8
VOLUME 98, NO. 3 SETS'I 7 '73, Sawyer nc~~~~~~. T I Reroute ain St,,~~~'. I [~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Tenlvr or fSlc i hi etro Kenton Will Give T~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SRej ger PollnCaran George Wa'shington H& ll Stage: A pione r in American comnyknw sMinS.atrC~is hairlecman music, Mr. Kenton has been e ding a~a band for over - ofte'arofelcen, no ~ta h eete thirty years, and has recordednearly fy-five albums.b' encountered strong ,publi'c objec ions to rerouting Main Rendezvous Ballroom St.St Bo'rn sixty years ago in Wichita, Kns s, Mr. Kenton -Taldro as madelhis dbut in 1941 at the Rendezvo s Ballroom in, KrTe r, striking dw th proposal, simply al 6 oa, California. Recording and niati nal tours with $taldfrhrisuiooftemteunlteyava his fourteen piece band followed this succ ss and Kepton ~~~~~~~~~ . chance to considere possibilitiessibiaties a posaposaforfrsolving was'soon honored with such awards as L k Magazine's I'ul Butterfield'Sr Better Days Band h tw' nir rfi p ol is In his letter to Dr. r M lr sineou that ?iBand of the, Year" and a place on he Downbeat, Sie M. ospindou Mernm anIait azpl~ the proposal contained insufficient be efit for the Town LIn 1947, his new twenty piece " Pr ressive Jazz" Ua i ~t~ lj o noe a hl owra~t~Badalctn orchestra mnade its debut to a sell-out cro}'d at Carnagic P u uieldfuiereieir, u4 s Band the considerable amounts of high yayonstruction funds Hall. T~hat spring the ohsadev 1,000 -to theI which would have been necss reroute Main St. -' Hollywood Bowl and Variet cale te oup "the The Town, Mr. Collins note~ 1,(id recognize the 11 ~il I~u i t tiihv polm'o rfi otrol and cir ulation in' and around hottest box office attraction ntecutY."'il I form,~ II¶Nex day Anovler Ce tr.fi "Teicmon~1ritreti h Then, in 1950, Mr. Kento nrdc~ the 43-piece Andover enter. JThere ismuch trogeinrstn h "Inovations in Modern Msc orhsta adlae problem than~when it was first sug etd; the wole Iui"orchestr etuig poua and lcamuic Ill pefr InWsitn Ccaoweehwserlexsd problem is much broader now tha it comete iorganized the "New Concepts of Artistr in Rhythm" Paul Butterfield s Better Days ba Cicgwhr hes e arl ep S eceayedh eecmn f omne pogressie jazz A eorge g to jazz and blues. Working~in. small 'ccordino t cademy Frederic Sto in relation to the r~~~v an ~~,Icontempor ry music, Hall ne,~t Saturdak, Octobeir 6. GW ~ bar bands six orsve nights we, to's nagedo ithSeret n rilve'1itlt ecs doosewllopthet7:0vitality:0 e I Redlands I ~~music doors will open a 7:00 for 'the 8I: Butterfield sang ad played harp in depends on the flow of traffic-t ouh the town. Mr. In 1 1 966, lyr. Kenton began the first cinic for pmsi peiformanci, , Tickets are theryoswt moe mtes tt 'students and teachers at RdasUniversity., In av iab e to meml~ers of the sch ' I After a prodc heard him in bivdta reetyiut rafccneto coordination with his tours, Kenton and his band each coniunity for $2.00, and can be Chicago with' ano her bnd several rethi g iart fomulecdf fthog year old aost 100 clinics on campu ~es throughout purchased i the Icdbby of GW duri~ Iyar atr he cI to New Y-ork and tivilt col_ e ot Amerqcii. In 1970, Mr. Kenton establishd a mail-order the day,Ior at theCions in plyed iner the FolkFestvalSeaco Soluto firm, Creative World which distributes kenton's fifty- supper. iivdduring "big"name clubs.' His AthiponheTw isngelinaercfr 1burns,~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~r " "ruicbcme rir ad mr solutions to their traffic problems A 'ong those studies odd aus and according to a press release, "makes 7~c-eae moead mr fine jazz available to the selective person who is unable to The Better ays band, aYcomplex, which caised the group ,to ' eing cnddcted is the Traffic ee ation Program to fin4 music of high caliber in the usual record outlets." conglomeration o" young "blues"; dissolve ' in 1971 InreseCpciyaneaftyired M.Kek Over the years, Mr. Kento and his l~~and have ~von had its genesis in 1972 at~ He desired Chairman of the Andover Town P1 nniingBoard,,ex- Ove te easMr Kntp ndhi Lndhae on musiciarls, disgnisn192a- 'something less complex, and as a 'e fidvda wide acclaim from the public hind the pre! s, as his seven Wood stdck, where they first began'; result formed hi nw gru a band, plained that the program consists o studlieofidvua -' Playbo Jazz Pol Awards ttest. I ad~l itin, Kento perform togethe. They reordtfor by itivabyeprivae nengineeing flrm, hohmamae recoin Plyby az ol Aars tes. n diton Kntn pefom ktoeter Te rcod o according to ButterfId, w ere theI followed in the footsteps of such greats as Louis Arm- BearsvililI and he produced 'ine tImagic comes 'out."i mnendations in respect to traffic c ntrol changes.Ms strong and Duke Ellington in being elected the third albbm. The band features the in- 7'he other members of the and are Kekntd Uputlnwth ona otevsoe member. of Downbeat Magazine's Hall 4fFame. strumie tals of~ -aul Butterfield all op of the in4 bluesmen. As relocating Route 28 as aay of solln their prblems." Presently Kenton's energies focus on' a nunibqrof (vocals, harp an electric- piano),~ gui,~arist Amos Ga rett com Sefrhrcommented on s tasuhaiowsprblY activities, including personal appearaiices and recording Amos Garrett (gu tar picker)', Billy: "This is the hottest and in the I n unnecessary as an answer to te'T 's traffic problem., ibohAmerica and Europe, clinics ini col(n ih(ds) on arn~iano), Mabeatheonly bndointtefford collegysrs s ecuty,an operation of Crea e Christopher Park r (drums), and outside of Dan Hicks that's p Ahgey o-ldcopeae t the Town aryn te World, at this point'developing thema outle fo hs Geoff MIdaur (vo als). somne'sort of rooted pop music. I's Acdmso ooeaei h t e ntrigt our interest wiloetail, but in ayeeaprblem of I Continue on page f~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ur - I ~~~~~~this dimension cai not be solvedyon party aln. ________________ ~~~~~~~~~~~~R ssians us~u C ,~ News-Commentary IAdio Gae'ynUSR S -I I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t, -,S xchctnge CSP,'f Exchanges & nItermpdiate Iole pbivate ~lenoyation 'BvBob Winr trends in public and sc 1o matriculation. The ' 1 Itgarg I reality Addl~~~~~~~~~~~~~h phsclcondition ) h If you thipk Andover is changing relt is the end of te )Y -a 'b yiGalr f mrcn r a rerapidly with' Dr. enth holdingye the o boom' th ark the and s e beenreor in recentAmrno yea, andha Cnsider Ws Quad as a 'college education. Demnograpl~iic chani es cosqetytiIsme ahfo I '~~~~ monitored in order ' '~~~~~~~~~~as e re and painted ain a new camnpus' ~o~dacdsudents, while -'must be 'totre i hre 1 P tn sse vsisall ~I rest I a~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I litio a nt tI tud et I h ~ us remains maximize the app~eal ofithe Ncho . a the gallery's tw new devoted to he mainstream of PA tly, Andover mu t assume yet ~curators, Susan Clarke for A eican studen pndertheprospect of another posture (beyond coerucatij n) Arn!DnSye o ht a, fifty studet f illing nis Hall co sustain the traditionally high will organize shows t egin ,inday, fbr a monthlof intensiv studies in quality and di~rriy fisacd'i Septen~ber 30 at th glery's organic chemnistry. Ideas like these life.' torcsui ,' adet" 'II are not ustdancipg around amid the Also with an eye Brighteri 1 theorie? of' 'the headmaster, or some have glimpsed at public fundig - Ms. 'Antoinette Thiras, Regi trarof glimmering in the eyes of isolated as a concomitant a tegavantaprxmaed eAde faculty members. ad ohr i bringing in students ron pu dison's~'renovation to cost between ' ' Deputy Minister of ua ion .G. Niozhko Rather, these an ote schools f r shorter stays ndov . 25,04 ad $30,000. Director~ of the spaswtIeoresEuain imaginative, far-reaching questions (coi~tinued on pag7 GaileryjChristopher Cook comn ented NLlktcD'paiNiiscofL .aunI heSvt are the product of preliminary work I ' ~~.-. ' that lasi year the upstairs walls wvere u vi te Phli s A a m l stI by , the Complementary School ;1Uniodirtyite PstainedAcandmtheastSaturdiy[ along with three Project. Directe byIthe energeti other Russian officials; M.Z. Akmialor, the oRecor of the * ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ 'I ,' ' the~~~~~~~~O070 1 irtya 6 stlandhs i e de ndal wenth ed ihtn i diitrton~~~h IP ofnndo e iiAsenioro reviewerforthHi 4 th~~~~~gle ryloos, Brigher' an boe eterigU Jerry FrE nischoolstrctand anw"teodiSigRo"whc ors Peasgatofica Intted ,a ctonal, itigtoare schools." 'rh~~~~ Ford Foundation has~~~~~ - adjoines th'er Athen hals deres bien upnb h ntdSaesadteUSS. ,n rscen clturl iato su''oth thme Sfor t stude tone ae fvighsr'e was 1remAdmthiitrstin dther' mathio nsiene ailtis p drojcseamionin I t raie ropadasTetistrswregieiaturo theca is in whichk the ~~raphic influences on the schciol 1 * - to survive withoutk anheir four ismp eeng reliaben aashP iretr erbFstrCotnudonp efur Weptechialor vobcoa Eduction 'h ot sreunia aster attention. ' ' ' I managed el~~~~~~~~~'loks,"Brghtroan mitero= tiatpe. aree gallery tay~~was' part of a ten-day educatinaliedopaeo Ween esidetial choos andday ' ~ :II I' 'I ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~o. h od"hpRo"wih hu icetclua I emhsie thi neeti at

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Page 1: P u uieldfuiereieir, s Band tiihv

VOLUME 98, NO. 3 SETS'I 7

'73, Sawyer nc~~~~~~. T I Reroute ain St,,~~~'.

I [~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Tenlvr or fSlc i hi etro

Kenton Will Give T~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~omoownain SRej ger PollnCaran

George Wa'shington H& ll Stage: A pione r in American comnyknw sMinS.atrC~is hairlecmanmusic, Mr. Kenton has been e ding a~a band for over - ofte'arofelcen, no ~ta h eetethirty years, and has recordednearly fy-five albums.b' encountered strong ,publi'c objec ions to rerouting MainRendezvous Ballroom St.StBo'rn sixty years ago in Wichita, Kns s, Mr. Kenton -Taldro

asmadelhis dbut in 1941 at the Rendezvo s Ballroom in, KrTe r, striking dw th proposal, simplyal6 oa, California. Recording and niati nal tours with $taldfrhrisuiooftemteunlteyavahis fourteen piece band followed this succ ss and Kepton ~~~~~~~~~ . chance to considere possibilitiessibiaties a posaposaforfrsolvingwas'soon honored with such awards as L k Magazine's I'ul Butterfield'Sr Better Days Band h tw' nir rfi p ol isIn his letter to Dr. r M lr sineou that?iBand of the, Year" and a place on he Downbeat,

Sie M. ospindouMernm anIait azpl~ the proposal contained insufficient be efit for the TownLIn 1947, his new twenty piece " Pr ressive Jazz" Ua i ~t~ lj o noe a hl owra~t~Badalctnorchestra mnade its debut to a sell-out cro}'d at Carnagic P u uieldfuiereieir, u4 s Band the considerable amounts of high yayonstruction fundsHall. T~hat spring the ohsadev 1,000 -to theI which would have been necss reroute Main St.-' Hollywood Bowl and Variet cale te oup "the The Town, Mr. Collins note~ 1,(id recognize the11 ~il I~u i t tiihv polm'o rfi otrol and cir ulation in' and aroundhottest box office attraction ntecutY."'il I form,~ II¶Nex day Anovler Ce tr.fi "Teicmon~1ritreti hThen, in 1950, Mr. Kento nrdc~ the 43-piece Andover enter. JThere ismuch trogeinrstn h"Inovations in Modern Msc orhsta adlae problem than~when it was first sug etd; the woleIui"orchestr etuig poua and lcamuic Ill pefr InWsitn Ccaoweehwserlexsd problem is much broader now tha it cometeiorganized the "New Concepts of Artistr in Rhythm" Paul Butterfield s Better Days ba Cicgwhr hes e arl ep S eceayedh eecmn f omnepogressie jazz A eorge g to jazz and blues. Working~in. small 'ccordino t cademy Frederic Sto in relation to ther~~~v an ~~,Icontempor ry music, Hall ne,~t Saturdak, Octobeir 6. GW ~ bar bands six orsve nights we, to's nagedo ithSeret n rilve'1itltecs doosewllopthet7:0vitality:0 eI Redlands I ~~music doors will open a 7:00 for 'the 8I: Butterfield sang ad played harp in depends on the flow of traffic-t ouh the town. Mr.In 11 966, lyr. Kenton began the first cinic for pmsi peiformanci, , Tickets are theryoswt moe mtes tt'students and teachers at RdasUniversity., In av iab e to meml~ers of the sch ' I After a prodc heard him in bivdta reetyiut rafccnetocoordination with his tours, Kenton and his band each coniunity for $2.00, and can be Chicago with' ano her bnd several rethi g iart fomulecdf fthogyear old aost 100 clinics on campu ~es throughout purchased i the Icdbby of GW duri~ Iyar atr he cI to New Y-ork and tivilt col_ e ot Amerqcii. In 1970, Mr. Kenton establishd a mail-order the day,Ior at theCions in plyed iner the FolkFestvalSeaco Solutofirm, Creative World which distributes kenton's fifty- supper. iivdduring "big"name clubs.' His AthiponheTw isngelinaercfr1burns,~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~r

" "ruicbcme rir ad mr solutions to their traffic problems A 'ong those studiesodd aus and according to a press release, "makes 7~c-eae moead mrfine jazz available to the selective person who is unable to The Better ays band, aYcomplex, which caised the group ,to ' eing cnddcted is the Traffic ee ation Program tofin4 music of high caliber in the usual record outlets." conglomeration o" young "blues"; dissolve ' in 1971 InreseCpciyaneaftyired M.KekOver the years, Mr. Kento and his l~~and have ~von had its genesis in 1972 at~ He desired Chairman of the Andover Town P1 nniingBoard,,ex-Ove te easMr Kntp ndhi Lndhae on musiciarls, disgnisn192a- 'something less complex, and as a 'e fidvdawide acclaim from the public hind the pre! s, as his seven Wood stdck, where they first began'; result formed hi nw gru a band, plained that the program consists o studlieofidvua-' Playbo Jazz Pol Awards ttest. I ad~l itin, Kento perform togethe. They reordtfor by itivabyeprivae nengineeing flrm, hohmamae recoinPlyby az ol Aars tes. n diton Kntn pefom ktoeter Te rcod o according to ButterfId, w ere theIfollowed in the footsteps of such greats as Louis Arm- BearsvililI and he produced 'ine tImagic comes 'out."i mnendations in respect to traffic c ntrol changes.Msstrong and Duke Ellington in being elected the third albbm. The band features the in- 7'he other members of the and are Kekntd Uputlnwth ona otevsoemember. of Downbeat Magazine's Hall 4fFame. strumie tals of~ -aul Butterfield all op of the in4 bluesmen. As relocating Route 28 as aay of solln their prblems."Presently Kenton's energies focus on' a nunibqrof (vocals, harp an electric- piano),~ gui,~arist Amos Ga rett com Sefrhrcommented on s tasuhaiowsprblYactivities, including personal appearaiices and recording Amos Garrett (gu tar picker)', Billy: "This is the hottest and in the I n unnecessary as an answer to te'T 's traffic problem.,ibohAmerica and Europe, clinics ini col(n ih(ds) on arn~iano), Mabeatheonly bndointteffordcollegysrs s ecuty,an operation of Crea e Christopher Park r (drums), and outside of Dan Hicks that's p Ahgey o-ldcopeae t the Town aryn teWorld, at this point'developing thema outle fo hs Geoff MIdaur (vo als). somne'sort of rooted pop music. I's Acdmso ooeaei h t e ntrigt

our interest wiloetail, but in ayeeaprblem ofI Continue on page f~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ur - I ~~~~~~this dimension cai not be solvedyon party aln.

________________ ~~~~~~~~~~~~R ssians us~u C,~ News-Commentary IAdio Gae'ynUSR S-I I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t, -,S xchctnge

CSP,'f Exchanges & nItermpdiate Iole pbivate ~lenoyation'BvBob Winr trends in public and sc 1omatriculation. The '1 Itgarg

I reality Addl~~~~~~~~~~~~~h phsclcondition ) hIf you thipk Andover is changing relt is the end of te )Y -a 'b yiGalr f mrcn r arerapidly with' Dr. enth holdingye the o boom' th ark the and s e beenreor in recentAmrno yea, andhaCnsider Ws Quad as a 'college education. Demnograpl~iic chani es cosqetytiIsme ahfoI '~~~~ monitored in order ' '~~~~~~~~~~as e re and painted ain a newcamnpus' ~o~dacdsudents, while -'must be 'totre i hre 1P tn sse vsisall ~I

rest I a~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I litio a nt tItud et I h ~ us remains maximize the app~eal ofithe Ncho . a the gallery's tw newdevoted to he mainstream of PA tly, Andover mu t assume yet ~curators, Susan Clarke for A eicanstuden pndertheprospect of another posture (beyond coerucatij n) Arn!DnSye o ht a,fifty studet f illing nis Hall co sustain the traditionally high will organize shows t egin ,inday,fbr a monthlof intensiv studies in quality and di~rriy fisacd'i Septen~ber 30 at th glery'sorganic chemnistry. Ideas like these life.' torcsui ,' adet" 'IIare not ustdancipg around amid the Also with an eye Brighteri 1theorie? of' 'the headmaster, or some have glimpsed at public fundig - Ms. 'Antoinette Thiras, Regi trarof

glimmering in the eyes of isolated as a concomitant a tegavantaprxmaed eAdefaculty members. ad ohr i bringing in students ron pu dison's~'renovation to cost between ' ' Deputy Minister of ua ion .G. NiozhkoRather, these an ote schools f r shorter stays ndov . 25,04 ad $30,000. Director~ of the spaswtIeoresEuainimaginative, far-reaching questions (coi~tinued on pag7 GaileryjChristopher Cook comn ented NLlktcD'paiNiiscofL .aunI heSvtare the product of preliminary work I ' ~~.-. ' that lasi year the upstairs walls wvere u vi te Phli s A a m l stIby , the Complementary School ;1Uniodirtyite PstainedAcandmtheastSaturdiy[ along with threeProject. Directe byIthe energeti other Russian officials; M.Z. Akmialor, the oRecor of the

* ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ 'I ,' ' the~~~~~~~~O070 1 irtya 6 stlandhs i e de ndal wenth ed ihtn i diitrton~~~h IP ofnndo e iiAsenioro reviewerforthHie.4 th~~~~~gle ryloos, Brigher' an boe eterigUJerry FrE nischoolstrctand

anw"teodiSigRo"whc ors Peasgatofica Intted ,a ctonal, itigtoareschools." 'rh~~~~ Ford Foundation has~~~~~ - adjoines th'er Athen hals deres bien upnb h ntdSaesadteUSS. ,n rscen clturliato su''oth thme Sfor t stude tone ae fvighsr'e was 1remAdmthiitrstin dther' mathio nsiene ailtisp drojcseamionin I t raie ropadasTetistrswregieiaturo theca is in whichk the~~raphic influences on the schciol1 * - to survive withoutk anheir fourismp eeng reliaben aashP iretr erbFstrCotnudonp efur Weptechialor vobcoa Eduction 'h ot sreuniaaster attention. ' ' ' I managed el~~~~~~~~~'loks,"Brghtroan mitero= tiatpe. areegallery tay~~was' part of a ten-day educatinaliedopaeo

Ween esidetial choos andday ' ~ :II I'

'I ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~o. h od"hpRo"wih hu icetclua

I emhsie thi neeti at

Page 2: P u uieldfuiereieir, s Band tiihv

PAGE1 TWO Th ____ ThHILLIPIAN f_______________SEPT MBER 27, 1973

Siz 'S Pi~osals: 1a u iblk~ Or Unre alitic?aisrticle the'~ecorid iiea series of pr~,,els in ivjL'uaI, usIualy on the basis 6f principals of "reliforc ment" and praiseT h e p P IA N ~ ~~~~~thr~e dealing Ith t rrmorandurn their age n&the time thley'ser'e in school, arjcd around an pprIo~rlate theory and

recently distrilb td to the "'aculty by rather thaon their tru4 development, up ~system of jistice..~ ADAM ~~~~~~~~~~Headmaster T odor'Sizs entld through s olto collegj andibeyond, we ,aois

ADAM U~~~~RNER ~Andover's Form Crclu ,\dRelated have to ap that systen'i' and ty to im- The-first of the ~iove proposalsamusLLi-_LI ate~.I th fisTe f1a1-&~ prov i. wytim 'e it is to have the to a straightforward assertion of a tenet on '

President ~~~~~~~~discussied the ortalhsl of the avallibity f' ariety of eternally-acpale wihAdove ma oon operate. It imp~ieSproposails to whc ot of the credential! tward which students could that Andoverta tbealthnso

CHRIS an~~~~~~T fQOTADdum -dvte, Here; the study. T ese credentials should include a people"; that 'the schoo msbeelci-Editor ~~~~~~~~proposs tjiins, ves are presented. secondary school diploma, an Associate in along certain reas fr ebnfto hI Editor' IllaragngEdtr tu ~ tsMo aging Editor The 3rolems which Dr.-S.~ er ad dresses Arts degre , and a Bachelor in Arts degree." stdents he rsI~esf th bfitfthely

himsel are rainly t~orctc'al- AsiDr. Sizer points out, n oinOf ceec o tsion tlat the school mustMl~HAEL SAVITEDM, ND BACON! confsny so, atimes-yet tWe solutions Phillips A ademy having collegiate powers set it Im~S_-1 sdin wrdSport. he 1 ~~~~~~~~fs~gy oat tI'' "d ne" ~, i od

hepro~ffers sentepre ,th an un- is neither utlandish nor newl Ile 'maintains and thenJ operate as maginatively andorsEditor Busiel' c"Mamager' msaebese tmeeI ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~msaebeStrea of pragmatisih'. There is that 'Man 'Andover student's are now innovatively as possil ithin them.TH NIAS LENAGH CH IS GANNON ''~~~the deciided feeli g that they Jr, workable; performin academically at levels ac- ODr. Sizer Write ot is proposal, An-

'that te~ propose Is do not ti'saei o cpabeifrtrn ierlar~clee s dover fers a"structured" residential

A GARET DOWNS DON HAYDEN unreai tic theori s or qu xOtic ~kecul4tions. similar to ork beyond high school and even experient eone which by conventionallate Editora / ' ~~~~~~~~Equal pres~ing is the erise atithr the freshman and sophomore years. Ac- Aeiabrdig sch ols is quite "free"

I ~~~starting point of a whol n'(dctoa Level Exa innation Program arid Advanced 'restict 'We. mfiit certain frpedoms ofdirectidn and et deavor~n Placementtests, whncmae tweinl ou td~s )y oun'sld cjl hm

th nsth e alwa d ciisaole them;eradical Wy alter ean hogiwihte percentile, bear out this state of affairs wealwthem toWaenste. Weereschool du~~~~ates t studenti ~~~conclusive y.I' a studentl population hich nt, as

EDITORIAL BOARD! business of iivin " '~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ / psycholo ists would 'o say, "fullyd sals "ullEDITORIAL eo BOARDt; * autonomous" Iore whihbenefits from

T. Urush, T-.Davldson, C. Finn, R.! ~ ersh, R. Kinba But what is most astoundin to'grasp is ' continued pressing agai ista few imposedR. R61uet, J. Stein, J1. Stoltz, P. Van Raa to 'tef rpsl hY culyrsr I. S'e in. vdas ft

II ' ' been 'submitied~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ irrespective of th r SpeC age, are truly,beresng b is for consider~atin to the atnmuadfn~A.oe mznlfaculty.! hat i to say, they ;,enot in- auooos n in oe mznl

trsigspeculatos waiting 15radoption paternalistic. e 11l know some of them.intefar-distant uiture. Quite nce~vably j, They shoulid n t be her; we serve them

indfern after a rodof d suso prFsa year or Poorly. Other w om~'we know, while theytwo, t e o appl~oe these may complaint bout ur paternalism,propostat sand their u'1nstituti6m would Iclearly benefit ro n it, an should be here,

C~~cul9P~~~~~bl~~ School ~~~becomel an immediate ireality OlAnd then whether or not they re academicallyCurricurn.? Pubic ScolExchange wa? it would be a '~ deIntschool, I working a ch'o o cle levels.

Progam~s? Intermediate Colleges? Most students certilj a school which would "Reefcd~Teseodp~ sli h oedfiut

tiouldn't cre less. They don't -ae because much f its tradition and whdch i all 1Lofcuse. What r. Sizer says essentially is6, the world is going to cpuld indelibly in~~~~~~~~~~tuence the that impetus ~that mpeeuuc tion shouldouldbbtomorr( ol sgigt epet uhte poaiiycudidlbyifunete' I'.

same a ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I course of seconda y education i 2Ameia "ur sludents," he writes, aedig fsee holJr d r"entoday. The d ' be g i f~ no Ih rps tesleta at east colee e'1 work: wh"rydig'fseedtrA Jrw d r ensa t 'a s toa.Te o aebcue It' nohy rooatemevst ta eat clegtei provide flexiblity forcement", rathe than nishment. Thisn ot the! r, role to play: it's th o -er-olds who is dc I for 'them by awarding the' degrees they view,,he notes, is upporte by psychologist

fiddle 'th etheocies;nallthat the rdcl.' ! deserve? If they want' a full, four year B. F. Skinner, w o argu, that learningstident~ ave to worry abouti ai good time, j ROOSEID, hat "class"i categories porm tclee hycudsilhv t follows from s ccess, rat~ ethan failure,

I geting~ntoa god colege andIner~pssquezing [junor, ?oer up snr]bldiscarded, but if the, rather, desired to invest fewer more effectivel i'om rador "rein-sometleanong ollge wa.Fn qy te rkn Luea o ssb years in ontinued general &ucation'win foceent", thaA om punishent. If there

ng.11ongthe way ey ands snfpaed order to ove n'iore rapidly into, say, J egal ~ ~uihet, swticare be ause the 'faculty and admiitainuuly'!Dr. S er rnv this proposa'l from the or medical training, or into travel or work, witheld. o~dpas

;k them~~ to. tcatorr tust this would be a possibility. The granting of "Ameia schndon't a kte'to ther t as rts hat uaid stbe a dere qulfelt eia , s,"f Ie writes, "n

- - ' I '~~~~~~~~~~~ process Ifn atoi hc h ece dere ulfe tdents !woul& give cluding our pticua 'SC 1, are more

I !0 g ' I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~student nd rric lumn all coales' e in order thmot s n h d~na~o viig Calvinist than ki ean, moreplcso

'sthe culty and administraton oae f- omo eani '. ewisntaiale Th cem mkssod contains a Ist f' o-os rather than yes-

derstan ably involved and in carge~ of the Jong- are "Thiem o kow ee ary'pdggcIsne-h tdnswudb yes's; indeed, it is hird to~ agine the latter.rane ,inig of choo affirs. n h' ~ ecfic sher of nowle~e ad/or working a a generally agreed: upon tan. Orrtn e'ds frbiu rciabehaivio ,-affe c ogtietpwr u aigmetns o iu rciarag lig o shol{f AIwhile Toles aec-1,o o v-ontv'pw dard and stage of intellectual develop, reasons, discuss-th~ "failin " students, and

are lim ting and one-sided, th fcIyadad-~ anId~ia~dvrueul cent-nstitued- practical and economic we reward only to esceing" students '

ministrdt~on make it their'bus es cOko aot, I ayn es, ovi g from simple, concrete' sense as eli."in' who have haa the nftoeryhg aetl~e ' Aisofeuaio.h ontso indiv u co plex and absJ tact ones. ''EDenolof intellectual owth: they are the

encoura the faulty to includ ~ ese y ernuuRaP03Ey sthautr Anveronentl the theoryarandr"strang '~students are interselinasrse Anidii ay avel'at differ~ pt rates in 'prizJew tatAnovrnnnI ~~~~~~,natoettunt moarrepctveo tei'r"'r" olyate0learnin doctrines at their tender 't different spheres (i e. at a point time, he 'hsstetswoIrpcteofher rwaddnlatethey' bloomed."4 age Tc~~~~~~o few to ~~~~may be " rogressit g" more e-'eythan academic ev.11,. can benefit from a ' Dr. Ser elabora es on i conception of

! -"'~~~~~~~~~~.5'j ~~~~~in affecti erealms). Ind'iiua mv at anfu eIti'edcig em fusc. "Ameb i n their discussions. After 01 , how mruc~ different tes at di ferept times; ~e cannot ," an furtdoverI-Is duton comni built specifically on a

cnaneiihteen-year-old contribute t ~eland 'aeygnrli~e f r any age group. PtRuc ̀rED tshoca Anoe-se to psychologicalthnyo enorme,

,discourse of middl-age men?, .' If we ~ac t th notion," he ontinues, 'evrn ntaot(contiu on ~ge8) "that ind ividu~ Is Iamn sequentjally, over a series of "stag.s", hat Andovdr is adept at CA EN

Ihelping iidividuals ove inio and through a ENICKSI stgec bsrat hikig and Iht n

Quit tif students could somel ow'convince stg fasrc kn, andftat i ' 5 rdy Septemb~ required. In dividuals learn at their own rtes, "with Ird~

themselv siwawotth frt1 . idiosyncri tic sarts and stops, spurts and '' -Hoba~rt/Willim Smith groupreturn, t ere are either the benefits adritsatee Ionsthen it follows " 'meetihs

favorable Irule or curricular change or 'the thiit gradin b7 agc is senseless. WVe admit II. II I audyS eb

frustrating and excitin process of hsig out students who are capiable of hbenefitting 'atIdaSpeb

agreemes il a dive e group. ' kae' the from an cademic rogran i anmong VriyFoblv.Tfs20students ' valuinl~~ oherth s..bsr;, shudVan. Soccer vs. Tu's 2:00'I

let them progress theronrat es. Vr n'JV ,dofrom t more academic endeavours' they pursue ''Dr. Sizer does hwvr qu~lify this 'I I

in class ti e As for the faculty, efnd "stu4vnt ' proposal. 'Sel pacedl"tw d what' Golf vs Wvorchi s,{perspective" to be undoubtably hI importafnt defined g~l eann hat Var. Tennsv.Wlim rsmnel m'Fn i mitny policy decislops, yet ften they can reursthttefvie larys~ciyte : The Pi

studet opnionsand he st~den/facut '~ends t 'wshes me.t~ebs n-tanner in Moi:TePn Pnt in GW, 7:00pijedictl ~~~. the - y ~~~vhich t achieve th~ ecn~des, is and 9:00 pm I

acting out ~~~~~~through comp4ete ce' c~asfc on (in- 'Movie: inIKem) e,7lPM'committe~~~s become ofi an old, old ~~~~creasing levels I ofsp-tct~~n b I' Sunday, Septe Ier

s~ractness, as p~ese y exis in tlib english Saturday, September 29 at 7 and 9 m CahlIev . m hpl 00Eventually, a er will be 1 Department) and, he more imm~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~asurable inarmen)QWn The Pink Panth'iner-starsk Peterr amars ete

adde Eetala'student-mem e wl 'e anaemISizer ~~o the Complementary School roject. Dr. epirical eal of experiencd,. "Our Sellers ad David Niven in this Roman Prtsant, Serv ces cbran' Chapel

ad 'ild o ide r studle entr choomect .' r.requirements wi surely inclu e both .Comedy bout. jewel thievery. 11:00s amelI'~cuzrilm roepodrtuTen cm try n, his '"competences mastt red" and "exl,,riences Peter Sellers plays a bumbling Hradgop~tn i0p

Ad~~om will march 'on '~~ gained", ',he~~says. Sherlock Holmes in pursuit' ofvr ro fig8 .0 But such tudent inolvement ih c~ tine' t b II 1 professio a thief for the theft of the Monday, (Jctb 'P

otig e RPSD~h/~mhy offer fabulous diamond known as,"Thoe Pink Harvard intervi WSJ ll aythe exception that proves the rule. 'if anytig,'heAso teoEA adBceoofrt Panther."' Capucine plays Sellers' wife,student interest in school policies as radically 'degree, a well a secondar' i school while Da-id Niven is both the thi'ef ancd

declined i the past eca~le. diloma and ertlfl ateof Attendr'nce' and c' 'Iivette TuTuesda,,Octobe2declne d inthe astdecae. iploa'a IC Wat0 ' nce an Capucin' love. Harvard intervi , till oon

I I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~that the Facul y evelop specific' "corn- Rober Wagner enters as Niven's U.Msineiwtllon ,

' 1 As many of the pressing issues I ' ~petence"l and xp rience requirifis for crooked ephew ad Claudia Cdinale , Stanford group meting 8:00 meach. F ' plays the royal and rightful n~O h

'1 Sizer ~~~~~~ ~ ~~offers seqrpsl cuitur1 SaturdayRve ecie ~oi Wednesday, Octo eattdsWill have to change before rles.can be I r ~ rp sala a sJ .. adV oc v.Gvro

dticadeds n oeelh chng tthe heor that e'uation shouldCb S41f- "sheadlOng and hiaiuwitli each JrJV'ad aSociv.G enrdiscarded _~iete nt pcd"Hewites If a student r social scnh'dshr'osa ih int the Dme,3:00 a ayI

-our tired ~systern. It doesn't look as if' tht'il rasn'awl s rved to remai I at An- ato. henx,..aapycn- 'Crs outy v.Hnigo nhappefi for a good while. For nowv, all e an ask is' dover and if he were voking at an cademic catenatio i df fre;;h dialogue and 'ave Gover r Dumm nir, 300

thi I~ suetfcly an i Istain level whicil was, be ond that expq~`ted for I ', I U.N.C group mn eting, 8:09 mreUIz he resent state of affairs and drop the ''ecnar 'holsudntshudayent e aiaiicOtodoihtgas'4 retshze and I ' at ~~~~~~~~~~~~properly I "rewar ed" With college 'lusaOco

oftei~ kip' rfcial dihonest 6xpectationsth ced"?.wievemy epoe that U. Penn. intervi 0xs, aldayare rre tly held.' 'I excessively nmech, nistic systen~ which' ''I

Page 3: P u uieldfuiereieir, s Band tiihv

'I ~~~E

1SEPTEMBER 27, 1973 PAET!E

Towards 1Fbirc

* And Take" ~~~~~~~~World n A Bdx<~ Pre/ide oFaeTrc~An i~iora' aspect of a school BY-YPULK SR

mo~rufity is thBailtYoisSARAH WEIDEMAN B A LK IE"m ber to have fun, to experience 1joy,l and to consort with one- Phillips Academy stkents re Ineeysneslie h hneiandthe' (purport d to be the reamt of the c P timlrng has some rimpo.-tanrt

-~a~ rd University Administrator amn mrcn h c lsignifigance5., First, these visit; canAS iniany school community, the student Yet for all their intellectI~ be of value. Scond, when the su bsidy

An~lover: experience is one of opd {prowes, they are r marka lyisrmvdainiscmetfthtmsan~d bad times. While it is ignoran about world aa-s I'm' oth- plan (its sense of inner gra e) is

crainlyj possible toprosper I of thse'harsh aities' nreaedbaspitgluopiicplAndver, everyone has ideas about supppsqdly encounters up n enter ng &tecas oroe

ho oimprove the school i-one form terapwldbto ilecrnt-will ten be dioavowed & ondsthe me ofor. othr;eeyn has' disap- eets an essay (theg present rationa e ex-

po~tmeflts. The reasons are niany I star 2d as a perfect, exa ple of t is cluded) finighes among the curvs f varied. Some are inherant in a ignorance. When at school,Iraelc. twodbevihchol of Andover's size and d iversity; igeneral~y look at a newsp ater once or beivs t ~l itotmsothes ca bedeal wit an peraps twice a week, and even tenI ySarah Weldenian bldet ~pywtotmscan be dealt with and perhap§ n en I 11use 1 ofoury(in careful urisdictibn that these tents Pail] Kaiser* rectified ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~n the ati~~~~~1 d tradion solbehFfcrm body? The lather chest warp

and~ carefully considered by the than I do to the front page.1 was o t cr~edible) lack of awar~.enes? t so l eouinr ciiy stearound his ribicage. Cat's dish i hismebers of the community- aware of the severity of stuati n certainly not that we lIck facilit s. fcsopride ineto finds itself frozen hand, 'out'stretching eve /all

st nts 'and faculty. I until last Sunday aftron wh n, The Jibrary ';~ubscribq~ to anad dealt 'ith in a rij.anner fundarrm ntallymls When William Cra rthij im of charlge and un (leafing through a a-odBost~ a irbe ber ok, prom' iet idealized & abstracted. Nor o my Gorgeous was assigned as cief hefPHIILIPIA.N my eyes on a rat er~da newsapler maai I pehoiahrevnncer inty,, The PHLILNfeels ai Globe, m eysreqted ralrnwppr and agazines. eehbt orIish C holic the bvn dept we knew t ngs

res onsibility indeed an oblgation~ 'mysti~'ing headline "Chile Ju ta re a ifantastirhumber elfbtekvioiondbackgrondhfavorbuthisebutwseem woul rstartvmoving.Herewwasaammato xo the niany strengths and~ Bans Leftist Parties" it e~caim sets around for thdse who prefe T rahrtspkpoeflyf hewho dared kiss the Stars. And diseasewea ness which exist at Andover,' ~Wait a minute,' I thought, I t news. Four major! faictors influnce sewage aspect ohhis "moyen a e." control t ~emn h elh and to suigest means of bettering the' Chile Marxist? What hap pened o the general apathy of thesten stand for theskemnwoit& cres f hse vo for ad* And~over experience. Yet there comes~ ~alvatore Allende?' Later, fer a itcommunity toward world affai2.rl smoke in the cnders of a cig rette frowni ngI&, other pom ous,ti e wh6n the editorial "we" can no pfcasuaLdnqui., I1 discovr taii~lteeeets c imot c os.J a,,t lwa ad procedures. He even manage~~

Io Me sufc nti rgr.A otconly hd there been a (jvouti n iofrdlyivs. While! at school wewhat ga'iizat on I alone ould extermitlate, those innocent l~spo{esman frteshoteppr inCiebutatM.Alendeh d all inhabit the same little Wyrd r l at~ throughout th ~'etnh cbnperil. H-e later became theMUs reacfl out to members t our committed suicide. Those re pre yhaving contact with peo~pie or ev, ts entl wtn-n' accorciin t a cient Object of varii shistorical ende'a'orscam uni young'and old, male igeettooelo.BtImsu usdei.Thdaily bletin is frhsoin.saeak bud . sc as the crowning of queenand fme back and white-for ~hat there is a sizable umber f more 'important t the efficl cn . lzabeth & the assasination of andyAndover tode funtinin II ofInd cm of~~~~tdet c untonn ths-iuteniy, wa rhol.' crowded stretcher,tla'theia otions. ts to whoril t~~~~~~his wa,,,,u,,I tI an u sounded. From below come Awat'till come as a complete rpise. the New York 'pines could ever the fibers of sleep, the sleep t nes, what they oft~n told me. hilen-must chne In my oinion,' this sit ation s There is lso thle timne ac( aEach static margin expresseq itself i~ quaraniined he'rpdypce p h

mne~bers of the ommunity i excusable., Schools we e invent 'd rare student who can afford~od te the am~putated possibility. of com- dread orange b lge & apparently flexsr- the purpose of b nisliig an hour a day to reading te pape rmnctn.ABseofTh bos uthiuwdwsfsaes'e

Ius first be able to grasp i norance from the human' i d. It s watching'the news.. Such activities e erGadohr4id oarp ofotd i hseiec.'n

~alsides of the issues i i i oni that a shoo seI~ igy- lxre and are rsrved r' tumbled down. Mugs of poller thru day' we found i not far froi i

~~~~~~~cedicated to that purpoi shoul wyekends, if they are provided fo t all grillework & iron shinigle. No famous house of cards, countingquestion ... t. ' make such a massive oversight. ','all. Another factor is that newvspap mksako a thssr e lucrative achievements.

TeOp-Ed page is just such an Irtneonac7'I Kexchiange. It is not forum f or 1 '1"confirontation, nor is it a forum whic h

problems. Rather, it is simply ia tn oe cl u i p rtpre4cnlsoso crsifo the BYKN I~E fiilrls, e st' ctures, or student-facul'ty the ac ult world, or they c- nitigymanefeitso of ieas cnoernin Ith s iadichotomies. Our und rlying tenisions .and fric- establis ing a bond arw e.natinby-many importance cn exres tions sprinig frm div rsities of temperament, claimin that adults' are just as childish us

hims~~lf on any issue-personal or ~The enormous tudents give to rulesI* imsnfvonsanyhissueheorecss.olmde of gdm'ernace sfcou e~nil o upbringing, morality ad general outlopk which adolesc nts--or that adolescents are just 'as

Wenhe atowip e ahosmayvred raiga tmshr fhsilt nanu range thirough the whole chool from the youngest mature , adults. In thei~ impatience to launjhWe Ilae t prsentas anyvared h be 'xland bymIpvi is section. lIortdte most senilr faculty member. ' into the igwide world "outside", boarding School

An eppru cdano h peoslv He wee aua tmyb ofehs tgns Baffled by these comp, exities, we return to ur student~ sometimes expresssc for the faculty's- A o evnegiarn nhp to solve, polm by t~r fiilfrso uhrt care no simple notio'rilhat anta onism between 'tudents willingn ss to volunteer fors "hf imprisonment' in

orevf bgnt.ov, rbesb mad fiilfrso asuthor~ ircumih etnot ariA faculty produces ost of our ws. The a pedestrian, cloistered, and unchallenging en-it ef.For cohstructive action to beh'rqaYY 'or easilyciumetd the resu eshdnt lo cr* i:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "''I~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ fthy vrnet Yt'h an

*tk wih'egrdo ayofteI I, ecisdnmki did not divert us so cliri~,Ietely frm-othe sources middle-class materialism, subu ia's artificial aidissueq which we have been and will b a fostdtpricain Adigs of camlpus disharmon nd they would lepave us commuterized existence, and the' hol-dealing with, there must first be a mi laced. Our iJules are so eraial sre or lesaiae r c mosehw lo op fbgbuiesyrtaitoafund amental change in th tiue norei htwtfenasm hyrm eaiey ls natated orebiteitw oul suee t how slow tp profesigns busiess r t rdi tilyof the people of the community. In littefr~ino eair W nug each ther, to grple power, to indulge i evils of Moderh Aqrica, by retreatipg to thefact, it has been argued that the paper u~fhatdlgl ipoeet-tnfair generaliz21na~ miti

p rovo esnothing nore than ruitless, proposals on drinking and p aldvised in the ti, ai omiti eti~wos mtryln onteoe odoprooke nohin r~oretha fritlss ~ 93 hc e fu idt e distance fron each other hese things must not even ret rnin~ to Andover to'te4ch. So once agaihoften bite~ conroversy-ften a Sp of f n atua be we find elements of respect nd liking quietlyimo an isu if forgotten as swiftly acknowledgementstatd ~tcic

Sita ions. Ee stdrts who have been ' ' -- hde nahteaiae ltre yeif attitudes must change, the inl e n(chh oenne and erlse ' and unr -st as more natural, more universal, ad-

be thei ia of ~eing a prt of te establi merit" ardme ers of the community must inding -f more i terestirig to cope with than we h'av~able grasp the different sides of theI . . I d.Sudn'

issues in question. Such an un- co uming, and oeq unimpresive in its results. I'imagine . tdn iscontcn~ is nt' nearly s.'sesn uesill. increae in Th~s is 'nt~ simlply becas they mrrag have ' ,much a pr6duct of Andover s it is a genieral

prsotanin toith amontcofegie and in equate powers-"poweu 1 faculy members ', -phenom non f youth- Growing pains beccametake that the community is open- are, akingllthe ame con l ts. fiacute a theluen awn e of soet's co n-eWke would! better unestn owt7"nplt

mide ndhnetenuh o a-\ * I'unestndhw omaiult ' i ~*,'-, iin nlenesad f4n' on inemined ad etnuht a ouie eves ibito a' healthier a more armonious ,~.1 ~ ~ "'''±eaknesses produces a world offewer delights andticipae in. nd so he. p-d a eI I opportuniisfr lrosself-f Iflllment than ha

hopes to play a significa t role in a earlways innew atmosphere of give rid take. -wihw f~tec tes eair h oeo /) ale e niiae.Sn hs liiainb

'I ' ~~~ ~ ~~~~ ~ ~~~~~regultos fear ofpnihent~ setngo'rvaltemselves within ones particular eithrough discipline caeand other toKent iori vionme titblami"n'come

Such a understaliding ivil ationes, ofonin punih setin of hand.asOnly laterh cllocalized, propean wil fe uresbeloging o th forml stuctue 'beseenas theatsto a e diclimae orauprper cncluiunsi ren fcusseetfocusthssitatioincre etase im piroportil to the' est blished to influence us is iio longer - powerful degree of rusit andudirSt riding. *'eprec ilcnic

i P on. Ruleg are too easily evaded, offenders are It might help 'us to ad it he ways in which we pr mtos'n lutoh~Ic stdnsta amiount of give and take that un'c etected r treated lenientyai the lessons are unconsciously 'payi ach other devious 'th "re old" A a~ea rs~tn~nroigthe comm unity honest emerging from pry scio~~~~nd asw r obsly flingig and dull ndover seems to be, Now they merely'is discilina '~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t aie highly compliments abuses ats

enoughill. rarely~~~~co usng Decent and considerate behavior is the "pposition"!. adut h aays Jfelt rather je th itu n ot i omnsoenoug to; articpate n. 1no~ arl induce byfa ~high r authority- fatigued a~ jae ste ev he boyancy, returnin alurrm,' who have hd more time to-a e. But we are deeply affect by peer confidence, and brsz es of youth. ,I Their sape eata potnt4oie

'dri the coming weeks, the pre~sures and by personal be~ iefs. So ur at- ,Jealousy causes them to und restimate the secret ' Teach rs can appear equiall~ insular in theirp-d tens ions shoudb ousdo ope nite fao~cnt h rm the style of almost ' orbid obsession wi h the Andover

page will focus on such issues as the ope atiops of unofficial persu 4Sion. We should these upstarts. -Teachers ti ere do it in the name of existenc which has become their piaye-Black experience at Andover, the t dic~e wytenmru e~l dns tl academic excellence and mor il rectitude, but they precofte world. Thymsoitu tdnsuiccesses and failures of the newly ahxious to please their parent, and iehave well, sometimes recall the pnitite aspects of these impatien e for reform by taking tasaformed Abbot cluster, and the are ovunrbetthglmredInis ets eadswchhyto uro d so anoying when ungracio s affront to! their I o'wn dedicated oc-

* ' : ~~growing differences btween Andover ~of riutinous minorities ad. ae so eluctant to they were students Mn techers also sense that cupation in life, which has de' anded so many'and Exeter. Also; the page will sp~ rati ees fteronvle.W hi w prnigadschooling prevented sacrifices ' arid should not be f-ther jeopardized.continue to air opinions on such j ned~to explain how the faculty allows its "tone" to them from being as thoughtf I, resourceful, or free Sonic t tem a unnecessarily quick to acceptpreviously discussed as druk use and '' be s t by a few' of its membersl and I ow Seniors, as toIday's crop'of stude ts, so their envy again. student assertionis ofti enrtoabuse, curriculum, studehE-faculty withitheir special neec%3 and i:*obleris, are per- shows in their muttering bo tstudents being the "unique ess" arid are apt to forget the 1 imnilarltieslrapport, inter-faculty conflicts arid' ~mitted to serve as spokesmen forlhe w ole student over-indulted and concei d products of a wildly between ach generation of youthful qestioners.'the academy's continued evolutions boTW must learn vhy it is that h( iesty, trust, permissive culture. So t e generation gap oes This leaves them defensive prnd fatalistically,

Unveiy Poresdn A. f Whrmer Y4 th tfulness, individuality; Ahd other qualities !exist, but it promotes 'as uch fascination as reluctant to resist "trends" %which Society appearsUniersty'Preidet A ~ hitleI we say we admire can still take s4ch beatings here. repulsion, as much silent r se as open criticism, to condoie. Too often they arp tempted into a'Griswold, "The only sure weapon'We hould pursue the ways in Which eachers can ,Students are prone to h same sort of mixed weak br d of "'liberalism" 11 whch coaksuws

* against ba Ideas ~5 beter ideas."~ exer a stronger influence Whel they last as in- feelings as they regard the cplty. While they are or premature surrenders to student pressures.gal is not to p3larize certain' divi~ al adults than when they ta1 b ck on their suffering the humiliatie of restrictions and They-under-rate the pwers' of persuasion they

in'dividuals, but to enlighten the 'sup osed powers as functiopaarie within a sermons aimed at their " maturitiest ', they are might ex rt if they concentrated upon getting tocommunity as a whole. "Sys m". All this ought to u away fromthe imagined le sres and fredmsAf ' (continued on page )

Page 4: P u uieldfuiereieir, s Band tiihv

P~EFOUI The PHILLIPIAN ,~____ SEPT MBER 27, 1973

PAGE ~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Alumni Class Age~tsll aly

gehts Sa~A vyalr ConcertI T o ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ T h i s ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I¶YT ~~~~~~~~~~~C on tin u ed f m pa l~e o ne

~~ ~three mont European tour. Hislninereen piece bandwill inclu e five trumpets, fi ve trombones, fiveI I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Andover class agents from as farbacas 1896 will saxaphones and four rhythm mn n. Chairman of the Medic~~~~ne uI~~~~fllc ~~gather here this weekend to visit the scoI and discuss English D artment Th mas Regan, a jazz enthusiastSport cre C1 nic ~~~~fund-raising efforts for'the 1973-74 dv noted'Ithat "the ,personalities of Kenton's band are as~

The agents, directed by Alumni Fu~ himn fsiating as t~rmusic they make." Included amongStephen Goodhue, will arrive for a dinr on Friday i theml~reJo n Park, aforty-year-old Alto s~xaphoiqe'whoIsham Infirmary has begun potsedicine Clinic. School Physician evni avnlcn Dr. Sizer wilspeak. 'On aturda the desnonth

Dr. Francis Soule explained th t plans f r the program were prompted by will visit various classes, and will cnvene their a nual I baratone x. In-addition, the band. features a ninet cen-inqiris hd equstsforhel b nearbcomuntie. Te sha stff usnes metin a 10~O.Aftr ~r.G he adrss earoldC foriat gilMar Fetison xaesaxpnoe,conducted a survey of public a dprivate schools the Merrimack Valley the fund raising committee on the successf telethons of and flute.unure nd euesfr hlhb e sa tf uies 1Og a.AfterbMbsGooc yerodCiona In MRyFthimont"area and fPn th neet in c a prga ob btntial. last year and its prosp~cts for '73:'74 oet ubject sch Artistry I htm-The clinic will be held on M nday afterinoons due ing the academic year. as a report from the Abbo almi dti ya'59h Most f heI ssIntebdsretorwreehr

Appointmlents will be made through Isham rom physicians,' school reunion will also be discussed 'c- drierittet) by Mr. Kenton, or his associates. -Someauthoitie, orparens oftudets. mer ecy sr~ics wil note ofered Robert~ulburld, who replaced 'Charle Smtith as noteworthy pieces includle" treet of Dreams," "n-Close liai'son will be attem ted with school uthorities and fanImily director of Alunini this year, said thaY the f d drive Ii termition R ff,' "Malaga,,' an Kc~tnsdw Atsrphsiblians, Charges will be cRi sistent wi h area standards;, and yiin officially open- October 1 and close M ch 1l, plusgt e ii Rhythm. ' The band hasa o rcorded renditions ofwill b- a fee-for-servic sis d~ 25th and 50th reunion. Mr. Hilburd aidhtn al maym r songs,am ghe "Hey Jude!"susanaDr. ph R. okous %l rvd rhp lsbe stfrti yer' die urmn tis te, "MyacArthur Park," and the eme from "Love Story."evlion anhrametwiette p ialypolm ilb eerd~ letters will be sent out from the agents Ando r 'Mr. Reg n,' who onc h a WPAA how whichthe other members of the eicl ental St ff. alumni. Last year the amni contributed $429,00( featured Knton's work add "Although the Sawyer Suppor~ing facilities and personnel at Isa wl ncuexryCneti usually classil iiovator like Kenitonlaborary physiotherapy, cast and bra e work, land hospital admi~o 1, certainly fit in comfortably with-Inis great tradition of ,when Ishni is appropriate. Wh'en requested, advic~ and help with coacl~in m067i'71-I continued " don' like to use superlatives,techniques, pysical conditioninig and equiipment will be offered thro~ugh 1eIn but he's o e f the greatest nOst inovative bi-band

I, ~~~~~~~~~N talgithe trainers at Phillips T~~~~~~tdrin g 'Program ~~Continue frmpae1i whs an~ in ovator, Mr. enon hs oftenirejectedthOse

JeaenioazerhisJenapontef173194Firctrzfihe 'ArehiitbyEnlihapsrut3 -1974 Dili"enonsrsiedstoonten ohfhe'tshegcs'iSenior ~ ~~~~~~~pintdj9 (presently on sabbafical) called "Four ho oap~1ic Accrntores bai iap tea y Cethve old'Phillijps Academy Bureau of uoing, ccording to last year's Dire tor, Cnes rdaeSuetWr rriClf aS~t the sad1 fact that' they deny teletecninoAlan Loui6, who now attends H1vadCol ege. r 1 Uiest'aSaFrnscIdn UivstMIT, extrient a rid changing rld that can never

Thle PA Bureau of Tutorng isl an entirely sudent-run oganization anthViulSdesWokopofR'erNw stand still." He still rememlbers th uproar and hiostilitycaters to those~~~who simply want' ans~~~'ere -~~ ~'~h nYorh "wil onSte exhibits.6 ,Nedesigned tb provide free academ c assistarce to the tudents who need it. It' Potg hCutr he fou nd w en he "unrhox oved his band fron,fiullld~ tutorng over longer erio of tim andto thsYh onk"wl Snye no thMr Wxiis' siow " hu sm tecet 1o r othotage."elygothnabu-eg ~~,. ' says Kento ,'Is the fact that theyose Fraiercomentd, TheBraun o Ttre ~ oatei two ecthons ofethemore advancedosuhenttage.c doe ar undnlhegthdgotdiog days,thislearedtutoring seo ane peroa uoig uoilssin t onr. h orsgt eecoe e so oh ae' eeayoedeslle of' wrayqetossudn~mgthvwiepr a geraphiadistriutio and nth porestnc of anoTickets ," theycon eto-a i bl frete frta studettuo In sg I esabisede' a ndi i y AthahpitiFraie romenartudin onh Bra oet ne baioepet tet uinhtgahstahr~ -'ci siuin art here tnyonr esktsdets, tutoriaslel a ttesssionsh ataadhoe'tht peTeyinlueoanWothonCalfortaMiieaWit o tereaersaiinntcktsthsrooewllopnIhteachers Iaso a'sst usiIu uolsesos" ... gegahenry distr Smuith anf Inth6anasan oNatan Tkefrtconcert tor tvile public."tudnt1 deignd t e will best on cutrLbs fteVsa studdihaveorwhieop.rThealhow willec_________ _____esk___ u______id___Athtpintiorg~~~~~~~~~~nized ~ ~ ~ ~ etblse phtorah teaherathaclusterio. havein itsn tuos fandasdn tutor oeto ho basis the tutors wil rort endion ovember1, and his Marhit willapoeanattththeir rogi~ss~ -The rsiden' futr, intuijn repos to he die~tor Imae Worksd allerho Mass. w~ia i eofplansae e$stdelas tutor in sel subes wilriiaeadh- tatie topulil noxtnivcctaoueofthtoh i.thep wli.cluster. ~~~~~~~~~ It ' ~~~~i .IT.enYersyi Role troectv l thethI-now.'teahes wllals asis u inou tutoil Amrca htorperianyyonsil l b pn nin o

National erit Semi-Finalists ~~~~~~~~Lon he the Vaccor udito rkSyr..h Lhons haslPersonal tutc~~~~ring will Rides,"g"TheDestructonuoftLoe Manhata "aandcOlusteE PRINTINFourteeton Phillis r seni uors ho alae lrcetl ee uos elt as nNvmbrIad-hsMrhi ila ra h

photgraphr aderesd of Camridge, wil ho pahi gess Teone-halfnf'one perrent t eo's to t r ordatn colcinofhspoosoiei theWs."i rs"'-high~ schoks seniuoribecome e'flssTe r hsnacrig ote cmetdM ndr dcmn wealt -tylThe '73~~ winners include: R'bert tests~~~~~.Jonathan~~, Day, Robinen Wesr in Reropetve b he-cluster, y lsBgnall 6kEnoxntree

John St~~'phen, Robert Street, Jeanne Nah~~~~ll, TimothyrcWilshntoBrianr"Zeaar, Lyo if wAll Andevereand Judith wan, a firt'year senir ~vlj atended Andovr High Sch o n. the LEOt O a cing r.lL er M. n hasasahuet

PA'senior aioilde ha rti os~ot becomFinglst a semi-finalistf 'o ng ~ ipease to have been sel '1cted a~~~ a semi-finalist." Rece tlyctone fowae o nhat" n

some people have criticized the MeItPgrmothgoudtatos RCoessantudent ih atheeast17 'the ookr is eigh easoschoarsenhillre awade ecus teor st' aherntybn wr selacmpayschoig tre taesei 6b oeTt ieta htowhich so~isor a schlarship rathe than n the ~le bass of astude~ T exao ste18,0 shoosonpe ae6h Lsa ,dyswe,-attres Ofs

setonlet setsfto its hipudnt ii s, ratetan ao iniiul yadiin IAd Lild-ayon,ncatiid taln serc,0 te ithe bt oe oarspi nrfRsi' frms.dctonl'o m sth ag ubroprocess selecting s~~~~parsegyapopulaed restht we musrt ie,.T combathiw (I TI Fis stied1 et is uofnte tftheeare iofew ot gropr ofg rviha~ du hae e phgl cmlxrgoa coos" usagtdnt'' ~Bk .~'scholrships n the bsis of n~rit, ut t 'efact reains tht th~ Ntio al collecticonaro ctivitispareoasoon libneaicotmhniSybasis. high scho~~~l seniors become semifinalists, I They are' chosen according to ~~~~~~~~~~Isn475An0626

Selection ex scores on PSAT-NMS tencesilsrasatntas.no. col cil Inent"AJd I wier they lmeivean aWulesth.rsi" ''

DavdildMricaen 2 da Lerier, Meeding "ae WhnaseaaotthleretaeoPnnredncsuensinttdoe, asand JdithSwana fist'yer seior w atteded'Adove Hiozhkool rsponed itsi' r I~noeMsahs

PA senior-David Hilder had this to youdon'tubelieveing acmeeseefforlourself.At its firs meeting lst Tuesday~ven~iing, the P Acaudmica Plc s -sa*tdn i tlat1,tecoS ih eroCommeepehv dicussed z thenpcaon oeith ega popoal innDr Sizr's

additions ommitte shlrviwe somhe tat onts cpnerbaisg atetics d r sytm 8I0 col'prt ,ois, 6dy ek

ca eletisntuent~s eior, lower schlarsii udsrtheeosibltya ey o ofsi'sofferingcaioa prl.em lag ubrodegreeswere ton ofser's he h Circuis popslcishahicomitters sasyppltdestae mlE u s t cover' To at'tis wdiscussed.Accnornglyeh membere of few cohe wil begrm icn he %~~ Id n 1 t OilTtwelasmaliops n whbaiho t b faculy t; diie nexs tek tFollowing vlstu hihl cope -einl1c~~s"*

coserti ofm a Siveprooas thne1 I bIt uiunes' I emrdividual rejotts. "Thisway," said Dean f Faculy Peter McFeeh"Every, RusaCopas m n niet IdeAdoe ii2vn~~~~~~~~~~4nf tb~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ reportsbe 'asateda ~ n fscolsc 1 1e Int n"The comiiiittee also moved td allows ud enits to t~~~~~~~~~~~ikeermusic for on a yeariin 1arsh

¶t i~~~the place oflethletics upon'cons ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~Idussia;Mr. Nzhkolrseontwo"departments.ilitIncyad-

adition, te coinmtee evtown olusi oiscncerninghs tudets who'and'repeatcll altePyia dcto co's.'i vc o;P .

I' '' 24miat nffl"lasesr(uerrvicwr, aed-68posiil2455 ofein

dereswee w o izr' oriullilprpsasUNt h 4om45tte Da r m i

Q a realt "Ths4ayBroid edwFauly PteaMcee "Eerapct.o cierpr lb r etivew Pine/Burlingtoneating; " re ceP.Th pornintersomvdtalost stotkmui f0r ~ yerIi

l~heplc o Ahetcsuoncosdcato b tetw dprtens I ad I

clition, the %,uinmittee came to no concl concet~~~~~~~~~~~~~lig those students who I'

repeat~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ usIX~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.,dl fil hePhsicl duatin cors. il rvcefor P'I

' ' II~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~2 orevie6325C t,' ~,

Page 5: P u uieldfuiereieir, s Band tiihv

p ~~~~~~~P rsThe PHILLIPIAN. SEPTEMBERI 27: ~7 PAGE FT "7E

ROBERT J. ISH~BURIN1

(Last weej, noted T e is~ting H b s 0i The W terloggfod' oebaburne columnist Robertli. Fish- you ~~ ~~Mm. You just can ot put a governor on jock. She was carrying a ock y stick and was scho mixed doubles, t 6prerequisite to Ivy

breconcerned himself with maters of la seventeen year-old's se drive, built like she co Ild ake Zelon 'o falls out-of- leagu inixcd ddubles, iA~ "Must" for those 6fgeneral school nterest. ' This time aund ~"~ * ''"" three. Southie, if t is is an ex mple of one of~ us w wish to be successful in the social circles

hoever, he has turned his attento ,' th Nw o h in1 portan Matters at hand. The "the great piec h fed ockey eam"' I ofs c cultural wild~rnessa ainhoeerhe as urnd hs ateni 1 irtf , Now toetheslasmost part", to the more ntriguing orld of !Phillipian's own inestimable wonder, M. K. Pity your -vision ntse)Conn ticut.sports, with the result beiong what o Ios.) :Savit, asked mect r iew co-educational I would like ton ec osscoptry in passing Th motives behind krate are intriguing;

, ~~~~~~~~~~~~sporting activities, acorn iendable proposition with its sizeable g 1 eainotoirs'M.pDgi{s ihoorpInehmevs o sal

First~~~~ is the sports I that I would b~~~~~~~~odi ? Doyusthmlk leribnis Bs? Do boys desire 'a further arm them -* irs!ti stesot ae n od 'Roadside Inn. have to confess ta ol sIikeIct une

real belittle its prestige with a parag ph of a istill,be there nursing a b nde and a beer had at a yo rc, lwzgte osta n evs~o btlswt gtclydmrnthis age, n souldnt tht wasclose ove a ewpopsat Baney' Marx whtt epose f theosetI heave l ory ats ith esre-tarv e)Phinip

geamits nature.abIufe however that I !not the innkeeper closed ;hop on account of a catchable paefryou rp pnngreyhoundjs? femnall s? Or do all the Prentice Kung-u'

seullimbo at Andover known asJ a etals.t smen. Hill than the pan ramna of the oston skyline. scour~ of the towni b ;barians

We all 1know that the only thingistheprsn You wvill noti~e, good f iends, the m~ention of I suppose I am expect to relate To lid on a generous zoe would like topaiea ~sstemn encourages is homose uality. V'sporting activities,' inste d of athletics. Tre coeducational te ni t hilIip to the Riggs- presen udos to r. ir land for initiating the

sy for ~~iakn p tot~ I sapesr senpar ta 0 n f te sees oes ot rove li butoneconed activiti that is considered King circus. ,No being a yell, w journalist, I girls'rgrmSegreationof gthseende not prd on 1fp or'tanen is butf onec emaewhpoga. tisapeur sein thatmos pher of gtigaquainted as erson sprt", but, good tnste nd my housemaster rvnt ensls oeo o i fuction than fna (woithfutu will bitch at every

rther than bois I at uhrgltos~cnosi)fde me fr:rn carrying this issue an athletic daoanyway. owgood one undering from cook tortootema)eun

increas the pressure on males after ekn iast the1 recognition st, ge. (I will admit, actually is'at playing the game s perilpheral t t th gymnasiuni genui ely exhausted and- , females into ther 'rooms to slam-bam-thank however, to having seen' my first real female who you are playing with herfrprP wt raeo tercl.

Bickert'on, Sets R ecord In Tau Football To' OpeaSearo On S turday%Le'~~~~~ 4nd~over ' I / Jela To Start4

Th e ndover vrsity cross-country tie PA ad coefstoers For Tu Inteam rn its final Iesntm ra finish line in ;13:42. Finishing n~h'~Vlast Saiurday an4 in the process tupper Mark Grange rcordcd a, ti e as;" reinforced the opirion that this year's fof 13:45. - an a kIed

group 54 hrriers is the finest, in PA CpantMa nga ai ynshitr.Led by the record-breaking bn the squad last year, isOn Satra hevrit oobl

effort of p~st-grad Chris Bickerton, ~ecovering from an Achilles tend n [ta pndssaoaanttethe Bl~ie e~dIie ah aaigIjr ufrdi h Tufte 26i2ll be out to

the Blic exhibited ail amazin suffeecte preseas II aveng de t which~ the'

combination of quality arid depth, asvrkouts ~,n d is exetoto miss tI T Jumo ifctron the Blui,.14tIeleven rnners completed the 2.5 mil pening mieet against Williston' t is ~sao

course in under 14 minutes., aturday. 11The Blue is expected'o- -I yearsn.1, Bl~kerton Smashes Record verwhelm the Williston squad, b t -- h nT tr

standing pre-season pefracsI st dfa be-ICakil ti ~ ini Tufts". starting,,Continuing his string of out- angan's p~resence will P nee(difbeknwlleTm

stadin pe-sasn frmnce, istodefatsuch formidabe-- -

Chris Bi~kerton led te Andlover squad Pontents as Exeterl and No -N Wan he et Mfac ftah'crsed the finish line in the heastern an arvard freshmn Tim Whelan 1301 will lead the Tu rs nst his fo ner tea Naikwoa hesro1a yr'

remrark'able time of 1:25 qas mates on Saturday. opnggaefrtelu, hlnBickerton's clocking clipped 7 5 opnngimei teBle Wea

secoods off the existing school and -~~~~~~----~~'. R 01-~~- P-~ ~ ~ - rushed forhe 1for 10 rdsrdincluding anan83-cousereord o 1:200 utlli 1 S cce r T 61 O nf P oL'rf tl O ff l in yard touchdoNNw jaunt against the

eforseil reords uoffi2,0 bcusthi LR L Tufts', freshme qudwill reain unficia bThus t The Adoer ty ce ea ta gisthe play.s Catn Jorge t Mash bella are still in con- After this fiil erformance inthe

I - - I ill open it's twelve-game seas~~~~~on ti Bu ofese ha s completely trntion for the other tarting season opener, Whelan continued to'''I ' ' ' s turday ag~~~~~~~~~~i :mn ~inet le footed p st-grads perform mirac4~l usly throughout the

'~~~'- s it ~~~~hopes to avenge last Iyear's hard Sanchez, last fall'sleading scorer, will Lenny Mohler andDaeBnrgt emidro ePAssn. Ho~~ight 2-0,~~~defeat. ' ~center a powerful line with upe i arltergtad1f xn ne pwith eason totals,~of 673f 1-,!ee t.-ad

I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~otent Offense Lawrence' Gordon at one inner sot, psionrsetively. ~ards rushing, ",ell over 1000 ~adIn two-onLsided scrimages thus while senior Steve Ho and lower To a Goalie Battle total offense, d nine touchdowns

In two-on~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ sided scrimmaghtwtheeiss ae here:id ottehussqa~~~Theonceh ctic ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~goalie situation has for a total of5points.'

B man orJim Trueb ing for 'presents a ma r'question,, ni~ark.

P A "rlu a~~~~~~~~~ hieu halfback[ tn 1ak otiecmeion, frs 'coacI~xt's MQ~t c~putar Clubtion has also hanged lightly. George GrimshA calls his team "anThe Phillips Academy T K ~~~~~~~~Cinter half ystein; Haul en will unknown qantith a loe

I j ~~~~~~~~~~~TePilpsAaey ale Kwon University. Mark Tay, this year's Igoonsmetd ~wihhsloeD)club has ccrI4 begun its third head instructor and a third year poal efakdb eir onsbtbdo tes

consecutive year. ~y far one 'of the student of Tac Kwon Do, first trained iaa n etVgewiesno I y oftoe konIunott most oua on campusi, the club is uritder Mr. Kim, reaching his Blue Du rhradSeeGesnwl eada a.w iWeaP ol

popular ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~be the mainstayofth Ibak einoraursga nonnuider the auspices ofthe merican Belt evel. He tien trained under Mr. o'tefia fteI I',ei raatrono~~u A - u f sur rising~~co s.Saurdy.--

-' I ' ~~~~~'. .~~~T e Kwon Do Associati'on (A.T.A.) Laven and is presently at the Brown c audy' Posi-gF'ad Chris Bickerton has been arid all belt ranks granted by the club Belt level. Paul Rysavy, a Blue Belt.

outstanding la the recent timeI trlals, ai~erecognized in all ~,Association and another third year student of Tae ON THE' SIDELINES~sta~shingunoffcialschool ad schol intecutry. Mr.~ Hecil Kwon Do, will aid Tay in the In-

course rcords. 0 ,a sixth 'egree Black Belt fromn struction oflnovices.(A7) nthcoremnelIr 1n~' l e J e t;Iby:Jobb ~ P~vicncR.L, will haid in the in- All stude ts, will agttec

schooL record, Rog si t uction adsupervise teprornotipn Koensyeof punching, kicking,(PA 173), ~~nd avid cors Mae edY of4, students. Cho is the Regional and basic self-dtfense. Tac Kwon Do I

iI Rogprsozi and avdPottetti (Har- D rctl, of the A.T.A., as well as the is particulaly oted for its effective -

yard 73) will teporarilystand: ~,K reatn' 'and United States National and intricat kcigsye. Since 70%' A er tchin$ last SturAy c ae oecus , help but riotice

* ' Seniori~amie Morgan a~ain place~ C ampion, an~ heads two schools, in of TaehKlonkDofutilizeswkicking theylarinllack andeheads twocschools,5inanfimportant Do utilizthekfortunesao

secoid in the time trial, finishing in a theProvide n"C area. 2'thich is a far more effective method this ear' arsity football team. T xcellenice of the ten'l or'twelve Players%.stror~g tifie of 12:51 Mognstne ~rer head instructor Mr. of self-defepse than punching, it is by who ill be called upon to lead this ye 's team cannot beIeid Vt fr

represent's an improvement ofl~2 S ncin kim pf Columbia far the most effective military art, this roup, there is a sharp drop of tai nt, and it seems di btful that twelve

seod ovrhsprvos rsao ~iversity, a fourth degree black belt, Classes will be held on Wed- play rs. , ioiyo emW a a uren roster of ffty, can producClocking.! ~~~I also aid inpromotional exams, nsast200pm, Saturdays at vitrics tlhemselvps.

Perhaps the most i .n udy t90 M se 1mpressive aspeiqt wlieMr. 'Bill Laven, last year's 2:00 pmadSnyst2:0p. T'iss esp ily t in lighlt of th' fact that many these top notchVI 6pth~~~- which ileuto r 9

of th~s year's squad is the dph whc n -rco~and a Blacek Belt first All classes are open to the !entire P.A., perf rmcrs wi Il be pl aying both' offen and defense. evye Kaseta is an

fiihe n lsesccsio.Lemn -ditly'a~ 'l te Blue possesses. Following degree, will be-a~ advisor to the club. communitk, as well as the inhabitants exc lent tight nd, deI loan cx lient defensive en, but the',uestionMorgan, seniors Martin Leamori, Mi. Laven is noW. attending Stanford of the Greattr Lawrence Area.' ling rs as to w~'etherF' n ebt in he same game. ,A I shoold someoneCharliel Nadler, and Kevin 'Retelle ' like aseta, or apy fte w-a perf rmers, be ijui'ed two ppsitions willcamhd i oese sso.Lcm' i n~itus open upNevaa i l'zav to e l ed from a bench

caeacryss in a time of 13:24, while _________________h:beiha opdantngb it impressive. I

Nadler sliced oven; a minute off ~ ____ ~ 'o Apolr an p tnaue xis tqarrbc. D ths6 newcomer to the squad, - f r eitsAtqare Ic.Dethi

earlier tiAiue, to finish in a time df 'IJI promnexint, an the th~ quarterbacks ompeting for the s arting slot are all~~ shown tremendous imad--.--- o ,u thus r, non has pr-oven hit1 self to be that mu ht better than the

Reeieilssop reendwouts - re,poe ls eu how important the quaterakpsto

and ran a ca'reer best cokn f7i 13:2 ' clocking df - i~~~~~~~~~~~~___ reall s~~~t anyone- ,a tepiontat this team lacks a positi ec,side, I might as

13ill the time trial. ' ' " well ention s mefthpusshet bigt of wh c named DohertyWhit! Ijohnscin, a senior, placed- and roasdale. At' the scrimm~age the ranl through an( round the entire

sixtl~ in~the trial ntie of' 3:4, ''deiseonunro ocisad I is doubtful th t any prep school

,' ~~eight se~ohrds better than his previou~ - ply s will be 4 lle to tuckle either th c-two-wvith a grei elo ease. The -

preseason1 time. Only on e econ ~j-* ' , fact hat theyrebt serious contend, rs for defensive backfield positionsI I'ann Afrte r~e tervleyto'ca an' dsrt eta' ao

Lbhind Johnsoloeredws pert clron f It pro eni- gIrig lack ofyepth o sn evnpa th tsma bepajorLbrie, seod ofnihrned :l wh et lcile aupyay[etrad akTy Isreoslsrc~sInti ersTe b n-a onSorfyrb eting ao Istatn e rs a bfee plays wil

Mikel Mu-phy. another- newcomer t~ Kwon Do club. 'Ibi as toprrm tasks normally assig d to twenty-Nw.

Page 6: P u uieldfuiereieir, s Band tiihv

PAQE - - - ~~~~~ ~~~The P, HILLIPIAN _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

i-Sports Comment- ~~~~~~~~~~~Aidover Golf' Ties' IT'InBy Chds Terms Are Out! i ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~O iting Matc liOf eason,

ByCrsGannoit varsity l~c e s, for example, ise to fer stetaoky r~iteyhdn rbe eevn

In recent years Phillips Acadm ha isituted an ' cesr per isslil. Yet, recently a group of WIene a, Spebr 19; wai las minteu uttoDaatvt 'Program, which offers le stu~ ent an alter- stdn swere not 'allowed to participate in a touch Haehloas- Th noer Rpes Aoteif; da xelnntvtothe traditional athletic priai.While ihis footbal progm, which has ecn very popular, in past go em oee t a dl err ov em i I

system has' the p tential to b very su~cestfulj it cannot years. Thus,. lst~ of playing touch football for an sesn wta4-tiagaint the MIT aVoe itche I Moore, PA'sWith students ~~~~~~~~~~~hrared cting in~ atrnoongiseraof~s whos widnsvr~t.I uhtheMBTuperfereancdsubdued

thri've under the existing coijdiio. n cols hu i afiteatenosvrlo h rfre futibqr l~ frou mL n, a thr:hwtt~~sing~~ solely as an escape fromitheinmorectorsinweotspretty girlseiiitbekwitisafol~'anMITemahalfahour.rthehtie.

With students requarionlyrequitd pparciipateh in Katzatheanumberasixdrowoatain pefande ab he two bmn uedcot r cause ofn tdanntrs ue~ '&sd wtud e are punder th st ena sd hn' th efld t a ,ae n Cailwsd~ro db i'fr

'I * -Therefore, the acti ties could~~~te existas a altrnaive o ashetwn hle. haylgeiles ote atcians. heronatheho4ththc tien, 73 Loe ieAte e-psing% ~ ~ ~~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ms preptty giperfrmancrofbtekunile lsing

Treoa, sp~s owev , ie--otobael so er isdreec con- Jhc avo th ws proradovtt e r iould op ase olcy toteais To Mtchell fi re aptiainae as he fe Mevnan six.cun heeritneovaiu studn two a voiudr'athicituesart th e qrs~oprtcipat comn b 80anidfatd i Hoa dd' Sk rn

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~entis understood thatdthis yeardisithelasporANDOVE aNnd defeLeadhueso tim pefrite var iou ees ptte. and ll feligsiogawwSrdessrareand

overcome. ( ' WELCOMES PARENTS, STUD~~~~~~~~~~~~ppoEN dT e ALUne's l irnm at~~~e~all:Sports Schedule indicates where and whstenurthe gameo willetaketh

to sttl fo seond illng.It oul hav ~mde oresens an ben moreChapl Ae. Rt. a2 caef Dv rn9n tron paesfo isyarsta,l4fentetrescins hsi- ei4nn ha eepaie h m imre on ylas ersi&ro

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Page 7: P u uieldfuiereieir, s Band tiihv

PItL'FMIBER 27, 1973 The PHILLIPIAN PAGE SEVEN

Se~osAir 'ommaints''* ' C~~~~~~ ~ ~~~~~~P R'AB S AGE

onnedfr t page oneIMr. Foster is assembling a parade o need to replace standar admiss ons In J'u rn 1~ 'Intrv B ohlegal oinions to support the school' criteria with more pobing ino-In e ve')B Jh en~

case of ublic fuding forthoeav formation. Is wlganipr ceI(Writer's te: Dr'ab is a co taction of Drama Lab.come to Andover in complementr st PA as students are'sh ed in nd The new Journal of eater Lawrence recety Ti ounwl rdao op iw h eti'suet

prgan S. A prominent Boston 1 ut with greater rapidi, , wit~ out featured an article entitled "Sizer's Cbhnges kl1awyer, Brooks Potter, pln oime for adjustment to residential ife. Some Sehiorm a Little Uneas ", on the back page of its tetia netimn vial ~P.challene the definition of 'public Can we evolve more of a two- ay Septeniber 20 issue. The rticle,'written by Deborah seehels illa tep eof prdtionsd "Ptiseducati'n' in an old upreme relationship between students ind 'Fitts, consisted of an inter-vie with five PA seniors over fall with his one-man, ong so nild"ee

Cou tu S I ellars' Bitday Spe~cial".~ Tb will take place in the~ruling w~hich' stated that public finds auty Motfth cuyar di egtomos Drama Lab t 645 on Thursda ,September 27.

cainotbe sedforprvat, hn- ccuomd o anator~taria ole "The feeling among five se iors at Phillips Academy isALtleBc ' d

sectarianedct .Public funding t PA, whereas~ the. Sim~on's R itk the oldh schooeill nev bea a r of sam y'egan th ie, For those of you who don't ow him, please don'tmight ater be extended to all ~ 'aculty are ivolyed extei siely 4it th l colwl ee et a 9bgntestory.students', as the present structure o Counselling particularly cdni) The five-Mike Corcoran M Katti Mangani, Mark confuse Sellars with the great a r of the same name toeducational finance remains under rCawodsget, Onr Illy Pellegrini, Kent Vogel an4 Bill, Zech-voiced their whm e s no resemblance atsoever. PA's Sellars'assault' 'Ad may see add'd flexibility o point that ndlover an Iea is opinions concerning va ious, issues, including inan expert n drama theory an former irl critic of the'in th surc'hools have ota o n odctoci~ilnadanme f'te new Ph illiplan. e is also a master 1'4 peteer and a genuine,

* Work g nsjoto h Sp 1vthout studentsi" The fa lyat- PA programs. ' ' surrealist, His greatest accompl b~m ents have beeri inadministration is a committee of hbows little desire to re iqih its On coeducation, Coroco an -'commented, "Girls Pupiletry'e hn art formt at'Ive incultivated at PAI uptwelve Faculty ~members chaired by ~esponsibility fr the soI a coin ini elyastp wt I Al iesnos until two yea~ ago. Thn ee llars began ptting onDirector' of Admissions Joshua Miner. '~osphere of the school, in the man ragreed that tere isagrt ifeijncbetween the old aseisfmrontead'pptsiw nthDr a

Thy 'e addressing themselves to 'fan intermediate colleg. Abbot girl and the newP 6dgrtesa, Lb.inewsonc tuinheeuyadThey, 6 ,~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I . heII g irte ad a.Hsaisrie~wssoy a t up o i thele seatrand

th gen al questions of who should While Simon's Rock offers an would wear, "men's blue jeans and a man's flannel plaid lif thtSl satsr aeto fhslvlssrwbe at A ndover, for how long, and for lternative way to handl 'biiht ' shrt," while one of the stu ents aznoiymously corn- sffd'co'.Buoyed up by_opuiar acclaim, he wentwhat b~iipose. Peetyhyar oung kids, English ~instruc or mented about the new gIrls;" t weep I saw a pair of o tpeertescD'ash' s"DneMaba,

trying t 'gain at feeling for new ideas C'hristopherKirkland examined he nylons oni the campus for the rttime In' three yers "TeLs ohad"noii"* Which ' uld, aidst theprolifertion juotential of more concrete progra 5. The seniors also criticized r.Szrspa oamt ,'The Shoj

of exper1mental education, be, ap- -le visited the affluetner ast students for long and short pen s of time.'- "This would Asstd reon pup-m erDvdCaiplicablel to Phillips Academy. High School, 'which h~ ated nean a lot of coming and goin "said Corcoran, "And I and lighting echnician Dori H~4 Sellars will present a

To gain any useful insights which )rbesof racj'sm and'l discont nt do' hn htsgo. a~namte ta ay Punch and,~ Idy show to his Th rday night audience.could, give direction to committee withao calems in pr , Cldsnosaenwfeigbte u cagsi tels Theplot of i is puppet show is dWnfrom the old comic

discssio, seeralof te fcult, '~ith chalen ngpo*m a dsnosaenw eln itra u hne ntels~ folk traditi6i - It has the Sim ity o a ream--or adiscssin, everl o th faclty in 'Senior Seminar". This provi es few years. "In those days,".he 4aid, referring to the pre-recent' months, have explored a jiotoeti of the senior cI Sizer years, "Seniors used to b a i hn. ecn ihmr-nwihPnhc'fot n riumph

number of inovations. Ro'bett vith a shrjnesv Outw r tiiued, "Dr. SiZe a bn-'aou roe beng' over a succe! Sion of the thi~ a~r n unhappyCrawford, Director of College 3ound typ ofepeice r. equal." Yet, according to the gills arq getting better home, arrest aid trial, death pripation, aPlacement, S anish instructor Kirkland als viie ~oina tly treatment thaa the boys. :_'Whi some girls' dours were' n~ust in any; urrealistic ventu, il e eusted in the,Dorothy Judd, and Marie Schaefer, a lack and Chcn ih chool of renovated i the summer," they noted,"u dormn hasn't' ~cond and ? iefer segetote so~bPter Seillars'

recenty apointd memer o the enve, the Maiual Tchnial Hi h' been renovated since about 19. ,"si agn ad hday Pat . This~t ft hwwlb oatsiCSP adatinistrative staff, traveled to school. Curiously enug, he we have mice running around our doepi." cnrvne'h osiuul mtbeSlaswl ~Simon's' Rock a coeducational Orincipal is designing p~asfor a Corcoran also 1' riticized the PAdiscipline system. He -older by a y ar on 2 etm~intermediate college for grades II1-14, 'residential qarnpds (Projc Heperls) blamed the cluster system fr the injustice. "The'Ilocated ' ii Great Barrington. to offe ghelt tenagers prpect yve "discipline just isn't the way it as a few ysars agcq," hej-Massachusetts. on the city thibhgh a short-te mi 'said. Although he students h d harsh words fr his

Simon's Rock w'as founded on the residenta Ixeine programns, the general cnsesii was that., as Mangan:principle1 that students aged 16-20 Mr. iradismpes by he phrased it, "Thel-Headmasterig eally agood guy."

Shudb~treated as adults~ i'all areas c'oib'i of he1of school life. 'Its enrollment has' Ienver shos ad Phill ps.

I xaded since its inception in 1964, Acadey '~eei-sound evide ceIfront 54to 210, with plans to reach' hat wecnhvr ith seo in, - C M L M N O -' A d v r S o800:in the future. The theory that Iacomp ementary ay." I'ie inprpr ts~ college i more ppropriately begun the probemof the committee as't at ', THE BIRD'S ESTafter thd tenth grade has begun' to of bringn students to, Ad doer di~- produce! results. Mr. Crawford sending the baek to "ric r hi

1co ta ihmmented, "You get the feeling tht hg colcommiities. lSimon's Rock is here to stay. It's a Can we i~odel 'an Outvardl Bou cif hard-nol ed liberal arts college, not a campus after Project HiesperIus? an 'K N E HPplaygrotiind for freaks, hippies, and we help in the planning of Proj ct 127 MaS.dropouts." It certainly raises several Hesperus, and perhaps] undertake an ''

important questions for PA. 'exchange of'studenits' and faculty w th 'u.~

Are we willing and able to modify~ it? If so, how cati weavoidcreat' g 9' the social environment for students School earAbroad' in Ve~ner he T h o m p so n~/3Ewho are' more mature and advanced logistIca qestions are cqmp icat .'IacademiLally? PA must re-bxamn but as; with the entire CSP, e '

its thrust toward high quality Ioverriding intent is to open up n ''''academics, probably to find suh cover toyouit f pblic shobls'or ' -SCHOOL SUPPLIESthings as postgraduates ad short periods o im.tPWIE DA O ESSlRPI'restrictive rules on students of college Mr. Mineir's committee will soo nYE RIEmraturitg1 to be incompatible with ' meet to assess rpor nits SAom ad ERts that purpose. Perhaps we should members, which my of er4

atrt'anew age group, perhaps we possibilities for ex terimn al 'I ''-EPT

Shold sgregate the more advanced programs, and t discus Proba le '' 77M I SREstudenti certainly we must speak to student involvement in th 'ir igesi,the needs of those capable of college- ~'Subcommittees ae being salse 20 Essex StreetAnoelevel work, as Simon's Rock has done. to work on propc sals fo'wrs SANDOVER, MASS.

Can we vlpa better admissions next yer ne which ihshovrfi e' Paut the potential of Istudents may live adwr

many student in getrda I campus! wwile the P omnt' I Nx o h otO ie~~imon'Rock is still working on the reanInat NeIttePotOf e

WO RLD IN ABOX" ''' ,'

lotnedfrom page 3 ~ HH E ED~~ ~are largely' concealed from public i*view: mrostly being located at thelibrary. They are almost never foundin doriiory ommons rooms, or' FO places sdh as the Underwood room, 'I FROZEN FOODSwhere the likelihood of people seeing ',

them s far greater. If the'Washiripton Post was as well placed -F E 1 R Z N - C N Etbroughot~t the school as the social FREH'RO EN IN Eschedule, 'Iimagine how much bettr rTm!V E AB Siiiformed the studnt bodyEwold iLES MEATS Lastly, I have the impression that -there farl too little omphasis on ' ''O L R O Ddirntvnt nthe classroom.rrn Tt i his -PO L R SE F ODisprobably the fault of the t ,ih~s.'I

No matter how great the ndover~ evcedcation is, it will never ei truly ' . ' We, Sr 'Restaur~nts Hotels -Isiuin

effctiv~ until it become's pos Ile for'IItl'e studbnlt to relate his or hr newly' Iacquired knowledge to some face f 688-1844 1''Anodertf human experience. 4nd ht''- c ,

cn ever occur until the studentj learns 'hat human experiences are HA E HLL4-' '

aaitualli 'taking place. It is the 439 HST.HILIS' LAWRE 4 E obligation of all members of the! i Icommunity to see that this void ofIignorance is filled. '~

.11'~~~~~~

Page 8: P u uieldfuiereieir, s Band tiihv

PAG~~~~~~~~~~~IGHT ~~~~~~~~~~~' ~~~The PHILLIPIAN /T. ET BER 2 7, 1973

4" Cla ond C0- 11,. ,*g'aI.-d 'ad. ln*,ko wh.C OnI 'WV~

KO. '~~~Kindred Spin~~~~~~~~~~~~2 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~satisfied if we were merely consider t be "good guys"ContInued from page orliked for being sociable and respon Nt quests butcentrated upun getting to knpw a few students so well perhaps not genuinely admired as co letent teachers ortl~at private discussions could blossom spontaneously students. So'n6 of us are already br at~ elss from trying-

- - ~~~a~id decent behavior could be made the product of a to keep pace with all the fresh demrn s created by ex- 2 2 2 ~~~~~~~~~sudent's desire to avoid disappointing an adult friend on panding definitions of "education". Clasrooms andcampus whose firm opinions he has grudgingly learned dormitories can suffer as teachers b co e caught in oo;to respect after intensive and probably heated debates many competing concerns. Studies sorts, sleep,' and

bjetween the two of them. other basic~ can be neglected a tudents becomeIt, seems to me that despite the working groups committed to other, often mpre a tractive" activities.cpuncils, clusters, and all the other gathering places we If we all concentr~ te lyju n what look like- , .~~~~~. ~are industriously devising to allowv groups of students and refreshingly new devi~e foIS n~ ving the Andoverteachers to convene, it 6fien remains within the "con- experience, we will be i dngrb ig oring aal the long-fines" of classioom, dormtrpdigfed nr standing elements which quietly cohtribute to the

table, and campus pathwva that a tea'cher and'a student "spiriV'_ of the school. Our disco nt n s may spring ascan best approach one another. As'soo~i'as individual much from hoddy performance ofesnibiis and,contacts are enlarged to group contactIs, we are inclined feeble rsponse to "old-fashioned ' ducational op-to stop seeing and talking with each other sensibly and to portunities as from, recently-noi d elficiencies insiart referring to "teachers" and "students" as though friendliness, trust, or breadth 6f e rig experifenceq-they were two entities exhibiting qualities we have Having come nere atterte yer apling a Vdriety7i~aned ourselves to mistrust. of occupations and socialevrn nt, I am deeplyWhile we are all experimenting' WtA ne, soial, disturbed to find that Andoe cnoeard itself as thecultural, and governmental activities that are sportant fortunate possessor rnf the nrafates of a com-

22 tt us but are still vaguely defined and' therefore, ham- munity, plus the maturity-testing clie 1 gs created by pered by strained communications or dis appointed living in especially ccose quarters, p th stimulatingshpes, we should remember that faculty members are of me'eting a uniquely diverse assortmer~ ~ niiulalso here to teach and stude'nts to learn many less representing a multitude of backgrou ds, tempera~nents,

personal" skills and thought proc~sses which are interests, and ages. t is a great pity tht.we cannot be6irpportant 6nough to be taught apd ]'earned in ways we humble( and patieet enough to sec t e pportunity 2 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~culd greatly improve upon if ~ve haive mord of our Andqvdr provides for genuine fellows i~p among in-

2 ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"nnovative" energies to these traditional areas, instead telligentl human beings, whose diffre ces should be -2 U ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~of tying to replace or submerge them. Even thoughwe regarded not with dismay but. with asination, as thenmay be broadening the purposes f a "preparatory individualized expressions of basica ~yind~ed spirits.sehool", we must continue to earn respect fro each Kent Allen Is an EnglIsh I ctr, at Phillips~~~ j ~~~her through or demonstrations Iof aptitud~ and Academy, currently teacl~lng at $ch Iear Abroad In

/' 2 ~~~~concern for phy cal, mental, emotional, and moral Barcelona, Spain. This Is the last secti of three partc iltivationi. It is ubtful that any ofi; us would b truly esay concernIng Andover's comm I[ problems.

2 2 2 ' ' Plauisible or Uhreafistic? 2

And wherever you find ccongenia crowd,-4- u'l I CO tine fro Page 2 expect that person to lea o an unvarying,. I ~~~~~~~~predicatble schedule. Th ere times whenfind Coca-Cola. For Coc&a-Cola has the refresh- .2 rqie a parlel philospkl hoyrI n lan ffectively m~ersed in aing taste you never et tirec$ f. That',s ~Why things2 dn dpsth 'evta a is a developing, residential academic co_ m nity such asing better with Coke, dfter Coke, after Coke. ' ~~~~~~~~creature, a ffair' community should accept' Andover,larid there are tswenh2 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~people on tle basis of conduct appropriate properly sless effective heanewould

to their stage 4f development. In a crude,- be elsewhee nti sso Iy e it 2 - JJ~~~~~~~~J~~~ age-related wa$/ we do this now:we treat that all students tvork onlthe same caleri- 220212` j -io socially, differently than we treat dar? That is, s sounrd reasonable to

upperclassmen An individual h6 cnnot epcevrstudett edfl-itrd alde~dr Aa a,2thlty of The Ca-Cot C-nPony ba l e 'o i odcthrt nte spring terms, invariably • !ouldri't a~Salem CcCoaBottlin CoIc T E Xi2 ps isnt jst 'bad' , and puniishable: student's calendar vary 'as i developmenit2Coca-Co ~~~~~~. iris Co., Inc. h~~~~~~~fe is, rather, at a lw stage of moralvriWhis' Andov hninesv7 ' 2 K ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I ~~~~~~development, unable to perceive the ab- acdmcadrsdnilx~Ien ) us 0 1) W straction of accounting for the effect of his but one experierice which i plugged in' to '2

- i act$ upon anot er, and the rights that the a student's calendar when it is Miost right for./ 2 ~other may have. A just com n'lrity must hini"iss'o are.". A' euto hseag ns r ie2 2 1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~It will be a difficult problem, Dr. Sizer ureguhttescolrc tsi D em-e '

WT7WVU*~~~~~~~~~~~~~*,~~~~~~1 ~~asserts, one n easily solved by political phasize "off-campus"1 pro rrs, or non-1V i. Brine Co. action, "by committees of faculty ad traditional studies more .treriuously.stddents balanaigr offthi pfeuead However, the Headmaster )dints out that

2 [ 2 2 "~~~~~~~~~~~~~~rights". Insteadagopo aut n such projects 'often require aI beauracracyBOSTON. N ASS'. suet ilhv osat"y n intolerable for an academic muiy arid-~~~~~ 2 2 '~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ derstanding development and justice-their is o otyfrmn an ~.H ss

psychology n philosophy-and acting "Why don't we at Andove fous on our- -' ~~~~~~~~~"acc "digly. strengths'(einta a.ade ic schooling),

PROPOSED, hat Andover allow, and if encourage ,other agencies t continiue or towIse n a partl ular stuatIon encourage,. create non- 'academic' or iqu~asi-acadernic lvi's, ~~~~~~~~~~ ,-~~~~~I ~~studIents to leave h school for a term or programs in which our students could, fromM y roh es Pl'ace 2I more,'as pproprae In order to undertake 'time to time, enol an eour sfiudetstudies or to g~sn experience more ef. tra~nsfer into programs comn emntary to~~ .4 ~~~~ Ciff; 1 -~~~~~~~-~~~A~~ fectlvely achiee away from the Academy; ours? SYA,' the, Washi igb''InternI ~~~ FO~~~)L \JlII~~~~~,~~~I~~V 9 ~and that Advr actively encourage the Porm tdMn n Sit are alcreation of "1schools complementary to ts prototypes, he suggested, in ta they in-~~~~~~ I ~~~~~~~~~~~~residential acade pilpogram n which our volve schools compleenrta'y to Andover's2 ~~~~~~~tel 475i.J 9J699 students can enrol~l. I residential academic progranl

2 I 2 ' ~~~~Dr. Sizer dis.-usses this Oroposal i at The third and final artleI thl series2length. "As s holarship-and common ~'ill deal 'with Dr. Szerl ~roposals In2 Syrian ~~~~~~Steak RolI~~~~~~ I 2 Syrian ubs ~~~~~~~sense observatio-i-shows, an individual respect to the actual form an ubs4 nce ofalk Rolls ~ ~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~learns, or 'devel ps' often_ in spurts, first. thei-currculum, and offer an her offaster, then slow 4 , and rarely at a constant comments 'and conclusions cerninth2 PLAIN: 1.25 2 VEGETAB -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~s* ALL ~~~rate. It logically folows that %k should i etre 'memorandum. n~ h

'MUSTA~p1300AEDMD1.30EGG SALAD 1.0 ARE AD

ONION. : 1.30 '~ TUNA 1.0 WITH I

CHEESE! 1.30 2 SAMI1.1 MAYO A.' CA2VAILLARONION ACHEESE 1.45H M'12 CES

PEPPER & CHEESE 1.45 ROAST BEEF 1.40 LETTUCE1 ap otanct$ ~~~~acerTOMAT & CHEESE 1.45TU EY142OM OS

MUSHROOM & CHEESE 1.45 ''UPRBR ER 1. PICKLES'

PlNEAPPitE & CHEESE I 2 U5 NIOINS 2I

7P I~ 1 PM~2 2.0I1SEASONING 2

21 I ~ ~ ~ ~ ADOE

Deliveries Start at 5:-30 p.m. this year. 22<

No deliveries o Saturdayights 2