8
Commencement, ... at the-end of the light . LELANaft Volume 26, Number 7 Phillip's Academy, Andover, Ma:4achusetts June 9, 1972 Rydell, Todd, Kavanigh~ To20SnrsG dueFrmP Serve, As Class Prsidents 119t AnulCm ec et YALE CHAPLAIN COFF N SPEAKS~ AT CCALAUREATE Two hdred and fifty lhips stag dinner Scoo1 Minister James Academy seniors were grad ted Rae Whyte served as toastmaster today at Andover's 194th Om- with retiring instructors Jarfies mencement. Acting Headm ster Grew, and Ge rge Sanborn pre: Simeon Hyde delivered the Om_ Vent honored guests. mencement address to the sen ors, The next dathe senioh~ attend- *and Board of Trustees presi ent ed receptiops intheir dormitories Donald McLean presented the With parents nd h6usemasters. diplomas. Afe ining with their parents in Baccalaureatethe Flagstaff Court~ the seniors, along with other members of the The Commencement pro am 9 ommunity, viqved All For Andov--- ~egan last Sunday with' the an ual er in George W hton Hall. The K > B~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~accalaureate service in the ch evening ended wth a candle- are (lef to righ): Jim ~n Chapel. Yale University ca- light Communi nservice in 'the Class pesidents for 73 are(deftloRrighardimin Williaih Sloan Coffin, PA '1 hapel. Th omunion was Todd;, and BIlKavaniaughl Missinig: Kurt Silverman. spoke at the service. Tevdb her of th eno er class ~~~~~~In his sermfon, Rev. C in caan OseA agipaydte' ls delcedmy's yde lsl c 136 votes. He S as deated criticized United States forI gn lorgan ieaanply~lh. hlis daelct am s up e Jack Gray and Chris hite, whb plicy in respect to the Indoc mna . i as next year's class priesi ent. .The received 2 and 22 vote respect- onflict and President Nixon' re-rze class chose DvdS nsna iey.zent journey to the Soviet Uion, The formal omnmencement 'ex- vice-president I other balloting KaaahadSlerinwnte aso mentioning the role the g i- ercises began rdy morning at YalIe C li ila .Cfi Friday, Richard Todd, and Bill loe ls fie natce a ating seniors would have to lay 10:00 with he trdtional1 proces- spkatt Baccalaureate service last Kavanagh I-and Kurt .1ilverman loe ls fie n ae caof in the future of the world., Se ior sion frorn the ell Tower to the Sunday., were elected as presiden ad co- pagfnsigoevt ha ndrew Olsen played the o an steps of Sam el Phillips Hall, seniors t r symbolic diplomas. lpresidents of next yersupper ofjno ie 'nig er the Baccalaureate, accomp y- accompanied b the Clan Mac- The gradu tes received their dip- and lower classes, respectively, ofjno ieCnig g a group of seniors in a spe jal- Pherson Pipe Bnd from Lawrence. "lIomas in f nt of the Addison Gal- Rydell defeated uppe~ Cals Cmetnonhsrcteet- yprepared anthem. After Mr. Hyde delivered ig add- lery of)Am rican Art, and attended Toy, receivig74otf 126 votes in Ryelsae,"I'm, pleased On Wdedy vnn, te ress and pre ented the senior a light b ffet pper with their cast, while in the vie- r~ieta htIwseetdadIwl t eir teddtesno-ac Ity prizes, Mr. M ean awarded the parents inthe FlgstafCut election, Swanson polld63otf tempt to inject political vitality in- 117 votes. addition to~i uis to an otherwise t teIe adap -as spokesminifor the nocls, athetic communit." pwrT Rydell will run all choelt- Todd noted, "Alltiough the 'Pwr Aademic Depa nts T Resw~ch Te c i p P o r m ions. of the position is limited, I will £~4WRR~RE.RU)l a ilP o r m Todd finished farhe -of vice- work towards increasing the priv-p president Ted Maynard in the ileges and respect of the upper Members of Phillips Acade y's English, history, man Wayne Frederick, - upper cla s voting, reci iving 59 class." ' n ahmtcs departments il conduct research Mathematics departme t 1 chairnr.an Richard' .1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~t summer concerning futur teaching proArams, Pieters said that a 'CO Thittee - composed of ]T~~~u. A~~~l-I aDA C ~tS Acting Headmastert Simeon Hyde announced rhatherhatics instructors 3. 'ichard Lux, David JO~~~liL LJT 11. iAIJO ~~~~~~recently. He added that seve al faculty membersIPne'adAeadrWr'nwl otnet r ~~~will undertake research indepe dently. 'research the new math 15- 5-35 course. sequence, I comment~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ commit ~ewill write materials Phllp Ac aysS ate Coozrdinatiofi n . Cmee~ for Math 35 and furthur i egrate the computer dent-aculy Coperaive ad Abot'sTownEnglish instructors Paul Kalkstein, Thoma's inot aruscre. Meeting mt jointly last ursday to examine difficulties in the current MieganburKelly In ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~te thatEgirh stu etsWill deise Scoptencer . ideur -g policy of sm~hool coordinati n. After limited discussion, the group tinani- testu -tha egish sbtde t Eil liake nexepte Fre i S ametAdro n nls I~~~he group pl~~~~~abityi th Enisw langsuage Frchinstructor Dv c 6w mously palsse a e uin which called for distribution of .A student Th ru past rgie si-eksuy o isrd r Dvd Cobb wIl work s. teachers at faculty questionnaire to acertain attitudes concerning the problems of woknthte.,MideuyClgenVrm t 'rannsucr* coor inain. the questiplnaire which is similar to one recently ad- woko h1et.Mdlbr oleei r t Gemnisrco ministered at Abbot, wilt istributed to all PA students and faculty, Hsoyitrcr Harrison Royce will compile JoehWni pls 0acm nysvn ig befole the 6omp!letion of stool. y new materials in the social s iences for use in a school 'students to Germ~ny where they will, par- I i Regulator two-year history sequence w ich the department tipaenthGrmn utadBndPoa. Betsy Fauver, Town eeting moderator, outlined in broad terms has been planning for over a yar. Mr. Royce plans Mr. Hyde noted, "these' r arc' programs have the problems of coordinat onbetween PA and Abbot. 5he asserted that tentatively to obtain material read extensively, bden a wohderful way to ke p the academic pro- 9 conflicting rules in res6ett bcce and cuts made it 'difficult to ~and dlo whatever organization i possible.'He added gram abreast of new educati nal needs." Mr. Hyde achieve- "equalized" coord ntofrsudents of each school. She added, that although hie will Work alon he plans to discuss plans to spehd the summerl working with Head- "Many students, both fro P anAbot, find ft hard to attend classes any problems with acting histo department chair- m~aster-ellect Theodore Sizer dn "long-range plans." in which their regulator sau isdfferent from- '* their classmates, especialin repc o cuts."do n A N O S T I R S Y O D Coop president Bob B tnrte teppeddon SE I R IAS) EY from the chair to elabora e on mnoderator Fauver' staeten, satngthat h believed differences T ~f KRUSE. 'PUBLISH ID LONS "the emphai of educai "of each school preseifted ' '- .- 7j'v19 CL SG F asi to 172CL S IF mor f~arrentl pobl tothe policy of ctu ntsrurin nation. He maintained tha the two schools differed Andov- t er patd ar. Seios Criff in their concern tow~rds e "instructive" and "per:- *Atkue VIe eWqad'Rusl rhm rsdn ftecaso sonalized" nature of educa ion.Atkue k~ woadRselGaah rsdn ftecaso Furhe dicusio o te matter supported the '~.Ae saa tdtemgzn.' 1972, recently announced the enior gift, to Phillips general points of both F ver's and Blattner's as- S ecialtics . ~ cademy. The gift will consis of a sum of money sertions. Lower Steve P chuck commented, "At ~ NI Abbo, eucaionis l e rsonalized; it is less of a Co-editor iaras ommented, to be used to dreate a 16 illimeter cqpy of All Abbot, education is more ~~~~~~~~~~~~"This issue ofEidolons ad much FrAnoeam~ewihSehnMr' push or competitive 'grind than at PA." For.Andoer, a 'o iewh SpenMr' At this point, Blattner proposed the recommen- -senior English course "Ltr eand the Movies" dation for a questionnaire n coordination, especially - ,. htgahr t okwt hi created. in esec t rguatrycoflct. Themotion passed ik :.specialities, s h as 'p rtraits, SO Grhmaddta h without debate land dist,,us ion continued on further we'ol i u h eti-Gaa de htteremaining amount, asp'ects of coriination. ' dividual styles" of money will be used to rei burse the menmbers English ins tiructor Chri opher Kirkland extended y.of the course who. sbet considerable sum his assessmn I fcodina ion to the area of'coedu- in addito~ o the editors, con-, financing the production of he film. cation, com etn hte appreciated the differ- Alex ~iaras co-c ited Eidolons. tiungoEIlooswrseis ences betw~n PA and bot and flt that eah 1" . 'ISteve ButerEd Levy, and Tad 'the graduating cfas~- had originally planned school wa "~~s Ituigt qualities" by remaining Eioo~s, Phillips Academy's Ipren b eirmd i-t rsntt h col' al'~de o coodintedwi~iot fll education. Mathematics suet photography magazine, Sgetam, rA h eith-i a n o- te ocif oha ac t instructor Frn Ec~,however, disagreed that was published asi Friday. The teMocifCchaSntar;he idea pre- Abbot andP erfua entally different. He 'not- magazine, which consists of loose aino ter, ui Prer JffI-ad f sented too mnafI problems. ed, "Neither sc ool is a onolithic as this meeting sheets in a yellow envelope, con- loe ai0er yrndTf, wvuld like to be ieve." tains 44, photogr h taken by School student Aike Magnim.

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  • Commencement, ... at the-end of

    the light . LELANaftVolume 26, Number 7 Phillip's Academy, Andover, Ma:4achusetts June 9, 1972

    Rydell, Todd, Kavanigh~ To20SnrsG dueFrmPServe, As Class Prsidents 119t AnulCm ec et

    YALE CHAPLAIN COFF N SPEAKS~ AT CCALAUREATETwo hdred and fifty lhips stag dinner Scoo1 Minister James

    Academy seniors were grad ted Rae Whyte served as toastmastertoday at Andover's 194th Om- with retiring instructors Jarfiesmencement. Acting Headm ster Grew, and Ge rge Sanborn pre:Simeon Hyde delivered the Om_ Vent honored guests.mencement address to the sen ors, The next dathe senioh~ attend-*and Board of Trustees presi ent ed receptiops intheir dormitoriesDonald McLean presented the With parents nd h6usemasters. diplomas. Afe ining with their parents in

    Baccalaureatethe Flagstaff Court~ the seniors,along with other members of the

    The Commencement pro am 9 ommunity, viqved All For Andov---~egan last Sunday with' the an ual er in George W hton Hall. The

    K > B~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~accalaureate service in the ch evening ended wth a candle-are (lef to righ): Jim ~n Chapel. Yale University ca- light Communi nservice in 'the

    Class pesidents for 73 are(deftloRrighardimin Williaih Sloan Coffin, PA '1 hapel. Th omunion wasTodd;, and BIlKavaniaughl Missinig: Kurt Silverman. spoke at the service. Tevdb her of th eno

    er class ~~~~~~In his sermfon, Rev. C in caan OseA agipaydte'ls delcedmy's yde lsl c 136 votes. He S as deated criticized United States forI gn lorgan ieaanply~lh.hlis daelct am s up e Jack Gray and Chris hite, whb plicy in respect to the Indoc mna . i

    as next year's class priesi ent. .The received 2 and 22 vote respect- onflict and President Nixon' re-rzeclass chose DvdS nsna iey.zent journey to the Soviet Uion, The formal omnmencement 'ex-vice-president I other balloting KaaahadSlerinwnte aso mentioning the role the g i- ercises began rdy morning at YalIe C li ila .CfiFriday, Richard Todd, and Bill loe ls fie natce a ating seniors would have to lay 10:00 with he trdtional1 proces- spkatt Baccalaureate service lastKavanagh I-and Kurt .1ilverman loe ls fie n ae caof in the future of the world., Se ior sion frorn the ell Tower to the Sunday.,were elected as presiden ad co- pagfnsigoevt ha ndrew Olsen played the o an steps of Sam el Phillips Hall, seniors t r symbolic diplomas.

    lpresidents of next yersupper ofjno ie 'nig er the Baccalaureate, accomp y- accompanied b the Clan Mac- The gradu tes received their dip-and lower classes, respectively, ofjno ieCnig g a group of seniors in a spe jal- Pherson Pipe Bnd from Lawrence. "lIomas in f nt of the Addison Gal-

    Rydell defeated uppe~ Cals Cmetnonhsrcteet- yprepared anthem. After Mr. Hyde delivered ig add- lery of)Am rican Art, and attendedToy, receivig74otf 126 votes in Ryelsae,"I'm, pleased On Wdedy vnn, te ress and pre ented the senior a light b ffet pper with theircast, while in the vie- r~ieta htIwseetdadIwl t eir teddtesno-ac Ity prizes, Mr. M ean awarded the parents inthe FlgstafCut

    election, Swanson polld63otf tempt to inject political vitality in-117 votes. addition to~i uis to an otherwise t teIe adap

    -as spokesminifor the nocls, athetic communit." pwrTRydell will run all choelt- Todd noted, "Alltiough the 'Pwr Aademic Depa nts T Resw~ch Te c i p P o r mions. of the position is limited, I will £~4WRR~RE.RU)l a ilP o r m

    Todd finished farhe -of vice- work towards increasing the priv-ppresident Ted Maynard in the ileges and respect of the upper Members of Phillips Acade y's English, history, man Wayne Frederick,

    -upper cla s voting, reci iving 59 class." ' n ahmtcs departments il conduct research Mathematics departme t1 chairnr.an Richard'.1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~t summer concerning futur teaching proArams, Pieters said that a 'CO Thittee - composed of]T~~~u. A~~~l-I aDA C ~tS Acting Headmastert Simeon Hyde announced rhatherhatics instructors 3. 'ichard Lux, David

    JO~~~liL LJT 11. iAIJO ~~~~~~recently. He added that seve al faculty membersIPne'adAeadrWr'nwl otnetr ~~~will undertake research indepe dently. 'research the new math 15- 5-35 course. sequence,I comment~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ commit ~ewill write materials

    Phllp Ac aysS ate Coozrdinatiofi n . Cmee~ for Math 35 and furthur i egrate the computerdent-aculy Coperaive ad Abot'sTownEnglish instructors Paul Kalkstein, Thoma's inot aruscre.

    Meeting mt jointly last ursday to examine difficulties in the current MieganburKellyIn ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~te thatEgirh stu etsWill deise Scoptencer . ideur -gpolicy of sm~hool coordinati n. After limited discussion, the group tinani- testu -tha egish sbtde t Eil liake nexepte Fre i S ametAdro n nls

    I~~~he group pl~~~~~abityi th Enisw langsuage Frchinstructor Dv c 6w

    mously palsse a e uin which called for distribution of .A student Th ru past rgie si-eksuy o isrd r Dvd Cobb wIl work s. teachers atfaculty questionnaire to acertain attitudes concerning the problems of woknthte.,MideuyClgenVrm t 'rannsucr*

    coor inain. the questiplnaire which is similar to one recently ad- woko h1et.Mdlbr oleei r t Gemnisrco

    ministered at Abbot, wilt istributed to all PA students and faculty, Hsoyitrcr Harrison Royce will compile JoehWni pls 0acm nysvn igbefole the 6omp!letion of stool. y new materials in the social s iences for use in a school 'students to Germ~ny where they will, par-

    I i Regulator two-year history sequence w ich the department tipaenthGrmn utadBndPoa.Betsy Fauver, Town eeting moderator, outlined in broad terms has been planning for over a yar. Mr. Royce plans Mr. Hyde noted, "these' r arc' programs have

    the problems of coordinat onbetween PA and Abbot. 5he asserted that tentatively to obtain material read extensively, bden a wohderful way to ke p the academic pro-9 conflicting rules in res6ett bcce and cuts made it 'difficult to ~and dlo whatever organization i possible.'He added gram abreast of new educati nal needs." Mr. Hyde

    achieve- "equalized" coord ntofrsudents of each school. She added, that although hie will Work alon he plans to discuss plans to spehd the summerl working with Head-"Many students, both fro P anAbot, find ft hard to attend classes any problems with acting histo department chair- m~aster-ellect Theodore Sizer dn "long-range plans."in which their regulator sau isdfferent from-

    '* their classmates, especialin repc o cuts."do n A N O S T I R S Y O DCoop president Bob B tnrte teppeddon SE I R IAS) EY

    from the chair to elabora e on mnoderator Fauver'staeten, satngthat h believed differences T ~f KRUSE. 'PUBLISH ID LONS

    "the emphai of educai "of each school preseifted ' '- .- 7j'v19 CL SG Fasi to 172CL S IFmor f~arrentl pobl tothe policy of ctu ntsrurin

    nation. He maintained tha the two schools differed Andov- t er patd ar. Seios Criffin their concern tow~rds e "instructive" and "per:- *Atkue VIe eWqad'Rusl rhm rsdn ftecasosonalized" nature of educa ion.Atkue k~ woadRselGaah rsdn ftecaso

    Furhe dicusio o te matter supported the '~.Ae saa tdtemgzn.' 1972, recently announced the enior gift, to Phillipsgeneral points of both F ver's and Blattner's as- S ecialtics . ~ cademy. The gift will consis of a sum of moneysertions. Lower Steve P chuck commented, "At ~ NI

    Abbo, eucaionis l e rsonalized; it is less of a Co-editor iaras ommented, to be used to dreate a 16 illimeter cqpy of AllAbbot, education is more ~~~~~~~~~~~~"This issue ofEidolons ad much FrAnoeam~ewihSehnMr'

    push or competitive 'grind than at PA." For.Andoer, a 'o iewh SpenMr'At this point, Blattner proposed the recommen- -senior English course "Ltr eand the Movies"

    dation for a questionnaire n coordination, especially - ,. htgahr t okwt hi created. in esec t rguatrycoflct. Themotion passed ik :.specialities, s h as 'p rtraits, SO Grhmaddta h

    without debate land dist,,us ion continued on further we'ol i u h eti-Gaa de htteremaining amount,asp'ects of coriination. ' dividual styles" of money will be used to rei burse the menmbers

    English ins tiructor Chri opher Kirkland extended y.of the course who. sbet considerable sumhis assessmn I fcodina ion to the area of'coedu- in addito~ o the editors, con-, financing the production of he film.cation, com etn hte appreciated the differ- Alex ~iaras co-c ited Eidolons. tiungoEIlooswrseis

    ences betw~n PA and bot and flt that eah 1" . 'ISteve ButerEd Levy, and Tad 'the graduating cfas~- had originally plannedschool wa "~~s Ituigt qualities" by remaining Eioo~s, Phillips Academy's Ipren b eirmd i-t rsntt h col' al'~de o

    coodintedwi~iot fll education. Mathematics suet photography magazine, Sgetam, rA h eith-i a n o- te ocif oha ac tinstructor Frn Ec~,however, disagreed that was published asi Friday. The teMocifCchaSntar;he idea pre-Abbot andP erfua entally different. He 'not- magazine, which consists of loose aino ter, ui Prer JffI-ad f sented too mnafI problems.ed, "Neither sc ool is a onolithic as this meeting sheets in a yellow envelope, con- loe ai0er yrndTf,wvuld like to be ieve." tains 44, photogr h taken by School student Aike Magnim.

  • - j PHILLJ A . '4~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    Page 2 THE HIL AJune 9, 1972

    laugh at the incident and oursel es after it was.

    The I IPIAN I ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Husernastering ws treat oltefirst order.As the beneficiaries of Andwver's academic No mere lck of discipline cases c utd give a dor-

    ~cellenice; we can gratefully I ~ave PA .as en- m tory the positive' cohesiveness hat we sharedDAVI DWSceidividas notnaey-h h he po- in Day Hall South thjs year. The i habitants there

    President sdARTPIUR WI~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~kER riv sd of the experience was often clouded by havye ben cooperative and inter sted in cothers.

    STEPHnEN itSU EdAN i NtAYLR e negati e effects, of student-factilty tension as M st of aill, they wvere willing to t y gettiig~ alongARTH61RWINTER ILLIAM KAPLAN Well as byiacuity condescension nd sudent self- , with their neighbors.Business Matl aker Spr Idto

    RICHARD PITH ICK ~~~LLIAM GIFFORD righteousness. ~I feel a greater admiraion r members ofExecutive E itor -Associate Spor-ts Editor The eents of tlii year, one (f PA' most tur- th? dormitory for- their'm~istakes~ 'ndliubsequent

    John We stbrool: ete eck Iblnhv eioie h nu ou problems chnefor their pleasant and p i~ eAmulsant Editor Photo Editor, bchnhaeeptmiedesentru isitilVe attitudeAlan Jewkes Iave Dorsey plaguing te campus. Room sear' hes, andalism, in he ae uihet hna hybe

    L hlAsitanlt Edit'r! 'ISports Phortog~rapher hedul hf ftect L n fc fpnsmn . 1 na Ie1 beP~lKemp -Steve Rooney hdobetefofhectrecoids, l qstionable sp te s year long, because they.hi '1k met correc-Brad Hart F eter Shanholt

    Advertising Aadlager Advertising Manager yesardmy-last year in a eesfattacks pip en.circulation A*'onager Cir~'uiation Manager ~ '1d!.ry actions by stuidents d' faculty*'sacchIhrCirculaion anaer Ciruta~,Sti Afanagr Assilnrato~adlsl, tuet~iomr, t~ 't accept ac nly ouel-rd oBill Crawford Fritz Drury I Imes hetotprstdnsbcm

    rmaEdi aroois BOARD I'di ls a inse oeof th mnost dra- a nd relaxed in afternoon athletics nid their~ieadyC. Agee, W Gnile, Hadcn, R. Hirsh, matic' eliminations of rules and requi eents in acceptance of me as a guide bot surpriseo! and

    'r. ,~nagh, A. 1. rz~cr, NI. Savitihe schodl's history and still out'sideirs would not shook me. I wa's surprised because~ Coop meetingsBUSINESS BOARD d~~~are label ours a hapy cormunity vhre con- an1 stdn-aulty committee parlees dont eem&E. Ba on. ' .. I toidiaeIhsbId t ivlvd

    piliation and understanding are te rule. The prob- tincaehsproay-ue t er sionsinovdfem evidently lies much deeper and dos not der- I was shakpn because this sudd nlyma me

    On behal 'cjf tb entir chool cmmunity he- iveexclusively from the alleged natUiE of today's a are of how little I knewv about ~cinie sportsPLLPJAN vishes assi tant eno tiet aere naibeyuh In the Af-Ani Society I noe being less

    froii mFG his a, (IL s cknd uneventful-r- J' Presently, there, exists on campus a sense of of a leader than an advisor in, t& true snse. covery Lro hi ferlssglroeheponles.n frequently BI ck sttrdents have taken a grea deal of iitia-

    ~'landerous actions of student info'rmei s Far of ti e this year and more,- positiv roles i the[he facultyl remains a necessary' anI accepted -sc ol as a whole. Or relationship has been very

    'eeetof rulebreaking. Treachery fr 'ni fvihillf naturally, because we share psmlrast7M O ner' ndovei' ihough, is detrimental in its stimulaticnjof suspi- an a future of necessity: Here w mix bsiness

    cion and tension among stud~nts.jlf th( faculty in ani pleasure into a lend'of life t t require~ theIcant ~lp it hin g, s Iloo bac upn ay wy wshe toimpove he i utio -nxt ear co stant mees fsea ntef of lauhtrthree years s.pLn at An over, that I've led a anfuhe1 tesabimntoanttdco- or emi-serious verbal assaults. P inst and ears

    pretty prot~cte existenc. Let 'me ju~stify' my muiyiI ei ysedat~ sIngt be ome bearable only as we und rgoth tostatoment.cept.tipsel-o these perhaps. Wiell-meaning but ke her. , f'

    Andove i ha spoonfed us everything it has to nonetheless destructive informners. And what does all this -have t o with beingofrIthas an verlywtfueeonsmkg If the chool wouldstr to ',ac pi- mium Black at Andovdr. Well,\I don't thin ayone nedssuetha wedo nothing t get out of line. It~has starrderlatosure that w~~~~ dec ~ ~ should ~ on the timeless values of 'harmony and u~nder- to beat Andover with its na dequac e nodmt

    many '~~~~~~~~~~R~~~' ~~standing instead of on the tmtiaylc.ain . change, it; i's impossible'that way If &verybodyj'smoke and drin or-not is closed issue, or so the 't2et cud.aeth yeIfIvehda PA-school think. H w many asses we sould att~nd question of morals, futuregn-ain stdns colhveheyp of experiencesIyehdaPAiscaotherncs. d issue. Wats sho ou e at d oldbneinro ndulci see the positive, the enriching; ma be it ud'

    is another los d issu. hat soianner anSI depart withou terevains many need o much changing.should we takel The scho ' ha~ given us its offi- rtii Warren K. Young, Instructor i Mathdm tics''A ~~~~~~~~~~~f usrea.cial opinion~on.t hs matter o. As a matter of fact, 'there' is hardly a' single spect of student life ' Rogr: Col eP 7where the schoo does not ctate the proper be-I I To rds the',F uehavior. - , After two years at PA, I leave w th mixed feel-

    We' complIn bout is. But Ithink our .ktrhuht ings. Although am oo1king-forwarc to next year,complains stem from gilt athe tha m oraut- '.1xilhold many good thoughts abou' the school. t

    the womblike atmosp~ re of this place, e -t h n fm nevifhr rsste osedfiutieaso wreadi undr t, stentsrg.This guilt results the fact that we hal.. been a pleasuret okwihbih

    -' though we think ~veshopI t hrei orao temptation to philosophize over eft rt past and informative papers, to be involved i interestingto feel guilt,r.An 'over is on hell1 of a comfortable opruieswtd.Ornwideail kc oirpast disdussions. It has',been educational to work withplace, and 1hou benodasuc., eperiences into place, crystallizn r eba- epeiene faculty members, and o nmc

    I . Il s'rizewa h m ces so, that all foriner action ielurjfac pepack- "about education. It has been articularly interest-,However, L ag~~~~~~~~~~~~~ed the -same every time. ')h bot e us less ' 't -~lications ae in leavin ~th PA womb Willait be-ing be involved with a commun ty unlike anyL'

    jparadise getting away I l the prep school ta a.t I have known in the pas't.j ''routne? dout t.Life il efr-more unpleas- I hope to keppthe philosophizi m oarini- aesrotiesI fedosevaiost -There ar omany things. w ich might e'

    -I feel are ecessary. said in retrospect, but I wouldpre to lok tt-*all our own decis ons, wht a Blue Book in our My life at PX has been segmented into the four wads the future. Those who will be round ri~

    pockets t guide s alon~ areas of teacher, housemnaster, oa~h, qrd advisor tx e erswl hm citing years~Acade al ndoir as'spoiled us rotten. toteAr-ArericanScey ecii a t I e pect that Dr. Sizer will do ma y good things

    Here, we h~ve a peno 111 good the own rewards and its inherent frustrati ns, and I fo 4Here, en~me 1 Igo facultyt,~ fo-he school. It is with these years in mind hatImajbrity ofwo re riable for consultation suppose I've discovered at least asI11lich as my present three hopes foi- the future o PA.on a p-oa1ee. The m kcullee oih students regar~ding academic discipli an no

    ' .~~ - I ing. OfterL identifying ~~ th a pupilI' It i my hops that communication within PA'sstudent hol eei i~rta Lat most colleges. varnfrlansmiar -tosdr om art willices rNP'agr in plight, Ic.aniremember imla situiinsdr coi tywl n raegety ,suniquenessSo, when you g t a lprfessor in a ina onelec s Pc se aogseo-r shos le h

    ture of 400 students r9ext yea you'll look back at ing my schoolingbetaen 1 ainsteor in otinual- Andover and wonder if y u'l &ier see it so good what I should have done then; as a stud nt I real- clsInatbtenal eleso h crnAndover and won er if ie~er sewhat so goodt doltrI - I- I munity both students and faculty heeareliiagain. The odds a e OU.wn ~ tation'~ in such 'a ceyk i cIbto

    So we should 'tig leavese Fo Mypostio is byntrunique I m actual- tlsl ntcni ntbto ex~~c ~ ing~paradise. For My position is, by natlire, I the wkol the possibilities for- diague' are i~' we are leaving 4aadse ` l il prepare our ly between to academic exper-iences in the iidst mens7t is my +~e that all line's f communid -

    mealsWho wil makeur tht we sudy fo qf a hird, nd wha I 'gan in dn hei- tion ill be ~ thata inorpedecimelsWhowil u tht e sudyfo ofa tir, ad watI 'ainin ndrst, iother tin. e oene -o tat mrnprfet t '~~~~~~~~~~~~~. q I Itests? Who will make surge ke eexercise enough? V'carry with me and cher-ish. - murnity might come into being.IWho will make sure that a a plica 'ions for grad- trau'sasbenycoat

    we'll be on it mnt not 1%all w~ ~~ ~~iheclsse -wil sylefbth and upf-buate school-orois are in n ime?' For the first icst alwenItsmyhptatP wllf{ rdsuottime, An -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~wihstudents. The cls ei-e lgidcaio bthi ndouyo

    one big pai-ty. ur own. ig - ~~~joyed an exc~ianqe of jokes, ' Igu'e, and "larom' I do -ma to pptif rize education,ideas that ae a part- ofg-wngEv our con- I do mean to adjust eucation'-5q at it can ee

    -' '-~~~~~ D~a d Schwartz, PA-'72 flicts have ~raw~n us close e-ue couId - (Fonti ed On Page T)-

  • 1 -

    June 9, 1972 TH H I LL IP IAN _ _____I Page 3

    (Continued rom Page 2) Ia ol hich is canging so r pidly around us. Levels; of ex-LE T R T H EDT R'/r

    cellerice ca temitained, b tthey can also be expressed in To the Editors of The PHIL~.IPIAN: hevolutionary Gvernment (far mo~e legitimate and;varying ways. Though -faculty wives seldo Write to the popular than th Saigon gove m ,t even among

    - ~~Phillijpian, I must speak Qt again t the inaccurate, most anticmnists); they are helping their'Finally, there is much t k among students of how bad misleading analysis of the Indoc'h na War by Mr.-, southern Vietna ese brothers defend themselvesthings are. Some f this. talk is based in fact, much of it is William B. Macomber- which was so thoroughly- against the Sg n regime a tl~e American i-

    nosese. If the students are to take a share in. running this 'reported in The PHILLIP1IAN of ay 24th. vaders. Mr. Mac mber's 'descriptiprn of the peoplenonse i~~ I tea6h Asian history, inclu ing In6dochinese of South Vietnam a~ in dangers of eing taken overlshool, which I thi k hey should, then they must be' careful histoi-y, at a nearby college. At I ast seven years and executed by te people frqn t e north is absurdtoattachthat which is of fun( amental importance and forget ago lrealizdd that a basic knowled e of VietnAmese - typical of -My. Nixon's ,explaitation of an ill-in-colonial and post-coloniall histdry plus the ue f- formed, frustrated American ublic. Both northernthe inorirritants. a few sound, decent guidelines f r U. -S. foreign and southern Vie arnese dreI eing. crushed by our -My- best wishs and gre t iterest go outto PA in the policy showed our involvement Vietnam to be 'military machine nd or merc naries.

    My- bst wshesand reatinteest o ou -toPX i the legally, politically, and morally i defensible from Fifth, it is- _t the North Vietnamese but the'future., the very beginning, andl totally c ary to our Americans who-hkve behaved niran'sigeantly at theGrant Mallett, Religion instructor. national inter&~Sts,. unless nation 1i iiterests are negotiating table I spent a eek' last year with

    -. defin~ed as owerand profit for a f w! at the expense all the delegate at the Par~ S Peace Talks, andof humanity herel and in Indochina I1 saw this cleary For exame e, prisoners of warPost Ei~~~~ra nate 'Year -- Mr. ~~Let me state a few of the hist rical facts which are neveqr releasyd until after, a 'a soe. The-Post Gra uate Year Mr. ~~~Macomber- has chosen to consider irrelevant: ` American' negotiators know is, but ~xloit the'I. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~First, the United States' lea ers deliberately issue to make t edfenemy I k' iiansigeat: (NoThe ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~destroyed the internationp) Genevz Accords of 1954 mention is mrad ofthe mnhotqsands of military '-

    Tepost-grad ate year s a very solid and worthwhile by setting up and underwiiting t e Diem g overn- iand civilian ietnarnese lin A merican-financea'program. There a~ many r asons to take a year after corn- Iment in South Vietnam and by pre nting the legally.I Saigon pions) Also, a cease-f e without a political

    pleting highschool and efc~,re entring colleg. The posts Promised elections in 1956 which w uld have unified settlement withd rawing a tierican support fromVietnam. ~~~~~~~~~~~the illegally eeq ed Thieu re irle ;s an unacceptablegraduates that I m famili r with, including myself, have ,Second, since 1954, the United tates government and phony pea e. The Ameni~an negotiators know -

    come to, PA wih a~ definite rjason in mind, either to get into hag interfered with he sovereigi political rights that, too. Andsitge. / -a secfi inttut n rt rrf eti unterlvs of the Vetnamese nation, has spoi'sored unpopular, Jean-Paul atedsribed our Vietnam policy,havetakn. et t admni atin des ot cnsierthefact repressive puppet military regim s in Saigon and as a clear case of imperialists enocide, comparable

    that the PG has gr duated f om heihigh school process. The millions of Vietnamese, Laotian, and Cmbodian ge n oc ide a geeaion ago.. Sit ce it is obvious thatschool does not all w us a more freedom than a regular citizens. This policy of imper'ialis. aggression has Mr. aob supports this policy, I find it -£ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~been cloaked in cold-war terminolo y and 1984 nv- trmydiq ting that he sould be chosen overseniordespit the fct that ost PG's are over eighteen years speak. thbsnso other alumni to be this year'sold and are full citizens in t e eyes of the law. To force us to I Third, Mr. Nixon's "remark ble record" is Idistinguished lum'inus of Ph ipsAcad my. Is. thisre-experience the ressures of being a senior, especially in -earbechflfoitcnstnysnce Dier elytew ae ede hte students of

    terms of cllege a plcation , i not only nfair, butalso un- ien Phu in 1954. He then advised t e use of nuclear -Phillip Acadtmy should Idok p to and follow?weapons to crush the Vietmin , ignoring the - A dstin ished PA alurtiris 'should reject an~r reasonable. The sc ool mu tL now recognize this fact if the evolution and strength of the Vietmeenioast ]peltofleatriots ndaScooyfone

    -- PG program is to ttain a geater level of achievement. - independence movement under the leadership of H.- on death hshould dernand an immediate, totall~hiMin. Nxonremained a super awk during t o he go t e ny of 1Andochi a and useless deathMy own pei~o al com lint, afterliving her for one lennedy and Johnson administra ions, citicising. and injur fmricans, ther ; he should demandyear, is tht the p rpoe of the aademy is no reflected n them fornot bombing hard enou h. He, posed as a return thealthy foreign nd domestic policies

    its disciplinary, act ons. As far as I can discern, the purpose ,a peace candidate in 1968~ Since thei h e has steadily based on t efine principles f the Declaration ofof this school is to prepare students for later ffe, toLt teach expanded the war in the whole o Indochina. His - Independen , the- Constitulon, , the power of

    * ~~~reduction of American forcds to make the war Congress, nd the spirit ant laws of the United them the real and- busines end of living," not t roott less visible and less expensive at homnel has been Nations. H shoudug Iall~ dents to realize thatboys cruel ~~~~~~~electronic - the "wagig of peace" is th I torder of businesshealthy community. Many boys air war and by the forced recruiting of overa in Amen ; all Americans should protest non-

    - --havp ben eple ti r tyfrbekn ltn million Vietnamese into the Saigon army equipped .violently nil this obscene ( r is over. He shouldrulds such as drinking, smo ing marijuana; and breaking ad wt h os osi~edW Liepn ~kl hir -ug tdntaIF.toe, stomka"pge

    entering - man ifriore th n ave been f~rce to leave be- fellow Vietnamrese Vietnamization like paying for peace, l overhecj try and especially inyour victims to do your raping a murdering for the hallslof Congres' so t cn o onerbcause of academic trouble. The school has gathered' together you, and stai-ving them if they wo 't comply). The the sanct ary f arnger wtan nrofloner.bI I nd war profiteers.~~~~~~~~y 'I a very impressive rmnt of bright students. If one goes recent intensified bombing and mining is merely FIna a disttnguished alumnus of Phillipsastray", while at s hool, the administration should take the Ithe latest escalation of the Americaij blood-bath. Acadelm 'shouldtireflect a wise regard for the lessons

    "i~eal' wrld, nbt Fourth, Mr. Nixon's pan for a "decentt, respec- I of and ave an ~bdrg reverence fo lie.responsibility to h p him prepare for the tablelcceptabepeace really m ans complete 1-fis r ig teousfury at the resent shocking per-~kick him ou n aemters more unreal 'for both the Americain victory and pltclcintrol in a per- versio ofthe American ream should be matched'student and the sch ol. If omeone makes a m istake he should mranently separate Sout Vit amaswl as by his reatve efforts t est lish justice and truelI

    I learn t accept he responibility hat it enails andhe must Americaii hegemony in1 all of Iindochina outside de moc acy, so that suet an be proud of their(-'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ North Vietnam. M io n h etgninr count- and have he

    - do it in thecommu ity in hch he erred. the fundamental fact thiit the norihern~lrs in Viet-but the entire cho I mu~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ nam ate riot the inv~ders bu, ave very right - Caroln Brdman Rees,I

    ask the r ae 's forg eness in te author'sIugce to be in the southein part of theiir own country. Assisa r essor of Asian Historybuttheentre ODImusbe spoken of when discussing an They a there by invitation ~ h ProvisionalBrdodCl g

    aspect of it. -''-- ~~Steve Blutter, PA '72 -- -

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  • Pag 4 HE ,H L P A Iun 9, 197

    * eitm IiwuhriHenry Robert Ander~ien Robert Al NicholsonTimothy Bronk Ban~rloft 1David Frederick Epstein Edward M rtin Pratt

    Shol Year A road'Aadm H. Gerard Bissirlger, III Morgan F. Fiaherity, Jr. Thomas L. aleigh, IIINine students from ~'ilps Academy and four from Abbot MaAHetrBrwadToe Mr 'ec½

    will participate next ya int e School'Year' Abroad (SYA) programsserBow hoa Mr Fjee Alastair G.-L. Ramsayin France, Germany an, Sain, ~ccording to SYA administrator Edad Thomas Eckels t~rown Ru~ssell'Dale, Graha Richard Rath

    Hars Aogwthsul~tsfo teto te posrn shos Bruce C.- Bruckmann Richard Ste'ven Green Ricdhard Alan Remis!PhilipsExeer fdStPaul's Shoas well as other schools, the 13 Gerad CrtiPhillps Ext~eraz~d natie faili~sand tte ~ classes hichtar B rant Nicholas John 'deyJohn Hack tt Rieger

    participants will live w natf t e'untry atI DaelamsosesdJon arwhttiesAlxade adrchrconducted in, the langu -o h o ailHrrpo ~dJh ant Hs lxne adShr

    PA upper I'a nFaw et and lowers Roet Bagnall, Stephen Brody, Marc D. Chardox Charles Walker 1-eywood Douglas Gtant SpaethPeter 'Lombardi ,Patri~k Morasco, Hwr Sklar, and John Stephen Craig W. Christensen William John Hoffman, III Richard C. Spurgeon, IIIwill attend the SYA scho in ennes, France. Abbot senior-mids Sarah Jsp ai rhrHihTmtyHrca tvn

    gram. RbnEsn ~~*ae ilas ~iiae ntepo Roger Bryan Cohen ' Timothy N~te~ Kaiser Douglas Robert Suisman4Inaddition PA lows Miciael Cameron and Christie Leverett, and James Makni Cafr Bruce Robert Kratis Gordon K. T. Sze

    Abbot junior~ Beth Polelbum vill study at the panish SYA school in DogaIdadCiclwEaBarcelona. Lower, Paul' Picket, will be the onjy Andover st~dent lbat- IxnerD~k Watetend the SYA~progran i Ha over-Lagenhagen, Germ'any,) next year. AtxneDeclolno. WatrLeo Maroney, Jr. Alden Wentworth Watson

    Wildern. ss Workshop II ~ ~ ~ ~ 'William Kpith Durfee James Firth Martin Douglas J mes WestbergDirector~ of Special Activ ties Barry Crook will cod, ct Phillips ________PhlpErMoeJhn er nkZnon

    Academy's secornd "Wi derness Workshop," a!f It Search ~'nd Rescue Chsta R.HEie ess_______________* ~~program, from June 1 to Jun( 2. The Orogr-am Vill ake PIce at Red- HA D A E

    ington, Maine, a town 15 mile, south of the Canadian border. 'f~ 'tk ormerly . R. Hill HardwareIAccording to Mr. Crook, 12 participants, al PA instructors, 'will -"Everything ractical -

    work in many Search anfd Rescue activities such as canoeing, hiking, h ~ sPnorthern branch of Maine's D adRiver~ Mr. Crookas, pasatw-o p bW Mi of litter, 5Mi tetAdvithree day mountain expedition orthe teachers.

    The participants include Director of College Placement Robert Hul-burd, Aliumt~i Secretary Charl s Smith, art instructor John MacMurray,chemistry istructor) Thomyas Rees, Cassics instructor Vincent- Pas- KN EHPHoitsma, and Alex Warren, eligion instructor Frederick Pease, and Teaching FIllow in an! and Sodiety i'effrey Melameal. Glen Bastion,who will come toArlover n xt year as a biology instructor, will ac-company the group -T Op oGordon, yde ssue Condemnations , -SCHOOL SOPPLIES -Of Recent AA bot Midnight Attacks TYPEWRITER

    In-rsos't seisf early morning ranks by Abbot and SALES And SERVICEPhillips Admysuents las week, Acting Headmaster Simeon Hyde .and, Abbt PicplDonald Gordon issued separate statements of .IV

    warning to, the Andover an Abbot student bodies, condemning the -77 MANSTREETIn the memo isued Sat rday afternoon to Ie -PA tudent body, .ANDVR MASS.

    Mr. Hyde commented, "I a concerned about t e posilility that PA and Abbot studen&b may b tempted to conti ue teexchange ofnighttime visits tol each oth rs' campuses." He added that that the Next to the Post Officeschool would "regaM~ the presence of PA studeints on the Abbot campusafter legitimate v siting o rs as an absolute y intolerable breach

    In his statern nt, Mr. ordon sta ted, "I hav Leyconfidence after tound-trip its sIIu dumpr And less bottlesa ~ y eeylife. That means less tII s to littenng the highways H tG~\'thatr-you will observe requisite restraint from w through the com- H RIA 'pletion of the school year, in the interests of our wishing to cooperate S u o~.o nrt~nbebtlswith PA and, most importantly, to avoid even idire'ctty contributing So tuy aretenbleottlesto a difficult situation for an~ PA student." o~er he evarone t

    During the wek, Abbot students staged a raid in retaliation toJjthe May 27 prank on Abbot cademy,, entering s veral PA dormitories

    -early in the mor ing of Ju e2. Following tha, raid, approximately BdWiWW11*a .cV-YyA, 1itOAIA Wr,-rI M. INc 6 A NOE75 PA students eturned t Abbot in a couiter-retaliation which66M I!TANOE-limaxed when a picture Wi dw in Chapin Ho se was broken. The ,.-- -girls' school, at hich time more propet wadamaged and policeaid was summoneq. perty_____ wa ________ /

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  • *June 9, 1972 THE- PHI [Ll I :1A age5

    P Le~~~~~~~~~~ro ss Overwv eImns Exeter, 18 The Andoveri var i a rosse team routed a check, as hey coiitiiuou y iecovcrcd ad cted

    weak Exeter squad, 1 -7, fi ishing its season with the l4all well. Al Senior w s artictil aily tronga 6-6 record. ~With tIe, sco e' tied at two apiece on defense, as was midifielder B ruce Briuck ann.

    -halfway through the first eriod', captain Kevin lBruckmann's most iportan~ role in the. me,McCall ignited a o'u goal coi'ing spree, with his however,' was on offeiise as he led the A ovprsecond of seven goal in th gamne, to supply the midfielders to their finest hewing of te year.team with a subsata, tal I ad lthat remained un- Bi'uckmann also' added hree goals to the bai rage,challenged throughout the re 'to he gmp. lifting bis 'total to eleven.

    With :47 one in the o ening period,' the rally - McCall Tallies S,-en Goals.~began as McCall soo1 eup loe ball from behind Captain McCall accounti d for sven. of the

    $ ~~~~~the cage, njoved 'in front, arid fired it over the eighteen Adover goals, raisi g his s easonto I o- ~~~~~~' -~~~~~~ ~~~~ ~goalie's shoulder into the n . Scott Clemson soon 31, six goals higher than' last year's scoring le der,

    followed with his eigh hI goal of 'the season, bouncing Gregg Meserole.: Also contribL ing to the'attck wasin shot off a ass from Craig Reynolds. Three ~.Scott Mead - who gath~ired our assist ahd twon'llnutes later McCall upped the score to 5-2 on a 'goals, giving him the. scoid highest overall ointwrist shot fror in ront o the cage that eluded total on the squad. Rou ndig out the scor-ing for the'Exeter goalie. B b Joh son added another goal the attackmen; weri Craig Reynolds and ayearly in the second uarter, as he took a bunce' Stecker. Reynolds tal lied twc goals and oe a ist

    * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~shot tat Went into he up er ight corner. I~rZim while Stecker colfected~ n assist and 'ag al.'this point o, A coas ed to n easy victory. , - Reynold's 'two goals lifted hm to third place on

    Bluc ominates Ploy 'the , scoring list with tu' tee goals for the y r.The Blue domina ed p y throughout the game Kevin Dann scored hII first oat of the season as

    as' it tdutshot tie! Re fort)-three to eighteen. The he quicksticked in a p,s 'fr Stedker.team played 'rogressively better as the game- PA thus finished Iths sea onl at 6-6, the xv ist continued, climnaxihg its attack in the'fourth quarter record of an Andovei' lcro se team in the IStby outscoring the ed 7-2 and outshooting them 16 years. With five. retluirning6'taiters and an~r er

    Upper Sco t Mea (1 1ale w! ol n four assists against Exeter fourteen to five. ITh' defersemen and midfielders of promising lettermen,, the Blue. hope to ret rnto finish the ye.r as te lacros! tam's second leading scorer, did an excellent job keepirg the Exeter, attack in to the limelight next year.

    O'Connor ins ifth ame. 7 rack Rtouts Exiee, 83-4

    -. *. Base all Downs- Exeter, Lawri eTFnshYa ih7iMr1Saturday, e3, Anoe r- Capping off an ex- 'With Hall at first ad one out, Stanw od and Tak- '

    cpellent 10-2 season, he vars ty baseball team routed vorian hit. back-to-back singles to scc unt fo oneEee,15-2. H-al Stanwoo and Mike Takvorian ~ 'un. A single by Bolduc' and a Rd rror I d to ~ -"

    led the seven :een-hiit Blue attack with four and two more runs, while yet another E eter iscuethree hits, res ecth ely,. while Pat O 'Connor ended And a single by Barry Cronin roulght in the finail -a brilliant ind vidu I season by recording his fifth runs of the inning. PA compl~ted thE humiliationconsecutive vi~ftory.l I y tallying three runs in the eighth.

    After O'Connor had surrendered a solo tally in Howes Records Save] the top ofP th~ firs~ in nin , PfA quickly gained a O'Connoir worked the first six inni gs of the amelead in ison half of the first that it never qnd pitched creditably, allowing two rns an nine

    ~relinquished. hedecisivE hit in this three-run hits over that span, while constantly pitchig hisoutburst wa poite-f eld triple' by Rick Hall, way out of dangerous situations. Lev~ I- Wes re ievedwho' thu eedteseas n with a team-leading him in the seventh anZl held Exeter in che k the

    - batting avera of .364. , ~~rest of the way, limiting the Red to usi one hi ovei,the final three innings. The Blue thus nd this high-ly successful season with a six-gamn w nning treak hosF in ~dE hroshv cteP pitr l isnwhich incluides tWo impressive victo ies over Eeter, honF'nn ael h Asrftr lie

    Saturday, June3'Exee-~ocp sec ds, w le he on the ong

    Wednesday, Mdy I31; Andover,- C pit lizing n the OffI thu 'tsccesul prn joi v~ith a leap of 22'6i/2 "'.-4 inept fielding of its opposition, thej vaisity ba eball seao ircetyears, the An- Flenm ng Wis 'T'%sire

    team scored six unearned runs to take a 6-4 ictory dovrariy tak. ta ook its I ti:srns o l inover a hapless awrence High Shoo squa.. An eet 5rih vcoiy b iihdth ao netn shdbyer could manage only three hits, t o by c ptain ciuhigE te 18348 Tle Blue wa victorious in both the 10 andDpug Bigwood and the third by Barney Buppert, but finse th saodwh a 7-1 220 yai'd dhes, wvinningin1.

    sven Lawrence errors allowed P t score three recod losi g ony to t Dart- se n ad2.scosi.pctrun~s i the fr~t 'ining, wo in he ih r , an ne ~n mot freshmen n IS fir~ t meet ive Distan 'e runner Bue of

    / ~~~th~ Sixth, as the Blue recorded its fift consecutive 1Of tesao.an weight thrower,,Mik st.victory. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I ~~ Butler, .'lierson Lead Team too PA's 41y otherl inmdi idual

    Bon, A'sstrtng ith , r eve two of PA'3 prerniar performers in ti~ne of 4:27.3 and Kase awon~layton Bond Ps Rscrd To 3, SaiButhrane Mcpheson, i Wofcp e'tIemerucdtfor the viclory, his third of thes aon a anSt. all season, closed :ut dteir Ani- the discus t hox f1'"

    I ta~~~~~~~o loss~~~~es. Bond, who worked te s ur inins ovrcers i fIn so- A ovrs 8 yard r~clay teamP - .A.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~. ~~~~~~~~ ~~ofjti rain-shortened game (play was halt afte r ings, as hey c ptured three wo the fin Ieeto h me

    seven innings), allowed two runs a dfourht and two fir t pla es. res ectively. in fine tim of 1: 33.5. -

    Dan Bold c ad1 two it in PA's 152 win o~er during his stint on the mound. Hle as r lieved Butler, who has lie ead equaled sac ne atMnE Dete told s thai ao ithe rin bAseal by Lew Howes in the fifth, who was a o only par- the school iecord'it the 120 yard Set a newv lover recoi' Iteml

    I tial ly effective, surrendei'ing two Irun , twc hits, high hurdle, estab tse~aoher roi it Magn h rem arkbed secofdStanwood s ecod~ hit o~ thegam , a double to and four walks in just three inningslof itching. PA reodxihaPIeo nlts ' an n h cdscn

    leftfieltl gnit d a to-run Blu ra -in the fourth 'Bu ae aLe .ad of,201'11" i the 'a elin throw. In acihheoliowreeinning, while consecutiv sigles- by Takvorian le Blue had opened up an early 3-0 lead in the addition to s in n the javelin, 5 break te 4:30 mark. In theand seniors rney Bupp rt aid Dan B4olduc coin- I first inning. Bigwood and Barney Bup) ert Id the Butler also copied firsts n h i ~itJh culhlae

    'bined with ostly Red error to givePA two add-' inning off with singles'- and subseq ntly cored 120 yad hi h hur'dl a d the 880', 6'2 ' to' fini h second in the highitional' runs the sixth. Andover stay~d content with the help of three Lawrence eri'ors ndov r add- yat u i h times of 15,.0 secod or.I Scot: Gillogly anid Lee

    with this lead until the bo tomn of the seve~sth where Ied two more runs in the third, upper Seye hite's and'I: 59.0, respecjtiv ly. In the 440 LMtrray als' tuined i fine per-they clincetl he vidory ~' exloding forsix runs, b~ses-loaded walk accounting for on' h ad Mpeson e dp alarge lead folnes, a'igsxadfv

    stretching thE lead to an invincible 12-2. closed out the scoring with a solo ,tally n the sixth. and glided t roug h he tp e i 50.8 poi ts, respc ctively.

    Fixetei Defeats Andover Golf Blue ar i en beatne ter Squad 1 C~~~~~~~ .jI -J~~~~~~~~~~~- .~~~~~ Saturday, J 3; Exeter- -01 quartei mark of the mile long

    P"A E ds W eak -Season A t 1-6) .Coming ,off J four h p ace finish cot ise thoui h~ Exeter held a slim- .~~ -Ž~~' 4 ~in the NewV gng a dPepSho' hal' at I ad. PA kept up its

    Wednesda a 31; I-averhill- The Blue varsity golf team closed Rowing. 'Ch I pii nhips te'n tor 'td pace oT 38 strokes perits season wtn adsastel-ous 1-6 record as it fell to a wak Exeter ~ 'dover yams i~ r~W asd it mi ut Iand by the half xvay post,squad, 5 2-3V/-. Alhugh PA had defeated the Red earlier 'in a three, winning stre Ikst 'en as t' e putled even vith' the Red.rbund tri-meet, mos of the Andover golfers played poorly and the the ~pe'o yIur beat poEee e t1e th used its home ad-

    r ~~~teamnL lost as a resut I . crew.-Racing wit iougl concdt ons va -9tage thi ughlthe sharp turnsthe 4 ~~Kazicaks, Coyer W~in on the Exit terR ver, the lue

    Iit h E eter match, which was scored on the basis of individual which cosi'ted of cltanndm a ythd oflt uop' ando

    as well as toman team match play, the Blue picked p'two of, its -' Stevens, Alfe Shr, ileins fn I lbed4 i a bito upl afco

    Coyer, each l'mn rom' behind to win their individual matches. The Rocky Taylor, John Cof Crwc~srel bo eve-rAt began andnExeter team, early success in ec of the matches, however, was ' Oirr and coxswain Ma toMavvx eve'an ie Rd, winning 'byenough to giv it the point for team play. .. stroked isIji ~a Z~1 h -fourth5 of a length

    I ~~~~~ ~PA's onl ~ other poin s of the day came from the team of Doug PA E Iveri threeailr' Mayor and Ioward Skla ~ as Mayor won hi's match and Sklar came. -seodahdoiteR.PA i IWih-2.ln

    from ehind, winning two~ of the last three holes, to half his opponent. 'I Dfiut:ourA idever finished, tise year'sThe Bli''s s con t~osemewas completely shutout, however, as both j IWith boh~esge tine, off to sea otf1 ith al excellent '~i-2 mark.

    - .A ' Dave1 ?hase aId JonHslost their matches as well as their team T'he A cress efeait' E 1r to strong strs ~era pr6ved to Nex yeax's squlad, tho ugF, ill beplay p intj raise it', rcecord to a 'tro 7-' mark, be a cet eeth'ugh ut. By the -for'c d' to f ce a rebuilding year.

  • 1~~~~~IW

    Page 6 THE PHIL4IPI N Nue9,17

    1Fleming 'Butler'O PFi'rst, e

    Spots In School i ,e Ball

    In a ree t pol condcted by star ii theFor Athlete f he TiethePHLL poA l ctd steii h spring, he completed linebacker on the f ball tea innwas pringernk co-cstambEthe ~ ~ ~ pot endeAdord\h esnuneetdi he10 tefl, hl ui te tr ro aneceen saonbseason undefeaed in the *~, t,~e La~z, w~i~e u~rin theMcPhero t e wneh e winning the mile and placingTom Fleming coll td 41 out -of and 220 yard dashes, capturing he compiled a stron 9-2 rord, a new indoo ong rpecdan second in t 880 in the In-a psil 10 it to win wins in both events in the In- wrestling in the 16 lb. w ight tied the 50 d dsfmyk c tersr~hols.the Aheeo r a- terschols. class H finished th year with Pherson the elp eImeseyi Cronin lected Eighthward Smbtefnsh seond Butler Captures Second In Poll his best season, lea ing wi h 31 the spring r cksudsdiet Barry Cron n tallied-1 'enough -in th alti ih3 onts, Versatile track performer Sam goals and 6 assists, an Interscho cpi pllonsljip. votes to finish in eighth place. Awhl KvnI1c l dGreg Butler captured second place in Another three spar perfoi mer, Kaz 'Pia es Six quick and hard-hitting, defensiveCr~ni follw~'d n thet irdand the b~alloting. In winter track, he Greg Cronin,' was 'the ourth c olce Alex Kazia f Ilowel 'in the' back on the foztball squad, he ledforth plcs Spetve. equalled the existing 45 yard i h pollDrng hefllh sixth piositio H stablilhed new the team in 'itercentions and re-Flemin~ Fnishe Fi hurdlesi mark with. a 5.8 second was ah Defensies e on the school and nglad -swim- 'turn yardage. Varsity track per-for1 the Blue fri 'three sp rts this impressivevesa inonthe min spring h '0 yad frm er n trackte, asniheaFleming h~sbeeiou tanding clocking. Butler' was even more football squad, whie in the mn eo j h 0 ad fre ntewneCoi afoil the following sethsasonessiveinsproodtractasas backstroke it a emar ~able 53.9 also a fine sec d' baseman on theexc~elld at s~i en fo he foo- anoter. He lazed t a 14.9second rightwing eadn he sod e -second clock addidtoyear. During ef'l se sn he broke one school record and tied ti ncntoinhis baseball team.1 of~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ theh hoke team en I h outstanding w ng ex boits, he Finishing in e ninth andtehbafl team, 'Ieading the quad, in clocking in the 120 yard high year with 17gal to his 'cedt was also cti d number one spots were Buth Frazier and Danreceptions and :otal ~yr In the hurdles and in the final, meet f Cronin a.ni 1sqa.,Cls olu, ese el.Faie-wswi tr, lem~~ ppvedeqully the easn heunlashe a antsticwasals n i ortnt art man nCtroninsqnwaslosaBodncresecrielynFrpartIware Feni rvdeuly tesao eulahda atsi of this year's"'baseba tea as behind 'KaziF came record- a three sport articipant, staftingval ale to th hcey tam. He javelin throw of21l~ obek ebatdteol e- f beking dit e runn r Bruce on the football, basketball, andce'tered the ~e se and line all the existing record by over three the year. I Wolfe. Afte st n a n school Iacr6sSe 'teams while Bolduc not * ~~~sea~on, finisliij ah th~e third feet. I 5rs-euty eOdin the fall, only. J led the hockey team inliad~n cr~~ thle team with Kevin McCall finished third in M~esnTksC eFf of rk e idooT ecord in scori but also played centerfield4 2 a s s~~~~~~~~~~~~s t s .

    u x~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'~26 oals and 2asts A track the voting. He was a hardihitting - Finishing a close fift in the poll teml ntesrnh on th bs eball squad.

    ~prtn ~ Mettaptan Track Sta utle Wi hete Of T e Term.erms ElctCptis j ____________________________ In a recent Pol of t PHILLIPIAN sports- staff by soring seven goals in the- Blu '0s rout f Exeter.Id a recent sem*l, th varsity mewhrheclctdbhga - Sm Butler was vote "he 6f the Spring Term.' ) E Mchro tokfutpaeinhevigteam anno~~ince their winning hits. ~~Amassing one hundred t of possible one hndre as a result 'of his accomplish ents on the trackspr g [em no~ne hi inn is points, Butler outscored sprin ~r Tom Fleming an iteam, of which he is one of the two co-captai s.Incata,-lcs~r~t' cmn Track "ocptains' lacrosse captain Kevin MCC Iinteving, a the lIriterschols, McPherson cap red te 440 yardyeai. Surprise h th v ting oc- 1ith vocurred n the I~cross d trac John ogersonand TomMaster ,the to finihed on s d an third place, espect- run a5d placed third in the 100 y rd dash.teams where t"-captain and co- will co-captpin next spring's track ively.' Brdce Bruckmann, starting midfielder on thecaptains were ~os es ectively. team. Also the captain of the The most. versatile per rmer on PA's track team, -lacrosse team, finished fifth in te balloting. Bruck-cross-country andl wnterl track. BulrwsatrpewnI inthsya' neshl 'manr has been' a consistent perf rmer for the. BlueHeading, next S year s lacrosse squads, Rogerson'l is al ong as he won both hurdle eve s and the 880 yarc all s son, as his all-around p ay has proven toteam will b~ SCott ead, Al distance runner while I~asters, run. Butler was also a sta out javelin thrower; be a eadying influence on the tehm. -Senior, and Dave Ictr. The excels in the shorter races, his amazin toss of 201 11" gainst Exeter brok Hall Fnse isecold lea Ig scor on the The tennis team chose Bill Kap-- the school r co rd. ThE starting catcher ont t .h ealtaRcn leadi J he b seball team, RibckHalsquad, Mead has b -xellent Ian as captain of neIxt a' sud Flmnh coete ig ty-one points in th pal6aced sixth ih' the vtin , just two pointsat ttack all season, while both The year's ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ I bhinsquad.anFlemingledhoe comlwecte .eiat Ittack all co-apai-eecnofthbsuahth was an h major ason for the success of th( behin r~mn al-ldteta iha.6Seni r and 'Vi~tor a e been team , Kaplan recorded? an excel- tral k team . He copped tw first-place finishes bat via e d a r a . r s on ilIooutstanding as starti-g deense- lent 5-2 mark this season while the Interschols in the 0 and 220 yard dashes PrA cell 10- re ord ts year. i Brcmenlor B ue.moigu two spois on the adder events' in which he en udefeated for the year y he'ponswsmieIrcmoving up ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~ ~~d ~of co-captain of the track team. Wolfe finishedakvrian o LeadBa ball to py in the number one pqsition. Fleming also anchoed PA's unbeaten 440 yarc WofCa tain-ele If th bsblIedn nx ya r n relay team. q first n the' Interschbls with a :23.2 clocking inCa am-~ec ofeh bsbl edn etya' r n the mile, ad finishe4l second to Butler in the 880.team Mike k orian a played golf teams will be Bill Keni s and MNcCAll Takes Srong Third Place I- Kazickas Takes Final Spot - 1 e x t -e m e I well fog he Blue Dave Chase. Kerini rowed varsity Finishing just four poin s eind Fleming, McCall, Alex Kazickas, captain of the golf team, roundedyear. Hi ~S t peio rmances crew this season for the second led the lacrosse tea i scoring After switching' out the topleight vote-getters. Playing..in the nurn-dfth s aso mae again t Lowell year in a row, whil Cs i~as rom midfield..to 'attc this ear, McCall had a b er one position for he entire season, wcpue-' High~~ School r u~~ the T~~if s a two-yearltemh brilliant individual ssn wich' he fittingly capped victories i l u w fhsidvda'mths

    MAR ANN'S ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~e .~~n~~o~~er '~~~ ATHLETIE OFkT HlE' E K Visit ad e y .

    CRD YA S . thufh archwayOLJDEANI~~~~~ OVER LAGE ~~~gifts & accessories 'OUR GIFT-.SHOPI ~ ~ , VjI ______ ________________________

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    KEVIN Md L ISHE ATON-ROLLING GREEN-Chapel Ave. Off R e. 28 Tel. 475 5903 - ati ei cals ord s cA OTO INN* i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~oals to lead the Blue Ia'os mn____________________________________ l~ ~~o an 18-7 victory ove E. ter.

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    I -7

  • Exta~~ The PHIL LIPLAN ~~ExtraVolume 96, Nilmber 28 Phiipis Addemy, Andover, asachusetts1 ' June 9, 1972

    ABBOT STEVENS PIZE AASP1 BIERER" PRIZE FULLER PRIZE IMPROVEMENT PRIZE

    Douglask David N. Shwrt Charles P. SmI /hTrot aa mern~er oi the Senior "To a member. ofteSno "To a studen hoiutstai ding 'To a me rber of the Senior "To a member of t e Senior

    Class who through hlis character Class who, through w?rk, pre in character and person lity." Caswo a.igbe tAdvr Caswohsbe ue~a

    ands leersi a ddaig- verance and seeking after excel- noq less tlianj t~wo years, has best .Andover for at least two ears andficant contributi n t the Academy lence, has created foi~ himself a ' exernplified an4l upheld n his life 'who has shown the greatest devel-arid his classm tes." position of respect .andl dmiration andwor athe.nsov the, ideals omn f hrce n shlr

    * r ~~~~~~~~~~~~~in the school commun ity."1 and tadition ofth 0cho." ship."

    KINGSB RY PRIZE LORD PRIZE SCHWEPPE RIZE STEARN PRIZEYAEBW

    * ~~~Thomas LKaegh I Richard K Be~ry John RM~ logh ThUrston 1E rzicr, jrl Bruce C. Bruck ann"To a etude tof outstandidg "To a Senior who during his, "To that member of t SE ior "To a st dent who through "To that, member of he Senior

    character, who n he jdmn f rsdnea htisAademy has Class in recognition of a ] a consciniu ihab o Class who has attained te highest

    ~he headmaster Is especially dis- displayed in' hitj daily acIons and spirit of cooperationa d fi nd- and courageo tsta ~ding chara ter proficiency in scholar hip andtinguished for erserverance and personal contacts a genuinely fine liness." and excellent dejortment, as athletics."

    It~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~admr redypaei cresolution." character. m,de Phillips~ Academy a better

    *1 ' ' ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~to live.- '

    AURELIAN HONOR,*-

    SOCIETY PRIZE *,FACULTY' PRIZE

    ~oa menmber of the graduating "T that member of the grad-cass who, in the opinion of the .uatin cla Ss who during his Senior

    Fac~ilty and1 his classmates, is 'year ttained the highest academic

    outspanding in sterling character, .aver ge."

    leadership.'''

    Williarri H.Pdn, III Douglas E. Critchilw

  • Page 2 THE PHILLIPIA ______ ___ J~ne 9, 1972

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    OVER ~ ~ ~ -

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