8
V~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ VOL. CV No. 2 - ,-PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASSACHUiSmrS SEPTEMBER 30, 83 Uppers El~~ect Flte Lew is- and, Parsons'-as--Stdn ConilRps_ Byv TEDDY KEIM took on an especially strong e "'liason" between the Upper class and. phasis. This 'theme of open corn- the Student Council. He-gave stress to Kate Flather,. Jackson Lewis, and munication and efficient representa-. his idea that the representative must Bill Parsons all rode themes of in- tibn comes in the wake of last 'understand the extent to which the cycased student involvement and- Spring's presidency election, inivwhich faculty will compromise on an issue. 6omfniianicati6n to "win the Upper, the three- fiuialift-,all voiced a strog Upon i lcin ei &ttdI Represeniativ final elections to the comnmittmeflt to opening student was disappointed that so--ittlieatten- *St~~udent Council. ~-goverfliment to increased student in- tion was paid to the speeches, but I'ml pr t ter a ei ndBl asnlil ev snx Schoo presdentJorda Smyt an-volvement- looking forward to a productive-year year's Upper Reps.. photo/Charlton School president Jordan Smyth an- ~for the Upper Class." nounfced the winners Tuiesday. with the voting having taken place Thi WinnersRo mh s N e ~ re t r throughout Monday and Tuesday. 'in her pltomIlte&si It y M] e*DVe io The Student Council postponed the she saw the Student Council as an ef- elections, normally held in the Spring ficient outlet for students and she said S t h i a finalists could not deliver his, speech with a link to the Council. She als -mennst S t de nts T is.eyMon d a due to an injured leg, Smyth - said. said he- had interest in employing By BJRR A STRANDBER 7 by work duty and t Board ofmeto eRyyRo . Another complication arose when WPARTePzliapls n h RlyRo iloe Mody Governors on cleaning. We 'also ex- St. Paul previously worked in one' of the six candidates'who made questionnaires to survey the opinion deRye them w pect students to appreciate this and similar establishments, with fewer the run-offs did not return for the up- of uppers on Student Council oals bero 3,n Maie new anage- tho hi wntahaa. managerial'responsibilities. She also per year.TeSdetCucldcd-.- oas metoAnMaiStPu." Last year, the Ryley Room accrued worked_ as a waitress and cook in a ed to add' Elliot Smyth and Charlie Jako ei:as mhsfd Tetite ebr fteRly a $3000 debt. Another goal of the number of restaurants. St. Paul says Chun. the to candidates tied for communication and added that he- Room Board of Governors met Tues- Board' involves nnaldng up that debt she looks forward to working in the seventh place la~t" spring to te had experience in cluster government, day night to discuss plans~ and policy- and then trying to make a profit. Ryley Room, calling it "a challenge finalists. - , ~He promised that his- personal ideas for- the year.-The board pla±ns to em- A h etnteBadcagd ada potnt would take a "second seat" to thiose phasize the cleanliness in the Ryley sm o h oiisfo atya igmnsi,"h or ok TheCouncil ad 'intended ~tQ of the pper Class.Room as the major goal for this year. oe-fteplce rmls er Tlha ad Te or ok The Councilhad 'ifitencled -- tooar MemberhenryppergmClasaid that did not work out. These include forward to wvorking with Ann. She schedule the votinig for solely Mon jorMebrHnyTlhasid iscontinuing the charging service wouldn't be doing it unless she really day, during lunch aipd dinner. Smnyth In his platform, Bill Parsons em-, "We're going to try and make it a lot and changing the manner in which the wanted to make it good." 4ecidd to xtend the voting to lunch phasized that he would serve as. a, cleaner. That means mere'tine spn cotetasadsrvsres.-TeReyomBadofG e- and dinnerTuesday because of thp I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 St. Paul said that additions 'to the nors consists of Edward Anderson., poor voter turnout. Smyth eitimated W~Ryley Room include new video games Paul. Bowman,. Nina Henderson, that at the end of Tuesday's votg, i/Ii h erfuture'and a jukbx;Te Jamie A(gllogg, Ian Loring, Kent more than eighty percent of the-Up- -Board also added a new pool table-. Lucs Alastair MacTaggart, 'Susan per class had voted. -'Thd Board encourages student ideas O'Brien, -Peter Stark, Peter Sullivan, Uppers -- Charlie Chun, Arren - and suggestions on further improv- HnyTlhaadSrhWelr Fisher, Kite Rather, Adama Leff,, 1 i Jackson Lewis, Bill Parsons and i- a u t Elliot Smyth, presented their plat-- . .u tC ac forms to the -Upper Class in George Washington Ha Monday morning. were good and "they said many of f rD r the things I said when I was running, -By YJEFNORDRAUS so I should be able te work well with ~~~~~~~~~~~~ -~~ ~Th'~M faculty Tuesday voted over- The faculty passed thie proposal -- wvhoever wins." f r. whelrningly to cancel--a daily class in with fthedesire tbatstudents know -the Among the issues discussed in the - ~~~~~~~~~te school week of Ociober 10 when faculty considered the program wor- - - platforms, communication between - -. ,~~~~~~~~~-. -.-- ~the Freedom,. fronm-iemca thwhile-,enough to give up.4ass-tirne the students And their representatives 'pooCsyDpnncficuio -seins rt.Theetra to' sstheodasm __ - ~~~return to Andvr.-allow studenttodicsthpoga on the week before mid-terims. B lacks O? f vith C ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~TheAdvisory Comniittee, made up of six faculty ffiembers that meet with In Their~~~~Andover Experlenbces ~the Headmasfer weeklyt-diead tion. Ad so wechose he firs summer in cojucnctin withthe of ll backrounbs~ncIggivnggwewern a-scl -- be roropdp SaidS Cmmitte With this is'sue, The Phillipian tin n ow hs h is umr ncnutcinwt h falbcgons dmember Lou Bernieri, "I think it's a News. Deprtment itroduces-Spotlight to focus on blacks at An-,'. regular- Andover Summer. Session. the opportunities to learn, and An- News, Departmnt introducesgood idea for a number of reasons. spotlight. In Spotlight we hope to dover. Latyear (MS)2 had approximately dover is a great place for that, the First of all by sacrificing class time, ocus on issues which have not receiv-, ' First in a series ninety students. In the recruitment of message that is actually getting across -the faculty is showing its commitment ed the attention (hey 'deserve, but--- - By ONCAT these students and' the easing of their is that a black -student is doing wel if hpoga.I nohrpe which nevertheless possess a great. Tedsuio istknplcin transitian to Andlover,-Young plays - he acts like all, other students. Now tcool they rogram -tn anoeenthee The iscusion- istakig plce n ipratrlwhpevosx-were not talng about 'mainstream- shote re osueei h deal f i~~ortane formembes ofUpper Leff, as the school year opens. pe.-c asaS. alsamsirsing'. We're talking confor~mist." Ceia.Dpnec rga the -Philips Academy community- It It has been a spirited, good-natured - pounenceiasa St.: Paul' thiniasoit evenings and it didn't work too well is our intention 'to approach -each onbtwe h oi hne o officer. In his job he doncentrates .Von ad tegodtifaotbecause students didn't feel like the story with the consideration-- it merits. "how you fit in at Andover," this 'almost exclusively" on recruiting facdoier isethatoimhastadgoodnheart As e atemt o d ths, sodo e backstden's acechnge, ls'ig'blacks and hispanics. There are enough people here who fault wer oodited. istaothe aso ws atp tvoido this A-sdow -black sudent'sd faechagemoing'il He said' of his task, J'We. have -to care, and the school has had a history classes that have new students in tlher also wsh to void he "hy~7' t - ij~humor nd beoming rimly make an - assumption right off: I of beiing in the forefront of race rela- wn aeteesue~smsig which flawed reporting can give rise., ironic. wudgesta esta w e- in.Ta rdtohsbe tog o Most importantly, we seek to fulfill "Last year, I overheard a group of weof us htls th a lc omnit tw per ln.d Tht traditinghs beenhstrong- therefore, they wont have tospend the newspaper's charge of raising the white kids talk about how 'all those cmafte lc omuiyko s tey lind ht ehe feeling f theed extra time to make up the workEi-- -level of awareness of the readers it black kid' sat together in Lower ofschools_ like Exeter pr Andover. matr ndhaeerh ase.e faculty won't have to-give more time serves. ' ~~~~~~~Left',"" said the black student, who k' not saying there is little very good about -this Heamsezt ml hoesuet.Tetird im- With, the advent of 'the Winter wished to remairn anonymous. "It knowledge of these schools; there is Hshati hr. - otn esni hti ilso - - -- ~~~~~~~~~almost none." - ontepc flf o tdns and "So the job of the minority fclya abuytm inthe -fall rec'ruiter is to educate the term." - community," Young explained. In niwyn ziyxes nas taugnt ngubn UEL This year's program, unlike that of this end he must rely -heavily on per- Andover since '1971;. He was' the 1982, involves new students only. Old - sonal' contact, -WA no reputation Director of (MS)2 and last year'- students wfio attended the lectures - suppzrt~gIii Young said he ex- delivered an address to an all-school 'last year, will have the opportunity to - ~perienced 'terrible frustration" in meeting in honor - of Dr. Martin continue discussions in some sort of w~ilding relationships to specific Luther King's birthday. cruster gathering. The cost of twelve public high school -counselors, who Sykes said, "I think the school has. dollars per student was a factor in this are "transients in their job." Second- been especially sensitive to that decision, 'according to organizer 15r, Andover constitutes a "foreign ['mainstreaming'I with its strong em- Priscilla Bellizia. ~' identity" to black students who have phasis on integration .. ..the quest is 'Head naster- Donald McNemar,'- lived in their -neighborhoods their not for assimilation, but of sharing who chairs-the weekly faculty gather- ~~ ~r ~~" - ~~~.,. "'. ,,- - ' ~~~~whole lives. Finally, Young said that, the wealth of their experiences, ofCotne p. I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~in addition to educating the parents- positive recognition." -, - - -- - -~~~~~~~~ ~~ " ~of these students about Andover, he Sykes said that any difficulty black -- 'ill - ~~~~~~~~~~ ~~ 4.~~~~ must "really win their faith and trust, students encounter in their Andover - ~~~~~~~~~~for they think their kidsare going to a life traces from their lack of exposure - different world." - to such schools, "Teeare kd h T7 C T 1 7 -- ~~ ~~: - - ~ ~ \\' - While he said he believes (MS)2 is don't have a tradition of going away L N S - - -. - ~~~~~~~~becoming highly successful, Young to school. Boarding school has hiot plhpto/Chapoton said that he sees problems in the ways been _a part of the black experience."

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Page 1: In Their~~~~Andover Experlenbcespdf.phillipian.net/1983/09301983.pdf · VOL. CV No. 2 - ,-PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASSACHUiSmrS SEPTEMBER 30, 83 Uppers El~~ect Flte Lew is- and,

V~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

VOL. CV No. 2 - ,-PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASSACHUiSmrS SEPTEMBER 30, 83

Uppers El~~ect Flte Lew is- and,Parsons'-as--Stdn ConilRps_

Byv TEDDY KEIM took on an especially strong e "'liason" between the Upper class and.phasis. This 'theme of open corn- the Student Council. He-gave stress to

Kate Flather,. Jackson Lewis, and munication and efficient representa-. his idea that the representative mustBill Parsons all rode themes of in- tibn comes in the wake of last 'understand the extent to which thecycased student involvement and- Spring's presidency election, inivwhich faculty will compromise on an issue. 6omfniianicati6n to "win the Upper, the three- fiuialift-,all voiced a strog Upon i lcin ei &ttdIRepreseniativ final elections to the comnmittmeflt to opening student was disappointed that so--ittlieatten-

*St~~udent Council. ~-goverfliment to increased student in- tion was paid to the speeches, but I'ml pr t ter a ei ndBl asnlil ev snx

Schoo presdentJorda Smyt an-volvement- looking forward to a productive-year year's Upper Reps.. photo/CharltonSchool president Jordan Smyth an- ~for the Upper Class."

nounfced the winners Tuiesday. withthe voting having taken place Thi WinnersRo mh s N e ~ re t rthroughout Monday and Tuesday. 'in her pltomIlte&si It y M] e*DVe io

The Student Council postponed the she saw the Student Council as an ef-elections, normally held in the Spring ficient outlet for students and she said S t h i afinalists could not deliver his, speech with a link to the Council. She als -mennst S t de nts T is.eyMon d adue to an injured leg, Smyth -said. said he- had interest in employing By BJRR A STRANDBER 7 by work duty and t Board ofmeto eRyyRo .Another complication arose when WPARTePzliapls n h RlyRo iloe Mody Governors on cleaning. We 'also ex- St. Paul previously worked in

one' of the six candidates'who made questionnaires to survey the opinion deRye them w pect students to appreciate this and similar establishments, with fewer

the run-offs did not return for the up- of uppers on Student Council oals bero 3,n Maie new anage- tho hi wntahaa. managerial'responsibilities. She alsoper year.TeSdetCucldcd-.- oas metoAnMaiStPu." Last year, the Ryley Room accrued worked_ as a waitress and cook in a

ed to add' Elliot Smyth and Charlie Jako ei:as mhsfd Tetite ebr fteRly a $3000 debt. Another goal of the number of restaurants. St. Paul says

Chun. the to candidates tied for communication and added that he- Room Board of Governors met Tues- Board' involves nnaldng up that debt she looks forward to working in the

seventh place la~t" spring to te had experience in cluster government, day night to discuss plans~ and policy- and then trying to make a profit. Ryley Room, calling it "a challengefinalists. - , ~He promised that his- personal ideas for- the year.-The bo ard pla±ns to em- A h etnteBadcagd ada potnt

would take a "second seat" to thiose phasize the cleanliness in the Ryley sm o h oiisfo atya igmnsi,"h or okThe Council ad 'intended ~tQ of the pper Class.Room as the major goal for this year. oe-fteplce rmls er Tlha ad Te or okThe Council had 'ifitencled --tooar MemberhenryppergmClasaid that did not work out. These include forward to wvorking with Ann. She

schedule the votinig for solely Mon jorMebrHnyTlhasid iscontinuing the charging service wouldn't be doing it unless she really

day, during lunch aipd dinner. Smnyth In his platform, Bill Parsons em-, "We're going to try and make it a lot and changing the manner in which the wanted to make it good."4ecidd to xtend the voting to lunch phasized that he would serve as. a, cleaner. That means mere'tine spn cotetasadsrvsres.-TeReyomBadofG e-

and dinner Tuesday because of thp I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 St. Paul said that additions 'to the nors consists of Edward Anderson.,

poor voter turnout. Smyth eitimated W~Ryley Room include new video games Paul. Bowman,. Nina Henderson,

that at the end of Tuesday's votg, i/Ii h erfuture'and a jukbx;Te Jamie A(gllogg, Ian Loring, Kent

more than eighty percent of the-Up- -Board also added a new pool table-. Lucs Alastair MacTaggart, 'Susan

per class had voted. -'Thd Board encourages student ideas O'Brien, -Peter Stark, Peter Sullivan,

Uppers --Charlie Chun, Arren -and suggestions on further improv- HnyTlhaadSrhWelrFisher, Kite Rather, Adama Leff,, 1 i

Jackson Lewis, Bill Parsons and i- a u tElliot Smyth, presented their plat-- . .u tC ac forms to the -Upper Class in GeorgeWashington Ha Monday morning.

were good and "they said many of f rD r the things I said when I was running, -By YJEFNORDRAUS

so I should be able te work well with ~~~~~~~~~~~~ -~~ ~Th'~M faculty Tuesday voted over- The faculty passed thie proposal --

wvhoever wins." f r. whelrningly to cancel--a daily class in with fthedesire tbatstudents know -the

Among the issues discussed in the - ~~~~~~~~~te school week of Ociober 10 when faculty considered the program wor- -

- platforms, communication between - -.,~~~~~~~~~-. -.-- ~the Freedom,. fronm-iemca thwhile-,enough to give up.4ass-tirne

the students And their representatives 'pooCsyDpnncficuio -seins rt.Theetra to' sstheodasm __

- ~~~return to Andvr.-allow studenttodicsthpoga

on the week before mid-terims.B lacks O? f vith C ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~TheAdvisory Comniittee, made up

of six faculty ffiembers that meet with

In Their~~~~Andover Experlenbces ~the Headmasfer weeklyt-dieadtion. Ad so wechose he firs summer in cojucnctin withthe of ll backrounbs~ncIggivnggwewern a-scl --be roropdp SaidS Cmmitte

With this is'sue, The Phillipian tin n ow hs h is umr ncnutcinwt h falbcgons dmember Lou Bernieri, "I think it's a

News. Deprtment itroduces-Spotlight to focus on blacks at An-,'. regular- Andover Summer. Session. the opportunities to learn, and An-News, Departmnt introducesgood

idea for a number of reasons.

spotlight. In Spotlight we hope to dover. Latyear (MS)2 had approximately dover is a great place for that, the First of all by sacrificing class time,

ocus on issues which have not receiv-, ' First in a series ninety students. In the recruitment of message that is actually getting across -the faculty is showing its commitment

ed the attention (hey 'deserve, but--- - By ONCAT these students and' the easing of their is that a black -student is doing wel if hpoga.I nohrpe

which nevertheless possess a great. Tedsuio istknplcin transitian to Andlover,-Young plays - he acts like all, other students. Now tcool they rogram -tn anoeenthee The iscusion- istakig plce n ipratrlwhpevosx-were not talng about 'mainstream- shote re osueei h

deal f i~~ortane formembes ofUpper Leff, as the school year opens. pe.-c asaS. alsamsirsing'. We're talking confor~mist." Ceia.Dpnec rga

the -Philips Academy community- It It has been a spirited, good-natured -pounenceiasa St.: Paul' thiniasoit evenings and it didn't work too well

is our intention 'to approach -each onbtwe h oi hne o officer. In his job he doncentrates .Von ad tegodtifaotbecause students didn't feel like the

story with the consideration-- it merits. "how you fit in at Andover," this 'almost exclusively" on recruiting facdoier isethatoimhastadgoodnheartAs e atemt o d ths, sodo e backstden's acechnge, ls'ig'blacks and hispanics. There are enough people here who fault wer oodited. istaothe

aso ws atp tvoido this A-sdow -black sudent'sd faechagemoing'il He said' of his task, J'We. have -to care, and the school has had a history classes that have new students in tlheralso wsh to void he "hy~7' t - ij~humor nd beoming rimly make an - assumption right off: I of beiing in the forefront of race rela- wn aeteesue~smsig

which flawed reporting can give rise., ironic. wudgesta esta w e- in.Ta rdtohsbe tog o

Most importantly, we seek to fulfill "Last year, I overheard a group of weof us htls th a lc omnit tw per ln.d Tht traditinghs beenhstrong- therefore, they wont have tospend

the newspaper's charge of raising the white kids talk about how 'all those cmafte lc omuiyko s tey lind ht ehe feeling f theed extra time to make up the workEi---level of awareness of the readers it black kid' sat together in Lower ofschools_ like Exeter pr Andover. matr ndhaeerh ase.e faculty won't have to-give more time

serves. ' ~~~~~~~Left',"" said the black student, who k' not saying there is little very good about -this Heamsezt ml hoesuet.Tetird im-

With, the advent of 'the Winter wished to remairn anonymous. "It knowledge of these schools; there is Hshati hr. - otn esni hti ilso- - - - ~~~~~~~~~almost none." - ontepc flf o tdns and

"So the job of the minority fclya abuytm inthe -fall rec'ruiter is to educate the term." -

community," Young explained. In niwyn ziyxes nas taugnt ngubn UEL This year's program, unlike that ofthis end he must rely -heavily on per- Andover since '1971;. He was' the 1982, involves new students only. Old -

sonal' contact, -WA no reputation Director of (MS)2 and last year'- students wfio attended the lectures -

suppzrt~gIii Young said he ex- delivered an address to an all-school 'last year, will have the opportunity to- ~perienced 'terrible frustration" in meeting in honor - of Dr. Martin continue discussions in some sort of

w~ilding relationships to specific Luther King's birthday. cruster gathering. The cost of twelvepublic high school -counselors, who Sykes said, "I think the school has. dollars per student was a factor in thisare "transients in their job." Second- been especially sensitive to that decision, 'according to organizer15r, Andover constitutes a "foreign ['mainstreaming'I with its strong em- Priscilla Bellizia.

~' identity" to black students who have phasis on integration .. ..the quest is 'Head naster- Donald McNemar,'-lived in their -neighborhoods their not for assimilation, but of sharing who chairs-the weekly faculty gather-

~~ ~r ~~" -~~~.,. "'. ,,- - ' ~~~~whole lives. Finally, Young said that, the wealth of their experiences, ofCotne p.I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~in addition to educating the parents- positive recognition."

-, - - -- - -~~~~~~~~ ~~ " ~of these students about Andover, he Sykes said that any difficulty black

- - 'ill - ~~~~~~~~~~ ~~ 4.~~~~ must "really win their faith and trust, students encounter in their Andover- ~~~~~~~~~~for they think their kidsare going to a life traces from their lack of exposure -

different world." - to such schools, "Teeare kd h T7 C T 1 7-- ~~ ~~: - - ~ ~ \\' - While he said he believes (MS)2 is don't have a tradition of going away L N S- - -. - ~~~~~~~~becoming highly successful, Young to school. Boarding school has hiot

plhpto/Chapoton said that he sees problems in the ways been _a part of the black experience."

Page 2: In Their~~~~Andover Experlenbcespdf.phillipian.net/1983/09301983.pdf · VOL. CV No. 2 - ,-PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASSACHUiSmrS SEPTEMBER 30, 83 Uppers El~~ect Flte Lew is- and,

PA~~~~~l<~~~~~TWO . -. '--Vi- - -.-' SEPTEMBER~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~O~~~ 1983.ER30 18

Comm~~~~~~~~entary and etr

Faculty. Practice ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Two-Studeniso Eeg onevtonr o the Edtor: open, causing the Dining Hall to be whole campus is necessary to ensure

alarmingly cold. Hvn ben the needed energy standards.-This ef-cit u ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~The morning of September 28th;' 'repeatedly directed to be con~diouis of fort must include--tfe participation of7h atIL Y o0 t eac hi' Breakfast, we were appalled at establishment of hes.ampus Energy'-~~~~~ di~~scovering the neglect of haing Committee,. wve have. realized-that a John aChasn '84

-A fiumber of facult~~mfembers are hypocritical in their at- stnad. The windows-were left q6operative effort_on - the-"part theJhnCaso'4tude t`-Nard-clasis -6ts nd tidns at nns as.'

derronstr ated by the poor attendance at a recent facultyeeting. According to-onre sniof-faculty.-mrember[ hal the. -me-

faculty was adbsent. Dean of Faculty Richards, on the other- hand, said that a-- "substantial- maj-rity -of the-fatulty". at- --

tended the ast meeting -Richards ent on to etimate that To The Editor: and empotional. well-being of. each toots of our societies, from inierna-this majority consisted of about 150 of the,-2-15 faculty-- The Editorial on trust and care of member of the dormitory .. " tional to local, are nourished more bymembers.. According to either estimate, attendance- was far rooms culd renew a onstructive- Nations as well as communities and responsibly shared concern than'by_from ideal. In addition t this po tedne ayo h dialogue. The quotation from the. persons flotfish, in the "great chain-, eiltoisecino-piayfaculty that d attend the metings occupytheir time by Blue Book should be completed: "... of being"- by mta upr.. But concern is learned And tau~ght ac-and share in the creation of an en- "Trust" and "4truth" are derived tively, not passively.knitting or cor~ting papers ather than conentrating 0fl- vironment which protects'the physical fron the linguistic root of "tree." The R. anthe meeting..

These same people that don't find the- time for the onehour per week meetings or attend them.paying minimal at-

-- tention are very often the same ones who require class atten- S o t l h C -' d eance and fee offendhedfcut whenasfro-tsawn example school is a progressive place," said McKayle then asked for the names what'sjimportant t us, and you can't

91 and realizes how difficult-it is for students to attend all~their Sykes, Yet he earnestly urges -an in- and homnes of those gathered. As the- explain it well o them ... there's an-- -comymittments with eagerness and energy. The. Blue Book creasing -share of attention upon rough humor' here increases, with enormOU's difference here: whites cansays that -studenits- are --epeted-toattend--all-aca4mic black literature and- experience in the- Sykes- applauding all members from avoid- blacks,- but blacks can't avoid-obligatios all athetic actiity commttmn l ok pro- cu~riculumi, which he' believes is Louisiana, it becomes-apparant that whiies.~ That is a daily fact.""ethnocentric". "Our curriculum these are the children of big cities. When asked of the easy warmth of- - -- ~gram asimetadalcho.an cUste ncings- reflects this [ethnocentricityl but less New York, Washington, Los 'the meeting, Toure replied wih aunless they are excused by teachers, super~ita6rs, or Coaches~ so than other schools.-I am impressed Angeles, and Chicago are all well. smile, "We feel pretty relaxed here.'in advance.' This statement means that a -tudent taking with the efforts of some faculty to Iin- represented-. Each seems to marvel at -Because we feellike we're at home.three 4-hobir courses, two 5-hour courses, work duty, and a 4 corporate'such material into their his kinship to new friends, at the close That~s what Af-Lat-Amn is to us."

* - - ~hour sport, and allowed only four cuts a term must attend at- cus."-ties binding thcm. - A calling which has not yet escapedleast 98.6percent ofhis or he committmets (this fgure of .Andover-is in a "Catch-22" situa- "You' cadA'- talk about what our is-the uty, detailed in its charter, toleast 9.16 perent of is or hr commitments this fiure of tion in the small number. of black problems are to others," said Society educate "youth from -ery quarter."!course doesn't take-.into account cluster and al-l-school- -- faculty teaching at the school, Sykes member Seko'u - 6iuHreiIte said, In the face of deepening economicmeetings, commons duty, varsity spoits and extracurricular commented, saying that "because Of "'There are problems of racism here.- pressures, the administration, hascommittments). It -becomes exceedingly difficult for -a stu- the numbers, people don't come.- There are racist jokes and things that pomiittditefincalyothdent (or anyone else) to attend so many committments not to - Because they don't come we have low make you feel on the outside. A black -4w~u I rer" "deal. Yet the voicesmention- maintaining a high level of interest. --- nmes"H adta .lre kid here has to be enormously, well, within' P.A.'s black community,7ff ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~number was necessary to I aleviate withdrawn. I mean that you can feel -teacher and student alike, have givenIf faculty sincerely wish students to attend all their comn- an absence that black studens feel lke you're getting stereotyped and~ increasing ly strong callsfracol - - ~mittments with enthusiasm and interest, then they ~hould at for 'mentors' almost. I don' mean,nlye al tetie.nheeh mi str forng"adscib-o

least set the example. A better solution, however, would be to be rite. I think it is important to While Toure has praise for the An- ed by Victor Young cani take effect.-. ~~to loosen the present school-wide cut policy giving the undlerstand that- absence and to do dover faculty, he said that Aipdover Nx ekBak n

__ sfudenits more flexibility. Perhaps someday -soon students smtigaott.students "know nothing about 1is and thi/e A dministration -

may only be required to attend 98.5 percent of their commit-* * *-* * -----

* - ~~tments! tisFiaadsthnit falls,the first meeting of the Af-LatAriFaculty -M e i g 7 C nt

- - ~~~Society is held in Cooley House whereDEAR READER: the Society has taken its new ings, announced that during the. same experiment exists currently at

-The Phillipian would greatly appreciate your inuetrug idence. The gathering draws some winter term a dietary program, under Eeeatog oeut~rmlsour Letters O the Editorcolumn each eek, wirethe it con- far people, a large number of whom supervision of Dr. Claire Wilson and year have been announced. --our ettes t theEditr clumneachwee, whethe it~on- arenew to P.A. As the loud music Director of Commons Tom Pool, will Polsi,"erong-to get'dif-cerns a local, national or even international issue. blares on, the room loses any of- its- take' place.', The di&t will.-r~c~:~ri:c s nd -' s-- vex Iple

awkward'shyness while students free-- sodium content in Commons food Ai rather than salied potato chips, -therely meet others. Sykes bind William and cut down on animal fats while -will be unsalted chips. Rather than

- - ~~~~~~~~~~Thomas are present to talk to, or to supplementing this with -vegatable- the oils we have ar~ound; we will have'-- ~ laugh with. Soon President Marc fats. Certain Biology classes will - poly-unsaturated oils.

McKayle calls the meeting to order.' record their blood pressure and corn- Students may notice a difference of- - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~He explains with humor the purpose pile data at the end of the term to see texture and taste in the food right off-

of- the Society and its officers. if any change has -taken place. The the bat."

the American ship Liberty. The Prisoners'of Israel Ask PLOAmerican ship'led for the first four to Speed Exchange -

buoys. They could not hold the lead-however and by the fifth buoy A committee representing the-Australia II took the lead. The Liber- nearly-500Palestinian and Lebanest

--- ty tacked five times, but could not' prisoners held by Israel have -askec- '~~~~~~~~- -~~~~~~~regain the lead. The.'Unite d States their leaders-in the Palestine Libera.

- B~~iy ERIK TOZZI had the longest sports dynasty, tion Organization to speed -- --- ~~~and JIM NASH holding the cup-for 132 years.neoitnsfrapsnrexhg.

sr ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~The four man committee said. that- - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~: Cease Fire Accord Gained '.- there' occurred" many mental

U in-Lebanon :~~~Marinesro Remain In Lebanona breakdowns" among inmates.-4-. -~~~~~~Syria and Lebanon announced -- * - oSeptember 25 that theyhad agreed to The House Foreign Coinis-Co- Amnesty Group Accuses- 4ianoI ~~~~~~~~~~~~a Saudi Arabian-sponsored ceasefire. mittee voted last Thursday to - Secret Executions The accord ends four weeks of heavy authorize the Presence of the Marine -The hum~an rights group Amnesty

- -~~~ - - -~ fighting i Beirutand the nfearby force in Lebanon for another M' mon- 'International said September 27 that'IL ~ 1 ((3~ It It t IF IN.~1 A( N mountains and-paves that wayfor-a ths. The deal calls for Congress to ap- it had evidence Iran' secretly executedLebanese national reconciliatiory prove the authorization delcaring that- and tortured olitical prisoners.

- ~~~~~~~~~conference. -the War Powers Resolution covers "The total iiiber of executions in-the deployment. Reagan agreed-) to Iran since the 979revolution must beArmed Terroists Lscape sign the bill although he feels it shows considerably'higher than more than

-- - - . ~~Editor in Chief frmBlatPio our allies a sign of weakness fi - hfinced - f f iiallIy fa"Hau~yder*

*-I the London-bised organization said i,- - - - - ~~~~~~~Thirty-eight Irish nationalists a-1leter to Ayatollah Ruhollah Kho-

News Editor Business Managers Sports Editor - --- broke out of-th-C maximum security Senate Calls for Watt's Resignation meini.-Canty -- John Caulkins Sarah Bullock prison September 25 after batile andhand-tonhand fighting. One -gua'rd Seven Republican senators called' Female Vice-Presidential Nomination

Alex Mehiman ~~~~~~~~~died and five others sustailned in- for Secretary of the Interior, James juries. The. Northern Ireland Office Watt's resignation.,'-Watt has-again Soetp'eaeDemocrat f-

- - Managig Editor Eecutive Avertiser Composition Editors announced a huge army. and police put his foo t in his mouth when he ficials are urging the party toRichard Eisert Julia Stallings John Clunan - - search recaptured the fugitives by described five members of a coal- nominate a woman for vice-presidentKitty Douglas - nightfall.- leasing panel as, a black, a woman, in 1984. They challenge the

* * * ~~~two Jews, and a cripple."! The Senate Democrats to take their words of sup-Graphics Editor - oe etwe hte rn tto cX- port for women and back-theirby ac--David .Charlton -' - Raid on-Soviet Convoys by pelWat - -'- tios-.-Most -Democrat -president__----Afghas-Repnrted---:1 - * - , hopefuls say that they will consider

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SEPTEMBER 30, 1983 T-h L Iit'l-A PAGE HREE

iXCHANGE WITH THE PRO ----

_ * Three New- Chinese Students ArriveBy ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~lv nteLloyd's house and remarked, Since then, eev~n boys and one girl hv

DEMBITZER ~~~Certainly, these-three newcomers have ex- "They,[the LloydlsJ gave us lots of help, not come here to-participate in PA school -life.and DAVIDbe 19o thsyahre pinced a bit of culture shock' Their. dif- only in school life, but in other things." Their'success in America- has been immense.

studets fom te Peple'sRepulic f Chna _ ficulties here, according to P.A. Dean of Ad- .And, not surprisingly, it seems that people Two have matriculatd to Harvard, three tosteped o Ameicansoilfor he frst ime issins JshuaMine~r wuldbe aaloous are the same all over the world. When asked Stanford,- one to University of Pen-nsylvania,

and- in so doing walked straight into axadical- to those of an Amezjcan student studying dif- walejmotenjoyed at Andover~--Qiao one- to MIT, one to Brown and one~ to Dart-ly new way of life. Whether it wasta step into icult courses in Mandarin, -surrounded by rePlied baither disparagingly, "not -the food." mouth.

the cld o isoltionor th warth ofcon- countless new -Asian faces. - -History of the Program *

genialityiyette be sen~but, inany case, tInitial - Opinluns-..: Andovir alumnus, Jack P. Stevens left Last year, Andover sent Bit' Hsovtwasaargestefor' Qiao Xing,FuZ Yn~ u-- ,--Frall- the,,adjustingthey-ha - ad-to- ac----- --money--in-his--will-,-for--P.A..-foreign-students - '82 to -China to study as-part ofiht xcage -

atid ~~~~~~~~~complish in this short while, the-three Chinese when he died. In 1981, Bardyl Tirana '55,- students -from the- Harbfn---Technological-In- students have-formulated some definite opi-- took i6mne of that money and started an ex- TeFtr

stitute at Heilongjiang Province, ,China.The Chinese Government picked the three ara e ollgei Futho3ngiad-Eraso plad to are stn'' he veena rers friendly. aoFuhogadirlspanogot

students -on the basis of their-scores oia. stan- thiJigt n -itd-Harvardnd astngddardized test given to China's top college 7tersgt nMT avr n tn~d

*freshmien. The students who arrived at P,.A. *~--..As for future study, Fu-zhong explains- "the*lait week received the three best grades, an w ilder tbai [tnC in s j. - -- more physics, the more we like."are therefore honored with the opportunity to ----- -E L u

--study and live in-the United States for the next -- -- --- EetulyterheeAiLichlrswlsix years. They will return to China duringEvnulyththeAsascorswlthat period for-only one summer vacation. - nions on a diverge group ofrtopics. On yon.'change program between Phillips Academy return to China and resume their lives-there.--

Academic Work Americans, Er Liu says, "The teenagers here and the PRC-the-tfirst such program between ThyaeteypdgpruoCin..WAcademic Workr'qutefiedl;thy r.wldr[ta th -tdSae n hn ttescnay must build our country." PA-for them is the

-As in previous years, emphasis will be put aequtfredythyaewle[ta teUiedStsanCiaatheecdry-first step towards that, goal.on itensve sokenEnglsh, atheatic and Chinese]. They seem to me-they don't care as school level.

physics. A typical Chinese student's schedule much for their studies as Clhinese students. I

When asked what, e enjoe-otaAndover,, one of the students replied,'not th e fo6-o-d-.'

would include Math 55, Physics .11 and a one like Americans ana I tninK tney aire very in-adone-half hour daily English class which tersting."

will- include intensive language lab-work. When comparing Chines d US-schools,In addition, Qiao's Fu-shong's and Er-Liu's Fu-zhong remarks, "In class rin, Chinal, the'

spoirts interests are qite varied. The jogging -teacher always talked from notes, theris little-craze has appareritly caught fame among them chance for- students to speak. Here, students('I like to do some running in the mforning," are very active in class. They can ask questions-reveals Er-Liu). Also popular are badminton, at any time if-tifley-ike."and soccer--which is called "football" in Qiao agrees, and adds that he thinks "the

China. ~~~~~~~~~~lessons are the best"' part of the day.~New Ties

The Chinese are also forming closities-with-the people, they come into- contact with. ErLiu, who lives in -Nathan Hale, said that he is Y N -

meeting many new people. His compatriots The three new arrivals from the People's Republic of China.pht/ae

Chinese Pr~~~~~~~ogram- May LeaVeByCHRIS HUTCHINS * blems have been cited as contributing to some 'form. The, language division will do

and JEFF NORDHAUS -speculation about the future of the program-- anything we can [to maintain the program].The future of the Chinese language pro- the lack of enrollment in-the program and the

gram at Andover remains unceftain as the two maintainance costs. Once the committee has We do Support tht teaching of Chinese atyear Ablbot grant providing fundi~for the reached a decision on the program it will give Phillips Academy.",,

-,experimental progran dwindles. . its recommendation to the Headmaster who is Those associated with the program are cur- ltThe- Cuificulum--Committee--which-is---ultimately reponsible for the -fate--of- the rently':-considering-several -alternatives -to i-- responsible for a yearly revision of the course raeerlmn..s.Ci eak ht"-.Academy's courses,, will undoubtedly give Currently, Chinese 10-20 is -the only wolheomedtiaous eslt to

The'school's only Chinese Language Instructor, careful scrutiny to the Chinese program when Chinese language course open to students at twouyearecoursen" tha10lee course iinof aSon-Mey Chlu. -. ---- Photo/Pettit it convenes in November. Two major pro- Andover. The current enrollment in this fered to uppers andi a twenty level course of- -

DIETARY EXPE~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~R. ~~~year's Chinese 10-20 class is nine; last year, fedtosnr.terle otecore twlye students Another consideration is that .the Chinese

r7'7-7-- t ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Prbgiin be open t6 everyone. Sturges men--34 ~~~7~~j~j ~~ t ~ The low enrollment is due to a number of tioned, however, that the "complication thero o d F t-Fr , i n factors. First, the Chiinese 10-20 course is is [that] one is obliged to start a department

-' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~open primarfly tio-Seniors, with only a few and a four-year continuum"1--something cf aunderclassmen permitted to enroll. Son-Mey financial problem with thie future enrollment

By NAOMI-GENDLER ___________________________Members of the Phillips Andover and Ex- the student's total calorie ant fat intake.

eter communities will serve as "guinea pigs"' If the experiment links drop in-iblood C i e e 1 - 0 n y c u sthisfal an winer n a exprimnt on- Pressure with an increased consusnption -of

ducted by preventive cardiologist Dr. R. Cur- poly-unsaturated fats, Ellison said that theofn etis Ellison. The experiment is an attempt to results will be some of tle most definite and i h n s nlm ~ to ldetermine the relationship between poly- conclusive evidence available on the effects of i Ch n s -has-a en o l ntof n y. i e .unsaturated fats in the di et and high blood increased poly-unsaturated- fats in the diet.-

- pressure.Expeimen The Exeter Experiment Chiu, the Instructor ot the Chinese course, of the course uncertain.Th td Tile Expoleritw ph - th- re Ellison conducted a similar study -of blood claims, "Seniors hesitate to take * Chinese. The Chinese.10-20 course, which began last

-of which will be-reversed at Andover and Ex.; -pressure-amng students at Exeter three years because they are not sure what they are getting -year, inerked the first time that a Chineseeter. For ten weeks, from October to -ago- changing salt - rather than -poly- ~ into," with respect to workload and class has been taught at Andover in fifteenDecember, Exeterwill undergo a change from unsaturated' fat intake. The staff in Exeter's. challenge. years. Chinese was picked over other Easternthe use of saturated fats to the use of poly- kitchien facilities reduced the amount of salt Hale Sturges, Chairman of the Department languages such -as'- Arabic and I apanes6unsaturatedlats in-its food. During that time, usdi~o rprto yffypret f~eg agae omns"tsa because of the connection we have with the -

Andover's cooking will remain unchanged. In Because, of food students consumed-outside language and culture that most students are Chinese through the three Chinese studentsth* oreo h Wnetietr -no~' Exeter's cafeteria, the net sodium intake was ignorant of. It represents toimost people an who studey each year at Andover. The dici-kthen useaof thl e itrtrmser novrs reduced only thirty-five pecent. According to unknown. Many people are hesitant to go into sion in November concerning the fate of the

- - itchn saff ill se oly-uinsaturated fats, Ellison, most' students blood pressure dropped an [unfamiliar area such as Chinese]." In ad- Chinese prog~am will not affect the three whileExetr wifi~eum toits sualreciies. "sigafficantly athycnuelssat.dition, Chiinese 10-20 is a year long elective students form the Orient.

Dr. R. Curtis Ellison, the' study's cbor- Th-agrofHg.lodPesr commitment that many seniors do not want. Interest' and enthusiasm for the Chinesedinator, is currently employed at the Depart- -- TeDnrofHgBldPesueWith the Abbot grand expiring at the end of. program has been promoted in the past andment of Medicine 'and Pediatrics at the 1High-blood pressure also known as~ hyperten- ti colyatems rsigqeto s wl otiu ob rmtdti iaacr

Univesityof MasachsettsMedial Scool. sion,~iicuse hrdenng ofthe rteris or whether or not it is financially sensible to sup- ding to Ms. Chiu. Last year, a caligraphyin Worchester and lectures on Epidemology at arteriosclerosis which can lead to an increased port-,a program that is taken by so few wokhpaselansmeCisedcsthe Harvard School of Public -Health in,- risk, of heart attacks and strokes.wokhpaselansmeCisedcs

-Boston. Because High blood pressure usually re- students. Sturges claims that, "money is a fac- were performed in the Spring Term.Ellisn - hs -spnt eght yars a' the- mans unetectd, Anovers phyician Dr. tor the economic side of it is simply supply This year, a speaker on Sino-American rela-

El as -pen eigt yars t -the ain undtecexplAinde s "thybstcan cur.i and demand," and with: the demand for the -i'os in the nineteenth century is scheduled to-Children's Hospital in Boston working with Claire Wilson exlie,"h eicr s course seemingly little, "there are cold, bard appear at Andover. Even signs remindinginner city adolescents to find correlations bqt- prevenition."' Just as salt is known to cause ecnmcftsocnidr"Heae, suetso"ak hee eepoedn

ween thir weigt, foo intake, genetic hgbloprsuetesaemyodtue however, that "I would like to think that it.- campus prior to- Arena Day to encourage-background and' other ' personal -for saturated, or animal, fats. If this is the [the teaching of Chinese] will continue in enrollment.

-.characteristics. Ellison also conducted a study-, case, people will be able to prevent the oftenabout,- sodium intake in relation to blood fatal disease,from settling in,

-pressure at -Exifir three years ago. * .Hypertension-has also been associated with .a ~ 4 VR I N '--Monitoring the Experiment with people, in stressful situations. When -

Although the experiment will,.-affect all under stress, a pierson's normal1 reaction is the - r'h apu fPilpsAae'---those- who eat schol od lio w1l fight or flight response- an increase in blood -th Caps-fPhlip_-cdr

moio only th hnestha foccur Elin thWp rsue blood flow to -muscles,-tnetabolism * --

amtric f hn bloodpress r deie hic tion ofes hpertninmyeut

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r s-*

Turns Back Taift 44-1Ifor a safety. On the ensuing kickoff, scored hefr t o his tre~.....ww.*By LAWRZENCE EPSTEIN - -tefrt-he

The ndoer 'arsty footallP.A. obtained-excellent field position touchdo-wns-on-a short slashifig run.'-and prompy-s&red - on a Buddy The qfuarter ended, with another seven ::::::::........... .

team, led by ew coach Davi B da to George Maloof 35-yard pont for Andover making the scre . ::x::: o r:<:::......**'**:***routed Tft 44-16 in their sessionTftDeneSig

Big First Quarter With the score 9-0, the Blue took --The'Blue was-held scoreless in the-second quarter as- theTatdfs-The Blue 1pndte crn eal advantage-of a Tait fumble deep lnin the first quarter when they tackled their own terrtory; and increased hedtgt h o9sfinally got on

16-0Scot Glaserthe board with a touchdown late in the Taft kick returner in the endzone, their lead to 160.ScthGls ethe-half.

- ~ The third quarter started out with_mor-ba-luck- for -Andcjver as TafBrandeis i'oo Strong, ~~~~~~~~scored ten unanswered points. 'Me Blue responded well to pressure-withquarterback-Boyda, who6 went 13 forB oys' -Socc-e--Falld1s- - 24 for his 156 yards on -the day,throwing 'his second touchdown pass -

toGeorge Maloof -and reversed theiradvantage for 14 p6ints.

- -. ~~~~~~~~By TOM NOVELLINE - -__Ground-Game aiches Vllctory-The Boys'. Varsity Soccer opened Andover Plays. Wi nSecond And Scott Glasser and Ed Baccari cliti-

its season with ~ 3-0 loss to a very Third Quarters ched the Andover win -ith fourth -talented Brandeis J.V. suad. As ex- For most of the second and third quarter touchdowns making the final ~pected, the defense played solidly quarters, Andover and Brandeis score 44l1& Th'e P.A. offensiveoverall, but the offense was unable, to played step-for-step with each other; machine was backed p by a strong~produce any goals. unfortunately- theBlue never could defensive 'sh~w.ng. The Blue defenseBrandeis Sores EarlyTeally develop any scoring oppor- held Taft to arnrdbe4 ad

Andover, fell behind early when a tunities and get back into the game. runningonu thirty carries -andj{_rcedBrandeis forward drilled a shot past Late in the fourth quarter, four turnovers,. Middle linebackergoalie John,,Crawford creating a 1-0- Brandeis put the game away with a -Steve Zubkoff summed up the-teami'slead. It looked as if the oposition low, hard shot that beat netminder feelings by saying, "The score looked ByDoyda, the Ble a at -roun ng e en oraso-wNould add to its lead, but the Blue Eric Thieringer, who had taken over -impressive; but we-wilrs ee what hap- gain. Boyda went 13 for 24 agains -Tuft for 156 yards-He led the team to a -defense held and Brandeis was forced the goal in the second-half.-- pens against the Coast Guard." -44.16 wiu. - prsPoobtAvitout ofthe Anover ed._________ Coach Price aid, "The defenise Sports______________Photo____________by____________________Just as Andover began controlling tumedlfr an overal soiJefr V FootbaU oce h altie Tefradtahrfeh u fWsca nvrthe mid-fied, Brandeis capitalized on mance, but I was disappointed -that tuhdtebUtie'h owr ece rs u fWsea nvra throw\whichcaught ndoverthe offense couldn't score." He'allso -By DAVID CHUNG - lines,_'consistingt of Captain Jenny sity,. i-the new coach, along withuawareo ifon ofuthe noet.TeaddtarhsBadi qa a Kicking off the season Wednesday, Wiz, ohaMalitsky, Melissa Sarah Craver. She is conident 'thatunaarein ron o th ne. Te ade tht tis rane h hqa as the J.V. football team played Falcone, Caroline Pool,- Marcie the team, filled *Wa talent, willBurnand cedrilletd hthe it thew everfcd str n i o ib thieri er superbly against a weaker Central Lebowitz, Lista, Lincoln, and Kath haive a successful season.:,turned nd driled a hot- ito theever fced. Siiior ric Thennger Catholic team, shutting them -o't Campbell controlledl the ball well, but -JV Field Hockey -___back of the net. Andover played even- turned in a excellent second half in -20-0.-colntcmpsaefrGAsyJEAS LAwith Brandeis for the remainder of the net blocking many shots good -cThedgame featuredaneamazingDper- an JOASN LAXthe quarter; however, neither team keepers -could not get to," according aonneb uir alakJmL d ArSsiv deeneRX - hcoula podceansli scrigt Tac. oHe hps fotrda. moeDccs etor, who rushed for 152,yards, in- -- r Girls' JV--Field. Hockey Team at-chances. against Tabor this Saturday. --cluding two -touchdowns of ten and JJ . -tamned a scoreless tie.- with Winsor

- - - ~twenty,one yards. Solid offensive - colo Wdedy blocking and timely play-calng by -- Initially, the Blue had trouble mov-the coaching staff bollstered the team. -ing-the ball past midfield, yet the'-

The real force In the game, though, -superior defense directed by Co--- was the Blue defense, whigh c- - -captain-Julie-Callhoun held Winsor tocounted for four of the team's twenty a few aimless shots.

-. points on two safeties. A Rogers C z1z4 11r Beginning with the ive minute- ~~and Greg Dick lled the defense which SJu m f' m14 a r warning at the end of the first half,

also recorded several, quarterback P .A._bean-to-Aciferate the pace ofsacks and interceptions. -- the game: The Blue caught Winsor -Gils' JV Soccer off guard and trapped Winsor into its

- ~~~~~~~The Girls' JV Soccer team started 'every member run for the ball" own end of the field for most of the-- / ~~~~~~~~ ~its season on a frustrating note, tying method of play. '-rest of the game.

Governor Dummer's JV Squad 0.. Fullbacks- Lydia Wise, Suzanna In the second half the Blue attem p- -Governor Dummer's inexperience Smnith,. Brittqatrandberg, Anne ted to break- the tie but each shot

- ~~and frenzied method of play confused Plamondon, with help from seemed to fall short or wide of he-___ - - ~~~~~~~~~the. Blue anpl despite heavy spirit and halfbacks Laurie M'acDonald, ,E1Ieit.-gol - -

- ~determination on Andover's part, the Gould, Sarina Cooper, Chris O'Dell, The youn~ I.V. team, despite a - - ~~~~~~~~ball would'not find the net. - Hanna Johnson, Julia Denver,-and- scoreless tie-' with Winsor, showed

-' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~From the start, Andover Mae Doykos had no problem cntrol- flashes of Lpromising talent anddominated. In fact, Goalies Franchot ing GDA's feeble offense. - should have a very strong and suc-

-- ~~Munson and Vered Pomerantz only Katia Aisler, a new. German cessful season.

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Page 5: In Their~~~~Andover Experlenbcespdf.phillipian.net/1983/09301983.pdf · VOL. CV No. 2 - ,-PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASSACHUiSmrS SEPTEMBER 30, 83 Uppers El~~ect Flte Lew is- and,

Girls Soccer Starts New~~~~~~~~~~treak ! ~~ATHLETE,~v OF T-rHEL

With Shutouts, Over MIT & GDA1This By TED MCENROE . her secbnd gcoal of the day, making t quarters of the game, but could not 8

Ti pas wek, the Girls' Varsit 3 - Governor Dummer got its only scr olaanttebgeytSoccer eamn wn a pair- of shutouts real chance of the game midway unklepayrinMTsewoce over Governor Dummer, 4-0, on through the period on a breakaway prga.-hyothtl hryt t

Saturday, and a 20 decision over but goalkeeper Serra Butler made a SX u fe he eid h cr.- MIT. on Wednesday. Neithergm spectacular diving save to preserve was sildalce t00 was as close -as- the -scores idicaed *the shutout.- .Fnly ntefut quarter, them 8'~

-.-- bot- Sawrdy.-~andWednesdy~the. In the ~au are hjeg o-Blue broke thegame openwt a pairteam 4ominated its opposition.. - .tne t onigo-teOA o-gasCitrIafakuiwa*

~Oi±Satudaythe lueopenc~t~eir- -team. With-five minutes reiaiig worked a give-and-go with Gharibianm ----- rushe.tGDASaia-Poinier closed -the Scoring off- ard.yn s-thd onlbreakaay,- e-tin-U

season at Govtrmor -Dummer, - and pass from. Debby Tharp, -nd ,the thaolewt el-lcdso nb -wastedno~ime icontroling the game end~l in a 4 shutout. Coach the upper righthand corner. MIT. A

game. By the eighth minute of play, Drake as peased- wit te -team amsssoe h gm-yngga -Nell-Gharibian scored the first goal of performance,- especially the secon _e_ miueaaebu aoieHthe 1983 season, on a pass forih string, which played very well in'te-gnsboeuabrkwybfretewing Mary Slaney, -first game of the year. ri'dcolrleshrsot -UU

Right'wing Ellen LeMaitre made Overpowers MIT -Wihalte-oramnueean

the -score 2-0 at- 10:23 of the second-.Wednesday, the team sufferedl-a lit- --ng, lef -Jgessica DeVivo scored: < --- -

quarter with an unassisted tally, and tde letdown, but still pulled outa o anisrcegldligalf-u*the first half ended with the score 2-0 victory over.. MIT's women's-varsity -footer into the top of the net fom U-

--_in Andover's favor. - team. Julie Agar, scored a goaLaid-twle-ydsut-Tegm end --

In the second- half, Andover' CO'i added an assist in a sluggish game on -with the Blue -winning its second. E tinue its nslaght. our inute in- an -absolutely awful field. -straight shutout, 2-0.

to the third qureOaiinscored Andover dominated the first three rk etta dsietepo - ~~~~~~~field conditibns, his team played well. 9' --

against a group of much older UEEEEUU UEUEUUEEUEEEEUplayers. "It's only MIT's first year in For the second tme in two- terms;-The Phillipian salutes Senior Schille ofsocceril he said, " !but they were bet the-Cross Country teamt and names him Athlete of the Week. Aft&r an in.

- - ween eighteen and twenty-two y~~~~~~s credible season of record-breaking on Track last, spring, Schille had hisold, wihewen rang tentrm fourtent sights on lowering the cross-country record. He accomplished thisfeat easi-

-~~ 4 se~kventeen." - On--Saturday the team ly on. Wednesday. Schille absolutely shattered the record by, 22 seconds,travels to Brooks to face a team that making the new mark an Intdmidating 14:12. With Schille's markable hm-

- -~~ j they defeated 2-0 in a scrixniage Povemfent, however, It s questionable how long that record will stand.

September 17th. .Sports Photo by Liivitt

q Boys', X Cunty Uals Short_SChille Shatters School Record

By JIM MOORE Andover timies to- be slower than team wilf uch etr when theand MATT DONAHUE. usual--But the squad shows promise -team races prep schools."

Wednesday, the Andover Boys' in that it placed three runners in the With a strong and cunning groupCross Country.- Team lost its first top ten against Naval Academy for of runners, the squad hopes tomeieti, 23-37, to Naval Academy, the first time in several contests. -bounce back against Harvard next

- Coch rankHanah smme up Wednesday,despite and outstanding perfornifice Thc rn ana u~e p 'e -team hopes to see more up--

S*hby le shatteteteysainrefelwdhv port by throngs of Andoverites such-oe couse atreodi oor' An-3 wih - nothing to be ashamed of, consider- as Cross-Country Bill Graham. Next

dovercours recod of 4:34 ith aing the talent of the Navy squad. I- week the cross country'team will meetclocking of 14:12. After Schille, think we-performed admirably. The Harvard here.-

-- Naval Academy- took- the- next twoplaces, but co-captain Jim Moor

took furth with a respectable time of F e d H c e r ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I Senior -Craig Golding seized ninth C , O ,f

with a time of 15:27, Ibilowed by co- - ~~~~~~~~~captain Matt Dofiahue, John

Chapoton. and-,Paul Bowman. who -T 4* ~ r. g- finished in twelfth o- fourteenth W indsor Victorious. 14),

Ca~iatuKu e M~rid maeuvrs ownfeldiiilii iheGirs' occr -places respectively ith times just -

Teatn's 4-Jutout of Governor Dumimer. McBride's move to'midfil n hher admission to the AD-Pro Chin 1- - stI'MmL~d a Blue squad loae wi ariyee ithatmof123 ByEENR Y-- va~~sityo seven w theacm of 16:23.newcomers. Sw Photo by Mike Morrissey- AstogsatbthpakfNvlByE AORTD GS ,Academy runners caused most of-'the Varsity Field Hockey cracked goal on a skillful corner play about-

under the pressure of a solid Winsor twenty minutes into the game. An-team, losiig Wednesday afternoon dover's offense arnd defense cred1.0. on firmly, but were unable to score.~~1'r 11 ~~~~-, ~� IIV, N'<i' ItfII II,,k 'i;i. '1 v2 "~- i~ first fifteen minutes of the Defense Strong In Second Half

~~.~III~~ti;,, t r - -- - - ~~~~~~II~Ž~~,iIIW- .~~~ ~ game, the mighty Blue offense con- The'second half consi'ted of con-- ., - 1..-A ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ sisting f Turie- Vanqe, captain tinued fine play by Nash, Trotman

NA Pe~~~~~~- ' '~psi - Janine Coleman, Fern Ward an-x&halfback Jew~ Tessier. Coleman,

trol of the ball, earning several corner Ward along with forwards Daisy- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~plays, but few shots on-goal. Smith,' Whitney Camrco, and Kiki

-, -\&-~~I1 IM CO--3 1 The powerful Winsor defense kept Thompson worked the ball up and --'IN ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~ ~~~~~ ~the Blue from scoring. Consequently, down the field, but, again were unable __

- - - / ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~the Winsor players often captured the -'to surpass the unyielding Winsor -:2" - . -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~ - -- ~~~~~~~~~ball and whipped it downfield to their defense.:Puif ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~-- own able offense. The game was an unfortunate loss

~~~~~ .1. 0 > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Despite beautiful play by fullbacks for a talented Blue team, but all team- - ... .- - '4 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Laurie Nash and Julia Trotmnan, and members look forward to a strong

I . ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~many expert saves by goalie Kathy comeback against Tabor on Satur- -

Mulvey, Winsor scored their single day.

-- - *SPSPOTS#*-- - ~~CALENDAR

- - - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1I' - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Cross Country (B JV) Tabor Academy . ... *2:30

1-' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~" _ - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Cross Country (G) ... Milton Invitational ... *A.M.- ~~~. Field-Hockeyf(V)..Tabor . .. *2:30--

- - // ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Eeld Hockey (JV) .... Tabor . ...... *2:30* - - ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~-;,--~~~~~~~ - ~~~Soccer (B V)......Tabor ........ *2:00

4- - ~~Soccer (B JVI)...Tabor ........ *2:00~~-' 'z~~~ Soccer (B JYLI) -..... Tabor ......... 1 *2 00- ~~~~Soccer (G ).......BroosSchool ..... *2:00

-- - - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~Soccer (G JV)....Winchendon School -- 2:00-- - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~~~Volleyball (V) . .... Andover High ..... 2:00

Volleyball ....... Andover High .. ... -20- - -.T- :Z;1!17,5 -1

Page 6: In Their~~~~Andover Experlenbcespdf.phillipian.net/1983/09301983.pdf · VOL. CV No. 2 - ,-PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASSACHUiSmrS SEPTEMBER 30, 83 Uppers El~~ect Flte Lew is- and,

PAGESIX t uk-Il V L 4Ij111'I A SEPTEMBER 30,, 1983

-- ~~~Discuss Goals F~~~~~~~~~o Coming Yar'AIMPU&-i-EW autyAvsoyCmmteDy CIIAPPELL LAWSON tlebaum. described the-role the faculty tosreand PHILLIPIAN STAFF '~advisors will play as "advisors to Harper has positive ideas of the

___ __ -The Faculty Advisory Committee, ~~~~~~~~~McNemar"- on issue& facing the' committee. She thinks that-the- corn-'Me F cult Advsory Comm tee, school community. He feels that -ffe rnitteewill appreciate more: fully the

a six-member group which sets the advisors should keep an "ear to the way it operates, having a-clear senseagenda for faculty meetings, willassume'an inreasig~y acivistreal policy" on faculty concerns. of what the Headmaster expects asposture this year, with members p~lan- nls ntutrEwnSks wl skoig~a~odsusPlains th meeingsbetwen-twad enry Wilmer sees -the Comittee asnling on' tackling such issues as house pansteretn ewete d visors and McNemar. He said that the - aliason between the Headmaster andC O O S ees I~~~~~~arrc~~~w - co~ungeling, work load, and the four---Intere~~set o CVolege committeemeets with'Mcemar and, the faculty, as well as a nutn

meetng aenda als mees hurs.He aded hai he eetigs -he-Hadmaterand faculty together.on -a week- to -discus-issues of con--' -'Aidii6Wle,- D7i'o-- -' - ~By MATT BOERSMA .. cr ihteHamse:Isfaculty member with a -specific pro- West Quad'North,-the Committee has

-The trend in -Phillips -Academy's priorities." mmessret-yatesan pol iipekOnh-sue of the" three- -ak:--eggn--autseniors~ college pplications has rawford traces the name visibility win thi et byIvoe- of the faculty.

revetedto he arrw lst f tradi- problem to the many students who -This year, the Committee consists of pc flf t'noe, ye ad meigatn-a edatrtionate coe, acordig o Rbnare "uninformed" as a result of "not faculty members Lou Bernieri, that "every issue of'tbe community facultyliason, and channeling facultytional colleges,: hmeorkaccordliingKahlen altnAnnHarerbinin will be' discussed. under that topic" to proposals to the roper, committees.Crawfofd, Director of College doing their mwr."H eivs Ktle ilon apr di determine what factors affect it Wilmer's personal goal for the Coin-Cofinseling. 'tanoenuhstdnsprply uateamEinSkad "qualitativd* and -quantitatively." mittee calls for improving faculty

"The problem- can be called Name- ~eei~jtedfeetclee:Hny imr atn ye 1 ad Ann Harper, Instructor in-English, -meetings. I--- ------ ",visibiliy," saidCrawford who ob- In an'- effort to better infoum' Wilmer have ust begun their two- - sees her duties is maidg sur Hea Lou Berniieri, Instructor in English,

-:jects- to the narrowing of choices ts dns teCieeConeigO - a fc., r- 'masterDnl cea ean says, "'If there are problems or strong"traditional" schools.' "Students see fice has experimented in publishing a Newly elected member and Instruc- aware of current problems, issues, feelings on any issue, we [the Ad-the prestigious name of-a college and weekly -newsletter that' has detailed tor in History Kathleen Dalton said and concerns of, the faculty.- The- visory Committee] bring it to the

adhereto itwithout knowing any and useful information that students the ob involves "discussing coin- -!Committee also -asses information Hamse:mohre o t scol"might miss. CCO has also decided to munity issues with the Headmaster," onoH~ea'erniaerhsevrlpsnagos

Theis e anscrease" _In the _break up general meetings into-six-__as well- as- the repnsbliy o aprse h Committe very-frthe :mitt eera eroa tooisc s hnumber of visiting cllege represen- grus tdnsmeigwt'ter "ersiigfcly"Dlo' e-representattoive of the faculty biecause pace of life for-faculty, to analyze the

tative will rovide- seniors with a respective counselors, Also ex- sonal 'goals for the-coming year deal o'isgetcos-eto fvesand hos oneo' tts ocniubroader selection of schools. These - i etl h metig tr to wt keig open the commuica lifestyles. She favors the small corn to make the Andover community

:representatives present mall infor- create a more conversational, small- tion between the faculty and th head- mte eas fefcec u asdvre oke neeo h ugtmation sessions about their school, scale setting," said Crawford. "We. master." ti ufruae-ha ak aut n okepu h ult feuaand then generally set aside time for hope our effort 'will have an impact

any questions 100 to 120 o these col- n students an help them."Instrulctor in History Edwin Quat- members do not have the opportunity tion.leges will visit this year, 'from

Set~b-20-through, FebruaryCrawford points but thavAndover

accomodates as many visitors as SIV lleges cannot visit for various reasons. By EMILY BERNSTEIN and BRITA STRANDBERGSmaller colleges, though, are beginn- sc opttv col.a I ning to gain more representation on The (MS) 2 program, Math and suhcmeivecolsaMIan

campus asa genera trend, onfirmed Science for Minority Students, which Brown.Crawford. - compliments the math and science (M)tretom esudnsoe

Crawford advises students to edcto fmnrttdnssneeThiasi aou athand silten "create their own [college] choices. " 1977 has progressed smoothly, accor-Thspieadntuamwllhn -

He say defintivelythat sudents ding t its director, Victor Young. - hopefully act as example to other.should be careful to choose "colleges Theodore Sizer, the headmater at -Y-suntsig hi.cols codn othat will meet their., iie-Is and the time, and a group of faculty, who Young sttdta-e a n

expressed concern over the lack of Yugsae hth a n aminorities in niath and science related oormnrpblswihterofields conceived the programh in 1974 -gram," except the inability to accept

Theywaned t enourae mnoriiesmore students. Other schools, such asto enter these fields, by supplemen- Loodm haffe andpLake ore

tig their high school math andAcdm haepnsodulatte-science educationuporm

(MS2 he~esutin prgra, i- (MS)z2 considers only these students - -

Mstreigty-ig studeats in who iave beeiFscteened by their volves egt-ih stdnswho school guidance' counselors for-,ap- j~come- for three consecutive summersA

toPhillips Academy where they con- plication. The application requires Adisr Committee Clerk Peter McKee pooCaoocentrate in umath and science through rcecmmeatiosero ne, mathdand,'

-i ~~~~four. class hours a day and gusiiicecetahradth- udne-' turers, who are'prominent inorit"cuslr tdnt uflowiei terfede- 50sodesyo hi. l t - E , z n r t

500wor esay n teirmath and l h - ei a-' Th priary oal o theprogam ~ science interests whiile~ parents write

encouraging the students' interests in about their child. The- student's-'.' math and science related fields,-such school must sent a transcript with the ____rn ~ V des a

as chemical engineering and coin- application. B- putr tecnolog-. (M) 2 acomplih- - Young says (MS)2 has met its goals, -~ yNAOMI GENDLER

CCO Director~~obin Crawfordperh thnoigt coileg acoumslisgh -although this cannot-be proved until Assistant Dean of, Residence for- Bulimla phioto4Ehrbor prgawihh~ sent students to the first class graduates from college, Health Issues Cilia Belliziaannounced Bellizia defined Bulimia as "an ab-

program, ~~~~~~~~and enters their selected fields. that Phillips Academy will host a normally, ravenous - appetite." Ap-* - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~seminar on Anorexia Nervosa and 'plied to the disease, Bulimia is when

-' S erve - JI~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~irector ~~~~~~~~~~ulimia on Wednesday October-S at one binges and then upchucks the:. .J~~~~~~~o~~~u1'ins to as c'r ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~6:45pm in Kemper Auditorium, consumed food. Bellizia explainfeobbins-to' Serve as D irectbr,,,~~~~~~for Teseminar, open to all students, that this disease is probably the morefaculty, and staff, will center around dangerous of the two diseases, as the

('-jr,1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~organization, -comprised of three have a normal,-healthy appetite,C o mp-vIi 'u ter ?lech no logy at--"P amt grocllede "Foadts Fiht. pren pherswthe iulles apes o,.......... fof approximately one hour , a food. . TSithColeehrauaeswilereen-wil sh i atull dgesin nfo aprximteytnehort aroo.gu-Th- onsan-aegr itain

DONNA RUSSELL school as nd where~hecessity dic- personal computer. ---- cabaret," consisting of "a collage grows .increasingly dangerous for theand MATT BOERSMA ates. He also advses departments ~ A statement from Headmaster 'cf senes, Songs, and dramatic in- nervous system because the body con-

and MAT'RIOERSA tates He als advise departents o Mc~ema said tathed lke to "r- abouttatiostrbtesce onratsgontdiest thnoughugthehein-..... . Headmaster Donald- McNemar ap- -how to automate and utilize the corn- M~mrsi hth' i~ o"r epeain

jiointfed iLoI -Rbbiiisa4s Diirector of pOuter in' an' academic'envir'onment, - mng PA. to the forefront of -com - woinsobsesson- with food,-health, -itial. process -of-- eating. Food,Comptin, anew osiionrisig Rbbis' mjortas invlve dein-puting at the secondary school level." ,,a d beauty. The three women will However, rarely makes it through the

from the eed-for oganizatin ing an verall pan for co Robbins aidholdtAdiscussionn hgroupscuimmediately idigestivedig tract.tr The.constantatacidicfrom te nee for oganiztion ig an verallplan or coputers at Robn ai htAnoe is teso frtoeidviul.vmtigas ass eiu o

amng the growing computer use at Phillips over the nekt five years, and backwads in this sense h hwfrtoeidvdas-vmtn locue eiu otPhillips Academy. - educatin faculty in the-use of corn-there are other schools more advanc- -interested. - decay.

A search committee headed by puters. ed comiputerwise than we. - A noe' edrhp o- "odFih"wl otS0 o Assistant'Headmaster and Physics In- Robbins already accomplished the,' Robbins involvenient with corn- ference, Bellizia said that she n fgta Adve,$0lssta

pute - ~~~~~discovered that many students of their usual 600 fee. Bellizia is utiliz-* strucor Pete Mc~eeformed to find negotiation of a long-term contract puesetnsbc o h at~ both sexes felt-concern about the two ing part' of the Abbot Grant whcih

candidates for the position. Ater with The CPU Shop, a computer years' He recieved his B.A. with diseases. Thus the idea'-of greater -she received -last -year for health*-submitting their suggestions, store in Salem, 1NH. Uhder'this con- hnr rmCmrdeUiestyi awareness toward the subject came education programs to cover the ex-

McNemar appointed Robbins as tract, not only are all faculty, staff, England and:---is M.A. in Computer aot h omne.Blii adpne fteeeigDirectorthis sumer. an studens spare the 51Science' from he University of ta o, rommeted. theia sapidce of theeeig

- Director this smmer. - and studets spared the 5/Wisconsin- in Madison- He taught ta Fo:Fih, h oi fte _____________Robbins position entails supervi- Massachusetts sales tax, but they maha; rvt coli aac -eminar, was "'a way of educating the-

sion of all acadilIC -ada:rceea1/icuto h pl for a year before moving on to whole campus" about the diseases.ministrative computer use. -- More - vrospston ntecmuespecifically, he buys both microcom- computer, a lYdiscount on the IBM -aiu oiin ntecmueputers and mainframe systems or tne' PC, and 5/off the price of an IBM XT field, ranging from programming to Anorexia Nervosa __

systems analysis to management. Anorexia Nervosa is both a mntal- -

Robbins work extends-tdo'ixvolving' -and a' -physical disease. It representshimself with' both the computer and the lack of appetite and the inabilityTh s n

Cl ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~mcoopte lb.He also hopes- to eat because of an obsession to lose,R a m' ey Speaks. -M on deq V ~~-within the nefarifuture to network, or Weight.' The disease affects one of OfficeProducts"V '-:bnnect, some-or fall of the campus-every two hundred and fifty adoles-

By TED I(EIM ,.....- ~~~~~computers, thereby improving effi- cent females. Ten percent of these in- &hool SuppliesBy TED KEIM ~cznc adcomuictindividuals die because of ialt.kCadDean of Studies Jeane Amster an- members who travelled to Exeter to IT .1 . Vl -and

nounced Wednesday that this year's 'hear Dr, Ramey speak this summer as U l eev e J ~ f q -SaonrRoger F'ellow will be- Dr. Estelle R. "very impressed". She characterized V l n e We e'~~Sainr

Raeprofessor ofPyjlg-n -Dr--Ramey -as a- "very itty and r77 Main Street'Biophysics at Georgetown Medical engaging" speaker. B e -gin r o~d 45%32

a Dr Raey wil adres stuent Dr.Estele ame, asa pofesor ll olut ~ 8v KEITti HRWANG-

Page 7: In Their~~~~Andover Experlenbcespdf.phillipian.net/1983/09301983.pdf · VOL. CV No. 2 - ,-PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASSACHUiSmrS SEPTEMBER 30, 83 Uppers El~~ect Flte Lew is- and,

SEPTEMBER- 30, 1983> .' tII i41 -t 'AGEq Si-

Radical, New Art-ist Da vid Salle'M~akes --,.Hs 'Andover Debut-

By RACHE--COPPLSN -aia tle-that has been subjqct to artapreciater can better unders-.adTIM BANKER muhdeaeTh x ibi, fitled tadhs work h alr ilb

OnFia,. tme 0h th--,David' Salle: Paintings, Prints and designing a Source Room wherinAddison Art 'Gallery will hold an DaiShs been made-possibl smofterinsorisdaswlocpeninlg for the" controversial new bylon from the Mary Boone b hsro ih ehp feexpresionist.David-- Salle.--Called G6allery for the paintings-and Robert some insghts on how he denives his-

--- a ent terrible, Salle (pro- Feldman, aprivate collect or ,for the, imagery.nounced-Saly hsclueanew; prnSaddaig.Sles threeexciting way of-expression. difrnamdsorepeso Salle is known for his new ap-

Born in '1952 in Oklahoma, Salle abig h ntgtesoteaeae poctoxrsinsmanes-tilfigure in Art, Salle may be a- - 4' ~~~~~~~~forerunner-zin a new artistic era-

However, although he has received-much acclaim:- many art critics -are--PA Alu na Exhibits' not cpieto his breedof radical

f -~~~~movementl' moraey-oreinted. What.New -Children s BLJLJI' -Picasso was to Cubism, Salle may beto ... who knows? Only time will tell'

if te pblicwil coroboatethis

By WENDY DICK~~etebe 3 t ovnier~ at Emily Corbato will perform Sunday in a solo piano recital at -theAngela Lenz '83 currently has While at Andover, Lorenz was ac- eglAdioGaertidisn alry

~an exhibition of b~tok prints and nar- tive in- several nuclear freeze -ration entitled Sleep Peacefully, at groups. Her project- is a children'sthe Addison Gallery. The exhibition book about nuclear war, a book to, p st3"b , o -~ l'is the result of a grant Lorenzo calm their fears. In the narration ac- ia ythe'Mark Larner Fellowship. 'said "Iam concerned,[about war]

Originaly, Lornz .planed 'to but I know the best way to cope By TRIG TARAZI lpremiuere f SoifatdBreveb-y7Oica7 and Ernst Bacon, all of whose corn-makeagmal, whichz he nfld- to with my fears is to be active." The - Reknowned pianist EmilyCorbato Lorenzo Fernandez, and sectioins- positions Corbato has played fre- ~ make a murdl, wsthiccocernsahchilusndramdof will perform a recital on Snaby Villa-Cobos and'Ginastera. Al qetly She is currently a resident-ed present a "span of con-stwry ane hi ils ex- OcoeSurt300PM nhd- lnedaeSutn 6); qute Botnara.ed-would Wheen"s ofe h paret'ssubeuent disonblery2t30 of Mrin pl'~Bstan arthurit Fote and6 , .::nther fosonrhomnacncr

tinuous~ ~ ~ ~~~ ~~~~a ad ar ' images.6 thebhillipsAcadem Camus d- Noelte~yShmn. s hee Corbtomig planngtbenokws m ae been foldacc theo planation.dioGaerofAeiaAtonBsnan rhu Foe, n,- ishape,each picture leading tk the The plaies are drawn in a z, igthe' recital, sponsored by the-' Emily', Corbato has established return performance at - Abrahamnext. Although her plans cged demiewywtvid; _Phillips Academy Music Depart- herself as an exponent of piano Goodman House in New York City '-dremlke aywih vvi emo , in November. Raymon- Ericson ofsomevdlhat, Lorenz went ahead with - tonal -col ors. Lorenz has successful- ment, Corbat6 plans to perform the music of North and South America, The New York Times said of~her in-the project and is now looking for a 'ly completed hdr project; the book works of several Latin American and has attracted critical praise for.-.publisher. an-cls comiposers, including a Boston her performance and recording of itial performance at Abraha m Good-

-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~this music. In addition to -traveling na os:"e otcudrtnto many areas of the United States to ding of the music itself was im-,

- prsen rectal andlecuresshe pressive. The pianist was not afraidhas given premiere erforniances of to'-submit completely to its roman-

- works by ~~~~~~~~~~~ticism, to highlight each emotional- several- contemporar~~y detai.. .this was quite an achieve-

1' , ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~A native of New 'York City, bato plans to travel to the-western'Corbato holds degrees from U.S. for several tours, and to visitSyracuse University and the New England in the spring of 1984.-England Conservatory. Her piano 'The public is cordially invited toteachers have included .David attend Coibato's Andover recital.

- - ~Barnett, Bela BostormengiNag There is no charge for admission.

F~RIDAY, SEPT. 30 9:45am Kme Chanel Mas

:1 6:~~~~~~~~45 Kemper Chapel Shabbat Ser- celebrated by-k'ather GrossService of Worship led by the Rev.

SATURDAY, OCT. 1' ZeeAngela Loreuzs exhibition Sleep Peaceflly, be~ng sown at the Adison. Ph~to/6u45somo6:45 o 3ie. PenPenny pOpera MMusicattbothhservcescby by rol

AnglaLoen'sexibtinSlepPeceulynow ben hwtteAdio.P~1/hlSn GW Hall - ~ . Skelton, organ, and Ja8:30 Cabaret featuring guest pianist Clendenning, violin

0 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I.D.'s required '7:15pm Kemper Chapel Mass

Classes Zn Sadaisin-iVow~ve .SUNDAY OCT.'2 celebrated by Father Groiss

By SUSAN KWOCK Meryl Streep but actually acts as tryouts ...(1what a ist!). I just fro~eand EDWARD YIM well'as, uh, Brooke- Shields. That's couldn't remember my... ____

dura cs 'esttosly ow onaudcitT eriw snhesimaw -eentatn-ah ad.-N th ng see ed to coeom plim entBaic ll,,udiio sere an.n- NO a com leenaear)itTeiudiio er sadaOid,,c- - ----K. -- ''gci

hold out against someone who tells Fidelio try-outs thinking it was Eight out of my, mouth.you t dazzle him. - n One. Have, you ever tried to belt "We're READY."

(Right! Like blow his mind, eh?) out "when I'm Sixty-Four" with a I wasn't.Personally, we think auditioners group singing some classical stuff Mouth agape, mind blank, mn)

must take classes in sadism. (Buck? Book? Oh, BACH) and all of hand started to shakes like 8.3 onTake them?- No, they teach them! a sudden, the room gets really quiet, the Richter scale'. Some smart

What could be more cruel than ~like a- morgue ... and I MEAN mouth said,"Relax..you're doing,making someone try,6ut beforegyu -orgue I could have died!-(No pun great so far..." who's 'breathtaking and then intended.)I Ha.Ha.Ha.-displays her brilliance, while we sit "-Ohhhhhhh, 'God ... my audition's "You can start now ... Really, it's,-'there- with our mounths hanging starting! What' am I doing here? O.K... we don't bite."open? Or making a guy sing so high Why am I going through with this? I "Yet," another comedian finished'that he thinks he's going to turn into., can't remember m lines!!! I must for him. ~-

be ~ ~ weeb no bin ct-e Then again, think of the agony -able to remember two lines! What @4&7-audition. (Some of you

-auditioners must go through listen- the heck do I say? The sa me thin haiavette voauaisorri-~)~ 0 -

ing o the singer who thinks he's happened at Fidelio, Cantata, azz giatons - than mine, 'so feeI~freePavarotti - but rally sounds like -a- Band,t hamber Music, the Parent's to use whichever words. you want.),._squeaky wheel on a rusty wagon; Or Weekend play, the Drama Lab play All we cn-say is, LET'S NOT -

the actress who thinks she'silhe next iin- One and orchestra SCREW IT UP THIS TIME, *EH?

Spi tting the fairwa0111alowing a sudden-death putt on the 18th gr0lM~1find Pepsi

People smack in themof of the4 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~ excitement And when thieuover they

T11"A T.. ',e V th e1Wn rou nd. un pentv of cr-e-ol (A la m

Page 8: In Their~~~~Andover Experlenbcespdf.phillipian.net/1983/09301983.pdf · VOL. CV No. 2 - ,-PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASSACHUiSmrS SEPTEMBER 30, 83 Uppers El~~ect Flte Lew is- and,

PAGE EIGHT - iunic i'it~~~It h';i IL1 I-ANSEPTEMBER 30, 1983. -

Imported Vr-Native-Blooming

Greenn t7rn- - ~~~~~~andDif VILLAGE _d U PL tNCIOSe:IINES

Plants (fEtTl.10 G

20 Post offid~`Av6.,Andover. Mo.

N - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~475,2178-T-SHIRTS

* CANVAS BAGS- --- --- S H O ? _~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~PrlntobleaF-

77 Main St., Andover, MA --j~~ akPad

475-4821 WHode - ~~~~~~~Bathrobes

______ .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Avaijable inAssorted Colors ExoiOt aturda

L~~~Ii)[UI[L~~~~~~~~T JASCN - 's~~~~Of Rue 21 c-r Of 'J 686i7161 683.7143

And'~~Sw. (ra 00 ~~Phinney's T.V.

Tanning Salon, ~~~~~~~~~~~~29 Barnard St.Tanning Salon ~~~~~~~~~ARTIST SUPPLIES Andover, Mass.

________ ________ Two dollars-off ~~~~~89 NORTH MAIN STREET 475 - 175Wish cut-dry with PA I.D. NVEA080

475-9787Rerd25 Barnar'd Street, Ahndover, Mass. - Cassettes - Blanks& P~re-recorded_.

-- - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Audio AccessoriesAuthorized, Music Books

Dtp~~OT HOUSE.Ata Guitar Strings

-. ~~~,' of P~~IZZA 4743

- A~~~~~~~~~~~~dOVER ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~GOU NWE DELIVERI~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~NIIDA TAE

* Doran's Andover T axi OJ

"Serving' Oreater Lawrence".

* Ho urs Daily 7 a:m - 10 pm. Tel.-470-:3383

- ~~~~~RATES: Others by Appt.

Within Andover $ 3.;5 0

To Cinema $4.50To or From Logan or Boston $25.00 i ol- ahta

- - Other Areas $1.00 Per Mile ~~~~~~~~~~~suggests they'know the dif-

ference between a silent butler

Maximum 4 Persons ada~u batr

Make Early Reservations for Htollida Transportation.ay ~~~~~~~~~~~veneer anid Verrmeer',~ ,

seers'and Sears: Baggies and

aguttsKing Kong

* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~and King Lear:

u v. ies acv .,~~~~~~~~~~~hos- prtwar-Ace~sre