Top Banner
Volume CV Number 22 PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASSACHUSEITS MAY 4,4'984 Husband-Wife Pair: to Serve as Writer-in-Residence_ ,_Next_ Year iv.- By MATT OERSMA pair to fill his acancy. become "active and creative forces andTED UGHETTA ~~~~~~~~~within the_ ~.English department and r- and TED UGHETIA The husband and wife team cur tecmmnt rently teach English at thetJniversity Jutwhwilb -'-- The Roger Murray Foundation- of Connecticut, where McKain letya t eoe aving Ander t is---- Selection Committee recently chose received an award for faculty, ex nextin yead to eoed his ienyh' two--poets, -Margaret Gibson and, cellence ast year. ohGbo and here. "The people are congenial," , David McKain, to replace Ward- Just McKain have publiished several col- Js rie,"noe savr ~ ~~ 'next year as Phillips Academy's lections of their poetry. The Common hospitable place to write." writers-ira-residence.. --- Life, McKiainlgsnmost recent -poetry Just's last major work, n the City The committee, -headed by English anthology, was runner-up to -of Fear, set im Washington D.C., St.Pirrrenlde CnglishanstruJeon Gibson's Long Walks in the -After- - deals with the politics of our nation's RanalPeer, Thomad s eaga'nt el-tos oon, which on the coveted Lamont capitol. He hopes next month to - -- ly Wise and Phillip Zaeder. St.Pierre' Poetry Prize 1982. The two will pbihhslts oeTe\~ descibe- te huban an wif teirnmove here in the faillof next year and- American Blues, a work about Viet- deasc"mreloteusbaolks" we hoes - will bring their son Josh who will at- nam. and the war's effect on a group- the "adveou communi will senoy.es.. of people.- Director of Coilege Counseiing Robert Crawford released the Andover coi- The comittee-was "xtremeyi-- lege admissions statistics this week. Photo/Pettit presed"withMc~in -nd ii'sn -The pair will, f6llowthreua presed"withMc~in and itsoi writer-in-residence schedule: teaching T when they gave a joint poetry reading twoEgihcussadsngter-l at Adovr lat Jnuar. Wen- ustmainder of their time to continue announced his plans to leave next the creative process of eje c io n N u m br.R sesSm o n year, the committee agreed to ask the Pierre said she hopes the two will S e r ;Apc a tPoSa s -~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ - - ~~~~~~~~~~By JOHN NESBEITr year's 14,500 to 15,600 this year. individual financial needs of its ap and NOEL WANNER Harvard University cited a similar plicants. Piips Academy's Senior' class rise from 12,537 applications in 1983 When questioned about the tradi- received more college rejection letters to 13,237 this year for only 2,229 tional, low percentage of Andover this spring than in previous years as a openinfgs.- - students admitted to Princeton - - ~ ~~~ ~ result of an "astronomical" increase Crawford pointed out that the University, Crawford expressed that in the number of Andover applicants more applications a college receives, nationally, Princeton accepts in the to highly selective olleges explained the more demanding they are about realm of 160%. He stressed that Director of College Counseling the applicant's transcript. In addi- Princeton has a very fine applicant Robert Crawford. - tion, he maintained that an increas- pool and a comparatively small Comparing this year's chart of ingly important factor which many freshman class, "they can afford to preliminary admissions statistics with colleges must consider lies in meeting be very-selective." last year's, the number of P.A. ap- plicants increased significantly at all of the highly competitive colleges. M c( altoP rf ri Freample, applications to Brown c al to P r o M - - -~ University increased from 107 to 143, ad d increased from 127 to 155, -- Regarding these noted increases1 So o ro uc io - Siteenof te nieten students who revdwrsfothi performance_- Yaefom9 o 2.i nso oP ou t o Sixteo the neatP o/eima Crawford insisted, "Many stude in on the Spanish exam Photo/Hekindan ~~have been attracted to the image of an institution. Students pursued the cot- -yGORAKIM- - - .19 1? eceive A 1~vdtr'cI~s' - leges by name more than individual Acclaimed actress, instructor, and woman show in 1974. In the produc- - '19 R e C eive A 'W a rd s 1,inerets Te ncrass er theatrical director, Tulis McCall, will ltion, McCall is both the narrator, asrnmcland, in nian instances, perform her one-woman show, What Everywoman, and famous women not elladvised." In addition, Everywoman Knows, in George from American history. She portrays Crawford emphasized that as the Washington Hall at 7:00 tonight to figures such as Nelly Bly, Sojourner mrce oe visibleon olles, aseopla commence the celebration of a decade Truth,. and Harriet Tubman. in S ta te -T~~~~~id e E x a m ~~~perceivemoevsbeclgsa-' of coeducation at Andover. McCall explains her show as a more valid educationa] experience." At 9:00 Saturday morning McCall show about women for everyone. The By PHILLIPIAN STAFF Crawford stressed that getting ac- will conduct a workshop in the drania idea is for all of us -to come together Nineteen Andover students cur- achieved in a form other than grades cepted into college is becoming lab for anyone interested in acting. and listen to - this storyteller,' f-rently taking Spanish travelled to and quizzes." Expressing similar sen- "demontratively more competitive." Then at 11:30 she will lead a Everywoman." Presenting the stories Norwood, Massachusetts last timents, Spanish Instructor James The niumber of applicants to highly wrso nrsos ohrFia ihcetvt n uoM~l Wednesday to receive awards for Cuhepandta hsea i- slcieclee a nrae night performance. emphasizes, "it is important for us all their superior performance on- the dicates how much work P.A. students nation-wide. For instance, Stanford McCall, a graduate of the Depart- to'laugh so that we can carry on, so 1984 National Spanish Examination are doing beyond the normal levelo Unvriyaoucdttthrap ment of Dramatic Arts at the Univer- that we can live - we need to know our sponisored by the American Asocf- Spanish in the U.S." plicant pool increased fromt last.- sity of Connecticut, created her one- past so that we can grow. What tion of Teachersof Spanishand Por ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Every woman Knows gives us both tugus (A-I'TSP). Pfor-t. inouee r ofTS) SpanisLands R elea se s J{ 2 7 es s McCall's show has toured across Spanish instructors each selectedtecuty lyngweee h a two of their students to compete with findth cont ayinge hrevher soesa almost two thousand other entrants Il i ~~-I d ~ ' L rdv.~ i f l~fn nadec ~saehrsois from eastern Masschusetts. The .1.ii~i~ii~icLL~~ istory- 250J P r o e The production has appeared in over primenistdentsaswees ivTel m i a e forty states since its 1974 opening. by the AATSP to an awards By EMILY BERNSTEIN starting winter term..Ohr iltk feel deeply that every school has one - M~l' htEeywmn ceremony at -- the Norwood High Thomas Lyons, Chairman of the History 250 in the spring of their Up- group that' makes up the bottom Kn6 ws, has received much critical ac- School. History Department, - released the per year, and finish the sequence as 20%o. Competitive schools like An- claim over the past decade. Donna - In te Levl I diision Mattresults of the History Qualifying Test Seniors. cldover can make a person feel they are Allegia of Womanews praised 'the -- -- Inthe eve I dvison, att(HQT) for 1984 last Monday, but History 250 focusses on reading. not bri'ght. I'm afraid students often-- performance, stating, "her stage Lyman and Jon Sheeser both ranked refused to name the students who comprehension, organizing~ material,- misinterpret being placed in History preience and rhyt hm were superb; her first. bavid Prat. complemented the passed out of History 300.--- -- and writing essays. Lyons said he 250. We don't want them to think characaterizations were sorcery - she Andover victory, placing a close The results of the test were relative- worries that there is a "stigmia" they're not bright, we're just trying to raided the dead and filled them with fourth. Rajav Sheel, John Slavin, Ra- ly similar to past years according to about thecore He affirmed help them." -lf. quiba LaBrie, John Kukk, and Lyons. The vast majority of Lowers however, that the course has proved Stewart Hannah received awards in will matriculatetoHsoy30 cesflinhpngkdwowodJ - the eve II ateory.In evelIII (American History) in their Upper or otherwise have failed History 300: - Anove cature nie o thesevit-Senior ear. Very few students passed- "The kids who come out of History - - Andovernatpstein, withe Cyvnthi out of the course, Lyons reported, 250 are often more confi'dent about - and about thirty-fiye will have to their abilities -ta hs h o- .~ ~' James,' Laura Crabtree, Catherine complete a term of History.. 250G-str~iht-to'History-30"- Steenstrup, Dan Will, Anne Barbier, before they cn start thae 300-301 se- ~ 1,,-_`Hstory of the HQT Carolyn James, Lydia LoCascio, quence. Th-itr eatetraie Shannon Carey, and David Cox all Although most students are free to-ThHitrDeamntelzda take- History 300 during thefr Upper- need for a History Qualifying Test in - winning prizes. Crabtree also was or Senior -year, Lyons explained that 199wefitsudnsaldth- presented with a Spanish Consul this year only 14% of the students are first term of History 300. Lyons ex- -- Awhrd presented by Andres Drake, Seniors. He contended, "Too many plained that te problem before the- the General Consul from Spain.- Uppers are rushing into the course. Department was difficult. They need- Som shuldwai utilthe ar olered to diagnose those students who Melanie Sariho was the only Andover anome mul aituwhe they a taker have problems, then put the Motari ozankein se~e a nilip the orkei satrie." whe eantpae Istudents into a course which would Acadey raking n -te Naivein that orei stdets are beiningipateac hmtesil eesrosc ~Seaercaegry ndrsan tis adwil ol of-n-cedinHitoy 00
8

Writer-in-Residence Yearpdf.phillipian.net/1984/05041984.pdf · Piips Academy's Senior' class rise from 12,537 applications in 1983 When questioned about the tradi-received more college

Aug 21, 2020

Download

Documents

dariahiddleston
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Writer-in-Residence Yearpdf.phillipian.net/1984/05041984.pdf · Piips Academy's Senior' class rise from 12,537 applications in 1983 When questioned about the tradi-received more college

Volume CV Number 22 PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASSACHUSEITS MAY 4,4'984

Husband-Wife Pair: to Serve asWriter-in-Residence_ ,_Next_ Year iv.-By MATT OERSMA pair to fill his acancy. become "active and creative forces

and TED UGHETTA ~~~~~~~~~within the_ ~.English department and r-and TED UGHETIA The husband and wife team cur tecmmntrently teach English at thetJniversity Jutwhwilb -'--

The Roger Murray Foundation- of Connecticut, where McKain letya t eoe aving Ander t is----Selection Committee recently chose received an award for faculty, ex nextin yead to eoed his ienyh'two--poets, -Margaret Gibson and, cellence ast year. ohGbo and here. "The people are congenial," ,David McKain, to replace Ward- Just McKain have publiished several col- Js rie,"noe savr ~ ~~'next year as Phillips Academy's lections of their poetry. The Common hospitable place to write."writers-ira-residence.. --- Life, McKiainlgsnmost recent -poetry Just's last major work, n the City

The committee, -headed by English anthology, was runner-up to -of Fear, set im Washington D.C.,St.Pirrrenlde CnglishanstruJeon Gibson's Long Walks in the -After- - deals with the politics of our nation's RanalPeer, Thomad s eaga'nt el-tos oon, which on the coveted Lamont capitol. He hopes next month to -

-- ly Wise and Phillip Zaeder. St.Pierre' Poetry Prize 1982. The two will pbihhslts oeTe\~ descibe- te huban an wif teirnmove here in the faillof next year and- American Blues, a work about Viet-deasc"mreloteusbaolks" we hoes - will bring their son Josh who will at- nam. and the war's effect on a group-

the "adveou communi will senoy.es.. of people.- Director of Coilege Counseiing Robert Crawford released the Andover coi-The comittee-was "xtremeyi-- lege admissions statistics this week. Photo/Pettit

presed"withMc~in -nd ii'sn -The pair will, f6llowthreua presed"withMc~in and itsoi writer-in-residence schedule: teaching Twhen they gave a joint poetry reading twoEgihcussadsngter-lat Adovr lat Jnuar. Wen- ustmainder of their time to continueannounced his plans to leave next the creative process of eje c io n N u m br.R sesSm o nyear, the committee agreed to ask the Pierre said she hopes the two will S e r ;Apc a tPoSa s

-~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ - -~~~~~~~~~~By JOHN NESBEITr year's 14,500 to 15,600 this year. individual financial needs of its apand NOEL WANNER Harvard University cited a similar plicants.

Piips Academy's Senior' class rise from 12,537 applications in 1983 When questioned about the tradi-received more college rejection letters to 13,237 this year for only 2,229 tional, low percentage of Andoverthis spring than in previous years as a openinfgs.- - students admitted to Princeton -

- ~ ~~~ ~ result of an "astronomical" increase Crawford pointed out that the University, Crawford expressed thatin the number of Andover applicants more applications a college receives, nationally, Princeton accepts in theto highly selective olleges explained the more demanding they are about realm of 160%. He stressed thatDirector of College Counseling the applicant's transcript. In addi- Princeton has a very fine applicantRobert Crawford. - tion, he maintained that an increas- pool and a comparatively small

Comparing this year's chart of ingly important factor which many freshman class, "they can afford topreliminary admissions statistics with colleges must consider lies in meeting be very-selective."last year's, the number of P.A. ap-plicants increased significantly at allof the highly competitive colleges. M c( altoP rf ri

Freample, applications to Brown c al to P r o M- - -~ University increased from 107 to 143,

ad d increased from 127 to 155,

-- Regarding these noted increases1 So o ro uc io- Siteenof te nieten students who revdwrsfothi performance_- Yaefom9 o 2.i nso oP ou t oSixteo the neatP o/eima Crawford insisted, "Many stude inon the Spanish exam Photo/Hekindan ~~have been attracted to the image of an

institution. Students pursued the cot- -yGORAKIM- - -.19 1? eceive A 1~vdtr'cI~s' - leges by name more than individual Acclaimed actress, instructor, and woman show in 1974. In the produc- -'19 R e C eive A 'W a rd s 1,inerets Te ncrass er theatrical director, Tulis McCall, will ltion, McCall is both the narrator,asrnmcland, in nian instances, perform her one-woman show, What Everywoman, and famous women not elladvised." In addition, Everywoman Knows, in George from American history. She portraysCrawford emphasized that as the Washington Hall at 7:00 tonight to figures such as Nelly Bly, Sojourner

mrce oe visibleon olles, aseopla commence the celebration of a decade Truth,. and Harriet Tubman. in S ta te -T~~~~~id e E x a m ~~~perceivemoevsbeclgsa-' of coeducation at Andover. McCall explains her show as amore valid educationa] experience." At 9:00 Saturday morning McCall show about women for everyone. TheBy PHILLIPIAN STAFF Crawford stressed that getting ac- will conduct a workshop in the drania idea is for all of us -to come together

Nineteen Andover students cur- achieved in a form other than grades cepted into college is becoming lab for anyone interested in acting. and listen to - this storyteller,'f-rently taking Spanish travelled to and quizzes." Expressing similar sen- "demontratively more competitive." Then at 11:30 she will lead a Everywoman." Presenting the storiesNorwood, Massachusetts last timents, Spanish Instructor James The niumber of applicants to highly wrso nrsos ohrFia ihcetvt n uoM~lWednesday to receive awards for Cuhepandta hsea i- slcieclee a nrae night performance. emphasizes, "it is important for us alltheir superior performance on- the dicates how much work P.A. students nation-wide. For instance, Stanford McCall, a graduate of the Depart- to'laugh so that we can carry on, so1984 National Spanish Examination are doing beyond the normal levelo Unvriyaoucdttthrap ment of Dramatic Arts at the Univer- that we can live - we need to know oursponisored by the American Asocf- Spanish in the U.S." plicant pool increased fromt last.- sity of Connecticut, created her one- past so that we can grow. What

tion of Teachers of Spanish and Por ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Every woman Knows gives us bothtugus (A-I'TSP). Pfor-t.inouee r ofTS) SpanisLands R elea se s J{ 2 7 es s McCall's show has toured acrossSpanish instructors each selectedtecuty lyngweee h atwo of their students to compete with findth cont ayinge hrevher soesaalmost two thousand other entrants Il i ~~-I d ~ ' L rdv.~ i f l~fn nadec ~saehrsoisfrom eastern Masschusetts. The .1.ii~i~ii~icLL~~ istory- 250J P r o e The production has appeared in overprimenistdentsaswees ivTel m i a e forty states since its 1974 opening.by the AATSP to an awards By EMILY BERNSTEIN starting winter term..Ohr iltk feel deeply that every school has one - M~l' htEeywmnceremony at --the Norwood High Thomas Lyons, Chairman of the History 250 in the spring of their Up- group that' makes up the bottom Kn6 ws, has received much critical ac-School. History Department, - released the per year, and finish the sequence as 20%o. Competitive schools like An- claim over the past decade. Donna

- In te Levl I diision Mattresults of the History Qualifying Test Seniors. cldover can make a person feel they are Allegia of Womanews praised 'the ---- Inthe eve I dvison, att(HQT) for 1984 last Monday, but History 250 focusses on reading. not bri'ght. I'm afraid students often-- performance, stating, "her stageLyman and Jon Sheeser both ranked refused to name the students who comprehension, organizing~ material,- misinterpret being placed in History preience and rhyt hm were superb; herfirst. bavid Prat. complemented the passed out of History 300.--- -- and writing essays. Lyons said he 250. We don't want them to think characaterizations were sorcery - sheAndover victory, placing a close The results of the test were relative- worries that there is a "stigmia" they're not bright, we're just trying to raided the dead and filled them withfourth. Rajav Sheel, John Slavin, Ra- ly similar to past years according to about thecore He affirmed help them." -lf.

quiba LaBrie, John Kukk, and Lyons. The vast majority of Lowers however, that the course has provedStewart Hannah received awards in will matriculatetoHsoy30 cesflinhpngkdwowodJ

-the eve II ateory.In evelIII (American History) in their Upper or otherwise have failed History 300: - Anove cature nie o thesevit-Senior ear. Very few students passed- "The kids who come out of History - -

Andovernatpstein, withe Cyvnthi out of the course, Lyons reported, 250 are often more confi'dent about -

and about thirty-fiye will have to their abilities -ta hs h o- .~ ~'James,' Laura Crabtree, Catherine complete a term of History.. 250G-str~iht-to'History-30"-Steenstrup, Dan Will, Anne Barbier, before they cn start thae 300-301 se- ~ 1,,-_`Hstory of the HQTCarolyn James, Lydia LoCascio, quence. Th-itr eatetraie Shannon Carey, and David Cox all Although most students are free to-ThHitrDeamntelzda

take- History 300 during thefr Upper- need for a History Qualifying Test in -

winning prizes. Crabtree also was or Senior -year, Lyons explained that 199wefitsudnsaldth-presented with a Spanish Consul this year only 14% of the students are first term of History 300. Lyons ex- --

Awhrd presented by Andres Drake, Seniors. He contended, "Too many plained that te problem before the-the General Consul from Spain.- Uppers are rushing into the course. Department was difficult. They need-

Som shuldwai utilthe ar olered to diagnose those students whoMelanie Sariho was the only Andover anome mul aituwhe they a taker have problems, then put theMotari ozankein se~e a nilip the orkei satrie." whe eantpae Istudents into a course which wouldAcadey raking n -te Naivein that orei stdets are beiningipateac hmtesil eesrosc~Seaercaegry ndrsan tis adwil ol of-n-cedinHitoy 00

Page 2: Writer-in-Residence Yearpdf.phillipian.net/1984/05041984.pdf · Piips Academy's Senior' class rise from 12,537 applications in 1983 When questioned about the tradi-received more college

PAGE-TWO -MAYr 4,-1*8

Fora 1 yosum cKee Question s Apraho-- -~FUture Central America Vcot

o n Wo rld Id eo lo g ies To the Editor: readt laws, illegal. Because of those mines, we are engaged". But is this truly ourI amwiigi eadt nrw there was a possibility of a s ip of one only option? By supporting the con-luk as article,"Stop, the of ou-r allies- being sunk. To partially tra'sWfight against the -Sandinista

With jugementof t 'e pastwinter' Headmster'sSym- Iornihoes", fr hc r rsa cause the sinking of an allied ship regime in Nicaragua, the U.S, hasspoke out against what he saw as a would not only- weaken our alliences become, perhaps inextricably involv-

posium still ringing tbur ears," students and faculty realize dangierous weakeninrg__in the with that country. but it wudas d~_n-their war.the irnportance- of imxmediate planning-and- preparation for -_firii tadaans oriuisn mkdheUSalo o lsh.Annext years- program. The first two symposiums dealt with in Central Azierica. I would like to what goal could those mines possibly

* -. ~~~pressing national-and international issues: the nuclear-armns - respond to some of-his comments. fulfill?- If;-as Mr.- Hruska says; -the--- -~T6 truly-do "war" against Co -.

question nd race elations n the U.. We belive next- Mr. Hruska first stated that the mines were only "firecrackers"l,then mnsone must-attack the causesvear',s symposium should also focus on a current- issue- of moiain behind the ontra-mining how could they possibly interdict te-o-t-I eta Aeia hr-r

irans-endig gloal an natinal iportace.in Ncaraguan harbors is -flow of arms from the U.S.S.R an two- major rehsons why a peopletranscending global an national importance. unimpeachable" because the "con- Cuba to Nicaragua. It would'seem wudtr oCmuim oet

As Sovit expet JohnThompsn stresed inhis spech last tras did not lay those mines.., to sink thenr, that far from helping theU US. and repressive govennt.IthFriday evening, the hope for a better world through ships and kill sailors." Perhaps the position in Central America, the min- U..wol spend money it currentlyadherence to one of any number of sets of ideological beliefs contras did not wish to kill people ing actually harmed it. spends wonutecntalnNiaau

remainsa majo factorin forignoreddomestc contrver- -that- had- nothing to -do with their -MT.- Hruska then -goes on to state ofodad f Central America; there~es. InAndovers oftensmug, sphisticted, orcynicalcconflic.Mowever, the fact remains that the United States' '"only option" would be far less incentive to turn to

vs. I Andver'softe smug sopistictedor cyicalthat the US._colIaboration with the in Nicatragua is to pursue the sort- of Communism there. And if the U.S.political atmosphere it is easy to ignore the fact that many contras-i--iA#nlg- Nicaraguan har- limited war in Nicaragua "is to pur- would use its influence in the regionpolitical events ermaiate from ideological convictions.All too bors was in heey.es of international sue the sort of limited war in which to stop human. rights abuses by theoften, history courses at Andover (and elsewhere) address AI 7-governments in power there, anothermerely the facts of an historical event without spending ad AB ac O j mru sr incentive to turn to Corn-quate ime delving into the popular ideologies behind the reach st munism would be eliminated.

Though this topic may sound vague at' first, it can be -j l B r eti e A fa mSo dthough there would probablydefined, so as to give the lectures, reading, and seminars con-- inoolyndnsetbf fmreimadthnIy

-crete direction. Dividing the term- into two or- three week ITo the Editor: - - - -one student'inoolyad-nsethfllf Central America.-to Sovietwouayolduhn otte upct o proxies, I disagree completely withperiods, partkipants could. tackle a seperate ideology during wou d again i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ke to bring up the lack~~~~Aai ik t rigupte a o luhigou hesspcs operiods partiipants ould tckle a eperat ideoi~y durig lackthereof in one person's case), but the means Mr. Hruska suggests totopic of faculty-student relationships, aeach period. alycmetgigintesm ie- so serves to decrease student trust in keep that fall from. occuring. Not on-

For example, the participants might exarn~ne modern tion of John C aulkins' questioning of- wh~at should be a life-saving device. I ly does current U.S. policy towardsSoviet communism,' post-Maoist Chinese commnunism, cur- the actual trust faculty have in thpcthat if one or a group- of Nicaragua make the U.S. lookrent American philosophies, and Third World n on-aligned students. Last Saturday night I, along students are suspected, a house, foolish, it also- wastes, millioris of-with he rst o thestudnts n my counselor should be direct in his or dollars on a war that cannot be won.

conciouness (a in Inia) amog othe topics The sm-, dorm, was rudely awakened and her job by confronting the person(s) By attacking the causes of Coin-posium should analyze each ideology, studying the recent disturbed by a firedrill at 12:30 a.m. rather than using the opportunity to munism rather than the countries thathistory of its effects and 'the conditions which created this The only reason behind this act-was -inspc the dorm late on a Saturday spread Communism, the U.S. will besystem of beliefs, geearing'all learning to present interna- that my housecounselor, "suspected -night. Student--aculty - relationship in a better position to halt Coin-tional discussions. that not everybody was in." Okay, could have been strengthened by munism. in Central America.

d1 not evrbd tityaie yte showing a trust in the rest of the dorm However, by the road Mr. HruskaOnlywitha fll udertandng f difernt ieolgia BleBook, but to go-t thexenof at in turn, would have resulted in wishes to follo~w n' regards to

systems can Andover -students hope to synthesize current usnt aeyp or thatexaffects greater respect for the faculty Nicaragua, the only outcome is oneevents with astuteness. This undercurrent of recent history overg thirftyv poeple st tofebus member involved, of defeat.is the ovriigconcern of our times. -John Chalisson '84 W. Arthur McKee'8

overidin . -Gross- Disputes Huk' iw-~~~ -~of 'Evil' Sees Religious. Parale

To the Editor: freedom of all people, might well "Oh? And when the last law was~neaanAde -rsahs rsr osc utfcto on n h ei undrudogiven a tirade against an evil which he In the same vein I would recoin youn wn heel youre hi de oersees as omnipresent. Each person has mend to your readers the dialogue the laws all being flat? This country'sa right to express her or her opinion between Will Roper and Thomas planted thick with laws from coast tobut I wofild raise question to the More in Robert Bolt's "A Man for ~coast - man's laws, not God's - and ifJustification 1rsaoffers for some All Seasons" Will Roper sees no You cut them down - and you're justof the recent actions of the'United reason why More, the Chancellor of, the man to do it d'you really thinkStated Government. MY own opinion England,- shouldn't arrest the you could stand upright in the windsis that democracy, freedom and truth dangerous scoundrel Richard Rich ta ol lwte 9 Ys ' ieare-Wot well served by a policy which even though he has broken no law. the Devil benefit of law, for my ownis directed by the attitude that "the To Roper's tirade that every law in safety's sake.ends justifies the means!'' A govern- England should be cut down to getment which -has no real commitment after the Devil More replies with such Richard Grossto law or justice, much less the wisdom:

- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Blue Key Mfakes-- Public Iliit--Bazaar Turtle Racing TourneyTo the Editor IAbbot

The Abbot Bazaar, this Sunday, Abt -___May 6, from 11:00 am. to 4:00 pm. 1:30 'Semi-Finaliston the Great Lawn and Vista (rain

-location: the cage), will be a day ofmusic, good foodi and incredible fun West Quad Southfor all. Bag your homework and Fnls

-- come drench faculty in the dunk 30tank, paint your face, and tie-dye abring-your-ow~ t-shirt. Get up your Rabbit Pond

Jeffrey ~~~~. . -~~cluster spirit ad join in the clusterPresictent -all in the cluster with the most points 2:-JfryNordhaus athe end of the day.2cettckswill be abailable at ticket booths dur- West Quad North

-Editor in Chief ~~~ing the bazaar and all booths will be 330Keith H - ~~~~~~~using tickets as currency. t's finally ~_____

Ket Hwang spigso let's prove it! -

spin Jane McGillivray Pine KnollNews Editors Contributing Editor Business Manager -- Yulki- lshizuka -

Teddy Keim Andrew Hruska Jeff Kadis - -2:30

Phil Loughlin -Lawrence Epstein C U T RO Y P S:- -Finalist

Flagstaff-Composition Editors Sports Editors Graphics Editor Egg Toss 11:30 am

Scott Glasser Ted McEnroe -Kim Hekimian Wheelbarrow Races 12:30Sarah Heard _-Tom Novelline Ptt akRcs13

* - I - Potato Sack Races 1:30 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~Booths:Executive Edtior5:fFeatures/ Melanie Sriiio 17th Page] Edward Yinm _________________

fBusiness/ David Gilbert /CompugraphicJ Cliff Bernstein Turtle Races Bobbing for Apples,A ssociae - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Tie-dying Booth Ring Toss

A cit diiors:'News/ Chappell Lawson, Matthew Boersma [Composi- Limbo Booth .,-Dunk Taliktioni Arnina Tirana /.Sport.51 Joe Asselta, Paige Cox [Graphic-SI Michael A~~IhT 1~Donut Eating Contest .Carnival RideMorrissey, Alec French, John Myers iBusinessi Michelle Borre, Tajlci Levis A N D LP V ER~ Cake Walk -ISponge Throw/1 -.dure~S/ Naomi (Gendler ICirculalion] Alex Wise, John Warner I Basketball Shooting .Barbecued Hamburgers

lIpop rrab and Hont Dogsq

Page 3: Writer-in-Residence Yearpdf.phillipian.net/1984/05041984.pdf · Piips Academy's Senior' class rise from 12,537 applications in 1983 When questioned about the tradi-received more college

MAY 4, 19R Ti'he T11TjI i1111A N PAGE THREE,

URBAN STUDIES INSTITUTE: WW afl&01AY1"

Teens Tutor. Inner-CityKids.

By BRITA STRANDBERG of study handbook, and, if interested, apply [PA students'] image of us has. changed and

This spring seven Lawrence Hi'gh School to their guidence coordinator Eileen Khoury. our image of them has changed," comments

11th graders and nine Phillips Academy Up- This year Khoury received fourteen Lawrence Roberto Gallo.

pMs and Seniors are tutoring inner-city kids High School applications. Amy Makuku, a PA Upper, states, "We get

through the Urban Studies Institute, a term., P.A. students who want to participate in to break the barriers between Lawrence and

contaied prgram tudyin the mericn ci- the USI apply t Mrs. Lloyd. Mrs. Lloyd Andover."

ty and focusing on Lawrence, Massachusetts. states that potential USI students must be -The Tutors' Impressions

The USI consists of three courses and six completely responsible towards the Tarbox The tutors intend- to help the chlildren in

hours a week of field work in Lawrence. Ed- children. She adds that she looks for a com- their'different needs, needs which teachers

win Quattlebaum teaches an urban history bination of inventiveness, responsibility and a sometimes cannot fill. Makuku asserts, "The

burse;CarmeFodri~uz-Waltrsc~riuctsa willingness to do a ot fr ahcclie ersliave thirty i s n a c ass ain~te

class in Carribean History and Susan Lloyd Both Phillips Academny students and the don't have time- to spend on ech child' s -

-teaches-- a - core-course- that -introduces; Lawrence students board at Andover for-the special problems."

develpnietal sychlogyand thni stuies. spring term (with the exception of P.A: day The tutors state that the Tarbox-students "

-The high school students spend six hours pei stdns.'-eesn diinloti a- gtalt-ot--fteprogram. Makuku week of field work tutoring thi-ddiionardcst ithrougha lt-ofifthth

graers oft hel Trbuoxin schlin inrog it ticipation in the USI. The Lawrence students, declares, "My-little girl's attitude is better, her

Lgawrsnc e -abxshoninrct however, must pay, ninety dllars towards social skills are better, and her academics and Two Tarbox Friends Photo/Hekimian

The thee couses ae desined togive oarding costs. The Alfred E. Stearns Foun- sipelling are getting better." She adds, "a lot people. " And Carmen Villanueva finsuo-

students a better idea and - -dation of Lawrence covers one-half of the re- ofkd ne he compaionship." Riddick ing fun "because it's working and playing."

stuent a ettr-iea ndunderstanding pi -maining boarding' -costs,~ while the Abbot reiterates this, - commenting, "They really And when asked,"if the tutoring was more fun

the Tabox sudent' envronmets. Te ur- Academy Association contributes one hun- -need someone they can open up to." than regular class., Gourdon Fournier replied

ban' history course helps the tutors understand dred dollars and P.A.'s own scholarship fund -Other USI students also think that the pro- with a resounding "Yes, yes yes!"'-

the enironmnt ofthe Trbox hden Candi pysthe remainder, gram 'helps the children socially. Amny-Cook The children responded equally -favorably

how this environment has evolved. Th Car-History of the USI attests that "after two or three weeks you see towards PA. Zulma Mo ntarei says, "J had a

The USI evolved out of community projects big improvements. They [the Tarbox students] trip over there and it was nice. " Johnny Col- -

''Vie get to break the bar- and* history courses at Abbot during-the late open up, learn more about themselves, on "likels] the food they make over there."

"We get to b eak the bar- sixties and early seventies. The USI itself Cooper adds, "whether' or not their man- Johanna Ortez---wants to, go to Phillips

riers between Lawrence ~~began -in the winter of 1980 when L~oydj nerismns change on the outside, the more Academy "because I like the Bell Tower,"

riers between Lawrence Rodriguez-Walters, and Quattlebaum worke cosmopolitan, way of life',we provide gives while Anne Calde-ron-tates, "I like it[PA],

, ,- - - ~together on the- dea of an USI.- That year- them a different outlook on life.", they have good rooms." Zulena Monroy

andAndover. Lodrcie eanGatadsnthe The PA students remark, that they decided describes PA as being "big and nice."

ensuing sumnmer raiigteporm to participate in the USI because they wanted The children have many dreams for the

- -A~~~my Makuku The prog~~~~~r debutedzing the pringrm of18, ara rmAdo ver, and for other personal future. Many of the girls say that they want to

Lawrence students participated that first year. chance to work with histories other than that Calderon wants to be a teacher because "Ibean history course helps the teens cater to the Thero 918 l he fteivle

secineed of Tarbox clden;e niudnty pe faculty went on a leave of absence, so they "N y tutor is my best friend.''- cent o Tarbx's enolledstudens are decided to cancel the program- for that year.

Hispanic. The psycholbgy course helps the La-St year, for the first time, Lawrence -M anuel Vasquez

studnts ndertandthe eeligs o the students became involved with the program., ________________________________________

children they tutor. -Lwec eat oPA

The Tarbox Kids Laiec ecst .. of the Unites States. Itjthe USI] gives you a could teach things so all the kids could learn."

The six hours of tuParticpatingcLarenceeHih School chance to use the thngs we've learned in The boys' aspirations are more varied.

Thet six heour Titcompris atlare students had different reactions towards P.A. History 300 and apply them to things that are, David Greg Trougeau wants to be "the--Hulk

part of te prgram Thity-eght hird Lisa Riddick states that "P.A. isn't that dif- reeatorallf' -base esniendhssrng"oe

through fifth graders are chosen by their ferent from Lawrence High," while in con- Coksaee"oder mr bu auis wns toie a brek darner-becase

teachers', and the Tarbox school principal, trast, Phillip Ambrosinodisagrees, commen- Coyourselfawe, You ern wit kids. Ybout- "it'sn" a Rvr wants to bedncom-eans

Maria Narganes. The Tarbox students are ting, "Phillips is a lot different from feuelf en you're nwometing wrthhie."o artistf." s ieawnst eoea

chosen for various reasons. Some ave pro- -Lwec;eeyn ssrvn cdmcly

blenms adjusting to a new* Culture and ALawrence iferyoue wan stovigot acdmclle yi' The teenagers, in, general, gave positive Kid's Super Magazine, a magazine in which

language, and need special help with English Aal enup to you wan R ober to -lreited comments about the program. "Definitely do each child contributes s~me-writing or draw-'

and other subjects. Others are moving too stating, "~Phillipsis very different ... it trains it next year," Ambrosino advises others. "I ing, voices other as'pirations. Carmen

quickly for their school. However, a common you for college more than Lawrence." - think it's an excellent program, but that it's Villanueva writes, "I would like to get mnar-'

need seems to be an older role model. In general, the Lawrence- High students ony a rbgooda Sudente Retion ed and have two children, and I would like

The Admissions Process state that they like P.A. Riddick remarks, I TeTarbox deRemanypstiveop- to live in New Jersey. 'When I grcup I want toThe arbx kis epres may psitie oi-_ be a nurse, a nice nurse. When I have a baby I

There are different application procedures enjoy Phillips Academy, it's really nice andfox~Lawrencg and Andover students ~ the people are friendly." 'nions about the Urban Studies Institute. hdp'e she is a girl."

All of these third, fourth and fifth-graders, In a piece called "Twenty' Years From

The stdentsfrom Lwrei~e HighSchoo - '"Te stuents i the rban TiesIn for instance, enjoy the- interaction between Now," David De Jesus writes, "I will have a

read the description of the USI in their course -stitute teach each other'* says Lloyd."Ter tmslsanthituo.DwnPplon-SATIRE ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~hmevs n hi ttr.DwnPplin good life, and I want to be rich."SATIRE ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~states, "I like them [the tutors] because they Amanda Oster writes, "I wish I had -a tube

don't make us do things like teachers. They're for my bike so I can ride it. And a million

1.. A ~~~~~~fun to-be with." Yesenia Rivera adds simply, dollars. And lots of' Barbies..."~

PA . L o o in g B a ka '"they're nice," while Isaul Rivera-cormments, The special interaction between the teenage"it's more fun than regular class. You l6nly do tutors and the Tarbox kids has promoted nota little' work." only the children's openness in expressing

By ANDREW HRUSKA democracy, and integration of non-Russian Johanna Ortez likes the -tutoring because, feelings and dreams, but also deep bonds ofU pper Edward Bellamy hoped to -students through forced bussing. 'she's [her tutor] good..", Zulena Monroy friendsip. Manuel Vasquez.WrFtes, "My tutor

graduate And over '85, Class of 2085 Upon reflection, however, Ed decided to remarks, " I like'it because the tutors help is b bet friend."

that is. In the spring of 2084, only cosatpionwchecul-fdsme NEW SCHOOL PRESIDENTI IS 4m o "

-one thing stood between him and the corn- -figures. Graphs and numbers, however er-

mencement of his life's ambitions: that age- roneous, always appeal to History teachers.-

old requirement, the History 301 paper. This ----Economics, of course, loads of numbers P r o s n j e ad . it pape looed lrgein Ed's mind as it provid- there; besides, he could find so many subjects.P a s n : Sf e ad Al-

ed the only stumbling block in his otherwise The failure of Mondale'g brand of tatx ,and

pristine approach to a blissful Senicor year. -spond to 'reverse the economic epression. ,By CHUCK CHUNG -Parsons considers "cynicism" the biggest

Ed sat down to collect his thoughts and President Kemp's "miracle," turning the Last week, the Andover student body problem at PA, but thinks that the Student

decid ona opic or ths hismajorpreocupa- economy around 'virtually- overnight with elected three-year Upper Bill Parsons to repre- Council can do little about it. He stated that if

tion of Spring Term. So many things had hap- - sharp cuts in spending and taxes. sent them for the 1984-1985 school year, someone is going to criticize the council, then

pened in all of American history, millions of That was it, Kemp's miracle, the perfect op- replacing this year's president Jordan Smyth. they should have a solution in mind. "Don't

event justin te las hunded yars. hink portunity to drag the remainder of the routed Parsons defeated Uppers Allison Grishman mindlessly talk something down," because

edt uthin he ould wuried abt theiten KeyInesian faithful's noses in the dirt. After and Jackson Lewis in the race for the '"that's too easy," Parsons cautioned.

meiit--of,American Martians during the first -months of procrastination, Ed finally had his presidency. - The biggest solvable problem Parsons, ad-

interlaneary-ar. No, everyone did ihat, Ed topic,- a description of how the perfect 'Parsofis credited his success, in, large dressed was the lack of a focus for the Sturdent

decided. He could examinetedciint capitalist system arose. There was no time for mesuet his previous education at the Council. Parsons did not specify next y'ear S

employ the first parnjicle beam weapon against otcrsthpaewsduinheeay. Buckley, School in Manhattan. He considere nvstudentscuclises sh ad eblee

the expanding Japanese economic empire in Ed breezed through the classic economics Buckley a good, high- pressured school which they would materialize after the evudts

2045. N goodEd did't realy car where texts on both sides of the laissez- gave him "an understanding of human arrival; he added that he would like to receive

the N whole , patcEd arms' melha stared onlyere faire-government control controversy: ntradijeedcfdneinhmor more suggestions-from students. Parsons pro-

that thoe particle "frmee fraks spetexori- Smith's Wealth of Nations, Gilder's-Wealth his arrival at Andover. While at Buckley,Par- posed to distribute a short student question-

tat amts ofrtie flying" fredk ballonsxovr and Poverty, Hruska's Supply and Demand, sons received the prestigious Woodruf Pulc naire to increase attendapce a-, Student Coun-

satellite launch pads. ~~~Nordhaus' Keynes fi?~~VsLtea Speaking Award, for, which he competed cil meetings. "Criticismis the only wav to ini-

presidency --Ed started writing iwith exactly twenty-six against eighty students from-his school. Par- prove the council," stated Parsons, addingThere was, of course, the brief hosdnywekvSu

of Jese~acson i 1989 But hat ws ancent hours beforethe deadline. He forced hixmself sons matriculated at Andover as a Rockwell that he would hzppily-move thewekytu

-- hitory Jaksons "'ainow"inauura to thinle~-pounding h~sfstis s ed and Junior; now, three years'later, he is serving on dent Council meetingstohe*droo

-hseech haclek onton -wide~no raialahiring his head to the desk. 'With a few spare hours the student-coifncil as Upper Representative. Room, if such a roove would increase studenm

quotas, the end of dijlomatic relations with between Ed and a late paper, he handed a When Parsons assumes his duties as school interest and attendance. "Coristante improve-

Israel and nmed Lois Farakhan o head rather roughilookinig finished copy to -his "president next year, lie states that hewill at-- ment" through constructive critiism is one of

the. Cmmissin To ~et TheHymiesOut of friend Fred Engels for laser-format printout tempt to improve food in Commons, establish Parson's goals for next Neai.

iewtow. Ed wnderedwhethe Jacksn had and slinke,; off to his bedroom for the first a reading day on Mondays of exam weeks and From Parson's speech on "The Iniportance

-huedrainbws knwn to sleep in sleveral nights. Spring Term had listribute a questionnaire to the students. of Preserving our Natural Resources" for the

ever seen the multi-he ranoskont rrived for the Class of '85. Worf rz obigUprrpeeie

Page 4: Writer-in-Residence Yearpdf.phillipian.net/1984/05041984.pdf · Piips Academy's Senior' class rise from 12,537 applications in 1983 When questioned about the tradi-received more college

PAGE FUR -- l:i~rrlrta . -I

Andover Cyclists Take 1st Place'

In National3Da Stage Eventi

BY CHRISTOPHER LYNCH top fifteen. Excellent races. overall team standings of' st and 5tn in theand PHILLIP SCHUMM moved Andover's "A"l teams to se- "B's and 7nd qnd _1rd in' the "A"s.This ast weekend the Phillips Both race leaders, Peter Rawitcher

Academy Cycling team competed codannort ostosad aeand Phillip Schumm of Andover, leftthree-day stage race sponsore '~the '-B" teams first and fifth places inBishopConnoly HighSchool by hirbace the competition wearing their yellowBishop Connolly High Schol, run- iheir bracketrace leader's jerseys.nling from Friday through Sunday. In Sunday: Team TimiA&-Criterinm Tle Girls' Team

the first such race in. the nation,' the Sunday was- an incredibly difficult. Andover's female cyclist KettiAndover team showed their great day a he rigL iiae inm-. convrmd nnrdbehwabiltr-~nd-conssteny bscori~ -~evetsfigh iiii hti o from, the -ing during the three day event. Ridinghighly in each of the individual previous days' racing. Andover with two girls from North Middlesex-events,. ear'ning-top-placing-overall. - - -managed-to-soidify-their-leads with---High, Schoonover walked-away in 3rd-Instead of only one-ra-ce, .a stage', the "A!" teams of Schumm, yerkes place overall at the conclusion. 'Sun-

y"consisted of a four mile individual and Istvan Szent.'Miklosy, and day's-final race-Schoonover managedROM, ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~tm tilo rda feno, ycCatree, ansi Ogden taking- to grab 3rd place on Friday's eventespcialy'dificlt s i pis rdes 2n 5t, respectively. The riders and never relinquished her position toagainst both the clock and finished off the weekend event with a her tough competition. Peter Vrooman, a member of Andover's B-Cycling team leans into the turn themselves. Saturday, in the second 20 mile Criterium, where the riders Undaunted by her teammates'in their multi-scholatstic race. Photo/Lombard stage, both the "A" and "B" teams rode around a flat .8 mile circuit 25 crash on Saturday, Schoonover rode.compeed -i a. tam-rod- rae-66 es--Themost challenging aspectof tow2nd place; 'On Sunday--*ith hermiles for the "A" team and 50 miles the course was the series of hairpin, team reduced to two members,

fr the "B"s. The three-day event turns. A break during the second lap Schoonover helped to clinch their 2nd?Fabc~r DE~e fea ts B lu e was capped off Sunday with the of the "A" race forced the main pack place standing and her own individualT a b ' ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~races, a 20.8 mile team time trial, to keep the pace quick to try and- 3rd, Tired, from the morning's event,377 '~~~~here riders competed in groups f catch the "break-awayers".Scooerstldifratugin - 7u rb u'len t V a ter aheadaf0ml rternuointh Although the break managed to criterium that afternoon. Coming in-tenowhere'the riders circled a hold on td their lead with Lynch, to the final sprint and heading fora.8 mile track twenty-five times. ICrAbtreq, and Schumn fshing 8th, 3rd place finish her bicycle slid outBy SARA HAZELWOOD Friday: Individual Time Trial 10th, and 11th, respectively, from under her on the final cornerList Saturday, rowing on the wa-one ylittle ore than a Friday's, individual time trial Christopher Yerkes, who was attemp- and Schoonover tumbled to astop.rough'waters of the Merrimac River, wa boat-engh by challenged the fiders, on account the ting a sole break on the final lap to' After pausing briefly, Schoonover re-both Girls' Varsity Crew boats fell to In addition, both P.A. boats were strong headwind the riders faced on Place himself well in advance of the mounted and crossed the finish ineTabor. According 'to Jennie foedtro the firt50mtrm h irst half of the course. Despite a Pack fr the finish caught a pedal on wit astnigotIotkn5h

Wadsworth, "t was disappointing rough chop. Tabor, rowing on the in- minor mechanical mishap by Chris 'a corner whicl~amnpered his for the race and retaining her overallbecause we xpected to be the better sd aedrn h is ae i o Yerkes, all members' of the team breakaway attemfpts. 3rd place. Next week Andover will tryThre frtbotldyamc experience this disadvantage. The finished strongly. At the end of the AUl riders in the "B" race placed their luck at the Northfield Mount-The first boat hihlwins androughmuchrsaslon 'first day, Andover's teams held third well-and the Andover team left with Hermon Criterium.one-half a boat lenight until the mid- with several crabs (when the rower an seethpacsinte A dv.die of the 1500 meter race. Their start loe oto fhrorcnrbtdsoni, and second and eighth in' the-and settle to a 'slower stroke rating to both boats' defeats. 'B division.powered them past their opposition. hsweed ohbasrc Saturday: The Road Race-'Unfortunately, at the half-way mark~-, aantS.Pu'.,Bcueteta On Saturday, the "A" riders rode.

-' Tabr, rowng fewr stroes per is young-and inexperienced, with each eight laps over an 8.6 mile loop, andminute, managed to power right race they should continue to improve, the "B" team riders rode six laps.through the Blue crew. Undaunted, Also, once the boats recover from The pace was quick throughout thethe team pulled harder. Despite their their injury-related setbacks, they rolling, hilly course, but slowed. con.efforts and- the encouragement of should be even stronger. siderably as the riders attcked thecoxswain Wendy Dick, the first boat 'long, steep climb up the hill. The hlserved to break up the packs of

T a k es t~~~~~~~~.r~~~~t ~ riders. In the "A"' race; Andover'Softball Ta e irst -riders repeatedly chased down,, thosewho sprinted out' ahead of the pack.,"'.~~ Although one rider was able to open

up a three minute lead midwayJ~~~ ~~JI J~~~~4~~U ~ 1 through the race, the Blue ridersclosed the gap and finally caught him.

By KATHY MULVEY In the first sprint, .a: group of An-The Softball Team's four gamne win. ference in the' game. Atter Anciover dover riders, Phil Schuxnm, Yerkes,

sr4 ended Saturda'y with a disap- failed to produce any: runs ;in the Chris Lynch, *5cott Crabtree, and.pointing 6-5,,.Ioss ~~~~~~~~~~John Ogden captured. 5th,'.6th,, 9th,pointing 6-5 ~ossto Gushing sixth, Gushing tallied the winning run 11th, an 3h e tiey ge' .Academy. Andover banged out eight in its half of the inning. In the top of finish was especially impressive, since "hits against a formidable pitcher, the seventh, the Blue threatened, but h a ocdoftera ncah ~~/compared to three by Cushing. stranded Colbert on third base, and i h ia pitHowever, walks and errors plagued Gushing hung on for the victory- The ed i h ia pitthe Blue as three of the Gushing runs one-run loss was especially bitter for In the "B" race, Peter Rawitscher were scored by runners who got on the older players, who remember a managed to capture first place andbaseviawalk, ad to bybaters simiiar6-5 ossto his eamtwothe yellow race leader's jersey, with -A-Team riders Chris Yerkes, Chris Lynch and Scott Crabtree fly around twho reached first on defensive years ago. A rematch looms, in the an incredible solo. break, which curve at last weekend's three-day stage ace. PooLmsmiscues. Leadoff batter Nancy Col- AISUA tournament in two weeks,plcdhmaflmiuehadftebert sparked the offense with three but the team should not look bey~ passing pack. Other Andover 7hits, while Jessica Devivo and Anita ond the tough contests inbe drsMt Cafy, PeroF or Sd s LdMattedi played solidly in the outfield. 'including Milton Academy on at - oaSeeCoadRc

Colbert blooped an infield"'single, urday. ',Lmadalcpue lcsi h-then moved around to bring in a run B- e n s tV corin the top of the first inning to con-B -T i ItoV crytinue Andover's season long string oftallying first. An inning later, By LEE WESTERFIELDhowever, Cushing scratched out, a Udrsnysisls audy i pair of runs to pull ahead, 2-'l. TheUne snykisltSaud, Captain Rob antu, the trd seed,

Blue then scrapped, for a run, knot- ~~~~~~~~~~~Boys' Tennis defeated Deerfield on also won in straight sets.ting the score at two. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~our home courts 54. Powerful per-Since the Blue offense has been im- ~~~~~~~formances from the top four seeds Fourth Seed Pulls; Throughpressive this season, pouring in 77 proved to be more than the visiting

runs in four games, the players were ~~~~~~~~~~~squad could handle as the Blue rolled With the last three seeds left, An-to the, win. dover led comfoi1~bly 3-0. The Blue's a~confident that they could post some fourth ranked player Bill Bates facedcame. alive nouthop the fifthr as a-Top Three Seeds Sweep his opponent in what would provetocamealiveinthetopofthe~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~flfth~~~~~a a-. ~~~be a crucial match. After taking theColbert triple and a homner by Alhuhtefnl.cr a ut first set, Bates found himself lookingArianne Duddy led the onslaught,

-Atog h ia cr a ut at a 5-2 deficit in the second set butwhich gave PA a 5-2 lead. close, this total was not indicative ofmagetofhtbchrdinw tthe individual contests. The AndovermagetofhtbchadinwtCushing'Comeback ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ - *rCoach' Daniel Cohan referred to asaCushing Comeback f ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~first seed Sean Stone opened the . courageous performance," to take

Gushing battled back to tie the - singles matche ihavcoyi the set seven games to five and laterscore-af -5 by taking advantage of straight sets taking full advantage of the match. After losing to Deerfieldevery to a runner ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~his overwhelming serve to overpower both the fifth and sixth singles mat-eeychance get arne home, Andover's only female rider Ketti Schoonover stays with the lead pack, his Deerfield adversary. FolingceAdvrwtito oueswhich eventually proved to be the dif- Schoonover placed an impressive third ovrlcryigtegrstoascn ut ohJwrJhngrhr h cometioe leadn4tce to 2be,place finish.' - Photo/Lombard Andover second seed, and the Blue noee iin ding ne morecwin to i

an overall win.~~~~SPOR~POTS * ~ Doubles Matches

____ A A A ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Opening the doubles competition,bs four- C A" '& I4U LlEN D A RE the Andover duo of Sean Stone'and~~JJIAEUEILI1I ~reir u - niI'~'~ Z Alex Mahlman fell to a strong Deer-

Saturday, May 5 ~~field pair. The Andover squad thenLUNCHEONS * DINNERS ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Baieba'll B V ~~~~~ atrdayut Mey looked to the team of Rob Cantu and

klINMIONS VOINNIRS Bai~~~~~~~Cewa (B) ............... at SDamuh ............ 2:45 John Karcher to clinch the Blue vie-Crew (G)...........at St. Pauls ............. 2:45 ' tory, and the pair came through with~~EDV ATIII IA~~~~~~~f WA ~ ~ ~ ~ Golf(V) ............. at NAM, H ..... ".win..PA.......()Pk V TIL Gol(J3:00............. aN.M H ............. et...ateu:0Go~~t'(JV) atN M H 3:00 - ~~~~~their Green, rivals by only a singleLacrosse (B V) .......... at anrmuh........... . 2:0 match, but the score certainly did notLacrosse ( JV).....:... tABOnre............ . 2:00

Page 5: Writer-in-Residence Yearpdf.phillipian.net/1984/05041984.pdf · Piips Academy's Senior' class rise from 12,537 applications in 1983 When questioned about the tradi-received more college

'The. PHI.IAPLIAN PAGE FIVE B~oys'- Lacrosse UpsRecrto7-1; Defeats Concod,, Deerfield

TODD BROWN Iir1n11ineic enatieci te. uue to over- scored on an assist from Tad Davis.sand TOM TAKOUDES poe ?hi pponenits. The Green managed to tie the game

This wee the Boy' Varsit The scring drive began when on a shot that snuck past goaltenderLacrosse team upped its record to Thomsen netted the game's first goal -Paul O'Boyle with only 126 remain-7-1, with victories over Deerfield and on a -feed from attackman Bayne ing in the half. The first half endedlast year's state champions Concord- Finlay 8 minutes into the first, with the score tied 3-3, in what was an Carlisle. Travelfing to Deerfleld on quarter. Continuing the rally, the extremely close battle. -Saturday, the team, won its fouth team's leading goal-scorer- Rob. lhuhDefe4soe h isgame in a row by a scare of 10-7. The Kellan beat the goalie with a pass gAlofthe, sDeconed othal f iys1Blue continued its-winning-streak on from Upper'Jon Schwartz, edig ga fte second fe h whl blw at-Wednesday at home by edging their the first period scoring',,with Andover scnsatrtewitebea-skilled opponenets 7-5. oto2-.aciaBynFndlay tied the game

'.---'-~-Demo~shes-Deerfld The~seccjn~~~Clii7~f&a -- -ic-with -an- assist- from-Paul-qu~~~bg~ -Wt Chesterton only 15 seconds later.Lorne Thomsen led PA wt'gal.Deerfield 'kly scoring 2 goals DaeLtl-n oreTosncn

and'-1assists while captain- Charlie- within-the first-two ni egosalngeach -- d Senior gWelch and senior Chris Gildehaus an- gamne as they imediately displayed . Mwy ddddw moeite r'- choredi the defense. The dfensive ef- their powerful offense. CapitJin Btir uartr t gieP ao 8- ead-'the~

-otcombined with the texolosive - napwrpa iuioKla with only one quarter left to play.Deerfield brought, the score to PA's number 5 seed Kars Buckley hammers a forehand in her victorious

0 S~~~~'1cI~~~~~if.(.' ~~~~within 2 as their star midfilder - singles match against Exeter on Saturday. Photo/HendersonGirls'LacrosseSlt.soeol ohv h gam GprstTenioSayAO/7 ~ ~~~~~~~~quick-stick from Jason Anderson and G r s t yw eek* ile ts rocto Jeff. McDermott which bounced from 20 ards out. Athough -a6 0 0BY JOSIE R01aBINS and ELIZA MINOT field added one more goal in the U nde eate - at6LlU

The Girls' Varsity Lacrosse team Proctor Comeback quarter, it was in a losing effort.DyN ADVEPRsplit its two games- last week, At tis point, Proctor took to the Crushes Concord-Carlile ThBil'Vr y NN EPRTBleaddtirfthsagt

defeatng Protor- cademy1642,offensive, and put heavy pressure on - On Wednesday, defending state continued their winning ways over the' Victory over the Red in Saturday'sthen on Wednesday, losing to St. the Blue defense. Andover saw its champions Concord-Carlisle fll to a past two weeks, adding four victories, Exeter matchlongnyFisadPauls 135, doppig th tea recrd lad hink as atrTdgsalid-mighty Blue squad b a score of 7-5. over St. Mary's of -Lawrence, Win-~ Sixth- singles. Number Two throughto 3-2. Saturday against Proctor, again, the score was 11-8. Proctor outstanding, performances by goal sor, Exeter, and--Northfield Mount- Number Five all smashed tebl

stronge ofenste- ane timelry,- whled 'cniudisofnieosagt eder Paul Q'Boyle~ and defenseman Hermon to compile an undefeated f'rom comner to comner defeating their- defense led the Blue to victory; while and in a matter of minutes, P.A. Charlie Welch allowed Andover to re- record of 6-0..a opponentstte in tnuteswPqA sets,-e Wech a losingdove to r-, reord o 6-0only,

againt St Pau's 1 dspit a dcentfound themselves tied at 1 1. main undefeated at home. The game -' four to seven games per match. Theperformance, Andover could never I The Blue refused to let Proctor's was played with'a-controlled offense Powers Past St. Mary's, Winsor three doubles teams of -Hunt---finish off any -offensive plays, and comeback phase them, as later on which ept the tempo quite'slow,'as '. nStraArl2,teBu MltkBclySesr n

thusfellto astrog St Pau's tam. Pierce scored to give the lead back to very few fast breaks occured. smahed St. Mary's of Lawrence, five Allen-Davenport all also emerged vic- Slow Start at Proctor Andover for good. After Minot After allowing Concord-Carlisle to matches 'oe h hthisl oiu'ntoarsiest.TeBu

After the long bus ride, the team scored on a pass from Ward, Proctor tcore the rst goal, Upper Bayne proved to ne.a diaptenasth e sel tatic to tgressive7sets.nTheaBluegot off to a slow start; and took a cut the lead to 13-12, but Ward Findlay netted the tying goal with Blue were able to manhandle their op- their longtime Red rivals.while to get going in the heat. Mean- answered with a goal to ut Andover 1:30 left in the first quarter. Then 10 poqents without much of a' fight, This past Wednesday, Northfield while, Proctor jumped out to an early up by-two.'Nash and Minot de seconds later, midfielder Jason dropping but one game the entire Mounr-Hernmon also fell totwo-goal lead by quickly- taking ad- goals to ensuire P.A.'s hard- fought Anderson put in the first of his two day. - ' 'Andover's overwhelming power and

vantage of te Blue's eary sluggish -victory, goas, giving PAa 2-I 'firstquarter Wintord on Waynthea25the 25t, edeterminatoniinaa e7722victory..play- t alsToSr. lead. In an extremely slow paced se- proved to be more of a haflenge, but Singles players Numbers TwoAndover,'- shaken by Proctor'sStPalsTotrg cond quarter, Anderson matched athough Andover still, finished vic- through Six managed two-set vic-quick 'start, came to life and began to The Blue faced a solid St. Paul's Concord-Carlisle's second p'eriod'- torious by a score of 84. Trilby tories, using their smooth approachmove the ball effectively. Captain squad at home Wednesday, and score with-one of his own on a quick Sheeser, at Number T got the shots and put-away vollies. AtMelinda Pierce got the girlsQn the despite playing well in the midfield pasfo oDvsit ny1'red a shot ~~~~pla ss frm Dvswt nl 7Blue off to a tremendous start, put- Number Six, -J-ulia Calhoun'sboard when she fire a shtat an area, fell 13-5. Andover's eary plyseonds remaining the half. ting up a strong fight against a ranked relentless dter mination enabled herimpressive opposing goalie, who--had--- ue ottobinc ativ o th Andover began methird quarter -tennis player and splitting sets before to outlast her NMH opponent in apreviously handled anything the Blue game, as the team moved the bl up- with goals by Thomsen and Kellan, her opponent had to default. At 3-6, -7-5, 6-4 win.could shoot at her. Proctor attempted' field, but never could sucessfully both within 30 seconds of the initial Number Three, Captain - Stephanie Coach Tom Hodgson attributes theto advance their one-goal lead; finish off a play. The Blue only face-off. Sitting on a three point lead, Hunt came back after lo-sing the first undefeated record to "the depth ofhowever, tough defensive play, led by mnafige4 five goals all game,'two -by PA played a much more conservative set 3-6 to pull out her match 7-5, 6-3 our team." He said of the NorthfieldSeniors Janine Coleman and Danielle Tydings i- and,- Pierce, while Ward game, allowing their-. opponents to in the-final two sets. Singles players match, "We got good doubles playMorris, a new student from England scored once. Despite another strong score only one goal. Findlay and Numbers Four throuih Six, Nina from Sheeser and Buckley and-fromwhose skills have been a strong addi- defensive performance-i from Col- Chesterton began the fourth quarter Davenport, Kara Buckley, and Robin Malitsky and Hunt and a clutch comn-

ton o ths yersteam tha the ny le t omlteyclc and MrsPA jutase by each tallYing one goal, giving the Allen, respectively, whizzed through eback by a new entry into the top six-offensive attacks. P.A. passed teualtocmeeycikantkeBlue a 4-point lead. Concord-Carlisle straight set victories, losing only four singles, julia Calhoun."ball up through the middle tocetravngeosoigchcsfr- managed two more scores, but they or five games each. In doubles, the The team's upcoming matchesEleanor Tydings, who rifled home the much of-the game, and this St. Paul's were futile, as Andover'-merged as Number Two and Number Three agianst Dartmouth on Saturday and

Blue Tgoal. s the Lea lo wayt ith thvcoy h em w er fr the fifth..ame in a row. pairs of Buckley-Allen and Liz Milton on Wednesday-will probablyBlue Takes the eadhooket iampes Iets eor ait Next week the Blue faces Dart- Sommers-Julia Calhoun teamed up prove, to be more difficult, but shouldThe tea contiued it stron Brook gae etwe gis mouth on Wednesday and Governor-. for easy 6-1, 6-2 and 6-2, 6-4 wins. lead to Andover victories. Both mat-

formnance and constantly threatened an oenrDme. Dme nStra.Andover Crushes Red ches will be on the Andover campus.the Proctor net. By the end of thehalf, Fern Ward had scored three

I "times, Pierce tallied her second of theA n o e I ncontest, while Eliza Minot and LaurieA I'Nash added one goal'apiece. During O i i a ~ ilp c d this time, the P.A. defense gave up On rhe camusPhillipsipAcade m ymjust two goals, and the Blue held anSs 8-4 halftime lead. ClassR

In the second half, Proctor tighten-ed up its defense, and neither teamwas able to score until further into theperiod. Finally, - Nash bro ke thedrought by scoring twice to completeher hattrick, on passes from Laura Obbard and Denyse Finn.

Star Pizza-- King's Subswill'Ideliver

anytime,

- lare or mallA vailabke in Kryptonium- orders ~~~~10 & 14 Karat Gold

Pices begin @ $86 ladies ad $98 gentlemenThrsA Melnand for every' ~Grecoe ewelersEerSupizzas, 75-0830get one26 Park St. Andover, Mass. OE ASAWE

MONDAY THRU SUNDAY 11 am to 9p~mFree

- -. --.- -. -' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~For Faster Service Call

470-1850ft -*~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~4

ft ~~~~Within Andover: $4.004' .. . ~~~~~~~~Outside of Andover: $1.25 per mile *+

- ' ~~-1 I ..*OLD HARTLAND PARKING LT

Page 6: Writer-in-Residence Yearpdf.phillipian.net/1984/05041984.pdf · Piips Academy's Senior' class rise from 12,537 applications in 1983 When questioned about the tradi-received more college

PAGE SIX -- JLIU----- * ~ "~<i e M_ T`4,19

Crespi, Wvright, owelson 'Win,,-Awards in National, Chem Exam

By WILLIAM C. SIJEIN Department Chairman Weld.' Weld registered Senior Andrew Myers andl IThree Andover chemistry students 'remarked that Andover has Upper Thorpias Shields as the fourth

recently received notification that 'performed well every year and called and fifth contestants. Myers, whothey had placed highly in the Twenty- this year's triple sweep as good as Weld believed to be one of the mostsixth Annual Aery A Asihdown we've vgr done." Weld cited one promising entries, unfortunatelyHigh School Chemistry Contest. year (1962) when Phillips Academy missed Minne's rally wagon for theSeniors Vincent Crespi, Lawrence entered a blind student, Gerald W. 9:00 am. exam. He stated that by a Powelson, and Timothy Wright will McCollum, who remarkably achieved "freak" mishap, e took a "backbe awarded cash prizes at a banquet first honors. route to Day Hall (Minne's dor-'on Thursday, -May lb~, at Simmons .mitory" to meet Minne, while at theCollege in Boston by the Nor: Last year, Andover Senior Evan same time Minne drove around totheastern division of the America Goldberg captured first while Geof- Stearns House to pickup Myers.

-~~~~~-Cheical S6ciet(ACS) -- frey--Carruthers and--Robcrt-Hogan-------- - -.

a four-ear Senor from received honorable mentions. Unable to locate Myers at Stearns,riespi, orya Sno rm In 4 ddition to the five top prizes, Minne returned to Day and stillicould -

-- -Downer's Grove, Illinois, placed-frtte ACS awards, P'tvehi' 0h rbe ntfidMeswoha eundtin the ACS exam. He is a member of mentions-ten for first year Stearns. Minne was forced to leave

-Mr. Phillip Weld's Chemistry 55 chemistry students-and ten for second -without Myers: so -the- others could-' - "' -class, a first-year chemistry course in year students. All receive a copy of maeteea.Silsddnot -~,

tended-rcF-pteparc students for the the Chemical Rubber Company receive an'award for the exam. Chemistry Teachers Phillip Weld and Ronn Mlnne. Pboto/GreerAdvanced Piaicement Examination. Handbook, a large volume of scien-

Powelson and Wrigh't com tific and mathematical facts and for-plemnentecl Crespi's victory by earinnmlam porhovrohitydolasthe second and furth places, respec- -this year's top five winner i ad- e~c j ' Lt vely Both are second-year .dition to receiving cash bonusses, will"i

leisrystdet i D. or b-invited opt nte R vluLtion., Sa sTe i -LivigMinne's, Chemistry 52- class. Chemistry International Olympiad B AI EBTE hl ttePaeCneto n Topo fimdta ei'The Contest Examination, reported Weld. wiea h ec ovnini

John Means Thompson, currently Paris when he dramatically described proposal of a "future good societyThe ACS. held the prize exaniinar This year's anquet, at Simmons' the Associate' Director of the the Russian Revolution as "a dd not and will not come into ex-

tion on-Saturday, April 7 at Simmons will incld dn, er; award American University's. Field Staff in loathsome plague" afflicting Europe. istence in the immediate future." He'College. Each school entered in the ceremonies, and a speech on "Single- Hanover, New Hampshire, lectured In today's perspective, Americans explained that -too, many complica-

* . contes registerd five stuents and ollision Cemistry" y Haryard to Scott Royce's Modern European judge the Marxist Sandinistas as tions resulted from Russia' ssent a five dollar contribution to University Professor Dudley History class as well as other listeners liberating the Nicaraguan people or, backwardness as an agricultural na-defray-the cost of the prizes. ' 'Hirschbach, outlined Weld, last Friday on the topic of his book~ as the U.S. -government maintains, -tion after the' Revolution. As opposed

Phillps Aadem haseolusonay Rssiad1n7.s suppressing individual rights. to te outbreak of Communism in* Phillips Academy has sent students Myers Misses Wagon The theme of Thompson's speech. Thompson emphasized that in - agrarian Russia, Marx predicted in-

to attend the contest since its begin- ~~entitled "Lenin, Lives," explained Russia for the first time in history, an itial revolution in an industrializedning in 1958, according to'Chemistry The Chemistry Department how Lenin's legacy still influences organized mass overthrow of a society society, followed by a

moderif day Russia. Thompson stated system of goverment was based solely 'worldwide repercussidn causing anthat, politically, Vladimir Lenin, the on social and economic grounds (in- organized overthrow of Capitalism.man who is accredited with putting stead of political). In evaluating the Topo othe i etr yKarl Marx's theories into practice, re- Fench Revolution of 1789, Marx Topo otne i etr ymains "a living, breathing epic." AP- anldtelw fhstory. The tying to define the type of Revolu-proximately,- one third of the world's "Ancien Regime" had been toppled, tion that ocured in 1917. In someis living under "Leninism." u h rmssof"ieteult respects, he remarked that it was a

By the end of the Russian Revolu- and fthernmitysf"liwere y nexuistyt "People's Revolution", meaning that-tion, opinion was divided between Tebugoslnwer netedthe minority of people who did havetwo fundamental positions as tp the frmteoetrwo igLusviewpoints opposed the old order, but-effects of the war on the world. The from heoverthe o "pr Lin supported the Bolshevik provisional

,4-~~~. ~first was summed up in March of masses were worse off. Marx's con-goen ntutluprtsaedo1919 by- Lincoln Steffens, the first clusions of the ideal revolution com- wane in January of 1918;. The Rus-American journalist to-vigil the newly prsdo omnlporeosi fsian Revolution was also a popularformed Socialist Russia. He land, and, imiprovements of social asa revolution because the Russian peo-explained, "I have seen the future well as economic conditions. As a ple all agreed with Lenin'shimotto of

o ','~~~~~~~ '~~~'~~~"~~~'~~ - -~~~~and it works,", and ever since the -'"child of the Enlightenment", Marx "Land, Bread, and Peace." T1hewrld has remembered Steffens for believed that the "individual shouldmashoer'-miudstd

this controversial statement which he be liberated to develop his talent to Lenin's overly general and-ambitiouswrote before he entered the So-viet-- -te-fletpsil xet"Acr oal, because he did not really meanUnion. John Reed, author Of, Ten ding tomhompson,Lenin agreed'with it. I addition, when the soldiersDays That Shook Mhe World, agreed this philosophy a long is it did not came home, and the factories werewith Steffens' opinion that the teprylns 'lhuhteSve seized, the proletariats had riot

The Student Council considered Parliamentary procedure as one possibl Revolution stopped exploitation and Union of today is a totalitarian state, achieved what they had fought for.means of impr~~ving efficiency. .Photo/Ehrbar ~improved sociaJ conditions. Winston 'The Revolution, furthermore, a-

Churchill expressed the second view -pThompson stressedmtheacontinuing ep* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~peal of liberation through revolution perdtbeaemctistug,Th1 Efficie n c y in many~hird World nations, for when Czar Nicolas II was leading

J .. J~j.jj U I . ~ ~ 1~*T' dsrb o the front during World War I he sent~~'~hJ I.J W~~.J .5.~~~VLJ om~~son went on to w ~~back a telegram to Russia ordering modern' day communists have his troops to eliminate the widespread

S distorted Marx's befief of "a dissent and protect about wartime-Com pletes "..D ow ntow n "' Plan the landowners and the proletariat as scmacndihios. oldiwnt th ands-woldwde-clas stugge" etwencociacndithios. Ioliriwn t ar's

By MATT' BOERSMA elections, Underwood Room, so that students an explanation for the failure of started to "fraternize"~ with theand BRITA-8TRANDBERG Junior Represenrtative josh Preven would be more likely to attend Leninism to realize Marxist ideals' crowds and soon turned on the Czar.

The Student Coiiniidf apprtoved the presented a proposal, which the nieetings~. P1reven cited the impor- However, Marx, like modern Coin- Ytsnetepoiinlgvr-final version of their propo~al allow-' Council discussed at length, dealing tance of unifying schoolwide ques- munists, stoutly Welieved that an in- ment's Second Copgress of Sovietsing seniors downtown after 8:00 and with efficiency. Preven suggested a tionnaires, and Upper Representative evitable confrontation will miak the met, the people -hdve not had a fair

discussed mprovement for next form for meetings closer to that of Kate Flather added "many of our Capitalists defend their land fom sainpltc.Linmdafatdyear'se Coilprvints Tu e' parliamentary procedure, requiring questions ... have been too broad." Communist antagonizers. sayonpolitian .deee thade as goidmeeting, the president. to review the discussion ing to control the government. Final-

The meeting commenced with every ten minutes to ensure it con- 00 C4 ly, the Russian Revolution was notSchool President ordan Smyth tinues beneficially and efficiently. LJBAI 44 entirely a social revolution. Commit-reading the proposal to allow seiniors-ThConialodsueddvc tees formed to equitably distributedowntown until sign-in. The proposal for next year's Student Council toA De a e Qthlndndfcoiswrqukyclaimed that Senioi-s "are old enough hepte efr oeefcetyI taken over b y the' ''state

-- to handle" the responsibility of going and productively. Rich Eisert, Pine ' . jAS. A' brecay"downtown at night. Granting seniors Knl'CeirRpeenaie x ... oeucation Ii tn L ~ rIn relation -to day, the ideal orthis privilege, the Council said, would pressed his feeling that, although myth of eliminating social andallow thm to "get a late meal or Council-Student communication has economic oppression through revolu-snack," thereby reducing the number imrvd otsuet ipy' tion as suggested by Lenin has in-

- ~~~of campus food deiveries each night. "were not active enough [in Council Friday, May 4 fluenced rebels in El Salvador to fightThe proposal also stressed that affairs]. There wasn't enough feed- 7:00 p.m. "What Every Woman Knows," a theatrical presenta- G.W Haill for a good cause and breaking away4seni6rs will be dware" of ihe safety back.' J. Murray, Senior tion by Tuis McCall' from backwardness. The idea of

issues involved due to Andover's em- Representative from West Quad- Saturday, May 5 eliminating oppression, even thoughphasis on safety this year. The Coun- South, stressed his hope that next 9:00 a.m. Actors' Workshop directed by Tulis McCall -Drama Lab - it requires violence, is very importantcil will present tis' proposal to the year's Council wilf -deal with issues 9:00 a.m. "Curriculum for a Non-seiist World,- a panel discus- U Room -to the peoples or the Third World.Faculty Adi-yCmiteo that afe within their power to change. 100 ~. sion led by Sue Lloyd Thmsn omntdtatpolM Aiy omiHe o ciedth Cunilsaim sen.e-Presentation of the Findings of the Coeducation Study Kemper Aud. boraripSoc tal esecall helThursday, Ma .H ie h oni' iesete-Comjnittee: Curriculum, Ailfiletics, Student LifebonatrSliepclyth

amining the "Pace of Life at An- 11:30 a.m. "Every Woman . . mages," a discussion led by Tulis U Room - younger generation, are losing faithEfficiency and Effectiveness dover" issue that lead to no definite McCall - nteMritble.Acrigt

Next, Abbot Senior Representative conclusion. 11:30 a.m.- LUNCHEON Commons inthmso Marxist' eieas Averdn oPeter Eliopoulos reported that Smyth stressed the importance of :0 p.m. AheisEntonCmu:eeprsca.np 5 Fldad been very successful in practice andCluster Reps had collected 394 dollars defining issues. Parsons concurred, tig r trigt oeaat

Facilitiesso far towards the Sound System for s tat i ng ''We must keep it 6:00 p.m. CELEBRATION!-All School Dinner with faculty and Case Mern. Cage -Many of the young people have turn-Social Functions. The Council also focused ... we can't lose interest." student entertainment e t pty yiim n orpdecided to hold elections for Upper Rabbit Pond Senior Representative 810J0 p.m. DANCE!-"Right Time" and "The azz Age" on stage Memorial Gym tion." To augment this problem, a'Representative in two weeks, at Sarah -Bullock suggested that fpture Sunday, May 6- gr6wving number of non-RussiansSmyth's suggestion, to avoid conflict meetings be held in mhore obvious I li:00 a.m. - ABBOT BAZAAR- "---The Great Lawn frmCnrlAi htcompromise a

with nxt wee's Cluter speches nd an conveient lcation such s the 4:00 p.m. fo eta satawithnex wee's lustr seeces ad ad covenentlocaion suc asthe 3:30 p.m. "Andover '7 4 -'83"-a faculty-alumni panel discussion U Room' national minority are starting to

- _______________________________________________________________________of the coeducational decade, moderated by K. Kelly become influential.Wise Thompson suggested that neither

5:00 p.m. Ecumenical Vespers: "The mage of Man: Male and Cochran Chapel Western nor Soviet politics inight beFemale," with gitest homilist Molly Bidwell Radley '61. the viable solution. Countries like In-Highlighting also new BENE VIE tapestries

8:00 P.M. All-School Meeting: "Ethics and Education: What does Kemper Chapel dia and China,- socialist republics school have to do with being good?" Guest Speaker- -with some links -to Marx, are rapidly

P P ' ~ ~ ~~~IDElizabeth Minnich. cagnipoing and becomingHas so ehnMo everyneg ir syingven

- - - ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Mother, - ' ' ' meA R y J I nt-arre~i7d exemplrsnbut tinr

Page 7: Writer-in-Residence Yearpdf.phillipian.net/1984/05041984.pdf · Piips Academy's Senior' class rise from 12,537 applications in 1983 When questioned about the tradi-received more college

The SEV~~~~~~TENHTH*11A RAG-SVE"Brilliant" Show from- EnglandBrings Laughter toDramia Lab

By KAMYAR ATABAI tions of the runners, their ap- presented the electrifying spectacleThe British theatre troup, Con- proaches to life' and numerous of a man coming t eris w~ith h s

federacy of Fools, performed aspects of modern life provided the romantic deli4sions and the essentialMarathon by Tony Dunham and substance of the drama. helplessness of his situation T eRob Sian last Monday and__Tuesday_ The marathon resembles a tensions of the-play eploded i thcnighfC&renl -on- U. S. tour, Con- religo fo rdhs persuito run emtoaantucige ndnfederacy-of Fools came to Andover-ning dominates his entire life. Runn- provided perfect resolution to th"through, the efforts of English- and ---ing serves as an escape from reality- tragic elements hich sufaced-inTheater Instructor Robert Mac- without a job and the loss of his the play.Dowell, who taught one of the cast girlfriend. Fred- is a romantic The- performances we remembers at Dulwich Collge te-iealist-iha"ggeiene to marvelous and uusually suiblimneBritish school from which he is cur- prove himself as his world slowly As the intense Fred, Ton-v Dunthamirently on exchange. crumbles around him. ran the gamut of emotions froni-A to

Marathon'revolve8 around an' In sharp contrast to the methodic, Z. Alternately sarcastic, reflectxve,aspiring runner, Fred, who per- tense, and serious Fred, Marathon upset, comic, and pensive, Dunham-suades- his friend Bob' to enter the presents Bob. Laid-back and easy- gave a detailed characeri7,ationLondon Marathon. The play focuses going, Bob-has a more passive ap- showing the nuances c hison the contrast between the two, proach to life. Bob is essentialry a character's emotions t an on-

:~Gwynmuln and Mke Greer n "MungoJerry and Rumpleteaser", a ari ad the resulting tensions which pragmatist in that he approaches life- ingly accurate degree. Whether in a---number-from, last weekc's dance recital. 'Pt/Ca srain their friendship. The motiva- with a sense of reality and without dramatic or comic scene, Dunham

Fred's romantic delusions. Perhaps always provided the correct nflec-the only escape Bob has from his tion and performed with an unerr-

D a n cers P er or m d e V a rie ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~boring and grim existance lies in his ing sense of conviction. His rage adin Al ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~ Moderation is Bob's key to being, scene adding a nevX' dimension to hisI-i rin~~~~~~~~~~' I D ance P er ~~~~~~~~~while Fred's is excess especially in subtly presented multi-faceted

/~.../~IILL4ILL~vc?2 his training for the marathon. The characterization.By MOLLYHIRTH - this piece featured- wonderful five- difference between the two friends- Rob Sian (Bob) provided a perfoi-

J ATandHY lines and poses, aindsowed the Katia Anmsler's and Mike makes for an incisive character mance of comic delight. His quirkyJONATHAN HOYTflexibility of both dancers well. Greer'z,- ards came next. Set to study, and an exploration Iof mannerisms, ridiculous running

This term's Dance Recital dazzled Next was another classical birdlike,, fluttery music, their jealousy, competition, role-playing outfit and everrso~slightiy feignedtwo audiences, on Saturday nighit piece,The Lady and the Unicorn , -choreography attempted to i- and common bonds that exist in a enthusiasm for the marathon on-and Sunday afternoon, on the GW with music by Debussy. Well itate the graceful, swaying mo- friendship. tributed to creating an endearingmainstage. The recital ran the choreographed, especially for tions of birds. The following One word suffices to describe portrayal. Bob was essentially agamut of choreographic and musical the unicorn movements, this number, choreographed by Marathon : brilliant. Fromnilts open- more comic character thah Fred,styles. Through sheer hard work dance featuredl Kluck and Cristina. Rubio, was the largest ing scene, with Bob silently and and Sian capitalized'on this aspectand talent the dancers were able to Nilson. Visually, Kluck' ~ in the recitaL, The nine dancers meticulously unfolding his unning especially in scenes where he fak~cdput on one of the best recitals ever.' movements, again on,. point, lent whirled and wove to the clothes as if they were holy artifacts cramps, tapped his feet in rhythm o--

Perhaps the most pleasant aspect a hoof-like q~uality to her feet energetic Rumanian music of to -the shattering climax, Marathon Fred's instead of runnrinqg and*of the recital was its va-iety, much Both dancers got a chance -to Bartok. Zita Ezpeleta and remained dri target. The stage-was created general chaos by throwi5nggreater than in previous years. The show thier great skill and grace. Michelle Kuck again performed sparce: two -benches, a running outfits, shoes, and orange peels allstriking first dance, "Quintet," was - Following The Lady and the precise, enchanting cadenzas. machine, some posters on the wall over the room.sharply choreographed and ex- Unicorn was -a five-man routine of'- The final number set t the and a garbage can. However, -these The success of the play, however,ecuted, with astonishing syn- the increasingly popular "break third movement of Vivaldi's Dou- esentials perfectly evoked a locker- depended entirely on the interplaychronization of movement between dance" style. Wayne - Belhen, ble Violin Concerto, proved to be a room atmospere. A sense of realism- between the actors. The two actorsthe dancers. Next came an "Irish Ernesto Espaldon, Mike Greer, variety of beautiful rolls and leaps, pervaded throughout; the actors ac- *generated a stupendous chemistry,Dust," danced by Megan Carroll Rico Kellog, and Jampes Meredith' with much contrast in the styles of tually ran and did calisthenics--and 'and by playing of each other withand Jim Driscoll. From their misty, each had their own interpreta- choreography. Its setback was the- sweated. - - peed, affection and talent they ful-almost dreamlike entrances to dis- tions of break dancing, although- music: precise baroque style did not The play treaded the thin line bet- y realized the potential of the play. tant music, to the mo~e upbeat end, Greer's came closest to the style match the dancers very well. Iall, ween comedy and drama, and suc- Marathon was an experieqnce to be,"Driscoll and Carroll performed with- frequently seen at Fanuiel Hall however, the recital provided a vir- ceded on both counts. There existed -cherished. Not only did it amuse andgreat lightness and agility, and in front of Filene's in tually enormous variety of talent, great moments of outragesness and divert, but it also provided some food

"Planet Rock" and later "Tubes". Boston. Their was, unfortunate- beauty, and music, perhaps the uninhibitedness. In one scene, Bob for thought by discussing and raising-provided the audience with a sharp ly, little synchronicity among the most dazzingperormncethi

chngr in "Plicanet ane ae oar then procedes to simultaneously dience members by raising questionsOnga h "Pane "robogedto Ct]\ m s e drink and douse himself thoroughly about priorities,, obsessions and'somehow look almost "robot1oiII1drect with Coca-Cola.-Anotherinstance of choices in life and by exposing the\~vhile still making each movement sheeicomdynocurd-whn inhisrrusrating banality and boredom of

smooth and'fluid. "Tubes, " starting i' C A / attempt to cheer up Fred, Bob at- aspects of modern life:with three dancers clad in wormlike J~r J, ~ ~ ~ t ~ -I i ak i n rcest e- The show also entertained with wit-tubes, definitely qualified as the '9 8 G er'L..Lm an..L JP.la4 cilessly tickle him as both roll ty lines and incredibly funny situa-

mance. his dane kept erfor- By CAROLINE LANGSTON with complex themes and- dated around on the ground in a momenttis.Wrscnotumpth '- --.

mostceTive dance of te wl h emnDprmn lpe of sheer exuberence and high fcct that Marathon had o the au-time ell Te Geran Deartmet wil pre- historical references, Cain and dec;sfiei os htwe hwith'- Driscoll, Torrance York and sent Andorra by Max Frisch Mon- Amsler deletedpatinodro spirits. dec;sfiettoay thtwe4h

-Brooke Williams' clad in billowy day, May 7th, at partsn theoDamarnto Th'e dramatic highlight of the play play ended, the entire audience roseclot tha the coud no seeout f. lb.Tepa is4 directe byam moh ke it more accessable to German ocuedathen.Bhfrns to its feet without a moment of

clot tht thy culd ot ee ot o. la. Te ply i dircte by ohn students of -all levels. Perhaps the ocrda h n.Bt red eiain ih.hi lentlNext in the recital came asection Cain and German teaching fellow greatest problem was the casting; ponder about their lives and each hstto. Wt hi lentl

of classical ballt. First were tw Katia -Amslerwith the help ofother. Then, in a lacerating and bit- audacious and poignant play, thevariations frcom "Carmen" danced Kemper students Etorre Ohage and firndn godtorscwho also spoe ter sotiloquoy, Fred muses on -the visitin ac tiono Biand scesul-eby Carroll and Zita Ezpeleta. Christine Moorthi. limiting . "We got a good bunch of emptyness and boredom of his life, ypqe mtosadepoeEzpeleta gracefully and seductively Cain first suggested Andorra foracos"ayAser"igssw and in a shattering climax an- universal themes of failure, the needhandled her part while Carroll the annual German play, and is now lucked out." -nounces that even running has ott rv on'ssef iuien t nshowed great skill on point, in a directing it as an Independent Pro-- its appeal for him. The scene and the joy and love ofredhp.dance full of pirouettes. - Ject. The large cast includes Jean-

in variations from Don Quixote nine Lairo, Cain himself, Viva, Bar-

the audience got its first look at tkus, Katrina Smith, Catherine Har-P e r oP en Si l uRc aMichelle Kuck. Making difficult Melle, Tim Smith, Al DuPuy, Mar

-- rops_-on-pont,' look light and Dobrosiejski, Stephanie.- Kirklandi ~ d S ~ l c l e y a t Sn aeasy, KMuck shone as the Susan Soule, Jody Porter, Stefan d i oGl l s ahighlight of this section. Cushman, Nicole Wynn, Luisa

In a sudden change from the Ezpeleta, Steve Carter, and Nared By EDGAR SARINO ctimpianist, soloing. The three of Far East music and country-classical styles of the preceding Porneranty.' Last Saturday, the accomplished movements all switched back' and ballads, and the last part ex- -

dances, Brooke Williams, - Li The plot, according to Cain, ex- oboe player Peggy Pearson gave a forth from shyly quiet to angrily- emplefied the revelry when arrivingNilson, and Serena Perrin turned plores .'.Prejudice and provinciably" concert in the Addison Gallery at loud almost every minute, but the home; it combined a march with an

in anoutsandig peformnce ft'erWorl War Iicentringon -3:OO0- Clad in a simple blue dress, Anime movement blended the two English fox-hunt horn, and endediof Time otheandchorora te azie and Wsh tIenin g man this slight woman played with care; most finely; its piano runs grew and the concert nicely.

-coordination of the dancers, lus named Adri is taken in by a Jewish her firm breathing produced clear subsided like bubbling brook, Both Pearson and the pianist-the superb lighting effects man, who in the play supposedly his trilling notes with perfect pitch.' even and pure. Amrlin clicked well together: their(especially Williams' red father, and is raised as a Jew. Later. She held her emotion in check, The endpiece, amilleSaint-Saens' talents closely combined. Pearson

silhouettes at the beginning and reveals that his father had an affair but when playing - , she em- Sonata from Opus 166 was a fantastic played with the serenity of corn-the end) added up for a with a foreign lady adn Andreis not phasized the staccato runs and loud mixture of oboe wind and piano plete confidence and gia':e under

--mesmerizing number. Jewish. However, his sense f being notes with comic movements-of her beat. The whole piece com- pressure. She was a rofess-,onalIn contrast to the extreme Jewish is so ingrained that he cannot eyebrows; she swayed through the municated a long journey, sounding with a great love of music.

sophistication of Time, came believe the truth. The play con- long floating phrases and sustained -_____

Forever My -Love. Choreographed tinues on to explore "how foreign or notes with a glimmerred eye. Her

dance flowed with seemingly ef- on a person", and contains many pieces, each memorable in its own C ACLN J ifortless movemn-nfs of - great ex- Nazi and Biblical overtures, way.- - Friday, May 4tension that created a soft ino- Cinrmkethtwlehepa The Sonata in A minor, a dirge-like 6:45 p.m. Shabbat Service-led by members of JSU Kemper Cpci

- centair. his inocen qualty waswell eceivd by uropan au- yet dignified piece written by -6:45 p.m. Mr. Wu Tang, a curator for the Boston useum of Kmc i, cent ai Tur, iet qlthe next diees recive y rpern n eean ne naspiigy Fine Arts will give a talk on Asiaiic Art. Slides %vill

contrasted, intrwt h et inee pcal nemn n eean ne naspiigyaccompany the lecture.piece, Evolution. Danced by Israel, it was not well received in upbeat style for the Vivace move- 8-:0 pn. Academy Concert Band and Jazz Band Concert Co,~hran C hiel

-Driscoll and Gwynneth Malin, New York. Because the play deals ment took off with quick fluid runs__________________________________________________ and popping notes. The improvisa- A CELEBRATION OF A DECADE OF COEDUCATION AT ANDOX LR B GINS, tion came as a surprise-strange- for further informatnon, see calendar on p. 6.

-NORTH ANDOVER SUB & SEAFOOD soundig with discordant squawks Saturday, May 5' I ~~~and a slew of acidentals, which put 3:00 p.m.- Saturday Afternoon Tea-all welcome Cook", fHouqc

We Deliver ~~~No charge for delivery the audience on edge. - 50 ~.CgWm TIM;%rar I .~~~~~~~~~~~~Th nex pice Moar' Soat in 6:00 .m. Celebration: All School Dinner! Cg

Page 8: Writer-in-Residence Yearpdf.phillipian.net/1984/05041984.pdf · Piips Academy's Senior' class rise from 12,537 applications in 1983 When questioned about the tradi-received more college

r~~~~~~~~~_ I

HarvardJV, Catholic M~emorial-Defeat Lethargic, Boys" Baseball

By MIKE MORRIS bined. got the number eight batter to fly out,The Boys' Varsity Baseball team Blasted by Harvard J.y. with the' bases loaded. Andover

suffered two devastating losses last Havr Vgm n managed to score another run in the*week t a sold Cathlic Melorial Entering the Havr .. gm n bottom of the sixth making the score

squad and an overpowering-Harvard Wensa h lu a okig or 84.Cpain John Best led the inning ~J .V. team on Wednesday. The 1 6 ward to a victory to snap their four- off with a walk, taking secoild on aloss to Catholic Memorial was game tailspin; instead they were met Jeff Penner sacrifice. Ben Gunder-especially frustrating as the Blu~e led by an overpowering Harvard JV sheimer than came up with two-outs, '

-early on, while the 21-6 loss to Har- team. The Harvard batters, described but he still managed to knock in Best vard J.V. was a direct result of "be - by Coach McGraw as being great with a single past the Crimson

ing oermached" as oach homa fastball hitters, faced two hardthrow- secondbaseman. Harvatd retaliated- ~Mc~raw emhasized. ndover no ing hurlers in-Kevin Nathan and John- inthe top of the seventh scoring three

Mch~raws emih aszd rowdovpingnthe Rec'esso. IHo-wever, Harvar-d teed off _runs- mainly-on-Andover-miscues.-In- -

record to .50 on the Blue pitching early exploding the bottom half of the inning, theDespie- -acin a -hrdthrwing for five runs in the top of therfifth, Blue once again had a-chance to climb_Despte fainga -ardhroing until Nathan-got the same-batter who* bakit he-aae;hwvr

Catholic MemQrial pitcher, the An- led off to fly out to Kantaros, thus they- toy h m -aed to score hone r,_

dover basmen wee able t squeak ending the inning. Nathan held the while stranding two-baserunners on. -Rounding-the-final turn of the 3000-meterrf(e Chris-Schile prepares to kILckouit six runs, taking advantage of Harvard batsmen in check long second and third. That was for the finish line as hie essily defeats' his NM adesy. Po/Wgmost of their opportunities. Andover, enough for Andover to retaliate in the Andoverdsersarycance for a come

unlie pat gaesstraded nly ive bottom of the fourth, when the Blue back, as Harvard xploded for tenT rl Q i m - y NT A I .men on base, making use of excessive batsmen touched Andover Alumnus rn ntoinnsptigte L 4'~ A gJ'g Ji t i iwalks by the Cauthoicnng Meiha Dave Lyons for three runs. baligamne out of reach. - -. I-.- -.hur le., ndoebe fonig wia As in previous games, Andover at- Despite the overw helming 21-6 loss

1-0 eadAndoer ws abe toim- tempted to rally back; however, they toHradCacMcawfudiprove its situation when Senior Mark Kolcolzlnguznernsyepiet HradCah crw on H -igh Scorer'Crowther belted a double, coldolymaaedhrerusdspte only -fit to commend the hitting of

Dave Kantaros home. Thehard shots hit by the-likes of Linscott, Flanagan and Kantaros as they sup-Dav Katars hme.Theinning Kantaros, and Gaffney. Sean pedmsofteA ovrfenieBy LUIS ANDRADE

began when Kantaros cracked a plied most of then teAtacktem'sfirtndalmeedovtenearevr b getigf1eousof2ebegan when Kanaros pracked a Flanagan began the rally when he was punch. McGraw algo took time out to of the season te' Bluet sudly et leacs ncluding seepin1 ot 15004

*basehit, taking second on a John Best walked, by Lyons. Upper John compliment the performance of dfeted seaonthe l ut Heronl plaes ancldin 00 ees ndover also-walk. The Crowther double enabled Linscott followed through with a shot Senior thirdbaseman Mark Gaffney, de07-38. Unltikel as t Heremthe wonetheasprint relay, 4Axd100rmeterKantaros to score and Best to reach past the Crimson secondbaseman, who showed his versatility be coming 173.Ulk atmesweetewntesrn ea,4x10mtrthird, whereupon Best scored- on a sedn aa~t eod ~ i opthfrte ~ "akhs runners have carried the team to vic. and the 4 x 400 meter relay. Co-1%lark Gaffney fielder's choice. sending then rippe thecball past th ison me aic goreate attie-a "Mixrea tory, the competitors in the field 'captain Stefan Kaluzny was the high-

Both teams were-field scoreless un- ing 45tout ofp63dpoints.lTheastnnersshownumnya gptaredtfirst inmither800P1-th sixt innig, whn Catolic thirdbaseman, scoringFlanagan and of goodliii56cr-6ff the field, and events performed admirably captur- scorer of the day with 12½/ points.

Memorial broke out for five runs. aloigLnct o-tk eod eiuns nH' enhtigte also continued- their strong showing, 'meters,- 200 meters, and anchoredJason Reeder, the Blue hurler, had After a Harvard error that loadtidthe ball hard and has proven himiself a tok6ouofhe8pinsobthrlyea.KndlPicad

bases, Mark Gaffney racked an 0-1 leader of the team." tgtok6 coplteAn oer' ointsfCrsPtikrfs to bohrlytasK endl brieandathus far pitched five solid innings of curve into left field, scoring Linscott.copeeAdvrsomntnofCisPrckeuetobbaenstwo-hit ball, until,-he faced a hungarxy With the score now 5-2 in Harvard's Blatting AB R HRBIl DA the opponent. they captured first'in the 100 meters,Catholic'Memorial offense. The op- favor, Lower Jeff Penner singled into BUMS 35 9 -12 5- .343FilEvnsadte30mtrhulsad 0

of rightfeld sendig Kantaro home for Gundersheimer 20 2 6 4.300*FilEvns- -dth30merhulsad10ponents struck for four hits (one ofuur 1 4 72righhtAdve ledenhd oco-meter hurdles, respectively. Super-

-them a triple), and five runs, until - the third run of the inning. However, Best 23 3 8 8.348 pete without Sid Rothrock, who is runner Chris Schille also came awayLowerielieer AlxPozy caie- to the Harvard pitcher settled down to Falgn26 J 5.35 Andover's best shot-putter and discus victorious leading the Andover sweep

came in to excape further damage, strike out one batter and force Gaffney 19 4-6 3 .316 thoewoasic.Advrapinhe10mtrrundatrdgtigout of the inning with a hard another to ground out ending the inn- Linscott 21 8 6 .381 thoeihrassc.snoercp in the 000 metersn.n cpue

getting ~~~~~~~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~Murtagh 11 3 3 1.273 tured 11 out of 21 places, and 4 offisinte00mtr.grounderosecotn aelyn fori ing, despite aig e winning runs mattirzc 11 0 0 0.000 these were first places. The strong Coc "goo ds inretati

Gunerseimr.'Unortnatly or on base. - poi~ o n. Kantaros 31 311i5 .35* showing was-led by--personal bests was a "go i, but it was less theAndver te dmag hd bendone Boyda 29 9 10 7.345 . result of superior PA performance

and dspit scorng tree ore uns dove wasethe opturnipity of thAn- ie 6 . from Ray Garay, Thai McGreivy, -

and espte sorig tree orerun- doer as te trnig pont f t e nCrwter 16 i2 s3 3338 ad Sid Smith. Garay captured first than the result of a N.M.H. teamAndover would never lead again. ballgame, as the .- Blue -wouldn't Reeder - -7 3 1 0 .143 with a throw of 141 7 'in the javelin, weOakened b injury and illness."

singed hoet wo nd DavPe e an- wo traeth-rimson's lead'again. TOTALS: 257 55 95 53 331 McGreivy also captured first with a -Richards also remarked that thewigldhom tadwidosth anhigt fD0'6vinth plevalt-adtoughest test the team will have is

tars, hocracked a basehit, and a Haivar Wdnsth Gap Sitht hl of seco' n d wth evutn high int Andover High School, whodouble, was otherwise stopped by two In the top of the ifth, Harvard Pitching W/L IP ER BBfSO ERAeSmconsiotersdthe bestndhighhschool"poised" Catholic Memorial lengthened their lead by reaching pit- Regan 0/0 1.67 2 3 2 8.38 'jump of 5 '6'. Althoughthe fieldmen hecosdrtebshihcol

it- r Redr1253 01 .6 wl aet eetterfn lytrack team in Masahset.If-hchers. The Andovqr pitchers, chrNathan for two more runs rin1c- Bergeron 2/1 12139 .8 performed well -last Saturday, they Bucacoeaahwit f vityeihowever, were not successful, fing the score 7-3. The Crimson scored PouZy 0/0 6.33 8 10 7 8.85 wlhaetrpathirfepaymight be their best win of-the season,

yieldng elven uns ad elven hts, once again in the top of the sixth, tak- - Nathan 1/1 12 10 91ii 5.83 againist Andover High ISchool tomor- not, of course, counting Exeter, whoin what was a solid showing despite ing advantage of an Andover walk BUrnS 1/1 16 7I7893.0 row. -at this point can be- considered the

the sith andninth nnings when and wild pitch. Recesso, the Andover RceCsso 0/0 1.67 2 3 .8-Running Events favorites in their meet later thisMemorial rallied for nine runs corn- hujr sae ute aaea e TOTAILS: 5/5 -76 44 55 46 4.0 The Andover runners remain con- spring.-

WVho will be 16 on Saturday MAay 5, 1984.Doesn't she need a spanking from

- - ~~~~~~~~~all her frens -

Love- Fom n

- . Mr. Edwards, Chuckie'. r. F. Chase,