm- STI's: Oultsiders At Andover pvssfrteeomfe,~cr J 'Peterson: "First, he alumni were've Des~pite Record Attendance much in favor ' working intoth program of acade ic demojnstrations ani` ByRONA SHAPIRO 12:20. Afternoons are free, th ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~exhibits, and, sec nd, they urged us t, STI's members o te Short Term dents an participate in athleticsor' te alumni thing tei amilie e ver Institute have come o Andover this extracurricular activities during this time.almit bnj herf iisve year in-a record numberlof fifty but still Additionally, the afternoon is also set 'youde childrbn." remain only on the periphery of the PA aside for homework from' the student's AcIa'rsp ne a ietial Co community. home school, which the students are mIe qestoni, toa mice tyil 'ort The' Short Term Institute is "a usually required to, keep up with. In viiting aluminisate favaoredy 'plan' conicentrated course of study over several Iaddition, there is a late afternoon cass, fo cdmcc bis n hs h weeks in a single subject at PA, offering' or in some cae,'ftdn/ece ommt a tade its uesda m ~t hfr tig school students an intensive reside-; -conference, followed by dinner and dacomtetcoriteraIgn a! learning experience." Eighty-five' evening study hours.' The institute also lectr a n somtem nar foornte arrani percent of the students re from public tries to includep speiatip -A s cial 1 lTecsjy onoito.' ' '-teiand eleb atior h Rc

APRIL,29,1177. Foundation. Grant Boostspdf.phillipian.net/1977/04291977.pdf · VO 11,NO. 21 r PHILLIPS AADEMYoANDOVER, I4ASACH JET`S /APRIL,29,1177. Foundation. Grant Boosts By RICK

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Page 1: APRIL,29,1177. Foundation. Grant Boostspdf.phillipian.net/1977/04291977.pdf · VO 11,NO. 21 r PHILLIPS AADEMYoANDOVER, I4ASACH JET`S /APRIL,29,1177. Foundation. Grant Boosts By RICK

VO 11,NO. 21 r PHILLIPS AADEMYoANDOVER, I4ASACH JET`S /APRIL,29,1177.

Foundation. Grant Boosts

By RICK BRADTThe Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation minority students and to oset minority A ,~ "i~' -''&A

of Morristown, New Jersey, recently students' decreasing role in he technical awarded $40,000 to Andover for the newv fields, as Foster, Director of New Blsummr sesionprogqm,(S) Suare, Prgram, noed: Theminority students.Mathematics and Science for Minority who have been badly prepared for collegeStudents. -. at below average high schools are not

Highly Selective! able to, succeed in: rmath ol sience, noAndover will recruit for the program matter how ntelligent the~ mnay be. Math

120 minority students who "have demon - and cience programs today'are just toostrated superior acadeniic ability in math sequential for the tudent to catch up inand sciences," according-to Jerry Foster, such little time."the program's founder. Each participant Scholarshipsin the program will attend the regular Every enrolled student will receive asummer session for fu r consecutive full scholarship whi ch aou :its to S5,500summers. Iover the four-year period with~ future

For the first three summers, the funding for the program coming fromstudent will participate in intensive, six various organizations including the

week-long math and science courses Dodge Foundation. The Podg~ Founda- cRL faculty mambers t MOnda 'n etn on BlueBokrtsoedesigned to complement their normal tion has in the past ontril~uted to -,

high school courses, . In the fourth educational, charitable, ad scientific J JJ -sumer, the student will attend a Short endeavors. The Foundation's caise ist I Pr po a s es n P r batio4Term Institute of their choice in either "identify' gifted and talented youth, in to al i pmath or science.': particular hose culturally different and P he i rn t~four-week pilot program of (MS)Squared, them with challenging opportunities." t n "' jaccording to Foster, After, four years, __(MS) Squared, wihile new to Andover,RB /tpossin rue0 iseaofrotinAcodgAndover will examine the achievements ~xss tohrshools. The' KIki yTM INla rbto:1of the (MS) Squared graduated and then School in Texas es a~ similar day The Committee on R idential Li Alcohol or marijuana; being off bounds Eccles, lDean of est uad otwnkdecide whether to continue the progrm porm and the Uhiversity of California (CR1I) unanimously approvl and sent 0 or out of one's drm after hout~ without hours are given o.those students whoF"os'ter renmarked, "If only we can at Berkeley also ha a summer program the faculty proposed revi ions onetpermission; violating room 'ris~ing rule; "have been consciemme~o hdemonstrate, to all, involved that (MS) for minorities. Iyeak's Blue Boindlud g an less blatAnt case" of dishonesty, or where community and ir pn onsinSquared is worthwhile, ahd productive During the cool year "Poet tree-to-five Probationso toselfishness is not involved; actions dan- straightforward ~n'replie's and sa'e-then we can make the program into a Link" will keep the minority students in and. defining punishments' r ofneof gerous to the safety and well being o ments" at discip ary co mit t-peranntPASume Sssonoffer- touch with (MS) Squared and its summer majobr school rules fess ojmtepen ent P Sumr esIo ' feig."rjc in"wl ala "ti el htcre dsiln others, particularly if calculated; and ings. In.

1feig."rjc ikwl al I sfl htcr i~piay serious gambling' for money." TeCL toal icsethe goal of (MS) Squared is to obtain bi-monthly newsletter containing artidles, .procedures do 'not corrspn wit e 'CnfotigPaensewr duy andithal mosussemdnire co~ge and careez opportunities for mathematics puzzles, and roblems. procedures the Blue Bk aplies. Te e ' History Insttructor Vic Henningsen agreeing that a sitdent who is 4ss1Named President ~~~~~~~~~~~suggestin ofrvsosaoteps6 commented on the proposed suspension 32 work hours us ally works around 0rS~~~~~~~fl br~~~~~~ ions B~ ook iinto an, wthm lue Teei ist ofon s'h esnw~suet ontwrAn~erson Nam'e'd Presidenf bring the Blue.Book into with wh A clause, "There value foruparentsatonhours.hCitingCiting of properpsu sepvervis

W P A A ' A p p o m ts ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~Chipeso o he Cluster Deans, wht parents." AbbotCluster.CRL representa- 'all of the hours ffey,are assigrnedreJ~fJIJ LiiI, U." N ew '-B oard , 1 with the Clustei~ Deans residen s tive olly Hoppin remarked that sending' CRL agreed that tricter supervision soriginally proposed the~ Blue Bo a stdent home would clear up the necessary. The Cluster Deans e-Outgoing WPAA President Quad and Brian inse. :'changes to the CRL - Wat-oItlmyprnsydoe. pevulydhaahaeWheele. las week nnouned thesel&. As Production Maae,'get ilProposals .Sev&ral CR1. members questioned the~ bersueieth wrinpaeoation of upper Gerrit Anderson as nexf be responsible for all taped~ programming A student placed on he pos eaiiiy fsndgsttshmeSreua cwmrit asinentace ayear's President. as well as 'WPAA's reddin ae Probation, which would liminate th uring Probation.! "There will be a lot of rPP run h o hours. Andeton wll, i ad~tion o beng lbrary Prorammig Di~ctorButtick ,present suspension, would 'be automa txpense involved;!~vill the school pay for renPobtoTechnical Director, oversee all aspects of will be in charge of assigniing rock and ically sent home- (or to ot r designate scholarship student to g oe" h rsn'oain ss~tdithe station,_ make final decisioiis on-lts Jazz shows tD'sand '4'rkinZ,.orit-,a , Place-off'-carnpus~,fr a .'r' of,betwee bbit Pond Cluster 'CRL representative the Blue Bok r4s: "'Insted being'operation, and coordixnate'-the activities 6f time schedule. In addition, she will' treadfvdys.oth bertun oet anning studedntRiay rdspnotethe seven ther boar members.oversee and assist the DJ's 'to ensure that to~ PA by parent or' oth ~Agent,' f at 80 percent of Andover students live Probation, usually~ for no mor cla ~Slit Uppers And Two lowers the station-runs smoothly. 'consultation" with the s evt's cluste ithin 220' miles of New York City. weeks, during whi h time the stud~nt h ',Other board members for next yail Serving as Chief Engineer, Lunse will dean., The Probation peri wul la~t eorge Best, Chairman of the R- ad a potnt ojsiyrmiigi hinclue upers ill lgheta, I1ary ut-I aid he Prgramin'gDiretor by recruit- ten weeks and be acomp nie41 by fi p t at students who are unable to go home Academy br attitcde and bhavoin 411trick, Sarah Slavitt, Jeff Savit, Joe ing and training qualified engineers, weeks On Bounds and at I st 25 worc would have- to, stay with someone areas. n the first weeks of Prba~on theTattlebaum, and lwers Sidney Browi' While at present every student engineer hours. i f-campus such as a relative or a friend Cluster Discipli r e Committee'usuailymust obtain a license froni the Federal The proposal lists t e followin who will 'atcompany the student back to limits theI studert's activities, f -x'eCommunications Commission, next yar offenses for which "a dent shou A ndover. apeb etio..

the oardm'~yinsitute a new progrAm expect to be dismissd, and r which t e Richards, responding to concerns ofcnisting of a practical test in engineer- minimum punishm~ent of th new,tough r RL members, sid he anticipates fewer L ciing that would be given to all new DJ's. Probation would .be impos only 'wh n siudents wuld be placed on the pro. ASarah Slavitt, 'Director, of the Classi- there, were strongly mitig ting circum p sed Probation as compareo to tne '-cal eeknd, illdirect all classical stances: procuring and ma ing availab e c rrent Probation and added it. would be

weekends which begin Saturday at 9 am to othprs alcohol 'and drugs use 6f'hard " served mostly for die-hards.!"and un hrouh Snday hlt ii PM. drugs; calculated dishonest committ' OnRtdn h asssedd ~ eview P L lan$Business and Public Relations Direc- for selfish purposes; and e rme viol- e~ rlier this year ,agreed with'Ithe idea oftor ~idney Brown will be responsible for tions or other major ruts especiall h ving a stricter Probation, commenting, Ft II imoitoring the station's budget, securing when the rigtan neds fohr ~ " ' odie eas rbto r B

grants, and publicizing the, station's violated." For'nve se tBeainyhig Kd wrprograms. With, the following orrules, 'a gi ecn stronger penialties because of this." "h nhsa xrse ytjTwo New Pos~t~ons first offense would norm ly result ~n -~ Work Hours lmifrteBcetnilClbal~The ougoing oard cr~ated tw'o new Censure (as a formal fatement uLst May, the faculty accepted plan waenuagg.hyav'saot

positions, naming S~avit as'News Director disapproval), accomp nied ya substan- al owing all clusters to adopt West Quad codence on eo y plannig tuand Tattlebaum as Sports!Dirtectoi.? This tial nuniber of or; ho s;arpaSuh'cicpiayorcdr iig nw"ideicko ro n, JGerrit, Anderson, WPAjstmt(continued on page eight) particularly- within a sho tiegou' ov tdet Sngmrewr hour wth Bietennial Ca sn,ime, Woujid somestu dents 2S or'more workohmirteheBsaidtonnialt

weekend's Alumni Coun eetnsThe' Council rovide tw'ew enm-STI's: Oultsiders At Andover pvssfrteeomfe,~cr J

'Peterson: "First, he alumni were'veDes~pite Record Attendance much in favor ' working intothprogram of acade ic demojnstrations ani`

By RONA SHAPIRO 12:20. Afternoons are free, th ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~exhibits, and, sec nd, they urged us t,STI's members o te Short Term dents an participate in athleticsor' te alumni thing tei amilie e verInstitute have come o Andover this extracurricular activities during this time.almit bnj herf iisveyear in-a record numberlof fifty but still Additionally, the afternoon is also set 'youde childrbn."remain only on the periphery of the PA aside for homework from' the student's AcIa'rsp ne a ietial Cocommunity. home school, which the students are mIe qestoni, toa mice tyil 'ortThe' Short Term Institute is "a usually required to, keep up with. In viiting aluminisate favaoredy 'plan'conicentrated course of study over several Iaddition, there is a late afternoon cass, fo cdmcc bis n hs hweeks in a single subject at PA, offering' or in some cae,'ftdn/ece ommt a tade its uesda m ~t hfrtig school students an intensive reside-; -conference, followed by dinner and dacomtetcoriteraIgna! learning experience." Eighty-five' evening study hours.' The institute also lectr a n somtem nar foornte arranipercent of the students re from public tries to includep speiatip -A s cial 1 lTecsjy onoito.' ' '-teiand eleb atior h Rc

Page 2: APRIL,29,1177. Foundation. Grant Boostspdf.phillipian.net/1977/04291977.pdf · VO 11,NO. 21 r PHILLIPS AADEMYoANDOVER, I4ASACH JET`S /APRIL,29,1177. Foundation. Grant Boosts By RICK

'PAGE TWO _________APRIL 29. 1977

Rdiornaldief Take Tw .Apn~j lM !I TheAfen 'DepartT wonisCaursees niiis to encouaBy KEN OASIS ''nresvepit soecuage the pirso tcdDepar mania j ~~~~~As a result of a rampant flood of abuse of the Katn hisprfolyowtch. AcordnNEWS. FEATURES sports medical excuse (med-ei) systetn at PA, the ,* Mrs. Morreo, the pep talk "is only ectve oSteven Kargman Jme elsirifirinary out-patient service has become a ' n gea wil.Editor Editor jf confusion. Approximately ten percent, of the Estch school year, the infirmary purchasedIstudent body regularly resorts to the infirmary to / approximately 3,400 dollars wo f mdcto

avoid sports, causing, among qther things, much ~~~All nurses must fill out an unqualified statementannoy ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~which determines whetlier or not the infirmary willkennon Miller IJeffirey'Strong anoance to~ the nurses. chretesuntfrmdain TeapuI Editor ~~~~~~~~~The amount of "sick" students receivig us ~'

Managing Editor I ~~~ ~~~~t at the Infirmary depends on many . ~ hospital only assumes responsibility f the chargeBUSINESS ~~~~factors. The'end of the term particularly lures -of less expensive medicines, su~h as cugh syrup.,BUSINESS ~ ~ ~ poleaa fo hirsot fnlexm n y ~OFten, students do nof ealize tat they hve beWilliam Vandeventertempprcasstdnstfig les.Ia charged until their parents reive the Infirmar

Business Manager iui l~th bu h uecmutelnt bill. For this reason, administration assistant Missf the list for excuses steeply agments. Bad Ei''alrmre~ha n stn ogtI

hot water with thFnulfedsaeetV eather likewise encourages students to takewiteuqiafldstmn." 'med-exes, rain causes complaints of sore throats The Isham staff is. ysable t even speculla- etLetter ' 1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~nd other common illnesses to accumulate rapidly th muto Icietiti~al atd~iEtthe Infirmnary. Thaniks these varied ecsS according to the complaintmtohl

I me sixty students acquire med- zxes each dayl F i order the e* According to Mrs. Beatrice Morreo oI condition, but no, we 6ln't waste the medication1IE~~ie al 'I~~~~lTIIJ11Ii[1i uMospor es of the tpainDeart ete According to administrat ve assistant Jane'ariiia~n staged." oexueAfter thenig'h isothe Mu nroe,do "patients" erhn for medjexes de-lWho are th Alumni? To frequentanswer:tA e back end of the building, the student sudden. prive truly sick pati nts of t4 eatment Another" ~gang of interested old men and women wearing smbeaouth serlzdwietidfoo, Would utanke, dkrI~m l lidy? prbe nte I Inr'~ h at of

conpicosrud aeso tejlpls NI hile constantly coughing as if he or she had jst student tV lie down in a id room for an hour or professional talint. According. 1o, Munroe, 'highlyActually, what we as students kno6w about them isl nished a pint of vodka. While ipatientl SO. wiI qulfe pesne n h apshamefully limited, cnsidering~the devotio and . cunning s fo I qshuldned paesone uinhe amu hosiashameftuly limited considerng the deotion and aiting on the benches planted in the hallwy frTe h tu~t quietly m hi irespect each has for their'alma, mater. The aumniwy hTes'rcnigstd' nom hud' aetouiieter ecekn hscounci meetigs Ins weeked F relly gae me a patient groans loudly until the nurses answer to the attei inurse that he omitd only half an~ who continually claim to be sick.Stloer

Ihnet elz hta aubersuc u his call. j hour ago inforfajion W1 cite nurse must~ strongly slant the idea. "I 'think i' li.s'phdol has i such, a councl' o~ hih-~edThe nurse mutte ~~vrjust how sick the accept as ue. Tus~ acu a med-ex does nIot laziness," growled aRabtPpn seirLoreipoieo tale ntsuc a atundi idu-pols ed "patient" really is. Theteprue is taken of necessaril require aknack oratn.F Terry Robinson thinks students take med-exes,"to,thermozmeter registers the normal 98.6 degrees, the medicine a regul r basis o bu ne hundred Many believe the work oad at PA andtegroup as a Bostonian or New Yorker, ClassesIafenoclssfrestdtsosekm

-xs.ranged rom '2 to '72 and vriety ws the ule. Fathlete can stil! earn his med-ex. Mrs. Morreo and twen students. Wh students abuse the' feno lse oc suet ose e-xsAfter' a shqrt nervous 'speech explaonedningtthevn if you have no temperature at med-exs s'tem Tr Franc Sotle, the medical Bill Miles, a new lower, comm nted, "Sometimesbackground and role of the Student Bicentennial first, your temperature could be higher~ only two director Phillips Academ), willi give the athlete' medexe cnipan e jstifyb" im ne to sdCele~,ratin Committe, I relaxe andF was hours later." Sometimes the nurse will ask Ai a ep ~ k., The purpose 7 the talk, from a focnipran et, Jper i clsareamazed, impressed, and inspired simultaneously.' wihMlssang.Ocina hleIheaThe first meeting was marked by eloquent , paper to do oratest to dudv or."'~~~~~~~~~~~~pperto o o a estto iud r.The first meeting was marlied by eloqluent ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Only tive years ago, there was a strict cutspee~hes which. amiliarized he alumni with ourA

ii ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~system atPA. Each' student was allowed nineconcept of and pireparation for the 1978 ceiebra- abess u otmr ta iv na'aeor.Tewith it immeditely recting t our tetativeiplom acy S ik sd ver ilso h ruswr lsebekat frtion., We handed themn the line,, 'and they took off titlabees bu nth osre a sseysi aast Therlowers and juniors), work progam, nd athletics.schedule, offering advice and assurance. They Itasuetctmr.ta-iemsi aeowere as anxious to meet us as we w oime By JENNY' ELV[LIE or nine times total, he would b osd or givenandtal wih temsoconversation was asily Of the six new courses at PA ti er1sparked as I mingled through small huddles of . ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~restriction. Skipping any fut re commitmentsspared s Iminledthrogh mil hudle of Students for the United Nations (SUN) is perhaos again would then warrant r triction. Associate,lawyers and business eople. the most novel. Senior Tom Hartman and Histo Da ila rhmsae ttecag ~Committee" members also, made proposals ' Instructor Richard Kaufman lead the coursethcusyembogtaut retutbtwncone rning the logistics of day cafe for families which puts students into -problem solving situ-. faculty and the students.with small children, possible gest speakers for ation similiar to those of the UN. - n eiroel eiisc -vroeothe convocation, and the public~o of a souvenir According to Kaufman, the SUN has three yers popular Imethods of oaining a mned-xbrochure describing events drirg te celebration. goals: "to acquire first-hand experience at Th eixMroch mto."elxMrol

At the same time, it was dc~d that communica- problems facing the UN, to gain a greair "IoldrigwneFtrtk a'iecltions in general should be ated n n ffr understanding bf US policies in regard to the h eradwieslletop hsrom inwto reach everyone ever corimted. with PA or world, and like any independent, project, to t lo h idt rf hog.A htpitAbbot. Final overtures were made to augment the ascertain knowledge through a different kind !of he would scream at -Phe top of his lungs until hefuind, raising campaign by dire' association with environment than the classroom." The SUN eor mWl SU. obtained a sore throat. fter completing' h'the Bicentennial Celebiation. ' models icielf 'after the UN Security Council, with in a niAe civil aner, wvr npesnig mdessniaddachslul edt hAll the meetings wre plan well, and. I was representatives from 15 different countries, five of their f resolutio s.. The opfraldebates Infirmary where. he would rcive a med-ex on;jbitqrel~te,witl th aumupi a meetings s well ~~hi II .are major-world powers, 'with permanent the isstj' and Cor es to a ~irt ~iin; K account of his- 'otrageously high temperature."1formally over 'an aften~ot luncheon and a positions and ten othef countries which rotate Witlyl te help tf the' officiall Ellen Roy, ' I hyG'roast beef dinner. I met and taE ed with over fifty positions. the Nem~ Enigland Preside pf SJ~ originated' While students mutare a oe omoequ Ily interestingmnad oesm f Bfr ahSNmeig pae discusses and fved the dea of UN while working at, physical exercise is necessary, there is-some debatewhici were wealthy and powe fIl, and some who ' the chosen topic, thus enabling the students to the U4N sumr. Roy ecic~ed that the SUN over the value of attending spo . Although senior'WEr not.. I 'digested a fk of opinions, learn more about the subject. Then, at the first wudI~4ty u d o ~,s h ilCabr os' lk sports,", but esugestonsand ideas and rec gnized' an insu- meeting, each student represents one of the fifteen contacted Mr r erickA lis, Chairman of' the refuses to take an activity beciuse, "I nee4 thepera~le ommitirept to hc If, 'and its ideals countries with representatives on the UN Security History'' ate Mr. Al isi in turn aipproachedI exercise." Jorge Virgil, wres ing captain' andiin pratice n inconcet. Su )unded by people C~uncil. In preparation for the first class, the Tom H mna leadin icourse. .Because three-sport varsity athlete, oted that sportsiwho~coul have eaily minAtui the importance student does extensive research on Jiis country in "of his ome with I" w ther simulation "should be a commitment, f r 'all ganies Ieftsurrisigly relation to the others and to the discussion topic. program at St rd Univeiy Kaufman ac- practices." He added, "If you re not there, youlcomfortable. They'elected to t k solely in terms Next, the students break up into three groups: the. cepted itman's nvitatio t assist him in t cntspotyu'em"UprRc itn

n fli' F I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Iejy prsof our successful accomplishipe' and exuded a third world countries, the Western countries and progra.I added a practical thought, Iejysrtfcollective optimism. I rgt t at this body of the Communist powers. Each group prepares a AppV' imately- ifty New England' secondary. without it, one becomes a phys Cal 'vegetable."'peopleremain unknol~'n.a'd I wish more, resolution stating its stand on the isitue and the SChools,4 cluding, rei lvdi the SUN Because too many student. recklessly waste~students could acquaint themsels with ne of the SpIfi ato'they will take. The students become progra ' At' And er, ab 4t twenty students valuable- medication ~by acquitig 1. med-exes, the schdol's important support en' es, the alumni. involved in role playing by voicing only the particip~ in the'clurse, but nly seven are taking administration' shouldalet present system,,Those of us who had the preciot opportunity will opinions of their countries, and by acting only as it for- ~¶eit. Ceit students nd non-credit and prohibit students froni o taining med-exes!record the experience as pricele 5s. I' their country would in a given situation. studentj ut rite a ten-pa e paper at the end of' when they are not really sick. y devising a new~I stud AS mu attendeverymSincerely, I In similar groups at other schools, students the ter;,) Alitd sms ted'vr eeting format that separates the sick froMn the sports', I ~~~~~~~~~~Tom Benton have become so involved that they staged and e ry ectur, havin read all assign ed evaders,, the Infirmary an say itself a consid.~

Student Chairperson kidnappings and sent ransom notes to their readinig including .N. pub itions: and material erable mount of money a ' nurses an eveniBiceniennial Committee enemies. PA students have simulated UN meetings ' (continuCdj on p eight) more substantial amount o lt on and trouble.,

A P arable

Too ch Pillow Fhting At PA'Editor 's Note: 7is satirical prable written by t~he Piliows!" she cried as he struggled With he appear rnce ot theJohn Moynihan [he Snozj con nues comment~in With him to go back into the fight." Councilp son, Simo~ was r4-The HiLUPIAN concerning 4e college sw - "'What about the pillows?" h asked. minded of the pillowIs, and th~e stakes. ' ' ' 7 "I~~~~~~~~11 must get one! A blue one! A BLUE ONE!" girl ientK'running !, ack to the

Thousands of years ago e world lay' in And again the harrassed lass fought frantically to fight;,in a frenzy, Te Cou cil-darkness. Then, like a l'u ing meteor of re-enter the fight. With his powers, Gurek sedated person prevented urek fomenlihtenmient, the snoz explosd onto this inky her and continued his inquiry. stopping er with a hal ing,kool of ignorance, and sread te word. And the "Why do you fight among yourselves?" he gesture. Iword was noz. asked. "Is it the pillows?"- "Don't' bother stranger, se'

Clad only in saffron vest'ments the seveh High I The oung woman, in her new-found calmness, like all h rest: ar~bitolnd "A

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APRIL 2 977 I ~~~tPAGE THREE,ap p ly -narrowly through the le ses of the economist, but scoil" grodsel ope wewt do~s ie"mlSizer F ears Effects O f Ecoricrti~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~#; fac which wee should If' take seriously I~ that Another opioi tomk ur program leaner.

~~~Laimmmu~~~~~~~~~~~im~~~~~m " ~~~~~~~~ ~ thcre not only has been ioincrease in produtivsttofSuch d o.art th a~ uetl sxetinirrip orta n ce ''' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~incducatidn sioice the 50's but indeed prg bably motfoudermnsa crrtlsrigS tre s s e s Im o t n c S. a'et decrease.. It takes ore of us at higherlf costs relatively full ect ons, and th elimination of one- ~~~~~~~to prvd0 omaalIeviet ht ftet Editor's Note: Several months ago Dr. Sizer was 'asked by members of the Fculty Cominittee on the prmd oprb evc ota ftet eprtlymen oinstantial setions rofnd Complementary Schools Project tol review for them' some of the basic assumiptions behind CSP and how oth g.Th tnadcooitshdg ~is erfly y men bersin oter etns ndelng

these assumptions seem to make sense in the current climiate. He accepted this task a after the hursand meial invres menutipevit- fpeoduct stiidents in otherl departmen . Furthermore, thediscussions of these matters, the Committee, suggeited that he make a sit ilar report to the aculty as a - n uhhsnt~nse t'l nor vreyaddpho u r mI infcnwhole. This speech, presented to the faculty last tm, describes trends which tnay well influence PA and tali u enterprise. Pioductlvity" is a nasty word t' most pdll t' the reason why we hav "customers." Themay have direct bearing on'Andover's role as a "pomplementary" school. educators' cars, but it's'something perhajos we expectations of pirents and ppli~ants are h h,By THEODORE R. SIZER ~~~~~should take a bit more eriously thap we have in and our standatd~ are high: b th of, these eailesBy THEODORE 11. SIZER ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~hepat. arc legitimate. To' run a th eadb'are' nstitonFirst, sme trnswhich are primarily educa- trend toward increasing support of parental rights tcps.tional: tpete is increasing criticism abroad in this icontrolling the particular ethical and moral Phillips Academy s heavily endowed istltu- serves neither us nor the students Well. Whyin C ~~~~~~~~~~~tion, ad its financial calth depends greatly on should a parent! pay any t ition for such an

feelng hat hey"don wok." f curse th was held that the specific curricular requirements ablttforedwethudsteke p dcto fa eulytr br dcto Iwork." th~ere sI onb h ho tt eateto with, inflation. While we have instructe$ our available at no extra expense at the loaI'l~ -cosualrys of' ritc o public l eucaie, a stachin bt the hioen n Sthte WhDercet theclpuIi

criticis of publc ed~caton, andinvestment managers to so arrange our resources' school?it modulates up andi down on some kind of Education were both t vague in one dimensicin ta noefo no etices' tn esAlo hc ed t nte

mystrios-6yle.Thecritcis is-p i ou day,~i than 7 percent a year, 't would be imprudent -- conclusion, that which has in olved the thinkingand s likely to increase. The high school is a inifacttwas ivolvedewatthemechanisticro'partiua tre.Itelatfuyesnoewr curricular objectives by he state which all schools gie h attet rhsoyof the Stock '.of the Complementary Scli Is Project FacItthan five national commissions have made their I had to meet, a listing which is frequently seen in kthi . tbvoul asumer ato schta 'ainwill beprurogrmite sovter. tIfee ays winth t ae rreports on secondary education, 'and without, educational literature. The Court not only shot thn.Ovosyorma rcpt¶cmag il pormsotr foesat h uneo,thisdownbut id sowith evasatingforce The helj~ wp can only praytt at we suc'ceed in bringn dollars' which a famnily'can asonably invest Ainexceptio all, on wayht or anotherr recommend scholthe in large sums of money uickly.' But a reasohable one of their childrep, and if o e assumes that wewaseitimizte byomprehesiv Bryan Con intewhichgonsaecretybigrifreo person can only agree t at the~ ca paign, if it is wish to give no~ quarter to our richness nd

;s ~~~~~~~~~~~~completed in two, three or four ears, will only standards,- the - only way out will be to designlate 19,50's. Again, without exception, these reports so seems thec trend to this layman. ' buy us time. The only ptionIs b fore us are to programs which are both educ ionally strong Andcopeh Finly Lon Angee reiintgratin irnt:rao peerla">r Insmthenoic.god ps. pora hnuzv4t-' ~r~commend that secondary education include bt 'Fnly n*h itgainfot eea increase tuition drama ically' ani to cut" ourt brief enough moieet the constraints of hon-campus and off-campus experience, ml Court in LosrAgeis's.rquiring n integrtion plasionssuppot th notiptht secndar eduction acyounter spends.e some ofuisn tie in he I beakernsmth oical tueiago fml' us.Shre rgas hntoevmentary education if you will. All these commis-. acepeamltpllchoesltinoeenwhc than are te legal and which we are ustomed are clearly an ans er,shonuobe made upofio seveal scools," seduatofIn eihoigsho n oeo h iei pedagogical ones. Pertha sby cptlzng on the whether they lastfor two year or two weeks, necentralized, integrated "i-ide schol. Such a I tttr wca eritIyeihtleadraiis yarosxwek. uch progras inevitably wo ildstep reinforces the notion o7f. complementariness, o1, the former. have to be "compldm ,entar; e would be obligedPhon nwy be to ~~~nd shows a good more imagination in the The implications of' s trids for Phillips' to dovetail our woil int that in which a stuid ntreduce the size of the' cai-~'ng out of ~e pinciples of Bm &~d'of cademyare both' good a ad. On the -bad" was engaged at hic or her ho e school.e~~'hnr,1 ~~" educat~on than do some other, earlier Court: ~~~~sqe isthe ard reality hturoduct is being In sum, the comnpelling aments for a mkeschool. E~~~~~~~madatedn phan. oeohr erirCut priced out of the market Indeed, e can now only toward d complementary plan are several, ,nd

these to be ithin wh~t i andly calle "the All o these thrses 'itgatstatdiscountre nlonit paysjiscount:enepnear obvious.at Theious Theimyjofrour'o studentsde now now aathese o be wthin w~t isgranl cald"h l fteetras'ugs om oe the,full cost of a Phillip; Academ educaticin and here for, far fewer tan fur ears of heworld of work." While'there are still some serious i positive time for those of us who would like to see i _

questions about he wsdomn of pressing young greater options and variety available for students.' pe6ple directly ito l~le labor market, the broad -of secondary school age." If one combines them '.. e i st lan n e s a dlc acceptance of the idea that secondary education is with some fresh pedagogical ideas -- promising .. u tole ry ner ta d1! 'no oner6 b gind ,whll wthi 'mo re on or anothe of Carry ng on, as we ar1' slo' buCurre entalcorits institution is srkn. 'oeeffectively le~rp 1 oraohrsubject

U tsinlerentryoptedoihe srkngicugtasprasmcol inexorabi t , 1 ~ orc oo .9oftestatus quo is one cannot escape nlud~ ngtatprhp chos u n ng i to a rch d 01''reinforced by the shrinking of the adolescent age skuch as ours are on the front edge of a wave of '

cohort From 1974 to 1984 there will be a fourteen ,change, well positioned t take leadership and to 'fpercent decline in students, from over 14,000,000 take advantage of the trends which seem to be' those who are now paying brely 50 ercent of it 'traditional secondlary so crse. The mo ofto. somewhere aroifnd 12,000,000. No longer will running our way. T my eye the time is ripe for are already complaining about our! high price. We "'the profession and the cony ional wisdom asschool systems feel the pressure of rising& numbers: institutional boldness and a deliberate attempt to must look suarely at the faci that' the product we rpentd i lecmiso eot eymctheredwill now be empty desks. The sellers market seize the moment. ' -I'offer will not sell unles! we" give at least one-half is running in thisl direction. hotrter enrolfem nts* ~~which typified the Conant era -- the time when However, there are also problems, many of of' it away. uch is the h rd truth, and peh an allow us to m~iti standa s and depth, ndthere were no empty desks and where parents had them economic. Thel most insidious one we face is 'ine~vitable ofie. I pi they allow us to: designpror ms which maj beto acept he nonon~thatthey had better be 'inflation, that inexorable if often invisible threat 'On the other 'hand I an't help but believe that economically viabl, 'both for he school and fr'' grateful for a space -- is behind us. Today, for the to our stability. Reasonable people now say that, tese times are now favorable 'for bold directions parents. first time since the Second World War, there is a for planning proewe shul xpc a by~independent schools, for.attemnots to ind new We should dicuss both~ It'mei of' iy

* , real possibility of cholde'for pareis, and the real percent inriation iate tr the next two years, and, ' Ipreceding arguirents and? f there is somelikelihood that public ischools as wKel1 as indepiin- should add 2 percent in' "o itnsv What practically' might these steps be? First, agreement onadrcin tward infreaigdent schools will increasingly bid for students. -industries" such as schools. Effectivey' then, anq obviously, we must make our resources work "complementary"' programs which one ie* ~~Already in some sburban areas we find Phillips Academy should plan its financNIn futur harder. We need to continue to have good, should be. None of us here, in luding myself,hatuition-paying young people from communities assuming 7 percent increase in costs per year. en owment manageme , and to see that'I our ' any excessively emotional sta e in the patt mns

such as the National Committee for the Support of growth and improvement of one's economic status but em ; fewer areas used financial base * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~re~outside a town's borders a commodity ,of growing Against the reality one must recognize that real r urces grow. We as a school are particularly represented currentlybthSmieSsiote

interst toits shool ommitee. Te posibiliy of famil~ incomes are at best plateauing; indeed, we 'blessed-with' an abl ad hard working Finance STIs. or the PG year, for exat pie. If we can Indchoice is with us, both' ideologically and practical- May be facing a 'genles but nonetheless real Comnmittee, and I hve reat confidence thati this better patterns, so e it. We mi st look carefullyat ,'ly. -,,,,~~~~ ,*. , ' ' ~~decline in the United, States standard of- Hving, 'side of our enterpriseris. nverysoliqtsape,indaled. .ol he.'w n oe ya ormfrtisRelatd to his uyersmarkt is ftes kin thisfor he fist tie'sice 191.'Few of us in our We must-be sure that w-'-waste le~s. We nittit use -A~ntheir way clearly "co plementary." We -of educational "consjimerism." Various groups generation have experienced a situation where - our builditigs bettei, I lowing fewer rooms to have time to do this analysis, hanks to the liduch s th Naiona Comitte fo th Suport f gowthandim'rvemet'o ones eonremaintus r heatehatd onlyea usediolythnanTrust es'nkn thd s- ermdetem dPublic Schools ha've sprung op. or have redirected was not almost a foregone conclusion, but such is part of the time; 'f" rfclte atfly t ieu n oasrn pl aTru tpolWhtw

their energies; tward becoming a school's version ' a reality to which all of us may have quickly to managed. We must pres; hard for "young round" need to have is the wisd~madtecuaet eof Nader's Raidrs. They are rising question learn- to adjst. - " ' - ' se of our facilities, iaginatively spread in the the trends as cea ly as! possib and carefull to* ~~about educational practices and advising parents ' Given the rising costs of this school and the costs of our 'beautiful, but expensive Ilatj n face up to their i pmcaios our iqstituion.and students what their rights' and expectations plateauing of family dollars to meet those costs, it grounds across a variety of enterprises. Of course We can make tec~ne ncessary to contipuemight properly be.' Again, this is a new is inevitable that schools such as ours will meet we are well on the wayo accomplishing,thi4; the service to youh"r4nfo evrery quarter" ndphenomenon: the notion, of consumer pressure is increased competition for the fewer discretionary Summer, Session is an ~important - part of our wehvtetietmktecansdebrtly

something which ha~. not been practically or dollars each family has. '(Such pressure may be school and,, if anything, should be expanded. ,n aeul.1 e'l cisd oats f 4 ipolitically possible in. this country, at least for alleviated somewhat, however, by the fact that Secondly, we must clearly understands the and, Ihpweiethatst.secondary schooling, since the 1920's. Consumer- ' 'implication 'of carrying o as~ we are: we are slowlyism is a practical extension of the typically cyclical bur inexorably turping to a "rich kid's schiool."public criticism: it is 'criticism with specificity and -~If Phillips Academy eventually costs so mti~cb' thatbite. Many of the particular "bites" are turning ,only the children of the pper-middle income caninto litigation in the courts. Most prominent in the .attend, save for a few very high scholarship The P Si Cola Co'.news is the concern. over equal funding of local 'youngsters,' I wonder how many of us would like tco~~itinue is ask nga st dodetits'education, best personified by Serrano in Califor- cltueto carry on he . Much of wha we do 9 nia and the Rodrigue'z case in Texas.- In many toflay is cerydefensibl on educational grounds states there are now judiciallearl ma~to sto d StI y nstats thre ae no judcialrequirements that , ndweqie rpel sppo i;buntgofunding be equalized across districts. The inequi- .be supportable on econo ic grounds. And we' may th so a mi esties between Compton;' California, and its neigh- fin tatwe nceaingahveamfnescooetht proorteverl illsenfor empen are striking h fewer and felwir talentd youngsters can attend. If va dalism con-proprtioal dfferncesbetwen te fudingper iThis hard fact may b painful, but we 'must,child in Massachusetts communities is equally understand it fully.tn eALs astriking. If the courts continue to assert that equal, An 'option may be'i o educe the size of theprotection of childreIn requires relatively equal school even 'more than e l av,Ie over the ast five m achines wv I befunding, the' revollution in the financing, and thus -years (you. will. recall w numbered, 1260 the yearcotoo ulceuaio ilb ecla.Is before the Abbot/Philliis merger; next year weimpact will be even greater than that which' will be somewhere aro nd'1070). We could, I c m n 1followed the Brown decision relating to racial supswihrwthadmmdwpoa tdnsegregation. b9 dy size of appro-cim'ately 600' stuqents

A,newer, and for many a more surprising; line, selling off all the property' on the west side of I'of litigation surrounds the whole notion of Route 28 gn'd corncent ating our efforts in the , I

considering arguments that the state inappro- fewer children in whose education an investmen achieve this'' 'we would be giving up the varietySa enpriately has the long-accepted power of compul- must be made.) This comipetition will' be fl' and depth which the r latively large faculty nowIi

particularly from colleges, in two ways. First, most allows. We would also nd urselves with an ever I'''No longer will school ~~private and nfiany ublic colleges are increasing higher cost per pupil. le ding us down the path of'No longer will school their fees at a rate at or higher than the'inflation what can only be called socially regressive policy. UamKCT's I Im -St Y- 47 rate, escalating their costs to figures which would -Indeed, or cuvrrent t tionn poflcies re alrayIiP l

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'1 R~ c LI) tI IJI APRIL 29,''97PAGE FOUR II 17

mu .. Girls' Thun~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ s ouls RadlffWednesday, AprUl 27; Andover Once A prently feeling' sor'ry for the Rosenberg defeated Radeliff ' s num1~er

again, the PA girls' varsity ten IIis, teaim Criml on squad, senior Margot Jones one pair, 82. Kinn'ey a Hill alsoinnihilated another hapless, cllegiate hand d over he'r match to her Radcliffe combined for an 82 victory., hule Ellejh

~q uad. [his time Radcliuffe suceutabed to oppo ent, 63, 75. Jones fought hard, Jewett and Jones fo'ught ani8-5the fearsome Blue, 81. Bolstered by the but er experienced Crimson adversary decision. Iadvantage o competing on its home outla ted her. Liz Anspach, the number [his match was character sze o tlecourts, Andover plaiyed well, tak ing five sixP player, rounded out the sngles Blue girls' tennis team, which s presentlyof-six-'singles events aid sweepinig the ponm etition with a 60, 6-0 shutout looking towards an undefeat dsdaso n.doubles m ~hes All of' the, Blue's victo y With two victories over suppo ly toughvicto~ics came in straight sets. ,Blue Sweeps Doubles competition behind them, Ohe girls, seem

Top Of The adder I - T e Blue cruised to rlatively easy well on their way to attaining heir, gald.Number one player Kris Kinney set victo ies in all' three cdogbres matches. The Blue's next match is o Saturd y

the pace for the PA squad by d I' oih- The umber one team of Goldberg and against St. Paul's 2:30.ing her Crimnson opponent, 6-,, 6. aKinney's co insistent serves~.Jand well-placed shots enabled her o t her TRa'dcliffe- opponent and 'regiVt her J flk TO S Loom1iZs Uesecond victory in two contestsr Robin .R'osenberg, playing jn the nmir'nber twoposition, a-in from behind in the 'first By BOB WALLACE with a time of 23.5 secon whileset to win her match. As the first' set W dnesday, April 20, Windsor, Conn- Bodman received second in he'. 440.reached 2-1 in favor of Rafleliffe, The Andover track team slipped by Newcomer Tim Cain sprinted 00 yards

~Rosenberg began playing monre aggres -Looniis-Chaffee in the Blye s second' in that event, lelving Andover o pit

taking anbther game, cruising to a 6-2,. by t o points going into the fial event, 880 relay remaining. Ii y . rvne e poetfo e oftesao,7 1Advrdw on ntesoigclmiWtol h~~~. 6-0 victory. - the ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~8 yard relay, needed to win that In the field events, Andov held ts

,. ~~~~~. ~Number three player Sue Goldberg even to pull out the victoryi ground. Pete Pezelli grabled rfst int edropped just one game to' her talented IThe rlayers, consisting of Taylor hammer throw with a hurl of 64' 912"

triumph. At this point the Radcliffe girls Day McLeod, prepared for their all-im- shot put with a put of'49' 8 .Joge

attempted to put some pressure on the por nt runs of 220 yards each. Bodman, Virgili and Michaide alo lcdicalm Blue squad. In a quick but tiring run ing the first leg, of1 the rela, tervnsVirgililtakin~ sec nd in thematch, Martha Hill encountereil some ant ipated the gun excellently and discus and Michailides gain inyth'rd indifficulty with her opponent and topped gied an impressive lead which Hill, the javelin. --

four games in the first set. Nevertheless, Cai and McLeod managed tmaain. ROBIN ROSENBERG's come from behind victory helped the Blue destroy Radicilffe.Hilrcvedwnig64621hBueandfvepntfownig

photo/Smnith te race and emerged with a 76-73

tri mph.

"PrO 4 'N ly'% qS J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~upers, HurdlersGirls Lacro.,sse WhipsTuft JVs, 204 Andover's power i tl~ie jumpingIT ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~events earned the su n early eaJ.

By LIZ SARGENT , was extremely' weak, the Blue contin- Cach Shirley Ritchie later, com- Th Blue collected three firsts in this and C HY BARR ~~~uously bombarded the Tufts goalie ;with mented, "The girls did ot play as well *are from Lefty Michailidesl in the long '

Wednesdayt, ri] 27; Andover- In fierce shots. Captain Wendy Sonnabend as last week because the competition was j ,M~o ntehg u~ad~their' second ga eof the season, the later commented, "It was mostly an not -as good." However, coach Ritchie Winston Wycoff in the. pole vau11t These :.

girls' varsity lacrosse team. effortlessly offensive game but when the~ defense was added that the girls' stickwork had fin showvings gave Andover a substantial i"

destroyed the Tufls University JV, 20-1. needed,, it was there." improved ovibr last week and it should adyantage.Tegirls' excelle t stickwork prevented -When t second half began, only 25 aid them when competing against more Dave Gutzke and Hill :otexelled i'.*

Tufts, a new addit on to the schedule this minutes stood between the Blue and their proficient opponents. in hIe hurdles, each winningitheir events. year, from, possessing the ball. for second victory. With an acute sense of -The team looks f'orward to one df its Gitzke captured first honors in the 180 .~

signijficant periods of time. deay ndover easily scored another toughest matches this season n4't Wed- yard low hurdles and Hill triumphed inBlue Takes 10-0 Lead ten goals. Mot-ton led the Blue attack nesday, May 4th, against the po% erful St the 120 yard high~hurdles

Mindtes after the game started, the with four -goals followed by. Carrie Paul's varsity at home at 2:30. ' Distance RunnersBlue scored their first few goals, giv'ing , ' In the middle' and lonp distances,

-Andover a lead which it retained through- Ai dover's lead was, narrowed. Andyout the remainder of the game. Secon~d Bmscia cruised to a first place with ahome Shelly Guyer, bigh scorer for th 4:. 2 mile while John Hostetler sped to a

gaewith 'six tal'i s, scored four times in firit placewsith a 2:06 in the 880 yardthe first half.-Attack wings Carrie .and -u.EieZn h nytomlrtEllie Cunningham added two goals each. pillcc. grabbed third place from theCenter Poll3( Hopp n and first home Judy h nds ofethe Loomis long-distance crew.Morton tallied twc more goals before the 'he ledbalanced precariously on theend of the half, iviiig the Blue a 10-0 09 teome of the sprintin events. If

ea.Because th( Tufts defensive line .Adover wished to take ho~ne a victory,.~~~ead. s' perb showings in the f'nal events were 880 runner JOHN OS 'R finishedgs n tre ilral vets ere188 runerJo hnhe

c cial. Gutzke clinched first 'in the 220 f*rst against Looml's-Chaf photo/Smith

Sports .AGr''Crew Wn ~

ftiday, April 29 By CHRIS McCARTHY "In the varsity' com ition, whichBoston Red Sox vs Oakland A's II

............ .......... 7:30 (night) ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~Saturday, April, 23; Merrimack River- followed th JV'aig Buckingham,7 30 (night) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I its sole split race of the season, the Winsor and Gonec aunche~ one

Andover girls' varsity prew combined 'crew while noe o te'd two. And-Saturday, April 3 with the JV oarswomen in four boats and over's first boatith ihheluorswomn inifur Anns and over'rfirs

Larseo vs. Deakl d....... 20. :0 sson two r'aces against talented.,Bucking- Barb Traon Ki inCr'M-Lacrosse vs. Deer eld..... 1 30 h m, Windsor and Groton crews. Carthy arid Esther Cindso rndrGrotn crews.ecrtvered

Tennis vs. Deerfie ... ... . .1 30 Eights Divided from a pbor start and inished in fir~ight Divded rom poo sta, e nTrack vs. Harvard......... 2:00 This contest marks the only time this place over Groton. Wiso crossed the

s ason when the Blue rows in "fours" finish line in thirdi l! , hl Bu kingSunday, May I , ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i stead of "eights,"' dividing the first and- hade P' eo bohile outhRed Sox vs. Clevel nd............. 2:00 s cond eight-member boats into four The Andoverndeigh sembr bots ino fou TheAnonvr boatd deservedve

crews. In both the JV arid varsity races, special recognition b cause both theTuesday, May 3 t vo Andover crews challenged one boat stroke, Lucy Schulte, a d the bow, MaryRed Sox vs. Seattl !Mariners. 7:30 (night) IF om each of the otifer three. schools. (ap oe ept fIes

Wednesday, May 4 Se~~~~cond home SHELLY GUYER e the Blue ln scorbng with six goals' Aga St' Tufts. F*M thyRed Sox vs. Seattl -......... 7:30 (night) CunigaPwh pt to/Smlth- De sBaseball vs. Nashi a High . ...... 2:30 Cunnhm wonted three. 'Before.Lacrosse vs. Harv' rd JV ........... 2:30 th aesed [r bo n hlyCrew vs. Harvard IV.... ... ..... 2:30 Guyer scored one and two goals Irespec-

G.Lacrosse vs. St Paul's .......... 2:30 tively. a r a dr r s r t en , 5G. T[ennis vs. St. aul's ... .. .... 2:30 ITufts TalliesG. '[rack vs. St,~ Pitil's ..... ..... 2:30 ;Midway through the second half, Wednesday, April 27a Andbver, tie momentum switched to the Crimson dropping th f irst et in atiebreaker

'[ufts received a I lucky break hrough Mass.- IThe Harvard Universit freshmen .s Gonzoles made a, spectacular lob before posting tso 6-2 ictories. NumberlThursday, May 5 ~~~~~~~~~some good positioning and matia-ged to sneaked by the Andover va ity tennis solley over the heads of thle stunned PA five man Jeff Storie bor zed through his'

Red Sox vs. Seattl-. ..... 7:30 (nih)sn oebalpt thle unsiispectrd teafnsigofteBj the final uo. Harvard managed to capture the singles match, troJunci g his opponentgoalie, Jesica Barton thus pr~v nti' dulsm Tch he outc ie rested iiddle 'et as well as the Final one, both 6-2, 6-0. Pitted Jgisa f ahd on.

the Blue from registering hi sh utout'. squarl onteshoulder of Steve y tescr f75 eeig thle fifth varsity player, PA' tpplayerSeeBakalar and his doubles part er, Michael. and decisive point. ' Bakalar dropped the first set of h is]

Harvard utlasts PA ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Sooay 'homt he*n be oeBlue Splits Singles match 6-2. H-f battled b ick5ip the second.Harvard utlasts PA ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I Crimson team of' Oreg Kiish ad Javie~r 'The Blue racketmen split the singles to obtain a lead of 4-2,30(oa,

I Gnzoes ithtie oeral sre f he Hache, winingthre ot f sx sste),before the Cimson statookjcx~~yiso 14,4 0 ~match tied at four. n . atches. Number two player Hamilton charge winning the s cond setl in al

By ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~~~~~~Crimson Breaks PA ervice . ehiman. had a bit of trouble in the first tiebreaker. Co-ca~ptain ikd Solov y, also'

[he PA tandern took the irst set 6-3 et. but recovered to win~ his match in fell in straight isets. 7-5, 6-2, wvhile

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APRIL 29, 1977 ~ ) 1~I (I I, L(1~1

Lac osse Bows To Tabor,Swa- ps Holerness, 15-4

Saturday, rfl 23; Marion, Mass.- A apiece. Nordell tallied four goals and twopowerful and moticilnally-charged Tabor assists. while Buttrick recorded two goalsvarsity lacros e team demolished the and four assists, The Blue pelted theAndover varsit , 11-5. Tabor dominated harassed Holderness netminder with aplay. througho t the~ contest, forcing the total of 41 shots in 48 minutes of play.Blue to commi majny costly errots. During the irst period,' attackman

oody1hiured Ken Miller tallied twice, while ButtrickEarly in t first: period, outstanding and Josh McCall each added one goal.

PA efensema Rickc Moody fell while Holderness slipped one shot past PAcompleting a Ss ad broke his foot. "It netminders Doug Desimone 'dnd Cam-was a bad g e for us," coach' Skip eron Warner during this period.Eccles later c meAted, "Mood' roke PA Pulls Awayhis foot, the p ssing was very bad' and During the second and third peri od,the shooting MIS inaccurate agaih." the Blue increased their advantage with

Ironically, he lue established an seven goals. Holderness scorel twice At~km EE RSHbek o h gis ao.FIc eitrdtogasada ua n Tbrcnet nearly, bf sor -lived, lead when attack- during the second period , but Andover he added one goal and three assists agaist olderness. po/man Peter Fris h tat lied the first of his held Holderness scoreless during thepbo/,libtwo goals less t an 'vo minutes after theopening whistl . Fri ch, Andover's high-scorer, added is4ond g~al' and an O rS assist in the for -hquarter. Tabor responded to Frisc s tally with fourconsecutive g als,, thrce from gamehigh-scorer Te Chapin, who netted atotal of six oas oP' a, Callan ' aS~scored unassis ed at the te'n minute mark, bringing the spFore to 4-2.

Offense Hibernates B HRI CIJLIDuring the econd nd third periods, li~stening in on a conversation among some intIe tra about hife's most

the PA attack becaffie dormant. Tabor pie ant occutrAnces I noticed that no one mentioned tela held last a rdayregistered four unanswered goals as the i~ b .A atr ffcte

Blue failed t gerate any cohesive Fu e Comittee and the policiesof the PA Ahe a enob hMoffensive effort. By he end, of the thirdimedaeadtthponneftem ilkeha ieaperiod, Tabor 8 2. wee -2 oi h ontiscokro.

,PA attempte 'c qcth ao n tejihugh he cloakroom was indleed permeated by a s igh odor, the real treat"final period as idifielders Lee Apgar andlainsoefrho blenuhtasedtetist e nc or.P refJohn Nordell a d Iisch tallied. Unfor- ringaonoatunately, Taboi fol oQwed suit and alsobaktalcuttthtueo"BdLv"snbyaw0 d(hihsab uescored three goaIs. sacrilege, but that's another story). God forbid' anyone shouldl light a match i the

The game markcod PA's worst per- Abbot gym on wrm Saturday night or we might all ie orbit....formanace to d te; the defense could not The PHILLIPIAN was deeply disturbed about 'the imminent danger of asscleai the ball e ectiv~l and consistently, suffocations,' so the Sports Department snt its roving r ep rt ,yours; trul to

while the offen e made many inaccurate 'investigate the cause behind the effect. Social Functions Ca oSchloss, ausedpasses and sh s. Once again, the Blzue by the situation (but then again, what situation doesn't sethe Czar in mehad tmrobed fie i ground balls, bts it AtachnntOH cCLLwrkngth al pstaharm done to the gym floor. This makes sense; why should students be ab e tocontests.-' third period. Nordell, Marv Mahoney, ho/oo o wear sneakers on a gym floor?

Wednesdaty April 2-7; Holderness, Buttrick, Peter i~risch adJosh McCall is~Instead of complaining and moaning about the deplora ile stain and I G trls ofttblltfruae iutoIhyN.H.- Irritated y boring two-hour bus tallied atleast one goal duringI these fomltdsome suggestions which, hopefully, will.so~y isfnjrsca yi eride, the Andoier vsity lacrosse, team periods. As the final ' quarter began, problem:Idismembered a feebl~!Holderness squad, PA held an impressive~Lj-3 lead. T p"1) Continue to employ the standard practice of t vl u15-4, in preparation f~rtomorrow's game Nordell, captain B Yun, Peter Beh, ~I n p c su ahadeeysuetwoatnsoe()pi fpatcfaagainst Deerfield. The H-olderness contest and Bob Colombo cored in the fourth aipaesipr. ocma h lih xestP iuhu ~di

rebled' a ractice session as, ac- quarter. Holdcrness tallied) once duringcolrasthpieto2cnsprclre-ledsnkcording to one layer, "everyne and his the fourth quarter after PA's 15th, and By AMY MEYERbrother scorer " including the first final, goal. Wednesday, April 20;' Concord, attack and mic field lines and assorted Many players and observers viewed Mass.- If the season continues as well'as

other players. ,the Holderness contest as a prelude to the opener this year,' it should be quite k~o o IScorlag Eleaders -. tomorrow's match against Deerfield, successfilifor-th.ixs. varsity' softblilL ,-.

Midifielders'lohn Nordell and Jerome traditionally one of Andover's toughest team. 'The Blue won its first game ~j~Buttrick led the scoring with. six points opponents. The game begins at 2:30. against a tough Concord cadem'

squad, 20:'5. WUDO

Pticher Chris Powers- went the route X r - USs'QJ O. tA Tl'~*

711 ~~~~~~~~~~for the Bu6 as she pitched the whole I DrOi YOU nl~~lue ~ aors Sinik B ~oston ,' L atini gzkme. Catcher Alison Zaccler was behind 16 A DAn' poNH' A Fo,'f' INE G

t) 1 th~plate throughout the entire contest. sfliPuy o~, NG r'ANCIN&.. r B

B3 GIILLIGAN Andove a /4 point edge. In the second Both hit and fielded well. /Frst'basemanand' SKIPPER race the team of Canning-Wolff led the Jesse Drury belted a home run for

Wednesday, AprIl27; Charles River- pack while the efforts of And'cws-Nyhast Andover' while shortstop Vicki Hull 2) Have a ver mall person sprinkle powder on thO stea ing feet uponAn experiences Boston Latin saililng enabled the PA boat of Dan Weld-Rich slugged a triple. A doubi b Kate admittance to t e dance. This man would be the 'b"st in since the Itea m faced ithe dover Sailing Club last See t'pass a Boston Latin opponent to' Thomas wrapped up the big~its for the confetti thrower n "The Gong Show." The powdIr fioablypreeWednesday aft rnoon and tasted defeat clinch the second win for the Blue. At Blue. The other starting play+ including ' Johnson's Baby ower, but.Shower-To-Shoe woilb cceptable.for the first t e in four years. The this point, the Andover Sailing Club hd third basewotnan and cato'ai n Becky Nimproved PA-sa lors threw together theit defeated Boston Latin in two races., iuoyd, outtielders Wai Hy,-:Jean Ken- 3) A wading poo of weak ammonia (NH 3 frtoevthcemical minds)

gear and aced themelves' totwo close The committee boat had not seen nedy and, Laura Smith all played well s mixed with disir fectant would suffice if twl wed oie Bui if anwins out of thr e' races for their second enough competition, however, and it they added their share to thd-victory. ' unsuspecting stu eat did not wipe off these harsh ch eials e game ofstraight icorv. scheduled a third race. Boston Latin PosngS Iit footsie might so n appear on the "endangered spedis lit.

The Pfledoiaethfisrce jumped out to a quick lead and wasl able "We were very happy to' win and as the crews f Ned Andrews-And-ew to. snatch away ther shutout from' the think everyone played very Well," coach 1 4) The next tim our fabulous Trustees meet, mnalc :'$ur to present to'Nyhart and R Canning-Brent Wolff victorious Blue. Skipper Hunt Stehli Marjorie Harrison commented. "~e're the idea of a ew gym floor made of dor-eate4 a oturf. So-'thegrabbed th w spots to give exclaimed after the race, "I had fn!" looking forward to a good season.-baktllaeafwfun bocsnwadthn'ustin te

- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~wrestlers' wouldr't have to lug the Wrestling mat to Ole cqurt, they could

-' 5) Go ahead and let us wear our sne~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~d~~~~~erGshed, sandals, armyr eni sos 11~ersadas am

Saturday, April 3 JV II Baseball 18 ..... Pike Sch 61 2 boots, baseball pikes orlwhatever. Who cares ablopttthe Abbot gym inJV I Lacrosse 1 .... Brookline 0 JV I Lacrosse 11 .... Middlesex School 101 the first place, nd furthermore, the whole joint wjl~ pr ably be sold

JYII Lacrosse fi! : Tabor Middlers I JV II Lacrpsse 7.......Holderne'ss 2 v i a etya nwy IWedniesday, Apr 27! JV Track 66......Lowell High J 65 EYE ' ! '' 1JV I Baseball 8~'.La~rence Vocational 0 Girls' V I Tennis 10..Notre Dame These suggestio shave just broken the surface, and there aemany more: n(Is -

WEAR SPECIALIST p ugs,~~ lts ani losI incense (oh, wow), etc. If you can c+n i~p with any dandies,PRESCRIPTIONS FILLD*ESS

I DUPLICATED ' REPAIRS & ADJUSTMENTS ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~f I fre t o sum hem! to Ron Schloss or drop by I a M~onday night Soc al- I 911,1. /91 ~~~~~~~ F ic~tion metn.nly an Abbot shoeless dance rivals Is6cial Function meeti gs

INCLUDING PRESCRIPTION AND ON- ' ht i.PRESCRIPH'O SNGASSES POTO-S ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~S PTO 6RAl' AND TINTW LfNSES

36 MAIN ST' rT* ** *~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~ANDOVER '475-6084 H-oar 0 on$n s

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PAGE SIX I( i i I'1, ' ARL 9.197

Carter's Energy Plani

orid ews Frdm Autos Toi Vacuum enerj e ~~~~~~~~~~O hW~91st day In oice, Jimmy yte as ro setRKmAs he tlrst lmt udbeset durin

week reve1ied his contra ersial energy con sorva. 1978, and would probably bp i5lilhtly abovoitt o~ ~&. n a s is ~~~~~~~~tion, plan.t Thc plan 'is t most complete and current rate of 7.3 million barrels a day. I use

I . e~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~omproeozjle ot' 'Its ki d, and its pro~iosals, exceeds tho target b more lhan one percent, aI ~~~~~~~~~~~~~dealing ,Ith everything from automobiles to five cent per gallon tax wvould be Imp~se(,

vacuum cleaners, will affe t eveky, Americao. The effective n January of 1979 Each yar, for WPIssue s edrtaln o ncite a barrage of protest~s, but, years, a nickel would be abdtd to the tax fperhaps eually mportan yCatrshnlgof consumption exceeds the I It,' Equally, n'- at It will provide Americans ith a true gaugeo i year n which consumption rate meets or fal s

'a ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~capabilities Said chief Carter aide Haitn below the targeted , rate, t~he tax woul4 beiU S eply T o(ussia: C ~ruise Jodn Tiswl emasure of Carter's biliy' decreased by five cnts. 'addition, eertsto lead the country. It I a greater test of his predict that by 1980, gas pri es will rise at least/leadership,,thati any other single ssue."cnsprglo eas f)IpieIces$

By, HENRY WARREN Carter isted seven "en rgy goals" on Ap I 20. c e prlaln bpe aen iizprice ofcreuye fThe reent br kdownin theUS-Sovet s T could possibly design a similar wveapon, but it They are: 1)To "reduce t e annual owth ae~ cr ihpo a ieg Aeaemls

talks resulted frmtehaeIoto'ry wud esvrlyasbfr ycud put a ou nrycnumption b rmore than 2 per~cent."! gallon figures would be d termined each yeaconcerning he erican' cruise missile and the model into iProduction. -2) To *rduce gasolin cnupin by 10 starting at 18 MPG for 1978 models anRussian Backfire bomber. It appears that the This clever little mechanism lhs. promoted a. prcet." ) o "!cut imp of foreign i o'les ncsngt275Mkfo 98aus.Byso

the key o any btter deate beteen thetwo countries, which than 6 miotbarrels a day, less than half the' automobiles exedn h erage. would r eivesmall, pilotless U plane, holds th e oanmitrdeaebtee h Ii xceigtefurther advancements in, the talks. This devious cau~not seem to agree on haacinsolbe mutt twe ilbe prigifedo ot government rebates. These bates, for 1978 'cars,little craft, which an elude Soviet defenses-'and taken in regard to the cruise missile. The, US conserve. ; 4) To "establish a strategic petro leum could e shg as 4~3 For those Ss'attack unexpected y, has created many problems refuses to cancel further development of the getting' less than I,$ Mk"G~-renalties could run 4and conflicts in the establishment of a new 'missile without a similalr curtailment of the high as $449. Federal offti~l estimate thaj th~agreement in arms limitation between Russia and RsinBcfrbob.ThSoetclmtataverage motorist, driving 1S,0 mils annuaJy 4'the O~nitd States, - the bomber is a medium range plane and a car that averages 15 MPG would pay aboqt,$70

The plane s j st 13'to 18 feet ogadto teeoesould not be included in a trade-off B more per yOAr with the ne Audelines in effect,feet in diameter. hen 'flying, the cruise missile with the cruise missile. The Americans disagree, 0and that, assuming that the Tull 50 cent per gallonmaintains a constarit altitude of 100 feet. A highly however, asserting that! the Backfire is a long tax is realized, by 1985 the pIl driver's fuel bi I~

-'sophisticated guid ce system allows the missile to range~ weapon designed for offensive purposes. The woiuld double to riearly 1, 00dollars, And, c(ffollow the contot r of the' terraini, and it is Backfira, like the cruise, has a 2000 mile range. , cou rse, all public transporthi ion fares are exp~cte 4practically imposs' Ae .t9 detect -on radar. t can Flying from Russia, the Backfire could trike ~~4Jto increase as airlines, ax'i fleets, and butherefore fly benea h the Russian air defens'es! and ~targets in the US and return to ts home~ base " companies pay more for ga oline. lattack enemy targi ts wihu n ann.'wtotrfeig ecause gas, heating il, and electric ~bil I

The cruise m sile,' Iis extremely versatile and The Soviets have increased production of the would increase, hme owners would 11i4d ican fire from truc] launchers, submarines and jet 'Backfire, focusing main~ly on a model th4t can profitable to take measures~ to "weatherize",the~fighters, in add itio tol permanent land bases.' The '~trike at a wide range iof industrial and military -'homes. It is estimated that natural gas use wsn'estimated range of the missile s over 2000 miles, targets in the US. 'Theyihave halted developme'nt -I pay.- 10 percent higher fuel bills. bry L,980with incredibly k en laccuracY. Presently, it can of an earlier model which was designed for use I*. Electricity will experjence a 10.15 percent in~e~land within 40 feet of its intended target, and soon against western naval force's in the Mediterr~'nean. .~2 Nover the next six years~ Ho neowners 'who insula~defense officials opel 'to narrow that "circle of The US, meanwhile, hat granted a full develop- - .their homes would be eligible to receive tax rediferror" to 10 fee. This amazing capability is ment contract to Boeinp~ Air--raft t build "'on 25 percent on the first 800 and 15 perct operhaps the missile's single most shocking and 17 experimental cruise missiles for use in a total the next $1,400 that they pend on "weath~i~frightening ability. Fired from thle US, the missile 'of 23 preliminary test flights. tion." Tax credits amountingto200 o(dbcould crath throu h a designated window n the ' While Pentagon plantieis claim that the cruise permitted for installation o0 sola-etn ~'cesKremlin in Mosco#. 'missile is essential to the US-Soviet balance of A$ Cptter predicted, aln ostveonhaon

The missile cal also be'used in both land and power and that only it canl keep the US even with ("N complaint about the progr4~.Cnrs o n~naval! battles. The missile could be fired from the Russiarls, many. obser~es feel that StopIng 'see m to be in any great hu' toriefe icaa ship 'or carrier-launched plane' to destroy' an the development of the ruise missile will bean \ .\frcnuirps mtr~soto hi

enemy ee vrhe horizon. An array of tfour important step in stopping the current arms race. j and comfortable lIzxury sea as and into srslemissiles ould conc elvably destroy'~ome 00 Soviet The -presence of the cruise, missile has made reev pl fa esablinbres!wih cr , ransfer' billions of, tax dollars Tfro

-' -~~~~~~~1will, me tour needs for bout 10 months.'t 5) To middle income to lin me taxpayers. warhead, the missIl could effectively destroy key 'difficult, but.ve if the USdecides t. cancel .. orttanherooase I two- ~~~~~to over one b lion tons a year.' 6) To restrict economic growt and cause fth industrial or milit ry sites in a non-ncerwr program,- thmssl asbenaeeata"isua 0pecn o ria oms nd !all uepomn rbes

As a result f its strategic and tactical bargaining tool. The cruise is definitely not an nw b 90dng andcen o "useca oare~g in eglatorst reoleadcvnnso.I scapabie" ite Russians are anxious to produce a ordinary missile, but rather a weapon which could more t`.an 2/2 miillion Anrcnhomes." opposition to parts of the il n eas ~ thecruise msile of their own.': Soviet technicians revolutionize the present'arms situation. .Tog teeac lsmnsmgtse iest fseilitrsgop poi~ t

diffcull to 'attain, the nie, plan systematica ~ly and there is Krowing speculatiio about how uofl-' thorou ly outlines the eans to achieve t en. the initial bill will get through Conj~is.

.~~'$I L~~~j1.~~~ provide~~~~, ~~r, a rerpoval a price Nevertheless, ConagemovreessioeNevetheles, leaderson leaers niomi. tt-' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~otrl,6nkloTn al','tbg thmay e"ginerhis'po(Catta5's>

icst es by only a pe ny; or two, a otf'as look." Senate, R epulcn er ow bae' oD O~~~~~~~~~ ,. V.E .1. N~J N gholnegiefal.Alhoghss 0 C4RublicanI IHw~dBkro

CHAPEL AVENUE . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~much' 50 cents in fe~ eral taxes on petroleum Tennessee promised, that G OP lawmakers "4touldCHAPEL AVENUE' ~~~~coulde implemented )y 1988 if'use exed ee smc sw~cn'

P3~~~* I ~~ ANDOVER, MASSACHUSET TS 01 81I0

'Pillp Acde The FashionablePaeT ie Telephone a tA y h n hill Ps dlace To ined(617)4thing an

Ve ng. r The Wite 'S DELI leph nt Booth ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Priscil' Greein

Go~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ZM19 h ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~CLOGS FOR Menl+W n C

*FmiRyssi ~~~~~77 MAIN ST., 4 5 2 1 E6EX.1'A~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ET ~~~~~~rolWr 5 8 ILaCk' MO n),

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ANN-

The Ne&w England Aquarium: AnOc topus' G arden On The' WVharf

By ROBERT S MTHE TROUT STREAM." Th~ partitionIs ep- creatures.) Wanna pick up a starfish?"Boston has many ittractions where arating the groups of tanks are full of asked an employee sitting on the rocks in

one can waste a Wednesday afternoon interesting information concerning habits the tidal pool as little kids bfna~e neirunder the, pretense of learning or cultural of certain fish, but are sometimes located heads. Taking n notice, she continued,enrichment. The New En'gland Aquarium yards away from the fish they describe. "Don't squeeze them tob hard." Shejis just such a place.Fo two dollars and The tanks ,themselves are often too held up a starfish- with a swollen leg. " a student ID, any ager purveyor' of small for the number of fish in them, think this one ha a tumor."jknowledge can see the orld's fish in an focn h Ihete osi nvery There are also a few doa safternoon. Since visitors' hands are tiny circles or not swim at all. The depicting various slices of marine life. Astamped upon entering, i ipossible to octopus, for example, could 'do nothing, mill pond in Connecticut and a salmonleave and re'turn all dy. more than writhe across the front of the stream were so realistically constructed -

The Aquarium is rmade up of two, tank, prompting one little girl to say, that at"a distance- of fifteen feet it, waspatts: an mpressive modern building on "You're cute, Mr. Otopus." hard to, tell where the plastic grassCentral Wharf, ad the "Disc~iery,"~ The tanks were devoid of any kinds blended into the painted background. which floats in the harbor fifty yards of plants or decorations unless'deoicting The most fascinajing scene, (it was away and is described asa autc acransee uha irma. The completely underwater), the Bmini Reefmammal pavilllon."- I penguins and otters (yes, they have these, tank,, was the only display that mapaged,

The, main building contains a spiral to)lv n aua pIn stito the walor even tried to convey the bauty and arrngement of galleries along the! outer like the tanks. Penguins were crowded splendor of a natural reef.walls of the Aquarium that extend to the in''the pen; one little fellow showed the After gaping at the last tank you findtop level of the three story building. The falseness of his mnmade habitat as he yourself magically transprted t the top,*spiral'iarrangement allows the aquarium tried fously to swim In the little of the world's largest observation tank: io/Nw kto set up ;tnd present nformation in a puddle provided for him. -23 feet high, and 14 feet acr ss. As yoIulogical, order. The otters' pen wasn't much better t an have been taken (in more waysp thain one)

This logical progression falls apart, the penquins', although they had a larger totetplee fAh aqlewu, hhowever, after the first level.' The pctual puddle to splash n and there were only gallery windows winding arou io the tanktanks of fish follow the biography of the two of them. A little 'girl pointed to he are designed to tke you -to-thebtosea n groupings of abput three tanko, whiskered creatures a d floor n one smooth moticoi. A' te O" [P u fe

-iheilch group of tanks sparared from screamed, "Mommy, they're dead!" I 4aoy recorded lecture i. piped iti t every u S 'f etrI 1. Iother groups by a partition that Is' just were only sleeping, which appeared to be portal you try-lto look througt4. The. tank B O p ei nough 'to have to walk around. This their perennial occupation. Iitself contains Moray eels, tuna, turtles, ong man prof ~lional writers , And this hurts his acting,,Is where the logical oder' falls apart. For the kiddies there s an artificial sharks, and all the other fh that are too Ina, n th e rre" trends seems to TaliA Shit* I a oW' actross, but ho4Pirahanas arc placed n thaI same; group tidal basin (a tidal basin s a pool of big to crowd nto a' normiil tank. In the be t t of makin'g danq( rtis sttaenents. unaccountab~' undergoes raither un~ et.as "A NEW HAMPSHIR POND," and water left on the beach by low tidle, nd center of the tank a 25 foot column of So e 1's be profssiona andl make a tl~ing nietamolphiis during the fim. hoan' electric 'eel ls the a ghbor of "A containing diverse population of Baa ohippck cmant to make everyone ft. t dan'iaotis statement; Amy hoiild not chanso ea rom i rematrkably unAppenl nghome. Every two hours, a diver dcendsi haye on the Ademy' ward-this year.' And shrewish looking WOMIan to a rt or,,'1 Into the blue'green depths to hand fd Airo ity I har popb grinding their fittractive one.! Apparentl eaetthe flaih, and the ver proment little kis teat and, harpeing aiknvsPu sm ttheasoltp wt1 yRiway's exQlaim that the0Y ant to lo te down 111t axe, sir, nd!I tl uslicaiiii this transformted h physically, It' that o,Ahorki dot the diver, like o oliotnit;, I'll o n ode that Roaky Ijorhapi tAllona should selU phoiogra ii'

i I ~~~~~~~The Aquarium'sk proudeust nooq~i.was 'Ii illed, and,' lo~t t hld myl of hisef a A ovoroigil yonlplly fOrBY J9811AGEBAR Illalit i- tile "isc00ory, a permaneni ilte; I w ell througholt , however, I IgINess,0 8Iuch 0changoor iever, uso ily1ANDOVER B OSTON VAU(NDARt ' exhiit mord nthUxibr 4 'it lO I im~a ie c~ lohl per n~iytls lai a an~i~iday, CN~[t~t I . ''Dlsco~ry'' is slick litle audit,'lun one attentin, and I doll's'hae tIslAietlinktlitwle''(udxfathl'rs,' hut hIDIAW UI ICTU tIR '1UR10'NMao 111oton. at the Iloston tiarden, M 4 ait will; it ating capactof vr0W ua ie nldbe' iliy of that uffer fro insucIIIvs' ii 11hsip' t. Morgan, whose rt iosri on exhibit t 8;0 pm, 'llckt are 7.80 to 6,50 thousand, ltvery two hours, 'thle AquA;"r , The I'l plot of Rtooky #esls ' o1 Wo

work Addl5 pallery, wilclssO he 'Pilo Sing Fvor Festival featuring him proeen live dolphin nd e ilou; t'nhsit~yttIl;Icno otrosywa hlriciudne~i work, 05 PM ~~~~Orleans, James Montgontery, Heafrt, aind shows, as wll as short ftaims dlescrlbi,;g Itt a1u loan rk b ig a symttpathe' clic1he, Collidac Io lp th tal han 41f, oal1tIILI01OUS 81RVIp11o JewIsh Seet' a special surprise guest. An all day tile two animals0. ''hlac0tuail howA I h tiot i Ikenhie Pleriml. I'll grant thaed 11ilisoi or old man 'avn e at powalvicesj Kemper Chapel 0;4S pm concert ait te Hito Shell1, April 30, Ilst eKul$ lng aspect of t Aquarium. fler sty e onie of tw$, but If you wre tol but n ttllone's 1han11,It baouOu~~CONCElItT Cdhibin1eW" rholutra/4nd Chick Coren ailtd 14eturn to opve~ TI'le ion l1pips9 ithmlyan lav;yol i P itge ~ br e y ta4ess l, Ibored' and nritool %'hiQ h a I ifiConcert, 1lhrna~1 71,100 06' featuring Stanley lrk ait ile Orporn oafiio;aily balked t,.perforntinii, as did ytiahlOOONes,~u it ted' o ln Vntire aunt irony, ho %yhou lieDRAMsA. "iluttbilles A Mre," Drama Theatre, M 1 at 7100 pitt. ''lukots atre thue dolphIns,'but In both ORIe A bit o1f fo'g t m.fl I pouesad vnwre h ttl~LAb), 800 pili ' 37.50 and 36,540 fish al1ways brought thent around, iak. S I as of Statlone1 wro thie script s ~beglit to take t erlisly t dast.

I ~~~~~~~~~MOVIn~s. lag you wotider f they a afintA11frt 115 Well ltaylaig thea title ro I.Ile not at Thel plot I denced 04-hr tntokAs"Network" at te Atout Cliteman, 2i00 you are told they re. p iarti u lt~ good scea it, Before lie thle forties, J (rile0i's ifedy- sNt dThivag~~," ~~, ~ P' 41 7:1, 94pmn. Also ait the Upon leaving te "Discovery," one0 tried' i~ il aI cipt, fbt trck star Soul, at 0coossa chla iit vll~tlyMOVIE' "Dfoctor 221aI1 O ,pln Chafrlds Cinema, 1:00 p, 3, 5:0, enuoun-lters harbor seals just outside who i~ b ought to- Is 1w1fl by hs superior fim I fac It s around asORAMA. ;"Butteflil A Frau," Drama, 7145, aid 9:5 p of the xsit of' the Aquarium. The salsa leaa a Ao 'craving for b aN o s eWas- far back .at' the thirt s, ii a im it Lb, 8:00 pm "Siivear'Stroak," ait the Central Square, are'o~llea Interesting itan the sit, don't ni u a1 fwn, and h c dn'~ sell It. 'Gntleman iim 530 pm, 730, and 930 pm cost a thing to watch, and at robabily a o's'aetihg8 s tough And unpol., Stallone and te lintl have a Ill

Catholic ~"Airport 77,"1 at the ,harles Cinema, thea most njoyable aspect otf n aquar(, hhd HeIs nt a StAnisa ski atr n btne1 Make tt Itkldso atny.'1:30 pm, 3:30, 5:45, 7:45 and 10:00 pm lum visit. ~ ~ there~ u reIlls actIng lac s Ntaturalness,! 461d undoubtedly wil make morew lRELIIOU AEVICib-o Camhl Set. "Black Sunday" at tho Cnema 57,' THE NEW UNOI.AND' ARIUM, Somw icors can ahie e naturalness the impondini, sequ 'Is and telavllavIces,'Cochran Chapel, ,,0a 12:0, 2:30, :00, 7:30 and 100 pmCET LWHR '' wihutmMhd b -t Ihy are few rt A Is urpris ~tg Popularity IlitsSericIs, SERICS.Proesan "Rocky" at, the Cheri Complex, 1:00O pm, BOSTON and fir between. He s em: good Int shown, Rockys a r ir charnintg Ittid ervlces, 11:00 am ' ~~~~~3:15.,5:30, 7:45 and 10:00 p Roce because of' his s ow, stumbling entertaining filn des' Ia all ts teclhni alI

I' Ar ' Free for' '~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ADMISSION 3.50 for adults, $2.0 voice ad actions. Howev r, I have read Insufficiencies and I dripping sn a1.AEditor's Preview: 1, Butterflies A 'Fe o ages 515 as well as students wtID that 'till n acts this W'a In real life. It mentality, If you h e an extra two CAr.,o, rRandolp'fl Julia will inRab enouted n young manl he[Chris hardohi lvig o Under 5 free IsTus 96Fi . ha Al an actor to a In~ hea proper dollars and two frep urs seeRocky -{It'

Leonard Oershe play, Btorfls are Free alone i Nw York City, Eventualy, he Weakends and holidays 9.5 itas r n the screenpi o fr his part, Awards can beFriday and Saturday nght a 8:00 PM n fall i love withi the girl ,,ext door Julia ~he Drama Lab, Randolph will d'ect he Roel I Matters are comnplicated when he 4 'platiln an attempt ioo f4l1 his Teatre girl runs ff with obnoxious produc ' P.27 asalunment wit~ thir help f h dirietor Ralph Ausin Rab KrlAssistant Director I Rachiel "Chi-Chi" T',e play will last about a hour

TheI play i a 60'sr cbmey about a tween the two acts, ~~'I1

K ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Magazies ocerie p2th~4t~l Paperback B Monarch N, ote

I' ' 'K' ~~~~~~~Sportswearn ,

Page 8: APRIL,29,1177. Foundation. Grant Boostspdf.phillipian.net/1977/04291977.pdf · VO 11,NO. 21 r PHILLIPS AADEMYoANDOVER, I4ASACH JET`S /APRIL,29,1177. Foundation. Grant Boosts By RICK

i ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~ ~VISIT the *

PAGE EIGHT /il'll(~~~T14 IA EAPRLO29B197

EVERYTHINGWPAA -

(continued from pagze one) fo htsi tl ~IIIbh~uhyear, WPAA greatly expanded its broad, owa' rdtoacasting of news and athletic events and (/l 7~-,~Cplans to continue to do o in the LJ e r P *upcoming year. (

Besides possibly reinstating the pop- ~.YlC. OPEN THURSDAY EVENINGS UNTIL :30ular show, Saturday Night Rock, Ander-son said that few new programs would INIiA IMPORT jU 0Mf~start in the upcoming year. He noted, DRESSES -, SH- IlRTS - SPREAD~n - RUQS

"We hope to make better use of our 4; T EGrop ftno oeprosaeivtdAVI ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~tour the Eg e-Tribune-plant. To make arro e-

talk shows and disciission shows such as 11 POST OFFICE AVE. NIV MS.00 mns eaecllKrnHwd,651

Anderson hopes~ that next year's most marked improvement will be in the I-HOUR FREE PARKING of the

equipment itself. The intended purchase Church Street Garage (right neat door) ho.of a limiter, costing nearly $700, would ~IC nt is.cut down on the existing overmodulation.4To extend WPAA's broadcasting radius,Anderson will attempt to change thestation's power rating with the FCC andchange the modd from mono to stereo., ~ 11IE 1CURHsr ABIj

Next year, WO~A will undergo per-*iodic inspections from the FCC which- -

will entail a -4os6 examination of thestation's qualityjnd variety pf shows, theD s, and the equipment) at B na d n

NORTH ANDOVERMSouth Afnca I SftTAfak rp(continued from 'page two) IESDA

on tnre, individual countries. The group APIwiPA-ODY- ICRspends an average of three weeks QQI -

researching antI discussing each topic.SpcalIgI Wr I1fatry'TV.liTTJATd17

of South African countries that are flJ n4P tt will rester It to its teasln, lke Mew, ANR AL ESAtorAG NCypresently under" white minority rule. The una4tI, fST. ANDdwREALaEdSTATEAGaArYdspeaker on this subject was Kenneth No 111twolAflC~ r I %T1 fI rIJj~Sarstens, a white South African working e A1dmr83W 6000 TNJY. IA.'J I i J.5.&

on his Ph.D. In international relations atA n'1farvard. KArstens spoke strongly against LSS; -te.'753 1

the current South Afripgan govern nent __ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ _ _

and stressed his feeling that Many JfHS H O Enations, including the U.S. would further IH , SCHARMY NORthe black -South African'sI cause by HAUSAR Y ESERVputting political and economic pressure CAN TRAIN YOU IN FOUR TO SIX MO ~THS IN ONEon 'the South African government, The OF HUNDREDS OF JOB SKILLS, HEN BRING YOU HOME

* ~~~~~~~TOWN PR~INTING INC. T OTNETANN OEWEED MNH NSUN hopes to draw speakers on teOoher ____NDO WMKSNNTTHSUMEDtopics that will be discussed later In theTW WEKINHE8 M ,term. These topics 'will include intorna. CALLitional economic order and huniimn rights foll fro;In Cyprus or Chile. I 1.8P.431.1 234

Next year, the SUN wilt probablyUSA M orrieexist only on an extra-curricular basis. I~ y O T NTEThose students currently taking the OP 8 01t 8669 RM R - minE tresRT NT

course, encourage the continuations of the s mr ro-learning a great deal and enjoying the TEL. 61?7 475.0526 Name .......-.. Ie

experiment.' HopefulIly the success of t~i - Arl __ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ __ __ __

'SUN should promote equally ionaiativo C2y t e.........4ventures on the part of PA students and ctyphn _St___________faculty.,-

01PEP111.0LA11 AND -Wt,~5i~dt~t~iitqT ~4

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