-rpe spirit of - phillipian archivespdf.phillipian.net/1971/10201971.pdf · s~hoo nd college studyi...

6
Ke mper Gudes' PA i.s eadm te!d f '2rYar byJOHN WESTB ?00K prac~ ice aong Co1 egeUS of aarding: fa ,ilitles haye also undergone various Mr.J hn Mason Kem ~~s retireme t' Advan ced ., P laci mrer~ tand A, canced re iions, additions, and improv en asIHamatr stwe cocdd, Standing onth Jasis of colle -'vl F Eihih~Shlrhp years f dedicated lead~~r~hip an worki completed n hh school. hder Mr. m1eiper's ledrs vice t Phillps Ade m .~.Km c yia ln P ilips Acadeffiy established its prest pi 'i he school i th a - strog Du ing M r. 'K!M term ot- office, SC olarship 'program, Whereby Priding force through a period ofe the chool g rea aug mentdd and im- s c ool admits students withu read tensivel groN~th and ch nge, includi g proved its hysi al acilities.1 R sorc es to their bility t py and automtcly sev eaIsubstantial physicial ar d for these new b ildi g rojects resulted g nts awards, 'strictly based on educatranal improvement . primarily f di ihly s cessful demonstrated need. As a result of this Sinc uemrao s n - mat almostr Pr00,0 which collected revolutionary program, the percentage I "~~~ 8 Mr. -- a~empe's minstrat 0 new cpalfunds of-scholarship students has included as L has been responsible for ay cduring h er 1959 through 1961. New m ch as 33 percent of the student body, Sgnifi ant educational acc6 inlimnS. facil'ie ~ bitsilri the fund§ include c 'istituting an annual expenditure of As fa back as 1951, h initia"te te five drioestie Tomas, Fvans'§ci- $5 o0,00. S~hoo nd College Studyi n conjuncti n ence bzlig e Arts and Co inunica- - A Better Chance with embers of the faculty under a tions center, an iCje irgi of the Ii- \r. Kemper and Andover- were git rom. the Ford Fourclation's Fuid brary.I leaders in the development of the In- cr heAdvancement' of Education. Other iprov r~it th existing dle endent School Talent Search, now Philli s Exeter Academy~~~~~~~~tawrenc~vil e, physical' plant r ng_,o t cmlt Ca led A Better Chance (ABC). In ad- Hlarvard, Princeton, and Yale a] o renovation ofsvea existIng dlorLi ciocn to establishing the organization, participated in the tud9L The resua ts mitories with te adiin o comtnon -M . Kerpiper recently served as Trustee of this extensive study drnstituted oie rooms to renvadn of classroom of the prog~am. PA is the leading NEW- ~ of the determinirrg atr whch buildings and th, oristru tio'i of several Pr!prtr'coli teACporm Headmaster Emeritus John M'vas6n emper eventually led to the'~cur nt widespr d faculty homes. the school's athletic (Cont. On Page 3, Column 2) -rpe spirit of ~~~~~~~~~~~~naAth the Lord. '6 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~(See Letter) 1 Volume 66 Number 6 Otbr2,17 Phillips Academy's Student-Faculty Cooperative Suggestions met last Thursday for-the first time under ts new eirDu usa 1 rpsdta h eiltv oiard. The meeting, which about 60 stude ts and pb er committee should coordin ete Curriculum 13 faculty members attended, concerned legislative C mittee report and! the 'Repoto Organization- powe andstuent responsibility. ' andGovernarice. It should alsom th be t way Coop presiden~tiAndrCiewnhra egnte t involve students ard faculty in dSsi n n Cooppreidet Adre Thrma be inthe the- best way to md e towar greater tident eting at 10: 00i a.m. and immediately ope ed the responsibility florto comments. Acting Headmaster Sime n Hyde IYr-eesnsugse htusia' ooa Coop Discuss s L- Mr. eteso gislati eta owern' Cp IFc~h l i ke~eka revarved t e major issue of legislative power -'b I advisory to the c mmittee ather than being' intermening".'how students may ha e more Ist of specific 'tt'mnaged n * ma y ~r stuensiilbeomivtngctientefr ~hura said he wudcnsid i' the' sugstions Im suensw 1bcoevoig iizn4 vhen charging the comttee. grauating fror PA, they should hayv oeeBtcrT~rot resobil search an Evaluation Federick I emeting, Thurman c mnted etro erhad' fe ,, d'In the Pet rson said that any. moye towArd student next few meetings, the Coo il be considered' legslaivepowrwould "eed much ktud ." He 'coeducation, the curriculum, and oenac fve ' i OU ri added that any, cornmittee 'formed \,to discu'ss he'school. I hope there will beterovrntao le lin betwe chluses ake into ac cou t both I~emeigtee abte ir~ta sh o s I leg~~~~~~~~~~~~~slafive powei- should becau~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~e is ues deserve both'. u.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ tee u~ eereb rel tins etwe custrsand between clusters and hssught and_' 0' ?the Coop. Idicsin[ AcadAemy's klumni is all fine, we do need to learni I DA *rw,~~~~~~~~~~~d-u' ' I ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~Cui hel its all meeting he e how to live, and hiard core studies FreAII~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i j ie us o c Se t .us "The Challenge f don't really know enough about fi re'G s Home hii Ir eSe u io ce tw d ke d.huonil-ss ve-tesd Btw tl PhlffsAcaden yJ tripled its office station *monitors 1 ,the S cond y t cion in t 0s h ol. Dougias B'vers ~~~securit) staff las week in re- other men, wh drive unmarked %.D;ontv s feiv 0~ D u asB e s sponse to incident i which out-, cars! The wat hmen have also N w i ctions TheCogfnitl s.k IFreiday siders aleel taked PX set up roadbl ck's on the Westucisesnoped 'Tefalpakr n'Fdy F re gutted t e home of Dr. student onSna Otober I. Quad and at bbit Pond Circle. F idyeve ing t8:00 p.m. with srco evening wasslog in- Dou las S. B ers, 'a former The scnooveillAalsting Deastrucor BararanMasartwh dire t S oftBr- plcerierroaswAdoe ctn-eaao 1 tdnt ee aSI see h ntitl "New Diree, spoke on "Cognitive and, Af-- 01 ., ih a~ eabody patpolce1 thie cam- Mcj ,ecm tdhttea- ti ns f E ucatinin the 190s fective Learning," using examples Museum, last pus. T wnplc aenot pre- mini tration ci~ed to ircrease lvfrre fFcl li fo AsHmn Rltos orni g. The Bes viously PA roperty. secu ity to "privaft anyo from Ba fomer. eanl fiFcut Alainafrom nPA'scHumang eaionsr fami y was tay ng at its Maine SxGa~s being, hurt." e Adde tt the r. BI ck er' obervati ns s she and Psychologist Stuart Pizer sum ~r cotage at the time. Sx securit pr nnel now mv"seed beane( eSry aRe'rhAsiate for /.Stud laytHavr iilrt n ' ~~~~guard the schol l~sof watch- precaution at t e ie"Aei iIdeinet frP eirs h~te tdt Tue day i~~~~~~~ patrojled ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ , four B ac in ~~~~~~~Ar ic' nk Inc ot ee Semnr. In dheaoscrb shee minar t Heat set off' a burglar alarm and al o on the. WSt Quad. One According to M~~ ortle~ullaigadafcieo connected with the Andover individu'al observe he Rabbit ,distinct incd ocIcurred on Mr B ac mer omment d, ' teecta leaning affectieor- Police' Department. The police Pond area, while nother patrols Oct$ ber 10. q t ti' e, upper tl e et t hat a school fu ctior~ emotional enn r on quickly~ alerted the Andover Fire near t e engineerin department's Bru io Marino receivd ;everal a elf- ontai ied com unit ~ patible. v Department. The house was office.~ lacerations, shi.~jupe John dito c fr m if- outside mnan( After a brief business meeting Ibeyond rescue when trucks Tegad tte nierng Id sfed bknnoe* elucIt I elieve that it ill fa I on Saturday morning, the council( arrived at :58 a.mn. By that B Niustu tadjutfalb met for its second 'session tohear ~~ime, th ~ ~ ~ ~ ~8-skV ' beyondtag the hagesofirrthvnc speeches by Acting Deani of time, th~"'-sk~ byond the north- Burrit o Bothe s eriorm r y a tandt f orared o re anc Suet ee M~e''itr eastern part of the campus was an( izd orcln ad tuens eerMceeLhstr Ii' ~~~~~~vith' smoke. - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~frustrati A few schools- ani instructor Thdmas Lyons,', and"- sweire whc'etrydmn good ons- have started t buili English instructor David Cobb. antiques belonging to the Byers, ~~~~~~~~~~~bid es connecting the tw) aus $96,000iworthofe Bamae.s' worl S n to assist adol scentMse Reorganiiation , I- fcaused $96,000 worth of damage. Mc~~~~~~~~~eeIspoke on "Reorganiza- The- second flodr suffered the I to ¶ak~ the transitions from tion of the School 'Community," motextensive harm. I sheltee students to indepeinder decingrcnthaesuh most ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~adults." eciigrcetcagssc I as verticpl housing and, clustr ' Electrical Cause - ' ' ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~ ~~~Foiloin Mr. Blac mer's dormitories. Mr. Lyons delivered Fire officials suspect that poor address,u per Michael Castr a speech etitled "A Student'and - electrical iwiring Awas the major 1pk h oni abou: over- the Larger Comunty" exolain- .~~ause of the blaze. They are still ~~~~~~einphasi ntrdtional educa-' ind off-campus and independent not certain whether 'the flames t on . Arigt Castio," t study at Andover. Mr. Cobb, dis- initiated 'in the basement, bet- seer n' t Eaebe agre d th, ~ cussed "Some Thoughts from,, the' ween floors, r along the entireI one of th flaws and. I mitin Curriculum- Study Committee." left side of the building.I' factors it 1 ' in the school is tha The entirie group, including Police have tempor-arily 'closed it, oer- hasizes, hard ore r alumni, administration members, the road' off Phillips Street which cogn tiv~ larning, as it hs 4 bee faculty and students then leads to the Byers' house. The called.'jW know enough about discussed opics raised ' by., the An-lover Fire Marshall's office is Thle Flying Burrit Brothees perfodned a concert f bIlucgrass conry the 'jorld' jthe cry goes oat, ' t speakers fiom 11:00 a.m. until still investigating the.incident. and c musicbeo a crowd of 500 students in GW all Saturdy i us nw le n how tq live.' Th nooin,when the meeting ended, I I

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Page 1: -rpe spirit of - Phillipian Archivespdf.phillipian.net/1971/10201971.pdf · S~hoo nd College Studyi n conjuncti n ence bzlig e Arts and Co inunica- -A Better Chance with embers of

Ke mper Gudes' PA i.s eadm te!d f '2rYarbyJOHN WESTB ?00K prac~ ice aong Co1 egeUS of aarding: fa ,ilitles haye also undergone various

Mr.J hn Mason Kem ~~s retireme t' Advan ced ., P laci mrer~ tand A, canced re iions, additions, and improv enasIHamatr stwe cocdd, Standing onth Jasis of colle -'vl F Eihih~Shlrhp

years f dedicated lead~~r~hip an worki completed n hh school. hder Mr. m1eiper's ledrsvice t Phillps Ade m .~.Km c yia ln P ilips Acadeffiy established its prest

pi 'i he school i th a - strog Du ing M r. 'K!M term ot- office, SC olarship 'program, WherebyPriding force through a period ofe the chool g rea aug mentdd and im- s c ool admits students withu readtensivel groN~th and ch nge, includi g proved its hysi al acilities.1 R sorc es to their bility t py and automtcly

sev eaIsubstantial physicial ar d for these new b ildi g rojects resulted g nts awards, 'strictly based oneducatranal improvement . primarily f di ihly s cessful demonstrated need. As a result of this

Sinc uemrao s n - mat almostr Pr00,0 which collected revolutionary program, the percentageI "~~~ 8 Mr. -- a~empe's minstrat 0 new cpalfunds of-scholarship students has included as L

has been responsible for ay cduring h er 1959 through 1961. New m ch as 33 percent of the student body,Sgnifi ant educational acc6 inlimnS. facil'ie ~ bitsilri the fund§ include c 'istituting an annual expenditure of

As fa back as 1951, h initia"te te five drioestie Tomas, Fvans'§ci- $5 o0,00.S~hoo nd College Studyi n conjuncti n ence bzlig e Arts and Co inunica- - A Better Chancewith embers of the faculty under a tions center, an iCje irgi of the Ii- \r. Kemper and Andover- weregit rom. the Ford Fourclation's Fuid brary.I leaders in the development of the In-

cr heAdvancement' of Education. Other iprov r~it th existing dle endent School Talent Search, nowPhilli s Exeter Academy~~~~~~~~tawrenc~vil e, physical' plant r ng_,o t cmlt Ca led A Better Chance (ABC). In ad-

Hlarvard, Princeton, and Yale a] o renovation ofsvea existIng dlorLi ciocn to establishing the organization,participated in the tud9L The resua ts mitories with te adiin o comtnon -M . Kerpiper recently served as Trusteeof this extensive study drnstituted oie rooms to renvadn of classroom of the prog~am. PA is the leading

NEW- ~ of the determinirrg atr whch buildings and th, oristru tio'i of several Pr!prtr'coli teACporm Headmaster Emeritus John M'vas6n emper eventually led to the'~cur nt widespr d faculty homes. the school's athletic (Cont. On Page 3, Column 2)

-rpe spirit of ~~~~~~~~~~~~naAth the Lord.'6 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~(See Letter)

1Volume 66 Number 6 Otbr2,17

Phillips Academy's Student-Faculty Cooperative Suggestionsmet last Thursday for-the first time under ts new eirDu usa 1 rpsdta h eiltvoiard. The meeting, which about 60 stude ts and pb er committee should coordin ete Curriculum

13 faculty members attended, concerned legislative C mittee report and! the 'Repoto Organization-powe andstuent responsibility. ' andGovernarice. It should alsom th be t way

Coop presiden~tiAndrCiewnhra egnte t involve students ard faculty in dSsi n nCooppreidet Adre Thrma be inthe the- best way to md e towar greater tident

eting at 10: 00i a.m. and immediately ope ed the responsibilityflorto comments. Acting Headmaster Sime n Hyde IYr-eesnsugse htusia' ooaCoop Discuss s L- Mr. eteso gislati eta owern' Cp IFc~h l i ke~ekarevarved t e major issue of legislative power -'b I advisory to the c mmittee ather than being'

intermening".'how students may ha e more Ist of specific 'tt'mnaged n* ma y ~r stuensiilbeomivtngctientefr ~hura said he wudcnsid i' the' sugstions

Im suensw 1bcoevoig iizn4 vhen charging the comttee.grauating fror PA, they should hayv oeeBtcrT~rot

resobil search an Evaluation Federick I emeting, Thurman c mnted etro erhad' fe ,, d'In thePet rson said that any. moye towArd student next few meetings, the Coo il be considered'

legslaivepowrwould "eed much ktud ." He 'coeducation, the curriculum, and oenac fve ' i OU riadded that any, cornmittee 'formed \,to discu'ss he'school. I hope there will beterovrntaole lin betwe chluses ake into ac cou t both I~emeigtee abte ir~ta sh o s I leg~~~~~~~~~~~~~slafive powei- should becau~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~e is ues deserve both'. u.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ tee u~ eereb

rel tins etwe custrsand between clusters and hssught and_' 0'?the Coop. Idicsin[ AcadAemy's klumni is all fine, we do need to learni

I DA *rw,~~~~~~~~~~~d-u' ' I ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~Cui hel its all meeting he e how to live, and hiard core studiesFreAII~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i j ie us o c Se t .us "The Challenge f don't really know enough aboutfi re'G s Home hii Ir eSe u io ce tw d ke d.huonil-ss ve-tesd Btw tl

PhlffsAcaden yJ tripled its office station *monitors 1,the S cond y t cion in t 0s h ol.Dougias B'vers ~~~securit) staff las week in re- other men, wh drive unmarked %.D;ontv s feiv0~ D u asB e s sponse to incident i which out-, cars! The wat hmen have also N w i ctions TheCogfnitl s.k IFreidaysiders aleel taked PX set up roadbl ck's on the Westucisesnoped 'Tefalpakr n'Fdy

F re gutted t e home of Dr. student onSna Otober I. Quad and at bbit Pond Circle. F idyeve ing t8:00 p.m. with srco evening wasslog in-Dou las S. B ers, 'a former The scnooveillAalsting Deastrucor BararanMasartwh

dire t S oftBr- plcerierroaswAdoe ctn-eaao 1 tdnt ee aSI see h ntitl "New Diree, spoke on "Cognitive and, Af--01 ., ih a~ eabody patpolce1 thie cam- Mcj ,ecm tdhttea- ti ns f E ucatinin the 190s fective Learning," using examplesMuseum, last pus. T wnplc aenot pre- mini tration ci~ed to ircrease lvfrre fFcl li fo AsHmn Rltos

orni g. The Bes viously PA roperty. secu ity to "privaft anyo from Ba fomer. eanl fiFcut Alainafrom nPA'scHumang eaionsrfami y was tay ng at its Maine SxGa~s being, hurt." e Adde tt the r. BI ck er' obervati ns s she and Psychologist Stuart Pizersum ~r cotage at the time. Sx securit pr nnel now mv"seed beane( eSry aRe'rhAsiate for /.Stud laytHavr iilrt n

' ~~~~guard the schol l~sof watch- precaution at t e ie"Aei iIdeinet frP eirs h~te tdtTue day i~~~~~~~ patrojled ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ , four B ac in ~~~~~~~Ar ic' nk Inc ot ee Semnr. In dheaoscrb shee minar t

Heat set off' a burglar alarm and al o on the. WSt Quad. One According to M~~ ortle~ullaigadafcieoconnected with the Andover individu'al observe he Rabbit ,distinct incd ocIcurred on Mr B ac mer omment d, ' teecta leaning affectieor-Police' Department. The police Pond area, while nother patrols Oct$ ber 10. q t ti' e, upper tl e et t hat a school fu ctior~ emotional enn r onquickly~ alerted the Andover Fire near t e engineerin department's Bru io Marino receivd ;everal a elf- ontai ied com unit ~ patible. vDepartment. The house was office.~ lacerations, shi.~jupe John dito c fr m if- outside mnan( After a brief business meeting

Ibeyond rescue when trucks Tegad tte nierng Id sfed bknnoe* elucIt I elieve that it ill fa I on Saturday morning, the council(arrived at :58 a.mn. By that B Niustu tadjutfalb met for its second 'session tohear

~~ime, th ~ ~ ~ ~ ~8-skV ' beyondtag the hagesofirrthvnc speeches by Acting Deani oftime, th~"'-sk~ byond the north- Burrit o Bothe s eriorm r y a tandt f orared o re anc Suet ee M~e''itreastern part of the campus was an( izd orcln ad tuens eerMceeLhstrIi' ~~~~~~vith' smoke. -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~frustrati A few schools- ani instructor Thdmas Lyons,', and"-

sweire whc'etrydmn good ons- have started t buili English instructor David Cobb.antiques belonging to the Byers, ~~~~~~~~~~~bid es connecting the tw)aus $96,000iworthofe Bamae.s' worl S n to assist adol scentMse Reorganiiation , I-

fcaused $96,000 worth of damage. Mc~~~~~~~~~eeIspoke on "Reorganiza-The- second flodr suffered the I to ¶ak~ the transitions from tion of the School 'Community,"

motextensive harm. I sheltee students to indepeinder decingrcnthaesuhmost ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~adults." eciigrcetcagsscI as verticpl housing and, clustr '

Electrical Cause - ' ' ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~ ~~~Foiloin Mr. Blac mer's dormitories. Mr. Lyons deliveredFire officials suspect that poor address,u per Michael Castr a speech etitled "A Student'and -

electrical iwiring Awas the major 1pk h oni abou: over- the Larger Comunty" exolain-.~~ause of the blaze. They are still ~~~~~~einphasi ntrdtional educa-' ind off-campus and independent

not certain whether 'the flames t on . Arigt Castio," t study at Andover. Mr. Cobb, dis-initiated 'in the basement, bet- seer n' t Eaebe agre d th, ~ cussed "Some Thoughts from,, the'ween floors, r along the entireI one of th flaws and. I mitin Curriculum- Study Committee."left side of the building.I' factors it1' in the school is tha The entirie group, including

Police have tempor-arily 'closed it, oer- hasizes, hard ore r alumni, administration members,the road' off Phillips Street which cogn tiv~ larning, as it hs 4bee faculty and students thenleads to the Byers' house. The called.'jW know enough about discussed opics raised ' by., theAn-lover Fire Marshall's office is Thle Flying Burrit Brothees perfodned a concert f bIlucgrass conry the 'jorld' jthe cry goes oat, ' t speakers fiom 11:00 a.m. untilstill investigating the.incident. and c musicbeo a crowd of 500 students in GW all Saturdy i us nw le n how tq live.' Th nooin,when the meeting ended,

I I

Page 2: -rpe spirit of - Phillipian Archivespdf.phillipian.net/1971/10201971.pdf · S~hoo nd College Studyi n conjuncti n ence bzlig e Arts and Co inunica- -A Better Chance with embers of

Page 2 'TH. P-HILL P A N October 20, 1971

N. SCHWARTZ' ectrsoh erves AsFrtg l \ Head mastersPre ident I EESULLIVAN cl asses: juniors1 \ wvho intended to stay at the schoolThe~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~ ~ ~~~~~ i B Apilo following yeh rs, and seniors, who would leaveP~~~ikLIPIAN ~~~~DAVI 'WARE Thr en 'students oneedoh17 it year Altho*ig Adams still based the schoolEdir uiindei he stern pece torship of Eliphal Peairson. cuj iculu~non Latin and Greek, he had set up the

MA HELRI Phillip 5 Academy had begun. SC ool's first diploma requirements by 1820. TheseA aging R Edtr F,' The tudent§. whos( ages ranged fron' 3t 30, :e uiremet inldd ony ne living language,

MAgn EAWRitC -tab' hp easns uclumeni~do R Im antsi olSat oi hard, ncomnfortbl benches n nold English, lessons from rtn atr re r

PHILLIPS ACADEMY ~~~Bus nss Manager Latin rid Greek, wit a minimum of ateitics o so~,adtetoc~scllnugsH. G ~AR BISSI GER arid hi Ic. . Poetry A Sin

ANPOVER MA~SSACHUSETTS Edtr dam strongly emphasized the fields of moralsS~~ditor DognHeic Orlo n eligjion with his students. One out of every

He iciplned it afirm hand, hnding 'ut fian rauaeROG RICOHEN seve ciphiie wiha iorshol . l gautseventually entered the Christian

The PHILLIPIAN is published Exe tive Editrso ishnt look mion affair iolticns, misitry.t According to Adams, "To have in one'sweekly throughout the school ycar possession~~~~~~~~~~~~ books of fidtion or light poetrywa

by the students of Phillips Academey, ~ 'Asso iate Sports Editor this di not~ bother P rson. In fact, h once told cdmsi realized, hs evrnht.hi"Andover, Massachusetts. ~~~~~~~~~~~~his sor ''I care not a straw what the w r'ld thinks te chino style did no ra ree with" the progressive

I. FI)~~~~EITORI BOAR of me. - ab hi chQ had; to follow' to exit, and he.'~~~~ BOARD ~~~~Dui g Parson's e ght year dmninst ation, thei'igrdonNvme2,18.

,.Smith, D. Dou ns, K. UrKe, B.- Kaplan, 2 ,fodsue oyrce di ie~o3 adh sgood ohsnformerly a assistant to Adams,J. Talrl.SuiaSRony . rook. dre-w ip his own co itract, specifying his salary rei ned ovrteschool for the next five years.

-. J. Ta~1or, S. Sulli~ an, S Rooney, I ~ iricl pivilegles. Pears It also initiated s holarships As Headmatr he taught classes and acted as chief.

.1 - ~~~for th less forunate dents in the chool. On a nsrtradbsns aae o h colJo nson ehiied self-control and effectiveness in

A L./t ication ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ti es o C risis. A Dedication ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~en the "Anti-Slav-ery" ~eel:brdke out, he

staff of the PHILLIP AN wishes *to edicate this is;, ~~foi bade the for-mation of anti-slavery 4ocieties,The safo h HLIINwse oeiaetOi~ be ause !they, would discourage outherners from

sue to Mr. John Mason Kemp , whose wisdo and judgment' ' atl ending, the' school. Some student s formed such

led his school for twenty-three years. , cety: but Johnson promptly expelled them.

- I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~1ousenmasters I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ohnson was no innovato, but he realized the

POINT'S 'OF VIEW ned for dormitories. For A'is reason, he helped/. I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~le dthe campaign for the construction of the Latin2 At Peace ith- ]*Iin 'self 1. I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ani Enghish Commllons. The completion of these1' Peace W ith A in selmitories resulted in the strengthening of a

To talk of Mi-. Kempei's Anclov r-in a few words sno mean task. - . *Hdn'chrce wih nrasd elrlac.Som eday it will be the work of a great biographe .Mr. Kemper's 'J~all usiateresitapaedtnierltr n187ttwedy-three years saw Andovei- develop in eitro -diar wasEnbFne er Piberlon iatre terulis ecssta Headmasterphysical plan., faculty and student reecruitmrent, Inc Jatveedcaionls - ev re atuberulsinqsated nArl 7 87programs and 'national leadership. He led in each of these efforts. .Janluaily 3,, 1786, hie iled his resignationi, having Jo de nson's y premtreaftr.gain prl1, 87But to me, the most significant con tribution of the mper years was rciv"I aprofcssorsh pat Harvard.~ adie Taor thraftoer ig whs pwr-a

'the presence 'of the man i our mn dst. The qualitiesIf the man I'nade Du gte uceii neldCl Linia mar g~alor,"a svrigno hoseol powg3ershim not only the greatest headm ster of our time Id of Andover's-ai J ihi Abbot serx ed as headmast , neitheruimpaabe sgedfrteolwng3yashistory; but, more important, the f nest man I have known. a sowIn eII xtreme abili v. The trustees c nsquenitly u l17-UdrhslaesiP egdwt

i anmnin ecl Ebenezer ~~sho emberton to a w month th neighboring Teachpr's Seminary, increasingBoarding school lu uites are often small, Closed societies in roatorvpciahpfeiwic e reivd en ofirrerif to 396 students by 1855. But the trustees

which there ard cliques and, factions, "insiders" nd " uIdr. ulheimse ttsha onlyI appointed ive additional teachers foi; theMr. Kemper had the courage, and' discipline to live lone and y t the Ien aged Istudent body. "Taylor tied, to convert" thewarmth and concern to be accessible to all-a rare feat, one rl Vale moinrals o PA boys in muhte aewasanot seen duplicated.I ' Pein erton po ee'to augment the curriculum Acams id, with daily prayers and bible before

by inc iding, geogra~py and highe ' erinatics. Su day s rvtces.When faced with a problem he did his homeworl he listened a Decli ationf and oriii peaking repiresented anotherYaes.aivd

he heard; and when the talking was over he usually dfidteibasic imYrale ar ovhss.uaroHarvardosph. oissue and laid it bare. There is a wisdom' that came rosud jfrom 'Thsr sn efeunl atoi~~u~ksekfi avlor did not favor innovation or. reform either.reflection, fon experience. Thouglitful deliberation, ouganlysis. otsti h n'reetin~ house Peinberon tried to Hclwever, he did succeed in. classifying studentsclears ecision's, careful impleinition-these are h stiademar S. isllIstuents wv th the stronI~ manners and as seniois, middlers, and juniors, d~nd instituted a,

Mr. Kemnper subscribes to some basic virtues. H doesn't hve to iirlauehe felt tey desperateli n eeded. When Il th e a y .ayo arsrutd h curriculum ofLtn re ,sontalk about them, for he lives by them and gives is community an Pe-etnenee hcae ll lnd ih tudes thema icys. Tylontr constructed thecurvriclu swould exchange bows before coti n~wt tet o ol ne aeisedoilradexample to emulate. Loyalty, duty, integrity-t4hey ile avays there sev c tone A cademy, one of PA's new main buildings,fi-e is decisive person. One knows where hest ds and he1 isn't sii

'abot tochane fo' liht aid ta~isent 'easns. e isalsoa hur nale .Geoi Washingtoll' vstto A doir i 1789 burned dwn on December 21, 1864. But by February,anbout chanes o lighmth good che'and delightfu s loei a. y iibablcosttuedth most rnltere~ ting event 18 6,' thrugh the efforts of Headmnaster Tylor,make b his re armethe hghoio t ofee and deveig.u sT orct i a i' ahn s d rn his,~bal csev e i d insrtoth school had a new main Yuilding which became

But o m, M. Kmpe~s reaestqtilit list dscher. t i i choo s "evrvthemg iidiatest at etAnornl, :

t e a rofte man.le is ao ifan eewit g hielf an hisc iintellccstueahl ncurcd hepispeasreal.,on,traillate asf. it anudrtidn ofPeri ge Pl resigpned bl bctaber o, some oeue'of huothr whic hso an apprns upnxhusbe ca r to ae nd acafair whicty-idsnotnsanisfycthesPhillipstfdmihym"

hav ballne rwrioealn est civi,, cobpt of n'ilet"Hwvr M. tesbleeand maks immedate deisions r gestres whih offe ,a heling r Ise -slesae in is bokOd2ei nl

d h~~~~~~e s qualits Ths'swhr. It ofshn schhool Evrtin theleadershpoat -k Newman.of t vsdmeadisgta aegor~wt gerdeprcr~ai ew nlce bMth thepieri' ari I eletalt

this leadrship o the pr. esna time of pcfl a hicmmul. ndef o'l'iesip s hsutsth sho pseddwI , for a\ whie.as "beai of thncur rd u rlet

ow othes epr ear are ove, tnehuhtibl cup e o uvnertond by aff3tai vi ere 1i inSa 809.th Duriglp NeAmarster'his finso legacyeis oothes fie, hspersona al tic which, we ehorfte hitsre gr oqetoi h ult ar~ulHr~yT

ady akders imae.Iecisitonsu ortheeins rsgadstyeu refrsorwshvefwthPA ndtutinlhdekyocetentg$5 hand. e act so eaily ad quikly, ad so uie I en 'thanW Ilic ea. This OPId t th fponmrtnpr terbfoedayorsceahiin181

hae 1 dan eviyoi he uaiie.Thlis cmiptoPo tni scoflndrrti' lerid ip 1805 ak N d la. fteclee.Testd ffrinlnugsof wsd~mandinsiht tat ave rownwit agen~d xpe ienl cNr'r' all ila'ged b t iclud acd re muitn, tray cecv aledHamse

I ' I~~~~~~I o h Ip' edoresThe'eforeetheourvivaledfcteo schoolosubeengAbvalh i t hm an a lng tieIe o oe~rmrrgctre. F ' -~

closely as~~~ociated ~~ 1or such th~~~se of head in ter Marechw 22,m810thee s rhoo mihees nse'FrdrcW rirn emd ob h

stoguiiesn a vep' tor t me.a auhrt w -el wa etrlt ol leioes fo, Ashi riilt effic ooad lostraor a 'F1s6 etigs

Hilaerisp man hom Ipresectm as aoneadet av ods omt sef orn bu juste discipi aofa, anedisard eIifred[tbcm h frtpicplto acinwel

doubt, o bodpooal-n e deatrs, Kme 'loa fii Aio ofv hitaerih." e'v' ihhs wsotsrmn otpolBefhore withidthWedndayaer blywhent he aourgretis resignca- Th St ~il bov tanse fchoolrfrt itnshamatrhpmatast

Nowe h com m et ev.s Wheoe, hwish hat youn were ~80 t stilmperehin hi Ins 809. c Dsu year Netxen11%erdpvrg hiwyfi ~eieepnintHis maoring"y Lie Sm of- hei.A cromnit tr wis wta o Rev. 82,j theha r t eahers uder this jurdcin Tnaefr udr ei Ban rt

Whyte culd hdv preachl that rning.Mr. Keiper's pesence ill lhan schle hbaeveri sdtl thembe apoi mtrfanr'mr A th'ie ofBacrft' appintent7PAsbe missed in Tcomgas. osIntuori so. v r ,i xhrc'sue tudi 'c arnrosaa eic Andngr had faleroed moe declined -cn

tht ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~stant a o eahe' cricipual Mvillac.y Incly odei~by1lwvr hnh id2 er ae

--vr A eaIisrfuctri 'L ergiors.inslo suaee libii ivdin 1ballp is 185 t t of th contge. The study 3, oein lagags

I - ~ ~ ~~ ~~~~hanistr FrdrcW --I emd ob- I -~~~~~~IYs fheda i arh2,11 hesho ihbeen closely as ociated with him lor such a long~~~~~ tie.Ye fo -hti

uIwoaelet iefcly rmaI alwohslf 'vr ae eihd asFes Hspupl ,adiih yeo alf hejb

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I,. ,,, October 20, 1971, ] ' I11LL IAN Pae

Stearns,' Feuss' Lead choolKENNETH P. . Through Period of hange m eRL~tIA.t U y i ~ n e~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~(Cont.Fo ae2Clm Co From age 1,'Columrn 4) decentralization. While Mr, Kemper wvas

(Coni. From age 2, Cohnwhich assists disadvantaged stud~ents in office, he set utp, 'd clearly definedI,. I~rged thi ough summer seoool programs.-and faculty process of organization thatinfa1ult frdovm 8a to22angd. gave facut embers placement in an improved school. at- abolished one-man rule and allowedT h o m so n itsfclyfo o2 n ope department heads to hre teachers.a stronger voice in the school's adminis ~ation. The mshrstudent- body' increased from 237 to 4 and teTac gFelwTrustees voted n 875 for ~the addiion J~f a fourthover the years along with the additionI .~~~~~~ heado o oher numerous ringebefit

preparatory year. -Tedevelopric nd maintena eo-SCHOOL UPPLIES - ~ nrf eve6 set up an~ alumni endowment professional com etence in And ver's Further Contributionsfud. The or-ganization of well-defined curr~culumn faculty consistentl- remained one, of Mr."at last ffrough PA in~0 harmony ith oth~r K e p e r ' s pr' me concerns. PA's Mr. Kemper has also been a leader *TYPE\-Y ~~~~~~~American ediucstional ins itutions." Ccurses nw Teaching Fellowslip Program pr viles i h il feuainotiePilpRITER m~~~~rnt t specified times for specified hour weekly. anl annual opport nity for young mien Acdm. o w yerI sevdaSALES and SERVIC ~~ ~~. Anoer Exeter l ust out of olle e to experienc the Chairman of the Ntional Council ofBacotsfund capagnisiitatd lifestyle of a s olteacher befote they Inendt-ShlsTelaern gdBancroft's raiing ap capinec~iit'td ide 'to commit themselves to frther with 'the Secondary Education Board toin 1 8 8 7 , r e s u lte d in th e o n s tr u c t io n f I B a n c r o o e s o a t d . T e f e h 6 u a i ri l f r h a i n l A s c a i n o nHall, Andover, Draper; 'Eaton,. and P~emberton depesinentdydhefehndc i~l om t Nationl Asoiaio ofer Mn.Cottage, and Gaves Hal. Studnts est Th utlooks they brirg with them p 6,vide denetScol(NI)whr M.I~ ~ ~~ ~~~otgs n rvsHl.Suet sa E h a stimulus for te remainder h eprsre n te-Bad oMAIN STREET ~~~PhILLIPIAN in 1878 to ,'oice' their o noifionrs fcly Directors. He also acted on the77. MAI~ STREET elitorially. The Andover-Exeter rivalry om enced "fcly xctv omte n a rsdn'1 ~ ~~~~~drn r Bnrf' edatrhp Salaried leaves f absence and t ~ition of te Coammistee an Ascasio ofpresienANDOV'E~, MASS.-The trustees elected Alfred E. Stearis o lead' grants for gradu e study and s cial scofothe Hedm ae' AociarTonte of ethe school in 1903. During Stearns' 3 -'ears' as trainn poram allow experi need schools.n He iscad former Trsteempon,heamaser heI uccede. n adig at immense instructors an op ortunity to raclen MilastcuseAcad ins oath aonNext to ePs Office number of new bruilding. By 1900 he hac convinced thir knowledge nd acquire the ad- bokSho nDefed Massachusetts,.n loofteEgethe Andover- Theological Seminary t ove to diinMattdsadsil e ce ro Sclmin Dservedo Mashustsgeand lease all of its former nd to P ycneprr uain r? eprsre nteAvsrC-1~ bgridgomon The last five yrs of Mr. Kemper's Committee othe -United States CoastHehad the old, rickety Latin and Engi Commonshp ereen prodo Guard Academy nNew London, Con-

torn down. I I ~ i long 'range plannin andstdreuIig necti cut from 1955 to 1959,. and oii thegBy developing, .a Building and Endlownent Fund in cne n snig tdy resovtin. Vstn omteet h eatgetc mpaign in 1919-1920, he lured Thomas Cchran into coginsequenth enlihtend inndyoAn ofVisiil it ttee tova the DepartentsITO~~~AIN ~ ~~,g ving over $11 million dllars to h scho'ol. Beinig6it?,bod tuyofAnef iitNavalland ir Scietnce Man.I cl~~over's rol in co temporary socie in l6,Weao olg nNroMs.TO N -B ~~ildings funded and erected with-this mone 196ne ima hr'e ebro;Z de George 'Washington Hall, Paul'Ry, e 94adclfiaigi h~Sern the President's Co mmittee. He is nowenelHlmsLbar dsnO Committee Report, subsequent stidies~aA~ldiO~ al~ry ,of have included al ost every aspe t of Ia member of the Committee to VisitPRINTI Gu CO* merican' Art, Cochran tn e'ndver Harvard and Radcliffe Colleges, whichIn. '~~~~~~~~~~Y~~$ w gg + ' .1 Ievaluates the curriculum of te twoCOMPLETE PRINTING SERVIGE .. SmleCass. schools.

Headmaster uess whom h trustees Mr. Kemper has never restricted hiseatdmato r laude M. ueeded iho the trgigstees f sevie to education and has alwaysLetterpress - Oftset follow Stearns, ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~ervceL e t t e r p r e s s O f s e t c t e d t o 'f o l l o w S t e a r n s s u c e e d e d i t I 'e l a r g i n g l a y e d a n a c t i v e r o l e i n c o m m u n i t y a n dtljie teaching~staf, ineseasing the std itt ody to - I 2 national affairs. In 1969, President Nixon'umber ver 700 boys and decreasing t~re size - sectdhmfrheC miio ona

475-0626 Fuess athorized the construction o0 r-Zokwell Al-oute ArdFrc.H'haouse andthrmoeigfthobIoeEiira.asitdth loa comnt.s-n

theemdein o te osoetinirar. Incorporator of The Pike School, a26 Essex Street - he trustees set up a retirement plan a d tachin 'Corporator of the La~vrence General* I f ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~undlatlons under his leadership, in ddrtion to'Andover, assachusets rantig the stuent goverment, m -e r-espo- . ' ~.Hospital, and a Direcior of both 'theAndover, Massachuisetytshe tdt o erth et mre'da Andover Savings, Bink . and theantud radiiuess. eSatdy ight movie Merrimack Valley National Bank."I.~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~. I

During his career, Mr. Kemper~Str.~dents . Beer

- ehi ed "many honors in recognition of1new Fuess as a man reauy to dismrss hi lead~ship iniprofessional and publicnystudent for any infraction I istory has it that 'honias Evans HalI was built with fund5 offices. r In 1967, he was among 26eonce irjtercepted a shipment of illic t beer raised bN Mr. Kemnp r. . graduates of West Point honored at anI ~~~estined for a fraternity party and greet d e"ryn h sho muiy ae-o ee 'Illustrious Graduates Dinner' inii th h I wih t esvlo r-i g st t m n,1Yur scho l established nev4 r e c o g nI it. o n of thhir ou s a d nBILLIN~GS. I C.

sl ie ot"1'14,hwvih :ai~dta, ai-ryingements ford rmitory,.life thug leadership. He holds hnorary degreesno Jlonger handle the job, so h s nd h lse y m hs s e from Cokby, Harvard, Merrimack, Tufts,After e t nsive deliberation, the tru ees chose rep esents one of he firsl in a s ries and Williams. ;JEWELERS & OPT IA S olonel Joh M~ Kemp•er as Headmaster. During -Of nt.inig han es allowing stu ents'Cvr tr S ~~~~~~~~~~~Ir. Kempe s tWenty-threci years Of istin uished torf anagement of their- own af airs. ISCHOOL JEWE RY I ervice to the school, Andover beca e a leader Antei committeE's suggestions con' Time magazine eaturedl Mr. Kempern the field of Americ~rn indepbn( ent school ceriim the-curriculum have led t int, in its cover storyl in an October,i 1962 -36 MAIN ST. J VER V~~ucaion I 'Schoo creased .oppor'ttpni y for indepe dent issue concerning American prep school~s.3 AINSTAND ER In 1951,g \Ir. Kemper tokpr i ei.tucy and of-c learningfobth Teaiceomns'ilM.K prs-475-0745 . ~~~ancd Pla'1emt nd Advancedvtulydi~ Ad- fact Ity and students.fr0h Te~toecmmns'riM.Kme'ance Pierni-i ani Avaned t~d Pin rams B cause of his extreme interest the Out,,.-Kemper's gifts for hard 'analysisn-ole daetjTi e curriculum Urd we~nsaa even development of t e Outward od~ 'and easy leadership galvaizd Andover.

~~ of ~ 'Enrollmenth mc- dy vr I, M. Kemper as nstrumentalit, Monro calls Kemper 'one o thie reallyI 0 tuen~ te eahigfeloshp r rm egn est blishirqg Outwaud Bound school in great headma~ters'.," -inc the school 'developed the cluster system to thscutiy Ud-hsdrcin A Teatcecnius, presenting Mr.I - ost~±r a sen~e of com munity in the sehoo - I inc rporated Outw a 'd Bound techni ues Kem per's concern' that .Andlover not be' I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Pillips 4dcadeimv, under M. Kempe 's t hful itfison Sac n Re cue merely a "shoehorn" for "prestige 60 gifts & accessories ' v, pionee 1ed the~ A etrCac ig'm AB C),' pi'ogram He has been a Trustef 0 clees."1 The- artidle, states, 'He- r~~niti ated ClIf sses ~vith Abbot, and modeld a earch Ou adBudsneisfunding. -.. wonders how to teach- hem a sense01.Andover ~~illoge nid Rescule program after the OutN ard boundI- utvr Bon sin euitsnfoy and' public service. He-- iogi'am. twe~n 1957and 1965 the rustees ap- Cescto wants the school to serve."thru the rchway rooved the construction of five new' dEms Evans l Mr. Kemper received his earlyliall, the ?rts nd Communications eterdor- Mr. Kempei-'s ad inistration rece t education in pullic schools in the US- ~~~~itory ren vations, and the'addition of h irary's coordinated variou classes and ac- anl the Philippines. He graduated from_______________________________ opley Wing.- tivities in collab ration with Aho West Point in 1935, taught there later- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Acaderdnv. Discussica concerning fu her on and -earned his master's deg ree in- development of coeducation a PA 'History from Columbia in l2. Priorcontinues. On Septemher 28 of this'e ar, to cming to Andover, Mr.. Kemper

the fis ult pas d the- rsol i~~i~ pursued an active Army career and he* I L i ~ ~ i l l E ~ ~ / ~ 1 r ~ r n ~ u~~ j ~ j r ~ j 1 " R sojlied th at it s the sense of~~~~th e rose to-rostheop ositionti of' of isi ta nn t C hiefLU~~~~iff I HAM ' ~~~~~~~fact tha Phillips Academy u fld-,altr'wcreevn heclu a boys an girls togeter, Lenoftaf G2 Mertrtidrcevn h* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~Pre n'tly, only certain depart e's Lgo~fMrt*ii~~~~. I coor drn'a~~~~~~~te ofIrns . -Fuess Refires -

-' cently, two c mmittees rele e According to Timci,J following theI ~~~~~~~~~~~~thei reports, on concerning th r'etirement of PA's ten th headmaster,____ I I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Curriculuim and the ther concernin h Claude Moore Futess, the Trustees* . .~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ c r e ' d ' r a i z t o . T e C r i l u

a d m g a i niCo ~mittee suggested the eliminati of Trustee James Baxt r 111, then

Rios: diploma req rirements and the president of Williris Cegeb, thought,-esta lishment of a four-quarter s hool 'he had the man for the j'. 4441 CH) HA MSTREET veai. The commit ee on' orgitnizi tion Baxter had helped record combatI TREET ~~~~~~~~~~rco nmended the institution -or a history. and knew Mr. 'lemper in that- I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~coed icational community- of up -to 1200 conn ction. In 948, upon Mr. 'Baxter'sL'YIN1N, MA S CIIUSETTS 01902 ~~~~~ ~~stud nits using the facilities of both advide, the, Trustees drelv Mr. Kemper,LYNN, MV_ S CHIUSETTS 01902 ~ ~~~~Abb t and Phillips Acadeirsies. It also froiith Army, only 36 years old, andireco mended that A retain the clse polte him the new headmaster of~~~'~~~K.'n-u ~~~~~~~syst m to make the administr tive Phillips Academy, succeeding veterah 5 2-5531 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ -proc ss .less "cu bersome thr ugh English. instructor Fuess.,

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Page 4 T E FHIL LI P11A N I_____October 20, 1971

Bailey to Hold A Grad1 Kelleht'r i'Sp ak, Pabody xhibitsNIP - .V

Interest Nighlt ecrtt IAides F r Cam' i4gn te6nRts'HGLGTSocial' activities for this L weekend will feature an Interest Hugh Kel ehier, P A 68, will, Speak t mr~rs of the W st Quad .Frida,,, Oct. 22: "The Artist in Per-

out clste o Yrdayevein at8:0 m.m TcerHos. i Roptes and Rites, a new ehibit sp-i*" h irtsgeto Night wth Abbot, Dn'Hall auhcutt~ rdyeeiga ukrH eHs at te Peabody M suemn of A sctv"lh i~tsgeto C onc o rd, iddee, ad t1 wl 1 .tepo recruit cam inokesfor his ovember ithree part special tracing the ca-! Midlese, , lk ill elan atmttpagwoer.cheo ogy, opened erly last week. reers and the mi o'teBaesNazareth. Plans include a dance, bid for a H-lverhill School Committee eat. bodyc'direhtoreRichar

movies, a cffe& houseahd- a ' r. Keher, who finished second t the cu rent preside t of the Pebd dro trRcadpizza party. ' mmitteej in this October's primary election,, is running for one Mac s h, who veoe h SnaOt 4 AlTig three vaant four-,year positipns. The chool ommitttee is i charge oriialconcept fo- the exhibitJ, idered": A sound profile of E

Wait Until Dark almost al'l budgeting. Most s hool acti ns sue as hiring of teachers rem ed that the isplak shows' Knevil, daredevil niotorc~cC Temin event of the eyening d col~ann r ujc oisa oa."ho no two cultu es, hartdle a~ jumper.

Thema Idssixl schoolresubec tdanceroalwill' be the 'i coldne Dissa-isfie d With Eucaition indivdual's life cyc e in the sam~, Sunday, Oct. 24: "Cleveland Sym-which will run from 8: 001 p.m. The:Harvard junior commen'ted that he is unning beca se hte is way. phony Orchestra Coincerts": An-

until 10:30 p.m. in the Old G3ym. 'ssatisfied with education on the whol adelieves that one vote Cutr-onprsnother in a seri~s-of -eoncerts re-The film Wcit Until Dark' will Da six-man committee could bdeivennstituting chne He Th exh'ibit c mpares the cre tteBosmMsc~sshow in George Hall ded that are failin to tea t6 get tiv in the alh Nielson: Prelude to Act II .

-at 8:00 p.m.Iti'asuene H o face up to its complexity."thriller about a blind wornar's -Actn b 4, sugetin bWest uad Cluster thearicnmBsh n from the phoriy No. 2 WNalton: "Belshamrvival a'gainstupnreegsol I a t hara aliianDsr an~the MandanI zar's Feast."fight-for -survvlaanttre el ie elehen wil ask stude ts o aid in the leafietting of mi~swoihbtdtechrl ~ -,-.-

kilr.Alan Arkin and Audrey svea o avhill1 's olit call~ mprtn dist~ricts areatohtheaturodrH~pburn plyi h e ae. bTel~lt io ant b kgonn eSatrayeortsnn "Angela Davis, a Sister of Spiritskillherp in thIkyrls oetelcin h efesexpa his bkgroundoin cain, B u s h m a n con ierthes on dy et 3 Bac mrAnte ilm, Tom Jones,'will a -1 hislex erience thi witbidu oetum inn Past -and Present": A Natianalbe shown in kempernat 8:00 p.m. h cmagtohepoint reachqd prece, ding'th primary. . booiastpinhem brs Public Radi6 Documentary.ThEf movie is a rollicking story - Coolp Presid nt lf kruhcrm e o it,________________of' a young manes QtIventures in While at Ke16ehr becamb the se oand Tpr sident of the Student- pube ty, marriage nd death. i

eigteetcenury- Britain't. It F Iuty Cceai He is pentyattending': arvard and receiving Thtlf cle o h Mnastars Albert Finney and Susanah 'c e t for h s study of the Havethill edu ational [sstem.Fr -te' DgIf J.J 111

York. ' ~ ~ ~ ~~~' . ' . -. -b~~~ray b&th ages o ~to 15abrvlblonged to te ittleDo IFunny Flicks -Soci~t, 'while, fron 20 to 26 he-

Associate- Dean of Students I.L~eIIV belor ed to the Half Shaven J * ~rolIl Bailey plans to -_show Head Society." P A T( V

- Fu-n n y Flicks" in White T~ the Edito rs of The PHILLIPIAN: BOOKSTORUIJJ EAuditorium, He hopes to present In prea hing sermons 1otle peaches becaus~ he has to and some- Gnrto amovies on the order of the Buck -ti es becauISE he wants Wc. It is a proc ss ndt unlike writing letters. I Dr. MacNeisli co~ mented thatRogers sries. A pizza party n w ite-this o e because I'm moved to writ it.- ' mod( rn American~ hiave' not Olde Andover Villa9ejthe Underwo'08 Room will' l3egin Teei as~ nte liTsaet ISmewihras reall solved the problem of

theei, persaerity tl esaetr aul twihea reds: ti later in thod evening. 'Students "hre is prince ad a great wian fallen this day in Israel.:' It is a out and age. Sin e the societywillle be a tobuy izzasbnutipnthatthosnof s siathioPhithatAcadmysommuityunow ails toist bPndlresidrnkscheapy. .and Commeii.Itty 'k"ofwhm n atur toeivebnoprsenciesg eatiAngaoveAndver aMass

' Dan Hewitz an John Igram ofcourageo s and noble men and not to recogi e he qult-fgeat- -________________________will hold ' Coffee House in F .n Ss until it is absent.1 fyuwol iet re

Graham Hou~e ein th hae John K mper, because he is a hui-ian being, mus t, like t a rest' of -U%,Dl iet rebetween :O~f an 10:30 ~m. The u have prfferred some~men to 6thers, but so air was his pesciv -ANOF ILPAC SSR G

entertpinment such as aoety oncer ll .hat iske witSR him wer-e greeted with the sao qc ddiniy ivered before winter v atoreadngi ro Jaes oestr a cncr. 'a i mark of hlumilit . He wvis a leader whc was not t a -to

readins' frm Jams Joye, sia aiaid' to make the unpopular decision f it hiad to be made, nd, in a -placeyour order- at,refrshme nts wuitll aoe sered y when ducators ave surrendered so -much of their ap eparture 'hat

Square Dance ' isa mark of ntgiy. Like so mrrany others, lI mourn his eatrAbbot will hold a square-dance f. 'n the. sr1o .11tasadnaS hma if gladness.

on Sunday.It will tke' olace There i' a rohv'erb whii~h ;tes ht"th( spirit of m n is the 26PR QT' AN O Rabout 2:00 p.m. in Davis Ha.1. ndle of the Lord" It, was this kind If Ii Jt heave this school, AND'VE

Hall. ~~~~~~~~Sin~e ely ours, -. ot later than OCTOBER 23rdI 'Rae~~~~5~ Min te A 5 deosit is required on all1 o rders.

t d e T the Edit r of The ~HILLIPIAN,tseems clear that the selection of the Headmaster of Phillips I_______ ___971-7.2 Social A, ~ademy ill have Prfudimplicatio s for the future of the school. - 1 1%tVOYCR Zfor t~~~~~~~ue erefore, taf'he Board of rustees, modify their tr aditional'. , "

't(ans-, for A Si lity to special committee c'ompi ised of iRepresentatives of 'the .j

Newly apointed Social Func- Almni, th~ faculty and the ktuodent ody, as well as the Trustees' I0tons Coi mnittee Chairman Xevin hscv.Itwudpemay be he duty of such a ommittee -

Dann ha 'annonced te com- to solicit and to consider recomnmenda ions frorp all interested mem- 'P3-Amiittee's ttative plans for te bsofheschool family, as has beei done w th notable success in1971 through 1972 school year. a me nvriisrcnl. j ~ST-These plan's include concerts, Sincerely., ~x6

A terest nigh ts BadRichard T. Hoe 64 __

"This terr- s main social event' Th Celli Jni'is Exeter '~1eekend, November 12 'i hl h

through14 Dannplans ativites ednesday, October 20, 8:00 PA in eniper -I hl'tCity Sleepsincluding a dance and a con~ert. (1 9 8) is a suspenseful tale of a grIoup df newspaper workers who comn- YI~~

Becauseth~re re no Sturday pet for a top position on their paper bytracking down a psychoticclasses, the dance will take lace kilr h at Incue DaaAIesJh

C on Friday n~ght in the Old Gym. P r 1 C-e. -ry adVicnOn Saturday night, the J.Geils S.iraOtbr2,80 ~. n'X is ~film ' ion of i~~~~~StbrayUnt tbril.80 youn ind woa whoe 'Htbrg sas wihnb

Band may 'a pear in concert. he it , ntil Dark (1967) asa-Adeyipun thi ian ub Frs in Andovervbe shown bdth nights. th&e thugs who are trying to recover ~ shipmnt of heroin hey be- kY.JVk

Pln' folIsemicuewl lieve is hidden in hertaartment. Alan rkin takes the rqle of he gang B ~ ~ ~ ' F Ekn fear il ms scuch asl leader. I/uy -Ge . FREEknown eatur6films uch as Saturday, October 21, 6:45 and 9:00 p m. ip K`6mper -Auditoru

- ' Who's Afra1d of-rinaWlfo lbert Fin ey stars in the' title role Tom Jones (1963), a film based' -' -C '-

'October 30 an olHn ue on itrof Tom Jones; A Fonindli g by Henry Fielding. Jones is'and Ali uiet on the Western abdoes chlanraedb'queAlwr'yanEgihobePzzFront on obvember 30. Among ma ' I ' --

other films which will come to thaofwnyTofal IIoewt ie o paedbR g la F nIilySizSha-Na-Na- may presente AlSha-Na-Na Ibdo 'chl Gn ritd Sqi woth aRegz-- lR CheslPiza FR E!

the Social I F~~unctSu nnCommitteeilms vullaingeiBisil HattDopts toFrench Ferwitto perfcirm in~ ~~~~tei CALLprsadn 475-9404ty odion om uy

concerts lainnuaryfor ear.-

tice Sal s shctold Copaytfor a[elapsffe RbE rgDe L -Ho VDE rY - S FE Rh V ri sisconser Orcl au- h

-Mnal ad thtte traiinlceie- P/B~igon o h leSpin prm may bhe ohrrepaed p prNtrs44' 0 V6r6n 34APLk475Nextbyke anle secild -aiy this a fseyed ar bct~ of dhecresedo stu-Lterrs'dn neetj I _______________ ________ __E______ __R_____SERVICE______

by anoher /pcalatviy ti 4 akSt N x o"T e wi le

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J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~IC

~CRONINSCORES ON 76 YARD PUNT RETUR

III~~~~L~~d F o 1 1 R0N1N ~~~~~~~~~~~rSiaturd!', ctoer 1;Advy-diby the fneofits deesthe Andover

vriy football a qekdb a ecvle 48 ar Cronin, Butch razier and--ariPellegrini led the defensive star ters, limit g Lawrenceville to 285 total yards. The

P c fene menwhle, as neff ective, inatolof12yards with only 15 of thoe

With less than one minute left in tegame, awrenceville got its hands on the ball fortle 1 st time.'On the first play from srmmage, tailback John McManus threw vhat seem-ed t,be nothing more thart a long in omplete pass. An interferenfce call,, however, on Barry

- N I ~~~~~~Con n gave te Larries a first down o the PA 3. On the next play, Cronin more than madeu fr his error s he stepped in front of a short pass on the 21 yardline and an it back 55

Blile offense started the game slowly, as a pata hudrseparation hindered quarterback ScottGI !~ is result, he had trouble moving tohis left, causing a fumble and an interception.'On defense,

li eb erl~ azier almost singlehandedly con aned the Lwrenceville attack, stopping two' drives in PAte~rit ry. fter the second drive had failed, cmanus pdinted C6 Barry Cronin who, after key' blocks by 1

-. ~ ~~~~~~~ ,'~~~~~~~~ .~~~~Tom lenring and Greg ronin, streaked 76 ards down he right sideline to give PA a 7-0 lead. On the

T e dfense held after the ensuing kickof~ and Andov ,rthen went 70 yards in ten plays to g ahead by

ON THE !jIDELINES

rriiHlar r Hae prrie r s,15I I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Wednesday, October1, Anoe

*the Andover football team i inatrn+sonfr an~ce by Bruce Wolf teHavrto go undefeate frtesecond str ight ye r. Fre m ~ en ovraeA vrscos

Last week's 14-8 victory over Lawren~zvillel coun r~ team', 15-45.proved the capabilities of the d fense. n the'field for 70 percept of the game, the defens excel~ Ha rd automatically Wit~ the meetled throughout, holding the Larries scoreless~ whe iheir top three me crossed the i

twice when they had first down anI ten sit4ations line tdgether in a rem rkbe 12:25.' inside the A 20 yardline. Halfbac Barry roIn, How Ver Harvard all t k orth and

hose return -yaydage (171) totalied o tha fit lcsas DouZ Hu hsadlsheoou tput of the entire offense (142), lIayed year s Interschol charnpio , John Noble.

his usual fadtless game, as did inebacker Buch finis ed in times o 12: 3 and 12,37,F~razier. The' other two' members of thee: con-~ resp ctivel y.ther illwn wN~eeier and 'Greg Cr nin, also heldSholRcr

ther, 6n.With one of his pa ented t ckles, BrokehoodinWheeler became responsible for te iciou~ welt In ather exceptional performance,-that appearoid on wingback Ed Wilson's face, Bu eWolfe, Andover's. tcjp finisher,one of the hinest players ever lo compete for low red th e school and his personalLawrenceville. n h three gae ha e r yfiescnds;h cosd theLawrencevillh had previously pla ed,' Wils n ha iein 12:3a for sixt 'lc.Snior

knocked out six players. In pching p for1 M ga' Flaherty I mr db ten Falling to Harvard, arrier Mor a Flaherty (wearing the Central sweatshirt) brokethe contest, he spent the pec ding 24 hours sec n and also smahd heodshool the sch?ol record, as d Bruce W~ol (fourth fromi the right.).' before game time staring 'at the ceiling, ;aying-rcdfnsig'seeh'ple'a taking nintet lc. ~n Muti wieTragl' mrvmn ennothing,, and no one on the Law~ enceville eamn 12: 1. Two more Hr d runers finished ,next in 14:'04, cutting off a that there are two runners under 14

- ' ~~dared to speak to him, for far that he might cro sed together in .12:0 ereuper- minute and one secofid fromh s last, minutes; not included in these figureskill him: Jo Rogerson, making a t enysecond raeanloepre DnHynA- re'tnCsnwohs otrn

Deerfield nd xeter are the ajor ob tacles imrovement ook. tenth place 12; ~4. drace ad lwrnne, Dn ay n,1 bA- arme titivcarson, who has notlrn.. in PAs pathto undfeatedstardo. nnin etwee -RogeMangan, the last Harvard rihinners, who we e both whose ankle injury has forced hir4 to

.7-0, 32-0, and 56-6 atgainst Lawrenceville, Ver- Ha varal placed fu rners, but over fifteen minut S.' stop'I running foi about ten days. .Inmont, and C hesire respectively, he Green is ini M .ngan an a odrcctting off . addition, there are eight o nine runnersgenerale, much worse than the 'cores of their eigt conds tofns n3:7,Treontinued Iprovemnrt udi itemnts h aedfntgames indicate. As oneI Lawre 'ceville player mce arvar rnrfihe behind Regardes oftefc htHrad caQes of running unde'r' fourteensaid, "They sucked wheni we pyed th~ml." sI Mngan,, includingCrsDbe PA '71, was expected to in the meet, the fine before the season is out. The weak pointfor Eketer, they too are supposed to be ~etter 'wo rah a 13: 53. Thelatf Andover's showing, by the teaff increasesI hopes still lies in the forty-three 'secorid gaIJthan ever. But so wa~ their ho key tea~ lastl scoringi runners, Kevin Threadgold,( for a winning season. The Harvard meet betWv en the Rogerson and Mangan. How-,.year, until tie Andover-Exeter contest. fia made significant improve ent as h rrats,the first time Andover has had ever, improvements by Threadgold andscore was Andover 9, Exeter 2. dropped helow fourteen min es to 13:56, three, runners underl thirteen 'minutes, Muta. will add more depth to the team.~

Andov r, r cerC ushes 'r S, by BILL KAPLAN of play, he IBlue offense,-!applying as it continued to blast away at

Wednesday October 13; At -1 the ,sm rsuelpuddthe he' MIT goal until a P'ole fin-allydbver?- Despt nijr o t MIT goal with strong, accurate opened. Senior ' Dou~ Billmanf

ting right in~~~~ide Tom Beeton, t e ' . ,~~~~~ ,~~ shots for the remaindersots of theaiwastedth nostimeo inmtakingin. ad-.AndoVer vasty soccer tear 'k"~ j~ ~ " game The offense's pe n atg f h iu o shracked up i thrd straight victory v' ''- cr'osses were greatly improved scored off a throw-in from PA

of the season, crushing the MI' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~over last week's game and con- right halfback, Chris Fraker. of the 'sea crushing the MIT ~~~~~~~~~sequerqtly there wer Inumerous Andover,'s defense helId firm for

frehme, 3. "*'I oppurtunities to score.1 the remainder ot the ,fin~ll twoWard, Chun ally Uper rigpewho puttipg the gan~e out of

Uppp~ Caig Reynolds, :who s i r~hwrstate th gpe ltrigtlinsdereach fior MT; the frihwr

Dominating play from the star , -'' ' satdheg e'trih.indeall6wed less than eight shots on,the Blue's irst tAlly came witl for Andove'r, did -a fine ~job of ga hogotteetr aeless than .two minutes gone in th filin the gap in the~ foward ga hruhitteetr aefilling ' ~~In the fourth period, illmangame.1 Don Ward, last year' - line left by Beaton., Lower

ledig crr took' cotI tv o h scre I~teBu' tallied another goal-but an offsides,of a loos~ ball, ten yarcs final goal against Tut last weekpnlyfre t ob aldbcaway from the goal, and fired t ~ ~ ' was also used to fll,in. at the The game ended soon 'thereafter

IId with Andovef on the top side ofpast the MIT goalie' into the et Paigt endo l husfa, Bill Pruden h ecn the mainstay of what vacant position, and a an p aye a -0 score.

hand come of the net to ~ ~ udooIwis be weak Andover defense. Iextremely well. I-----' ,- ' Pruden Shines -

Aniover in te lead, 1-0. Lesta P iays Tght Defense thie ball bakto the waiting Blue luo;t h ~~LC nn teaomtefurhtmetisaothree minues later, captai Inspi edy a -lead with only If o wa rd ,ie. Upper fullbacks Stu stog kcigo h Butem senior Bill Pruden played an'

C I~alan Cun coedths tmea five mnuts gone in the game, Sawabr and Al raig played -M I T' s defense hl strong outstanding game a e paved the 14arlnd Cun sored thistim6o inpresrvin the throughout the rest .4the first,beautiful pass from Dou the Blu d ense mehdtogether, strong mes inpeeyn n eodpros evn hway to a ictory, with strong,

formin~g virtuall' rpenetrable tem46 htu ft6sao. cuaekcs hogu hBillman Chun'sshot siled pat wall a teams ~ir tshutou of th~season halftid scor, 2-0, n'alftime'PAsccuratekicks.vrhrougoutAth

Billman Chnsso ale a wl.-enever-thefh mounted Blule Pounds Frosh Goal , / ~ . r 'gamne he displayed an inspiredthe f rosh goalie into the right han an offensive, the def rnse would After it startled the frosh with PA picked up wherle it had left stamina and strength that proved'corner of the goal.- quickly sti fle th~ play and send two score in the first five minutes off at the end of 'the econd peridnvlae

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Page 61 r E PHILLIPIAN ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~October 20, 1971

1olderness Do ns Grid1 rlvs Win CALENDAR § AFI Qi-~~~~~~~~~a~~-~~~-1.ht ~~~~Wednesday, October 20MH Soccer H ~~~~~~~~-u I~~~~ecord IV ~~Football ad' Third traig tChafel 10 00 aM

L' . c are d lote45spessaturdzay, ctober 6, Ply oUth, Va~cGopMe .5pmteas tnissed numerous oppor- Th noe VIfobl - (Continued rom age Five) Flick in KbrFOOTBALL ~~~~tuntes toscore. N -The AnoerJ f a nWie h City Sleeps - 0p.TFOOTBALL -t~~~xeteL then faced a strong teem recorded its first loss of the 14 points, ~ by Bruce Bruck- Amhrsay [ntcicsssPEA Wins Third Straigt MO lnt Hermon team and fell in ~s~~na tfl oam x'mann and Rick Hall put'thb ball Amherst Group MeetingQuar terb a k Mike ych an I6xcit'ing wl played game, 3 lperienced Holderne~s varsit3 26-8. th A4-a~ie'o FlemingF Yale lteivies1pasdto Ji ur oaa . fte bth-eeaBlsffre aas lagtheb FA4 ~ ln.Triday, October 22passed Jim Curry for pair The!bti-efi ufee Blu was plgu b then moved 1Aldover down to! the G orgeto~, ltervies

of ,toi.chdowr~sas he le the scoeless litst half, Exet~r took patisan nursthogot17 on an 11 .y d nid-aon n htirItriExte rsity football tea .to a, the lead, 1-0Wihegtnte gaeasHdrnsmnad a 20 yad ~ reception. AfterStud, Oobr223-0 rmp~ over MountH on'mi tsrmiig ntegm o cr nec ure.I s' Soccer s Mount Hnrs, 0n~ pTh Exeter team wm~tsrminnlntegm unIl lae in tah fouarthe. dt tat Hall lost a Y' rd, -Gillogly threw Cross-Coursmy vs. Mount Heronpowerful for he *juis, tono on a, beautiful shot by upper i soro a wo CgaiotoFIL House'hisTea 3.00O to 5:00 p.m.Hermies, con- . ~ ~ ~~~I Andover finally coed on agintoFonilfidighu'Hhouse :3pmtrolli h alfroe Caw ainBby Ho~ off a corner yadpug'b ady Cthbert- time in the ri side of 'the end- . Flick i W~.kicR.v t. Hermon came backzoe I Wait Until Dark 8.10 P M.thid~of hegame.! ctt Ol son FlcinKme

-eiExeter's thi cI touch own fnthodhI te iue f-lyto Holderness reevdth .pnn Fraie rPekyi nn temporarily out Sunday, October 24~9rd~fi thrtenminte o--paytoki kof an arie the b down o ~ 'Cae pae o1 theidgy on 'a stro g run. wntegm.f fo taend frst scref h thie game t~ minutes later due chreli rpae.soitScoring ix toucdowns i the le the mt. Hemntaaaeenesaiiyt ody, coer25 sscitDeerfid Victrious 56-6 R hard D ont and Rick Bell- g m o t, ort scplay In the toanc nuthe PA offense fell School Mnister ' '11:00 P.M.

Scoring six led the Mt. Hermon team, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~second period, Holderness scoredmaeteI C~lInriesfirst alf, he Deefieldva siY- tall ing one and two goals, agin o. aohrps ybtmk t g p a kept Lawrence-football tea ~ wo t id re etvl.The Exer goleaano nthrps 1ybtville from!' taki g the lead. Lo%'er

straigh game oteya5 it kep his'teamr alive throughout the tprdckhexarkPlgi ilyngtror, HARTIGANSdemolished the ~I aigThe team scored two morc tines qakP.lg..Ilyn ath oe5-.'Sid Evan ' n id pIa ing an outstanding game. or~ 26-Osar pssply tc r nig attack while Greg and,5e6-6e. teChsie a fyrgon25 avs wie the sa'epas la, go in rasunnirumeHARMn'

Zewinski both soe tooch- I eril oes 11 fotBarry Cronin in ercejpted a total ofdowns to lead th Geen Evns' P ayin'g against an extremely CuhctsnSorsdree passes i the~ secondary to 66 MAIN ST. A DOVEk

two touchdowns came! ithirst stogSuffield squad, the Anoe ial raIz~ t halt Lawrence ille drives. Thequarter as h scored on six and Deegidva~sity soccer team ofes~ tak w xelen Iarries' only toq cdncaenid-

11 yar runs 1 Zewinsi, onthe lot in tsted bttlerpalsbs to uppers Will Ha t and vfay through tlie second quarterother hand, scored his to ch-31 Greenle -athfim S, g HLIHAin i thOeol ure;oebtol o e - thltm ctt -lemson from Christ Cyer oni a ten yard scanmper by wg- HLS ADWAREdowns'i h eodqatr ebtol o contain the Suffield bruht the ball down. o the back Ed Wilso. The team lso SPORTING'GOODSfrom ithe five yard line and one offe ivel attack in the second' Holrntes two yard line.j Cuth- picked up two" itnasftyPIT ALAEIfrom 55 yards out. h If ani consequently fell b the bertsoiI then produced the touch- When Greg Cro ~in,lkiaking an lin- KITCHENWARE - TOOLS

Lid I~Ro SoIe anloa'dow~n and upper Steve White trception, failed to,!get complete-GAGTSOCCER- g e, jwio tall~d two -nd fourplunged, in for the two'poin~t con- l'out of the endzone. I ________________

Excter Tics, Loses g ae pciely, the Deerfiel Aine performance was turnedIn a ga~le masocceryteam crushed inbinterior lineman SteveTH ''AN(IEIagnesa gadhseomarkeda by vh rtilam-Muno arsnty, D' AMORE' S HO~E REPAIR TH A ND raggednss ar~ sloppyplay, he w a nson vrsityMiller,' who put out a tremendous

Exeterl varsi ty soccer' t am ~ re vroee Ho~derne~ss lineman. Also layingplayed a ~diocre S. Pa I ~a a1er Wilbraham-Munson squad, -w'lfensively for the Blu~ were (TTItTT ?varsityl to 1-1 tie, SPS tied m ing tegame foth Dave Benitez, who was ijred in E4eloe Wor GIFT HO SE

the fir~t[a 'of thegame1 ins rthelro second half, and safetL JohnWok-the second period but Ex ter F tall (Overall- Records) Soccer McDonald. With the recor~j now -',scored,11 a few! minutes later,, on (3O Exeter (42)21 th JV squad will face MVount- Sret'doe'1 anS. I 4582a shot I by Joe Krakora to e en (i(3 oDeerfield (2-0-31 He o. Saturday in,-us f t 20 seStetAdvrIIMant.4-82L

- -~~~~ the score at 1-1 at the h~lf. oth (A2ft. Hermon (4-0) thir vyl i n. qeto t se

AT'EEOFTE EK i ta I nI Check Your '-

ATHLETE OPTHEIWE K - - ' 'FT SNO Hoc 'd A h- CO KTAIL LOUNGEceyN dsATh

- ~INDOOR - OUD'00R SWIMMING P OL A DOVE RCOFFEE IS HOP DING Ro

SAUNA EAUT AIUL~iJE Co S H KEY, SHOP'5~LOVQ'ELL ST. SHAWS -1 EEN- SQUARE

k1 ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~MNDAY T RFIDAY 4TO 9

SAT ~ 9TO 51' , ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ IiERATO Co~~~~~~~~~~~~Iidea P6 6ian PAIiII-Qpen canls!.

I - - N. R 0 LL1 N C G R E E A ~~n~pHtoAopNn-justGliRtEand pull. Cans chill quicker, StackOT IN ,-aseg anyw eYU go. And they're no-deposit,'no-MOTOR if I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~return. nide [a faous Pepsi-Coila taste-taste that I con~~~~ies alivon~ e e O nl r'y now, therp's a'ne~/ ring to it!

MAFkI PELLEGRINI MORRISSEY TAXILower Rover Mark Pellegrini p w VRdo ntn e

ed an oulstanding'game vs. La% rn CIOtYANSOPviL RadoseVille, shutting off almost sing D YR SO

handedl lits sua~y dvastatng eIdTelephone 475 3000sweep. - - ANDOVER VILLAGE 32 Prk StreetAdve

INVALID SUPPLIES

A J CA A LAROHm-DIiey4- ~~~~~~~~~16 MAIN ST. AND V8 ~-- ~

'~~ cCanci~~~~~~caf~~~e arc/rie~~~~~~i~~ 11N1.Wi H. Brine Co. I

BOSTON, MASS.

ANDOVER INN -~ taste th freats --

-~ AND1 VERAN I BAER R hP I-the oth rs cod .* : 1

8:30-A.M. to 6 P.M. on!d ~ ~ ~