Top Banner
LG vrimavera m 1! )J e reld•mpago IlIT" iL. ki\IL'~I (See Pa~ge Five) Vol. 88 No. 27 ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~PLIPS AcADEmY, A1~DvER, MASACu SIu SApril 22, 1964 WriterHl icse e Philo Elects Boydston President;, Book With Faculty, StudentsExP by Mike Kiinsky problems she, as a fiction writer, tempioraneousLe meP osd Nancy Hale, a short story had in preparing her anthology. giter from the New -Yotrke'r, Not only did she-have the-problem* going Philo president, Jeff Gar- spent two days at Andover of research, but also the problem ten, made a few appropriate re- last week. Thursday night she of coordination. She found it dif- marks concerning the attempts spent talking wit h the faculty, and ficult to decide what representa- and accomplishments of the past Mrday she addressed a large audi- tive material would be imost uit- board. He encouraged the- -new egce of students in the White able for the book. '~officers and the members- of Philo Auditorium. Her work, "New England Dis- ~-~ to pick up the loose ends and in- She spoke for the most part of -crease Philo's quality ad import- liar r en undertaking in a field aneyi bvosleoprhn wihse had had no previous sv.Ntql sMs aefml me experence.She as ben askd byiar with New England, but he ~ ' ~ ~Laurent Alpert followed Garten a publiser to asemble a bnty was brought up around Boston u and spoke* of the changes that agy of Ne Englandwriting, and spent many of her childhood were made this year. The wise her tak, shedwelt n thehours listening to her father tell -r'~~ move of incorporating Forum and In ~~~~~~~~~tales and legends of colonial days. 'i PNYX was one of those cited. Meet In her talk, she offered signifi- This decision, according to Alpett, To ~ ~ cnt'isg- notetogt n was a sitnificant sfep toward ways of a successful fiAtionvwriter. better debating and discussion Iprogenitors At PA As he put it, "A fion writer grup er t novr wants to create a work of art; A brief rundown of election 9Ahis modest ambition is that i prcdr-yGre a.flvie Parents'9 Day '64 ol epret' A h e fieso hlo: BysgPeiet by the election itself, which was by Mfartin Geiger Lacking a college education . From left t ih h e fieso hl~BysoPeiet managed by Alpert. A motion With a prayer for good weather, which obviously hasn't roved to Richards, Vice-Peidt in charge of outside speakers; Smith, Treasurer; which was repeated throughout Adriance and his committee be detrimentalrinstohercrcareernsheurrhnrdkyViSecretary;tand churgharddeVice-Preshedenghinacharge tofadlbattn Adriance and his committee be detrimental to her caPotorbyeeer, te nighewashmteotoyaloweth emaking final arrangements for feels that the best preparation for voting to be done by a show of ret'Day, to be held on Satur- the amount of research she had to by Mike Krinsky meber of the organization hands, contrary to traditional pro- yMay 16th. "The purpose of do was to assemble the more than Rick Boydston was elected presi- tre out for the annual elec- cedure. After consultation with aet'Day is to welcome two hundred items in "New Eng- dent of Philo, Andover's oldestitions. advisor Dr. Gillingham, this mo- ents again and give the some land Discovery."club, last Friday night. Fiftyl In a preliminary speech, Out- tion 'was overruled and stayed agaohow theescholeratoe" Dsovr. overruled for the rest of the meet- i~c.Assistant Heamster Debaters Crushed By Strong Exie Teams; inewwiklgantoue Only parents of upper and ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~Anev rnke asitrdue Only pareExstenesOofre ScholsUnde ocrtc before the office of president was ermiddlers have been invited Ex s e cffP r lr c o ls U d mo r t voted upon. The candidates for attend the function. The ad- peietwr loe ogv tration feels that there -'- '1 AWAY peietwr loe ogv said be greater school-parent-- ''~~~~~~~~~~~~'•'~~'~~ ipeeches. This innovation was the ba e duregthefr yeooart of by Peter Schandorff result of a good deal of politick- h'school education. As Mr. The Philo team of Greg Rich- few days between Boydston and Paents'indy er hoter to ards, Pete Schandorif, Pete Burk- Greg Richards. After these two Parents' Days every other ~~~~~~~~~~hard, and Laurent A-lpert failed had made their speeches, Peter enabling parents to visit to defend the resolution: "The Ex- Burkhard advocated the election of aolbeteenthe time when between ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~istence of Private Schools is a con- 'Boydston and himself as a good' trsons first enroll and com-. tradiction of our Dmcai combination. neement." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ideals." Of the 479 students in the two Bfr h etntepi ddeclasses, about 500 arents Exeter's lead-off speaker, San- cifrcuaed th meetingwithe asir expected. Boys are urged to i~ford Dawsey, declared that inde- pitpa oipoePiis d parents to return reserva- pendent schools are harmful bAte pointssto im provePiis forms. cause they abrogate the "liberty of Aongd ethempoiansows therco- Registration_ on the 16th i - equality". Greg Richards, An poseid extmongeoguser-co undfor 10:0O A.M. Mr. Bene- - dover's first orator, countered thatlatcdbin leg. etand other members of the public schools are often not as Boydston went on to defeat esilty will then address parents. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~democratic as private ones. More- Richards for the presidency, 39-14. l benddPhels Hose .- nt'a. . ~ over, he maintained that in a urkhard then dAefeated Richards bew t hn ofPhe pici fors democracy such as ours, the pri- for the office of vice-president in belty, parens and boys.nicf vate, independent school has the charge of debating. Richards was arsityb asebll lacoysse -en- right to exist. elected vice-president in charge of ban acew bwll, beactive, i n hede a tviis on ase will mosativei potshe Clyde Milner, a lower with atieaciiis New England Prep School ~~ penetrating voice and the judge's ~Burkhard's job was created-lto clx Meet is scheduled also. A ' * ~~~~~~~ choice for The best speaker, con- maintain and promoteintain goodromoe dgbat- foreei faceulad aret ii yso onTwsnd efGreadPt crmvinced the judges that private ing at PA. Richards is in charge wil ber focloety the at- conie oecahwt towne dearte. -a(Continued on Page Si) of bringing interesting speakers, w ight e fooaweyte of t M ni d t.tonxcraping up good pictures, and night~, perfreaPr o Mvgenerally acquainting the school - hady. H~~~b SEE inch NamedPrs Club Head; with what Phil: is doing.ws by Steve Finch Ne~~~~~~~~~~~~xt on teagenda wsthe L~~~~aominngsrog rgmet n More Sports Coverage Planned eeto ftesceay hr Combining strong argument and ~~~~~~~~~~~~~were sevien nominees for this( office, ednesday, April 22 decisively direct delivery, a super- - by James IKunen including The Fly, and perhaps but most were eliminated n the - day , v Aprar 2ro2 2:30 jar team from Exeter topped P.A.hodadne"haddtoriefrt'lo.Tersutvsa eaani~ v. Harvad Froth2:30 in the Amndover-Exeter debate Chris Harte, famed PA photo- hold a lnc, hadetrisecfirs ballot h eut,.a ' lot the 1964 Press sosecondballotwith nomine s Brad ~~y, April ~~, - at- Bulfinch last Wednesday. A grapher, will pilo th"9WPrs oe aitl. e fw a g m-h'ieKinkFsnKen Vs. Dartmouth Frosh.eE- BrnMescadAlxpil2 1:30 capacity, audience witnessed the Club. "Weo trog want tol see w than go d et ie Schammk crantein,. GW Th pote 70 defeat of the resolution: "TheE- Bik esikadAePrso thog th wolyar ihutnd eeScam ntdng h~~~~~e.ntnc f rvaeScoosisawilassist at the helm as vice- accumulating a deficit. Since a majority was necessary, Oe.TheGetEcp 8:00 sec fpiaeShosi iltetonmne y, Aril26 e Coirdcino u eortcpeident and secretary-treasurer, "aYou have,-to remember that we for election, tetonmne pil 26h Re.H- 'l'J. Iel. respectively. - run u ev hn ilcligwt h~hgettlyo de e WP ev del. "We uppers have actually been P hn ilcligwith vted highes tl ohir valots not o mentonnthaA-whfotbal T iie Krinsi~ defeated Smith Franklurts in kolus - " Jeff Garten led off for Andover running the club for quite anhle" t Bton aendio New Y orkaers were tedo o/ thr lt - ~~~with the affirmative's definition ejaculated Harte. -pormcss$40adbijs n-q h ot iasaApril 29 of the topic. Emphasizing that Asked if he planned any sweep- pogryambots 4 andhbringsiint forotheopost.ll "ideals approach perfection 1 ' and ing changes, he replied; "Nothing onl a o wel e hudbernig n heeetrss. i 8 cuious'that ost f thecan nver'be fully realized, he much, really. The only big project "falgoswleshudbriin adteeecrs lwl aaeahines in hospitals in interpreted,-,our basic democratic we're working on now is a te bet oniurevgtesho eryi the inalse of o tfrs- Eoston area and in enner. principle as "equality f OPPOr- Page A-E program to be dis- as we have been. We'll work ar- sarrwsdpoeofnthfit BoshaveM abe nmd, hIleu I for all men. tributed free at the track and a- tidles into the Boston Herald and ballot. Brad Smith had a clear n th e ban iovd wnfirmar Euxt' r5~~fhnr ragcos otss many other newspapers, and sell majority ver his contenders and On n h Iiam nfra- xee' roexn Pager S rai) "We'll losho fwm.is SpOrtlite two or three times." - became,,the new money-watcliek. - I-- /~~~(0Pe'lasoso
6

IL'~I (See Pa~ge Five)pdf.phillipian.net/1964/04221964.pdf · Harvad in the Amndover-Exeter debate Chris Harte, famed PA photo- ' Press lot hold sosecondballotwith the 1964 a lnc,

Oct 13, 2020

Download

Documents

dariahiddleston
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: IL'~I (See Pa~ge Five)pdf.phillipian.net/1964/04221964.pdf · Harvad in the Amndover-Exeter debate Chris Harte, famed PA photo- ' Press lot hold sosecondballotwith the 1964 a lnc,

LG vrimavera m 1! )J e reld•mpago

I lIT" iL. ki\IL'~I (See Pa~ge Five)

Vol. 88 No. 27 ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~PLIPS AcADEmY, A1~DvER, MASACu SIu SApril 22, 1964

WriterHl icse e Philo Elects Boydston President;,Book With Faculty, StudentsExP

by Mike Kiinsky problems she, as a fiction writer, tempioraneousLe meP osdNancy Hale, a short story had in preparing her anthology.

giter from the New -Yotrke'r, Not only did she-have the-problem* going Philo president, Jeff Gar-

spent two days at Andover of research, but also the problem ten, made a few appropriate re-

last week. Thursday night she of coordination. She found it dif- marks concerning the attempts

spent talking wit h the faculty, and ficult to decide what representa- and accomplishments of the past

Mrday she addressed a large audi- tive material would be imost uit- board. He encouraged the- -new

egce of students in the White able for the book. '~officers and the members- of Philo

Auditorium. Her work, "New England Dis- ~-~ to pick up the loose ends and in-

She spoke for the most part of -crease Philo's quality ad import-

liar r en undertaking in a field aneyi

bvosleoprhnwihse had had no previous sv.Ntql sMs aefml me

experence.She as ben askd byiar with New England, but he ~ ' ~ ~Laurent Alpert followed Garten

a publiser to asemble a bnty was brought up around Boston u and spoke* of the changes that

agy of Ne Englandwriting, and spent many of her childhood were made this year. The wise

her tak, shedwelt n thehours listening to her father tell -r'~~ move of incorporating Forum and

In ~~~~~~~~~tales and legends of colonial days. 'i PNYX was one of those cited.

Meet In her talk, she offered signifi- This decision, according to Alpett,

To ~ ~ cnt'isg- notetogt n was a sitnificant sfep toward

ways of a successful fiAtionvwriter. better debating and discussion

Iprogenitors At PA As he put it, "A fion writer grup er t novr

wants to create a work of art; A brief rundown of election

9Ahis modest ambition is that i prcdr-yGre a.flvie

Parents'9 Day '64 ol epret' A h e fieso hlo: BysgPeiet by the election itself, which was

by Mfartin Geiger Lacking a college education . From left t ih h e fieso hl~BysoPeiet managed by Alpert. A motion

With a prayer for good weather, which obviously hasn't roved to Richards, Vice-Peidt in charge of outside speakers; Smith, Treasurer; which was repeated throughout

Adriance and his committee be detrimentalrinstohercrcareernsheurrhnrdkyViSecretary;tand churgharddeVice-Preshedenghinacharge tofadlbattnAdriance and his committee be detrimental to her caPotorbyeeer, te nighewashmteotoyaloweth

emaking final arrangements for feels that the best preparation for voting to be done by a show of

ret'Day, to be held on Satur- the amount of research she had to by Mike Krinsky meber of the organization hands, contrary to traditional pro-

yMay 16th. "The purpose of do was to assemble the more than Rick Boydston was elected presi- tre out for the annual elec- cedure. After consultation with

aet'Day is to welcome two hundred items in "New Eng- dent of Philo, Andover's oldestitions. advisor Dr. Gillingham, this mo-

ents again and give the some land Discovery."club, last Friday night. Fiftyl In a preliminary speech, Out- tion 'was overruled and stayed

agaohow theescholeratoe" Dsovr. overruled for the rest of the meet-

i~c.Assistant Heamster Debaters Crushed By Strong Exie Teams; inewwiklgantoue

Only parents of upper and ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~Anev rnke asitrdue

Only pareExstenesOofre ScholsUnde ocrtc before the office of president wasermiddlers have been invited Ex s e cffP r lr c o ls U d mo r t voted upon. The candidates for

attend the function. The ad- peietwr loe ogv

tration feels that there -'- '1 AWAY peietwr loe ogv

said be greater school-parent-- ''~~~~~~~~~~~~'•'~~'~~ ipeeches. This innovation was the

ba e duregthefr yeooart of by Peter Schandorff result of a good deal of politick-

h'school education. As Mr. The Philo team of Greg Rich- few days between Boydston and

Paents'indy er hoter to ards, Pete Schandorif, Pete Burk- Greg Richards. After these two

Parents' Days every other ~~~~~~~~~~hard, and Laurent A-lpert failed had made their speeches, Peter

enabling parents to visit to defend the resolution: "The Ex- Burkhard advocated the election of

aolbeteenthe time whenbetween ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~istence of Private Schools is a con- 'Boydston and himself as a good'

trsons first enroll and com-. tradiction of our Dmcai combination.

neement." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ideals."Of the 479 students in the two

Bfr h etntepi

ddeclasses, about 500 arents Exeter's lead-off speaker, San- cifrcuaed th meetingwithe asir

expected. Boys are urged to i~ford Dawsey, declared that inde- pitpa oipoePiis

d parents to return reserva- pendent schools are harmful bAte pointssto im provePiis

forms. cause they abrogate the "liberty of Aongd ethempoiansows therco-

Registration_ on the 16th i - equality". Greg Richards, An poseid extmongeoguser-co

undfor 10:0O A.M. Mr. Bene- - dover's first orator, countered thatlatcdbin leg.

etand other members of the public schools are often not as Boydston went on to defeat

esilty will then address parents. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~democratic as private ones. More- Richards for the presidency, 39-14.

l benddPhels Hose .-nt'a. . ~ over, he maintained that in a urkhard then dAefeated Richards

bew t hn ofPhe pici fors democracy such as ours, the pri- for the office of vice-president in

belty, parens and boys.nicf vate, independent school has the charge of debating. Richards was

arsityb asebll lacoysse -en- right to exist. elected vice-president in charge of

ban acew bwll, beactive, i n hede a tviis

on ase will mosativei potshe Clyde Milner, a lower with atieaciiis

New England Prep School ~~ penetrating voice and the judge's ~Burkhard's job was created-lto

clx Meet is scheduled also. A ' * ~~~~~~~ choice for The best speaker, con- maintain and promoteintain goodromoe dgbat-

foreei faceulad aret ii yso onTwsnd efGreadPt crmvinced the judges that private ing at PA. Richards is in charge

wil ber focloety the at- conie oecahwt towne dearte. -a(Continued on Page Si) of bringing interesting speakers,

w ight e fooaweyte of t M ni d t.tonxcraping up good pictures, and

night~, perfreaPr o Mvgenerally acquainting the school -

hady. H~~~b SEE inch NamedPrs Club Head; with what Phil: is doing.ws

by Steve Finch Ne~~~~~~~~~~~~xt on teagenda wsthe

L~~~~aominngsrog rgmet n More Sports Coverage Planned eeto ftesceay hrCombining strong argument and ~~~~~~~~~~~~~were sevien nominees for this( office,

ednesday, April 22 decisively direct delivery, a super- - by James IKunen including The Fly, and perhaps but most were eliminated n the -

day , v Aprar 2ro2 2:30 jar team from Exeter topped P.A.hodadne"haddtoriefrt'lo.Tersutvsaeaani~ v. Harvad Froth2:30 in the Amndover-Exeter debate Chris Harte, famed PA photo- hold a lnc, hadetrisecfirs ballot h eut,.a

' lot the 1964 Press sosecondballotwith nomine s Brad

~~y, April ~~, - at- Bulfinch last Wednesday. A grapher, will pilo th"9WPrs oe aitl. e fw a g m-h'ieKinkFsnKen

Vs. Dartmouth Frosh.eE- BrnMescadAlxpil2 1:30 capacity, audience witnessed the Club. "Weo trog want tol see w than go d et ie Schammk crantein,.

GW Th pote 70 defeat of the resolution: "TheE- Bik esikadAePrso thog th wolyar ihutnd eeScam ntdng

h~~~~~e.ntnc f rvaeScoosisawilassist at the helm as vice- accumulating a deficit. Since a majority was necessary,Oe.TheGetEcp 8:00 sec fpiaeShosi iltetonmne

y, Aril26 e Coirdcino u eortcpeident and secretary-treasurer, "aYou have,-to remember that we for election, tetonmne

pil 26h Re.H- 'l'J. Iel. respectively. -run u ev hn ilcligwt h~hgettlyo de

e WP ev del. "We uppers have actually been P hn ilcligwith vted highes tl ohir valotsnot o mentonnthaA-whfotbal T iie Krinsi~ defeated Smith

Franklurts in kolus - " Jeff Garten led off for Andover running the club for quite anhle" t Bton aendio New Y orkaers were tedo o/ thr lt

- ~~~with the affirmative's definition ejaculated Harte. -pormcss$40adbijs n-q h ot

iasaApril 29 of the topic. Emphasizing that Asked if he planned any sweep- pogryambots 4 andhbringsiint forotheopost.ll

"ideals approach perfection1' and ing changes, he replied; "Nothing onl a o wel e hudbernig n heeetrss.

i 8 cuious'that ost f thecan nver'be fully realized, he much, really. The only big project "falgoswleshudbriin adteeecrs lwl

aaeahines in hospitals in interpreted,-,our basic democratic we're working on now is a te bet oniurevgtesho eryi the inalse of o tfrs-

Eoston area and in enner. principle as "equality f OPPOr- Page A-E program to be dis- as we have been. We'll work ar- sarrwsdpoeofnthfit

BoshaveM abe nmd, hIleu I for all men. tributed free at the track and a- tidles into the Boston Herald and ballot. Brad Smith had a clear

n th e ban iovd wnfirmar Euxt' r5~~fhnr ragcos otss many other newspapers, and sell majority ver his contenders and

On n h Iiam nfra- xee' roexn Pager S rai) "We'll losho fwm.is SpOrtlite two or three times." - became,,the new money-watcliek. -I--

/~~~(0Pe'lasoso

Page 2: IL'~I (See Pa~ge Five)pdf.phillipian.net/1964/04221964.pdf · Harvad in the Amndover-Exeter debate Chris Harte, famed PA photo- ' Press lot hold sosecondballotwith the 1964 a lnc,

Paffe~ 2 ~hliin~.' , ,"'A~Pi" Alt)41:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~22,,"'9

Go Tell. -It On The Mouintan 2 ' .'-'' .

For those in whom the chapel sermon of even trite question V,2~i~e h St. Paul's Negr crusader, Rev'- John T. as students,-dotoiiel'p t'p~'Walker, rekindled some sense of democratic-__justice, a seemingly unanswerable question There is an answer,~however`% -~ -

must arise: what, really, can be done, about twofold. First, we, ean.' 'P'M1~IQ BUthe racial situation? The Negroes are calling communities to improvA .,., the DVDRB''* .now for their rights, and yet, our so-called Negro. e can -discov&e' the grounds for , Managing Editor Eiofreedom-loving people do not respond. Whiere prejudice and try to defeatit*m. Basically, - EE EAL ' BRINK MESSICKand how, then, can the colored people hope we au_ talk,- spread the -figl*k~ gnneGeneral Manager Bsns aae

for some kind of real breakthrough? democracy, and attempt to ~ -re S~V LE EE ENHtikxgand broadmnindediess. STEVE ALE PETANDEMARESY

LAst~ Sunday in the Underwood, Room, -; Sp~orts EdjiorsRev. Walker outlined some of his peopes Second, and equally importani."we~canj

hopes and asirations befre, a small hudddle ke donations. The integration mov~ient &fhT BZuinRum -

of- PA students. It is not love, but law, or the .Rev. Walker explained, is a costly one. Fex-removal of unfair law, that-the Negroes are' pensive court battles must bev'aged to b- Fm WuLSZN MARX MNM

looking for now, 'he stated. They hope that tain rights. Scholarships must be founded t, Advertising Manager Photograp~hy Editor when the laws ae laid down and they-~hold assist. the education of colored people, since TMKsva AEBZJI~

their rights, their acceptance will come in the at-present the Negr in high school has no Am.. Bsoas BilWing )danager

course of time. hope of advancement or success. Circulaion Managers *

But while we are' accustomed to sitting It is often that the Andover student EDITORIAL BOARDS. Finch, N. Dickerson, C. Mathews, R. Reach, .-Kunen, J. Short,' M. Krinsky, A:,5'back nd observing this struggle for equal- body is called upon to give financial or ma- m. Geier

ity, We are also very far removed from it. terial aid for a worthy cause, and invariably BUSINESS BOARDAfter all, it is not really our problem, we the response is commendable. Now, once J. F. Cain R. H. Ehrhart, C. . Masnoe. I

again, we feel such a call, the importance ofthink. Perhaps this sentiment explains why which cannot be stressed enough. We have PHOTOGRAPHY BOARD ethere were smiles Sunday when the familiar, been~ asked t support democracy. A. Ogilvie, . Stein, E. Adler. 1

Social Strategy For The Hustler StdnsloeSam.jby Joey Kahn -the happiest in SoutheasAs A

When the rare opportunity to attend a to the company of any girl with whom he Tira Chai Kambhu and Doug INY one main wish for it, owvedance presents itself, the PA student, iso.. happens to be dancing. When a Blue bruiser Pirnie, both- living in Asia, des-! is that more will be done j1

late frm grlsformonts, ise at6 AM. atchs o tosomonehe cnsiersattactvecribed the resent situation of present government for the orated from girls formonths, rises at 6 AM. latches, otheirscountries.onTheyralsoraspokemmonpeoplee"to make sure he doesn't miss the sign up at chances are other people think she is too. ounthe nees The ls ofe Pirnie, who is now living VIrbreakfast. -On the eve of the affair, as he Anyone who fails to honor a double cut not the people of Southeast Asia. Iapan, has also lived in the P'waitshol to meet his date, he has two only betrays his own selfishness but also his Chai, discussing his homeland Thleand Halya ashell asthoughts. If his date is "half-decent," he will bad manners. On the other hand, double cut- of Thailand, explained that the Ithoughts on Thailand, sayi hdance and talk with her just long enough to ting at the wrong moment can be equally lives of the Siamese-"are ruled al-J "The happiness and stability .

most completely by tradition. As the Siamese is emphasizedbyIsweep her suavely out the door. Otherwise, impolite. Perhaps good manners have gone an example, he said, "Most young fact that they ~can afford to She will ditch her and look for rosier pros- out of style at PA. men, before their parents die, port rice, something phenomnepects. enter priesthood for a period of for a Southeast Asian county

Besides conforming to the essentials of six months. Although this is not -Doug also brought out the'- - it is this attitue that tends to make etiquette, PA socialities should reconsider a law, many do this willinglyv out portance of Thailand to the fu l

awell-planned dance completely unenjoyable what they expect from a dance. Concern for ofrspchorteiaens"ommauits ' le lose othln for a majority of students. First of all, the the feelings of other people should replace a "There is no great revolution of Asia will fall. If the present pa"Big Mover" is extremely self-centered. He preoccupation with sex. Next time, ry talk thuh rieIfe.We It-jkeeps up, South Vietnam willfdents educated outside the country in a year. The United Statesis solely concerned -with his own pleasure, ing with a girl instead of crushing her. return, they do not try to change stuck, however, for if they and he caret little for the unfortunate-female the pattern of life to any izable in any troops, the Communextent, but rather fall back into will toowho is forced to share his company. Perhaps it." popleo 'si ar

she is not interested in embracing someone - ckChai also explained the flings influenced. For this reason, t uwho has: failed to introduce himself. She may of the Siamese towards Ameri- are many -demonstrations. n

prefer talkng or meetng other bos to beat- Based on a first-hand account of a Ger- cans: "The Siamese have no Japan, many take place which pcing a haty retret to thenearest ark cor-man prisoner of war camp for Allied officers, -strng opinon about Aericans. planned in advance and p 'emg ahasy rerea tothe earst drk or-The Great Escape deals with the exodus of Although there is quite a bit of- by the police."ner. tourist trade, this doesn't seem to Concluding, Doug deplored r

seventy-six prisoners whose getaways are afc thepol.' attitude of the American peoThe boy who finds a "nice landing place" insrumntetb tuneleinenousy br-towards the different crises A

for his date leaves her in an extremely awk- rowed beneath the Germans' noses. BringinggupptheesubjecttoffCoom- Asia. "I thought that the end i.ward and embarrassing position. The single fe h ra saptermiignunis iThladimefheteoveT UyAericon utnAfterthe reatescap, th remininsaid, "It poses no real threat as fectly portrayed the typical An hi

wallflower, abandoned beside the punch bowl 9 ~~of yet. The only Communist infil- can's interest in the problems eand clutching a cup of Mr. Lette's patented segment of the picture deals with the capture trtion' has been '-in the North, the Asian people. Too many of rdof the escapees. Steve McQueen's race to the which is mostly defise jungle am. just pass by the headline, ' dpassion potion, has no means of getting back Swiss border by plane and motorcycle is a Besides, there is a strong economy, Outbreak Of Violence InVitonto te danc floo. It i humiiatingfor a classic example of adventure filming. a stable government, and the peo- We must all take' an actiem

onoi th dane loor.d ovt isnhumliatin fo a pie love their king. In addition, est in the needs of th6 Pae)&l edlone girl to be looked over and passed by a There are many qualities in this week's their' religion, Buddhism, has a Asia."throng of stags. ~~flick which set it above previous fare. Steve doctrine onoctngte'sddn sef.oA

A boy has no reason for dropping his McQueen and Richard Attenborough give Beauefall thsies faores, tefdate when he can double cut. Any girl who brash and earnest performances. The script idea of Communism has not spread - Letterdefinds herself ditched under:-the cargo net in is intelligent, and the photography is vivid,.hog haln. To The Editor of Tam PHIL:IPthe old gym will have little desire to return Released last summer in the United Summing up, Chai said, "Thai- The 'senior class play is to P.Nihrwl any ofhrcasmts land is a happy, contented country, trouble. It is unfortunate, PA. Neither will of her classmates. States, The Great Escape achieved even difficutiessog___esouldm

Admittedly there always - ~~greater success in Europe, where McQueen arisen wblwa a little more fes his the ~~~~ws aedbstcoro teyeratoe f STMnSO TA E---diligence could

Ibility of being paired up witha young lass wsnmdbsacoofteyaatnef ST M SH RA ?--apvsfrstalled them. ftwho does not quite measure up to Andover's the well-known film festivals. Commented The PHILLIPIAN is constantly Whl ititnig to disahigh~standards of excellence. What the PA Time, "There is no sermonizing, no soul amazed by the number of angry age the senior-caI do feel

studentfails t realiz, howevr, is t'aat he probing, no sex. The Great Escape is simply -smokers who have vehemently this should serve as a lessos studet fais torealie, hoever is fat h opposed last week's smoking this year's uppers. We u1 owmight not e especialy appetizig either. great escapism." editorial.- -Also surprising is the take great are to avoid. tc

''The Apostles plan to serenade the-stu- number of outraged smokers who -caught in a similar situationThe Andover student also has the gross dent body before the Rlick and The Great E8- dared to see -their name in print Spring term of next year.

misconception tha he has exclusiverights cape will e a one-showing afair. - undereeataahlettertprotestngethenRethectRemiscncetio tha hehasexclsiv rihts apewil be on-shwingaffir.editorial: none. -'-- PeteiKt n

Page 3: IL'~I (See Pa~ge Five)pdf.phillipian.net/1964/04221964.pdf · Harvad in the Amndover-Exeter debate Chris Harte, famed PA photo- ' Press lot hold sosecondballotwith the 1964 a lnc,

l~~~~2, 1964 j ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~The Phlpiu ;k

Spe~~~~tacu~~~~~arI, / i Tr~~~~~~-ounce aor,1-Pn", ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~goal just after the~opening faceoffeclin ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~in the second period. The ball tookimp rove T ca bad bounce and eluded goalie

T, - -.- , .1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Reynolds, who played the first half.IS:*xrueti ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~From this point on neither de-In W etmore Greing .remnswmcaci.Thrsto

by~~ja~ai2 -down with a lib hsfensemen Hay, Nevius, or Chess-

This spring about 0 PA boys simulates a victiiwo '~thsteta eto osoefv olwill be stroking their way through air and becomes ai 1 sinker, to give Andover an 8-1 lead atan advanced six week enior lfe I -halftine.saving course taught by Mr. Wet- These va8rious urne tests, The third period- was all A-sore. Although the basic methods make 'up th4 dfence be-' dover's. Even. with two, men down,taught are those of the Red cross, tween the 1e ejieet id n i ees loe'olth varsity swimming. coach has adCchW ous.one meek shot. Andover's attackingincorporated certain parts of the Once these" cmlee squad camne through 'with four

testo, makngEd the course Corps and the Ir ~ r-goals in this period and .put theted, mltng hecouseone of lease / ~ a yet.

the touhest i the cuntry. are Ie e aal/ea sThe play in the,-last'period wasThe boys meet three times a given.v 1 n5 orlS tu- also completely dorminated by An-

week for about an hour, each time dents mut()r~ 0 d,(2) . Attackman Tex MacLean scrubs for ball under im Kilbrthias dlbsw dover. The' defense saw the balllearning and practicing new tech- swim 10 d'()cryfr100' 'with-Wyper and grimacing Steve Allen looking on.' Photo by Stein only three times. "Columbia" Rodenniques. But before anyone gets yds., a a~mwoehnsare successfully ran from one end ofa-edit in the actual lifesaving tied behn ~ hbc,(4) support by~ Bob Arras and attack-midfield' oordination th6 field to the7 other in a crowd-tests, he must pass the first stipu- the victiim for 5 more Minutes, With superior stick handling and greatly improved. However, Tab- pleasing attempt to burn out alatioa of the course: to swim ' 300 and (5), get bimrn out ofte 'oldepth, the Andover lacrosse team or's overall weakness, except at penalty.yards in less than 5 minutes. Very saf4~ The test b' purposely rug- trounced Tabor Academy 16 to 1, the goal, made Andover look better. CpanHyfl u ftepn

ewhave done this to date, but d' cmbnag endurance with Stra.The first period opened with aatyrcepoaiatls.3ir. *etmre says tat by theend skilkEleven of Andover's tallies came flurry of shots by Warren and att ribue teos~la toehste

of hesi We esy abth end Skr l from attackmen. Warren, Fran- Williams. It was only after 13 con-H trbtdtesakt i e

80%c will make it. uotthcoreM.Wtchtan Kibth ad heesecutive saves by the overworked stick, histidti ertue ephaszes tat svingsome- apiece, with Williams scoring two. Tabor goalie that Warren scored The win was the second-of the

In addition. e~rone must do,'e'Ieslfei xrml dan- Midfielders Allen, Perry, and for Andover. The high point of the year. With two miore games this.he'ext'ive han&-6tid test, ge sfrbt epeivle. Timbedrlake added three more goals, period was a beautiful sidearm week, Governor Dummer and

10 und ' 'carry. ~He Pont 'out that it is just as and Weiss came through with two. Shot by Franchot that found its M.I.T., Andover should be a n~i00 d' wth te' coss-hesteasy to lse one's own life in the The team' looked good in all mark in~ the upper left corner, good shape for Deerfeld next Sat-

told anahg by wh is eighed"proee.-" three positions with' ball control, Tabor scored their first and only urday.,

On The Sidelines

Brown Frosh Bomb Baseball, 12-0; AcosAegAnover Leaves Thirteen On Base_____ by ANDY MARKS

by Tom Rees four runs before he was replaced I in the first, when leadoff batter Since 1940, Andover has been competing in the almostVarsity baseball' was shut out by L. E. Sawyer in the second Mike Krinsky singled and ad- unk~iown sport of crew. Crew at PA began with three boatsfrthe second week in a row, inning. Sawyer pitched the rest of vanced to second on Andy Marks"- thstime by the Brown Freshmen,- the game, yielding eight runs and sacrifice bount. After Kriisky took gvnt h colb avrYl n rn~o.~hy~.1-.Although the Blue repeat- fanning six. third on a passed ball, Doug were kept in the Lawrence Canoe Club boathouse for' the

edlygotmen n bse, heywere' A theplae, sorttopjim Brown fanned and Sawyer popped first few Seasons. After a few years of rowing, an anonyosbeto come up with any key Chestnut paced the Blue with up to end the inning. -donor gave the school' six new shells and the present boatP

'Is. ~~~~~~three singles in three times at Back-to-back singles by Tory house. Popularity for the sport gained immensely with' they~Starter tm otonari as bpA. vrsfrt hetcm Peterson, Chestnut, and Bob Ma-new equipment. PA entered the intersehols ,after only one'

ged iththelos. H gae u Andvers frstthrat ameshall loaded the bases in the

The Ol'Swami fourth. Peterson was then throwni yea orwigadspped 30 feet before the finish lineout trying to take home on a wild after apparently having won the race. Thfe following year thepitc, aid Bob Stewart and Fer- Blue took one-two and since then have never finished worstBlue To Meet Green, Crimson nando Gonzalez struck out to end

anothe scorng th~eat.than second. In PA's first interschols there were such schools____________________ by FRED LONDONoChersnthtoirecn ing leret.as Tabor, Kent, St. Paul's, Shrewsbury and Springfeld Tech.[

big week of sports events looms ahead as Andover inteTithueaspcedofannouncement that came out' of Exeter last, re -

take on Deerfield and the Harvard frosh among others. vanced to third when the Brown that the Exies would be represented at the Henley"Lacrosse has an MIT warm-up for the Deerfield game fist' basema n Bo the 's for the first time in history, not in, their conventioD Ui

tra.The Blue stickmen displayed even more powrgone.Teinn ne sman boat, but in an eight man boat, aroused a lotofuetnnexpected against Tabor. Deerfield is almost always good, Gonzalez fanned. in people's minds. Many wanted to know why Exee ai'c

ecially when pitted against us. However, it will take more The Blue again advanced run- eights for the Regatta, but have never once aceptd~eawrthan the Green can muster to defeat Hay and company. ners into scoring position in the lenge to race PA in eights. The answer is simple.Te

The enns tem lst is frst nconter.. o th ran.,seventh, -eighth, and ninth, but Exeter races on is affected by the tides, and Red cespa-s week the Blue face the two best teams on it hedulefie, opodc n us tice any time from 6:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. in accordne~t,

d an Derfild.Harvrd lased he fll enns tam, Brown jumped off to a fast the level of the water. The heavy eights would be veryin'-rvardand Derfied. Havardblastd thefall ennisteam start, getting four runs in the first

utmissing from that team were Captain Gonzales, Michel tw,,, innings, but was held score- practical in this situation. The river is also full ofDheinmann, and Don Vermeil' Judging from last fall's Har- less by L. E. Sawyer until the which an eight man crew would have troU'blemn-- ltzff -ad team, there will be severe dropoff in talent after -the seventh. The Frosh capitalized on

~~~dman. ~~~~~~~~~~two Andover errors and connected PA Coach Brown summerized Exeter's L

d man.- ~~~~~~~~~~~for several hits as they scored ovosyae' fado s ti uttomc f~ n~It is rumored that Rick Sterne, first last year at Deer- four runs in the seventh. obiul rntariro's ti uttom

e, has been dropped to third because of the addition'-of two Blackwell, the Brown cacer, vnec.'~ked players. This should be the key match of 'the season belted the longest hit of the, gamne

orAndover. A victory would put the Blue in position for an into left center;' but an excellent ' Another question that popped up with the anuc~~throw 'by Blue shortstop John was on what basis does Exeter consider itsel

defeated season. Bakalar nabbed Blackwell as he 8Baseall hallnge theHarvrd ad te Yae frshme tred t strtchhis hit to a triple, enough to enter the Regatta in shells it has never, race~d

as. Harvard sports a top notch team, including former Murphy of Brown pitched a petitively. The switch from fours to eights is osdzaIAstar, Dan Hootstein. The question in these games .is- not good game, although he was con easier than from eights to fours because of the probism Ž

as iti stantly in trouble, as a result ofmauch- whether the Blue can hold their opponents asi sAndover's hits and rather poor balancing the weight -properly. But though the i-with i-t

hehrPA can, score. A victory over Harvard would sub- fielding by the Frosh infield, toIifclte e se ob upn h W ~ 'Ie

ntally raise bluc' hopes of a win over Exeter since Har- SUMMARY: haearayanucd eoeasnl ot~ ,I4atu w U4 a ~~ hago toHlrey.anu eoe igecnet

adrecently beat the Red 8-0. ab r h rbiOnpicleanExtrsod rf 4 0 0 0 got+ely O rnils )nEee hud-i

Golf also faces the Crimson-and the Blue. Not much is MM~r I o o o ovdi h eatai hya 0r~eonabout either, except that both will be good. These two S 5 o 0 0 7

ths will probably be the toughest non-Exeter matches of Peteron 23 0 1 0 crew over here first, or the trip to HeneyYer.T; touhthsSauda nd il arbl2 0 0 o a social junket. Since elimination races t~e~m e

e year. Trp~~~-ck takes on Dartot tiSaurated'wl aibU~

AgM~vitryngf whiehe credT boun ds fro3motoeo England to choose the very best high schoo roaitloss~ Gang.tII ,ad2Tbor0F00)gfield ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ renerech0 a '-(Continued on Page~or

Page 4: IL'~I (See Pa~ge Five)pdf.phillipian.net/1964/04221964.pdf · Harvad in the Amndover-Exeter debate Chris Harte, famed PA photo- ' Press lot hold sosecondballotwith the 1964 a lnc,

Polished Kent Overpowers Crew `4O-I ol~ Under extremely fast conditions on the Merrimack River last Saturday, the Keht -crew a-~ ~ 12b~ ael, 7oe Hron iafiihd1%/ lengths and 7'secondo ahead of Andover in a-fine -time f~ 29. theMtAp4 ~86day aA n' -loe ars5ons hi bth

Ke~theaver nd mre owerulbegan to pull Away slowly right after the start wa~:-~ s e -n a close' declso :94P e t otal of -79, picking-iAndover settled its stroke from 38 The race was a big disappsint- Planned b4ie the.race.- According t 8. ' og the Blue4laex -t e oiitot on his man, o,str6kes Per minute to 35. Holding mftt to the Blue. Kent has never to 3r . -the 2'cey ere sct betrtan-&g a 4 -

their initial high stroking throigh-& been beaten' by Andover in a dual whr he wanted, to wi it: at th.the Hlerie eeeayshptw 5 HalyadWnBreout the rce and mking faily meetand therehad atethepesfhafheilefirhengpl2'had theent doatd tfo an hfo spotssoforfPr out the rac and makin fairly met, and thee had beenhopes halfmile.--Theplanehad- ben tO 6Theeches: 6 mtches, plaed weatenbten,' 78-3aand77243good distance, Kent kept pulling tht-this year t could be done for make a good, defi ite ttle f 0Ai the Ns*u- point system. In Thle number five .man, Joe En'.-away slowly.Although Ketnever the r~t time. 4 stoe ermnttoh3o 4 eachl match',oie point is awarded isnd,- squeezed by his oppo(neompiled a very lamg lead, An- Perhaps wlif'akeite oiIt didn't come off very well WIt

dover-never made any real cal hard to' take is that Andover the Blue makting a shaky settle to:hewn -fterotin,838adpcdup2pota.lenge tco cme bekckt-take over. - couldn't follow the strategy a 35 - onO~for the ". nine, and oilie6-oi The greatest conso t o

At th halfmile ~k Anoverthe \.,8-hole tQ~-, In case of .. ia'for the Blue waf =3iIr .failed to gain, managing only to tib, S..,,halfpoit%s given to-eac Holkins, who turned in aneetake'the stroke up to 6.Inthe player.\ - score of 79 to take his ownlast quarter mile Kent Us sen Playing i the~#X osition, Cap- -by one stroke.pulling aay. ta er eabr sit n8 In ovefall strokes, ~the PA

As far as the actual rowingdyrpr78ad asvciofawsutled8641went, Andover did quite well.Theife was room for improvemtent however, especially in the blade

U * ~~~~~~~~~~work and possibly on the balance. J. V. SUM M ARYCaptain Spare, undaunted by Three JV teams absorbed losses hits. Two hits apiece 'by Jay Bond

tihe Kent defeat, has predicted a in weekend, contests as',.Eccles' and John Lacouture were the onlysuccessful season ending with laxmnen battled to a tie. The JV bright moments between 17 Blue-victory at the Interscholastics at lacrosse team traveled to Rivers strike outs. Worcester. The rest of the crew Country Day School to e da JV crew lost to a strong KentAs still confident and hopeful. As double overtime contest wit 5- second boat by one and a halfMr. Brown put it: "e've lost by deadlock. N lengths. Kent led all the way, andfar more to Kent at this time in 2 completed the mile course in 4:34,the season in earlier years, and IThe Middlesex varsity bae~beating the Blue's 4:40.

-~~~~ have managed to take te attesquad trounced Deke'snie32,iimterschol&" Iracking three Bluepitchers for 15 te oe High School cruhe

- - kL~~~~~~~~~~,Rz.W.~~~~~~~~~ ~Pete Carl in the 100 yard dash,- ~~~~~~~~~~~~(Continued from Page Three)- Doug Pirnie in the 180 yard o

Co6ah MeClement gi v arity rew final p talk as chief fan looks seem quite fair toplc an nvn crewints world-re- hurdles, Dewey Fulto in the'on. ~~~~~~~~~~Photo by (hag plcJnjvln n Jc wnlmi h____________ ___________ ____________ ___________ nowned sporting event. jv ln n a k T ieim i h

Mr. Brown pointed out that Andover races eights for high mp.thre basc rason. Th fist i becuseit i jus aseconmi- Lux's club lacrosse all-swa teamthre baic easos. he irs is ecase t i jus asecoomistomped on the Tabor 2, 74

7 ~~~~~~~~cal to row an eight as a four. Secondly, an eight man crew is_____________B -iL L:1N S, I N C . easier to coach than a four. Lastly, the best rowing schools allI * ~~~~~row eights. Athlete

One might want to know if there is any chance of An-Th v ee1" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~dover and Exeter ever racing each other. Attempts have been O

F~~~1 ~~JEWELERS & OPTICIANS made to have a Fall race, but this proved impossible due to --- -

the conflicts in choice of Fall sports. When asked what hopes .- ,

he had for the possibility of future Andover-Exeter racesSCHOOL JEWELRY Coach Brown replied, "I don't think we will ever race Ex-

eter; we've tried everything; it is just too awkward."

A ~~~~~~~~~~CADEMY MARY ANN'S* A ~~~~~BARBER SHOP'IADVE ILG,-~~~--r ~~~~~ NEAR A&P ~~~~~~CARD & YARN SHOP

4 BARBER - OOOLEVIE

- - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Air Conditioned - Main Street- - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~96 Main Street Andover Andover Mass.

Tel. 47 5-0742 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

f 36 MAIN STREET ANDOVER, MASS.

RESERVE YOUR FORMAL

Dave Morgan led the Jn0~

lcrosse tem to a 12-0 rout

of Jackets, Trousers, and ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~y scoring five goals. Photo b St

-'Accessories. 91

- ~~~~~~~ tasty ~~~~~~~~~~~food...trfypie STATIONERY - GIFTS

- - X ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~GREETING CARDS

stu ~~~~~ - ' ~~~~~ ~~ - ~~195 N. MAIN STREET 475-9854 ~SPLEmigh - INCORPORATED

T N S~~~hE~~T ..~~~ - ANDOVER ~~~ Open Year Round -Delivery ArrangementsMade Q MAIN &Rte ,AND

raiscon . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ "~,

Page 5: IL'~I (See Pa~ge Five)pdf.phillipian.net/1964/04221964.pdf · Harvad in the Amndover-Exeter debate Chris Harte, famed PA photo- ' Press lot hold sosecondballotwith the 1964 a lnc,

64" -The-- PhliinPg

Hi*~ G1~WiIL Chss -News Shorts-EVERETI RUNS TOWER SINGS nexLPnL IAscontents wdll be

luntil after it is printed.ADoug Everett, P's,lone entry In honjor f International 'Car--____in, Monday's B3OstO;. ',Xarathon, illon Day on Tuesday, April*covered the twenty-six mile' three twenty-.eighth, -Randy Bourne will A M L Mhundred eighty-fiv'zY~-rd distance give a carillon recital' at the AIN IBmi three hours, thirty-fiVe minutes Memorial Tower that afenn About sixty couples flapped andto Place 151st outof a-field f 400 The rogram, begling at two stomlied to the music of the Tor-runners. Everett, who had been thijrty, 'Will last abouf an hour qu~s at the rejuvenated Asiatraining extensively,aince early 'and will include folk songs, nd Society's second big dance of the.,ac, covers up-to thirty miles hymns as well as other religious Year. Singers Joe Freeman, Henryin daily workouts. and secular pieces. Hobson,,and Bob Marshall head-

lined the vocal department. Going------ ~all out on. refresbments, the AsiaTJPPJRS, DANCE Society had-plenty of soft drinksThe upper class held their -long PHhLLMAN ADVI[SER and pastries frbrn the bakery

downtown instead f goodies fromawaited class dance in th6 gym Mr. Wayne Frederick f the de- Commons. Faculty advio . Ryelast Saturday. Girls came from partment of History has been succeeded in lbouncing all, IrashersPingree, Abbot, and Dana Hall. namred faculty adviserlb- the P1. not. on "the 1i~"The Apostles supplied most of the lipian, replacing Mr. Emozir ,Bas--music with the Jazz Messengersi ford who retii~s this year. Mr.Mr. Fersch gives poetry the touch of Nature while students bathe in aiid. the Weevils filling in during Frederick has speixt_ the lastsun. Photo by Chimento, itrisosFounelhex-wnty-five years teaching college -~A.jiE

pected surplus of girls did not de- freshmen as well, as secondarySna.atron h hrsvelop, so the dance was certain school students in both public and band, and orchestra~,tbeld a joinlJIIX E to be a success, thanks t the Private institutions. ~ concert at the* No0tl ~ doveorganizational talents of Dan The Phillipian's new adviser Hg School. Athciugh" tle adi-fo r ~~~~~~~~Warren. meets each Saturday with the torium capacity wa 110ns~qunlypreidet n~dto of'te PILr- 00persons 6A. C1onsf'olyPIAN tdiscuss~the previous Wed- the proceeds *hich weetogoVALEN4TINE FLW R nesday's issue. Style, layout, and scholarships fpr the high sch9p61s-policy are discussed, but Mr. graduates were disappointig~THE P~~IIfiaLIPIA1N Frederick never knows what the sal

Editorial- Board Business Board 2 anSre noe W. . HILL, INC. HNEA 1,IC'ROOM SUPPLIES- RELO S -

Clocks - Picture HangarsfielIds t on es ~66 Main Street AndoverHOUSE AND BARN ~~~~~~~~~~~~~Gadgets "Consult us before you buy"

- Gift Shop 45Mi tee noe Telephone 475-4477

Coctails - Luncheons - Dinners- Special Functions

404 SOUTH MAIN STREET, ROUTE 28, ANDOVER, MASSACHUSETTS - AF[ESEILYSO

Telephone 475-1996 catering from head to toeEdward A. Romeo

to young gentlemen who

wear from size 6 to 40

B1ENNER HOUSE T¶NGR~$

HOPWhere the elite eat.

i

1-HouR FREE PARKING AT THE Open until 8 Weekdays Church Street Garage (right next door)

10A5 Saturdays ~~~~~~31 CHURCH STREET CAMBRIDGE

-4 W~NERHOUSE MEAL TICKETS ARE HERE!_Uivriy420

F JI S A LE _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

'* ftN1111,~ TEACHER

FOXCOR UMMER JOBS JOBS ABROADfor STUDENTS STUDENTS & TEACHERS

Largest NEW directory. Lists hundreds ofMotor Inn ~ ~NEW S'64 directory lists 20,000 summer job permanent career opportunities in Europe, South.T . . openings in 50 states.. MALE or FEMALE. Un- America, Africa and the Pacific, for MALE or'th - Massage precedented-reseairch for students includes exact FEMALE. Totals 50 countries. Gives specificUra~i Cocktail Lounge ,pa~y rates and job details. Names employers and addresses and names prospective U.S. employersBsamqt Facilities .their addresses for hiring in industry, summer with foreign subsidiaries. Exceptionally high pay,f * Room` Phones cmsnainlprsreost.,t.,t..free travel, etc. In addition, enclosed vital guideAir Conditioned Hurry!! jobs filled early. Send two dollars. Satis- and procedures necessary to foreign employment.Air Conditionedfaction guaranteed. Send to: Summer Jbs Direc- - Satisfacfion guaranteed. Snd two dollars to Jobs4~400 tory-P. .0. Box 1359 3-Phoenix, Arizona. Abroad Directory-P. 0. Box 13593-Phoenix,/ ~~~Arizona.!+uteC13

Page 6: IL'~I (See Pa~ge Five)pdf.phillipian.net/1964/04221964.pdf · Harvad in the Amndover-Exeter debate Chris Harte, famed PA photo- ' Press lot hold sosecondballotwith the 1964 a lnc,

Pag 6 '. The Phw]hpan .A~priff

Alan Blackmer - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'DEBATE HEE DEBATE AWAY,Explains Value Of Peace (I~~~PS .- (Cbntiaued fik~ Tage One) (Co iq from Page One)

From Alan Blackmer Jr., PA SaiPietro, theii'asked whether he -schools brecd negoists and sa'5$, now woit teo Peace Corps in opsda Supreme Court decision seekers, hence they-are conrr

Niger,*z, Crmtinuecl from last week. that~~~~~~~~~~r- iidered unconstitutional the democratic ideals.PeeShdoThere are no hippos or lions or abolishet fprivate schools. reminded the audience thtthe i

even woodchucks; the largest ani Garteli could oly 'reply in- the istence of private shosverifimal is a squirrel. I am surrounded affirmnative' our ideals of freedom of religia

by six-foot inosquito-breeding. ~~~~~~~~~~~John Sarrat, speaking first for choice, and establishment. "Wbbye six-ft" moasquito-blmreen the negative, pointed out that there is a choice, there is which Provide a sweet, intoxicat- the educational standards of pri-' chance," he emphasized. Al Reiding wine. There is an encyclopedia vate institutions cannot be made Exeter's lacrosse captain, thenof insects who know zne better to conform with those of the pub- gan his brute questioning whithan I know them. sr lie schools. was equalled by Mr. Schalofrounded by diseases,a a a Pete Schranmm supported a blunt answers.people- in Africa, but we hav adnumber ..of private schools which Laurent Alpert lead the sebo;health training in our' training, are out of res~ch of many families. arly rebuttal for the Blue, suProgram, and the Peace Corps* Sunlariiing his team's argu-' fully attacking each of E'gives us good medical' kits. If you .ments, Schranmm stated that pri- points. The last word of theeboil and filter all drinking waer - ' te schools deprive many youths ning, however, went to Etwash Yourself and Your food well, irof education. John- Whitbeck, who gained bsleep enough, and cook everything Exeter's James Hunter strongly in style what his speech lacke

thoroughly, You should -be well. ~~~~~~~~~~advocated continuing co-existence substance.4,N hotgraper n i~n btweon e l and priate ntiWe all suffer occasional bouts Alan Blackmer and students pose for PHILILA phtgahri iei. bttion Heli epand thiate mny

cfr dysntr, ort phehse anor ob- What, then, is my value? Is democracy. You mus t have an in- public school students would be D'AMORElsscurepor, bl~ug the weare or- there any use in my spending two telligent, educated base of middle- unhappy in an Andover-ExeterShe lic'Pleasant. The heat is extraord- good years in a far-of~_land with level manpower to del'elop a type atmosphere and could thusSheCicinary-, 115 degrees in the sun' dur- stdnswho probably will never nation. You must have respect for better fulfill their potentials at Main Street

ing March. be ~~~more than clerks? If you look other people. high school.Ting Marib. ~at it that way, it seeni dismal. I hope they are learning as ' Henry Norr, negative rebuttal- ' Opposite the Library

Finially, I should like to describe But you miist- have clerks before much from me as I am learning ist, emphasized the freedom from - Expert Shoe Work -my teaching. Apart from the Irish you have independent biqsiness- from them. Perhaps, years and government' pressure enjoyed bypalIca pretho onyunricy men. You -must have informed -years from now a man will re- Private institutions and reiterated SEKCOSadSAogpaaI ad hthe n un et people in a free society, and this is member that when he was small a the broader educational opportun- ST ZA an, SHPSAndHEATOI

gradate nd wite an i thea free country, whatever one may stranger came to help him, to ities offered at such schools. PIZ n SAHET

student and 260 teacI hours12 say about Nigerian politics and play with him, discipline him, and Despite John Townsend's effortsptuernwek and wor thn thethrd show him how to do things. I hope topersuade teaudience that Aporm wonsits ofk reaing fahtirydatia ' the 'adults will also remember the Exetei bad failed to challenge "UZCflO1. .... WeL9/n-simple stories, often simplified by "onye odha," -the white man, theGatnsdfiio ofheopc-American who said he was glad the judges awarded the debate to Iei41ccurantreduced vocabularies, language 1 to come to their land. Exeter.

-drills, practice: in writing short PhLarmacy Sincerely yours, 19i Essex Streetcompositions, listening, speaking, Alan Blackmer Jr. Advr asreasoning, punctuating, writing ,'AL~Advr asnotes and summaries, and work in Wh~ere your Prescriptions Make your Plane & Cruise Andover Tel. 475.9710 Tbuilding and using E~nglish sen- are always our first Reservatonl Through "AlFosMy -ePtU tehices. In the first form I do the IANDOVER BAooFodkMysetutUpe same thing on a far simpler level. consideration": Take Out" ,But before we can do any of this TRAVEL BUREAU inthe first form, these small boys Telephone '475-1006O&- FREDERICK CHEEVER Manager OWAtRZtDfAZ.5must be taught to behave and Tel. 475-3775 "OACW N CK' CRGMM UIX.

listen and sit still long enough to 66 MAIN ST. ANDOVER 3Main Street Andover "' '" '

learn something. They are badly -~'

taught in primary school, and with - '

almost no discipline. There is no 12 2 ri 1--ii~Tneed for me to learn Igbo, the S IX,,4LC A rt StuchoLL'J~ %"'

language of my area; it's a diffi-cult tonal language and I'm afraid 22 ESSEX STREET HOI haven't learned more than a fewphrases. (Down the Hill from the Library)

'The students are fun to work-with, very slow, but far more re--3'sponsive than American students, - Specializing in AR"' MATERIALS -th,

although perhaps their eagernessextends only as far as learning Oils - Watercolors - Casien - Pastels - Drawing and Block Printinguseful items and techniques for Inks -Acrylic Paints . .. Roma Plastilina - Modeling and Terra their fifth Form examination. Cot Clays.This exam is vital to their pro- - ''-

gress, with success a magic carpet '

here in society and economy, but 7' ~ .' ~~~hwith failure a stigma which couldruin their lives. They try hardbecause they want to do well, but /inucn(e nwe -don't accomplish much in A nucn e o eig OAmerican terms. It might take me -De

in an American class in two or " H A E A S O P ",: " " three days. 6

* Cameras & Accessories 'n

71'Lwe *~ Film-Developing & Printing '"

• Transistor Radios, Tape Recorders, Tapes' ra

* Binoculars -Telescopes -

FREE 5x7 ENLARGEMENT - ane goes better rereshed.And Coca-Cola gives you that big,--old tas

litl~~~~tti ~(Color or Black & White) - -- Awy utrgt never too sweet. .. refreshes best.

Famous for Made From Your FavoriteNegative, Slide or Print tisgo

JUNIOR BURGERS beteBEEF GS P.S. We Make K~eys Tool / tu

CHEESE BURGERS 1 Post Office Ave. Andover, Mass. Ck > -TERRIFIC BURGERS ~~~~(next to Simeone's Pharmacy) 'Wrdo

Tel. 475-2411 s~~~~~~~~~~ottled under the authority of The Coca-Cola Comfpqn byt ~pt___________________________________________________________________Salem Coca-Cola Bottling Co., Ire., Salti* gj~,