phillips 4tsjnuary jors pl~an mscl eso 'dear liar' hum

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Barry Singi ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Edges 'Dear I'oan Deerfield See Page 2 *~a~~~O-See Page 3No.'1 PHILLIPS ACAEmy, ANDovER, Mau=CH 4TSJnuary 23, 1962 jors Pl~an Mscl eso 'Dear Liar' Hum.orous Success; MrRoberts' With Real. Girl _ un'the trend began last Mr. Roberts takes place 6(i a Features Shavian, o' etr y rmth tditionial Navy 'cargo ship 'during he last ~L v e l r lSs "aeoff" on- Andover months of the war. The ship and - Class of 1962 is-attenipt- its men perform the vital task of e-she andi erect af Ieiap- ar.ofessional production carrying toothpaste' and toiletpaper poceadi i aIih obert as a mu~sical com- toward 'te front, but never get tne cetped,"oiuei teannual pre-graduation within thousand miles of the ac- wonderful, but not when you're tua ghting. -The action in the - alone." And the audience breaks the backing and help ol usical revolves around the con- it aosty unfrtnteta Da aloeland Freeman 14_ *fct created by Mr. Roberts' (Jim Ita amst infotuonastatingly soorDave Quattrone Riley's) impatient desire to get funrnya for sth s dieeletaigW. I aoshave adapted the into the war itself before V-J Day, HallnlasfoFridayanighteafter this stage play as a musical, and by the antagonism of the crew Hl atFia ihatrti ginning work last summer, for their tyrannical captain, played ~~last Cebrity Series presentation, ginnng orklas fumr obyBruc tyanclcptipae with too niuch of the humor in own initiative a :fo yBuePut. their minds and too little of the sides of the Atlantic, the Although all parts depend on almnigoth retosip sall but completed the faculty approval, Pruitt and Riley- between Shaw and Mrs. Campbell, lyisand music, and has are tenetively backed up by Bill prrydi h ly reharalaleaybe- Chickering as Enliign Pulver, a Playe i ar the ry.de casting of parts. cowardly loud-mouth, by the Doccrb "Play"i ar The ord wade a hmorus ookof (Tom Anderson), who always scribe, Detar ciar The taso connected incidents by passes out booze from the medical onumble, rethraschinrs tale- Heggan, Mr. Roberts was supplies, and by a real girl, as yet - oe si repeening Mhr, Camp- as a broadway play by unchosen (all reasonable sugges- beng' eside, and ao-o chirhr and Joshua Logan, and tions will be entertained), ithein dekadsto-nth ohr sformed into a movie un- part of Nurse Ann- Girard ~~~~~~~side, representing Shaw's domain. fored nt a ovi u -pr fNreAn iad The characters were only two in direction of Leland Hey- Supporting roles are held by ' number: Jerome Kilty playing rig Henry Fonda in the Roy Durham', Bob Ganmnons,- Keith Jeromfe Kilty and Cavada Humphrey stair in Celebrity Series performance. Shaw, and Cavadai Humphrey ___________ Chiappa, and Mike Beard as a laugh-a-minute comic quartet and Depa i - Mrs. amelld Brtesides, bytree other sailors, Dick Green-P . . k e s T e t d T i l i rs s ae o 'hesactesa P.'i. skiers Treated To Movie; ~~letters of -Gbrge Bexisird Shaw,- reRecounts berg, Ralph Hobart, and Needdn T u htB ycr-l c the great Irish-Englishdrmts .leton. Beie fee no-tg W d l 'T u h y c u l c and critic,. and of Mrs. Patrick Adventure, chorus and groups of danciiig-sail- Cmblafmu nls c - ors and native girls are sure to Last Wednesday night, the Out- is directing L'Ecole du Ski du Camello ah famnos thnglishuac- (1 ~provide fun and entertainment. ing Club provided P.A.'s avid ski- Mont Tremblant. The letters were adapted for the Peace COrDS Behn the scenes, George Peters ers with an instructive film en- I h is ato h oi tg yJrm it.~Ec and Chris Geissman will direct titled Everybody's Wedeln. Al- Intchastprtortemoc t erb re i -letyrt tahe a tough old P.A. teacher the musical, while business mana- though the club was caught un- McCulloch began by explaining ctharer rcasnhls lomentts rte an old lady of fity gers Steve Wells and Steve Abbot awares by the popular demand to that, although, Wedeln is an ad- otre sd- ocasionay -c ens re omiles at five-thirty in keep it solvent and a stage crew, see this movie, the undaunted vanced style of siing, both novices itrpreadafwsee r g,' said Mr. Kemper in led by John Morrow designing the schussboomers dragged chairs into adeershodtytolrnted ot.And ihrnothiform, with lat Wednesday. He was set. Music will blast out of the it the jammed A.V. room and quickly this new technique.' He pointed out the leterLa crontclls r about Mr. Reagh Wet- that Wedeln will help a beginner ranged, Dear Liar recounts rangetheere- doer.iec eacheth from an eight-piece orchestra un- settled down, eager to absorb all becomeadvance will improveb lationship of these two -eminent a iece orsaolnersh der the charge of- Marty Wishnat- they could from the film. b neer' sking nwl deeprow, persons, from 1899, when Shaw Peae ors vluterssky. In this two-part color movie, a epr' iigi epsowsol udn rm-rtc Rico last fall. Mr. Wet- Quattrone said he and Jacobs Ernie McCulloch demonstrated over bunmps, and down narrow waonl a0 budn g dr.ama-cr iic, bein the ce aboCorps, were trying to balance talent with Wedeln, a European ski technique trate sculcromesipe eerciesu- adrm omisuiul ribed te extrmely . a cros-section of the class in cast- which is gradually being accepted othatel hoela simpe masercthes appropriate for its purpose. inithe eremely rigo- in the parts, and, by working in North America. McCulloch is pormthrough seiulmttgprdcin.oigcetil ulfidisrco.H Wedeln. His -first illustration was The story was certainly varied put men and women of teousga at morwdspread aopealceotaonly edt "Sklifie" i sctr He side slipping. By leaning out of enough to hold one's interest, bring- eace orps"said r.W t-an oe thesfarcesao thpeauhoseral books eis 'SdLie ondWedetne the hill, Ernie flattened his skis ing in humor, affection, anger, and Cors"sai M. Wt-past. He further mentioned he was but also in one year he won the and began side slipping down theevntadyBu.hemo ws to be an important part ipesdwt h nhsamo o ormjrsicmeiin slope. He could stop himself by unique in its uncontainable ebulli- -S. foreign policy." Ou thpelsse i hth itssisAtopfurmjo k copeetntse merely leaning into the hill and ence, and gaiety-the spirit of olicy ow conistsuo theclssinit support of the play., in North America. Atpeeth digging his edges in, After a dem- George Bernard Shaw. In one hnica,"ecnomicaidand1 J' onstration of the snow plow place, he recounts -in a etter how peace" all of wihMr. Y aguba Ja low iscusses i eW McCulloch prepared the skier for he witnessed the ;cremation of -his termed - "Isomewa im- Stem Christies with an exercise mother, how, while looking t the ont "the eeotsn W e t A rc n P l i al T nd in weight shifting. With-the weight two piles of ashes and bonie-splint- "o Bu the PeaceCorps the down-hill ski, Ernie beganerceflyspatdb th g peace. It is not only Tehsoyadrs fTgln eiinadsoe hti wa taverse- across the slope. Slowly cremators after the burning, he in what itshould - be, he picked up the other ski and imiagine i mte'sprttad i hatl do. an 'he nations of West Africa one of the great hindrances to the fre ajsm-nwpo"os ing behind him and whispering in ce Chorps trains the vol- was the topic of discussion Wed- spread of Communism in West tion with the weight on theuphl his ear, "Which-pile do you think yWay of-a five-fold pro- nda at'ou'i SmelArc. -ski. Then he returned to his original -is nme?'-When tragedy did come to efirst-of these isphysical Phillip's Hfall. The -nieting featured In response to the question "If traversing position. McCulloch pro- the' surface, it'.was all the more designed to "improve a nie-Ntinflmonherathe nations of West Africa are ceeded to show that with the aid (Continued on Page Six) fitness and prepare for of West Afiica and a talk by opposed to Communism, why have of - body rotation the_ transitionI ing" The trainee begins Yaguba Jallow, 62,a student from they adopted socialistic forms of from weight shifting to in actual with a wo mile rn at Gambia. 'government?", Yaguba, answered Stem Christy is easy. Emphasizing in the- ni6rning. Then, The, film dealt with -the vote in that in the first place, Communism pole action and body position, tnudon Paesix) - 1958 taken by the people of Togo- and Socialism are very different Ernie illustrated Fall-line- hops. land whether to join with the Gold forms of governmnent. Secondly, The hop, as it's called, is just one, Coast (now Ghana) in seeking in- these nations have to start off with step below the Wedeln. The only coneenec ro ra Biano a form of government in which difference is that the hop requires day at3 p~m.~ ~ ~ to unite with French Togoland. the authority is entralized to in- more down-up spring than the dY at3 minte 'Ad- Eighty percent of Togo turned out sure a certain amount of stability. -Wedeln. During McCulloch's dem- Ozze ehnrt, voln-to vote on this important'issue, a Paidby Doris Lelmert far better percentage- than in the Jallow, with the help of Mr. onstration of the transition from no, will perfom a concert.. U.S. elections of 1960. -The country James, has taken a part in inform- the hop to the Wedeln, the viewer gram will include the first' voe'vrhligyto unite with ing the people of Gambia aboutrelzdteruhohisaemn of a Mozart concerto as 'the Geld Coat Communism. He has sent fifty cop- that this new style is "more ef- ecsby saye,,Tchaikovsky, - abln Jallow, who has built ies of the book WhaWe ut fective anom eskiing tech-s ainand Kreisder. up a reputation as an excellent Knaow About Communism, by niqeacmlsigtems rtmade his -concert de- extemporaneous speaker, began his Henry and Bonaro Overstreet, ~wt h es muto oe the ~hiagoSymphony- at talk--with a surnmally of the his- influential people in Gambia. He ment."p fif~ee. B. hs studied at tory of the nations of West Africa. lotinigosending copies Afeabrfinrmsond- i/heis urretly.on- the He mentioned that the coalitions of the book "The God That Failed," ing which refreshments were ~ Hatfor Conervaorybetween the nations of the area which is the story of six influential DC eterng he Iitenaton-are similar to the old empires that men. who betrayed their countries served, the second part of Every- - Copettio -i Moe exste thre~ any yers go.He to. jithe Communist Party, to body's -Wedeln wa4 shown. Most; First Winter Tei-iuie of - The pril. - --- - outlined the growth 'o~the Moslem- Som of his Gambian friends. - - (Continued on Paq Sx) Mirror. Review- on- page two.

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Barry Singi ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Hockey Edges

'Dear I'oan Deerfield

See Page 2 *~a~~~O-See Page

3No.'1 PHILLIPS ACAEmy, ANDovER, Mau=CH 4TSJnuary 23, 1962

jors Pl~an Mscl eso 'Dear Liar' Hum.orous Success;MrRoberts' With Real. Girl _

un'the trend began last Mr. Roberts takes place 6(i a Features Shavian, o' etry rmth tditionial Navy 'cargo ship 'during he last ~L v e l r

lSs "aeoff" on- Andover months of the war. The ship and -

Class of 1962 is-attenipt- its men perform the vital task of e-she andi erect af Ieiap-ar.ofessional production carrying toothpaste' and toiletpaper poceadi i aIih

obert as a mu~sical com- toward 'te front, but never get tne cetped,"oiueiteannual pre-graduation within thousand miles of the ac- wonderful, but not when you're

tua ghting. -The action in the - alone." And the audience breaksthe backing and help ol usical revolves around the con- it aosty unfrtnteta Da

aloeland Freeman 14_ *fct created by Mr. Roberts' (Jim Ita amst infotuonastatinglysoorDave Quattrone Riley's) impatient desire to get funrnya for sth s dieeletaigW.

I aoshave adapted the into the war itself before V-J Day, HallnlasfoFridayanighteafter thisstage play as a musical, and by the antagonism of the crew Hl atFia ihatrti

ginning work last summer, for their tyrannical captain, played ~~last Cebrity Series presentation,ginnng orklas fumr obyBruc tyanclcptipae with too niuch of the humor inown initiative a :fo yBuePut. their minds and too little of thesides of the Atlantic, the Although all parts depend on almnigoth retosipsall but completed the faculty approval, Pruitt and Riley- between Shaw and Mrs. Campbell,

lyisand music, and has are tenetively backed up by Bill prrydi h lyreharalaleaybe- Chickering as Enliign Pulver, a Playe i ar the ry.de

casting of parts. cowardly loud-mouth, by the Doccrb "Play"i ar The ord wadea hmorus ookof (Tom Anderson), who always scribe, Detar ciar The taso

connected incidents by passes out booze from the medical onumble, rethraschinrs tale-Heggan, Mr. Roberts was supplies, and by a real girl, as yet - oe si repeening Mhr, Camp-

as a broadway play by unchosen (all reasonable sugges- beng' eside, and ao-o chirhrand Joshua Logan, and tions will be entertained), ithein dekadsto-nth ohr

sformed into a movie un- part of Nurse Ann- Girard ~~~~~~~side, representing Shaw's domain.fored nt a ovi u -pr fNreAn iad The characters were only two indirection of Leland Hey- Supporting roles are held by ' number: Jerome Kilty playing

rig Henry Fonda in the Roy Durham', Bob Ganmnons,- Keith Jeromfe Kilty and Cavada Humphrey stair in Celebrity Series performance. Shaw, and Cavadai Humphrey___________ Chiappa, and Mike Beard as a

laugh-a-minute comic quartet and Depa i -Mrs. amelld Brtesides,bytree other sailors, Dick Green-P . . k e s T e t d T i l i rs s ae o 'hesactesaP.'i. skiers Treated To Movie; ~~letters of -Gbrge Bexisird Shaw,-reRecounts berg, Ralph Hobart, and Needdn T u htB ycr-l c the great Irish-Englishdrmts

.leton. Beie fee no-tg W d l 'T u h y c u l c and critic,. and of Mrs. PatrickAdventure, chorus and groups of danciiig-sail- Cmblafmu nls c- ors and native girls are sure to Last Wednesday night, the Out- is directing L'Ecole du Ski du Camello ah famnos thnglishuac-

(1 ~provide fun and entertainment. ing Club provided P.A.'s avid ski- Mont Tremblant. The letters were adapted for thePeace COrDS Behn the scenes, George Peters ers with an instructive film en- I h is ato h oi tg yJrm it.~Ecand Chris Geissman will direct titled Everybody's Wedeln. Al- Intchastprtortemoc t erb re i -letyrt tahe

a tough old P.A. teacher the musical, while business mana- though the club was caught un- McCulloch began by explaining ctharer rcasnhls lomentts rtean old lady of fity gers Steve Wells and Steve Abbot awares by the popular demand to that, although, Wedeln is an ad- otre sd- ocasionay -c ens re

omiles at five-thirty in keep it solvent and a stage crew, see this movie, the undaunted vanced style of siing, both novices itrpreadafwsee rg,' said Mr. Kemper in led by John Morrow designing the schussboomers dragged chairs into adeershodtytolrnted ot.And ihrnothiform, with

lat Wednesday. He was set. Music will blast out of the it the jammed A.V. room and quickly this new technique.' He pointed out the leterLa crontclls rabout Mr. Reagh Wet- that Wedeln will help a beginner ranged, Dear Liar recounts rangetheere-

doer.iec eacheth from an eight-piece orchestra un- settled down, eager to absorb all becomeadvance will improveb lationship of these two -eminenta iece orsaolnersh der the charge of- Marty Wishnat- they could from the film. b neer' sking nwl deeprow, persons, from 1899, when Shaw

Peae ors vluterssky. In this two-part color movie, a epr' iigi epsowsol udn rm-rtcRico last fall. Mr. Wet- Quattrone said he and Jacobs Ernie McCulloch demonstrated over bunmps, and down narrow waonl a0 budn g dr.ama-cr iic,bein the ce aboCorps, were trying to balance talent with Wedeln, a European ski technique trate sculcromesipe eerciesu- adrm omisuiul

ribed te extrmely . a cros-section of the class in cast- which is gradually being accepted othatel hoela simpe masercthes appropriate for its purpose.inithe eremely rigo- in the parts, and, by working in North America. McCulloch ispormthrough seiulmttgprdcin.oigcetil ulfidisrco.H Wedeln. His -first illustration was The story was certainly variedput men and women of teousga at morwdspread aopealceotaonly edt "Sklifie" i sctr He side slipping. By leaning out of enough to hold one's interest, bring-

eace orps"said r.W t-an oe thesfarcesao thpeauhoseral books eis 'SdLie ondWedetne the hill, Ernie flattened his skis ing in humor, affection, anger, andCors"sai M. Wt-past. He further mentioned he was but also in one year he won the and began side slipping down theevntadyBu.hemo wsto be an important part ipesdwt h nhsamo o ormjrsicmeiin slope. He could stop himself by unique in its uncontainable ebulli-

-S. foreign policy." Ou thpelsse i hth itssisAtopfurmjo k copeetntse merely leaning into the hill and ence, and gaiety-the spirit ofolicy ow conistsuo theclssinit support of the play., in North America. Atpeeth digging his edges in, After a dem- George Bernard Shaw. In onehnica,"ecnomicaidand1 J' onstration of the snow plow place, he recounts -in a etter how

peace" all of wihMr. Y aguba Ja low iscusses i eW McCulloch prepared the skier for he witnessed the ;cremation of -histermed - "Isomewa im- Stem Christies with an exercise mother, how, while looking t theont "the eeotsn W e t A rc n P l i al T nd in weight shifting. With-the weight two piles of ashes and bonie-splint-

"o Bu the PeaceCorps the down-hill ski, Ernie beganerceflyspatdb thg peace. It is not only Tehsoyadrs fTgln eiinadsoe hti wa taverse- across the slope. Slowly cremators after the burning, he

in what itshould - be, he picked up the other ski and imiagine i mte'sprttadi hatl do. an 'he nations of West Africa one of the great hindrances to the fre ajsm-nwpo"os ing behind him and whispering ince Chorps trains the vol- was the topic of discussion Wed- spread of Communism in West tion with the weight on theuphl his ear, "Which-pile do you thinkyWay of-a five-fold pro- nda at'ou'i SmelArc. -ski. Then he returned to his original -is nme?'-When tragedy did come toefirst-of these isphysical Phillip's Hfall. The -nieting featured In response to the question "If traversing position. McCulloch pro- the' surface, it'.was all the moredesigned to "improve a nie-Ntinflmonherathe nations of West Africa are ceeded to show that with the aid (Continued on Page Six)

fitness and prepare for of West Afiica and a talk by opposed to Communism, why have of -body rotation the_ transitionIing" The trainee begins Yaguba Jallow, 62,a student from they adopted socialistic forms of from weight shifting to in actual

with a wo mile rn at Gambia. 'government?", Yaguba, answered Stem Christy is easy. Emphasizingin the- ni6rning. Then, The, film dealt with -the vote in that in the first place, Communism pole action and body position,

tnudon Paesix) - 1958 taken by the people of Togo- and Socialism are very different Ernie illustrated Fall-line- hops.land whether to join with the Gold forms of governmnent. Secondly, The hop, as it's called, is just one,Coast (now Ghana) in seeking in- these nations have to start off with step below the Wedeln. The onlyconeenec ro ra Biano a form of government in which difference is that the hop requires

day at3 p~m.~ ~ ~ to unite with French Togoland. the authority is entralized to in- more down-up spring than thedY at3 minte 'Ad- Eighty percent of Togo turned out sure a certain amount of stability. -Wedeln. During McCulloch's dem-

Ozze ehnrt, voln-to vote on this important'issue, aPaidby Doris Lelmert far better percentage- than in the Jallow, with the help of Mr. onstration of the transition from

no, will perfom a concert.. U.S. elections of 1960. -The country James, has taken a part in inform- the hop to the Wedeln, the viewergram will include the first' voe'vrhligyto unite with ing the people of Gambia aboutrelzdteruhohisaemnof a Mozart concerto as 'the Geld Coat Communism. He has sent fifty cop- that this new style is "more ef-

ecsby saye,,Tchaikovsky, - abln Jallow, who has built ies of the book WhaWe ut fective anom eskiing tech-sainand Kreisder. up a reputation as an excellent Knaow About Communism, by niqeacmlsigtems rtmade his -concert de- extemporaneous speaker, began his Henry and Bonaro Overstreet, ~wt h es muto oethe ~hiagoSymphony- at talk--with a surnmally of the his- influential people in Gambia. He ment."p

fif~ee. B. hs studied at tory of the nations of West Africa. lotinigosending copies Afeabrfinrmsond-i/heis urretly.on- the He mentioned that the coalitions of the book "The God That Failed," ing which refreshments were

~ Hatfor Conervaorybetween the nations of the area which is the story of six influentialDC eterng he Iitenaton-are similar to the old empires that men. who betrayed their countries served, the second part of Every-

- Copettio -i Moe exste thre~ any yers go.He to. jithe Communist Party, to body's -Wedeln wa4 shown. Most; First Winter Tei-iuie of -Thepril. - - -- - outlined the growth 'o~the Moslem- Som of his Gambian friends. - - (Continued on Paq Sx) Mirror. Review- on- page two.

selling the tickets. Artists demanded less theni and

the -income from endowments was worth more; as ~ l e -T he A N ~ ~~~~~~~~~tists of the quality, of Casals, Heifitz, and Rachman- To the Editor of the Phillipian, placed on it~Yet Mr e,ninoff. Constantly losing- his balance, nounced lng- before -he

With the increasing complications of procuring a,1local atideit makes-his way oyer tions were set hat a~facBE1jAMIN W. WITE - ritsado slig the school asked a te-' a ice field, and, 'toward his dorm. mittee was ab~out%4to' ~i

Bdi~~o,'-i's.C~~ieI artitando eln tickets, After ~, ah.Jundred yards f falling problem--with the idea jFTIZGERALD B. 'IRAMWELL Haet take over. -Aaron .LiAUmoUd and into'!icy holes -and tripping~ over that they mightwl 'la

HAPOLD 1 S 'i'S. JR MawaGgiA g 13iBAMWEL Oarit-Brien inaugurated' Andover's Celebrity hidden mounds, our hero. blindly lay. And the Congress did:

CHISOPeraS. Ar TRONG esiTHOA i N. I -Series and have worked hard to make it a success. passes :by his-dotory4-and-some;- Not -until"-a" gigantic peC04..Sg dtors - IIO Working closely with S. Hurok,.the. biggest impresr whatiiibniiniously 'bumps into a the (fongress in the-.fa 1

DANIEL V. McNAMEE -~LAWRENCE EHRHART sario in New England, they have been able to bring tree.- So_. itis wih the -Student-mka oe Then, like'News Director Business Manageer _-to Andover such artists- as:. Andrea -Segovia, Ruth Congress, which'"like the hapless but instinctively reactio

* ~~~~~' D~~Jrape~r, I Soloisti di Zagreb, The Stratford Players student is not'onloy going-nciwliere union,r it appointed the A11It Of Canada, and the Vienna Choir Boys. but is getting there ineptly. ~.-of Athe. petition 2 to workOTh Thee sad

IL Inle, debrity SeieMuhothpriefrtescesftisies e Tesathing abgut .our little ind of compromise. TheMuc oftheprase or hesucessof hisseresexemplum. is that there is no irony, might-~ not have had to

]Following the draiatie lyrics of Rosalind-Elias'- should go to Dr. Malone. As Chairman of the Faculty, n t nyw ecp-h- in- t: I ony -w. -ould truthfully power xcp'te po er ofand- the eplosive Spanish dancing of Roberto Committee on Musicals and Lectures for the past say "'although'the student crawled sion to avoid restriction'aIgleslas, the witty dialogue of Dear Liar capped eight years, he- has-had to choose performers which painfully for hours, he 'eventually They culd have taken 'tithis year's highly successful Celebrity Series. We will please both the students and the general public, reached-.his dorm" Or even-like ular stand of putting bare indeed grateful to the school for presenting this to find a competent replacement in as short a time the-eaultsee-the-frs-r-ta-r the'-student body that th

greit entertainment. ~as three days, and to entertain the artists after clich-"Palthough" the - ey got 'no~vdwasbewn l:Andover is one of the few schools fortunate the show. - -'across safely because 'he studied han ofslontrol -orte

enough to~rn is-rate performers onto the This' combination of dedicated people and en- every, step, 'he nonetheless ended harsh hand of faculty rcampus. Trty years ago, the"- administration erous funds has given Andover this year an out- up in 'the woods-." But no. The The Congress did nothandled everything: booking the entertainers and standing Celebrity Series. -Congress has so far failed both in 'stand. If persuasion had',

___________________ ___________________ ___________________ _______________agreeiagreeing ton lits ong-range iaims tlmi ht--have--taken---and subsequently in trying ef- more unpopular -stand Of,,

Mirror Review fectively to realize them a slight restiction on ti 1 ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Recently, the Student Congress and the rest of the s-

Qud ity Im roves In S c nd I s eappointed a group -that would- sup- short, the maovie-rule incid_ r - ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~posedly answer the question of for the kind of initiative-

!-"'rby BRUCE 'M. CHAPIN -purpose-the Goals: Committee is Congress that Aomnetimies'certainly well-intentioned. We won- immediate popular opin

The Mirror, long the waif of Herbert to Bernstein and deplores~ to a mature and polished oem. der, though, why the Congress works in what are obvioPA. publications, may be finding the shallowness and stagnation of 'Steve Mathes writes of the paradox. Constitution wasn't consulted- long-term best interestsitself a stable or at least 'outward- the current shows which have all ieal strength in a fr-agile work of for once. The occasional congress- student body.ly harmonious home in a style and but banished serious drama from art in Small clay Statue,", and man who has read the Conistitution Let the Student Conconception which are' r'eally' its Broadway. The possibilities of the D.J. Smith of bourgeois compla- knows that in it the Student Con- being the negative body it own. Trends to this effect ard visi- musical comedy as a vigorous and cency in the United States, a gress's basic ideals as well ,as its haps with an understandnble in -the December issue, which progressive art form, rather than theme which is now merely a bro- less lofty-long-range aims are out- goals-an understandingacame out last week as the seebnd a mere palliative for reality, are mide, in the overly clever "'Mence lined fairly neatly and intelligently. for the low price of readingof.this year and which marks an too often overlooked. Meat.! Admittedly, ignoring constitutions sonable presentation of waupturn in quality from its precur- "Observations" by James Strip- The artwork is much improved, is the modern thing to do;- still, coafgressmen sense already,sor. - ling, is a somewhat clumsy pr- Erie Heyworth's Cover is imediat- one would think'- that if a group the constitution-and with

The writing is almost uniformly trait of intellectual arrogance. ely readable and is not marred by forgot why it assembled every cent on active imaginatigood. Rick Barry's "Editorial Re- Stephen Barnett dissertates, on the the~ jagged, sprawling title once in Monday night, it would refer to initiative, the Student flectioe' -droitly burlesques a "sweet sickness' in the- brief, aPh- favor. His Matisse-like "Woman the document that told all about it. can become a more efficiltraditional -Mirror motif - the tor- oristic "Hypochondriac Lovers." Working" -is a refreshing change Assuming that congressmen will effective constructive forctured Andover Man' despairingly The book review, one by Henry from the murky little cuts so com- read the constitution sometime 'S now.wrestles with his marital problems Binford of the collection Lost mon to the magazine, two of which soon and will have a fairly good Colin Campin~ an alchoholic fog and a cloud Letters from Stalin grad and the adorn the "book reviews. William idea as to what they're trying to - Don Enof symbols.,- Bill Chickering'r other by Bob Levin of Night Song Donnell's Pen drawing of a junk is do, there yet remains our Con- yi lc"Pointless Mood Story," despite a recent novel by John Williams, competent, but somewhat -heavy; gress's most important problem: The its aicb self-deprecatory title, does are both competant and ercep~- and it could make use of a little how to cross the ice, how to -gethave a point and makes it well. tive. more suggestion, especially in the where we're going. The answer is To make up for The",Labors Lost"1, by Tim Carter con- Poetry is also well-represented background. - initiative. With -Initiative must Family, the mnovie in G.cerns itself with the coxiventional, in the Mirror. Mike Beard's "On Joel Slotnikoff's photographs on come imagination, even boldness, -week is a good comedy tabittersweet adolescent love; but'the Julian Entering Antioch," cast in pages one and two are striking, more responsibility,; indeed, -with Sopijia Loren. Clark Gable,story is restrained and well-hand- the difficult lorm"of the Elizabeth- well-composed and 'integrated on initiative must come a certain adelphia lawyer in It Steled. However, the effectiveness of an sonnet, foregiadows the death the page. However, the manhole power. Though it is never exer- Naples, goes to that town tTom Harris' plea for Justice of the Emperor Julian -in battle cover' one again stares~blealy at cased, there is a disciplinary "what- his blacksheep brother's nftoward the American ndian in near the Tigris' and '*ith -him thie us, this time freon Page four; and ever is deemed necessary" clause that- his brother has died in-Pococurante Species"' is blunted extinction of the brief pagan re- the abstract contrast in gnarled in the constitution that is suf- boat accident. He findsby an oversimplification of char- vival he had inaugurated in the bark on page fourteen by the pho- ficently vague to enable the Con- brother had a son who is noacter which resolves conflicts to Roman world during the fourth tograph's being ptdi le rs culyt owaee t ing with"ut.pi"the moral extremes of Uncle Tom's century. The -reversal of conven- The layout is improved, perhaps deems necessary. Don't iiisunder- "1sister-not-in-law." WhenCa-bin. Editor-in-chief Dave Quat- tional -C hris tian imagery - because Mondrian has lost his job stand us; we certainly don't want finds tiat the boy is gettingtrone's essay, "T-rends of American "Christ's bleakish winter" is con- setting up ads. the Congress -to become- a police thing less than suitable eMusical Comedy," revirwa the dew trasted with the "Indian Summer" The trolls have produced a good force. But take the case of the he protestsr. "You're partvelopinent f the. 'musical from of paganism - adds ironic force magazine. -faculty-imposed movie rules. One can." 'The boyi. quick1Y

of the Congress's basic 'aimus i "You no tell anyone, I nofl ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~to improve stdent-faculy ela- one." Gable. iesac

n car- Jivalt ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~- tions. Obviously, the student body -which leads intoineofobjects to the restrictions now comedy--scenes in the sw

John Cavonovitch, a laundry beings, I feel we might think a just to get part of it. I think youboy at Bitters, is- touzghtfually great deal alike, collect whole buttons, too. But. I Celebrity Series Extraopening a laundry bag while he I'm a slob now, John. I used to can't help but believe that you-relaxes during "idea period," a have clothes that fitted just like might not want my buttons when'-special time the workers are given youg"'do. I just bought three you look out across a whole pile Saw once'to work on different problems that new shirts and a new pair of of shirts and see that all the but--may come up, such as what to do pants, and this may sound a little tons are. alike unless your. collec-about sanforized 'clothes or shirts narrow-minded, but these mean tion is filled' -with the- same indthat already have the buttons-miss- more to me than all the clothes of button. Or better than that, Under the auspices of the C 'Born: in a Montreal sing, when he sees this letter. Cur- in the A-shop even. A few years John, when you hold all your Sawyer Musical Foundation a of 'choirmaster JosephSious, he opens -the letter as the back you and I could get up and newly swiped buttons in your as a part of the Celebrity Series, Leopold Simoneaul began",Battle Hymn of the Academy" be- Put -on ur clothes and we both 'hands and realize thaf you are go- lovely coloratura soprano Pierrette- al -music studies atthgins to sound in the backgroud. had lothes that looked okay, you ing to have to carry about a ton Alarie and tenor Leopold Simoneau eight and rosd from a

To John Cavonovitch, U.S.S.R. and me, John. And I can't help or so home at night. By the way, will grace the 'stage' at G.W. next Mfontreal'-s St. Patrick'sC(Unsanitary Servant in charge of but believe that you still have de- I hope you know that there's, . Friday. to the renow46d tenorShrinkage at Rittere) cent-looking clothes, that you send god up there watching you, even Combining rare talent and shin-' today. He 'has been acDear John, your laundry somewhere else. I'll when you break the buttons and ing reputation: in- their, joint ap- the Chicago Tribune as "Os

You don't know me and I don't tell you something, John. I loved just take half, too. pearances. this husband-wife team finest lyric tenors of ourknow you, but I sure would like my clothes very much. Aw, I had John, when I put my new has won acclaim. throughout indeed his artistry hasto meet you. Yes sir, Id like to some of the most beautiful plain clothes'away tonight I'm going'to Europe and North America. To-' a -truly international fwalk up and break your hand and ordinary buttons and unfrayed say a prayer that I never acci- gether, they have starred 'at, the is- a leading tenor of thelook you straight in the eye and collars and good-fitting sleeves on dently send them to the laundry Paris Opera and the Opera Comi- State Ojpera, Milan's La,tell you that I can't prove one my shirts, and rm sure you feel and if you in your own way will que, and they have had great suc- Teatro, Colon in, Buenosthing in this world against you. the same way about your shirts, fix it up so that I don't get billed cess in such' pioductions as 'the Paris Grand OperathI know that your boss and some and I don't know about-you but I for "articles in excess of contract" American Opera's. "Grand Duch-- State Opera, and the Ch'iof my friends seem to have prob- sure didn't like to see the fronts for weeks that I don't even send ess f Gerolstien,"1 the Vanc~ouver rie-'Opera. Ka&h-ye-ar hlems getting together - to talk of my shirts blackened by the hot anything, this will be more help- Festival's "Don Giovanni," and the cely tenor voice") (Londnthings over. They don't care if metal of some careless cleaner's ful than any wash job done by even Philadelphia Grand Opera's "The Hearld) graces -thetheir khakis get shrunk a little, iron. . ,the most honest laundry anywhere Pearl Fishers." They have often na~tional music festios

but beruda shrts wit cuffs You know, they tell me that over in the whole wide world and then sung 'with the Little Orchrestra has appeared aa sols

aren't in style. But I got a feeling there you -have a half-button col- maybe we can-dress -as God in- Society, the Montreal Symfphony, wbrld's 'finestoresithat if you and I could just' sit lection. But though I've never met tended, not in pieces, but together. and at numerous musical festivals suc ' conidutos-sVndown (actuallyr I'd better stand you, I can't help but believe that - . Yours truly, in both North Aihirid-~andEurope; Br~no- Walter,JoehKpor my pants might split) and talk a man who just collects half-u- Rick Ba~'ry, P.A. theirrecital prs, both-nidal eiiihaidtrslike two plain, ordinary human tons would rip the whole button off (Phoolishly Attired) - ly and as a.team,-are extensiive7'-~ (Contiudopi Page F

A. Hock~~~ey-Cuh-sMiton dgesDefldTrack VanquishesBliueAtack RiddlsGoalie,4-;--

Boston Cindere onzaliez ' Snaps DA dlok, 3-2WedniesdaY, January 17. "Boom- Saturday January2- A combmn-T......1 Tilt ~Boom" Morrison icked up two ation of Dick Leger's goal-tending,In Tiang~udI' il more assists as the Blue stickmen Charlie Stuart's defensive'work,

.- Saturday, January 20 P.A.'s var- ran over Milton Academy, 4-0, at and a lot of alert, hustling hockeysty track team won its second Milton. Most of the game was play- on the forward line of Jack Xor-'At ~~~~~~~~~three-way meet of the season by ed in the Milton end, and goalie rison, Jorge Gonzalez, ad' Bill

~~ ->~~~<- ~defeating both Boston English and Tim Carter was forced to make Smoyer gave Andover a narrowB oston Technical High School. In 39' saves to the Andover goalies' &,2 victory, over Deer-field. It was.a meet which was to provide many 12. anYbody's gnie until literally theclose clashes, the first event proved The Blue started the game fast last second when Gonzo-scbrgd toto be the most important. Le by and hard 'and its first goal came end the sudden-death overtime.Captain Tim Beck, wvho put over at 1:14 in the first period. Morrn- The GreePn phayed, by their own ad:forty-eight feet, a strong trio of son assed out to Jorge Gonzalez mission, ,a better game than theyP.A; sOt-~Putters swept the first in front of the net, and Gonzo had thought possible, forcing An-

,~~,, ~ three laces, thereby giving the knocked the puck past_~Carter's dover to play for a they werelue an early ten point lead. Wil- leg. Three and a half minutes worth throughout the game. They

kinson, competing in his first of later, og Farrar entered the never once lapsed into-the sloppythree events, outjuinped the field scoring column unassisted and play-making that has been so corn-.with a leap of 2114,' giv-ing An- boosted the Andover lead to tw-o mon in previous contests.dover its . second first of the points. He took the puck over the At the start of the game Deer-'day. Andy Cahiners ran seconds Milton blue line and let fire with field looked completely outclassedand Dave Quattrone tied Dave a high shot that went right by the and the small. Andover cheeringPowell for fourth in the 50 yard goalie into the net. , section settled down to watch ahigh hurdles, to give Andover 4 -The second period was marked nice easy victory. Everything waspoints in this event. In the 50 by eight penalties, and both teams going along as they had pictured

Phot nby Hys yard dash, Wilkinson came in third were at a two man disadvantage it. Less than four minutes intoerneor drews hits on a fade away shot from, the outside i~to place for P.A. In'the mile, low at one time or another. But neither the game, .John Greene picked up

Frosh game. The Crimson later romped to 104-62 victory- er Dick Howe, running very well, team' was- able 1 apitalize on the puck after a deenseman hadry took second. them ,and the only goal of the stopped Nick Prahl's shot and

period came at rare moment when slammed, it' into the left side ofboth teams were at full strength. the net.

Keith Chiappa, who had been With less than a minute and a ' his had, a curious effect onall ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1000 in 2.24, and Wilkinson, run- son once more passed out. this the Green, it fired them, up, andning in his, third event of the after time to "Snooky" Smoyer, who they stayed fired up for the rest

oowon the 300 in 34.9. Jeff whipped the puck into the net. of the night. Now the Greena-rvard 'D ow n s B lu e Huvelle came in second by inches Carter, who made 13 saves in this tcsh edUP and began to play,in the 600. Mike Kaiser, jumping period to Dx Newton's 1s held better hockey. This improv~ement-re.

aJanuary7 17 - Complet- Saturday, January 20 - The loss of 5'91', took second in the high back a barrage. of shots to keep sulted in a score-tying -goal twoowered by an obviously three top players on fouls and a jump, giving the Blue an addition- the Blue from scoring again until thirds of the vquy throught the per-opponent, the. Andover last minute splurge of points by al three points.thenofheerd.od aMcorstok akBy

11team succumbed to the the U.N.H. Frosh combined tothenofh-prd.idMaMeirstok akRyJ~s Wednesday by a hand the Andover basketball squad A h n falnn vns In the lst period John Odden man's pass out to the- point and

104-62. The main differ- its fourth loss of the season by a t scoe sen d aninovenout put Denny McCullough's pass into whistled it from thirty. feet outenthe'two teams were 68-57 count. The, Blue were led h cr hoe noe u the net for the final goal, and the into he lower right side of the goal.

s ailiy t scre n fst ng y apoit wth ourmintestoahead with 42 points. Boston Tech- score became 4-0. Making 16 saves, BttomntsltrMrio'sfeabiit tsreon a g b apoin ih fomnues ol nical H. S. in second with 30, and Carter again amost single-ad- buk toti m ints oritn

offesiverebondsand o bt catainMikeMoones ful-Boston English H.S. in third with edly kept down the big Blue scor-boetetewihhsfvrtmthe outside compared ed out 18 seconds later and Joe 2ponsig.shot. Skating in from the blue line

dvrscontinual long- Belforti, high point man for the27pit.ng with the puck, he found that heatnand the Crimson's losers, left the game- with a little could not get off a god shot and

grabbing a huge propor- less than a minute to play. Sam D w[3so went around behind the net. Hee rebounds as opposed to Caldwell, who had contributed Swimm ers D w M t. uH erm on, came out on the left and gave the

fculty in just getting nine points, had fouled out with Sw e spck a backhanded flip by thecabe under the boards. 10:52 left in the game and the Ca tu ealiee'nsi o u legs. The Blue continued

igin defeat for the Blue Blue were forced to play the late AL-7-opton the pressure until thewh Alliedw1 and 12m miuts of the game with only two Saturday, January 20 -Andover his best time of the season, was end of the period, even though at

whectied Whnd itbe2o mnte'oinafvesrts.D- smashed Mount Hermon last Satur- clocked at a. 4:37.1. Veteran Bill one point a man 'down.ectively. When it be- ~~day afternoon despite the absence Vincent, probably the most consis- In the second,- period, neither

usthat Harvard had pite the loss, Coach DiClemente of one of its best swimmers, senior tent winner on the squad, placed team managed to score, and An-well jammed, Andrews expressed optimism based on te prep Bill Shubach, who will cer- first in the 50 free with a remark- dover maintained a slim one-pointoutsid wihpoodpnght team's performance . "It was cer- tainly break at least one rocord able 24.4. Vincent has won this lead. The Green out-shot the Blue,

otscoe ixh fied goalsh tainly the best game we've played this season. Strength was added event three times in the past three largely because they no longerto scre si fiel thia s yasttd heA ovrto the team, however, by the re- meets, not to mention the many bothered to try to get..through or.

this year,"h stem rey beganer turn of the John brothers, King times last year. Andover again got around Stuart. If they found them-lue aided their ownetea re desega-t Scherer, and Gibby Vincent. a first as Hunter John splashed (Continued from Page Four)'

thfouls. The team corn- jell and some of the plays executed Andover got off to a good start his way to a 1:01.5 in the 100 but-______________fus overall, 'enough to were simply professional." as Stu Davis and Mike Cathcart terfly. Wendell John, who just re-

am's whole startig line- (Continued o Page Five) gave the team a one - two sweep turned from the jm-packed in- Showmnen Schussefouls are distributed in_____________ the 400 free. Davis, recording firmary, wasn't able to keep up

As it was. three P.A. ~~~~~~~with his little brother, and placed T is ru pleinn-adkFe ofovesSquasil Bows To Deerfield;, only third for Andover. T is ru pca di Mike Melonves Andover copped second and third

t. Wile (11k (1 ('& ~~~~~~~~~Co in the 200 free, as Pt Cathcart As S.P.S. Tumbles,Whips Choate By 6-1 UntLwas edgea out of first. Gibby Vin- -str ftegame, Andov- ,1ByDe-cent, leading the field for six laps, The Andover ski team won itsaewtHarvard until In a lopsided match,' the An- Saturday, January 20 - TheDerjutdn'haeisonledr-fsticryftesaonSurws1-;At this point dover varsity squash team crushed field varsity squash team crushed ust did'tcae hisa rntaled ayfirtakvitory onthevseasnt metatr

son broke loose and ran the. Choate varsity at Andover last Andover 6-1,' while the Blue JVanebcueoarcntilsdytkngaoe-vtmettV ~~~and thus placed only third. Andov- Boston Hill. The meet combined1 lead by the end of the Saturday. Choate, despite a squad triumphed 5-2. Although they re -ed again ot second and third in the varsity and J.V. Time and snow

e.The rest of the game featuring six seniors, found itself cently defeated Choate and the the 100 backstroke. Tom KutVirt conditions permitted only a slalombeing whether Harvard completely outclassed by the fast- mighty faculty, the inexperienced was second, and King Scherer was race, with each competitor taking

ch he 00-oin mak. mprvin Ble tamandwasun- varsity squad was completly out- tidlite 10pit marelk improvingo Baluae e an a one classed by the much experienced fhrm Scheror, another returnee two runs. Andover easily cinched

wieith looed olk titg male i to slvge1 omor than ,ad ohdDeril ea.Tefo the infirmary, was not up to the first three places, with JohnitPwiththeonlythig mach n loing.6-1 To Gilert had posish eod Dewsied atm . the fine performance he displayed N~eck, an upper prep, posting both

Dinny Adams, and Bill Pugh ha vasteodnwsad t23 in the Portland meet. the best snl n obndtmthe easiest matches, each winning Adams, Adover'sno1ma,-Atrtebcsokhead-fth. igladcmiedie

FG F an' PrF in anstraighte acktrkgames.rd of-teday. Jim-Griswold-held the-6 3 15 2 Pl~igin the No. 1 boit owensragtgme,1.,est working - contingent on the best- time after the first run, lead-

6 ~~ 12 Playing position, ~15-3,-15-11, to Deerfield's Coonley, squad, according to Coach Wet- ing Meck by half a second. How-6 1 Gilbert took the first game against a nationally ranked player. Get- more showed tremendous improve- ever; under pressure, Meces corn-

3 2 Choate's Gilchrist by a 15-10 count. ting off to a slow start, Adams' met. Gordon Hardy, who recently -bined time was 50.6 seconds; Gris-3 5 i noer' t lner ten poured shots ~began to work in his final became first nian in the 100 breast, wold's was 51. A Senior exchange~ i 5 t on o winthe net twogamesgame, but Coonley's lead was too 'tdn rm NraSer2 2 6"' 3 1 5..' band 15-9 scores and to an- muhtooeroe placed first for -Andover with atdn frm NwaSeeI 0 2 1 nex the-match. . uht vroe ' respectable 1:14.5, ad Tony Obst Maehilura posted third with a coin-o 0 0 0 Adams, playing- No. 2 over- Tom Gilbert, no. 2 man, was also took second. Hank Stone and Jack bined time of 53.6 St. Paul's cap-2 0 4 2 powered the Choate captain' Camp- defeated in straight games. Gil.! Sartore swept the 100 free, both tamn, Wick Rowland, took fourth'o i 1 1 bell, in straight games, 15-li, 15-12, bert's game was not up to par,' l- recording their best times in meets with- a time' of 58.7, over five

o 2 0 and 15-7. Roy Durham, in the No. though he too started -to click in this season. Stone was clocked- at seconds behind Maehlum.-2 3 4 toWa 3 slot, found the going a little the final game. 55.o; and Sartore at 55.2, although The victory came despite falls

5 17 19 62 rougher. After splitting the first The Durham - Heath match was Stone did- a 54.6 ii) practice. Both on' the part -of other Andover ski-26----2Z-34-1o4 two-games-*vith-Cboate's-GilhuleY, very close. Although -Durhamn these swimmers have tremendous eirs. Fred Palnier went dow ona

-. on -Pag' Five) (Cntinued c -PagFour) (Continued on Page'Four) -(Continued on Page Four)'- (Continued on Page Four)

NJ

Pa g4- - - h Pi~a aur 3

Jerfie~~~~d.~~-. S~~iii~~~g~ Skihig- Choate-..qah-(Contiued, ftom page Three) (Continued from' Page Three)- (Continued from Page Thiree). (Continued from Page Three) - (Continued from Pag

sevesi facing hium, no matter potential and will certainly lower icy spot on his first-run, but tun 15-7 and 915, Durham came hratnd to wnt~-where they -wmr on the ice, they their times in futdunthreorhbettieoftelife and overwhelmed Gilhuley,' thraened col ibra

Just- Ifiya the goal. day on his second. He 'placed 15th. 15-8, and 15. h taysyeo i Etffft in the third 'period, Deer- In the dive o aoe' VanZandtH Hsw got tangled up. in' ,etfrGomn h

fieldtiedthe sore gain.Lege 525 int otg' ui~ihm th a gate on his second run and man- Andover's only loaa of the day the'team went down istoeld e h sottte ag.Lgr numbron spont. gained ithe aged only., an 1th* place. -Captain cme when Neely of. Choate Ont` games. --Stevens adI

bound ouncedback i frontofthe ,ed gret M hovener the'a George Peters finished his first lasted Courty Dixon in a tense five good opportunitiea to wingoidl, and two, Green layers, -w 'Worcester meet, where his point run ihago ie u a i-gm ul io o h is ond games, but theybodBlue players, and Leger hopped total was only 37.0. John Phillips pulfe o isn ae hsgm 71,btNeycut rp~essure.' Hall, OpPosiaqinto' the ensuing melee. Finally and Tomn Kutvirt swept the 200 eliminated him from the second by crushing the Andover junior (Deerield), was edged (

Bobi Bradley pushed the Puck individual edley, but only e- round; Ralph Hobart was the only in the second, 15-8. Dixon won the final game of his match ithrougk* the mass intoW the net. cause ne of MutHi113%sother Andover akier to place in third 18-17, but Neely held on to

This spurred Andover to double swimmers di untd The Medles the top tenm., He finished 7th with -win by taking the last two games Andover's only victoryits efforts, and for the next minute peak diqaiid.TeMde a combined time of 64.2k. Other by identical 15-13 scores. = -c yGoda.Paand-a half the pucek never got far- and taam of Scherer' Ob t,`John, Andover ' skiers finishing were -see yGomn P

Crothers easily vanquishedheadlte ruedther han tentyfeet rom te th Hermn rely tem. ScererBarnes (13th), Cooke (14th), Andover had little trouble hen- happon tt trouble 'def0

Deerf thnetwnti fnall groalihe tnd Hbetoth eld teir. owneand W.P.C. Smith (18th,) Whipple ning the matches from here on, al: poet 1-6 1-0 5JohnfWed fell ni i.aSeve soal- Hnter Joh gaed Ander wncon- (20th), and Allis (22nd). though both Matt Hall and Tomons ee laer l Bo it.Sevch en- sinerblen ave Anhich T o n- Results of the meet along with Israel'were extended to four games. In J.V. action, Walett

endslatr Bo Kiaseich n- ideable1~a whch Tm Cro-performances- in training, are Israel, playing No. 5, managed to, Abbott,\Brown, and Rabentered thb penalty box for tppIng thers didn't rlirnquish._Andover pr.omising, and the Si emi vroeGen'fCot, 56i'dwn naoesddv

and Andoer got, ts, chane.eb s lso eayoas Hertone Dinsh looking forward to a uccesful sea- 17-15, 8-15, 15-12. Hall outlastedcould not put ogether a success- fretl eaa atr Dvson. It will take hard work for the Millington, 15-9, 15-13, 11-15, 15-8,' The Squash Team wi)im soring Play. When both team Stone, and Vincent finished in a team to equal the showing of Dick in the nu'mber 6 position. Pugh, St. Paul's School on JUwere nce more at full strength, 1:37.2, which certainly reflected Durrance's group last year at the Andover's No. 7, swamped Len- and Brooks School here a

Deerfield took control and forced some of the effort Coach Wetmore interseholastics; however, spirits fensty, 15-12, 15-8, 15-7, to round ary 27; J.V. action~isal

ege atak savroen afte a. hadin pthe i thera tam in are high and by intensive train- out the scoring as Andover took against Brooks.the ttac wa broen hen add helingthen tie thir tart co- ing the siers hope to rank among the match easily

Cook got a leg-checking penalty, rectly. This last relaywas Probably the beat teams in prep-school coin- - 'Adm() 4

and Andover Put in the first line the losest race of the day. Aiidov-1 petition. Aai A

- for the Power play. The Blue Put er was a stroke behind as-Bill Viii. __________________

on the pressure until the end of cent dove off the starting block - .Gilbert (A) 5the period but just could not soe and succeeded in beating Mount P

and the game went into overtimie. Hermon's anchor man by a od Preps . . .0M Isaa 1) 1

It was announced Overtbe loud- two strokes. The final score was 5 .7 wm Jon Co. 'Durham (A) 9'

sjpeaker system that the basketball 70-25, and the entire team showed HEEL FOR . Heath (1)) 15

game, which all students were X- great improvement over the per- THE PHILLIPIAN _-rdover' News Co.) Stevens (A) 9quired to attend, would be delayed forrmance put in at Wortiester. If _.Stephens (ID) 15

until fiftleen minutes after the end the team continues shaping up, andof the hockey game; but th6 an-nttonnywimraelo AD M- SCFHOOL SUPPLIES Hail (A) I

nouncment was .unnecessary, be- to the "flu", that is going' around, BARBER SHOP Asiel () 15

cause the game was over forty-onie Andover has a good chanice of beat- NE RA& pSTATIONERY - GIFTS - () 8

seconds'later. 'ing the Dartmouth Frosh next BIESGO SRVCE' GREETING CARDS fMoreno (1) 15

-Andover continued to Pour it on Saturday, and defeating a trong - Air Coflditionad - IGoodman. (A) 18

in- the ovei'time, taking two shots Deerfield team the following week. 96 MAiNq STESET, ANoE Io ent- C) 1

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.APin Wrestlers, 3 2-l; igsSusAr GAllRyFeatures Fris;rwick FollowsSift, 31-il Will Depend Uponi Exhibit Delights Mn iwr

y, Jauary 17 - weU Saturday January 2 -Tom Gil.. S Venetian Fresco aintings are inexpensive means, and they'Govenor'Dtuinir wrst-more, Ivan' Higginsand Ned Ca- -fong Rietm- eeS-th subject of the current exhibit seemed to make a plajiar suifae

- wih esecialy'strong leton added the -only -bright spots Lat te, Addison Gallery of Art. A appear three dimensional.weihs pce.up -four to last Saturday's wrestling match, as eragood part ofbo- resc is executed ol wet plaster St.' George and t Pricess by

d four deeWsOrWs to crush as Warwick High School, winning mng's strongest team in years grad- so that the paint becomes absorbed Pisanello shows the emphasis thatmatee -by . an_. over- four of its matches by falls, over uated. Although six lettermen left, by the plaster and become a part was placed upon elaborate l.coui'tly -e The Gov- came the largely inexperiencedthis year's team- was good enoug ofthe surface. The process creates ritual drn h ohcadRn

g scoreof 32 weig. to merit a write-up in the Boston an interesting effect and enables aiissance periods. There i a definite,oaheas anho he used Advrta 11.Herald. The article, which aP- a painting to last fr many Years. concern for the accurate portrayal-

Dal whom -he used ~ ~~~~~peared over the holidays, stressed Fresco painting has been practiced of the human adteaiajuggled te first fur LowerChuck Rounds was the the difference between Andover since ancient times, but it reached body.

WIan attmpt to ick up first to succumb as he was pinned boxinig and that found in profes- its peak dn the -Rnisne TeFeceL ae'b aoock victoies.' -- late in the first period. In the sional boxing. It pointed out, for in Italy. da Ponte isoan excellent xample

next two matches Bill, Hartman example, that P.A. meets involve The exhibit at the Addison Gal- of what can be d6ne with a fresco.Tailor, the' . V 110 'and Terry Meyer were forced to no cheering 'and that no winners Iery. displays the wide variety of Jacopo da Ponte shows a cleverpinned Chuck ounds, the 'Submit, their opponents Gibb and are- declared. s~e hc tlzdtefewueo esetv nhsfec10 pounder took on Hart- Emerson inning them both in the The'success of this year's season teshih tliz the frescoraue of perpecive treineisfresc115 pound class. Robert middle of the second period. depends almost entirely upon the tcnqe l the phtorahsofohtsivsatt threedimensiona

last yer 'wasthird n . deelopmet of agreat dal of he frecos atthe exibit wre quality' and makes it appear toclastic Yand was id in Caeomn fa ra elO taken in or near Venice since the come to life. Pter and Paul, the

thsar wat 110, Cptain Higgins, in a match Promising nwmtra.Tesia ecin eeaogtebs ~ apostles on either side of the-waedtightea to much which was not as close as the score has only six boys with two or more Italian -painters in work with fresco, appear- to be at different- exta weghtto mchseems show, gave one of the years experience in the ring, and frescos. distances from the vi~wer; but

11to Andover'sHatn best performances of the day 'by an even smaller number of one- One of the more ommon uses they are both painted oi the samescoiftfg bout. Ha~tman ya eeas

clos to innig Taloroutwrestling captain Kopf of Waryervtan.- of frescos was to decoratek the flat surface. - ikewise, 1the semi-nose qute mnagit beT ika2yrlhseolhug r Captain Rod Young, a senior assi many inexpensive chuvch- circular row of colun*ln; behindrn uit Thneo e ginin~g his match very well with fro fast Viri Islands,* uses a es. The frescos created a richness the altar are all in atright line,

ranout Th Goernrsa -takedown, was out lasted by long, fs left jab as his main that could be achieved by no otherI but appear to be curved.- pa fal at 121 to' give Warwick's Joe Maarelli followed punch. Coupling this with good ____________________________

substantial team score with a 7-1 win over John Faggi. footwork, his right hand finds usemainly in keeping opponents, from- On~ The Sdeltnes

Johnon or he ourh Fllin - to or njued ougmoving in close. Weighing aboutJohso fo te furh Fllng n forinure Dug170 pounds, he is the team's ablest to C sua

~s_]±A. wrestling career' Wales, Randy Fleming dropped a fighter. O u a ul-o poreuse hi weghtad:high scoring match to- Williams,

avenge his last year's 9.5. Ned Carleton finished the me Sawyer Concert -b CHRI AmsTlRoNG.eRed captain-Durfee on a Blue note as he over poweredI

dy Godwi lae intheMenella, 5-0. Carleton wrestled very (Continued from Page Two) Three years ago a discouraged Andover reporter, after havingowihatght key-lock, well especially on the top where bie Theevieneeircear bthoro

anoter hre comine god riingwit valantwha simnea ha bee caledat the hands of the Dartmouth Freshmen, questioned the valiie of col-the ed ttalwith a win efforts for a pin to wear down upon to do and from critics' and

Mc~~ollum. ~ the visiting heavyweight, audiences' reactions thereto, thatleecm tionIfIrebrcretyhfnayar'vd ttethis artist is completely t home hazy conclusion that there was something good about it and mst likelyin classic, romantic, and modern consoled himself with the prospects of a smashing triumph over some

e troble ashfippe LL .H F os music, prep school teams the coming weekend.as flipped U.N.H. Frosh ~ The lovely, Pierrette Alarie, The situation has not changed significantly in regard to scheduln

onepiningstcombination,bein frutae time (Continued from Page Three) is famed throughout N or th with college freshmen since then. Many varsity squads lfetr

byteedeo temt Andover- found the going tough America and Europe for her. sil- a majority of senior competitors on their schedules, and a fewi managepythim edeow te ma.i the first half and the New very voice, beautiful and sensitive to come out ahead. The changes for the overall eriod between the endnd hi rudw toOa Hampshire team notched a size- interpretation and chring of World War II and today, however, have been great. -It was not so

able lead by halftime. Ball of sonality. Pert and blonide, Miss Al long ago that Yale and Harvard were famniliar faces on the P.A. grid-- m the eet wasU.N.H. singledhandedly put the arie has captivated music loversi. Got a h anrao o h eieo noe-V on

ere Ofl ~~Frosh- -in front,- by tallying. 18 everywhere since she bgan heion i Growtal th in resnon fort theIv deieagof ha Anovr-v coinhe GovrnorsPicked up lioints in the opening two eriods, career with an auspicious Metro-peionnfotalbuitsntjstheIyLgetatasent 15~'-n~l hentook the 'half' of his team's total. elforti, politan Opera debut in ",The growing. All colleges have been increasing their sizes, and we have notarletu wreste vy well t nine points, and Moonves, Masked Ball." Press and public been increasing ours proportionately. The day of the post grad has also~ nicifheaver ppoent it fie''ae h lu.Teaiehv thrilled to her lovely become all but extinct so that most of our varsity atbletes'are sixteenspruan job of brid- ~'rosh had a 36-27 lead at half- voice, all the more as her excep- to eighteen years old. While the number eligible for athletic-~draft in

caughton hi back~in Vinae, but this was not a true indi- tional talent is not limited. colleges sinprbouhitole withtenm rwecndaperid.uCaemi-atooftepa.Wh his team i Miss Alarie's recital tour takes from by the fact that our college competition can diw only from one~c6Itro , the 'final qold offensively,, Skip amnes more her through much of North A - clsteaeaeaeo trigfeha sa east nineten.

~pponen.and made e 6er8l b au-wt any uope tnhe adin soresd TWO years ago, while our football team was on its way to an un-him theiul'necetos 'Tctiy. 'allowedtaith e nifte States, Cnada defeated season, an Andover reporter was moved' to smuigly remark

~elfotf' o mov to orwar andMexio, h aniEroe. tts aaa in this very column that one reason for so. much unnecessary rough-ed-,, J. Vtj!he big upper responded with his As a team, Leopold Simoneau ness in the previous Saturday's football contest might have been thued foni Pge Tree) iestgame thus far'. '" and Pierrete Alarie delight audi- superior attitude of the freshmen who resentedbenbatnya"pp

inee, with 99 - points, a -' - ~enees with a repertoire that runs scho"tem Well, that reporter couldn't have be lsrt hply i~ht a99bpontse, - AnI e-pndth eodhl the gamut of composers, be they truth! For a nineteen-year-old-grad to watch a sixteen-year-old half-d snatche therebound. -i-t ad epoin an showd ha classical, romantic, or modern. back go through his side of the line for a touchdown is hiliating.

*ed a-2-1oter;-pz team- sustained offense that carried well Says the Philadelphia Inquirer, And, what is the benefit of all this to Andover?- Is it beneficial in a-did ikeise&ifhis. r. 'ntotheothprd.Mri zuk-. "Leopold Simoneau and Pierrette rough contact sport for a team to lose several key men in a college

e Uri se tok ah-r ermn ce-ofthed benchine Alarie . ,artists of thefirstrank, renimon~'~ii t o f' the .sera halef' themp info i fraevtrasieirrlsad shmen contest, which often means little to students, and then have

recveed- o e.sibsk apump-the Bluba icknto pefred itani es rlecte to fight for its life ine rder to down prep school competition?, Yaleough an fiall aossso H ar- t ae.BelfoteiiandM oe in both singing and aing." perhaps longing for a return to the big time, scheduled a two year 'sea'-

acnetd n a ar- tah' cointri-btedsix and thoesu The sponsor of the concert, the ies against Army in football only a few seasons ago and was sartshconted 3 L.- .ech~-hl ctbte Fsh n h scor- Sayr uial Foundation, was eanough not to renew it when it ran out despite the fact that it managed

-' ". ing~~~-lto te'pons.~ Andor SabwyeshMu by Mr. Thomas Coch- to squeak pas a powerful crew of cadets 14-12 in the second game ofg ams ndvz. ~pule ve i te hrdqurtrga in honor of Mr. James Sawyer, the series. Why?-the loss of the Big Three championship both thoseave o. top he-oppoi- nd the 'engage in a seesaw who was for many years Treasurer years owing in large part to injuries incurred against the -Axmy.

th' ait~asHavad' alwelMonvs, ad Bfof Atheip tiameyf.Coha' - Now that Ivy League football squads are beyond our level ofR aesring a30dan holweer, prove , toonduc 'fortn- death the foundation seemed ade- competition, what's left to us? Tufts, Williams, and Northeastern:

' s or.ifg -0,and wver , ove d torosh'xpor from quate, but, because of advancing granted, but who can deny that the replacement of Bowdoin withe 25gme af littler aoint$ bend toseleaedby costs and the desire' of the admin- Lawrenceville wasn't a universally applauded- change? Andover. stu-

enseand~anlgt te dro-thenofhegm inousor istration and of the Committee on dents have always worked up more enthusiasm over competition inio~~j~ ge the dein te - oer could inotr ope Musicals to secure the best artists, volving other secondary schools -than they have over that involving

thenebhotitigmn-Adoe ould wihthotewHmphr oe the School has supplemented the college freshmen while I've been here. Who's eer heard "What do we ewer roblmwtb~te sie bltz. AtNtew fasina rbzer n- gat in recent ears. eat, what do we eat-Polar Bear meat!"

teams n ~ts chedue - ive found. tseo the fialouz r t Taking place next. Friday even- Up to this point, I've dealt mainly with college competition inIed ou 6-57-sclore th shnrt te 3tAnual Concert willend__of __a _______7_______ begin at 8:15. Tickets, which have case of victory. Now let's turn to basketball where college freshmen -

_always- been free not only to( the again make up a rg6 part of the schedule with far less happy resultsLLAGASH- - ' j~~~airtjgan9S students but to the faculty and and see just what it's done for the sport. Aside from makting it an

N E'TRISlIformation desk at G.W. Seats, most popular winter spectator sport. Naturally no one wants to watch

hitewae,o rane - P armacy however, will be reserved. a team lose-'all the time even if he does live in Philadelphia, and thewek.ater o M- fla euti that i people while traveling between hockey, wrestling,

12.19e-Lkr: 2tprte "w Phesresultois anyce trips! Limited' en- here your K' ~~~~and swimming merely stop to' inquire how much basketball is losing by.12.19 - W: 2 separte "Whereyour PresriptionsThiis is for the most part true, however, only when Nwre playing cl-ees Biase am p:e n - - aeKor

9,etroilng-a "aeri ca-'ar ah~ways u first lege competition. At this point, one might interject the value of stiffre-colormvis 35 swae- cnidrtin BiC competition, but it must be pointed out. that the line between a hard-

once!2. B ., 0 S T 0 fought losing battle and a demoralizing mear is often very, thin. Our

ERT. COCHRANE Phone GR *6* last three basketball losses to MIT, Bowdoin, and Harvard resepectivelyPY Hoiiow~~~~~~~~~Road -' H ~~~~~~~~ ~~~ I would class in the latter category not because-of.anyting a player

Avn,- Conn. 66 MAIN ST. ANDOVER (Continued on Page Six)

Page 0 iflflpian J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~anuary23

Outing Club ~Peace Corps. 'Dear LiAr' Sidelines - -

(Continued fom Page One) j (Contied. from Page One) (Continued froin Page One) (otne rmPg ieof this part was. devoted to more after exercises like pUT-ups, sit- effective because- of this humorous. has said'to me but beause 61 the things whichthose cloey

advaced phn~" ofsIding. Once ups, weighl1-iftiiglhe~ particpates gloss. '-to or reasonably enthusiasi. about thb sport* have saidtoneagain M~u~loc showe&the o in ond-of -tree"aea of 'physical - Another *perhaps -disconcerting Protesea felt that M¶IT, Bowdoirt Conquer Bs~talw

ficiency of Wedeln by demoustrat- challenge. This part of' thd'$ro- characteristic of the play wag the peared, as a head in last week's issue of the Pilp a oing the Mambo, a technique tat gram features'an- obstacle course terrific 'pace it set'; At first there ad-wudhv eoaiigefcBuo h lyr.Ais siralar to Wedehi- but that re- with 40 foot cargo nets, rock- was hardly a break between letters. Wndb-weuld Nae Weorl izin effc-on e plaes ginquires considerably more3 work. climbing ver '100 foot cliffs, and Mr. Kilty specially spoke--at aWesr'NwWol-Dtont "cqusimisThen the Canadian ski champ - culminates in a four day expedi- furious tempo, coining jokes as- over someone or something by physical, mental, or moral folustrated methods of coping with tion through 100 miles of thick, hot if rlie were a mint, and occasionaly own opiuion is that conquer connotes a bard-fought losing

haroscondition For example, jungle. "This part of the program his enunciation lapsed. But this a demoralizing smear as rout might; but if so many, wereis areal strain on human relations"' speed had its effect too. It gave take it as the latter, then that must have been the generalf

he demonistrated JMP Christies, said Mr. Wetmore. - the. impression of Shawes tdra:- duced concerning basketball's most recent losses.which are helpful in crusty, wind- ordinary creative genius, and- wasblown snow. -For skiing through PuertoDRico, was chosen a a site an effective foil for pauses when

bump andmogls, ie sggeted or te tainig of Pece Crpsthey came.' - Even hockey, te undisputed Lawrencevifle champion,,bagkeeping the weight forwiard, keep- volunteers because'- it i a bridge As actors, Jerome Kilty and lost mri-ames this season than it lost all last year. I would

betwen te Unted tete andCavada Humphrey were excellent, its 10-1 rout of the Bowdoin Freshmen was hardly compenaing the knees bent, and using the Lai mre fesacleTheir harrowing pace exhausted back to back losses- to'the Browvn and Hiraad Freshimen. It

pole tohel mantan baanc. ad lnguge frein t Amricnsthe audience more than it affected so much the win-losp record which concerns me, however, as itpolesown h el m wnarm-u balance and laengae oforig touAericanso their fine enuciation and voice-pro- fact that I am convinced other prep schools are catching up to

cise oneshoud ue beore lalm, fiendy. 't i "anemeringjection. It is true that toward the letically. We are no longer the giaiftin size (of school) oiracig, M~uloch oncudedhisnation, with the roots -of indus- edwhnhaad sCmbelwe were a generation ago, and the differences between theracngMcullchconludd is rtry dedand on useducation ee ldthwereesgrwoldkie the voiceshae grewos. hic squeschokierEx

presentation with a demonstration to sped and just beginning to and scratchier, but whether this faiiisw hv n hs. hc uh shosa dxteDof-the five most important combina-, form ideas about the world around was an acting device or a weaken- and Mount Hermon have are hardly so great as we wol liettions used in slalom racing. it. - On such, a country, a sue- ing I cannot say. At all events, Even the small-,prep schools such as Williston, Kent and

cessful '-Peace--Corps- Could.- have the acting was polished and very Durnmer can meet us on equal terms by specialization. No- Alhouh E'e'g bdy'sWedin tefec~ A~o,-the-rugedtereffective. Shaw emerged from the deny that our swimming team and crew have more than ens

wAntahoumoEvryousyas theJohn rurel~eftal arfas and tikr la a brilliant but selfish man, petition where, the first two schools are involved, and howwasn as umorus a theJohnjunges were ideal for the training and Mrs. Campbell turned ut to bet for Andover had it played Choate in football last fall. _X

Jay Ski Movies, the terrific slow program - be a proud yet warm person: anwesvatyuprotohg 6 1cmeiintatemotion demonstrations of Ernie - - -effective contrast,.es atyspro ohghsho optto htwDear Liar was a fitting clfimax to brush' it aside by aying "Boy, I'll lefwe could beat theMcCulloch and the excellent photo- As'-the first cause f accidental to t Celebrity Series of this of my high school team back home.~" More than once Ngraphy. made, up for any other Peace -Corjs'deaths isdrwning," school year. ' aealtaihsusigduadorsc E qud hoo

lackings. -- ~~Mr. Wetmore stressed the eaching -found high school boaters a push-over.of swimming techniques, such as

- ~~ "s-ul~surfici floatilig." Thid 'volin-- - ~teers Were given swimming tests The-purpose of all this has not been to create the impres'

-while ticef up, and learned also to' Andover is something less than it's built up; to be,-but' that

Q14)t ~~teach the natives how to swim in aro i eat our own level is often just as tough and always more i

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