6
qi. ekemen Score 104 Political Commentary Record ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Russia See ga~ 4 See Page 2 oJ W 82, NO. 12 .PHILLIPS ACAEMY, ANDovER, MAs. January 10, 1961i ~~i~ij; .i..' I Pbilo matheans Score: Reject Rail Takeovejr LLouis Wiley, Daniel Sazks, and again. Lngdon Wright- representing the! Louis Wiley, the Negative's fiast Pliathean Society, successfully'speaker, agreed wholeheart~ily upheld the negative side of the re-:with the Affirmative's conteniO~n -' ~~ "A ~solution "U.S. Railro'ids Should that the railroads are not dqig Be Nationalized" in the first of xvell. He then demonstrated 4e hlir"c projc ed Philo Pnyx deba es. difficulties and dangers of natioil- E fd Cox, Leonaird Singei- and John ization. First, he showed that gv- Y oung com-prised th Pyx Afirri ernme'it operated r a i r o a d s ative team. World War One were not assa- Ed Cx, Speaking first for the cessful as privatejy-operated rlikl- Affirmative, showed that the rail- roads during World War Two.-Ike - , ~~roads are in a desperate plight. He stated' that the7 government pur- said that the railroads are vital chase of' all the railroad-equiprilt to the' nation, but in spite of that would entail an outlayed twqnty- M. Baron '62 exhibits Polaroid camera pictijres Charles J. Beard 1I '62 (left) and Jonathan M. Baron fact are in financial difficulties. In billion dollars, plus 2 billion 91- rmndgataries including Deputy Chancellor '62 (right) demonstrate properties of liquid oxygen at the debate's biggest understate- lars per ye-ar-for new equipmpt. gErh (center left) and mayor of Berlin Willy Berlin Industrial Fair. meat, he claimed that "the service Although not overly worried aout (cene ih) is oftent'nes poor." He concluded another increase in the natidhal that the way out of the mess is to debt, it was the Negative's 6&- S. Sends Andover Students To Berlin Faierconsolidate the railroads. tention that the debt should ntb Cox's teammate, Leonard Singer, (Continued on Page Five) (h-i A merican Toont'ra~~~r used the Affirmative's right to de-1 rtray Acivities Of eia en rfine the proposal, by stating that 0sn~iono A the railroads mentioned in the re- E t' to f A By George N. Budd I United States Government in Ber- The Marshall House grounds solution did not include communter ly ths fal P.A studntsin in recent years. Over seventy- 'ivere used more extensively than evc H pondouthto-S or Fr m P T L. tis '61P.A Charles Jfive per cent of the' 650,00 Fair ever before and a series of colorful soricetion ited o tNaton- Scor From PS II '62 and Jonathan M. -dmostrtins eredas a magnet ization would be desirable because L. Trvers'61, harls J.visitors saw the "Youth USA" ex- demonstrations-servedoOf196 II'62 workd orathen U.S. hibit, making an attendance record. drawing people to the pavilion. [ the government could then elimi-Of1 6 a1 T r ent inrkan unuua temptS. About fifty per cent of these visi- Among the mnore spectacular of nate the evils of mismanagement By John Levin baknom of urua losteps tors were from East Berlin and the these demonstrations wks the tram- and featherbedding. He also pointed ThUpe-idecastote bac soe o ou lot pes-Soviet Zone of Germany. The ex- pln eon-u'bigprome h pe-idecasto h ~e boys and sixty other hibition opened on September 101b p o reound-eteeblngerformedt out that the railroads would no PSAT tests late last term. The W 9 - cnhigh school students and and closed September 25.' Byr to ofa.theiptengr shen to loilger have to pay taxes, and would lowing material is taken from a gu freshmen participated in Britoprcpaeithexbt.therefore begin to make money debook-for counselors on the 1 rin International Industrial Among the distinguished guests (Continued on Page S lee ordSor Rprtwh- eld September 10-25. About of- Marshall House on opening day contasd dee eplantion on6 the visitors to the fair were wrthFeraRpulcD uyiD isfiiiguished Poet, iM oderi.Qst the estimates of SAT scores from he soviet zone of Germany. Chancellor and Economics Minis- PA crs ter, Ludwig Erhard; Governing PSAT scoreT ad of a dull exhibit of in- Mayor Willy' Brandt, who made' m iari T Lecture T d y "oestimate senior SAT scores machinery, the extremely special mention of "Youth USA"Ij n iT o a from PSAT upper scores, use the UAmprra ehiacad in his speech at the Fair opening; BBenjamiin W. White currently holds. A 'Fellow of the rules of thumb guides given below. USA potryedth acd-President of the Berlin House of Tdyssekri Assembly was American Academy of Arts and- "1. Verbal-Add 6 points to the nd extra-curricular interests Today's speaker in ~~~~~~~PSAT Verbal score and then affix ertrcan urYou. tesoth Representatives Willy Henneberg; ithe Poetry Editor of the Saturday Sciences, he is the director of the azr stetiddgt trated scien e lanuge Italian Trade Minister, Mario Mar- Review, Johni Ciardi. A native of Bread Loaf Writqr's conference in "a mproaste Mirdae scoedi0to hotgraphy la g, tinelli; and the Trade Minister of Boston, Mr. Ciardi attended Tufts Vermont. thExaVer al seci oed 4A in ar lokad , exhibited the Republic of Cameroun, Tsal College. While still a graduate stu- His poems, though difficult at the eleventh grade. 40 ± 6 = 46; art orkandprize winning Kongo. The entourage also included dent at the University of Michi- first glance, lure the reader back afxn eoa h hr ii sof the National Science of theiBerin anrhe wsrewardedihed digit nd oeratd a"ham rIo leading membersofteBri g, hewsreaddth 10 into rereading. The stint in the gie netmtd eirSTVr Featurs of he exibit enateand House of Representa- Hopwood Prize for poetry. In addi- Air For'ce provided much material, bal score of 460. 0-catrtemonstrtionsxhand tives, the borough mayo~s of Ber- tion, he has received five other lbut he fers to write about the "2. Mathematical-Two years of, y-ofrtw heotrtos heGer lin, and civic, business, and educa- major poetry prizes, including the effects of the war upon individuals study. For those who will study eaking members of the -inllaes rxd oe rather than about battle itself. He mathematics in both upper and Press, radio and TV coverage During the war, he became a believes that all poetry should dealseiryaad 9 otso-ie articipated in a daily sym- seioseasadtaoitstlti on a wide range of topics. was extensive and invariably favor- technical sergeant astalgunner in with men; all of his poetry deals PSAT score and then affix a zero. were attended by classes able, with numerous papers term- a B-29, flying many missions over with the "dilemma of man in the "Example: If Michael will study erlin high schools. f ing the American exhibit as one Japan. After teaching two years modern world". He has labled as mathematics for two years, his a ten day orientation of the "special attractions" of the, at Harvard, he came to Rutgers as his own recurrent theme the con- upper PSAT Mathematical scor'f inWashington, Baron and Fair. full professor, a position which he tradiction in terms of a civilized 45 is converted to an' estimated along with their group of Mirror Review ~~~~~~~~man as "a creature of intellectual senior SAT' Mathematical score '6f to Berinto etembegrou of Mirro Review pessimism but glandular enthu- 45 + 9 with zero affixed, or 540dl' hey ere joined by Trivers, -N ew Issue, W ellt R ~eceived is. hs".Mteaia-n erq lin. Baron worked in the Mr. Ciardi sno interest in the study. For those who will tudy and photography laborator- -by DANIEL V. MCNAMEE sweet traditional poetry which he mathematics' for one year, either ile Beard demonstrated calls "poesy". "From a ublic plat- upper or senior year, add 5 points ntin the science lab, and It's finally here, what every P.A. the mind-clogging affects of a form once .. .", he wrote, " ) and then affix a zero as the third a play, the Happy Journey student has been waiting for !-a cross-word puzzle, claimed I could turn out such an digit. ntn ider. Trivers oper- female contribution in the Mirror.' Among the stories which make illusion of the sonnet in three min- "Example: If Michael will study vi oectors, tape record- Led on by Steve Most's "Editorial this an' above average issue of the utes' fat. I was challenged and mathematics in upper or senior a language t ea ch in g Reflections," we fumble madly for Mirror is the first installment of given a first line to start with, but year, 45 + 5 with a zero becomets in the audio-visual and page 8 and a "never-never land 6f Tom Evslin's serial, "The Lifd and I failed I discovered it is impos- 500,"1 p elabs. All three students female psyche" in what Most calls Loves of Dom Maveldt," in which sible, simply mechanically, to write anelists on the 'Youth a "historical issue of the Mirror." he-h"as captured the atmosphere off fourteen lines in three minutes. Ga "~ 1 nr Not ure hatto epect weand feeling of the first dance with It took four minutes and eighteen Gar neI E gare 5 erican exhibition at the folpnd a rather artful short story, a ilssho.scns"Tersligsne a Mr. Donald W. Gardner, Jr.,- In somewhat the same vein is masterpiece of over-sentimentaltecigflo inhsryha erlin International Indus- "Love at Skin Sight", by Julie "Brian Connolly at Andover," by poesy-ended with "Having seen tecigflo inhsryha irproved to be the most Owen, about a girl's- attempts to last year's senior John Daniel, such beauty in the air/I have seen become engaged to Miss Damon ulexhibit shown by the seenm sophisticated while talking to about the effect of P.A. and a girl truth and will no more despair". Reed, daughter of Mr. and I~rs. an ole o.Carroll Reed of North Conway, older boy, ~~on a boy with two completely dif- In contrast to- the effeminate 'New Hampshire. Mr. Gardner of A~~ Math Exam ~The story was adorned with a ferent personalities. . language found in poesy, he uses Marblehead, Massachusetts- has Ex =' pictilire of Cupid, who had seeni- In story, "The Beggar," Robert the straightforward vocabulary of graduated from Marblehead High erthe sponsorship "-of the' ingly just shot an arrow (of love?) Mcllroy has attempted to present modern America. Devotees of tra- School and Williams College and atic Soiet of merca, into a television set illustrating the corruptibility -of men, even in ditional poetry decry his work as plntoaedthYae rd. gtyie exofAmiatio Red Smith's parody, "Pope on the person of his protagonist, a "ugly dlebased, and immoral", but ulantatenS n he Ye MissReed given here covering a T.V."; neither illustration was beggarly religious fanatic. they are given little heed. "Mr. gautdfo WlntH h lE and ery The award quite appropriate for either work. Vaguely calling to mind science Ciardi," holds one critic, "has do- Schooltad fro WanioH gaht highest mark in the school Also 'by Smith was the onily es- fiction, stories we have read, "The mesticated the ' language of our Connecticut College for Women; roz pin, for a perfect say in the issue, "The Crossword Very Early American Furnished machine civilization and broken it she is planning to finish her medal. Interested students Puzzle Menace (In America To- Room," by Paul Kalkstein, is ue- to the uses of a poetry which is as schooling. An early summer wed- meet with Mr.. Drake. I day) ," an' amusing discussion of (Continued on Page Five) (Continued on Page Six) ding is planned.

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qi.

ekemen Score 104 Political Commentary

Record ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~On RussiaSee ga~ 4 See Page 2

oJ

W 82, NO. 12 .PHILLIPS ACAEMY, ANDovER, MAs. January 10, 1961i

~~i~ij; .i..' I Pbilo matheans Score: Reject Rail Takeovejr

LLouis Wiley, Daniel Sazks, and again.Lngdon Wright- representing the! Louis Wiley, the Negative's fiast

Pliathean Society, successfully'speaker, agreed wholeheart~ilyupheld the negative side of the re-:with the Affirmative's conteniO~n

-' ~~ "A ~solution "U.S. Railro'ids Should that the railroads are not dqigBe Nationalized" in the first of xvell. He then demonstrated 4ehlir"c projc ed Philo Pnyx deba es. difficulties and dangers of natioil-

E fd Cox, Leonaird Singei- and John ization. First, he showed that gv-Y oung com-prised th Pyx Afirri ernme'it operated r a i r o a d s ative team. World War One were not assa-

Ed Cx, Speaking first for the cessful as privatejy-operated rlikl-Affirmative, showed that the rail- roads during World War Two.-Ike

- , ~~roads are in a desperate plight. He stated' that the7 government pur-said that the railroads are vital chase of' all the railroad-equipriltto the' nation, but in spite of that would entail an outlayed twqnty-

M. Baron '62 exhibits Polaroid camera pictijres Charles J. Beard 1I '62 (left) and Jonathan M. Baron fact are in financial difficulties. In billion dollars, plus 2 billion 91-rmndgataries including Deputy Chancellor '62 (right) demonstrate properties of liquid oxygen at the debate's biggest understate- lars per ye-ar-for new equipmpt.

gErh (center left) and mayor of Berlin Willy Berlin Industrial Fair. meat, he claimed that "the service Although not overly worried aout(cene ih) is oftent'nes poor." He concluded another increase in the natidhal

that the way out of the mess is to debt, it was the Negative's 6&-S. Sends Andover Students To Berlin Faierconsolidate the railroads. tention that the debt should ntbCox's teammate, Leonard Singer, (Continued on Page Five)

(h-i A merican Toont'ra~~~r used the Affirmative's right to de-1rtray Acivities Of eia en rfine the proposal, by stating that 0sn~iono Athe railroads mentioned in the re- E t' to f A

By George N. Budd I United States Government in Ber- The Marshall House grounds solution did not include communterly ths fal P.A studntsin in recent years. Over seventy- 'ivere used more extensively than evc H pondouthto-S or Fr m P T

L. tis '61P.A Charles Jfive per cent of the' 650,00 Fair ever before and a series of colorful soricetion ited o tNaton- Scor From PSII '62 and Jonathan M. -dmostrtins eredas a magnet ization would be desirable becauseL. Trvers'61, harls J.visitors saw the "Youth USA" ex- demonstrations-servedoOf196

II'62 workd orathen U.S. hibit, making an attendance record. drawing people to the pavilion. [ the government could then elimi-Of1 6 a1 T rent inrkan unuua temptS. About fifty per cent of these visi- Among the mnore spectacular of nate the evils of mismanagement By John Levin

baknom of urua losteps tors were from East Berlin and the these demonstrations wks the tram- and featherbedding. He also pointed ThUpe-idecastotebac soe o ou lot pes-Soviet Zone of Germany. The ex- pln eon-u'bigprome h pe-idecasto h

~e boys and sixty other hibition opened on September 101b p o reound-eteeblngerformedt out that the railroads would no PSAT tests late last term. The W9 -cnhigh school students and and closed September 25.' Byr to ofa.theiptengr shen to loilger have to pay taxes, and would lowing material is taken from a gufreshmen participated in Britoprcpaeithexbt.therefore begin to make money debook-for counselors on the 1

rin International Industrial Among the distinguished guests (Continued on Page S lee ordSor Rprtwh-eld September 10-25. About of- Marshall House on opening day contasd dee eplantion on6the visitors to the fair were wrthFeraRpulcD uyiD isfiiiguished Poet, iM oderi.Qst the estimates of SAT scores fromhe soviet zone of Germany. Chancellor and Economics Minis- PA crs

ter, Ludwig Erhard; Governing PSAT scoreTad of a dull exhibit of in- Mayor Willy' Brandt, who made' m iari T Lecture T d y "oestimate senior SAT scores

machinery, the extremely special mention of "Youth USA"Ij n iT o a from PSAT upper scores, use theUAmprra ehiacad in his speech at the Fair opening; BBenjamiin W. White currently holds. A 'Fellow of the rules of thumb guides given below.

USA potryedth acd-President of the Berlin House of Tdyssekri Assembly was American Academy of Arts and- "1. Verbal-Add 6 points to thend extra-curricular interests Today's speaker in ~~~~~~~PSAT Verbal score and then affixertrcan urYou. tesoth Representatives Willy Henneberg; ithe Poetry Editor of the Saturday Sciences, he is the director of the azr stetiddgt

trated scien e lanuge Italian Trade Minister, Mario Mar- Review, Johni Ciardi. A native of Bread Loaf Writqr's conference in "a mproaste Mirdae scoedi0tohotgraphy la g, tinelli; and the Trade Minister of Boston, Mr. Ciardi attended Tufts Vermont. thExaVer al seci oed 4A in

ar lokad , exhibited the Republic of Cameroun, Tsal College. While still a graduate stu- His poems, though difficult at the eleventh grade. 40 ± 6 = 46;art orkandprize winning Kongo. The entourage also included dent at the University of Michi- first glance, lure the reader back afxn eoa h hr ii

sof the National Science of theiBerin anrhe wsrewardedihed digitnd oeratd a"ham rIo leading membersofteBri g, hewsreaddth 10 into rereading. The stint in the gie netmtd eirSTVr

Featurs of he exibit enateand House of Representa- Hopwood Prize for poetry. In addi- Air For'ce provided much material, bal score of 460.0-catrtemonstrtionsxhand tives, the borough mayo~s of Ber- tion, he has received five other lbut he fers to write about the "2. Mathematical-Two years of,y-ofrtw heotrtos heGer lin, and civic, business, and educa- major poetry prizes, including the effects of the war upon individuals study. For those who will study

eaking members of the -inllaes rxd oe rather than about battle itself. He mathematics in both upper andPress, radio and TV coverage During the war, he became a believes that all poetry should dealseiryaad 9 otso-iearticipated in a daily sym- seioseasadtaoitstlti

on a wide range of topics. was extensive and invariably favor- technical sergeant astalgunner in with men; all of his poetry deals PSAT score and then affix a zero.were attended by classes able, with numerous papers term- a B-29, flying many missions over with the "dilemma of man in the "Example: If Michael will studyerlin high schools. f ing the American exhibit as one Japan. After teaching two years modern world". He has labled as mathematics for two years, his

a ten day orientation of the "special attractions" of the, at Harvard, he came to Rutgers as his own recurrent theme the con- upper PSAT Mathematical scor'finWashington, Baron and Fair. full professor, a position which he tradiction in terms of a civilized 45 is converted to an' estimated

along with their group of Mirror Review ~~~~~~~~man as "a creature of intellectual senior SAT' Mathematical score '6fto Berinto etembegrou of Mirro Review pessimism but glandular enthu- 45 + 9 with zero affixed, or 540dl'

hey ere joined by Trivers, -N ew Issue, W ellt R ~eceived is. hs".Mteaia-n erqlin. Baron worked in the Mr. Ciardi sno interest in the study. For those who will tudyand photography laborator- -by DANIEL V. MCNAMEE sweet traditional poetry which he mathematics' for one year, eitherile Beard demonstrated calls "poesy". "From a ublic plat- upper or senior year, add 5 pointsntin the science lab, and It's finally here, what every P.A. the mind-clogging affects of a form once . . .", he wrote, " ) and then affix a zero as the third

a play, the Happy Journey student has been waiting for !-a cross-word puzzle, claimed I could turn out such an digit.ntn ider. Trivers oper- female contribution in the Mirror.' Among the stories which make illusion of the sonnet in three min- "Example: If Michael will study

vi oectors, tape record- Led on by Steve Most's "Editorial this an' above average issue of the utes' fat. I was challenged and mathematics in upper or seniora language t ea ch in g Reflections," we fumble madly for Mirror is the first installment of given a first line to start with, but year, 45 + 5 with a zero becometsin the audio-visual and page 8 and a "never-never land 6f Tom Evslin's serial, "The Lifd and I failed I discovered it is impos- 500,"1

p elabs. All three students female psyche" in what Most calls Loves of Dom Maveldt," in which sible, simply mechanically, to writeanelists on the 'Youth a "historical issue of the Mirror." he-h"as captured the atmosphere off fourteen lines in three minutes. Ga "~ 1 nr

Not ure hatto epect weand feeling of the first dance with It took four minutes and eighteen Gar neI E gare5 erican exhibition at the folpnd a rather artful short story, a ilssho.scns"Tersligsne a Mr. Donald W. Gardner, Jr.,-

In somewhat the same vein is masterpiece of over-sentimentaltecigflo inhsryhaerlin International Indus- "Love at Skin Sight", by Julie "Brian Connolly at Andover," by poesy-ended with "Having seen tecigflo inhsryha

irproved to be the most Owen, about a girl's- attempts to last year's senior John Daniel, such beauty in the air/I have seen become engaged to Miss Damonulexhibit shown by the seenm sophisticated while talking to about the effect of P.A. and a girl truth and will no more despair". Reed, daughter of Mr. and I~rs.

an ole o.Carroll Reed of North Conway,older boy, ~~on a boy with two completely dif- In contrast to- the effeminate 'New Hampshire. Mr. Gardner ofA~~ Math Exam ~The story was adorned with a ferent personalities. . language found in poesy, he uses Marblehead, Massachusetts- hasEx =' pictilire of Cupid, who had seeni- In story, "The Beggar," Robert the straightforward vocabulary of graduated from Marblehead High

erthe sponsorship "-of the' ingly just shot an arrow (of love?) Mcllroy has attempted to present modern America. Devotees of tra- School and Williams College andatic Soiet of merca, into a television set illustrating the corruptibility -of men, even in ditional poetry decry his work as plntoaedthYae rd.

gtyie exofAmiatio Red Smith's parody, "Pope on the person of his protagonist, a "ugly dlebased, and immoral", but ulantatenS n he Ye MissReedgiven here covering a T.V."; neither illustration was beggarly religious fanatic. they are given little heed. "Mr. gautdfo WlntH h

lE and ery The award quite appropriate for either work. Vaguely calling to mind science Ciardi," holds one critic, "has do- Schooltad fro WanioH gahthighest mark in the school Also 'by Smith was the onily es- fiction, stories we have read, "The mesticated the ' language of our Connecticut College for Women;

roz pin, for a perfect say in the issue, "The Crossword Very Early American Furnished machine civilization and broken it she is planning to finish hermedal. Interested students Puzzle Menace (In America To- Room," by Paul Kalkstein, is ue- to the uses of a poetry which is as schooling. An early summer wed-meet with Mr.. Drake. I day) ," an' amusing discussion of (Continued on Page Five) (Continued on Page Six) ding is planned.

Page 2 The Phuipiap January j.O,

I The 'R a W od?soilnusieofnntetceur T esermon pr~ached by Dr. Jerome Davis in Chapel capitalism and kept alive by the ambitions of today'slast Sunday: that today's world is in an awful mess, ruling class, has set for itself the unalterable goal ofand that it is up to us, the next generation, to do total world domination. Since the United States issomething about it. But we disagree strongly with the greatest obstacle to the achievement of this goal, JOHN W. EWELL, Ji.the simplified analysis of world affairs he presented the Communists have made us their principal enemy. Editor-in-ChieIto Prove his point, and believe that if it were g n- It is only in response to this direct threat, not onlyrally itccepted, the consequences for the Free World to our security, but also to all the fruits of morewould be so unfortunate that, despite our own lck of than two milleniums of Western civilization (includ-experience, we will attempt a refutation. ing the heritage of the Christian Church), that we 1

In order to clarify the problems of the "real" have been forced to maintain network of basesworld, Dr. Davis proposed to--scale-them-down to the- -around the-world and to make fantastic outlays of -

level of asmall town. Out of a population of 1000 cash and effort to maintain ur dfif_ ealisB- ------ _____-____

-inhabitants, only 60 would be Americans, and yet -ment. This challenge also explains why we cannot ,

77-these 60 would possess fully half the town's wealth, accept less than absolutely, fool-proof nuclear dis- ~'~**" Because they are so rich, he said, the Americans aimnament. Otherwise we would lose our only defenseare afraid of all the others, and so spend millions of against the one thing that would be worse than adollars every hour for defense, and spread armed nuclear -War: Communist world domination.bases throughout the town. Because of their mutual To help the world solve its many problems, Dr./fears, the Americans and the Communists, who comn- Davis enjoined upon his audience to commit them-/prize some 350 of the citizens, have both developed selves to the way~f Christ, to the way of'mercy andterrifying weapons capable of destroying the whole compassion, as exemplified by hiis father, who, at town. And yet, Dr. Davis said deprecatingly, some the risk of his life, established Christian schools inI'lbtisdrnhoo.people are not willing to eliminate this menace be- Japan, and by Ghandi, who, almost single-handed, bti' otocause they are afraid that others might cheat and freed his country from the British by passive resist-keep weapons in secret. For this resri, all__:e ance As a guide for action in friendly countries and ~ Political1 Commentaryhouses are turning into armed fortresses. among peoples who respect honor and courage, we

D.In creating this otherwise admirable microcosm, could not agree with these precepts more. But vwhen I n c n sI e q aimportant fact of contemporary, world politics: that respects only power, one must counter force with by7 WILLIAm A. DRAYToNthe primary cause of international tension is not force. And surely this idea, too, -is not far from the I met Lew on the way to Europe munist s were aiming formutual jealousy, or the arms race, or even the gap way of a Christ who had-no compassion for the aboard the Dutch Student Ship the they threw Lew and thebetween rich and poor; it is the fact that a Corn- money-changers in the temple, and who once de- S.S. Waterman -more affection- Americans students outtmunist revolutionary elite, clinging to an idealogy clared, "I bring not peace, but a sword." ately known as "Escargot" (snail mer.

________________________________________________________________________in French). Lew, a hulkin Busi- After Stalin's death, hisness School graduate student, was that the final struggle for

-~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~ ~~"Leader" of a group of students, world rule was at. hand* Ill ~~~~ ~~4IJ~~JJJI(1II-~~~~ ~~vIJ1J~~~ going on tour through Europe and placed by the so-called '"tha

the Soviet Union. His only qual- new rulers in the KremlinThe faculty offal - raise their voices nor provide themselves with fications for this post consisted of that tn world struggle still

a desire to get to Europe free and have to be fought for socommittee of Phil- noisemakers.. of several hazy ideas of-creating to come. To pave the wayflips Academy ex- IV. Garbage Disposers are expected to main- in-terainlgo-iladbohr liaevcoyte olpects each Garbage tain high standards of dress and behavior. In hood and understanding. T h e s e win over the-world's "ThirdDisposer (colloquial- the performance of their service, they must ideas were largely rooted in his al- - the neutralists. They alsoly known as the combine espmrit de cor-ps with professional aloof- most total ignorance of what Corn- the value of--putting theW"boy on slop,") to ness. Remember, it was Lamb who said: "If munism. is and of everything to do its guard with a "peaceof

conduct himself in accordance with the letter and dirt was trumps, what hands you would hold!" with its history. - Enter the Touristspirit of the following precepts: V. There will be no loitering by the "slop hole". ' The next time I met Lew was One~of the policies that

I. Garbage Disposers must not waste any of the 'VL. The Garbage Disposer is always courteous upon my arrival in Moscow -at the versed in this Soviet "Ithamaterial they handle. This is Grade IAA offal VII. No offal may be taken from Commons. Kievsk 'Hotel'. He and his group the ban on American touriwhich is fed to only the finest pigs. Disposers VIII. Garbage Disposers on the job should not had been in Moscow for as a hdhda biul

mus, rmemertha thy re orkngwithe thise had hnitoue oamme week and still had a few days be- mental propaganda effect,imasl~remembr thatthey re woring shke hans whe introuced t a memer offore they were to move on. Lew versely its "removal" c

,kest offal available. thscommittee or his ladyfaire. seemed reasonbly impressed with very convincing and welcomeIL On'the job, other than Saturday evening, IX. The brush is the symbol of a garbage dis- Moscow. He had been to the Krem- of "thaw" and reversal ofGarbage Disposers must wear a clean white poser and must be properly handled. It should lin; he had gone to the Industrial Policies.apron with a well-tied bow in either the front be held between 1.8 and 2.4 inches from the end. and Agricultural Exppositidn Fair The Russians veryor back. On Saturday evening they may dress It should be used'in a sweeping motioie, keep- Grounds, (and spent a whole day limited this tourism, howeinformally-that is with dlean shirt with collar, ing the wrist slightly loose. The feet should be there being shown the wonders of only certain "Intourist" routhe shirtails clearly tucked in, clean trousers about 7 inches apart; right-handed people should Soviet achievements) ; he had been a few of the'big cities). Wi

(not bluejean"), nd otiona'aprn. kep te riht fot slghtl forard.to see the "Sovietranma" film of show and ado they havefr(not "bue jean"), andoptiona apron keep te rightfoot slghtly frward.Communism's great triumphs in to time opened up addition

III. There will be no shouting, whistling, run. --. X. No Disposer will encourage the presence of building Rusia hehdbe obut all told the tourist isning, or horseplay carried on anywhere within animals in Commons (excepting humans, of- seerl a ofCle ad est n a minutely small per centhe confines of the garbage trough, Gaibage course).- - and, most important, he had seen country. s(Recently newDisposers may demnonstrate any- displeasure by For the offal committee, "The Russian People" and come to routes" have been openedmuttering under their breath, etc., but must not Q. E. D. the startling conclusion that they with great publicity.

________ _______ _______ ________ _______ _______ ________ _______ _______ ______rea_____were__pereally w renpeope.nCons quentlyrhese ero te reare stri ttlhe was basking in international and few -In lluber. McireoL.~~~etters -- --- -~~~~~~~person-to-person good-wilL under- bad condlitioniiIn- lack of

- - ~~~~~~~e te standing and brotherhood.- able service has discoutrag

To the Editor of -THEn PHILLIPrN: -their collections, check the FBI 6. As is well known to vigilant "Litterbug" -from using this method ofwanted posters, or do other er- hseatrmany of- the stu- - w asltrh a honIn laying the ground for

Iwould like to offer the follow- rnsathPotOfcwi h osemts'ros (n th ne Twdaslerewsthwnthe Russians further attening proposals for consideration by rad ttePs fie-wih dns om adtenwout of the Soviet Union. The discourage tourists b y

the Student Congress: unfortunately closes at 12 noon~ dorms) have fireplaces, many ofthe Student Congress: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~charge formally levelled against him visits ludicrously e p e n1. Inview f thedailycongetion on Saturdays. which, are used only as conven- was "littering". "Littering" meant (thirty dollars a day and a1

ofI stuenfthe adfacly 4.oRe#g)esetbttrwh n . ient sites for clandestine drags that he had been distributing oldof tuent ad fcutytrying 4 P 3)Eenbtewynot ostgs.Ihikt-ulbeWith these restrictions

to squeeze through the two in- establish some sort of Post Of- onostosies. tthink-it--ouldpbeanda viets expected that at mnadequate doors leading from flee service at PA? It could generally appreciated by t he copie ofth-U.S. propSAganda ud easalumeSam Phil onto the Vista, I sug- operate two hours or so on two students if a central -depository maintiue te "USA"Rusas in woldl epl a fsal 'umbrgest that the main portals be or three days of the week and of fire wood were established. I strictly limited basis that their Most especially, they felt

kept~ oen throghout t e dy could offer the above mentioned believe that the grounds crew equivalent "U.S.S.R." can be sold cost would make them seckept-open thrughout the dy, services.has sme wood stashed away, in America). Legally it is a per- tedne fayntca

2.-when weather permits. I wanderedys over _wsomewhere, and I for one, would fectly legitimate publication, and, thb ner of viitn te2.For the benefit of the new dorm 5 A fewedaysvago-'2ie to know where and how tobeofvstnsudt.

and any nocturnal visitors of the to the majestic antique of a get at it. -moreover, is highly popular and in Intrepid- Explorers-cemetery, I propose that some- globe which graces our modern - -great demand. (To leave a copy The Soviets were correctthing be done about the- pitch Copley Wing, to see -if I could FRED GOFF '61 in your hotel room is a sure way to They did get the rich 'socdarkness which prevails after locate certain required bound- lose it as a maid will almiost inevit- ists they had counted on.Tsupper in the environs of the aries. Instead of Oklahoma there Miu d rtn i~ ably steal it.) Nevertheliss, the of tourist is a dlgtt hpathways leading to thwse dorms. was a square block of land lab- Soit aeavr-dmvewo riigi rudThree well placed lights would eled Indian Territory; there To the Editor of THE PHILLIPIAN: "U.S.A." -together - 'utaly-patkeep the occupants of these were no North and South Dak- As I walked from Chapel to Corn- -However, this was not the selves on the back frtheidorms from being terrified by otas, just a rectangular terrn- mons after Dr. Jerome Davis' ser- reason why Lew was thrown out. turesomeness all during~ tkoscillating shapeless masses, and tor~y called Dakotah. I will ad- mon, I picked up several bits of Thoiusands of tourists had been They 'love' the vodka andenable them to navigate at night mnit, this adds a little flavor to interesting conversation about the distributing the same magazine, wonderful time 'seeing 'iwithout probing the darkness for the American History course, talk: "What a crazy fanatic l" "A not to mention a whole raft of Russia' over their three-hthe winding paths. - but I think we should also have real nice autobiography," "He had other magazines that W-erd definite- ners and lunches in the se

3. How about being allowed down- a globe which is consistent with some of his facts wrong!! I" "He's ly not legal. This was clearly only Intourist hotels. -They 'adtown after your last Saturday the- modern atmosphere of he quite far out there." the surface reason; the basic mo- Imperial jewels in themorning class? Many of the guys Wing. I therefore propose that -Somehow, I feel that these stu- tives were much more profound. It and they gaze at the WDgo down town to buy stamps, a new and up-to-date globe be dents missed the important points is particularly important for Amer- Soviet achievement theyamail registered letters, clain purchased for the w i n g and of Dr. Davis' sermon. At first I ican students and their parents to in the inevitable day-longspecial.- mail, purchase monetl placed along side the relic which was moved to some anger that such understand these unterior motives the Industrial and Agricuorders, buy stamp blocks for we now have. (Continued on Page Six) for they were the target the Corn- (Continued on Page F

anarylO;'- 1961 The Philliian Page 3

ceimen Take 2Drop 1; MorrisonStrlue Quintet Tops 1 00-Mark, ~'ILast-Peri~odRal-

As Brayton Sinks 31 Points _ I" Overtakes. NoleBy Thomas M. A~derson, Jr iunder the hoop for a layup and two ~ "'~~" "

ton sank 31 points as the var crease their lead to 79-36 at the By.alpCH Sque ast4bask-etball team opened its end of the third uarter. SaturdaY, Jan. 7 -- Sparked byseason by mauling Wentworth Janktherfinal'periodatKingston'snq

*tute-10443.-BrnieBoon -dcross-country~-muscles -came--i--r- akMlio' w aegas nMtute -101;43.-Bernie-Boone~~~~~~~~~~~~~~an ~in overtime, the P.A. varsity- Bolt controlled the backboards handy as he and Moonves continued ~'''hockey team overcame a 3-1 de-.he ay r P.A., while guards ball hawking and leading fastflitodeaNbeanGreuh

Kingston and Mike Moonves breaks. Caldwell and Grant were by a score of 4-3. The game aw ant, the afternoon stealing the1 sinking some shots from the out- excellent goal-tending job by thefrt maentth fivoe.o h side and coming close on many ~ '~-Z~ , Nbe ole usRsel hothers. With minutes to go, An- Nole -oaie, us'"usel,'hfromad W ewort five of thaene trii re oshortly after the opening dover approached 100.points. Hust- wa~mst ofd thrgame, maings49esaver. From then on, it was a case ling up and down the court, the ' ool 4frAdvrsLeGlo much Bluespeed and too team fnlybroke into three Gil~

sharp shooting eyes for columns for the first time in years '' " - '' - bert. Nobl an Grehogh'began thetwrhto handle. Bombing as Brayton scored the last two scoine atd 5:10 ofuthe pnnof his thirty-one points. peoriod with Bill o Watiner gpetting'ANDOVER P.A, controlled the ball so welld thero firth oal hihat tri, nsap

F.G. F.T. Tot, that the Wentworthi team was held thepin goa los puck int teck f a p-13 5 31 to seven points in the last period. -------- pnra osepucknet.oJust 16 r seods

8 3 19 For Wentworth high scorer of the ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Pto by MacLean later, however, Ed Graney pounced4 0 8 game was Goodwin w~ith nine Lee Gilbert guards the nets for the Blue. on a rebound and flicked the puck

an 1 ~~~0 2 points. - over the rostrate goalie -to knotthe score at 1-1. Near-teen o52- 12 4Stie period with his teim short-

20 4~1 Smviriiers Flout PortlandHIS, 63-2 3 haddtol' atigrabbed the puck, at the red line,-2- 0' ' skated down the ice all'alr, and-

I 1V a si ySq as3 put the disk past Gilbert's -out--ityq JV ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~stretched arm, miaking~-the score

3.G 2T 8Tyohmat. nero By Christopher Burns yard. Over the vacation the team 2-1 as the buzzer sounded.--3 2 8 By Thomas M. Anderson ~~~~~~~entered the National Junior Singles inBoth teams played -good hockey1 0 2 Saturday, Dec. 10 - The An- Saturday, Jan. 7 - A strong An- Tournament at Pottstown, Penn- i h second period although no

wski ~~0 2 2 dover varsity swimmers speedily dover squash team scored twinsyvnawhrteyddeywel goals were sored. In thd -third3 0 6 splashed their way toa 63-23 vic- victories this Saturday, doa'wning Louis Hoitsma, hd coach, re-y taWllingr ompee i a33 9 ~ tory over Portland High. The winI Middlesex varsity 4-1 and the Mid- marked "The team shows some trick b aaligo another break-2 '2 6 was a team. effort that brought' dies junior varsity 3-2. All the Mid- prmseo go-eo" ad away. Two minutes later Bill

hy ~~~0 0 0 home ..frst paevictories in egtIdlesex paeswere returnees from poiefagodssn anSimoyerothifrsgalfteplace eight players ~~~~hinted that-this might be the year rgt i is olo h3 2 8 out of ten events. Instrumental in last year except Holmes, who was P.A. beats Exeter, for PA.'s first season, beating Russel at 12:19 to-I1 0 2 the victory were near-record per- then out wit i is . z_~ overh-1 A make the score 3-2 in- favor of

30 19 30 25 104 formances by Pete Winship andII n" uie- - victory in e years o ndvr Noble and Greenough. With' arth 10 16 10 7 43' Dan Mahoney. All-Amiericans Cy In the umber-one game, Pete Exeter Squash. mnt op orsnpoie h-all over the floor, Brayton Hornsby and Moose Hacket also va tic came frmbhnI- oVRImntet oMrio rvddteolt sentthe bal swishin won fist placehonors n theirdefeJ4 Terell 3-2. In the,-second f; vastich (A) over Turrell (M), 3, (Continued on Page Fivc)

hthe hoop time after time. events, as did lower-prep Stu DaviIs- and ird positions respectively, Ed 1 2-15, 9-15, 15-12, 15-13corebo a 30-10 Portland bolted to a ~ ~ Cx V~i~Tulp 3-1, and Mike Cohen 2: Cox (A) over Tulp (M) 15-12, 15-11, 9-

er la at oftefrtlawhnM alonMelrose Toppledlead~ a theendof he frstlea whe Mcalm nmanaed- loss -Thfue 2-lpse games to Holmes. 15, 15-7touch out P.A.'s Bill Vincent in the Rksatl' and Jim Payne shut 3 :Holmes (M) over Ceco. (A), 15-13, 15- BBlue second unit started the 50-yard freestyle. Paul Kinnear ou efetsTndMllninye atU2R1- quarter.' The Wentworth canmt-in close on their heels to get two gamnes. - 4: Rosati (A) over Leffet ts (M) 15-9, iS-5,_tfared little better under third place. Andover swept Middlesex last 15-3 By John Kane

oards as Bob Diemiar - and In the 100-yard butterfly, An- year also, 3-2 and 5-0. At the end 5: Payne (A) over Mllen (M), 15-10, 15- With a spetacular last periodZukerman snatched the dover seized the lead, never to re- of the fall term, P.A. lost to Bar- 12, 15-3- scoring splurge by lower Joe Mar-tyof the rebounds. Tone linquish it again, when Moose Hac- r 'soed theoseaso's oee oqud ofuthe

and Sam Caldwell shot at kett and Mike Mayers pulled even- fie, 3-2. Afern' ledngr o-t f toamthe outside while George ly ahead of the Portland swimmers On The Sidelines piei, .Andoer aeag1fre tovsalso icreased the Blue at the halfway mark and finished . 1 LFo TLlost when visiting Melrose High'-

tthe half P.A. held a 49-26 one-two. Thfree For T ree - put across two tallies early in thei eodDavis won the 200 free by half tidfaeBuwhaltleor

seodhalf saw Diemiar' a'-pool. Gallagher of Portland out- by/ RED'SMIT thir rmiue. Buft, th a littleoewhavilyain hilrelief flase Gibb Vicncewt. to The long, gray Winter Term which loomed on the horizon last! carried the puck through the whole

whom Coach Di~~~~lemente finish for second place. ~~~~~I Melrose team and, although wellaringly'because he had four Then, captain Cy Hornsby and week did not seem to worry the three'-Blue varsity teams that sw guarded, got off a shot which beat1fouls. Many times a-quick Tom Pollock combined to sweep the action -on Saturday. The squash squad, after taking a licking at the goalie Rod Greenlaw. Two minutes

wcutwould find Br ~ n100-yard backstroke. .Ihand&-RHarvard. at the end of last term, sent captain Jim Payne, Pete lae orso crdtecicerIn, the breaststroke, Pete Win- Svastich, Mae Rogers, and Mike Cohen to Pottstown, Pa., for the Na- and the Blue held on to win.

shipleggd ou thesecod winof tional Junior Singles Championships at the beginning of Christmas Neither team scored in tesee utwrestleS his four year varsity career with ain empae r o fiilykpbtteBu aktesswfrtpro.Bt em lanc-,a near-record time. Portland's -Re- I aain empae r'ntofcal et u h lerce ed sattackst wei.th noerm hldnghH~~L School ~gan touched out, lower Frank did better collectively on the Hill School courts than the pena te edg ontck sihAots r holille ffughi ch o Stephens for second place. i on any other school.th edeo sos,9o .BlMcCalmon gave Portland its only, In the Princeton Club Tournement, also 'held-during vacation, Smnoyer made one impressive rush

By Dick Bell other first place by defeating Svastich reached the semi-finals, where he lost to Pete-Humbert of Penn butds shot wient'wide. - c kyneAndover varsity wrestling Harry Stone in the 1 00 free. Stone, arter. d Cox reached the quarter-finals and Mike Rosati was put o uhbtcud' e f

ared the season in a grand lost to a strong finish after stay- out in an earlier rund by Exeter captain Frank Satterthwaite, who shot. Melrose retaliated and, - al-by defeating Hope H.S. of ing-evehi for most of the race. Port- went on to capture first pace. Last Saturday the Blue took Middlesex (otne nPg iencR.I., 28-8. Losing only land's St. Clairwa thr.apart, and it--looks as if Andover squash is ready-to come into its own. (otne

tsmatches, Mr. Lux's squad' In div'ing, All-American DanCapt Aindytwo Gr hm nd Mahoney, back for his fourth year The basketball team, meanwhile, was enjoying a light' workoutCapt Any Grhamandof varsity competition, missed the against Wentworth. Tom Brayton's lofty one-handers and Bob Holt's.U .Ho k y W nwen. school record by about two points fltones piled up -points faster thaii the assistant manager on black- -- By Sandy Larkin efirst match, upper Tom but won first place. Pierre Kleiber board detail could keep up with them, buein the end it was just as well Saturday- January 7 - Mikeset the pace by blanking completed the sweep by placing that the electric scoreboard was broken since it doesn't have spade for Pfaelzer drove a ga at h

rahof Hope, -0Gimr'second. three figures anyway. A dashing assortment of behind-the-back- passes Nobles Voalip in sudden death over-T ke-down ~and built up five Th niiulmde a ivsand fancy dribbling, as well as the brilliant' shooting, made the Andover times to iveithe Blue JV hockey

ie oints in the nx two and Mayers, bt wmigfn gym look more like Madison Square Garden. Tougher opposition is on te3~iU3-2'victoiy-.;b Dorsey. Gardner then re- races for the second time that ithe wy, esecialy aftr th~firs of tis yer's wo Exter gmes cmes ' %-i~first period, Dain:Fitts as-the second shutout in a afternoon, take first and third, then way epecaly- aft the rst o tears woe Exee aercme sisted Eric Muller in putting An--outclassing Cliff Pomna of~while' Fields of Portland placed aln nFburzbta h oeti loslk eesya. dover ahead, -0.-'Soon-'~afterwardce 5-0. F second. . - When Noble andLG3zeenough lashed one by Lee.Gilbert at the start the Noble and Greenough center

id lue mnet its first defeat as WIEW2E-Hornsby and Hackett, back of the third period of the hockey game to lengthen their lead to 3-1, I slapped the disc by - P.A.--goalie -

cCollum fell to Jim Mas- from last year's All-American med- decided to give my frozen toes a break and headed for Benner House, Dick Leger. -Tife- Blue retaliated.b -. But Alec Walling t ley relay team, the Blue had little thus becoming one of the last in the school to hear bout the great, with a -goial frdin the stick of Jim

e eback in the win columnl trouble winning that event. Win- comeback which saw Jack Morrison net two goals for the second tini'e Rylie:..Tjhe second weiit' scorelesx.sd ~ gConnelley, 7-0. In the ship swm h reaststroke leg, in the team's three games. Next time I'll stay. - '-iit-Andover-. 1eaiii Z-i1--late

asskin upthre pnts, flaat- tam. BilVn~ nhrdte -And djeep in the bowels of the gym and under the arching-roof 6f in the~final, stanza, the"Noblesline'h uHran thr e second, Inat thefestlaelym.ner the newly air-conditioned cage and high on'-the sloes of Boston ill drove into- Blue territory', skated

.g the first pin of the after-! Belden, , Johnson, Mahoney, and the swimmers, wrestlers, boxers, trackers, and skiers practiced,gn the puck past Tager into 'the netsao uiud nPg Fv) - Stone beat the Portland team by a their teeth and waited for somebody to play against. Their time is7 to tie the game - and set the stage

of -a pool. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~for Pfaelzer's winning goal.

Pag4 The Phiflipian January 10, 191

toget the 'advantage over John As well -as rectifying such im- (These figures are falltTrack Season Begorns Today; Cowden of Andover;. but Cowden pressions, many of the students not just students).

- brought De~ajo to the mat for themake intimate contacts with the Equally interesting ha beerr * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ruhtD~i otanmtfrteRussians, rang"n from plans to choice of students expelld M eet H u tn t n .D second pin and 'a 28-8 victory, exchange records by mail (with the several I met Lew was typi

_________________________American inevitably sending jazz) had very little idea of what-h

By Chris Armstrong comfortable than their old saw dust to invitations to a meal leading, o dealing with, and tended 'toWednesday Jan. 11 - AdvrsptThrisas newngwhich a personal friendship, or even to "'soft" view of Communism bi

spirited track squad, which may' ianes -it possible for sprinters to Summ~fer- In Russia a mild love affair with Ivan or of his extremely hazy unde well surprise quite a few pes9V~ gc 50~ yards instead of 40. Sonya. ing of it. Naturally, when he

mists who hive rated it as med- (Continued form ,Page Tim) Wedge Thrddih~`th'c Curtain dendyn waswa u tleddofff-too-aists~ whoomplveelratedfite asared- Station and told:!he had t

ernor Diiuiiier,-this' afternoon in for each event is -still unavailable, hibt. In five days to a week's time This contact, particularly as it four hours in which to pacits frst jid-one o -it touhestut the following, line up should they return to the Hilton Hotelso grew progressively each year, be was taken completely una

its first aad- one of 'Its toughest . Is of ~~~came a noticaable breach in the His previous ideas - his pro'ttymeets of the season. Although An- prove fairly aco~kate. n the mile, Western Europe and continue to Iron Curtain. The maintenance f bles of international broth'

dove is t alossfordept, aa strong event for the Blue, it -will h -

strn bsath osrs hold ab ati es carry eir 'AmericanMan's bur- the isolation and prejudiced' ignor-an udesndg rwe

sure the Blue team of a good sea- ner. Starters JA. te'1b wl"be den'~,.-now made weightier by their ance provided by the Cur.ain is popped. His mental hazine

Hson. atimnesr TomAeta Sheps Cobson, Pete lhiveli6, ind~~= Keith having become Soviet experts. - essential to Communist rule, - and came foggy confusion.aond Tom eHamel Tand outps mostpa Toweu evet, wi'oAll fetre Needless to say, the Soviets wel- ethefe Pats nra reacion- asueSlec

and om u Hael tandoutmos powrfu evetswillfeaurecome sch "guests". Not only do t e Plugyi s up.tHowat doatis, w-s Several days after the stoamong the. returning lettermen. the trio of' McAfee, Accetta, and they provide a lucrative source of ever prsnted.o a o proem ,hw his ejection had been announThe strength of this year's team Hobsbn. In the 300, Andy Cahners dollars, but, their attitude of super- bviouprseny, to summarily call an and when the case was no

- shuld efintelylie n th runingand Tom Phelps are lure starters. iority does not nder them to the endvtouAserican ou rism would front-page news-Lew arrievents, although'- Captain Accetta -T~he 50 yard sprint,-formerly a 40, Russians they do uiietand they mean a serious propaganda defeat. Warsaw where he spent thehas-labeled thp shot as-~one of the will see -Cahners and Du Hamel aevr-ayt h Mw ekadahl. lh

going or th Blue.Roundng aru vey-ay os n h Nw This therefore would be out of thc eekadahl. lhtdams most va luable assets,- gongfo the Bng tlue.s Rling otRussia. (As one these adven- question. TLheppeibility of further imagine even then the newsp

Though ahSorota's chief the rnigitlosik Phpsturers I vre in a London restricting tur'_Is eas or of rais- would have liked to print hiisfrtp efcoa ofr'raime and Dave Quattrone in the 45 yard theatre said to a British friend-ouitaI

' tan ecods thre s n ecelen wh wa qestonigdim.eWeling the prices would neither solve Of the story-how he hadthan recods, thereis an excllent whowas questoning him ~'Wellthe problem nor would t help build illegally seized for distributi

chance that Steve Hobson w illI George Houpis and Tim Beck, ypu know, the Huskies really aren't the proper Russian image in the legal publication and how he.break the existing record in the who perform -in both the discuss that bad at all ) - >world. The possibility of ending equally-illegally been forced to1000; and Captain Accetta has an and the shot, should provide some

even hanceto beter he mak in parkl in he fild evnts. teve Fortunately for us, however, just student travel to the U.S.S.R., a false confession of "littt h net bte mile.r insoarole and tack Baedmavntwil Stare adbytesmetknueo would not only be udicious, but it and how he had been bustl'

the mile. Sorota and Jack BateyafrdthmComunits)ihiswould be especially detrimental to Of the country, also illegallWhen asked whether the track in the weights- cls forit isCno hmnity -hi Soviet propaganda which tradi- remained remarkably quiet

turn-out was any larger than in Cnitny~hudb h e sal rfrigt eana h tionally put great emphasis on cause he was not sure of wprevious seasons, Coach Sorota to success in the jumping. Steve Ritz in Paris. "youth." thought, he didn't say anreplied, "I would say that the turn- Lenmkin, Fred Gass, and Mike Kai- The only possible method remain- This is exactly- why theout is average, but this is the hard-_ ser appear to be the starters in the Plot Back Fires' ing was to make American tu- chose Lew to throw out. If aest working group I've seen in- a hihdents not want to come and/or to informed and positive studentgood many years." hihjump, while it look like Du At the other end of the scale, make their parents afraid to have been picked, he would have

Looking ahead to theHamel and Charlie Ward in the generally speaking, one fi'nds the te oe hsidrc prahta uhmr oa nLookng hea tothecoming broad jump. Tony King may find American it~n h t hs boeen Th s rout et apry c thatquunt h detrentoal ndt

season, the Harvard and Dart- himself all alone in the pole vault, encountered w~ere usually able to aopte nd eryeePry s propagandaetoimete usins.mouth freshmen should provide the unless some preps come through. thatItu tsefrsth art oStrtin ind theSringlevand st Bypgad thei tcaeuschicesstiffiest competition for the Blue. twr nors' fot otwr trigi h pigadls- B hi crflcoc

Reot-from both schools indicate them.n they hade ontdactsowt ing all summer long American stu- pellees they not only achievedRepts te haev e r y powerful Rusiantteyiadgoveiaoutdents were regularly thrown out of primary, aim of cutting do

teams, accordingto Coaqh Sorota Wrestliug Wins on their own, consequently seeing the Soviet Union accompanied by number of students' comingPehp 'n resnfrteagodelmrthntewreself-righteous charges of bad con- Soviet Union, but they wer

Perhaps one reason for the ~~~supposed to. Even more important, duct and of "the corruption of vir- able to cast a false and richtrackmen's increasied-_enthusidsm is (Continued ozi Page Four) - they were able to -understand what tosSve iier" aual eevdbo nAeia tthe fact that the cage'Tno -loniger Hope's .reve'nge- came'-quickly, as thythes Sejecitis reve cNsialder-rad Ifo yo A c soresembles a dust bowl since itg re- Holmes, the sqiiid's a ptain andthysaw- r-teeejcin rcivdosdr-bod.Iyuacseomovamping last' fall. The' new ventila- mnain~stay, overpowered and pinned In this independent activity the able publicity in the American quently enough and theting system has almost ompletely Bruc'KXnapp to make the score Western student "community" co~ press, which is highly ensitive to accused never defends himseremnoved this problem, and - the Andover 11, Hope 8. But Andover opersted remarkably-passing n Russo-Amnerican friction tnturls conluio ofe thejumer should find-their new foam then took the initiative, and the maps, addresses, and helpful ad- Scae Tactics - - .

-rubber cushioningSL good bit more score never came that close again, vice. In Moscow, for example, cru- tisnertngonte tha rease.udlr-~~ - -. - ~~~~ The Blue's Tom Crystal outfought cial information as to the location ts explldteren all -eth st- Typi ar thGruitsof

Jim Rafferty 'and, winning 4 ofteatv hrce n h " dents or Emnbassy personnel. propaganda, this fear of go

-. Dalton's ~~~~boosted the Blue lead by two. With agogue came from other American Vanderwalker picked up ~~~~~~~other reasons.) This in itself is a own minds of~the students

tonywl-esre ont osu reasonably clear indication f the go there hai"no basis in

Pharmacy Dave Hardy out, three to nothing. This student community, because Prysmotives for these ejections; whatsoever. The American s-- This gave the Blue'a20-8 dge, and of its resourcefulness and conse- i.e. to discourage and frighten I met were, as a rule, inte

with only two matches remiaining;- 41iext contact with a relatively Americans from sending students resourceful, and highly sueMain Street, Andover gave them the meet. laije- number of people,- hs to~ the Soviet Union. in both their dealings withth

ManSret-noe wrought havoc with the orthodox 'Unfortunately, the effect has sians and in-getting a goodPete Watson was determined to Party image of American and been exactly what the Communists hand view of the "workers'

MARY ~~~~~~~ increase the lead and put the icing Americans. On seeing these stu- want. One student -group-,±hat was dise", which in the futurMARY ANN'S ~on the cake with a 4-3 win, the dents it becomes quite clear to the going to the Soviet Union, for ex- serve our country in veryclosest of the meet. Russians that Aerican~ are not ample, dwindled from thirteen to stead.

CA.1tL, SHOP - all either espionage agents, fully five as spring progressed._In Mid- Likewise, thebaifo CARD SHOPTh havwigt athwas equipped with horns. and spiked summer in our Embassy in Moscow visiting is purelyariica92 Man Steet nc~oer firlyevengoin int thethirtails,' or rich exploiters of the estimated that only eight thousand mnunist manufacture. The po

period, when Steve DeMaio began masses, dripping with money. (SeeI Americans would come to Russia of being expelled on the baccompanying photograph.) In fact-I this summer while just a few this yearis record is approxthey turn out to be quite friendlyinmonthis before the estimates were %k of one per cent and deand easily approachable humnans. approximately twice that' figure. progressively the better-i

A1~~~~TU-~~~~Cb~~~7T'T) d~~~~~~A'~~~~i~~D ~the tourist is. The Commu'I-IAT JD V J "k"407'..P not consider the actions 'ofi

IT A - ~~~~~dividuals tourist importantaM AIN ~~~~~~~~~~tirI, ~~~~~~~A NN U L never imprison or harm'68IJ M AINJSTR EET. cause of their great sensit

bad propaganda.MID.-WINTER SALE ~~~~~~American students have

an important hole in the Ie

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anuary 10,f 1961 The Philliian ... page-5

2 Make 2nd Ilonor~~~~~~~olls ~Mirror Reviewed inessee Valley Authority system of Marsh, and Paul Lufkin senthon2 ake Ist, 2nd H onot-R o~~~~~~~~~~~s, ~government ownership works well, the winning goal seconds later. The(Continued form Page One) so there is no reason why National- Blue were sparked by Capt. Buckycessful because it ets the reader ized railroads wouldn't work equal- Sides and by a strong defense ledsU p.pers Lead W itkForty O ne exercise his imagination. ly well.byJeStvn-dChriSua.

I Jonahan Cl r ath Paging back to the "Editorial Andover opened the scoring "inollowng i a lst othe122 o atick Thoak Mcaeh Reflections," we learned for. so me Ick~r 1 Jeloe the first period on a goal by Sidtes

owin isa lst f te 12 bys Ptrik Toma Maoneunkownreason, that a mountain "ocke -M er s nartehlwymk.Sds khave acieved Honor Roll stand- John Caldwell Calhoun Mayo, III isa imiversal. symbol, and that we (Continued from Pag Three) nertehlwymrISdsto

th alterm- ogasBr orsg a pass from Ed CGraney on ain the Fall Douglass Bert Morris ~would probably not be able to though the Blue defense uld not breakaway and cleanly bat TmFirn Honor Roll Richard-Gaidner Pearsall esad-h-smoi-agaecer-h uk- ald-oi__

8 boys wvithgeneral averages Harry Cushing Piper, II of Boubderst nth smoic lanue clAnear t itsk besdtcne. apprille, the B.C. goalie. Jim88% and no- grades b ow David McRa-Td7well ofBo e' stois QieaAnorgtisbstcneatK wls picked up the second BlueMost had rdicted, e learned 7:11 when Ron Umile of Melrose goal later in the same period. Pick-Robert Bruce Pruitt

Seniors Mar Sullivan eigch'ristlittle from te stories except that was penalized for tr.;._nng, but the ing up a loose puck in -front of tMeSeniors Mark Sullivan Seigchristthe author may have dangerous visitors successfully killed the B.C. cage, Knowles sent it home to

Robertson Barker Harry Clayton Stone, II sadistic tendencies, ad that the penalty make the score 2-0. Dave MathewsadVerxnilye Cox, III James Lewis Stripling' weir-Irsquiggles skirting the stories Bucky Sides opened the scoring of Satisan B..etdtheyRobertson Gardner James Jeter Tixnbie rather accurately reflected Levin's in the second period on a pass from hmsteams nly goal ofte the

ge Byron Houpi - William Howrd Vincent, ~clarity of meaning. Graney at :48. Sides took the pass frame on a pass from Barry Logue,Uppers peter Brooks Watson ~~On the whole, this issue of the on the right wing, wheeled, and coming just before the buzzer.

Claxton Binford Lowers Mirror was a physical. improve- total of 10 saves for Gilbert, 15 forrt Sedgwick Chapman Richard Henry Bell, Jr. . ment over the last one, with less sent a high backhander by Green- During the second period, An-rt Elliot Frank James Hazlett Binns white space and better sized print law. The period ended 1-0 with a dover held onto its one-goaI lead al-qhristopherGeiss'mann David Vaughan Bowen for the story titles. The artwork, Greenlaw. though both teams scored. Andover,

eCe Earle Hinkle, II Edward Winslow Campion, II especially Ned Cabot's photograph The third period saw Melrose netted their third goal on a rush~s Plato Malozemoff Peter Burr Eakland and John Hbyworth's painting, is strike' for two goals in the first by Charlie Stuart. Stuart broke in

nBurke Rodes- John Alexander Butler Faggi, Jr. as good as .that of any previous four minutes of play., The first unassisted and beat Apprille fromyMorgan Stopford John Robert Fuchs Mirror. came at 1:26 when Jim Dyer took 20 feet out to increase the Andover

Lowers~~.~ William Lawton Hartmaapssfo Uieanbldnon lead. March countered for B.C.Wot osterig Jr Lrrghan un H6&i~ v Nobes the goal, shooting for the near with* his first of the, night. On a

Foster, Jr. Larrdel Bonnri hn -VS corner. The shot beat Gilbert and three-on-two lireakaway, T o mCharles Johnson Denis Michael Kloepfer (Continued from Page Three) tied the game. At 3-44, Bob Hardy Latshaw fed Marsh whs httoGuy Langton Robert Stuart Mcllroy equalizer, forcing the game into took a pass from Priestly and shot the far corner beat Lee Gilbert.

Roi juniors Joshua Dill Morton overtime. With "only 5 seconds left into a screen. Gilbert lost the puck The period ended 3-2.RoiWolsey - William Allen Pugh, Jr. Deland of Noble skated down all and it went by him. Then, with The third period opened with

yGlynne Wright David Lawrence Rockwood .. alone on Gilbert, but the P.A. only 4:08 remaining, Morrisson Andover holding nto its slim .Second Honor Roll Arthur Verne Rogers, III goalie made ,a'beautiful save, pre- hulled through the Melrose defense goal margin. With 3 minutes left

4 boys with general averages John Munder Ross serving the tie and eventually the to score. This seemed to spark the to play, however, Marsh led a B.C.83%7 and- no grades bel1o w John Louis Soong, Jr. victory. Blue and at 10:07, Morrisson rush which tied the score. Mari!

w David Cohen - Bing Sung Six minutes had passed in the skated behind the goal, came out took a pass from Paul Lufkin nDaid ohnJames Alfred Tidd sudden death overtime when Mor- and stuffed a shot behind Green- the blue line and sent a blisteringeFulton Collins, III Benner Creswill Turner, Jr. rison again came through for the law to give Andover the game, shot past Gilbeit. Th aelnAlfred Dolben .Robert Gordon Urquhart, Jr. Blue, slamming home a 30 footer broke through with the clincheroper Stone Dove Glover Beardsley Wagner to give Andover the vtory. B C. Ov Hockey seconds later on a rush by Lufkinetherington Durfee Henry Bond Wilmer, Jr. I -_O and Marsh. Marsh sped across the

sac El j' unos S By John Kane blue line, faked a shot; and fedd Wi Foster'- Laurent Alpert -(Continued form Page One) Saturday Dc. 10 - Led by Lufkin stationed on the right cor-Steen Gaud,; III Jonathan Lee Bixby increased unless absolutely neces- a two goal output by John Marsh ner of the goal. TLufkin beat Gil-

ie eMaoGrtRichard Halleck Biodhead sary. - -of Lynn English, the B.C. Freshmen bert -and B.C. had its margin ofilliam Wishbone Hars Stephen Beaven Calderwood Wiley's teammate, Dan Saks, defeated Andover 4-3 in the cs- vic~tory, 4-3.

inehart Huvelle Daniel Sheldon Cooper showed why nationalization is un- ing minutes of play. Trailinig 3-2,~' Chapman Knapp Douglass Fairman Cowan necessary by proposing a super- B.C. pulled even with a goal by Pizza and Spaghetti

'~dClark Longfellow, Jr. John Kent Craford regulatory agency to take the place ANCHORS AWEIGHDennis Mahone'NF Jose~ Vincent DiRago -of the alphabet organization which Colonial R S A R N

~ lAndrew Manhein Mic 1e Cabell Francisco now control various aspects or rail- 19ESSEXAURANTle avid Marks Jonathan Joseph Edman Cuss roading. Although this regulatory AN9 E MSS.RETLbl Holmes Newton Marvin Hayne Kendrick, Jr. agency remained rather amor- Food~ Shop Tel.VGR, M-9710

McLeod Perry Christophefr Mayer phous, it was attributed with the rC Tel toPre of9710orLsNson Pyle Gerald Elbridge Miller, Jr. power to regulate me'rgers, prices, C6Pr tetallin FoMyB P utieo 60 oe

d Michael Singer Franklin Chalmers Nevius, Jr. taxes, and labor. T6Pr tee RFo ay e utUpT0' Marshall Smith Gregory O'Keefe, III The Negative r e b u ~aIis t, Andover Stas Chops and Seafood

Kes Smolens Kent Newberry Ross .Langdon Wright, objected to theBaird- Sprague John Christopher Wiles Affirmative's restriction of the de-~' ichael Tartakoff _Peter Lowell Youngquist finition, and claimed that the com-Rockwell Tobrtmuter service is in greater need

Alexander Ward ~~SUMMARY of help than any other kind of ser-~-~'IC MAloexde Wasrdt Jr s n oa ie. He pointed out the possibility '

odI 'chard Whitney CLASS HR HR HR that Nationalization coudfiad_Id Uppers Seniors 4 29 33 asked why a risk should be taken \-'I

S McDowell Andersorl, Jr. Uppers 8 33 41 when the Ndgative's counter-pro - .

ry triale BryLowers 4 24 28 posal would maintain the free en- ~~ ry Hanly Barryjuniors 2 18 20 terprise system.

Terrell Bledsoe John Young, rebutting for the -,-

unigo onesTTL 8 14 12Affirmative, summarised his team's al ningan Bdd et TOA 14 12arguments. He said that the Ten-~

Howard Carter ~- -

acfarlane Chapinle Henry Chickering, III

le Brewer Cohen -"Good asit- is to hrta tlbrary.. it is better. to collect oeGeoffrey Cullenas _ ihrt .uay ue oe

Allan Dixonamaewel Kafahnn

Kanght. Andover BookstoreKlwelKiiber

Jeffrey 'LewisC iur McCollumn MAIN, STREET CORNER CHESTNUT STREET[ro St. John McKee

wi

nl HOUSE AND BARNitt~

de ~~~~~~~~Gift -Shop

Cocktails -Luncheons -Dinners Special Functions _ ~~I

'404 South Main Street -'Rou'te' 28 Andover, Massachusetts Key to the Trails and Other Facilities at ad River Glen~~ 404 South Main Street - Route 28 Andover, Massachusetts ~~~ Cataoun Bunny ®Grasshopper 0 Parking Area- ®~~~~~~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Chute (® Parcupine and Cricket 0 Club Lodge

P ~~~~~~~~~~~GReenleaf -5-1996 (j Fall-Line ®j Chipmunk 0The Long Trail 0 Mid-Staticrn- ~~~~~0 Beaver ~ ) Snail 0 The Basebox * Stark's Nest-

rt 7 ~~~~Edward A.-Rorneo ( 0 Glade (H Open Slape 0 The Hutch rnChair LiftQ) Grand Canyon T-Bar Lift -

silO In The "Snow Corner.%- of New England-

MAD RIVER GLEN Ski Area .Waitsfield, Vermont

Page 6 The .Phi~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ipian ~~~~~January 10, 19

er an Fair Th secton devoted to audio and prize winrsi compe#itons such Mr. Ciardi Speak'sGerm, visual aids ~~in education evoked as the ainlSen Fair, (Continued form Page One) publlc interest, representing as it Chemistry, Physics, Biology, Space (Continued form Page One) Temple 5s Elecir

An asbhtalt paved arena enclosed did something completely new to Research, Mathematics and Elec- vrosadmn-aeea wnby baes o hay ~s te scee ofthe German scene in the technology tronics. The impressively compli- i u an manfeted. asRaitwen-,by baes o hay ~s te scee ofand methodology of language in- cated and original machinery co- tieth-centuylf tef. X.'~Uanother popular sight. Here every stuto.Ohraudio-.visual aids structed to illustrate the technology Mr. Ciardi will be in the reading (PHD~~Ys)fiders altenatiuteso tinage ahot included teaching machines, closed of providing for the survival of room of Abbot Stevnsto talk wihrtdtrouis plr ae int a o circuit television, tape recorders, man on distant planets proved to the EngishandSta- RADIOS -Tkart through its paces in a noisy English ~~~~~department adsuand spectacular show. motion picture projectors, and a be one of the principal attractions dents, who must request Faculty STEREOhot rd diplayvariety of models, transparent in this part of the exhibition, par- -ermssion, tonight from eight to REPAIRS ON ALL MAKESNearby was the'lo o ipa globes, and charts, plus an atten- ticularly. since the exhibit was ten.Hr ilbeaalbemoalsuwher the twont erspine tion-getting training panel used in built and demonstrated by a young dents tomorrow -morning, from ten TEL. GR 5175out he dstictiv fetures f two teaching electric circuitry to pro- high school snior. ocokt uc nteDbtn

of th mostunusal veicleseverspective radio technicians and en- ro ofBlnc;Robert W. Phinneyseen in Berlin: one, a dragster; the gineers. reoeom of 26Par Stin- Andverother, a bona fide, fire engine-red "ooflDily etr2 akS.Advrhot rod with an organ pipe assem- "Colorfuld forDPag Twobly of gleaming chrome exhausts Next came a colorful display of a (Cinued sriforae Two) H rtga 'jutting out from each side of its reading materials: texts, training sol esodsepce.T e~huge soubed up engines. These two manuals, do-it-yourself literature, Dr. Davis' tee httewrd .__.vehicles were built and owned by magazines for teenagers, student trouble and we need some- P.~**~' ;.

America to demonstrate their interest to high school students. 'oy, a lot of somebodies, to act 'a m ccars, which they had-loaned to the There was considerable interest in -forcefully rather than spend theirMO UU.S., Government for the exhibi- this display. Visitors were always lives falsifying their expense ac- PRESCRIPTIONStion. 4ined up in -4ront of it intentl cutws lerreentad

Camping and boating displays leafing through the various books worth thinking over. It is obvious Chsnt&MiSresrounded out the outdoor part of the and periodicals. tom ththeetunsdint Cesn &MnSresThe cothig deonstrtionarea-take the time to listen closply--to -_______________exhibition. Boy Scoufs from the what Dr. Davis had to say.Berlin American community were was manned by teenagers recruited. I m orytht heipuseton hand weekends and after school from the American --community in a or htteipletto-demonstrate the various items of Berlin, and was one of the most criticize seems to have lost itscamnping equipmeut. popular parts of the xhibition, place at this school as a means

-Olumn in Separatingthe clothing demon-of learning and become instead 'i tArching aund the clm n Sprtn h clohig em n end in itself.-which the entrance to the pavilion stration from the rest of the secondanediitlf -- was hused as anattrativefloor of the Marshall House as a WLAm. R. TRBEnT, 1961

basin, filled with water, on which large, slightly curved wall on which ________________

floated about a dozen small boats, was mounted an attractive display- rangng romcanes t fiergassof student paintings, superimposed VCTflW FAMOUS SKI DORM

dinghies, aluminumn rowboats andupna-ipesostcmpfth " " IliUUfoam plastic sailboats. The color- United States and arranged ac- M N ful display also included a battery conrbing treios iwichthof outboard motors of various types cnrbtn rit ie. 1111and sizes which, periodically turn- "Photo Bug" trI 4ed, cunrned up the waters of the On the ground floor main exhibitrbasin and attracted attention. area, in hexagonal, booths serving

Proceeding through the entrance as stages, teenage demonstrators. famous forto the Marshall House and up the performed experiments in a fullystairs, visitors entered upon the equipped high school science lab- JUNIORBURGERS SK APITonly major documentary and essen- oratory, manned a short wave radiotially static part of the ehibition. station in communication' w i t h OF THE EA-Contrasting sharply to the urly- hm ttostruhu h For folders, informationbuirly of the outdoor displays, this world, put a variety of equipzmentBEFUGR reservations, wyrite lodgesection, -relying principally u-p-on, available to the youthful photo bug yu hieo o 0photo panels interspersed' with a through its paces, built w6oden and CHEESEBURGERS yu hieo o 01

Stowe Area Associatiorvariety of objects, was designed to plastic models, demonstrated the $6.25 Daily (ncl. Breakfast & Dinner)In.StwVro.acquaint visitors with the purpose activities conducted under the au- S?-EC:AL MID-WEEK BUDGET PLANS TERRIF1CBURGERS I in.SowVrnt

of te ehibtio, wth ts ponorsspices of the 4-H Clubs and Ftur F-OLDER-Write or Phone ~~''~ /:- and contributors; i.e., school, home, Farmers of America, and exhibited SOE EMN ~ie372 2 ANSREcommunity, etc., in which Ameni- research projects, some of them STOWE,_ ERMONT______3_7223_25_MAISTREEcan youth lives, works and plays. _______________

A major' portion of this introduc- -

-tory section was devoted to theAmerican high school curriculum,foteaching and recreational facili-thties, school furniture and equip-meat, including a display and de- finestmonstration of scientific equipment,plus an extensive panel and object inldisplay about industrial arts, fea- - custom Clothingturing some of the prize winningentries in the Ford Motor Coin- and furnishings Dairymple Oil Co.,~~~ Inc.,pany industrial arts competition. D a r Oi-

Photo panel displays o howteenagers earn spending money in-their spare time, on the White 4E thS.%ewYr 1 N.House Conference on Children and 14 E.44BrS.adNww YhL1,wr..n24Youth, on the operation of a stu- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _B o d a ,L w e cdent legislative body, and on the teenager at home completed the N." Broad-way, Salemintroductory section of the exhibit.K Sm *D M TI &IN JS R L O L

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