6
76, NUMBER 7 PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASS. NOVEMBER 8,1951 PRfICE 15 CENTS IS EXAMINESDR AMA QUARTET RED PART Reviews Issue PosedOV S By Commies n Gov'tOV RH L S P tlast Wednesday's assembly Spr Interpretation Of Shaw's a presented as speaker S p r ofthe American History de- ' ent. He devoted his talk to "Don Juan In Hell" Captures Crowd rolmof what to do with omuists in this country. Bernard Shaw was a genius.-The tev udrdpol nexample of the type of man eant y these American Corn- who had the good fortune to attend Saturday night's perform- s, Mvr. Allis cited Daniel ance of DQn Juan. in Hell must also have the good sense to eSchirmer, a Communist spoke here at Andover last admit this one bvious fact. And in which the four talented per- it is ust as plain that, Charles formers could do what as noted *Allis went on to say that Laughtlon, Charles foyer, Sir Thespians they make a very suc- are at least fifty-five thou- Cedric Hardwicke, an dges sfu1 lhod dn-cig known com'munists in the aMoocessau iveyooatlng-actorg at this time, md probably toorehadl doh he de auor Don Juan is, after all, an argu- more to whom Communist than "all right" liy the late au-~~~~~ meat more than an actual drama carhe oto bee n isd thor. and sets and costumes would dded hver tat hee das-eof The audience was prejudiced, just have distracted from the dded, however, that the dan- of ~~~~~~~~course; it could not have read eloquence with which Shaw's s iot so much the numbers the New York Times and the Bos. ideas were communicated to the the degree of their influence. ton Globe and Life magazine and ies h atr"&v hs enng this, Mr. Allis said all the other newspapers and thide h os o thewse toproblems have arisen as proiasttfeuedeots theories aonlifeiofnhera n s otiga eteatment of these Corn- peidclehtfaue'~prs htn ovninlstigws ats. One concerns the probi- on Don Juan without having ex-rqretoblerheadec' f the Conilnunist as an mdi- ~~~~~~~~~pected an exceptional dramatic ia~nto.Ti cul"ed I, and the other, the Corn- - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ experience. The surprising fact in fDnJa oee oled stnwh thas mansr dh tob- was that this reviewer, at east, nooe twsaprn othe who hs manged t be- The First"rama Quartet, composed of Charles Laughton, was not disappointed; THE FIRST latosrntileitrthat a moembern ft. eUie Charles Boyer, Agnes Moorehead, and Sir Cedric Hardwicke DAAmr thn the four microphones and the ur lived up to expectations. When raigsad een oeta heCommunist as a citizen, merely_____________________ read,astehidcto a concession to the QUARTET'S M. ise dos ndan e to Man and Superman, it is im- advance billing, just as the .S tfhe oe n u~ena Iacte pressive; when seen on stage, as careless turningyof a pa e at the t then aovrse, But the BaL s tWIIrbL ntrve GiJves it was presented Saturday night, uroper momenat byMs Morehead ionthn aissshould welo it almost over-awing. rwho had her lines perfectI em talk and preach and ad- m g t I t h va l- And what a presentation THE meoied sdi h cohr te their ideas and doctrines? In ih I to S a an H l FIRSTDRM QUARTET ave, signified nothing more than her Smith Act, passed by the The device of reading Don uan, obedience to the external form deit efcrie t prc the By Stephen Charnas hit upon by Messrs. oyer, Laugh- (the "reading"), a form which "I hve pan i th bac ofthehea," aidChre ton an adik n Miss had, n the course of the evening, how of the government. When " aeapi ntebc fteha, ad ae Moorehead proved very service- been entirely supsed. ssue arosequsing the B aserorgiv ituion quesoftionn atde Boyer. "Piee frieme." able; it set up th ip ea s ures Byr titutionality of this act, de- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~work of the piece, and established Charles Laughtan. Sir Cedric gthat it interfered with the Thanks to the arrangements of Dy.., and Mrs. Grew, the a basic professional tmosphere (Cat. on Pg. 5) of free speech, the upreme decided that it was not un- PHILLIPIAN had been allowed to "Impossible," exclaimed the iitoaand tat a plan to send one correspondent back- Frnchman. and nodded his head C A I I S D I E- S T government was saet akwt h orte in an exhausted way. "I have h e onit a suspect. Aedul 't ebr of DE he h a pain." He patted the c enit isaquestion of a FIS V'URTET, wich of his skull and sat down again. $ 6 0 G A O A V S unist in theq government, had just presented Don Juan in Spotting Charles Laughton's -var, it is a much more seri- Hell.. Chosen by your Editor as imposing ack through the open situation, for once in the luk erf, I squeezed my doorway to the wings, I seizedVo r y T. F s e L ad l ment itself, the Cmu a ktruhtewnsit the opportunity and stole out of v de , T ih r L a nia le to exert powers wih il aaa desn om oe dressin room to catch a few . o it rv e him to strengthent cn a e eoeadesn words from the director of the Phillips S cey P eg rv of his parton Uie table leaning on his elbows,whe Quartet. a. As a r ,teUid Sir Cedric H ardwicke relaxedo "Pardon me, Mr. Laughton" On the night of November 9, the eve of the Exeter game, ashas to takeextape the couch. Miss Moorehead was, I blurted out. "I'm from the PHIL osagainst allowin ths I understood downstairs dis- LIPIAN, and I was told you'd the Charities Drive will have its annual fund raising cam- unSt-ed men t ne no rbnad'r agtnws be eeoseog to re paign. Led by Co-Chairman Tom Vodrey and Tny Fisher, 30 origs of our government, nowhere to be seen. to see one of its representa- senior and 10 upper midjdler can- TeHatFudtoTeA manmethod of combatting Pulling my nerves together in tives." Charles Lau~bton shifted vasTswllcvrevrydrmoeart CanrtSoci, Ad Trhs bente oat ruee jou rnaisi tradin ase n qine n the campus in an effort to attain The March of Dimes. hsconcerns ma king a Boyrwehrhwolmidas praising eye at me. ed investigation of the back- wering a few questions; he apolo- "As you know," he started, the Drive's oal of $3,600. In a breakdown of the total dof members o the U.S. gized that he was suffering from after I had asked how this pro- The largest p art of this money sum necessary to contribute to all meat, and from the findin a terrible headache-it was so duction of Don Juan had come will go to the Community Chest, of these organizations it may be erte nesiatcon eith sideon apologied toemfore bre- about, "I've been doing Bible Following thit comes the Red noted that an average of $5.00 is igthe m unis c use ort suide. Thenooied timfret readings around the country. Paul Cross. Other benefactors of the expected from each student. Win timin. Then, oiled, I urned to Gregoy, who worked with me on Drive will be the Salvation Broken down into classes, how- inc thi~s ha svto baue ar whr Hadikewsrelnngt ever, the Junior Class has a goal mcumbersme oand o te adakdpltl fh ol hose, suggested a drm quartet of $525. The Lower Middlerjgoal unairsor metod or h tell me, since he was a ersonal to.o.ourchraterplys.Th.. is $825. The Upper Middle Cls U a tfactory method forP difficulty lay in finding some isepcted to raise $1100 with g th govrnmet ofCoin of Shaw's (so I understood), about ieetdoIrmmbedyasheSnorCssgl 15 ts gteU.S a eie h eoitoswt the la e ack when I had put Don Juan 5 ther emerlsso hrte trid ofallmen whose lby- gnucocerning that evening's under my pillow, and I wondered Drive Commiittee are as follows: production of Don Juan. itdy w WrdWr aeBbGro n AtFedadr (Coat, on Pg. 6) "I am not a very brilliant ifeoday, mgth do Wod nas daer, o-odnadAtFedadr talker," muttered Sir Cedric, so pelemgtbrad toue- sub-chairman, are in charge of Monday and Tuesday, I told him that his wit, whether stand it." ublicity, that has to do-with n onday andrflete ornotesddbene- Mr. Laughton pushed a well- Ndormitory posters, the napkins in her 2thand13t, Mr. rfletedor nt, ad eende- shod foot at two iron pipes lay- the Commons etc. Gene Bay is at mbe ofth a1sh Bors. vasting that evening. He seemed ing, on the floor and continued. ~"teha fteFo omte ing, o the Hmpshir Book- on the verge of delivering some thI wroteoftohShowdCwhoihad will have in the Oliver uotable answer to this, but sank Ive meomy ft phart, and told Bill Reeves has charge of Pled~e and sles Library an ex- 9ack into the couch, instead. venime my plant Ipaso wrot tod- Cards. John Horn will be in ofbooks. The "e rLu n eto 1mo ypa;Ias rt ocmado h avses hl shir Bokhpi n o SeM.L hton H tok Mr. oyer, Mr. Hardwicke, and -- 'cmado h avses hl shi~es~cllkofp s neof care l tah ial re- Don Falvey will take care of the. outstanding soe fte o l ht'h ial Miss oorehead, ho agreed to stors ofthe marked, in a distracted way. 41hwhdntlttr oe wihtl h yadMrs. Manning, who At this point in my up-tifl- take parts.Ia10 hwhdnoletr hme hih elte ohrprep chools, is ex-nwaailypoutv te- written Don IN o be acted on parents about the drive and ask ae inseetiganite- iw r 'e nad a stage, you know, but now he te oavs hi oscn clectianofibooks staed ar conerstion i and was intrigued by the idea of do-. cerning their contributions. The ~is will be our semi-an-, tpe ing itin the form of a reading. usual poseintelbyoth Boyer, who by now was standing He died in the middle of our cor- Commons which keeps a recbrd opportunity to rowse among up. Dr. Grew mentioned the p- pe oftePtgeso ec ls boks, standard editions as titcplnof"erame- res ondence."o h ors fec ls timisic plns o "sevral mm- a interview shifted to Donwilb anthsyrbyMk aPouarly rced rphdnTh tewillfbehawnrthis year"byhMike as popul p~ eprints hers of the Fren h clbrho d Juan itself. "What do ou sppose Filides. e classics. rhe sale will hoped to speak to tceertd ha menbyteLfFoc, C rlsauhorman________ before lunch on Monday and actor in his native tongue. (Co ment. on Pg. 5) ceintrvewe' eyeo view a ue until five on Tuesday. Cn.oPg )itrew'syevw

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Page 1: RH L S P - The Phillipian

76, NUMBER 7 PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASS. NOVEMBER 8,1951 PRfICE 15 CENTS

IS EXAMINESDR AMA QUARTETRED PART

Reviews Issue PosedOV S By Commies n Gov'tOV RH L S Ptlast Wednesday's assembly Spr Interpretation Of Shaw'sa presented as speaker S p r

ofthe American History de- 'ent. He devoted his talk to "Don Juan In Hell" Captures Crowdrolmof what to do with

omuists in this country. Bernard Shaw was a genius.-The tev udrdpolnexample of the type of maneant y these American Corn- who had the good fortune to attend Saturday night's perform-s, Mvr. Allis cited Daniel ance of DQn Juan. in Hell must also have the good sense toeSchirmer, a Communistspoke here at Andover last admit this one bvious fact. And in which the four talented per-

it is ust as plain that, Charles formers could do what as noted*Allis went on to say that Laughtlon, Charles foyer, Sir Thespians they make a very suc-are at least fifty-five thou- Cedric Hardwicke, an dges sfu1 lhod dn-cigknown com'munists in the aMoocessau iveyooatlng-actorgat this time, md probably toorehadl doh he de auor Don Juan is, after all, an argu-more to whom Communist than "all right" liy the late au-~~~~~ meat more than an actual dramacarhe oto bee n isd thor. and sets and costumes woulddded hver tat hee das-eof The audience was prejudiced, just have distracted from thedded, however, that the dan- of ~~~~~~~~course; it could not have read eloquence with which Shaw'ss iot so much the numbers the New York Times and the Bos. ideas were communicated to thethe degree of their influence. ton Globe and Life magazine and ies h atr"&v hsenng this, Mr. Allis said all the other newspapers and thide h os o thewsetoproblems have arisen as proiasttfeuedeots theories aonlifeiofnhera n s otigaeteatment of these Corn- peidclehtfaue'~prs htn ovninlstigwsats. One concerns the probi- on Don Juan without having ex-rqretoblerheadec'f the Conilnunist as an mdi- ~~~~~~~~~pected an exceptional dramatic ia~nto.Ti cul"edI, and the other, the Corn- - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ experience. The surprising fact in fDnJa oee oledstnwh thas mansr dh tob- was that this reviewer, at east, nooe twsaprn othewho hs manged t be- The First"rama Quartet, composed of Charles Laughton, was not disappointed; THE FIRST latosrntileitrthata moembern ft. eUie Charles Boyer, Agnes Moorehead, and Sir Cedric Hardwicke DAAmr thn the four microphones and the ur

lived up to expectations. When raigsad een oetaheCommunist as a citizen, merely_____________________ read,astehidcto a concession to the QUARTET'SM. ise dos ndan e to Man and Superman, it is im- advance billing, just as the.S tfhe oe n u~ena Iacte pressive; when seen on stage, as careless turningyof a pa e at thet then aovrse, But the BaL s tWIIrbL ntrve GiJves it was presented Saturday night, uroper momenat byMs Moreheadionthn aissshould welo it almost over-awing. rwho had her lines perfectIem talk and preach and ad- m g t I t h va l- And what a presentation THE meoied sdi h cohrte their ideas and doctrines? In ih I to S a an H l FIRSTDRM QUARTET ave, signified nothing more than herSmith Act, passed by the The device of reading Don uan, obedience to the external formdeit efcrie t prc the By Stephen Charnas hit upon by Messrs. oyer, Laugh- (the "reading"), a form which

"I hve pan i th bac ofthehea," aidChre ton an adik n Miss had, n the course of the evening,how of the government. When " aeapi ntebc fteha, ad ae Moorehead proved very service- been entirely supsed.ssue arosequsing the B aserorgivituion quesoftionn atde Boyer. "Piee frieme." able; it set up th ip ea s ures Byrtitutionality of this act, de- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~work of the piece, and established Charles Laughtan. Sir Cedricgthat it interfered with the Thanks to the arrangements of Dy.., and Mrs. Grew, the a basic professional tmosphere (Cat. on Pg. 5)of free speech, the upremedecided that it was not un- PHILLIPIAN had been allowed to "Impossible," exclaimed the

iitoaand tat a plan to send one correspondent back- Frnchman. and nodded his head C A I I S D I E- S Tgovernment was saet akwt h orte in an exhausted way. "I haveh e onit a suspect. Aedul 't ebr of DE he h a pain." He patted the c

enit isaquestion of a FIS V'URTET, wich of his skull and sat down again. $ 6 0 G A O A V Sunist in theq government, had just presented Don Juan in Spotting Charles Laughton's-var, it is a much more seri- Hell.. Chosen by your Editor as imposing ack through the open

situation, for once in the luk erf, I squeezed my doorway to the wings, I seizedVo r y T. F s e L ad lment itself, the Cmu a ktruhtewnsit the opportunity and stole out of v de , T ih r L a niale to exert powers wih il aaa desn om oe dressin room to catch a few . o it rve him to strengthent cn a e eoeadesn words from the director of the Phillips S cey P eg rvof his parton Uie table leaning on his elbows,whe Quartet.a. As a r ,teUid Sir Cedric H ardwicke relaxedo "Pardon me, Mr. Laughton" On the night of November 9, the eve of the Exeter game,ashas to takeextape the couch. Miss Moorehead was, I blurted out. "I'm from the PHIL

osagainst allowin ths I understood downstairs dis- LIPIAN, and I was told you'd the Charities Drive will have its annual fund raising cam-unSt-ed men t ne no rbnad'r agtnws be eeoseog to re paign. Led by Co-Chairman Tom Vodrey and Tny Fisher, 30origs of our government, nowhere to be seen. to see one of its representa- senior and 10 upper midjdler can- TeHatFudtoTeAmanmethod of combatting Pulling my nerves together in tives." Charles Lau~bton shifted vasTswllcvrevrydrmoeart CanrtSoci, AdTrhs bente oat ruee jou rnaisi tradin ase n qine n the campus in an effort to attain The March of Dimes.hsconcerns ma king a Boyrwehrhwolmidas praising eye at me.ed investigation of the back- wering a few questions; he apolo- "As you know," he started, the Drive's oal of $3,600. In a breakdown of the totaldof members o the U.S. gized that he was suffering from after I had asked how this pro- The largest p art of this money sum necessary to contribute to allmeat, and from the findin a terrible headache-it was so duction of Don Juan had come will go to the Community Chest, of these organizations it may be

erte nesiatcon eith sideon apologied toemfore bre- about, "I've been doing Bible Following thit comes the Red noted that an average of $5.00 isigthe m unis c use ort suide. Thenooied timfret readings around the country. Paul Cross. Other benefactors of the expected from each student.Win timin. Then, oiled, I urned to Gregoy, who worked with me on Drive will be the Salvation Broken down into classes, how-inc thi~s ha svto baue ar whr Hadikewsrelnngt ever, the Junior Class has a goalmcumbersme oand o te adakdpltl fh ol hose, suggested a drm quartet of $525. The Lower Middlerjgoalunairsor metod or h tell me, since he was a ersonal to.o.ourchraterplys.Th.. is $825. The Upper Middle ClsU a tfactory method forP difficulty lay in finding some isepcted to raise $1100 withg th govrnmet ofCoin of Shaw's (so I understood), about ieetdoIrmmbedyasheSnorCssgl 15ts gteU.S a eie h eoitoswt the la e ack when I had put Don Juan 5 ther emerlsso hrtetrid ofallmen whose lby- gnucocerning that evening's under my pillow, and I wondered Drive Commiittee are as follows:production of Don Juan. itdy w WrdWr aeBbGro n AtFedadr(Coat, on Pg. 6) "I am not a very brilliant ifeoday, mgth do Wod nas daer, o-odnadAtFedadrtalker," muttered Sir Cedric, so pelemgtbrad toue- sub-chairman, are in charge ofMonday and Tuesday, I told him that his wit, whether stand it." ublicity, that has to do-withn onday andrflete ornotesddbene- Mr. Laughton pushed a well- Ndormitory posters, the napkins inher 2thand13t, Mr. rfletedor nt, ad eende- shod foot at two iron pipes lay- the Commons etc. Gene Bay is atmbe ofth a1sh Bors. vasting that evening. He seemed ing, on the floor and continued. ~"teha fteFo omteing, o the Hmpshir Book- on the verge of delivering some thI wroteoftohShowdCwhoihadwill have in the Oliver uotable answer to this, but sank Ive meomy ft phart, and told Bill Reeves has charge of Pled~eand sles Library an ex- 9ack into the couch, instead. venime my plant Ipaso wrot tod- Cards. John Horn will be inofbooks. The "e rLu n eto 1mo ypa;Ias rt ocmado h avses hlshir Bokhpi n o SeM.L hton H tok Mr. oyer, Mr. Hardwicke, and -- 'cmado h avses hlshi~es~cllkofp s neof care l tah ial re- Don Falvey will take care of the.outstanding soe fte o l ht'h ial Miss oorehead, ho agreed tostors ofthe marked, in a distracted way. 41hwhdntlttr oe wihtl hyadMrs. Manning, who At this point in my up-tifl- take parts.Ia10 hwhdnoletr hme hih elteohrprep chools, is ex-nwaailypoutv te- written Don IN o be acted on parents about the drive and askae inseetiganite- iw r 'e nad a stage, you know, but now he te oavs hi oscnclectianofibooks staed ar conerstion i and was intrigued by the idea of do-. cerning their contributions. The~is will be our semi-an-, tpe ing it in the form of a reading. usual poseintelbyothBoyer, who by now was standing He died in the middle of our cor- Commons which keeps a recbrdopportunity to rowse among up. Dr. Grew mentioned the p- pe oftePtgeso ec lsboks, standard editions as titcplnof"erame- res ondence."o h ors fec lstimisic plns o "sevral mm- a interview shifted to Donwilb anthsyrbyMkaPouarly rced rphdnTh tewillfbehawnrthis year"byhMikeas popul p~ eprints hers of the Fren h clbrho d Juan itself. "What do ou sppose Filides.e classics. rhe sale will hoped to speak to tceertd ha menbyteLfFoc, C rlsauhorman________before lunch on Monday and actor in his native tongue. (Co ment. on Pg. 5) ceintrvewe' eyeo view a

ue until five on Tuesday. Cn.oPg )itrew'syevw

Page 2: RH L S P - The Phillipian

Palo Two THE PHILLIPIAN

drenched group who saw the Varsity gridders down Tufts Fresh-

The PHILLIPIAN ~~~~men last Saturday. Despite the rain they stayed to the very lastThe PHILLIPIAN ~ ~~~~and although disheartened by the absence of the high scoringof late, they yedjed their --lungs ot- when the team was really By Fritz Coonradtin need of support. It wasn't the forced yelling prompted by the I've avoided the mention

Editor-its Chief Warren B. Harshmazi ~cheerleaders but the iqonstant roar increasing in the'last quar- discussion of classical reManaging Editor William J.Poorvu ter and reaching'a- crescendo as the team broke the deadlock forv ib~,t fourt wees aud IAssistant Managing Editor Evan R. Berlack to win. The rest of the school should take a hint from this epi- lonei fIevercn bed anut oreExecutive Editor Stuart Braunsod n elzehwlo u ta elyi we i a nge.I eve haz-idd n trAssignment Editor Charles R. Flather boeadoedzyhwgoortamral i hnIths i thi l poabzmide lseSports Editor James L. Downey honest and hearty support, and should use the same brand of now. Nevertheless, t wuCopy Editor Henry S.F. Cooper Iern as that fod in the Tufts mwhenw bkupa kill any of you to listenFeatures Editor Stephen Charnas cheng aewnw cu - little "~long-hair" stuff now

gainst Exeter next week. then. Some of it can bea

ASSOCIATES good!LP records have helped.J~~~~. (I- ~~~~~~~ and even popular records

E. Geilich, . Bugbee, D. Bourne, J. Hebard Studenti Gon ress iu t~es the classical world canU ~~~~~~~~~~~sing their praises. Back in

recordings were good. The

PHOTOGRAPHIC ASSOCIATES ~~~~The meeting was called to order at 6:30 by President Jay techni ques and f ine st Talcott. At the beginning of the meeting, Mr. Cobb informed duce almost perfect rec

C.R. Schulze, L. Brace, D. Babin the members that these elected to serve on the Advisory Coin- music. But ver fewCongress being ~~~~~~~bou~ht much of this

BUSINESS BOARD mittee form the n~s wereben transferred to -front row music. After all, thereBusiness ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~seats in assembly. The Advisory Committee members are sit- usually about or 6 records

BuiesManager - Thompson K. Vodre symphony. These were boAdvertising Manager John HoscK ting in the first row as the old Student Council members used aeuIulcdbadauCirculation Managers Myron . Bromberg, Luis E. Dubon to do. sold for a fancy price in e

In acordnce itha faultyreqest, theConressare un- of $6.00. After buying theIn acordnce ith faclty equetL te Cogres arerun- could find a place to store

The PHILLIPIAN is published Wednesdays dring the school year igacmuscenu t1:5Fia on Furthermore, after 20 or soby the PHILLIPIAN board. Entered as second class matter at the inacmpsle-uat15Frdyon.ngthe surface hiss incrpost office at Andover, Mass., under the act of March 3, 1879. Add- The results of the poll taken by the Congress showed that, andsthe noise became obje

Ie I l correspondence concerni.ng subscriptions to M.J. Bromberg or if 'there were to be a long Thanksgiving week-end, five un- able. Junior was bound toL. Dubon and advertisements to T..Vde rJh occr fat least two out of everPHILLIPIAN, George Washington Hall. School subscriptions, 3.50. dred forty-five students would go home; and out of this num- But now in 1951, we hMain subscriptions 4.50.bemsofte sadtathywudb wiln toak schore.

The PHILLIPIAN is distributed to subscribers at the Commons beAms fte adta he ol ewligt ae sc orriee s mhoand is for sale at the Andover Inn. The PHILLIPIAN does not ne- othoers ome with them. certo comes on one D rcessarily endorse the Communications that appear in its Editaiial The Senior representatives reported that the Seniors were lasting up to an hour. Thocolumn, notorCmecmn.Jc is considerably less: there

Office of publication: Offset Printing Co., Lowell, Mass,.nfvro heie fhvn breakae-surface noise, Logan will see the administration as for carrying out this pro- over, or storage troubles.

tone quality on LPs is unsposal. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ed, in spite of RCA's 4

The Phillips Society and the Student Congress are running ads. In other words,whave unprecedented lisCharities D rive an amateur show which is tentatively scheduled for some Satur- dnoynt. rec jbords

day in December before a movie. The faculty has offered to put Remington rcrs non a few acts in addition to the student acts. Forn a21 weo can get au1

Every year, right after the Friday night l~ally for the Exeter Begien, Rhodes, Talcott, and Unobskey volunteered to help record with 50 miinutes

football ame a oup of canvassers sped t ovrthe ca- Don Falvey collect movie tickets, wol' Insmuiplag, grpsrao ovr cm excellent musicians. Na

pus to fulfill their duties. Ordinarily, 'these smooth-talking' ~~the actual record is infepus to fulfill their duties. Odinarily, these smooth-talkingRespectfully submitted, quality. There is slightlyfellows are the ones to look out for in this school, they are Ed Ansin surface noise than on other

the ones that try to sell you every known type of scandal sheet Secretary and they will wear after ye

under the name of "school publication" and they are also the at_________________________________,is bthno ater athe it. thceyln arenba

ones that swindled you into paying out exhorbitant sums of price.f Exelen renditsmoney to have your clothes and suits ruined weekly. They are Fraack's D Minor Syni

greedy fellows, rapacious and materialistic. They enjoy the Tchaikovsky's Nutcrackersight of a dollar bill passing from your hand into theirs. They ~etc. are available on Resight of a dollar bill passing from your hand into theirs. They ~~In the last article,

are the untrustworthy souls on this campus. tioned the Jazz portion But not this weekend. Even in the Victor's series of I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~cto's seres f

Butnotthi weked. veninyour excitement about the Per formance.They haveo.. ~~~~. imm~eportaedsoime cthExeter game, you may recoil distrustfully when one of them imjj jmepotces iomn the c

approaches you asking for alms. Don't. These will be honest,'. cfnertisuc arese payiand you may depend upon it. Don't allow the sins of their pre- ~riJ playing two of his own

decessors to influence your attitude toward them, for they are Q.. Bach violin soliataS. andcanvassing in the name of the Charities Drive, and even the /,2F Jothers. These are by all

lowly class of canvassers wouldn't cheat you here. as fiey nvesment or an ic

Every year this drive is carried on. Every year in the j~e music on records.memories of all but the most ancient residents of P.A. has seen Ifayoucare is the mh

asuccessful Charities Drive, not ony from the viewpoint of- loaials t Mrcw

attaining the goal set, but also from the viewpoint of one hun- evrogrsie maestbshmn

dred percent subscription. Yearly, the goals set for each class Ter oitn macdes cor

are surpassed easily. But the important thing is notz.how much einrecordsg nod fusi

you donate, but that yoti do donate. The canvassers admit that I have ne ected to mentother speeos of records,

the goal of one hundred percent subscription is more important feel that LPs Lre a mustto them than the goal of money, although they would like to see nisic lover. All classicalboth reached. And the money you give will be sent out to about isea ail on 78 RP eight haritable organizations, including the Red Cross, and getda so 5RMa

The Heart and Cancer Funds, relieving you of any obligation Everyoneto those.

So, you needn't distrust the canvasser this weekend. De- Gives lvelop your sales resistance another time, but you can forgetit for now. To The

Communication Charities

Although the- school spirit this year has been reasonably 4

good, the whole Academy should take a lesson from the small

Page 3: RH L S P - The Phillipian

THE PHILLIPIAN Page Three

Iue logs Through Mud To Edge Tufts, 14-=7;

-ESoccer Today Decides New England Title

A Crush~es Red, Blue Soccermen Both'ewksbury ~~~~~~~~~~Enter Contest- Undefeated

40-6 Rout This Wednesday, November 6, the Red and Blue Varsity

soccer teams will meet in a crucial contest here at Andover.TheAn oe i seAvsra l Both teams are undefeated and willI be fighting hard all the way.

asteywalked over a ame As far as comparing scores wa- iapitn n sfrasynf fro Tewksbury High, goes, it looks as though Andover go ly wscnend A

6. Roger Hinkson, playing is and Exeter are very evenly match- geea ako ii emdtoond game at tail ack, scored ed. Exeter heat Tabor Academy by ame sfo lyn aralyce in the first period, going a 3-0 score, while we only ma- hn-pgm.Aoeromidale

ad41 yards to pay dirt. naged tscore once, holdin Ta- opponent was ound in Tufts '55,TeBlue continued to domin- bor scoreless. Deerfield and vXe- hut Pete Bartlett's outstanding

~lay ding the second uar- ter ended up in a 1-1 deadlock, saves in the goal and Ben Brown's M aSith went around end but the Blue booters managed to aggressive play at full back-e-

the five, making the score shut Deerfield out by a score of nabled P.A. to come out the vic-0.Toward the end of the peri- 1-0. tor, 5-2. The Deerfield gameJim Samaschin went 30 yards At the beginning of the year prvd to be the most hard foughtreverse to make the score prospects were uncertain for And- battle of the season. The pay

over with only a few returning was centered mainly about theGrySider, Co-captain Jay - lettermen to bolster the team, mid-field line with good defensiveJi Gale, and Bob Maes However, Coach Diclemente play on both sides. The last game

eot ut nteofnieHort Smith carries for a gain in the -switched these players around to to date was with Belmont Hrigh,

Their timely blocks ac- fourth period rally fill1 the weakest positions. Hig- and Andover had no trouble innted for more than one P.A. gins was moved from halfback to scoring a 3-0 win. The Harvardhdown. On the defense, Earl center forward, and Tom Rades game was called off on account of

Bob Stevenson, eads And verlushwas dropped to a fullback spot rain.anand Jesse James were W a e d n o e u hfo afak h afakoi codn oDkPlera

douts. tions were now left open for Pel- and Poinier have been outstand-Tewksbury made its only tally 1 'V *S oe T letreau, Poinier and Von Molnar, ingly good halfbacks thisyerthe ofame after a prolonged For 'Winming S o e In Riain all prod~ucts of fast year's J.V.'s. Tom Rodes and Ben Brown hv

s short smashes through ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~n the first game the Blue proven themselves capable ofles eshor smahes thrug team walked all over Watertown, clearing that ball when it really

line eded wen a arrier The Andover Varsity football team captured its fifth win of 3-0, with Higgins, Foote, and counts. Pete Bartlett has letled over from the three yard

This was the: only score of the season last Saturday under a steady downpour of rain by Stewart all scoring. Governor through only three goals, and hasBlue turnig back a srong Tuft' Freshman quad 14-7.Dummer came next and were taken save4 a countless number of dif-

tid quarter, as the Ble trigbc togTf' rsmnsud1-.care of by G.V. Angelis and Larry ficult shots. On the wings, Petetalled temporarily. Then, Despite the al- and was downed on thie oppit Hginwosra fve ols Kbrad"L ky Dkehe

teearly minutes of the last ready muddy turf, made more so 36. Foote went to the 25 or an- oe l orqatr o h e xeld epn h alwtiiod, Howe Shaff ade the by a drenching rain throughout the other first down, and once again cond straight win of the season, the sidelines with accurate pass-

e 's most spectacular run, as last three quarters, the Big Blue the Blue bed down and Tufts efr osiue h is el e otecne.Pt ar,went aroun en nar- came across with a tie breaking took over. ut then, as the rain opposition that Andover had t Larry Higgins, and G.V. Angelis

se and darted 650 yards for a tally in the losing minutes of the began to pour down upon the field, face, but the Blue had the situn- have done consistently good workchdown. A few minutes later, game to climax the most thrilling Andover was brought back to life tion well in hand for they defeated all season.th threw a 39 yard pass to contest of the season. The small when Fred Dent recovered a fum- Medford High, scoring their third It was unfortunate that thetAlexander, who was all by crowd who braved the rain backed ble of the 25, to end the quarter. victory, 4-1. Higgins, Capra, An- Harvard game had to be called off

self in the end zone, for the the Blue to the last with the most On the st down PA went to gelis and Stewart all scored, because xeter beat the CrimsonI score of the me. Co-cap- sprited cheering yet. The Blue the 21 where a fumble and a loss' Tfe fourth game of the season (Cont. o Pg. 5)

Karl Purnell and Dana failed to capitalize on several threw them back five yards. After ________________th shared the conversations, scoring opportunities because of bobbling the ball John Golden

the muddi field and rough foot- hung on to a ass for a first downSLAUGHTER ing. Joe Xennik led the team from on the 151 'ote carried forI5 Runners 5t At Mt. Hermon;SLAUGHTER ~the QB spot by gaining constantly yards and then eludes several -

and scoring the winnin TD Hor tacklers to score from the 8. Ray h sSmith came through witl tremend then rushed over the extra point mo t Team Ist Exeter 3ril

ENCE 25-0 osordawi setting up the fina for a 7-0 PA lead.scr ilRay Foote registere The Freshmen uickl retali- Unable to cope with the power of Mount Hermon, a strange

Blanchard Leads B'sheavy ground gaiig scoring ated by taking the kick om the colurse, a stormy weather, P.A.'s Cross Country team took fifthBlanchard Leearyaidthefirt peiod Althoug ten o te 31 and driving on fiveTo Secon Triumph the score indicates a close nine, pastthBle3.TnBs-place in the New England Interscholastic Prep meet at Mount

Tufts never manaped to ra ter- comb scampered 30 yards o- an Hermon. Captain Thompson of ust missed a "show" takinghe JB football team over- ritory inside. the Blue 30 except off tackle smash resulting in the Mount Hermon won the meet easily iourth; D eerfield's MacArth wasred the Lawrence High JV's on the touchdown run, which score. He then carried through in 12:55.5, and he was followed fifth, The next three men crossedlast Wednesday by the score vouches for the excellent defen- center to deadlock the score, closel by two teammates, Dixon in a photo finish. Johnstone and

5-0 for their second win of sive play. The kick at the opening of the in 13:05 and Cannon in 13:19. Flather of Andover put on a ter-eason. After a thtly playd Andover kicked off and Tufts second half was taken at the 30 Co-captain Dusty Johnstone and rific kick in the submerged 100

quarer, he Bs fin yboe rught the ball from their 3 into and returned by John Golden to Chuck Flather ofAnd over placed yd. stretch, and just outs plashedight of the Lawrence defense Blue gound at the 43. Owing to a the Tufts 45. A fumble gave Tufts well taking 7th and 8th places Eee' ue ttefns.Hwutting across a touchdown hard tackle, Bascomb fumbled and the ball, but they were forced to respectively. Six schools partici- ever, a mixup in the judging putwas followed by three more Murray recovered for the Blue on kick. By Wennik's and Foote's pated in the meet. Huber in front. The official scor-

-s to pile up the team's hig the 49. In four plays Foote and long gaining the Blue went all Because the original course er set Huber's time at 13:26,score in ive contests, Al1 Smith moved the ball to the 27, the way to the visitors 20 from became too flopded and lippery, Johnstone's at 13:26.5, and Fla-

chard showed good running but here the offensive ogged their own 25. Despite the rain a new course was laid ut on te ther's at 13:26.6. The final de-ball handling as he led the down, Tufts takin over. After Wennik tossed to Golden who Hermon macadem roads at the last cision had no affect on the team

frmthe OB spot. Les Blank sprintin 15 yads te Tufts ball made a head long diving catch on minute. Although the new course scorin.Egro eon ankdup considerable yard- carrierlotheblonass- the 12; but a second pass failed was the accustomed distance, Walker of Mount Hermon filled up

wtpowerful- runs as Jim ing tackle and Smith grabbed it and Tufts took over. Four downs 2.5 miles, the hard surface was a the 9th and 10th spots. Dave Nor-ttnled the tailback spot. on the 40. The Blue later fumbled later the Tuft's kicker was rush- radical change from the usual dirt ris finished 16th and Niemand,

espite the handicap of se- into the hands of Tufts across ed and his punt only reached the and grass course. The weather Smith, and Reeves also placedijrenamely those of the mid-field stripe on the 49. 31. Although so close, the Blue conditions were about as bad as well in the forty-two man field

iloBb Sigal, and Chuck Tufts chalked up a first down and failed to come across with a they could have been. A freezing for Andover. Co-captain Ed Hurleyarz h eamn came through after two loses passed to the 33 score. The small crowd was dis- downpour and strong winds turned injured his ankle early in the race

ptionally well. The defense yard line. The alert PA Defense heartened next by a Tuft's drive into snow halfway through the and failed to inish.ed their best ball game to halted the p ass thrower and took to mid-field before the PA de- race.

out wyhoie thewofene a up e the 3 ackAteh Lo a l chcedah fe~ise tightened, foicing them to The race started at 2:45 in the When the respective scoresfur h tohofns. a Ion ed aheri6ak togHor Smhce wh kick. However, they needed no driving rain. Andover, Exeter, were tabulated, Mount Hermon hadaourec kiucedo ff Leo ma a setala rt leaigth heeedr oegte na Deerfield, Moses Brown, Hebron, won handily with 30 points. Theningethe balld ff tot e 37. Cat-pcaclrlepn c tch hey shouted constant support and Mount Hermon were paired up next three places were closelyning the ball to the 37. Cal.- y ~ ~ ~ t hestatig in, Coae avng contested. Deerfield took second~

.carried for six and Begien ran eahi man two, dth first th n meratoo tkkick at been rained out. Andover's E with 77, Exeter third with 83, andBheanchared ani eoy to-s tim ta atopaonsse hiwyhe ettohe4.A Smith slipped at the gun but was Moses Brown was fourth with 89,

IN Leoy t- tie haa tw-plaoon yste hisway e wet tothe 5. A able to continue the race. At the although none of their men finish-Blanchard an has been employed by oach 15 yard penalty failed to stop thIafml akTo snwswl ed within the first 10 places.

1 ears forge a nr hua eero.Ofesvdnddfn Blue as Hort Smith scampered in the lead and heldthi Posto Andover with 101 points was fifthetook oged- down cand siemeieenud 0 in omfe 50 yards through the mud, to the for the remainder of te race, and Hebron last with 122.

e b0 ut anIllglueo positions, but almost wo on Freshmen 20. Two plays later Flather and Johnstone, unn A short award meeting follow-enalty gave the JVB's ~ e teamsy wee u'se t agans Joe Wennik gjaloped around end slowly at first, befan to pick up ed in which the first 10 men and

alp o thir ow 5Atn ewksur.TeAsmtth into the coffin corner with a rugath mie ak.Dv the winning school received a-loss stoped B's ad minute and a half remaining, and Noris and Arno Niemand started wards. Captain Thompson was

lossstopedthe B' n lic in their final game before Exe- sahed the deadlock. Hort Smith well ack in the field but worked the recipient of the fir kce oteLwec sst lface5 kicked to the Lawren e r.Ti am hud rv

After one first down Law- te.Ti gaesol prv went over for the extra point, and up slowly, medal and the Interschoistichad third and one to go whether or not the steady improve- several plays later the game end- At the finish it was Thompson, Plaque for Mount Hermon. Chuck

Catlett threw Lawrence or ment of the team since te season ed with Andover winning the Dixon and Cannon taking the first Flather and Dusty Johnstone wereyard loss and forced them to started can be kept up. tightest and most spectacular three sots clinching the meet for awarded medals for their resIpec-

(Cont. on Pg. 6)game of the season 4-7, Mount ermon. Perkins of Exeter tv lcs

Page 4: RH L S P - The Phillipian

Page Four THE PHILLIPIA4

bring your entry to the storeItuleg ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~fering the prize before6Ru~~~e~~~ this Friday. All ties will

Any P.A. student may enter judged on a time ba s soas many of these contests as he yor entry in early The deci K/~~~g (&ahedl '%4 `5/ likes but only one entry for each o the judges wiflybe final.individual. contest is permutted. mit entries for the PHILLIPiWrite your name and answer in contest to either Tom Vocke) q

,the space provided for them, and John Hosch.

ANDOVER SHOP ELANDER & SWANTON

'Rhat will be the longest kick of game? IWhat will final'score be?I ~~~~~~~~~~~~Name................

Name ................ Answer .............

Answer ..............

g Gift: A $2.50 tie. I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~Gift: Victory Banner

r I~~~~~~~~nwr...............

I ANDOVER~~HLL' GIFT SNOOLDEOES

I X~flw a hafmbe will h esu toalo point sored byw both teamsWhate will boer Anovrlongsrn

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Gift: $.50Gwoth r f meaise soitx$.0wot.fecanieI I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~it resusrpin n ili heUSI.....…I I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Wnnrcooe'

Page 5: RH L S P - The Phillipian

THE PHILLIPIAN Fe Fv

IITETTE ~~~of the evening by his well-placed attacics and strategi defenses- Interview Atothi apordint ercoand.

RTIETTE ~~grimaces and his broad, self-ap- all these are his.(It remains for BCn.fo g )L o appered in ovco adts.

preciative style, and, in particu- better men than this reviewer to (CnifonP.1atonie tuaed hbioslac andr th

(Cant. from Pg. 1) lab his brief, lapel uipng describe them.) His are the ideas te'ilnth wrk? Id- sipeve a oiu slyexi inoeIar, y ero~~, i exprbakeoutythenexitninto

the

imitation of the tpical po ititian. epesdb DnJa n h thned.ili h wrd? e auA'ftorium. As I left, I could see

Sir Cedric i-ardwicke "ane. atGd fcus a~hoggsuig wt i

icke, and Agnes Moorehead MisTorhae n Doneved onyhein flact, And hisae "ematGdnfcus, Luhogsuig wt i

ht to the oorhedplaying The ceived ethi lyrndisa Laughton exploded, and that ban s and whispering to over

ctors, they bogh tote Satue and Dona Ania, .,yeaete tribute to him to say was that. in French. I remembered tat

ing" both the good and. the average man. and average woman that iAn Juan in Hell, written in Aan Ihdspoe r oeo a adt e ut

qualities of actors. Their respectively, made the most of 1901, sounds almost as true to- Laugton hadppsd Mr.isotebodehadaaid to e getitwas quoe

points were very, very their all-too-few lines. Mr. Hard- day as if it had been written yes- bout some of the opinions the late for that now.

their bad' ones, 'happily wicke milked each of his for its terday. B tpe hra ato h ei aldfrhmt

h werenegliible, full comic value, and the result B tpe hra ato h ei aldfrhmt

Baer, as n Juan, the wa neteeyauigcaa-speak-about "the power thatthe prtsbrougt to tefiaian el mig critc governs the earth i not the power

stol ~ ~ ruh o eiain n ih ciiie Soccer of Life but of Death," fr in-art t lnetof the four, that he tried too hard, especiallystne

Gallic harm tat made the in his first few lines, butcthis CotfrmPg. 3) B sadM.LuhoBE S REal Lothario's philo h reviewer will not cavil at an seeey ra h ly

ncingl persasi et as- minor blemishes, the total resut Frash 3-2. As in all their games, "I read it this afternoon," I

has proveda hindrance to proving so enjoyable. The Statue the Red tallied in the,-first half 'interrupted,.ildsoe

audience's uderstanding. Ir enl srved as "comic re- and slowed dawn in the later quar- ..... and ou wldicvrIT*S

evinwr foud itonly slight- her' and, in general, lubricated ters. Mr. DiClementi is confident that Juan is Shaw's protagonist,

racting-several misplaced the long controversies between that the way to beat Exeter is to while the Devil is the antagonist.

ts and a few broken rhythms the Devil and Don Juan. Miss scare in the first eriod and main- The protagonist utters te au-

emusic at' Shaw's poet Moorehead put much the same zest tain the lead. Nao one can pre- thor's own beliefs, but -Shaw al- ~all that could be criticized into her part as Mr. Hardwicke put dict the outcome of the gmhe waslets the antagonist oppose HO"

trethat he seemed not to into his. Hers were the last lines said, and a break of lucke for to the -protagonist the best and

ceas much buoyancy as of the play, "A father!.Alather either side might mean the game. mast complete arg uments for the

ters, as to convey as much fo h ueman!" and she gave He added that our bays have usu- other side. There s an antagonistto these her mast dramatic qai,- ally been making their own breaks, in every play he wrote."

pleasure at his lines at- ties of the evening I mgh be and have really been scrapping it "And just what do you think

did, but this.can perhaps be commented, with reard toMSs up in al their ames, is his greatest work,"I persisted. Ml c rabed to the headache which Moorehead's characterization of iThel probabil Milki Ilneup "St JanThs?

d him throughout the per- Dana Ana as a woman of seventy- will be: goalie, Bartlett, ullbacks Lauhton expanded. "Don

Laughto, who prtrayed seven at the beginning of Don Bon and Rodes; halfbacks, uity far his greatest! Where

r-Juan, before -she becomes twen- Poinier, Pelletreau, and Patter; else do you, find such oratory',

evil Saturday night-or per t-evnaithtodlis wngs Dyke and Kohler; insides, scpotrytiscnruedIe

it's te other atond AD bowed under the weight of that CarIn Angelis; and center a piece omuia symphony-tive a caracterzation id Cpaad..

oduc-arweariretn many years do not necessarily forward, Higgins. the way itfosand moves ..e-aswellas irecing have to stoop so obviously nor

UARTET put prhaps the crook their hand in such an awk-

emtoalpais i nta ouhs ward position, but this is like

eotisoi ang of sucuse, one very small flaw in perfect Thnsiigis coming Mr. and Mrs. J. Kendall Lange Tel. 251

emoton cn besuccss- diamond. Takgvn

introduced into the realm This reviewer mentioned Slhaw And, the Turkey will be cooked.

as without perverting them; in his first sentence; it may seem Bt fyuke ogtigyu NOE ASton showed himself a mas- as though he has subsequently Bt fyuke ogtigyu NOE AS

it, if we accept this as- gien all the credit to the actors Mother- 19Mi t

on. He gave us a f ar mar and noea l ote uhr u0 Mas.

performance than Bayer did tebs isawy svdtll Your Goose will be cooked. AndoverMas

might reason, on the other last; a very size ale portion of Get goad marks for Dad-d. f te enc, tatDonleofl that luster with which Messrs.

dead, and therefore Bayer Laughton, Bayer, and Hardwicke, Tkephmga-Guests On U.S. Route 28

a right to act truly alive), and Miss Moorehead shone may be And to Mother send

ihton even drew several un- ascribed to Bernard Shaw. The A little gift.

d~d for laughs in the course wit, the sarcasm, the smashing

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Page 6: RH L S P - The Phillipian

Pop Six THE PHILLIPIAN ___________ ________

lays la e e et n ar covered on the 47. Blanchard andMr. Allis Ior~ another on the 36. H~owie LeRoy teamed up to score a first BIr SOTMN FA

(Cant. from p5* 1) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Clark intercepted and went to down. On the twenty h 'alt totheU.S isdoutedin lie the Lawrence 36. Jack McMichaels drove to a TD. On the third t MORRISSEY TAXIFllinof3,4,7

real proof of the man's guilt is un frthe half making the score Begien who made a fin er tip PHONOGRAPH RECORneelied to oust him from his 13-0. catch in the ned zone or thefederal job. Although this method The kickoff was taken by Law- score. Les Blank plowed over to TML'is certainly quick and uncumber- rence from the 27 to the 37 to make it 19;0. Then after Harvey's Tel. 8059 TML'

the 49 for a first down but two kick Ken Pruett intercepted a se- 85 Main St. Tel.some, it resents a real danger plays later Sid Unobsky recovered concf down Lawrence pass andto the ri hts of private citizens, a fumble for the B's. Catlett's 9 raced 50 yards to score. ________________who can e ousted from their jobs yard gain was set back by a loss . ,*;~*"'~-x,,

simply by force of a mere sus- plus an incomplete pass and Har ,~*

picion. ~~~ris kicked to e 31. On their 3rd 2Mr. Allis closed by saying that down after running ten yards Law-

the best method to combat the -rence fumbled and the Blue_ re-Communist menace is to keeig thecountry prosperous and well in-formed. ince Communism thriveson discontent and P~overty, we cankee i oursecountry trng, fandb Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests beetpidg oursl cofr strng, fanyd'prosperous, and keeping our

peope content and satisfied withtheir station in life.N . 27 .T E LX

(Cont. from Pg. 3)

kick. Then the B's went all theon the Andover 40. On a fourth AK~S~down with 4 to go Woody Harris Icarried on a fake kick play for BOWL ATrf 0more than enough to the op-onent's 46. Catlett carried to te

9 Blank to the 25, and Blank ANDOVERagain to the 15 for the fourth RE EAINC TR1st down in four plays. Blanchard RE EA INC TRraced over for the score but thelified.34 AR STHarris' kick was run back 25

yads to the 50. A penalty gave (Foot of Bartlet Street)Larnce a first down and two

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