8
VL 0,NO. WU Fewe Dimsal ases Faculy proves Arise D sring Fail rm By MICHAEL ?~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~M~~~~~IN ~~~~~students to serve, prepare' fod and ct as Aodin to School Re trar James are behaving ... breaking fewer rules ... there 'AThe faculty approved a proposal for, a '1' Lynch, at-the end of the fall :erm fourteen is better mnorale. Stu ents at Andover are Student Union located in the Underw d jntr.Mebr ftebar ilieev ceoring ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~hpp. ht' eifo j aitaor. mSchof thP orrwl ev students withdrew from th school, five hpyTatsrnfr edb Astudentsa y Room on January 4. A board of studerjts; pyaloScolresident Al ElI s will were required to eave o r academic cleswhrstden from other private will ,opelkate the entire union and it wl dititeapctIon o or aiin reasons, and two 'were ( sisdfor schools like Exeter iakdown their old serve as a snack bar and social center. The shortly. The CRL committee sug ested disciplinary reasons.! A dratIcaly differ- school." Mr. Smith, h 3wever, stated, "1 do -. Committee on~ Residential Life (CR!L) that six students, okie'student fron each ent picture atothedend of the not feel that I am paricularly reial !ipreviously passed the proposal, drafted y cluster, be namda"hebad previous fall when four studet wtdrew, well-informed source nstudents' noctur- ~-tCRL members House Counselor Prisci la Although the bpald 'vill detc rmine none were required to leave frademic nal and illicit habits;" Bellizial, Seniors Peter-Downs from West specific oper ting lidurs, the student union, risljtu~end ni weeL Isd OnQtdn ak eibe uadSouth and Peter Van Cleve frmi Thdeilssen.Th uion wlbeopen disciplinary reasons. hese ~rsdemon- Upper Steve 0 ada, referring toPieKol F ~~~~~student rule breaking remarked, "I think Tesuntbadwhnchosen, illfrm7t14pIdheba my I 0~ .~ change these hoursjaii esft News Analy~.iis teachers see it but art just passing by it." De=a 1dM' Rkbard select an opening date, hire and ay as iot operaionthe ~~~I-. ~ Oe tdetquipped, "I think people, have TeUini f~ prto h strate a $efinite upwar I swing in learned to drink mo discreetly." Senior scol icorparte aI ne dismissals. I of students here are ot as rowdy as last ree discussio m n ,the CR 99e htthe chool wirwl and h rpedscpliaroSbatiaCndicm'ened,"Te riPvJ ndisussion y ste tat u ng itsc "Kids Are 1 eu year. People gme more carefuil. The parties eisntol ibr u lc w hy eeren stunts e question of continue but they h yve calmed. down." designated for so rnunli e the why fewe stdnts r le misdfrom Onestu 'n suggest~dta h possible i~alibrary, Becausei orproe is social qte suboltl e adI there, is, it remains reason for the high umbner of dismissals (J J JJ ',f(j Sin nature, the hol1o ose a u'btli anyd tudent4 and last year was the enforcement of a new great$7threat0ton "obnd s bu iness. faculty hold several cI ffe views or the Double Probation sys'tem-: Then, students BnerHuecs'at8pm th possible reasons. WetIQuad North weren't fully acquairted with this, policy 'Grants totaling $70,000 Were awyarded Students program is to provide - a operatitig houswl va fori y one Cluster Dean Nathaniel S'ith comment- and were't whnte eepto othe Coplementary holPjet sequential program of cmeenr ho.BuBnerobcommented, "Any ed, "There are a nur~e of ypothesis but probation. (CSP) by three foundations last December mtansceesudopportunities o bunestathuriiwllet wi take Iwould agrqe to the ide th t not as many The faculty, expe ng a larger number The Edward E. % Ford Foundation economically disadvantaged and mino ty away from mine." taigchan~s. A lot of of stude ts to be dig issed from the school granted $30,000 to the CSP. oftice to youngsters from day schools acros's he ~-The CRL cons e' ev lo ons studes inarehe school's lenec rdcd this yea, were surpr sed and happy with support, in particular, the Short Term countr. She observed that many-mino ty for the'union, i n the basime ts of the numberof studnt dIs .sd.Nta the lack 6f d isciplina ases that came ta Institute program which is in its second and low income families ie in areas wh -re Commons n e d Ho~se, bu: they many are testing the Aademy. This in the fl."Fall tert was the first time year o f existence: The STI's offer courses, local school mathematics and cience chose the Unew 1oon ecus of~t discipinary~syste is no a pariculaly canren~emer inw ich o one n our intensively, in Organic Chemistry, French, curricl might well be augmetited b a favorable size!, loca~o, k ~ a lte punitive on¶." Mr. smith added, "About cluster was kicked out for disciplinary Germnin Astronomy, and Visual Arts for a planned curriculum of intensive matli nd and its relative lck oi s.~io will I- - ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~xo.tnwes.sinesuya a resd'nti scol ie i be'isuped us i art toure flveyearsago, e ~er forcd by'reasons,, Mr. Richards remarked. "I can period of either s outeneesisinc tuya oieta3serater ntcirpt a the students t os; orr to to meet thie rmem r terms o r or five. years ago' Ford, who died in 1963, served on the Anoe.Andover, Sum e Ses~n. during evenings., TI~e vui ea ent - F 4 - , r~~~~~~~~~n institutes mi htad willetor conB.tinueabi to holdsan Shrt r-'tsttuts i asiollconine concd on] rtse in i tiniles. We ould~ 'ti[Fh"e now, but I when k~ lids had left schoof." Mr. Bado ietr tIM eetbihd cussadSotT thinkwe're~unnlg~a app cmmuniy;" ichar' expainedt atithsofew pople the undation to "improve the quiality of serve' as models or (MS) Squa d the Underwood Roo"' - FlagstaffDean Jud~ !Hmil~on sta~ed,, "As remave ,from the sc idol; we had to really secondry~ education, with , particular curriculum, which will keplanned over :he The facult o~tat they wI not -S~~~~~~~~~ needr-yatoigsupervisegra. thI stdtnt union any far as majo*f rule bo kngheesitr scabetfd lcstrnnenew' 'emphasis on independent schools." fuyerhgscologm.hegoa of e t less ofit or ess is aught4I don'tknow sud~nt~ oming~n anu~r." Mr.Smith Asistan Direcor of CP Mari Shaffe (M quaquaredttudy wlllbebte makemakway.ehewboad w De esponsbneifo lewsco it or In is8 ghb o' t mattulilaoindnanar M.Smt * bit~~~~ rou lse Da de ~a h pok fpaige o 'a htP a xrml otunate optio of advanced work and careers in keeping thodde Room clean, studentf ' Foundatio~~~~~~efn' polc ueof spotn smallor m t alnd ineara norit o igsteres cr ss haning ter 8nde mengRon w it on Jofn Ri-chgrds 'tholglit the small' amount sue" was especia ly b~d with 'the 'girls gtteg~n eas f .. Fr of'Iismissals' "reflect the fact that kids (continued n bae8) Fou i edn col. h latn m l For d tenty. mioiyyugtr - 's fromaoutsidfer PAaigwihPol , - ~~~~amnassed much f his fortune fronm a ad sineara n o nee e adigteudrape h nito Davis, M~~~~~~MU~~try No - -' - later Techi An I~aiocre e cad r~~~~hea4 S~~~~ho~~a ships " ~~~~~~~~~ ClS Scholarships rne w n y P r e t I e r . cdthe i'minaLs Of snosGreg4-J Co-~mnayScol rjc. Merrill positions have risen about 20 percent: since Davis and' MIichal Mc urtry for the wsafndroMerilLych, Pierce, ilast year, The'PHI~LIAN leatned last- Morehead'Award,~ four.y all inclusive Fenner and Smith, Jncorporated, a I eek. The school usually receives - scholarship to' t-hr Unive ity, of North nati ?1nwide brokerage firm. He established approximately 1000 application' annually; Carolina (UNC)'tCOe HIl last the foundation to aid. secondary and [an advertisement which PA placed in the Tuesday. Te ilcr~ for fifty higher education, hospitals and other ,National Association of ndep~ent scholarshipswt'hosns of students charitable organizations. ~'Schools (NAIS) Buletn last Decmber. from a-cross th nloaniGreat Britain. 'in addition, the, 'William Randolph btought an additio al 200 responses. MAsumin ta UC xproves their Hearst Fodndation granted 25,000 to '-Den,ourfehersRequred - initial essay Dai n-~~ rtry wl-SUpIDrt the-Math and.Science for'Minority 'I ssociate Headimaster Peterb ~~e travel to Clia~~~el HjlI fbrth$~~~e days in late S~tets Program at Phillips Academy. resppnsible for pro cessin teapia February or early March obr preliminary Hearst was the founder' and publisher of tions, stated that two Eis -istcos screening,' and aii inten lye series of the San Francisco Eaminer inthfisantoMtemtcisrctswllb interviews with ~~~~ selection ~~~ommlttee. - ~~half 1 of this century. - required, as well,_,as a Deancf the Then they will tour' campuson, an informal -(MS) Squared was conceptualized last Academy. These psltion~ have b~oe basis with unerrdu' August by Dilrector of the Complementary Iavailable as a result of the past red ents Schools Project Jerry Foster. According to Iof Math Instructors Rich~'d Piete s'and The caiididates must meet rigorous Ms.~ Shaffer, the purpose of the Tethm rod M . Robert Mad-a t tep ie qulifications to ~~iithe ward, which is Senbin MkO c and reDk Mthematics and Science for Minority je Mures ck - -rtrement and resignations effmt enext judged solely on te basis kA merit These Tune, of Dean of the Academy -Crolyn standards involvd evide ice of moral c ' f., Goodwin, Art and English" ini' cto. character, of capacities t lead and take eesm ca .ie-''Stephen' Marx, and Els n uco /interest n schoolnmates, schiolastic ability, Elsa Hill. i glh~ co participation in e ra.curricular activities D aa~, Mr.' McKee 'explained the school's, and phsclvgra ip~e yathei ~ r ~ t ' f 2 i decision to ire two math nstructor . "We competition or, in oteI ys -~thought we could gef by without hiring The faculty soliie 4p cations for rt; teciib~mn the award, after;wih h Office •fEnglish Instructor Frank Bellizia as (todnt repa teied teers),s u manyei College Counseling, narrowred the choices formulated plans-for the 1976 Manch tr senior year, he stated. "As a result, is fall -to Davis and McMurtry after confering Drama Exchange.' The Andover Tou r we had more senloz 4xi five to rses." with the Cluster Deans. I- Company, coniiing of ten PA students The increased nune ofMath s dents John Motley Morehead donated the will travel to England with A.R. Gurunt caused scheduling roblems,, a[ thus scholarship fund 'ih 1945, hAnd it draws on'' Scenes From AmerleanLife'during sp g convinced the sho to-him' twc more an income from ixn amount larger than vacation in March and students f m instructors for n4year. PA's entire endowment. Its purpose is to Manchester Grammar School will pres nt 'As for' 'the opnnsin the nglish enhanc~ the diversity and' quality of the The Recruiting Offcear by -. George Department, Depgtmn Thomas Regap. UNC student bdy. Recipients of the -Farquahar at PA in. April. observed, "In May, our teaching scheddle award may also Participate in a summer -' Cast Members was set; but over the summer the school

Fewe Dimsal ases Faculy proves - Phillipian Archivespdf.phillipian.net/1976/01161976.pdf · Fewe Dimsal ases Faculy proves Arise D sring Fail rm By MICHAEL ?~~~~~M~~~~~IN ~~~~~students

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Page 1: Fewe Dimsal ases Faculy proves - Phillipian Archivespdf.phillipian.net/1976/01161976.pdf · Fewe Dimsal ases Faculy proves Arise D sring Fail rm By MICHAEL ?~~~~~M~~~~~IN ~~~~~students

VL 0,NO. WU

Fewe Dimsal ases Faculy provesArise D sring Fail rm

By MICHAEL ?~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~M~~~~~IN ~~~~~students to serve, prepare' fod and ct asAodin to School Re trar James are behaving ... breaking fewer rules ... there 'AThe faculty approved a proposal for, a '1'

Lynch, at-the end of the fall :erm fourteen is better mnorale. Stu ents at Andover are Student Union located in the Underw d jntr.Mebr ftebar ilieevceoring ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~hpp. ht' eifo j aitaor. mSchof thP orrwl evstudents withdrew from th school, five hpyTatsrnfr edb Astudentsa y Room on January 4. A board of studerjts; pyaloScolresident Al ElI s willwere required to eave o r academic cleswhrstden from other private will ,opelkate the entire union and it wl dititeapctIon o or aiinreasons, and two 'were ( sisdfor schools like Exeter iakdown their old serve as a snack bar and social center. The shortly. The CRL committee sug esteddisciplinary reasons.! A dratIcaly differ- school." Mr. Smith, h 3wever, stated, "1 do -. Committee on~ Residential Life (CR!L) that six students, okie'student fron eachent picture atothedend of the not feel that I am paricularly reial !ipreviously passed the proposal, drafted y cluster, be namda"hebadprevious fall when four studet wtdrew, well-informed source nstudents' noctur- ~-tCRL members House Counselor Prisci la Although the bpald 'vill detc rminenone were required to leave frademic nal and illicit habits;" Bellizial, Seniors Peter-Downs from West specific oper ting lidurs, the student union,

risljtu~end ni weeL Isd OnQtdn ak eibe uadSouth and Peter Van Cleve frmi Thdeilssen.Th uion wlbeopendisciplinary reasons. hese ~rsdemon- Upper Steve 0 ada, referring toPieKol

F ~~~~~student rule breaking remarked, "I think Tesuntbadwhnchosen, illfrm7t14pIdheba myI 0~ .~ change these hoursjaii esftNews Analy~.iis teachers see it but art just passing by it." De=a 1dM' Rkbard select an opening date, hire and ay as iot operaionthe

~~~I-. ~ Oe tdetquipped, "I think people, have TeUini f~ prto h

strate a $efinite upwar I swing in learned to drink mo discreetly." Senior scol icorparte aI nedismissals. I of students here are ot as rowdy as last ree discussio m n ,the CR 99e htthe chool

wirwl and h rpedscpliaroSbatiaCndicm'ened,"Te riPvJ ndisussion y ste tat u ng itsc"Kids Are1 eu year. People gme more carefuil. The parties eisntol ibr u lc

w hy eeren stunts e question of continue but they h yve calmed. down." designated for so rnunli e thewhy fewe stdnts r le misdfrom Onestu 'n suggest~dta h possible i~alibrary, Becausei orproe is social

qte suboltl e adI there, is, it remains reason for the high umbner of dismissals (J J JJ ',f(j Sin nature, the hol1o ose au'btli anyd tudent4 and last year was the enforcement of a new great$7threat0ton "obnd s bu iness.

faculty hold several cI ffe views or the Double Probation sys'tem-: Then, students BnerHuecs'at8pm thpossible reasons. WetIQuad North weren't fully acquairted with this, policy 'Grants totaling $70,000 Were awyarded Students program is to provide - a operatitig houswl va fori y oneCluster Dean Nathaniel S'ith comment- and were't whnte eepto othe Coplementary holPjet sequential program of cmeenr ho.BuBnerobcommented, "Anyed, "There are a nur~e of ypothesis but probation. (CSP) by three foundations last December mtansceesudopportunities o bunestathuriiwllet wi take

Iwould agrqe to the ide th t not as many The faculty, expe ng a larger number The Edward E. % Ford Foundation economically disadvantaged and mino ty away from mine."taigchan~s. A lot of of stude ts to be dig issed from the school granted $30,000 to the CSP. oftice to youngsters from day schools acros's he ~-The CRL cons e' ev lo ons

studes inarehe school's lenec rdcd this yea, were surpr sed and happy with support, in particular, the Short Term countr. She observed that many-mino ty for the'union, i n the basime ts ofthe numberof studnt dIs .sd.Nta the lack 6f d isciplina ases that came ta Institute program which is in its second and low income families ie in areas wh -re Commons n e d Ho~se, bu: theymany are testing the Aademy. This in the fl."Fall tert was the first time year o f existence: The STI's offer courses, local school mathematics and cience chose the Unew 1oon ecus of~t

discipinary~syste is no a pariculaly canren~emer inw ich o one n our intensively, in Organic Chemistry, French, curricl might well be augmetited b a favorable size!, loca~o, k ~ a ltepunitive on¶." Mr. smith added, "About cluster was kicked out for disciplinary Germnin Astronomy, and Visual Arts for a planned curriculum of intensive matli nd and its relative lck oi s.~io will

I- - ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~xo.tnwes.sinesuya a resd'nti scol ie i be'isuped us i arttoure flveyearsago, e ~er forcd by'reasons,, Mr. Richards remarked. "I can period of either s outeneesisinc tuya oieta3serater ntcirpt a

the students t os; orr to to meet thie rmem r terms o r or five. years ago' Ford, who died in 1963, served on the Anoe.Andover, Sum e Ses~n. during evenings., TI~e vui ea ent- F 4 - , r~~~~~~~~~n institutes mi htad willetor conB.tinueabi to holdsan Shrt r-'tsttuts i asiollconine concd on] rtse in i

tiniles. We ould~ 'ti[Fh"e now, but I when k~ lids had left schoof." Mr. Bado ietr tIM eetbihd cussadSotTthinkwe're~unnlg~a app cmmuniy;" ichar' expainedt atithsofew pople the undation to "improve the quiality of serve' as models or (MS) Squa d the Underwood Roo"' -

FlagstaffDean Jud~ !Hmil~on sta~ed,, "As remave ,from the sc idol; we had to really secondry~ education, with , particular curriculum, which will keplanned over :he The facult o~tat they wI not-S~~~~~~~~~ needr-yatoigsupervisegra. thI stdtnt union anyfar as majo*f rule bo kngheesitr scabetfd lcstrnnenew' 'emphasis on independent schools." fuyerhgscologm.hegoa of e tless ofit or ess is aught4I don'tknow sud~nt~ oming~n anu~r." Mr.Smith Asistan Direcor of CP Mari Shaffe (M quaquaredttudy wlllbebte makemakway.ehewboad w De esponsbneifo

lewsco it or In is8 ghb o' t mattulilaoindnanar M.Smt* bit~~~~ rou lse Da de ~a h pok fpaige o 'a htP a xrml otunate optio of advanced work and careers in keeping thodde Room clean,studentf ' Foundatio~~~~~~efn' polc ueof spotn smallor m t alnd ineara norit o igsteres cr ss haning ter 8nde mengRon w it on

Jofn Ri-chgrds 'tholglit the small' amount sue" was especia ly b~d with 'the 'girls gtteg~n eas f .. Frof'Iismissals' "reflect the fact that kids (continued n bae8) Fou i edn col. h latn m l For d tenty. mioiyyugtr - 's fromaoutsidfer PAaigwihPol

, - ~~~~amnassed much f his fortune fronm a ad sineara n o nee e adigteudrape h nito

Davis, M~~~~~~MU~~try No - -' - later Techi An I~aiocre e

cad r~~~~hea4 S~~~~ho~~a ships " ~~~~~~~~~ ClS Scholarships rne w n y P r e t I e r .cdthe i'minaLs Of snosGreg4-J Co-~mnayScol rjc. Merrill positions have risen about 20 percent: since

Davis and' MIichal Mc urtry for the wsafndroMerilLych, Pierce, ilast year, The'PHI~LIAN leatned last- Morehead'Award,~ four.y all inclusive Fenner and Smith, Jncorporated, a I eek. The school usually receives -scholarship to' t-hr Unive ity, of North nati ?1nwide brokerage firm. He established approximately 1000 application' annually;Carolina (UNC)'tCOe HIl last the foundation to aid. secondary and [an advertisement which PA placed in theTuesday. Te ilcr~ for fifty higher education, hospitals and other ,National Association of ndep~entscholarshipswt'hosns of students charitable organizations. ~'Schools (NAIS) Buletn last Decmber.from a-cross th nloaniGreat Britain. 'in addition, the, 'William Randolph btought an additio al 200 responses.

MAsumin ta UC xproves their Hearst Fodndation granted 25,000 to '-Den,ourfehersRequred -

initial essay Dai n-~~ rtry wl-SUpIDrt the-Math and.Science for'Minority 'I ssociate Headimaster Peterb ~~etravel to Clia~~~el HjlI fbrth$~~~e days in late S~tets Program at Phillips Academy. resppnsible for pro cessin teapia

February or early March obr preliminary Hearst was the founder' and publisher of tions, stated that two Eis -istcosscreening,' and aii inten lye series of the San Francisco Eaminer inthfisantoMtemtcisrctswllb

interviews with ~~~~ selection ~~~ommlttee. -~~half 1 of this century. - required, as well,_,as a Deancf the

Then they will tour' campuson, an informal -(MS) Squared was conceptualized last Academy. These psltion~ have b~oebasis with unerrdu' August by Dilrector of the Complementary Iavailable as a result of the past red ents

Schools Project Jerry Foster. According to Iof Math Instructors Rich~'d Piete s'andThe caiididates must meet rigorous Ms.~ Shaffer, the purpose of the Tethm rod M . Robert Mad-a t tep ie

qulifications to ~~iithe ward, which is Senbin MkO c and reDk Mthematics and Science for Minority je Mures ck - -rtrement and resignations effmt enextjudged solely on te basis kA merit These Tune, of Dean of the Academy -Crolynstandards involvd evide ice of moral c ' f., Goodwin, Art and English" ini' cto.character, of capacities t lead and take eesm ca .ie-''Stephen' Marx, and Els n uco

/interest n schoolnmates, schiolastic ability, Elsa Hill. i glh~ coparticipation in e ra.curricular activities D aa~, Mr.' McKee 'explained the school's,and phsclvgra ip~e yathei ~ r ~ t ' f 2 i decision to ire two math nstructor . "Wecompetition or, in oteI ys -~thought we could gef by without hiring

The faculty soliie 4p cations for rt; teciib~mnthe award, after;wih h Office •fEnglish Instructor Frank Bellizia as (todnt repa teied teers),s u manyeiCollege Counseling, narrowred the choices formulated plans-for the 1976 Manch tr senior year, he stated. "As a result, is fall

-to Davis and McMurtry after confering Drama Exchange.' The Andover Tou r we had more senloz 4xi five to rses."with the Cluster Deans. I- Company, coniiing of ten PA students The increased nune ofMath s dents

John Motley Morehead donated the will travel to England with A.R. Gurunt caused scheduling roblems,, a[ thusscholarship fund 'ih 1945, hAnd it draws on'' Scenes From AmerleanLife'during sp g convinced the sho to-him' twc morean income from ixn amount larger than vacation in March and students f m instructors for n4year.PA's entire endowment. Its purpose is to Manchester Grammar School will pres nt 'As for' 'the opnnsin the nglishenhanc~ the diversity and' quality of the The Recruiting Offcear by -.George Department, Depgtmn Thomas Regap.UNC student bdy. Recipients of the -Farquahar at PA in. April. observed, "In May, our teaching scheddleaward may also Participate in a summer -' Cast Members was set; but over the summer the school

Page 2: Fewe Dimsal ases Faculy proves - Phillipian Archivespdf.phillipian.net/1976/01161976.pdf · Fewe Dimsal ases Faculy proves Arise D sring Fail rm By MICHAEL ?~~~~~M~~~~~IN ~~~~~students

PAGE TWO________________ _________1W ' It11. Uf If 1 i(I A~ N~ JANUARY 16, p976

Hiigh Prices Threaten Future of Off-Campus'ProgramsBy HAMITON MEIILMAN students involved in the program. When it was boarding expenses, -and also paying for fees, each stljdent must pay $199 for speakers,

Amid inflated prices and economic initiated in 1971, it consisted mostly of transportation to and fo,n Mexico. While the 'meals, stationery, faculty family room andrecession, Phillips Academy's off-campus scholarship students. At that point, LA boarding cost is less 'th~an that of the other board, telephone, three trips to Washingtonprograms are struggling to survive. In just the susdzdshlrhpsuet noldi. programs, extensive trave~n inMxc ds adamileage allowance. These expenses arepast year, fees for Man and Society programs off-campusl activities in proportion to the ' substantially to the bill. shared on pro rata basis with interns fromin Boston and Mexico increased 75 percent degree of their scholarship. Fees for students') Erratic Fluctuations Exeter. The administration absorbs none of theand 28 percent respectively, while tuition or on flscolarship, for example, were paid Although enrollment is low, History 'Costs, except the normal $100 food rebate givenWashington Interns rose 23 percent. Applida- entirely from, the school's scholarship funds. Instructor Wayne Frederick, director 1of the oeeyst~etpriiaigi nofcmutions for off-campus programs in the 1975-76 After several years, however, this system ~'program, claims he "can draw no corollation" actiiity. A special fund, however, provides oneacademic year dropped as much as 67 percent proved too costly to the school, and students between the low interest in the program and scholarship each year for a student whofrom last year. were forced to pay their own way. When rates * the economy. He notes tat the program' has requires financial aid.

The Boston Man and Society program, were lower,i students were usuq1ly able to earn 'run with only three students in previous ye'.s N utz..fdirected by History Instructor Thomas Lyons, sufficient fpinds through a summer job. Now, and ,seems to fluctuate rather erratically According to Mr. Lyons, there is "no futureexperienced the biggest cost increases for three Mr.' Lyons! observed, as prices! increase the between a high of ' fifteen studenit and the for our officamnpus programs if prices increasereasons. First, Mr. L~rons noted that last year's chances of raising between $600 and $1000 are 'current low of three. He also believes that much more." F or the past several years, he haspriqe of $380 did not sufficiently cover the not as good. This winter, none of the ten' ,interest is more of a geographical questio bee suggesting that, PA convert to aprogram's expenses. As a result, the Academy studenfs involved in the Boston Man and than an economic one:, a student coming from temo-em yse ofuiinblngoadwas focdtcoepatothta.Tefe Society program are on scholarship. the Southwest is likely to be the most interested off-campus students by not requiring them tocharged last year was actually $550, but Mr. L ons also note tl'at financial in the Mexico Man and Society program, pay tuitimi for their termi away from school. Ifstudents received a $180 rebate ($20 per week) problems ate not the only cause for the decline The 25 percent cost increase in the such a sitch takes> place, 'students Wuldin spending money for' lunchesan in the number of applicants. He excplains, "The Washington Infern program also stems froyn actually save money by enrolling in off-campusentertainment. social activism in the 1960's, which ld to so reasons other than inflation. Susan Ford's programs because they would pay only the cost

As a result of inflation, room and board much clamor about programs such as this, has - matriculation at Mount Vernon College, where of the progranis, which are currently financedrates at South End House have risen. Mr. been replaced by less concern." Secondly, he PA Interns have lived in the past, caused a in addition to tuition fees. Mr. Lyons observedLyons noted, however, "The house is not trying contends that coeducation and increased ' udden'rise in the college's 'enrollment, and that this would eable the administration to fillto make money. Their primary interest is to on-campus activities have made PA a more forced the Interns to change their "home base" "vacated be Ids with one-term applicants or Shortbring people into the community." A balanced exciting place to live. The alienation from the,_ to the Bellevue Hotel. As a result, roon' and, Term Istitute (STI) students. This winter, sixbudget, however, is essential' to the House's campus prevalent in theA1960's has virfiually board fees increased by $94 to the' current level new students have readily filled the beds of sixsurvival. I disappeared. of $894. Aedertees.

Finally, a South End resident, rather than' While enrollment in Boston Man and The director of the program, History I While the economy may not be the onlyan Andover faculty member, is supervising the Society is full, one of the most significant Instructor Ed Quattlebaum, also contends that reason fordeclining applications to off-campusprogram this year, This change means! that'the aspects of~ this year's Man 'and Society a greater stuqent interest in academies at PA is programs,' it is evi~ent. that'- unless' theschool must pay an additional salary for one program is that only three, students are contributing to declining off-campus applica- administration work,& ~ut a formula such asterm. involved. W hile the program is the least costly tions. The Washington program, however, is Mr. Lyons has proposed, or, very strict

No Scholarships at $580, it appears to be in the greatest trouble. 'by far the tnost popular off-cittrpus activity, book-kee ng is emphkized, the programs willRising costs for Boston Man and Society have The administration subsidizes the program in with' 39 applicants this year for fifteen places. disappear.changed the compo ition of the group of part, providing $100 for each student's In addition to $894 for room and board

Stan WVateiman: Living in a Fin i te World StanWatemanweliknow unewter A: I think that maybe what you've heard is the I'

cinematographer and father of Gar Waterman fact that tigers are able to unhinge their upper'74, discussed hi; work In a lecture lbi Kemper jaws, and by doing this their able to open their

Hutrum lsFrdyigt iTrtji mouths to almost 160 degrees. So they canAsociate Editor Michael Connor and eal egafanojet

writer Andrew Morse, as well as lower WMl Q: Are thete any kiuids of sharks other thanStackpole, Interviewed Mr. Wtr after, great whtsadtgers that attack humans?

the ~~~~~~ .~~~A: There are over three hundred species ofQUESTION: How did you become involved sharks, an4 most are potentially dangerous.with diving? 'However, your chances of being bitten by ,aANSWER: When I was in boarding chool, shark' are less than your chances of ever beingback in the tirties, we used to go on vacations struck by lghitning. And that's not likelytin Palm Beach,, An old lady,,who was a friend of o'hpe.Itikta f ol agrev that thethe family brought 'me a mask -- thisw , great ie ~-ems before masks were even known in America; she them all.' "~ ms got it in 1Japan. Very few people weni down', Q: How do you fel about al the new violeiat 'with helmets, of course, and when she gave me weapons on the market for p'reventing shark "

this mask, I went swimming off the breakers. -attacks5?One look and I just blew my mmnd. And'that A: I would, be very sorry to, see any of them ,' -'

was te beinnig ofa hoby, o 'o, hc used indiscriminately. My feeling about-sharts' was getting in the water whenever I could bn is~ that people who have been in the sea a long I it goes into clouds; the cloudy dump into the cotnalupeinsitngchgnadholidays. Then I got one of the first aqualungs, time anp have worked with them have& ,, oenItaldup itoheo n Prs crin thswaesafwy rod tein fact the first one in the state of Maine, and de'velopeo a sense 'of respect, because we are '.dum s over fifty thotisand tons a day of iaw ,World. I hiave no idea' .dosaynel,

wth it the unylvited visitors in their environment. eaeito the Seine River,. and they till really, ,ho~, soon' in etwilbomprofessionally.jI used to repair"',fishing reels They afea balanced part of the envionmnt ntitorhe itbr will beoes ecomet

began getting into the waterheyliv -- the ha enirponent ion' dm inoteTbrnRme-talges ver tcl to t point of seriously affectingand recover scallop drags, on the .coast of whc hylv -te aeaproe.A on 'directly. out to, the sea. You know, it's ow.ies ut o' Maine in a little town called Sargentville. Muroc sii oupc n ato he' happ~ning, it's happening. QWa o o e Isteftueo h

Butm wfe usi an I'ecied io'tryto environmient out, you find that it's attached to - We ercn are the 'mosi fbagrlmnt oceans?-But my wife Susie and I decidedvtoytrhtogsexty.percentoofsworld'seAerWellll thfu damentA: yeanoptimist, anddturn the hobby into a profession. Wpe took a big i.vrtiges.S eorevsnvrkl hm cnaninators -- sxyprei ftewrdsnae fya piitchance and snk all the money we had at the 'amoebtwecryih'uwaevrste dispo able products are in' our own affluent think our: awareness is good sign. I see atime into the building of a boat up on the most up-to-date anti-shark tool, which today is 'society, So is an encouraging sign that we ~re possibility, of a happy ending' in which manMaine coast. It had a lobster boat hull and 'something called theMcNair, or "bangstick." begin ~1ng to think. We are the first ntion uses his t chnology to-balance his position inspecial designs adapted to work with divers: Ihvoe'atched to the backpack of my.' really' aware of what it is -dig o ('r hi niom ad cetinyue the sea to aaqualung racks in the stern, and things that i tank, so hiat I'm not encumbered by t. envir ~ment. n Europe;, there's' hardly any-stir' fa~ greate~ advantage thanhe does today. Weasked to have put on it. We took it down to the I:Wa'd o hn bu l h eb~ tsbcm ut cn here.,Thavp~ a must hus1band the aimxals in the sea, the way

Bahamas ad set upshop as charter sensationalism about sharkssic "Jw", good sign. ' ~ husband4 animals on the earth's surface. Weboatman there. I taught diving, back in '54, came out?, , I think that, as Churchill once said, " is will'begifil to treat protein in the sea, with theand became a guide to the reefs;'I worked for AIthni'soobd-Imveyor.Its is not the beginning of the end; it is bnly~'Ihe sa~le kind of care. Already we're experimen-

four yers in te Bahams as a harter almost inevitable that it should happen. But I ~'end o' the beginning." The seal's constantl in tngwh efamg,"ufa ig"Ter'boatman. Really, that was my ftse no tiki tkp uepro rmsimn out notioh, othing remains static- The oceat~ is a ig future for that. '

professional work as a diver. I then,- started alone, it was worth scaring a co'uple of million. klike aboiling pot of water o2the stove.,' -- ~underwater filming, and decided, enuly Nobody who'-s seen --jaws is ever guz::g u gu ______________

that I could never make enough money as a out swimming in the deep water alone. And it'icharter boatman to send a son to Andover. But in deep water that an attack is possible -- not l'llr-'.*there was money to be made from-i films. lieybcusL'tcsveyraeyocu.Pu !11J A*There's leverage for earning there dnd an think it's orhsa Ial those people, even ifopportunity for growth and development. So I it prevents, only' one life being lost. But the er

sold the boat and went into filming full-time, problem is the fear is unhealthy, because now Iphotography? water up t their necks. They'll get over it; it'll, ~ d n n h I d f e ecA: Well, I did a little in college, but so many run its course and gradually people will forget:".A .

interesting things were happenin udrwtr about it. '

during those early years in the Bahamas that it QBilgalywathfim"ascortAdvrssueinfom nicesnly can jprovide an education (both in and out ofjust semed nturalto me hat Ishouldstart A: Yes, it'was. I think the jump up on to the' widespread, i-defined shift in attitude: the te~asom mosbe1ooti nwee

masy'eopee coturle and etigacneto ooshsik theihadsupouhofoh'ld' oltinedcatontue of theom impsshole on obetait andee

Page 3: Fewe Dimsal ases Faculy proves - Phillipian Archivespdf.phillipian.net/1976/01161976.pdf · Fewe Dimsal ases Faculy proves Arise D sring Fail rm By MICHAEL ?~~~~~M~~~~~IN ~~~~~students

JANUARY 16, 196.Il L1i 1 IFi1d1 It.iA N ) PAGE THRFEWhat, then, is the future role of the

Marines? Former Secretary of Defense JamesFrom the Halls of Montezuama *Schlesinger wrote, "There is a certain salutaryvalue in having reinforced marine battalions'111' I i ~~~~~to the Shores~ of Shanghai . abo ard assault ships in variou5 sensitive partsof the worldi." Yet the 82nd'Airborne Divisionof the Army, is rapidly assu ing the role thathas been traditionally rserved for theMarines. Furthermore, there are threebattalions of Army infantry pecially trained todrop by parachute or helicopters into stresssituations. these two unilt4 c4ud easily replace

ibte' resenti day Marines.* R e a h e ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.Whether the 82nd Aoreand' Armyinfantry assume the role of eMarine Corpsdepends primarily on the future composition ofChina's he N avy ~~~~and 4a neIteUiedStates Navy, c~dn to SecretaryC hina's i~~~~~~~~~~~avy M arin es: '~~~~~~~~~~~~~; of the Navy J. William Middendorf, the United4States Naval Force has taditionally carried out

A l ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~four tasks: control of the eas, projecion of* L~~~~utLu iX A'e i n n r power, ashore, especially a dng/the Marines,-- Anco 'A.way?N ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ 1etbIshn oiia rs taei'S teps 'the ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~deterrence of employment cof nuclear weapons.

T eng grwngoiioShttntepsdedr ge n ocotn, OrabltBy MICHAEL CONNOR g' n pno ta h ntdStates 'Kto survive as a nation depepods on seapower."

Quiot movement is forming in Washington "Mari es are outdated. One support for this' Howeyer, what kind of seapower does theto rdeile th rol an futre cmpostionof Argui~ent is. contemporary straitegic geogta- 1. United States have? The Navy now has 483In ~~~~the Un ted States' military~ since the United py.'. limits te potnte o the vessel. Specifically, the lfiavy- is made up of

betwen Preiden Ford Congrssioial tese Crps. "'~ wethe deplo casesf ah Maprtnes forte thely 18 low e cy oil nd aonvnioaStates' pullout from Vietnam. Considerable d Iyma ofteYainsnSae sipy -13argcombat ships, 77- ~tak submarines,~. Syndiated colmnist Jck Anderon debae is cenered arund the avy and 'there is no place for the Marines to invade. In and'41 ballistic missile sul arines. Most arer~ieale the mnutes f a secret meeting Marino MianIy critics question ineeshnaeoltheeposrirrf crirseth igpnob~en Pesien Fod ada ond essonavo branches te ofitrywouthe Aimilitaryes ina would ounbe oudAcanos foreigncarirscountrykigpi oRepublian leaers inwhich residet Ford seful n futue conficts, ead to a full-scale war. Thus, the Marines are the fleet. The ENTERPRISE class carriers

dlsclosed that China'sChairman Mao The Unitd States Marine Corps i'neffedctivF, as a quick strike force because they ' have an 4 Group compo~ed of F-14's, A-6'sTse-tung Iconfirmed De6puty Prime Minister essenti~il light infantry well-suite~l for Mold'ealt fighting, not suppress it. j and A-7's. These planes pck a soU punch.Teng Hsiao-ping as Mao's sucessor. With amphibius landings. There are 195,000 men iitryecnlghaasoctibedo: , Future plans for the Navy involve a varietyChairman Mao ll and Prime Minister Chou and 3,000 women in the Corps, comprising the devaluation of the Marines as a strike of new ships. A Mis~ile atrol Hydrofoil isEn-lai dead, Teng is the, effective bead of the three divisions of 18,000 men and three tank irc.matb bsndnreinlacut planned for the near futurl. This craft will be

Chinese goverx~ment battali~ns. Two divisions are based in the missilbs eliminate the prospect bf suc~cessful ' assigned to patrol and surveillance duties. Fifty

1904 in Szechwan province to a landed family. Okin'~a the Philippines, and the Seventh GofeyRcrofteBoigsnttuon These low-cost, ships will rovide escort duty.At the age of 16 Teng left China to go to Fleet. Treair wings of 372 combat aircraft - h " itdSatsNv ol a the capability 4Each'ship will be equipped' *t so isilesFrance to study. It fia in France where he and two battalions of Hawk sffacp-to-air 'ohp one division of Marines abroad at 4 and 5-inch guns. The Na~ would also like to

joined the Chinese'Communist P~t~ an met missile~s prvide support. time -Hencecaelaageacge e amphibioushladinng ' bbufddststikeccruisers. Thes rcruiserswwouldbbanother Chinese student, Chou En-lai. Upon De pite this impressive size, there is j h aie ol eipsil.''ouftfitted with an Aegis, fr-defense system,returning to China at the age of 22, Teng took " 'Hronsrfc-osr'e m'issiles, Arsocto the hills of Kwangsi in southern China <.. ) anti-sub missiles, and eight. inch gun,where Commnsft were trying to set up a .. , gte atclrywl utdfreter

guerrlla ase~The attempt failed in 1931 and ilescoA duty or as a singular strike force in aTeng headed north to join the forces of Mao jsmall sirpnish. Ten Trident muclar sub-Tse-ttung., Teng's' rise in the' Chinese V Iiiarines are planned. These subs areCommunist ai-ty ensue~d, culminating in his .pai-ulrl ~ seful becauie of their enormousappointmttt as a member,'of the Politburo, *range and ability to ,carrT, 408 warheads. ToChina's ruling body, in, 1956. .,updite the, 'aircraft carrier fleet, the Navy

From a tudent in France, Teng had risen . would like to build five N41ITrZ class aircraft '

to oneof the-top psts in China., However, 6 crriers. These super-lcarriers carry 100troubles," soon esued., In 1962, Teng and --,warplanes incluiding tMi 2000-mph F-14Chairman Mao clashed over methods of .ToctFially, the Navy plans to develop ainducing .fhrmworkers, to pfiqducii a . larger . .~:i~ iicrir These carriers carry 66 planes,

gr~~~iiy .,~~~~~ ''~~~'~~i~~' ~~~ ~~ et-~~~annot carry ~~~~the--F-14 -because of a short

stim ~ ~ ~~ ~ ~~~~* ~ ' .'eodie: resent p16ns, few can agree

felt atdeolM ondertn'wr.' wha character the Navy's long-range shipsuperfluous.' any incen~~~~~~~i~~re that would raise T~~~~buildling program should 'take. Some analysts

proddcton shoul'b' epyd.Ticah ' contend that the. Navy sh~uld concentrate onproved to be the harbinger of Tng's political . building many smaller shi. This would helpfuture. !' O W ID COME IE SEND TWWOTE UUAL BOATlLOAD OF PING7)kN 1BALLS, Ithe Navy establish a global presence and

The Cultural Revolution brought arbund ACUPUlJR NEEDLES AND EGG ftN~ IN ACKNOWL..EEIWI' '' nable it'to fight more th" one "Brush-fire"the toghestcballnge~t Teg iigTn' ~ ~ Peieta ~ ar, that is, local wars of a small scale, at a

-uposed " bourgeolst' lifestyle, tie Red Wedesday, January 7 ca~tssen oiain time.sup I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~The Reulca'ofonain..lb btenGuard,' a youth group advocating a campaign *CIA agent Richiard Welch was buried in 'gepblcaocnfonatoewllbebeweniorron Pentagon official,I I Pesidnt Fr'1ato Roned eseniorhof violence against' apyone -opposing Mao's Arito National Cemetary following a Peidej'odad.Rnl eaa.T I h ays primary roles was to sock it tophilosophy and ide~,logy throughout the fnrlatnded by President Ford and rimar wileake' pla se arc 2.' *0 by eRsinswt tatgcnceaFmigChinese Cultural Revolution, depict~l Teng as Sceayof State Kissinger. Welch was '.fldrig Clae'-al a e t $1000b hnyuwud need lots O~f supercarriers. Butone of the chief enemies of the people of China, gunned down in front of his villa in Athens, " "eio CutTh' fomrBak Pantheehav Poseidon missile submarines for

Teng dropped out of view for six years after Greeke,_ two days before Christmas, Wlch SueirCut h omr.c:Pnhr tat'. I could imagine us have to retake theL.967, only to reappear, in public. 1for the first worked in the US embassy until his *'li~ht Pat edrfcschre fatmtd Panama Canal or punch our w hack into

time t 'a banqet fr abdas rne" was broken, by a Washington-based murder. "KXorea, but for those missions you need a fewtimeat a'baque fo ambdia' Prnce cove .bgcrirwihltofpaefrsuotSihanouk oi 'April ' 12, 1973. From this publication, Counterspy. '.i~areswt os fpae o uprappearance on,' Ten~ increasingly found iLeb~anop's Palestinians and Christians fought. SnaJnay1 amphibious operations. But the Navy'shimself in the publi s' eye. In September, a battle over food supplies. The Palestinians, *A sharp split developed at the emergency rimary role now is sea control and you don't1973, the Commnist Party held its first who have until now stayed 'largely out of sum ciit meeting in Addis Ababa of the ~eed many superarrers' for that."Niionoal Peoples Con~rs in four years. Teng Leb n~sMoslem-Christian fighting,, found Oraiain'fArcnUiya w ihy~Some critics contend that the Navy mustwas 'imdt'te 195-member Central the slves drawn deeply into the confliqt when repce fia'laespeetdto~ ainfain the composition of its fleet if it is toCommittee at this con ess. From' that time on, a ristian group attempted to block 'a food psig lasfr cto. oabqu' be comnpetitive with the Russians. The

.~~~~~ ' ~~~~~~President Samora Machel received the backingTeilg's asc~endency to ble number one position cnprehigarefugee camp. ' 'sian Navy now surpasses theUntdSaehas', progressed steau ili. As Premier' Chou o ~ftedlgtsfrhspooa htte in eery class of vessel except aircraft andbegan to fall from p bi view because of his Thursday, January 8 ' .. J rvd ul eonto ote Helicopter crrieks. These figures are doublyillness, Teng began to step in. Fipiklly, in eltalian Premier Aldo Mro aa his cabinet -Soviet-backedn PopularkeMovementofordthetio~Liberation of Angola, bu rsdn eghor of' reiewhntisaknnocoidainChinese icuucr~~~~~~~rnp ~~~ UI4IL Christian . .~~~~~bu Prsdn ereSesv eivsi ndn aisbJanuary, 1975, Chou En-lai unveiled a new resignedl after the Socialisit Party ceased its Snglugdteecuaeeto noa at the Commander of the Russian Navy

at the National People's ~~UJI~jLL, . " nati6al unity and a resoijution condemning all Congress. Teng was named to the six-mnember Denmocrats had ignored Socialst~ economic ri tecon ding a lethal first punch. Secretary of Njavystanding committee of the Politburo and advi e and had refused to deal openly with the M odAmnsrtonadteSlc' riddendorf noted in a speech in San francisconamed a vice chairman o'f' the Chinese Comrmunists, Italy's second largest party. :" anoncdplnnt etuDjitecember 3, 1974 that "Having cut the sizeCommunist Party.- Two Weeks 'after the *Wl itei House Press Secretary Ron Nessen ' comnIitteefee nhafan avnCongrss ajoin1ed, eng as naed cief f decaredthat he pesene of Sovet 'propbgals'for the reform.'bf the United States fth US leti haf nd avgaCongress adjourned, ng wa named chief of declaredthat the presence of a Soietpbuilbuingiprogramrjeopararizeddbyyinflation,'p ' *. ~~~~~~~~~intelligence system. enwfcthchlneoteSvitNy.Istaff of the Peoj~le's I~eration Army. All that guided-'missile destroyer and a tank-landing '~n~' January 12 enwfc h hlego h oitNv.Iwas lacking no*r waste final word from Mao. ' ship off the West African coast displays further A temrgnys mimc gofhe Is the trend of expanding Soviet Naval

PeietF rd learned that Teng is Mao's evid~ne of "continuing Soviet involvement in ,.cpblte htIproal iwa n o hsuccesor t a eigwt'Ciee a1ae weete aen eiiae .A'U., 'the heads of the two pro-Western cpaliesttIpronlyvwasnefth's t~ metngwih'Chnee n eawhreth~yhae o egtiat most significant strategic developments sinceCommunistPa~ ChiranMao Tse-tung on inteZes4' The Soviet landing ship is presently 'gla guriamv ensriczdte the atomic bomnb." Thus, if the American Naiy'Decemer 2 ~i~ekig. For and issingr staIne off thIoato Agla n the U.S 'fr failing to- suply them withase. -

Page 4: Fewe Dimsal ases Faculy proves - Phillipian Archivespdf.phillipian.net/1976/01161976.pdf · Fewe Dimsal ases Faculy proves Arise D sring Fail rm By MICHAEL ?~~~~~M~~~~~IN ~~~~~students

H ok yW n o rn y o n em elCnii JANUARY 16. 1976/PAGE FOUR

Belmon HIll and New Hampton, GapesDsryWretrBy COD n"assited y Ran olph Vi.'iliLeadAttack

By L CO Murphy scored a minute later, but two goals on the same shift, one asse y R n o p ,J iDecember 18 1, 20; Pr~vldence, R.I.- goals in one minute~for Kent closed the Ron Martignetti, and the other analsisted. Saturday, January 10; And.

Needing a victory and a score of eight or gap to 9-8. On the first of these, Farrelly Belmont scored again, but with 12 seconds over A pin by Garrett Randolphmore goals, the, Andover ~'arsity hockey jammed a fingernaI ~;nd had to leave the left, Jeff Ba'rhoff tallied,, thanks to, fine in his varsity debut and a sterlingteam downed a never-say-die Kent squad game. Cerrone soehIs eond of the play by both Cerrone and Kelley. 9- htotpromnebby ascore of 11- t win the First Annual night at 1:9butair nt bruh t Blotpto qi~ sow for its roki BynDurrett led theBrown Holiday 14o'key Tournament. PA, to within one. hen a 1:41, Driscoll home fans in the final period, however. Andover varsity wrestling team toKent, Hotchkiss; and Brown JV's scored the final goal. ,Aidover held Kent Two goals early created d ight situation. a 37-12 shelling of Worcestercompeted in the I tourney, which was the rest of the way, a d thus squeaked to Belmont kept pressing, but PA managed Academy. The Blue jumped out toscrutinized by scouits from seral college victory in both thl game and the to keep the puck out f thd net the rest f an early 24-0 advantage andteams. tournament, the way. Especially impressive was the play coasted to victory from there.

Andover Brown J 4 Wednesday, Janu~,tryj 7; Belmont, of goalie Greg Rosenthal,' who has had Coach Nick Kip was ppased.PA and Kent W~re early f6vorites, and Mass.. n its first game after the Christmas some difficulties so fr this year. I "Worcester was surprisingly

on the first day eOach won\ The Blue vacation, the Anddver arsity hockey team Saturday, January i 10; Andover- strong. We were well- conditioned -'

downed Brown 64 on goals by Paul slipped by an inspired lieliont Hill squad, Playing what coach Frtd Harilison termed, and I feel this week's hai workWheeler,, Bill Arnmy, Gerry Harrington, 6-4. PA took a 3-9 lead into the "our best game so far this year," the certainly paid ff.. We'll have a-Wally Ro"t, Dem`14 Murphy, and Bob locker roomnafter the fi t eriod, but after Andover varsity hockey teaiii won a 6-4 much better idea of wihat we canKelley. The teams wir ~ on no that, Belmont gave th learnfris thriller over New Hampton. ;The contest really do when we face axelnthe third period, bu phe' l nfur mny h leto ~nany uncalled for was hard-hitting, 27 penalties were called Chelmsford team next week."minutes gave PA the win. Inf the second .penalties, including a rugiling call on Bill during the course of the game, and, was Pleasants Sque"aks Bygame, Kent beat IHotchkiss, §-3. Army at the buzzer of he second period, played at a fevered pitch continually,, One of the most exciting

Hotchlss II, Andover 6 which saw Blue defens nMkeCroe thanks to the almost hostile. PA fans, matches of the afternoon was inThe seconid day coulc ony b hafrte lkr roo orinobea Brilliant FIrst Period ih6 heavyweight diviiion. Wrest-

eonsidered isasteruus for both Andover up the fight. iFor the second time in as miany gamres, ling as if the team score was a lotand Kent. Kent was edged by ~rown, 5-3, Offense Strlk~ Early PA took command early with three first ~closer than 34-12, lower Richand in the nightcap,, the Blue ropped its Before five minutes ere up, PA had'l period goals. Bob Kelley scored one and a Pleasants fought off his back in Wotngcapan BILL Papppe a holdfirst game of the year, 11-6, t9 Hotchkiss, built up a 2-0 lead. A e taking a pass -half minutes into the game, when he the second period, and scored a on fhls Worcester opponent en route to a 64After a 3-3 firstI period ox0 goals by fi~om Bob Fo6wkes, wing Bob Kelley rushed tipped in a R~n Martignetti drive from h reversal and near fall; in the third decIsion In the meet. Ile team crus 2o to viciory,

hee4Kelley, I ind Army lightning up the left side and p ssed the puck to point. Two minutes later, Wally Row to capture a 9-8 thriller. opening u a 24-0 lead early and gtting somestruck. Hotchkiss sc~red three mes, in the Army, who wap station~d right in frorit. stuffed the puck by tha NH netminder , Palmer Silnes superb performances froai Its new members.first to~ur minutes nd tallied hree more Army was stopped oce,' but on the after fine work in the corner by Lee Apgar. Captain Bill Palmer worked a beautiful s.befor the eriod ded, espie Andover rebound, he lifted the disk over the The Blue picked upanower plav'tallv laerIevesal n te tird e,,d-t noth*a6-4gols bye ro Mat~etted adsi Th pa*ltr rvra nte~z' onthao''Johnsoi i ExcAtels Mu

goal by on Army. Th outstretched netminder.i in the pericid when captain Dennis decision against oie of Worcester'sonly good that cm tofhetird period A few minutes later' Dennis Driscoll Murphy deflated a Steve Harrington shot. strongest wrestlers. Mr. Kip commeznted 11IA ~~~~ his' i~sc~edH over N r iw.s aBi.1 r~i ~ rc, second in soe on the rebound of a Gerry Not many penalties were called duiing the "Palmer wrestled one beck of a match, oneN o cithree games. thscpe f hat coach Harrington shot. Befori4 the Period was period, but a situation for later firewo~rks of his est ever."Fred1 Harrison cald tewrtgame any over, Army had sent lelley on a clean, was set up. Lightweights John, ylvester, Winston Je v (o x reiirof my teariis has ev r p ayed." breakaway for a score.I ith nx New Hampton came out strong in t Wyckoff, and Lee Kante'r all turned in ne. .

Andover i, Kent 9 Belmont scored ea lyinte ex second period, and scdred twice on performances en route to the threeSTThe next day, IHotchkiss came back' period, but Paul Wheeler notched two (continued on paefv)consecutive decisions that established PA's y TVE GERST

from a 4-1 deficit t beat Brown, 5-4, in early control. A determined effort by Doug January 10, 11; Hanover, N.HL- Forovertjme, thereby .se~tng up the deciding Amster in the 145 pound division gave the tv~J~consecutive days( ten members of thegame of the tourna ent. Just before the Worcester captain somre anxious moments ski team competed in -the events of thematch, the officials, anoned that PA before theq captain seepred the, near fall in Hinover Relays. On Saturday, with sevenrequired eight gals to win the the second period which proved to be the schools in the ctest, Andove~-i Toddtournament, and if etwretwiitwinning margin. .,Johnson won the 7 flometer cross-countrywould need ten. Coach 144rris n had an In other action, John French dropped a race clocking 30.0 minutes. Tom Frenchannouncement of his own. Wholesale 7-2 decision at 177' pounds, Buck glided in just 1.46 iinutes later for a verychanges were being mtade in -the lineup. Burnanian was forced to default because, close third place. F.Ihen on Sunday, theThe first line would be Army,1 Mtfrphy, o nijradJm ulercivda snek iesudertook the jupiping events.and Kelley, and Don Bolduc would start- forfeit. 'After two solid dais of competition bothon defense with Bob F'pwkes aftqr nearly a ,Joilnson and French earned very respect-year of inactiit wih the tam. Bob ' able standings. 'Johnsmon had ,ird placeFairelly was to, start in goal. p r S adFechd 1 '

A~ter falling behiand early, Andover IThe events a compositely termed -

waited until three mninutes were left to tie .1, "Junior Nordic Co~led"'and consist Of,up the game and go jl?~4d. Fowkes'started" '- a§' Monty Montgomnery of -e"'-Boston *it off with a power pliy goal, aid Dennis fGlbe puts it, "asto~nishing ~athletes whoDriscoll made it 2-1 with 1:36 eft. Baktal'corz'~r~...33 nbinie'the 'skils fjizm;iping and racig."1

There were ten penalties intefrtI aktalv.TbrJs 200'in the first N~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I Skiing vs. St. Paul's ..... 2:00 Eac6h contestant does just that; oneliday heperiod; however, the game settle down toa shooting gallery in the final t sans.Siingv.M.Hro . 30 race cr A-cutr, ahnd' thn sspent

After ivingup tw goal to Knt1 P went Senior WALLY ROV, 'receives the copgratulations of defeasesman RON JV Swimming vs. Mtflerman AV.m.n. Ath n'eahsoeitr towi oing fourw goals MARTIGNETT'I foliowlig his tally In the opening game of the lrown Hckey . comue and places are awarded.to town, scoyiMgikeur Forlthis week~end conditions were veryCerrone Gerry arringtn, Wheeer, and Tournament. PA downe 1 Its Brown JV host, 6-4, and went on to w the tourney. codwtIeprtrsrnigfo

Wally Row, in a minlite and a h'f. Each I'0 1 ~ C~, TTJ ~1 y degress on Satura4 to -11 degrees duringteam scored once more before t e peiod ~ -r 1).f 11 f ~ ~ I 1f 1 '(I t lO t Sunday's jumping., 'However, Johnson andend'-d at 74. G irls' u"wS'ivim iWn, N 'p W ake ieldF~ French faired very~well. Now their goal is

rhe third period was a repet of the ~75 to be selected f the 1975-76 Juniorsecond, as fie teams exchang scores. fI .l BUWb. 1 Nordic Team which w be announcedArmy tallied 24 seconds into th period, KRo lls,~ tOver yj 7 January IS.-The te~m consisting of up tobut moments later, Farrelly wyas oled by ( f ite ebr ioe rmteetra shot from the red ine, and ent was Saturday, December 6; Andover- In a 85-79. Barbara Trafton, a riewv lower, won it for the Blue. Barbara Trafton led New England. -ate on the basis of theback in it, and closiiig~fast. Anot er Kent meet that came down to h~ `fifial relay, the provided key victories for the Blue, the Andover scoring, pncing sec ond'in the competitors' best three results, is one of

8-6.~ ~ ~ 1 defeated a young Wakeflelj Y team, events. Other first place finishes came anchoring the freestylerelay. Last year, the present Andover captain1 I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~from co-captin elly Ronan n te100 Sandy Clvlad two goo races, Bob, Burnham was one of -its members.

yard breaststroke and from the free style finishing 'second in the 1200 yard 1.M. and Girls CompeteSalvo, Hostetler col ~~~~~~~~~and medley relays. third in the 00 yard frestyle. Cleveland 'three girls also were in one of the

Co-captain Sandy Cleveland, swim- also bolstered the freestyle relay. Dorote, Hanover relays this weekend. Captain AnnT hin d ad s op pie ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ich. ~~~ ming against very stiff competition, placed Schlenke, a new junior from Germany, Pawlqwski, Mary Best and, a swift youngT h in clad s op p le ~ ~~~Nor iihthird in the 500 yard freestyle and scond picked up second place honors in the 100 addition to the tearii, lower Jenny Bensleyin the 200 yard freestyle. She also swam yard breaststroke. Co-captain Kelly Ronan each! "ran" five kilometers to place 15th

I ~~~the third leg of the winning freestyle relay. was touched out in the 100 yard butterfly, against nineteen cIege teams.Saturday, Janar 10; Andover- The Upper Paige Sutherland,' a returning finishing a close second. Ronan also The next Nordic "meet is Wednesday,

relatively inexperienced va ity track team varsity starter, tallied second place points managed a third place,'finish in the 200 January 14,.at Andover versus Holderness,registered its first victor ofthe winter 'in both the 50 yard freestyle and the 100 yard freestyle. Proctor Academy arid Belmont Hill.season by overpowering the Norwich Free yard backstroke, as well as leading off the NAcademy tracksters, 58-37. heBlue field victorious miedley relay. Lower arJudyii at

comptitrs omiate th scrin by Morton was also influential in the~ HA.capturing first place in thre of their four victory, as she swam on both relays' and A n o e .Ua huic

- ~~~~~events, while the runners could salvage added an individual third place finish in r y r o s -.i~ly three firsts out of the~sevd~ races, the 100 yard butterfly. A n oe-~e t o s B o k ,4 1

Salvo MI~se RecqrdCaptain Joe Sal4o, a v~a'it trcse Wednesday, Decepber,3; Andover- At rcse talented Crimson opponent 3-2 in what

since his junior yr, inspired his team ~. vsl ueirHradfehe qah coAch Bob Hoehn termed as "the' finestwith a near-record p0yard ash triumph team devastated the PA varsity 7-0 in the .maich I've seen him play. (his time of 5.6 seconds was just .1,,seconds team's first mathCoc BbHen Tpplyr ra.R kwlwsabove the current PA mark) and a second commented that "the Harvard players demolished in three straight games whileplace in the high-jumping competit.ion, 'were just too strong for our boys to cope third man Sloane Boocfiever managed toone of the teamn's weakest events. re ' with right now." capture a game from his superior

Page 5: Fewe Dimsal ases Faculy proves - Phillipian Archivespdf.phillipian.net/1976/01161976.pdf · Fewe Dimsal ases Faculy proves Arise D sring Fail rm By MICHAEL ?~~~~~M~~~~~IN ~~~~~students

JANUARY 16, 1976 l.I~~1~((I [ 1r1(1~I t ~4 AEFV

Basketball, Drops First Three" Outngs;.Abboud Stars n New~ Hampton L'oss

B ED FRECHE'IT for his players after the third lc0S. Ve there's enough players with goodAfter a forecast of asolid season by haven't been outrebounded in our last two basketball sense on the squad to run a

The PHILL PIAN, the vairsity basketball games but he turnovers have really hurt free-lance offense"team has een downed three times and us. "The problem in the New Hampton did Kalkstein feels thitt the upcomingfallen far b low the expectations bf coach not seem to be in shooting either. If the match with Tabor will forecast what is toKalkstein, loppy play has proved to be Blue could evade the deadly press they come for the rest of the seasona Tabor andthe downfalI in all three contests. usually got off good shots widhin ten to Deerfield are both beatable, but the Blue

In its oener, a superior Merrimack twelve feet of the basket. The only problem is going to have o pick up the pieces fromsquad totally outclassed the Blue, 111-62. was that the Blue could not consistently their three losse~ before they can challengeFacing a severe height disadvantage, get by the press. i these two traditonal foes. Mt: 'HermonAndover dd not control a sufficient Kalkstein has really been diseappointed and Exeter look even stronger' but notamount of vine rebounds to mount any in the way Andover turned the ball oveF, beyond Andover's reacn .If te number of P' ENSDICL ece o h~eu~epc gis emn il

threat Ste'e Pangiotakos was the sole "We're going to g mor-e with .set plays turnovers diminish, then he number ofstandout fr te Blue as he bucketted instead of free-lance offense. I don't feel wins should accumulate.i

In its s anid contest and PA's home H tp e a opener, A dover .challenged the Lowell S w mi r' C sot t r

Tech squad~~~~~~ The Andover attack was more ~~~~~~~~~~~(continued from page four)balsancd, iThis cnotest astc five playe Andover. goalie Bob Farrelly. Three puck went to Murphy, who passed it back

scorned i t oponts. Cas i Mlarksr s ~ , l leet V \7 minutes after the scynd' tally, center Bill to the point, where Mike Cerrone Itt looseSchiewetz led the Bluer p ar scor,,'Mrst withII Army won a faceoff in the NH4 zone. The a wrist shot that found~the upper right

seventeen, ollowed by Labeeb Abboud Prep '~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~hand corner. wisxtee .olwd yLbebAbu By RON RYAN several excellent dives, St. Louis and AI I t 'f ' A few moments later,Army made the)

PAth l s ix ts ow ntebors u Saturday, January 11; Ando~ver- Sherman captured first and second place th"e * 0score 5-2 on a tip of a Bob Fowkes blast.

oncei s owa n teboars, cost Sweeping every event by capturing every respectively and added twlve points to an ~ I ~ ~Durin' the period, twelve infractions weretheBlu t cons,~ thstm 8-9 first second and third position, the And- already winning' cause. .called, and only twice from the eight

late suge i th fourthquarterover swimming team surged over Needless to say, this win over hapless minute mark on, was there no one in the

guard ob Chenow brught te Blue Worcester for its second victory of the Worcester is neither a positive nor negative penalty box, one break lasting 17 seconds,githrd fivebu unnecessryu thoer plut season. The Blue outswam. the extremely indicator of what lies ahead for PA rl and the second nearly a minute.

thn game out ufnrecac. troespt weak Worcester squad by a ptodigous 103 swimming this season., But with two Th hrdprodwshihihtdbthe game out &f reach. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ fiegolenig n sprbdfesv

Npw Hampton t(3ips PA points running the score up to 135-32 victories, under its belt, the squad isfiegatnng ndspr dfniv

The Blue held a niinor height' before the drubbing subsidedl. undoubtedly gathering moment um for the , work by both "squads. The first NH goaladvantag i in it game aginst New The times, according' to coach Gil most difficult part of'its season, nd is as, wasn't scoredu~ntil almost 15 minutes were

aduatag ile ito apiie oan te Sewall, "were, for the most part. Sewall put it: "in the land of the living t. up. Gerry Harrington, who moved up toHampton ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ unpcaclr"bt hywreecuag er" the first line before, the game, scored the

handicap nd fell 73-65.unptacr"buthyweecoag ya.Labeeb Abboud put on a one man 'ingly good in light of the limited training goal that really Rut the contest outof reach

show for ~~A as he jurn ur time afforded to the squad upon its return with 2:05.rwith emainirmaigin He Hegdgttheppuckooushow forI~ as h juped in thirty-fo tiafr o rdt the suadra. upon itrei~ ' p asrn~ of the corner,, skated out in front

points and~ played fine defense., heolI rmteCrsmsbek h heotherplaye who eachd doul~ fiures standouts, said Mr. Sewall, were Tim unmolested, and beat the NH netminder.

was John~ignot ith twele. Thi~Draper nd Spike Cooney, who both X ayI.TNew Hampton kept it interesting at thethe ohn Wgt, wit Hton uieda lowered their times considerably. 1 Tim 'yJ end, however. With only 1:29 left, Murphy

devastatin press which frqe ocd Draper, SW Wd i nimming in the ne husdred j~F~ 7 j X'~1 ."1[ . was called for elbowing.,NH pulledl its

Andover o c ough up tebl.Tse yard breast stroke event lowered time I ." goalie, and put on te pessure until

turnversgaincostAndver he~ ontet. b animprssiv thre seotis dalot Saturday, December 6; Andover-The ~ ''~ Fowkes was called for r'oughing 30 seconds.

Coach Kalkstein had few kin words caught his record holding teams~mate,! John girls' squash team won its first match ever, late.Advrwsnwfcdwt h

Grinder. Spike Cooney cut nearly one alf defeating the Brown varsity by a 5-2 score. m ydilemma of playing three meni down. After

i auase~ second off hi'already lI ow tm of The girls attribute their' ucs oth ilA m clearing-'the puck once, NH cameabackq ~~~~~twenty-four flat for fifty yrds freestyle. expert coaching of CC'Tu rner, wnerith a fout on two~reak and scored on the

(continued fromn page ou Ray Hudner also swam exceptionally well whose direction the~ saya!eleaiin rebound of a fine stop by Farrelly. TheI games~~~foriI ay't"ewtrinngBrow tourney, Includingh!ret fth ayfr h

his opponent in the, fifth. game of the, grabbing firsts in the 500, and 200 yard methods such as running ahnd work-outs in shat rick In the Hotle edontereto tewy o hmac hnteopsigpae aqe freestyle events, and~ contributing to the the weight room have significantly vcoy

slipped Olt of his hand, leaving a welt in winning 400 yard relay squad. increased the ta' blte.the back of steve's leg. The score of the last In' the diving events, the greatly Playing her customryr number one game wa~ 5 13 in favor of the Brooks. improved duo of Pete St. Louis and Joe position. Sarah Mleczkd continued her Fre'' Sa kh fiv

player. ~~Sherman performed prIl.Eeuig streak of never having lost'a game, easily ~I L L J-L LLplayer superbly Executing~~~~~ defeating her Brown opplnent. Number

/U M 41M - Wg MM two player, Kris Kinney hiso won in a Sunday-FridayW .im IF in 7 ~~~~~~~~~~~quick three games. Abb~' Mason,, the

W i= 0 W M number three woman, ftdher Brown iI i ~U ppnnt~Call 475-9698Ht

s~~~nuuiu~~~~nahnd ~~~The two Ando'`e'r k~ lme in the "Sra Snwce''Steak Roll1aeros~~~~~~e '}quipm3NEJEU number foi~r and five pton.Cone

_____________________________________________________ - Ordway, playing number fdur,klost a close A base of lettuce,tomato, 41.sta__________________________ ~~~~five game match, losing 15.8 in the fifth. pickle,onion,cheese and' dressing

Priscilla Green'. numbei< five, lost in' i Plain............1.25another close five game mlitch. Vegetable ........ 75 j Onion . .......... 1.30

FIOLLIS ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~ ~~~~~~~~~O Martha' Hill, playing ipniber six, and Ham .... .... 1.35 ' heeI..........13HOLLIS ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ A ff~IEhEllie Cunningham, the 'uii'iber seven Salami (Genoa) .... 1.50 Onion & Cheese .'...1.35'ANDOV El racketman, b terBonCombination Pepper & Cheese .... 1.45ELECTRICAL CO. Pht Ofse . Letterpress ohdefeated, erBonHam-Genoa Salami ... 1.45k Mushroom, & Cheese ... 1.50M N Trade Comnposition * Prorm opponents in three fast ga~nes.I

INOUMTRIAL 11/0Weddieg Invtations a TOMg The girls, now psyched",after winning Roast Beef ('A lb.)....... 1.50 I Special Steak, Mushroom,/ ~ ~ ~ CMM ILP N ,Letterheads * Bll1heads thi is ac nP itiaeloig 'Superburger .... .. 1.25 onion, Green Pepper,

~1DENTIALSnapout Frms. N C t Fons'., forward to playing St. Paul's in their &Ces..7

2k-HR. EmERGENCY SERVtCE ,',upcoming match. Coach Turner comment-I CONITIONNO & R16ERTIONIng on the St. Paul's"~ match said, ' M Y BR T E PLACE

All CONDITIOING I REIIWEAIION 475.0 26 "Although the two Week period before theF&DERAL III

ELCTRIC KEAT St. Paul's match yslow ou r momentum, 9 P s fi eA o e as~~~EALEAS ~~~~~~~26 ESEX S1. AIIOVE we'll continue our had orking pace."9 PotOfc A e. nd er Mas

475-5734 -57 ESSEX STREET. ANDOVER1

-j ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ M

IRERNARDINTI1tSURANCE 2 i a ad ihs

ENE BERNARDIN 'sa

rlassq nf 144 '18 s% hakesLv and, .lnM

Page 6: Fewe Dimsal ases Faculy proves - Phillipian Archivespdf.phillipian.net/1976/01161976.pdf · Fewe Dimsal ases Faculy proves Arise D sring Fail rm By MICHAEL ?~~~~~M~~~~~IN ~~~~~students

F o rum________________PAGE SIX/JANUARY 16, 1975

Grades at PolmAndover ~~~~~~~~Missing

Late last trn I got a phone call from a -A ci ye student who l~~~ad done poorly on an exam.thtill 0 rs ~~~~~~~~~~The next d when we met for; a

conference, h 'was clever enough to be \polite and n his head when I made somne P ra ci e ~~~~~~uggestianf~yve.Bthsee odG ra e te tut. H id'twant to go over the P i t~ st or hear blout notetaking and theandbook of AmerIcan History. He By ROBERT CRAWFORD

wanted an hon rs grade. He had gotten I 1 I wonder if it is desirable to raise teshaft. "Sewill," his eyes read, "you JIIstorm about grades at Andover. When'Iscrewed me."j) jf ii first came here so-called radicals wre.By GLLBERT 9WALL Psychiatrists have a word for this:. creating something r? a following asthe.

It is not surprising that Andover etraiain short, it i 'iigth bellowed about the inequity of a numericalstudents are neurotic aloit grades. Good blame fr failure outside oneself. One is grading scale. The New School was on thegrades in junior high sciiool are one of the victimized rather han in error. It is the tip of everyone's tongue in the, midst oseveral tickets of admis on, and presum- whole "I deserveJ five but got a two" or "graded" conversations. Those frenetic

ably most Andoverians played the grade "I ,should have bte on the Varsity bt the days are past, unlamented by the facultygame well for a long m before they came Coach plays f~ies - and anyway h's J a', curiously, unobserved by most-of thehere. Thyare accustom d tostigat the incompetent" roe xenlztocurrent Andover students. paelltop f te aademc hli I fer sepiden~ic at -Ando junior high scho an parenhy~Unfortunately, not everyone can be top To teachers this is incredibly depress- were not infected by this particular strain

dog here. No one has to look very far ing. Any decent tacher wishes above all to of radical virus. Perhaps that is too bad.around the corner to ee someone else, be fair. He seeps to give students the What 1,as been substituted in its'stearlisdoin' "better." Someare forced to accept bnftodutuneaeso'rr.Bt possibly more hairmful to he- blymed ocre records; afev~ have to contend he also must act from his more - academic.with magnlpasses or ailures. Too often. knowledgeable v ntage point todsour-the maturity to fc6 tranquilly the age wrong tu rni, He must set certain, into our midst. Not that grades are bad-- Iacademic expectations bf Phillips Acad- academik standards and then use the- vigorously support a system whichemy is! missing. The res t is'demoraliza- ,sometimes insensitive system of grading to -. classifies acadernlc~achlevesnent comparedtion and anger. measure cogmii~ acivmn.-to an established zomSuch a record of

More important, students of all - Certainly ndover could avoid grade performance cant ieI established, andabilies see grades as thil machine that will neurosis by doini what the colleges have Such a point of view~ seems almost unsatisfactory. ought to be. Students deserve this kind ofor ivill not' catapault 'them into a done in the last decade: give every student heretical, in the "every man an academic Let's get something else straight. appraisal, as well as narrative cornmen-presigios unversty. lthough a college honor grades. I could give fives as 'a king" climate in the schools and colleges Grades re not areecinohua tary from teachers. ut I am distressed-canc iate usually exaggerates the signifi- "standard" and 6eserve sixes' for "special today. It is, however, a good antidote to worth. There are few things moi he e the ca mic behidvgradescanc of grades, to tell him not' to worry cases." Then everone could marinate in "grade inflation." loathesome than a compulsive gra e shiftn from oneofadeiacevmnabod them is pointless. the record proves the luxury of Hc nor Roll. Radical educators in the 1,960's, grubber. Students with middling grades tone of persnalworth. Students -areotherwise. But then, you a the Honor Roll would suggested abandoning grades, but pass- are often more likeable, interesting ad guilty -More Ofte~i than we think-- of

Iecause. of college; pressure, grade become mneaning ess. Eactly - and this is fail systems are meoal- o anyfr mlidmninlta rns Doilg making this casuosl identification. Thishu 'ness is sesnl4eedof each -just whit has happened in universities their dismal failure. few 'idealistic kids poorly in a subject is different thndoing .leads to funny Behavior, attitude's per su Aesna.Teen rd~tsti term is partirularly agonizing,, and across the couniy Harvard -College, for profited from them; in most cases pass-fail badly as a person. . unique to the aca eic world. It srafnspossibly the end of' all Termi is the most example,grdte better than ninety stimulated little'more than sloth. There is no solution to rade neurosis, students who coinl for grades, lest theydifficult of'all; It is then that most every percent of its clas each year with honors. Let's face some hard realities. (1) Grades Are important to - ambitious, lte sidvdas

- - ~~~~~upperclassman sems to lather at the Many responsible, professors now consider Grades are here to stay unless there is a intelligent'students.' They are no~ worth, Oesgae ~oag fproathought of Honor Roll, eniors in the last the problem, o1 "grade inflation" a radical change in American, education however, a drhven personality to Wvhom "a worth. Still, sidea s act on occasion as ifleg f the college sweepstakes see a three paramount issue in their institutions'. beginig n the.'elementary schools. (2) bad mark is a shattering experience. I wish the identification were a vetitble law of(or sometimes even a four) as a threat to Arthur B. Dar ing, a tough old buzzard 'The reward of grades more often than not there were a ground where students saw the universe. The s dent who follows the

ruture ecurit, uppes are sezsng~r who or ~ ~ the Chairman of the' encourages academic achievement - if for grades as mre symbols a( ens~dcttso t i o w i eo hisporvezxiefirt tie te rel pessue o colege Phillips Academy History Department, inany of the wrong reasons. (3) Grades themselves. o'tunatejly, I am not hod' lo-grade / fate adsrv o mrvadmissions. The outcome-'can sometimes used to say thast "a course, has no mean nothing unless they assess perfor- my breath. - per'sonal r ttioiwith a variety of ploys.tie -ery unpretty. I standards unless ome people can fail it." mance from the, outstanding to, the Giber Sewall is an nstructor n Hltry' h-i.vis eutfrtoew

____________________________ '. -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~achieve higher gra4es is the belief that heI ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~or she is a better prhnthan others. High

belive tat te s entshould have the exam period. The ill effects ot this hysteria nothing to the compiunity. -gae upIel',nineoe hlPressures option of electin afit course on a were brought home to me when witnessed In conclusion, I1,believe that ;eti grade pupelowenhance one hilPass/Fail basis, i the course is not a an incideint this fl.Agraedytedamutoaceicpsure 'i bt eereas rrevocale bairp to 4'happyriti stddent presumably is be unprepared ~~~~~~~~~f rl 'areriay Hitory coupte otf bcaegietse is both Ase* I'resc -- tio ~~~~~~~~diploma, reqirem nt. If the course is an from the rayages of tWf term, felt-horseif to instructive and productive, ye"rsuefuture. Ha~~trsi usateinterested in it, s that the teacher need exam. On the night before the exam, she destructive and dehibilitaig. hysteria issue at Andover op ~ma larning. That'* I ~~~~~~~~~~~~not fear lack of effort on the pato h eaes erfed th't she felt physically' generally stemsfo.aproa ecint includes a real stic description ofstudent taking e ore on a Pass/Fail ill'and, as ,a, result was pable to take the pressure; it is generated by the m'o priorities. Grades r legitimate, but alsotcr I ~~~~~~~~~~~basis. This option ould give the student a exam. Many of the uppers in her dorm' intelligence and dterminationofte PA elusive and deceptive. If they are sought

chane t elet ac'~rse he fears he would believed that she had feigned illness to cmuiy omte nycr o directly one will probably miss the moreriot do well in, bt ontheless wishes tbe escape the exam. Both sides over-reacted hysteria is a sense of ' humor and a important reality that they can only'-exposed to. The mst important deterrent as a result of the intensely emotional reluctance t'take ourselves too sriously, inI' to academic presgul'e, however, is effective climate which characterizes the exam None of'what~Iwrite is especially gnal,, Robert Crawvford Is an Instructor In'communication, btween teacher and period. In some wayis, the incident was but I feel it bears repeating. Laugh, and, Histosy and CO Dlrector of College,I I - ~~~~~~~~~~student. If a st udent is honestly contructive because it demonstrated the everything seems brightir. L Counseling.

There is quite afl concerning few days' grace. Thiso communication sure. I think that few of the participantsgrade; at PA. No doubt pr~xnpted by tales requires flexibility, honesty, trust, and will consider an exam so crucial again. would be ideal. Unfortunately the era ofof a suicide at. ~inother prepscolth repnilty Another variation of academic pres- O u r the instructor as a "gentle scholar" is past. cadp a ocu~ed attention-on its own I believe, howevr, that the source of sure is indigenous t seniors - college-itis. I The PA community as well as the largeracdmcpressurc. The CL recently held academic pressure inot simply excessive have never heard such iscussion about society outside our walls is effiqiency-an oen meetin~ to dis 'uss academic work but rather pei~sonal reaction-to this grades as I have this past fall term among ~ T. onscious and does, regretfully, demand apresst re. The CR, has b n' a valuable work. Most students at PA are driven, not' seniors. The self-imposed pressure' of C 'large output, albeit, "quality-controlled"

-forum for discussi h and c3mmunication, by their teachers, ut by themselves, to qualifying for a'"good" college creates a insofar as possible.yet I Ie that after this partcular meeting, perform a wl a they can. The PA nightmarish fall term. Numbers becomeI can now state the assumptionswve c~re expected to arch home, community is an artificial one in the sense all-important, and most seniors unasham- needed tbuild iy 'case for grades.frustrations prged, t right ~ that each mm~ is selected for el grade-grub. Nubrgubnmakes - ) The student must have goals.

down ~ that"~at ed andreal business ..-intelligence and nrtvto.W rv for, a very boring person; many 2)Hems be todwa the instructorof livi~i, W RK ourselves, and most of the pressure we feel number-grubbers mke for a very boring is hoping to achie'e in a given course.

M 01stip peopl at theedtat mntsfrmorqw desire to succeed, and stifling school. For this and other By CAROLYN GOODWIN 3) The studentf must have some way tothp- quality (an utiy of work at I do not mean to imp~ly that the workload maladies, I suggest involvement in lt'sffbeen said that people climb verest measure his progress.Andover is precisely what makes it one of' is never unreasonably, but we must admit extra-curricular activities. Some might because it's there and I suppose i anllbe 4) he instructor must relate his gradesthe'mgst highly regarded chools in the that we create a largF part of the pressure argue that participation in these activities believeO that instructors give' 'grades to the goals of the course.country. Although a day seldom passes we complain of. Pr sure only becomes only compounds te workload 'by leaving because "they are there" - hidden} in the If the instructor can give.'a satisfactory

* - ~~~~withou tales of unbearable workloads or counter-productive when it reaches the even less time fozo'work, but I disagree Himalayas of taching, sometimes easily.. explanation of the- relationship' of hi~unceasing all-nighters, I do not believe point of hysteria. A bit of pressure acts completely. I belive that involvement seen and sometimes lost behind cle~uds. I grade-giving to' the standards implied bythat thl majority of the cam'pus would like well as a spur, but eFcassive pressure has helps to dispel academic pressure by shall pursue this comparison no furthier for the stated goals of the course, then in ourto see1 the quality of work decline, dangerous side effects. Those people forcing attention away from oneself, by I do -not see rades as the highest point of efficiency-conscious orld the grade servesNevertheless, perhaps some of the lacking a sense of humor or a sense of providing an emotional outlet, and by teaching but do think they are sometimes- a prpose.-acadermic pressure can be alleviated. There perspective can all~w the pressure to .preventing over-seriousness. Participation "there." I do not doubt that there are betterhave been efforts made to prevent students overwhelm them. A case in point is the in an activity 'supplies 'a sense of personal Few will deny that 16 words spelled ways to achieve the same purpose. I do'from having more than two major tests on extreme hysteria gen~rated at exam time.'- importance and personal contribution. It correctly out of a required 20, mlies. a believe that greats unaccompanied bythe same day, and such 4forts should The worst hysteri~ centers around combats h elnso ndqay grade of 80 percent,-but many will claim feun ilgeadcmet r contnuL he mdter graing erid is Amercan istoy. P~s trnsto pnic nferorit andinsinifcanceso ommosthafattinmeteiucretiveworkorufelds feebeltol. e reget tatmteentse-aren

canuse byThe mitehrs jn etootains ak American Histo ' t one ime, trand ee ok pfo i ok iss motneo eonzn h rd o w eatet.Ia paldta

Page 7: Fewe Dimsal ases Faculy proves - Phillipian Archivespdf.phillipian.net/1976/01161976.pdf · Fewe Dimsal ases Faculy proves Arise D sring Fail rm By MICHAEL ?~~~~~M~~~~~IN ~~~~~students

JANUARY 16, 1976 T_________________i k"1 c' i, .PAGE SEVEN

Arts and E itertainment THOMPSON Sihe Mouse 0 9.ap. !JncINDIA IMPORT

DRaES SH ITS SPREADS - RUISS

Orpheunm's box office. he show will start -colsp ie PAT WIRTZ POST OFFICE AVE.

at 8:30 on Friday an4 Saturday, and at ADVR A..miC

Boston ~~~~~~~3:00 and 8:00 on Sunday. ps..1Boston ~~~~~~"Festival Bostonialls Arab Celebra- TYPEWT~fll*~II ~~tion" with pictures and poetry from the r -- - - - - - - - -------

If you find time to go int Boston this niid-East, and nati~e costurles and -

weekend; you won't be lackin in things to landscapes from seven ' rab countries will do. Downtown Boston beat downtown open at the Boston Ci~y Hall. sales Andservice I _M O'INLA HO EAndover for cinematic entertainment any- day. The Charles Cinema C~e at 195Cambridge Str. is featuring I Pac in ~Events-IDog Day Afternoon, IaBergman's 77 XAM AIT ST C lD I'V'The Ma~c, Flute, and Ihe dther- Side of I BRI 'the Mountain. One Hlewl over the f~j ICockoo'u Nest; Kesey's bestseller with Jack FRIDAY, Jau= 16~ AINDOUVE XitNicholson, and The Suint *py are RlgosServices/Jewlsh Sabbath services BL Kplaying at ithe Cheri 11, so. Dalton St. will be held in Kempe Chapel tonight at SADTNE

The Codor ispresently atthe SaxonITheater at 210O Tremont St SATURDAY, Januy 17

The Beacon HI Theater ~tI Beacon Movie/A cartoon speci I will be shown~ at 'V'

HUIl is showing The Blakid*t ere7:00. in GW. This extravaganza will' Segal. You'll also find urRenlsadfeatuqre Woody W eker, the Pink' Catherine Deneuve i uteadRa Panther, and Heckel Je6kW est Streetay

O Neaul B yndo at iCinema 57 night blast from the past.eIon 00 tuat S; Tie indIIe L~nReligious Services/Sunday services wI

andWalabot ae sowig a Cinema begi withi Mass in emerChapel at II7313 on 739 Boylston St. and 6er Elite s 10:00 am. Protestant s rvcswill be held L w e cplaying at the Savoy II on 539 Washingtoni in Cochran Chapel at1:00 am.

Th It Ue Pince is being presented by SUNdJAy, January 1 m.. n~r~n-- -nr-the Boston Repertory ITheater at the' Memorial service/Arc~ie Epps, HarvardCharles Playhouse at 74.76 Warrenton St. bean of St~xents, a~ biographer ofFor a quiet ei~ninig go to the liocket Mime W.E.B. DuB ois, il9eka h evcTheater on 67 Newbury St. The Comiedy of commemiorating Marti Luther King in ' D0VERWN EErrors performed by the Boston Shake- Cochran Chapel at 5:90o PM. A N O E THE WMTER USICALspeare Comp~y is on the corner of Music/PianistfBarbara Kaufmnan, cellistN

Brlyand Marlboroukh lxn Back. Bay., William Thomas an voiitGrlAndove; Lit BlI1 lovers can take GuJ~ver's Ellis, will play selpction from BeethovenNTravels at 1151 Mass. Ave.1 in Harvard and Brahms in the- oJanuayT 8Square. ' e~~~~~~~dd~~son(~~allery at 3:00 ~ D AMA1LA'pm. ~ d oo tecampus

There ,Are',no concerts this week, but -Philips Academy"'Chris Smithfer and Rob Car on wil .b FRIDAY, JUaU3 2 ______________

playing live folk and blue as at Passlmnts Lecture/At 8:00 pm, Professor. Benjamin 141,on 47 Palme'r St. in arv r Square. Sc'hwartz, a mebrof Harvard's Paul's Mall will befeatuig eyaic Government and History Departments A .,.Superiors. and a biographer of Mao Tse Tung will be LP awHAP 01 THVW -T1ag

Alvin Ailey's Dance Theate will giver speaking on Cl~na in Kemper Auditor- ~E!&aBperformane Frda, aMar -:b M.fhIf

S nday , on at Ja ur 16 to iumn. Mr.' Schwartz, wh~o returned from chape I ave. Seek by, IC i~.V~iWY~DR ik Lics Sudythe eighteenth atd.Orplheurn trip to China last fall, isone of America's

Music Hall. Tickets will be sold at the foremost authoities o China.,e.674550 ________________

For the children,in Kifsillie, Arrzono. Project Partner ~ i'oerPrnrafl tr~hisedoTronblV means a new health clirlic ,o.'n empty one'For those in Sumapaz Colombia, Project Partner ' A healthy body instead of iseoised one

motor ,-Co c easvcationbl high s(hoLLHope ins d dsprI ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~Fr,86~l dbk o fl roject'Partners yogu'-wher) ~'u agree to

' *needed nutrition programcntiue4s$9ayarSerIceBut what is Prdject Partner9. Or- $4.twice a year

It is a new way of helping children through 'Or $24 fdr times a yearSave the Children Federation Oras. ittlecqs'S8 a month.

No. Andover ~~~~~~~~~~~But more, it is a village helping all its- children. It's 'oL ndyour moneV(justover25Cqday),workingI ~~~~~~~~~~~~~A village building schobls to'e'docate its children tthrwth others and their m-o;'ey to build a

i.125 By- Pas' Avillage growing better crops so' its children arership i8~'ete ie

686-9703 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~' , rwstogr. o~rtmsa year you'llI see your money at work686-~~~~~~~7O3 '~~~Laying new roads to bririg the outside inside. thruh omunity progress report~ that'includeTurninq $1000 into $5000 worthofi volunteered work nw rmtecider

and omuniyresources.._______________________ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~So please: fill out this coupon ansi mail it today

Remembetr it's your chance to gve a communityand all its children ochance atlife

~BARCE~ 0 u LABRO ~~~~~~~~~~~PROJ rPARNER IS iHE HEPYOHome of Faz~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~cy ~~~~WHNlED 10-GIVE BU1F OU

Fruits & ITgeTaTOM

Quality' Meats

4am

Street

An~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~A

AV 8 areIneedtudo u e nyor 'nt .a report and audit

ttmn aoto onrQst membI~ internatio" Liontar Child WeIore and the Ameilcanounctt Younor Aences toe

Forein service Founded 1 932 Contnutwut~ orb Income tax tlet~

Page 8: Fewe Dimsal ases Faculy proves - Phillipian Archivespdf.phillipian.net/1976/01161976.pdf · Fewe Dimsal ases Faculy proves Arise D sring Fail rm By MICHAEL ?~~~~~M~~~~~IN ~~~~~students

PAGE EIGHT ~'I'hL 11 (1I 1,f 1,I( L k~t\ N JANUP.R 1,1976

Dic" ~e Appl 4 attonts Drama 'Wise Indiain Bionesac commdtinu. Ther schiad oa o.e me(cntined thpaer sasrn (continued ,'from page ). (continued from page 1)ac moationus froi sc a oak or emnindhat eeiasrog Lincoln--Sudbpry Regional High School. be a "more lucid" collection if his work

Boston Man and. Society 'rls t ive up need for coaches' i tennis, lacrosse, They will spend' en days there before was excluded. By DAN, LIEBERFELDtheirros hockey, squash, wi ming, and basket- coming~ to Andov r on' April 9. The "A Very Personal Statement" l During his first visit to Peabody

Satisfied Or LensR l~o~ ball. Recruiting Officer, a post Restoration Hoping to demnonstrate that 'pio- *Museum Gill Gallant, a Mic Mac Indiqn, "No disciplinary com .ittee had to Applicants come from all parts Of the comedy which Mr. Bellizia describes as a tograPhY is a multi-faceted media, Mr. was "going along looking at' ,.cowiheads,",

meet this fall," Nr. Smi~cnnetd country. Mr. McKc'e remarked. "There "-fantastic costume piece" will be Wise's purpose was to identify some of the when he noticed t!:: "~.jes of a twelve year,"In none of the probation '~aei h alare about 60 percent from New England, prsnte in GW on'April 16 and 17. The underground and unrecognized pso l ningr wq id30yasao

was dismissal con;idered. I ha 'eln t30 percent from the (East, and 10 percent British group will 46part on April 20. cmoern phtgsraphy. bPotoaphy ar.tisGalnwowihisifDaaheswas a term in whilh some was done." from other parts of h country including ManchestetrGratnmar School Instruc- coefagt snwr. ti the new Greater Lawrenc lxIfdianFlagstaff Clustel Dean,' udImilton California and Arikona." tors Martin Fisher pad David Wylde will becoming much moecneta.Poo nomto etr adthat hefltiwamentioned that most her custer's Although M4r.. 1cKee has not et direct Ile Recruiting officer and serve as graphs, are no longer just to be hung!, on not "moially right" to view the remains ofdisciplinary problems " ve beeni small tabulated applications received in the past tour manager respectively. Both men have walls. The photographer is creating a very another human being.

thins lie ahlet~ cus -I~iigtig- weh esinhts ta smn as 200 visited the school previously as part of tfie personal statement," Mr. Wise observed. 0 Mrs. Gallant later asked the n~useu m'ssmaller breaking' of less-major rules. No additional forms vyere filed before the Exchange but with reverse roles. Tehogahe'Coceptryandirector, Richar acNeish, whither te~students were kiclied out. Ve expected far January 15 deadline. The associate Mr. Bellizia chose 4micoln-Sud bury as avant-garde approach to a ceturyiold bones coulti be plaed- in her husband'smore student to l~ave." Pine Knoli Cluster headmaster expect to choose instructors host because it is a &hre suburban public device. Some critics have descriedn~ h utd o rprIda euiDean Clement M~~rell, aff~ing tl~e belief to fill the positions Ino later than March, high school, in conttrli to PA, but similar book as eight to ten yer aedf ttie. MacNelsh frqsiuaing hoevr

I - years ahead of itj tim agre t Manceste.,Hetadded "Thyosholdr-'of many students Fnd faculty, stat~u, "It's and perhaps as eaTy as next month. tMaceerHeIed "Thahteymye latehcstuldrplcethebeen a good te. Things ran smoothly. ; e'agodcossction of American bones in orler to preserve the exhibit.Either students are safsified pr less. school life. ' beDemonsraturebellious." . .The a.s were pedwt

W14thdrawats MacNeish'sJ response, but, Mr.! GallantThe number of withdrawals was noted, "If 1#had said no, we wouid have

anotber ite:ti~g change from 'eyear .picket~d thi mu~eum. We would'have thebefore. Mi. Lynch rmre,"tmay. -moral fiber 'of tie noni-Indian communityOf them reflect badly on the sch .Some to back us' up.. But MacNeish has beenof the voluntary tdiwiseithz missed great." Ma Neis~i agreed with Gallant thathome, missed a I rb *no ee, the .latter c uld probably recruit a largejust not ready t: adust 'othis ~yeOf G U D OE ,numbe r of' ndi s for a demonstration of 'place. Unfortunately, many, teke are ' RdPw* a~ihfrhrosre

probemsat ome." Lower 'Lfartha~,-nq that Indiat denionstratibus are commonMcCormick, e~ressing nother pinlon jf ~ jj in the west and midwest where seralsaid, "More nd pepl are muem ae nl enpcee ouestinig abIl what (Advr tns ,the release of Indian relics. To MacNeish,'

for. Some peopletrealize ajuteaueG ie o m re h n 2 60 0a d the threat which followWd Gallant'ste eeaccepted by Andvr AdSc oas is-request seemied ptnnecessa~ i'oen

mean the schodl is riih frth ."Financial;A Source 4~items valued at over' haIyga pi eid lsiAnother studerii comientd, Many Pwoulln't bother me a bit," he commented.students withdriiw because thy are $500 million dollars. "alnt on tht other hand, felt that

catching w In Ia'sIigo IIento*"having Indian remains on exhibit likethem if they don't." Senior .Chris ~ckie . C ta sth mot ptod c f mton n:this means we'~ bing treated as thoughprofessed, " f you fliscount t hose Scoasis rns ad elwhp on,.we were extinct. If Gallant persists in thiswithdrawals for Sonalaorfamily easonstF,! adflo hisln, work-study programs, interpretationo the e:hbit, oweyer, he

itbcmsappa a hiol oe afo cooperative education programs, 'and summer job opportunities; frwl rbbyo estsidb hone percent study atcollege ctoa n'tcn lshos, paraprofessional replacement ei~bit, which would beincapable f traininngsoclamuyiandor two-year aolgs rdaeshos nd post- - ientical to the first in every respect, andacadersically, ndtsa tlite ot to g radnung, cotuiy rrsacuddon'~e gaduoategscooals, an oawould convey `!`e same impression.caliber of applic tsa tesele on job'-' rdaesuyo rsac;fne n ainl einl n oa Further complications may ensue

I I ~~~~~levels by the federal government, states, cities,, fdundations, corpora- eaeGlandosntavthmnytions, -trade. unions, professional associations, fraternal organizations, ncsayt lti h oes huhh-~nd minority organizations, Money is available for both averageI as wellsadttheiod ak an foras excellent tudents,'both with anid without~ need. "through a local school or college" to get

the replacement made free of cost

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Please rush me - copies o GLVIDE TO MONEY, F~OR HIGHER EI)UCA-FTION at $5.95 plus S0c for postage, and' haodling for each copy.

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