8
VOL 12 .1' PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASSACHUSETTS MAY 5, 178 I 49 1~~~~4! EisPoest 0 ricStocks By GEORGE CA~TY Nearly 200 students gathered last.' Friday in, a planned protest against that -school's ownership in companies involved in South Africa The deosrain which achieved national media attention, was headed by seniors Donna )ennis and Vladimir~ 41~~~~~~~~~~~~ Klim~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~enko, membrs of Exeter's Commit- tee for Corporate Responsibility which is onMo wivth Headmaster Theodore SzradSenior dma vice resldent Austeii mpoedof dreesfaculaydiences at Ploren elatSdynih.photo/Hooper four students. The committee's dutyis to the ¶O -ftulunayniht A ~~~~~~~~~review Exeter's investments with the Trustee Investmenit committee.- nt~r Class~ 0fcrs ~ Anloun ced I I ar GLF 7 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~The idea for 'the protest first arose* 4 ~~~~~~~B BLL, SEED power, preparing people each year who faculty. Why don't we?" when Dennis and Klimehko looked at a Dfrectorof AlumIAfar Robert are going' to be' influencial simply Comiientiqig about his speech, Moy- report from te IvsosRsuc Hulburd'bas named seniors Tom Benton, because they are trained here. Ideally the nihan said, "I didn't offer any solutions; Responsibility Center (IRRC) and noticed Julin' Cari, Vi~de ull andJeffey chool would direct its students on how that was not the point. The idea was to three proxiies c~ming up for votes. Savi1t as Class Agents !for the class of to, deal with this power and how to live remind us, we who are caught up in the Klimenko commented, "The px from . 1978. beyond campus bounds, but it doesn't. Bicentennial daydream, not to forget or U.S. Steel called for a limit to expanding i H'ulburd ali6 announced that* in an The effects of this negligence can be seen deny the incredibly serious problems of operations in So~h Africa, and proxies er, started to publicize the event he extremely close senior class election, John right here every day, or do you choose to living at this school. The only way we can fo StdadOiofClifornia and protest, cleared with the Dean's office, Moynihan was elected class president. forge _h ae ftoepol woe wr hs rbesout, is if we are Mobil Oil concerned ending oil ship- began on the steps of the campus's main Austen Furse, the runne~-up, was elected expezience here have nt been good? - aware of them." ments to Rhodesia... We decided some- building at 10:20 ~Lm. the same time as vice-president ad' Mrtha Hill was Neptune, in~vay, Stephens, Goodman. Moynihan added, "Demands are put thing'dtastic, was in order' to dramatize a faculty mreeting. elected class secretary. The list is distressingly long. We could on the tudents' for them to behave like our point:" ' Although n estimated 185 students 1 Thie ass Agents i~re designed to get it together., We have the potential to adults, yet at the same tirge they are The pair ot for a demonstration participated n the demonstration, Klim- serve as liasons between PA and their mnke it work, the students and the traelIkebbe. nwt ulc aet ieShad enko projected that "there was an active class, in rder to raise money for the nucleus~of only about 60 students at the Alunini Fund. The fund, which amount-.. time." The protesters waved banners and ed, to. approxim'ately $650,000 this yearI:r'ifi-um-'r~ -m w r 7E 2 ~~n,, shouted chants like "People; united can eohstitutes seven percent.- of Andrs J JI J I3 I * I E L I i~ never b defeated", "Freedom yes, * 1 operating budget iii'addition to'contribu- ncs n apartheid, stock, and racism must go", ting to student scholars ips. **~ ,* necase and 'Damn the~racists, damn the profits, The Class Agents arq also responsible By AUL MEILMAN unerls'a caught violtn vao-js a-il ryil." for writing letters of solicitation every six The Cluster Deans have issued a '~'' offenses will be given an alternative of The primary concern of the demon-:' months to their classmates and keeping tentative statement on rules and rule reurin- t shoo xt fo prba-srtr a Eer' them 'informed of alumni affairs. enforcement for the Bicentennial celebra- :: tion, or patcptn in. a special than $450,000 ~korth of stock in J.P. ' ~~~Currently, the Agents are trying to tion in preparation frter'ia '" three-to-five day long work duty follow- Morgan Guaranty and Trust tind Manu-' collect enough funds 'for special senior decision expected to, be released next/ ing commencement facturer Hanov'es Bank, t&,o 6 class gift in recognition 1 of the Bicenten- week. j \~'~~ Richards cormrented, "The work 'which have loanedlmnydretyt h nial. Last year's graduating class donated The prlmnrieport h~as been met '-' duty option will gv~ students a chance to South African g6rnment fundsifor ew funitu~ in'the Uder- thus far with'ltl opposition, having ' get their nsm u of the way so He added that txeter has "never voted funds ~ fornew furnitue inpthisUder-tlittl wood Room.. been approvedunim sl by the CRLthydntav orabute unanimously I' they don't hve to worry aout them neit against manageiient recommendations' ~ Chfss Agent "$enton' coinniented, tw6 wee~ ' jaJ1. As a secondary benefit, it will lso nonrproxysstatementsiinmmorallyiinvolve "th ken~einiF~ ybg and I'd The popotals state that school-rules serve to speed the cleanup operatin. issues." like t sufitwt ,nyobibuk. duig te clebrato will remain ' nAbbott CRL; representative. Leslie At ' Chang add d "We -'e these a the unchanged with the exception of the Swendsrud said 4he: felt the work duty. erte izldosmefth I i7 hard-core demonstrators went t the meat-and-potato psitibns." ' following provisions: ' option might prove unfair to some Exeter Inn, where they knew a J.P. Mor- Com~menting on his appointment s * Dorm' heqk-in times will be moved students: "In some cases it will create gnexctewa meigwth n head aent Sa vit said, "Although I fifid to I p. Wednesday and Thursday, conflicts with summer plans. Students Eee uiescas fe h ls it diutto as m alclasmts1:bpm dy'n :0a.m. on .1 ho ivefar away will be unable to take dirtcu as y,.o lsmts 1:0pm rdyad23 ended, the demohstrators lined up at the and friends\~ for oney especially 'when Saturday.; advantage of the, special work duty. A Innseisni~"esaloecm. most of us are nt in the position to give * House counselors, or in rare" student from Texas, who already has The executive then invited the group's money from our o~Yn wallets, I feel that instances designated seniors, should travel arrangements, will be forced to leaders toI breakfast the next day to contributing to thej ahinni fund is much perform personal check-ins each night ,- come back to school next year on'dsustepblm more worthwhile than wasting five and will have authorit to grant special "', ' probation. Other students who have dsustepolm dollars a week at Vendo Alley or on excuses to students engaged in late night' committed the same offense will be able frAt thtorakfsh rep resentatit ff vey doughnuts. But, l~elievA me, I'm' very, work for the celebration.. to get off with work duty, which is'bd wt hi inicryadsimyes ~excited about this' osition." * Visitors will be required to vacate I generally a preferable punishment." v rmMrairpotdy"u f evry p~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~7 I cherish sincerit~ bv l, n ejs As Class Secret ry,,Hill is responsible all dorms by 11 p.m. No outsiders, " -~- Richards stresse4 that the report didn't show it in aboealnd hergjus Bulleting ls o throge Andoverinldg relatives will be allowed to stay How many hours will they get? which is currently in pi is not poiy" 'dfnngMras forlwting class .oesfo the inluig lstr Deans' pooa lo-emnn."tsol pogrint,"h oiy'Klimenl~o said. ,i orepnances with overnight in student dorms. Chairperson The prpsallouemaetsttsenyarogh'rft"h The main crJiticisms of the demon- fellow cassm~ates. ' of the Clustef Deans, John Richards, calls for changes' in the discipline said, '"Some, of the rules will undergo stttrs are trying to brinF back the Each year the' clais Piresident is however, said that after discussion with procedure durifig the celebration week, changes before' they are finalize4." 1960's; that a carnival atmosphere sur- expected to address the senior-faculty house counselors, the Clu'ster Deans Richards explained, "There is no way the In addition to revisin' the discipline rone.te''tst ad tht he- dinnot. At this year's dinner, held ast decided to' drop tsrle. schodl can accommodate the .i normal system for the Bicentennial, the Cluster students were 'ski'ng too much from Sunijay President Moynihan said: Students s wn irresponsibility in discipline pocess during the Bicenten- Deans also plan to publish guidelines Exeter to divest itself tof all its stock in "For 200 years now, Andover has their celebratio hoe will be required nial,. People lare goin~g to be too' busy. covering areas falling outside the formal compne e ingi ot fia been providing perhaps the best acade- to' leave campps. Disciplihe cmnmittee meetings will only rules. Frederick Peterson, who will write accounting for ore than' $3 million of mic opportunities' for any boarding * Seniors violating major rules will be be called in cases involving dismissal, the initial recommendations for the',e it's endowment scniooi in the c untry. s far as courses punished by' loss 'or delay of their suspension, or loss of diploma. All other statemepts, commented: "The Iguideliiies Klimenko denied that the demaiids and resouyces arei concerned, we are diplomas. Those receiving delayed di- cases will be decided between the for the Bicentennial will encompass such *eretoget ic h nyseii -' ~ste'ps b d our associate schools. But plomas will be excluded from the student's house counselor and his cluster tbings as dress, attendance, and meal- 'demand was that! Exeter, sell its stock in Andover ss the' worlds Andover~ and rem~aining events of the celebration dean." times., Iowever nothing specific in these M P. Mo~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~rga Guarantee and Trust and we have tou ~ t a eat of greater including commencement. Under the provisions of the report, regards has yet been decided." Manufacturer's Hanover, but admitted to I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~the other two charges. t w a - I '~~~~~~ i r r~~~ i f ~ ~ ~ L e a d e r ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ P A / ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ f g' g ,~~~~~ p "~k in d o f p ro u d o f th k id s. I'm p le a se d A'4,onime opraiRiilh twer-etoadcntgius" t A pisd eresctdonhs nAaua1968 whl tilIcmie-hig n A'

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Page 1: VOL 12 .1' PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, …pdf.phillipian.net/1978/05051978.pdf · which is currently in pi is not poiy" ... Daniel ~~anm hoto~ "ldhfdGa National Ad, Managet i~erdte"cnsfo

VOL 12 .1' PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASSACHUSETTS MAY 5, 178 I

49 1~~~~4! EisPoest0 ricStocks

By GEORGE CA~TYNearly 200 students gathered last.'

Friday in, a planned protest against that-school's ownership in companies involvedin South Africa

The deosrain which achievednational media attention, was headed byseniors Donna )ennis and Vladimir~ 41~~~~~~~~~~~~ Klim~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~enko, membrs of Exeter's Commit-tee for Corporate Responsibility which isonMo wivth Headmaster Theodore SzradSenior dma vice resldent Austeii mpoedof dreesfaculaydiences atPloren elatSdynih.photo/Hooper four students. The committee's dutyis to

the ¶O -ftulunayniht

A ~~~~~~~~~review Exeter's investments with theTrustee Investmenit committee.-nt~r Class~ 0fcrs ~ Anloun cedI I ar GLF 7 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~The idea for 'the protest first arose*

4 ~~~~~~~B BLL, SEED power, preparing people each year who faculty. Why don't we?" when Dennis and Klimehko looked at aDfrectorof AlumIAfar Robert are going' to be' influencial simply Comiientiqig about his speech, Moy- report from te IvsosRsucHulburd'bas named seniors Tom Benton, because they are trained here. Ideally the nihan said, "I didn't offer any solutions; Responsibility Center (IRRC) and noticedJulin' Cari, Vi~de ull andJeffey chool would direct its students on how that was not the point. The idea was to three proxiies c~ming up for votes.Savi1t as Class Agents !for the class of to, deal with this power and how to live remind us, we who are caught up in the Klimenko commented, "The px from .1978. beyond campus bounds, but it doesn't. Bicentennial daydream, not to forget or U.S. Steel called for a limit to expanding iH'ulburd ali6 announced that* in an The effects of this negligence can be seen deny the incredibly serious problems of operations in So~h Africa, and proxies er, started to publicize the event heextremely close senior class election, John right here every day, or do you choose to living at this school. The only way we can fo StdadOiofClifornia and protest, cleared with the Dean's office,Moynihan was elected class president. forge _h ae ftoepol woe wr hs rbesout, is if we are Mobil Oil concerned ending oil ship- began on the steps of the campus's mainAusten Furse, the runne~-up, was elected expezience here have nt been good? - aware of them." ments to Rhodesia... We decided some- building at 10:20 ~Lm. the same time asvice-president ad' Mrtha Hill was Neptune, in~vay, Stephens, Goodman. Moynihan added, "Demands are put thing'dtastic, was in order' to dramatize a faculty mreeting.elected class secretary. The list is distressingly long. We could on the tudents' for them to behave like our point:" ' Although n estimated 185 students 1Thie ass Agents i~re designed to get it together., We have the potential to adults, yet at the same tirge they are The pair ot for a demonstration participated n the demonstration, Klim-serve as liasons between PA and their mnke it work, the students and the traelIkebbe. nwt ulc aet ieShad enko projected that "there was an activeclass, in rder to raise money for the nucleus~of only about 60 students at theAlunini Fund. The fund, which amount-.. time." The protesters waved banners anded, to. approxim'ately $650,000 this yearI:r'ifi-um-'r~ -m w r 7E 2 ~~n,, shouted chants like "People; united caneohstitutes seven percent.- of Andrs J JI J I3 I * I E L I i~ never b defeated", "Freedom yes,* 1 operating budget iii'addition to'contribu- ncs n apartheid, stock, and racism must go",ting to student scholars ips.

**~ ,* necase and 'Damn the~racists, damn the profits,The Class Agents arq also responsible By AUL MEILMAN unerls'a caught violtn vao-js a-il ryil."for writing letters of solicitation every six The Cluster Deans have issued a '~'' offenses will be given an alternative of The primary concern of the demon-:'months to their classmates and keeping tentative statement on rules and rule reurin- t shoo xt fo prba-srtr a Eer' them 'informed of alumni affairs. enforcement for the Bicentennial celebra- :: tion, or patcptn in. a special than $450,000 ~korth of stock in J.P.

' ~~~Currently, the Agents are trying to tion in preparation frter'ia '" three-to-five day long work duty follow- Morgan Guaranty and Trust tind Manu-'collect enough funds 'for special senior decision expected to, be released next/ ing commencement facturer Hanov'es Bank, t&,o 6class gift in recognition 1of the Bicenten- week. j \~'~~ Richards cormrented, "The work 'which have loanedlmnydretyt hnial. Last year's graduating class donated The prlmnrieport h~as been met '-' duty option will gv~ students a chance to South African g6rnmentfundsifor ew funitu~ in'the Uder- thus far with'ltl opposition, having ' get their nsm u of the way so He added that txeter has "never votedfunds ~ fornew furnitue inpthisUder-tlittl

wood Room.. been approvedunim sl by the CRLthydntav orabuteunanimously I' they don't hve to worry aout them neit against manageiient recommendations'~ Chfss Agent "$enton' coinniented, tw6 wee~ ' jaJ1. As a secondary benefit, it will lso nonrproxysstatementsiinmmorallyiinvolve"th ken~einiF~ ybg and I'd The popotals state that school-rules serve to speed the cleanup operatin. issues."like t sufitwt ,nyobibuk. duig te clebrato will remain ' nAbbott CRL; representative. Leslie At 'Chang add d "We -'e these a the unchanged with the exception of the Swendsrud said 4he: felt the work duty. erte izldosmefthI i7 hard-core demonstrators went t themeat-and-potato psitibns." ' following provisions: ' option might prove unfair to some Exeter Inn, where they knew a J.P. Mor-Com~menting on his appointment s * Dorm' heqk-in times will be moved students: "In some cases it will create gnexctewa meigwth nhead aent Sa vit said, "Although I fifid to I p. Wednesday and Thursday, conflicts with summer plans. Students Eee uiescas fe h lsit diutto as m alclasmts1:bpm dy'n :0a.m. on .1 ho ivefar away will be unable to takedirtcu as y,.o lsmts 1:0pm rdyad23 ended, the demohstrators lined up at theand friends\~ for oney especially 'when Saturday.; advantage of the, special work duty. A Innseisni~"esaloecm.most of us are nt in the position to give * House counselors, or in rare" student from Texas, who already has The executive then invited the group'smoney from our o~Yn wallets, I feel that instances designated seniors, should travel arrangements, will be forced to leaders toI breakfast the next day tocontributing to thej ahinni fund is much perform personal check-ins each night ,- come back to school next year on'dsustepblmmore worthwhile than wasting five and will have authorit to grant special "', ' probation. Other students who have dsustepolmdollars a week at Vendo Alley or on excuses to students engaged in late night' committed the same offense will be able frAt thtorakfsh rep resentatit ff veydoughnuts. But, l~elievA me, I'm' very, work for the celebration.. to get off with work duty, which is'bd wt hi inicryadsimyes~excited about this' osition." * Visitors will be required to vacate I generally a preferable punishment." v rmMrairpotdy"u f evryp~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~7 I cherish sincerit~ bv l, n ejsAs Class Secret ry,,Hill is responsible all dorms by 11 p.m. No outsiders, " -~- Richards stresse4 that the report didn't show it in aboealnd hergjusBulleting ls o throge Andoverinldg relatives will be allowed to stay How many hours will they get? which is currently in pi is not poiy" 'dfnngMrasforlwting class .oesfo the inluig lstr Deans' pooa lo-emnn."tsol pogrint,"h oiy'Klimenl~o said. ,iorepnances with overnight in student dorms. Chairperson The prpsallouemaetsttsenyarogh'rft"h The main crJiticisms of the demon-fellow cassm~ates. ' of the Clustef Deans, John Richards, calls for changes' in the discipline said, '"Some, of the rules will undergo stttrs are trying to brinF back theEach year the' clais Piresident is however, said that after discussion with procedure durifig the celebration week, changes before' they are finalize4." 1960's; that a carnival atmosphere sur-expected to address the senior-faculty house counselors, the Clu'ster Deans Richards explained, "There is no way the In addition to revisin' the discipline rone.te''tst ad tht he-dinnot. At this year's dinner, held ast decided to' drop tsrle. schodl can accommodate the .i normal system for the Bicentennial, the Cluster students were 'ski'ng too much fromSunijay President Moynihan said: Students s wn irresponsibility in discipline pocess during the Bicenten- Deans also plan to publish guidelines Exeter to divest itself tof all its stock in"For 200 years now, Andover has their celebratio hoe will be required nial,. People lare goin~g to be too' busy. covering areas falling outside the formal compne e ingi ot fiabeen providing perhaps the best acade- to' leave campps. Disciplihe cmnmittee meetings will only rules. Frederick Peterson, who will write accounting for ore than' $3 million ofmic opportunities' for any boarding * Seniors violating major rules will be be called in cases involving dismissal, the initial recommendations for the',e it's endowmentscniooi in the c untry. s far as courses punished by' loss 'or delay of their suspension, or loss of diploma. All other statemepts, commented: "The Iguideliiies Klimenko denied that the demaiidsand resouyces arei concerned, we are diplomas. Those receiving delayed di- cases will be decided between the for the Bicentennial will encompass such *eretoget ic h nyseii

- ' ~ste'ps b d our associate schools. But plomas will be excluded from the student's house counselor and his cluster tbings as dress, attendance, and meal- 'demand was that! Exeter, sell its stock inAndover ss the' worlds Andover~ and rem~aining events of the celebration dean." times., Iowever nothing specific in these MP. Mo~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~rgan Guarantee and Trust andwe have tou ~ t a eat of greater including commencement. Under the provisions of the report, regards has yet been decided." Manufacturer's Hanover, but admitted toI ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~the other two charges.

t w a - I '~~~~~~ i r r~~~ i f ~ ~ ~ L e a d e r ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ P A / ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ f g ' g ,~~~~~ p "~k in d o f p ro u d o f th k id s. I'm p le a se d

A'4,onime opraiRiilh twer-etoadcntgius" t A pisd eresctdonhs nAaua1968 whl tilIcmie-hig n

A'

Page 2: VOL 12 .1' PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, …pdf.phillipian.net/1978/05051978.pdf · which is currently in pi is not poiy" ... Daniel ~~anm hoto~ "ldhfdGa National Ad, Managet i~erdte"cnsfo

PAGE TW? h HL IINMY17

Bicente nialI ScenesThM PHILLIPIAN ,, r'v isub g

7 Dz~ ~ ~ ~~PrGv Distur 't

Editor in.ChkefTOth Editor. 4ny's mai broughtthb Apri 7th iss of theif, under rule 8, these cees" reflc studn

___ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~H s wit oblh te Aprl 7jci drsaxio~lEIATUFRBS CIoSITon o SPOR[fS ADVERTISMN gts sounaing e In ofthe alumni of 1111ps ademy, I canI chaI .UradBuktia wthit nbl sunin stateen of vil nesadwhy t~Bicentnnal Fund

-~~ - Editor Magln~Edito ddIhbloo:2 A ~Muatier pa iyg rgardigtherle uder whcDi:'prts Eive(#hich imarily s alumni support) isEdiorsg Mnaers niniig ehid cheuAra pointed out in your~Rokert. noar Kenneth Oaah 'OfEior v Ig aaes ed the saedtra page.i bo In ninigbeidmnedlDRUM 7=08 Kdldls qo4 theArtameo page inabreindoun~ itorial "Gym Caution."Daniel ~~anm hoto~ "ldhfdGa National Ad, Managet i~erdte"cnsfo h eert "Ti J av een intervii i poecsftPA fo rJa~~aes Exeuivsior hoortiyies ~fdrawings is In consummate bad asfe. It 18 'er.a nAuni ersnalein myExecutive itt hrI oe dadMi~itotosrtUItO viola -niost of the precepts just set o i the forhqlarea, and ive been callef upon

George Canty i~~~~~~m, Buies Mnae "Pipan %licy." It violAtes rule "1 it aGeorge t~anty Jocie Eiors CntbtfSM R~ De ~ k1Moiinaesadru many imes to help in various fnd raising effortsAssociate Edtors hym~, pinionated, landerous ad, licious daringi these years as wellJ rsv d rawi s suchAssm.1ste. F-dtors ~~~l~rm Crclaio Mnges eies It xlolates rule 2 as no respiect for lumn a the lead m to e ethat' my efforts (in

'(fo wom espect s due) is shown i n of the ¶yar atlas)hy hrIgscenes." It violates rule 7 n 'ts elitre y, but', imsdrte. 1ws

particularly the' statement "one vhch ebases rPkerCBnzf

omitted." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Class of '38

Arbitrary ' 4 ~~~~~~~~~ritictsni thi Silution

'The system's Cuttitig Policy ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~T the fdtromheClass by PAsngiec nisrcigoni It' a good thing to voice criticism o th is' "'how ito deal with this po et atmiraculously

PhlisAcad~xny peetylcsacerydfndpolicy frdealing with the cutting of casse&. hod4. It's good to shake up this school, to "clear Itss sml eau&wae mdhr.

robem dyseals eolxuonary stage has ae many 'grievances among the" student body. Te the cObwebs out," and to suggest (or demand) Moynihail said that Fi~ank Goodman and Tommidle reals not only with class cuts, but also with athletic commitments, all schopl'me~tings, changes n "tident andi faculty attitudes.' At last, Hanway were victims .of he school's nlgn.and equred"Celebrations." Sunday nighj's senior-faculty 4nner,, Senior Am I so naive s to think that they had repeatedly- ~~~~The preet senrequires faculty to.'report un'xcused abscuices twice a term. Diflfere 'ndas presmdex~t John Moynihan was merely able to broken the school's majorrules ofwhich they were

each ~~~yth em rvds httestdn i rec r~'nw efrmn uihent to 1;iwhne vaguely about the scho~l's n e in continually reminded and of whidh they were fullyeac cluereche ngi "studentsatthestdeonmihhowcivtony tre rwero. nsh len ttMor ,more weeks restriction as a result of "excessive" cutting. ' suet n o o6lwith powe. wr,a ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~%oIed nosltost this "ne igence"'~~~~~ ~Although rigid system with strict guidelines is undesirable, nmore regulations are necessary to I fee osltost

establish' a consistent schoolwide system. A policy in which Andover permits 10 unexcused Lrb~ia hs col n aldt exmnetis'cerely,abscence~ per term from classes and sports would be the best solution. In order to 'orevent iandeilItrmasucerin 1 ymdwhtPaul Hei&*nn '78excessive cutting in any one area the student should be prohibitted from taking more than five ofNss 10 cuA in u~yoeclass~ or in sports. If a student exceeds the limit of ten abscences, his 'Fluster __

culd thnmyeicpms action. h1twsR ~ IIFiriendsijhip v~or, een wt~'the besto lnig hs the cutting of classes sometimes becomes a necessity. a t

Sich sem l ninfcnt appointments as cluster softball are often more difficult to cut with-' ~ ~ ipunit ancss nthat after two cuts one must do work duty. '

The adejcstutre of PA create a situation where occasional abscences becoqles by:cessay Th'suents are'unaware of when they hve exceeded the limit that warrantsrn . ¶i s Ad e9dsciplinr atn.Unless the school en'kets a new system, the students will remain overworked I 'By RANDY DAY

and dininformed. '9 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~An unspoken optimism exist t dvra' cue If' people really want to form friendshios;* 'I ' - V' ., " ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~feeling that somehow Andover combi the best (and who wants to go ~riendless?) they will, find the

- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ingredients in the proper porportion to roduce a time.1 So what is it that inhibits riendlship athealthy, intelligent and happy ndividual. I call it- Ando,rr? I place the blame o two general

r -,'', - .' ' ~~~~~~~~not wtotatuh fcycs te scapegoats, the liin cnditions at PA and the- .. ,*.*.., I''- '~~~~' ' '" 'a~~l-.%...~~ticaii boy' a~tI i.6ie.(i' th' g Id PA students theem~rs,;~

'I '.' " '''"''~~~~~~~~~ ' ' ' ' ~~~an9 s~r~'fsi vnrsriga huan bing" One of -Andover's uiany unique%, problems' 9 " ' " . - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~and ifter a fw years it will give y u a tal that of trying to design a living environment for its

hand!some allstar athlete with, lonors ades; and stude~its. Andover is not like thc old'hometown,C u cu P e y leaderiship in drama and 'social functions. high where you can hop'- Ii the car and meet up""~~~ Suspq'cting Exeter of nerds and Northfield-Mt. with your fiends, anywhere and anytme. Nor is

I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Hermaon of hedonistic socialites, 'Ando feels it Andover a college, where no one gives a damn asI' I ' ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~folloils the happy medium. a on s yrou pay your tuition, don't set fres, nd

I ' ' ~~find it 'hypocritikal. I think the r~cent election of 'students 'dream, Andover can never have a livingTetime Is 10:20, .John IMoynihan, definitely not an 'all-LAmnerican environment like a collegp. PA'caters to a different

Better oeiler expla, 6oy.~o the pst of Senior 'class president s evidence~ clientlele of a younger age. Juniors are incapable ofHow'11 you explain, J ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~that 4ther Seniors feel likewise. handiing clege feedom, and many parents

Not coming to class? 'The attitude is hypocritical becaiuse while would hesitate to send their children into such

You wake and prepare, I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~feelin that it prdduces individuals with normal Satan-tmtn lbryan tional social' values, Andover keeps its h tdnst~evslr lorsnil oTo meet the dy's light, 'S std si nextremely irrational playp~en. Be iit many' of the 'friendship inffibitors at Andover. I

You notice while leaving, bytprIas - thre 'feet on the flo&r - froiji thinkiwe all tend to be, aittle self-centered and '

Your roommate i white. ' ,sxt'egnosn~~king n your rn whn ignorant, of the value in erent in a friendship. I'

* Who'd ev~~~~r' thought, ' I persons other than your roomates are present. I came yorIrooratestoe Andover I camett learn, andlarn I took t ukputhehetaskThis could happen to mp, I ano thoghortistfoo inolwta bit wasermerinn 'Bthe one myA Black ghetto hustler' 'rmember' achingApmy Strdma. ad soerintomyhseolanWho wants to be free ' ' 9 female on a cold April Saturday. I n~~~~~~~~ade some the scholarlyhol secretsre of the t worldr andndtoobe

Who wants to be free. ' ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~comilent about how ridiculous the cen was. The successful acdmclyT cee up my vaus '

0 nt still holds. failed! to recognize the wisdom and joy possible inRues and~ yegulatidns constrain my desire ' 'silhls I faldtIcdmcly cee aus I. IBrusigtolas hrIhodbe myfie t vAin Ulin talked about cultivating fr1endship? a friendship. Perhaps we should all examine ourq at PA in ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~his Philhipian article last week, cling priorities. and reasses the Ivalue we place on our

"Hello," and a smile is part of ny mask, ' 4 " ' ~~~~Andoiler "a cold ND IMPERSONAL CITADEL friends, '' "TO MIANY 'WHO ATTEN., He fet htai I'Isud i&a~nor yearning for a free

In additiop, do whatever they as.'Iorla waa arrtotem. evthes, i op1 heexcessive Wokodwsamajor bar ote leash, I a.Nvrhes oe hfrainof ma~4ny potential friendships admi IsrtogieThey think I've been broken, the~ think that, they've won, 'I fonIaIogne witho the problem;, ut not with the soepthuh t el ieaI laugh when I think what a grehM job I'ye done! "IT~

I' ' ' ' ~~~~~~~~~Dter Wadsworth t ex cu rnWhen transcending from this w~~~~~~~rld to theTe nextcurStii4 t e m

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Evening tudy ours, To Be Or Not To BeBy JON DEE closely' monitored class in terms of study habits,

always subject to regulated study hours. JuniorFormal study hours are In effect drn Michael Marrus explained, "Sometimes I'm

~c~~ln~eir dais perids and aftr 8 P ~_' studying by 7:00, sometimes not until 830. It's allexctpt Saurdays and o Frddays wbi nM]ot 4,very vague - if your house counselor sees youfollowed by Saturdy clae ... unlesa ISpecial , watching TV or something, he'll ask you if you'yeprmission s granted, underelasmen should be In oealyu oeorbtohrta ht

their dormitory rooms studying ... or In thei library they'e alt really hoeforbud."thnthtafter 8 p. Sizer, who says that with study hours as with

This excierpt from the Blue Book explains somn ther things at PA, "We try and)find thePhillips' Academy's policy on formal stud, hours, idewycmlt]spot h rsn

Whether or not these~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~hours ~~~~~~ctualmidllwa",comleelysupors heoreen~~Whether dr not these hours a~~~~~ctually exist In more ~~~system. Some teachers, however, are morethan theory is a question which studeiits and concerned with the study habits of their students,

faculty alike find deb~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~table. ~~~~~such as Classics Instructor Karl Kmpe, whoAlthough acknowledging that the Bluel Book' Strethsud-absofomf-hipuls

guidelines are not stricl upheld, Headmaster .._____ shocking". Richards favor a "modest tightening- Theodore Sizer defends the presei~~~~~~~t system, "The up of the enforcement of theorement policy.olcWe've'ebeenna

issue is, what's the best education? If thtre were little casual up to, this point Sayinig that allsome kind of formnalized required study time some udrlsmnms ei hi om'b :0istudenits might be better off. But others, who as ar we we should go." thnoinhate

knwhwto budget their time well, would be Richadsnowevrto thehindered by 'such a system." rnhouse counselors should be obligated o keep a

Chairperson of. the Cluster Deans John , constant watch over his students. "h4 should allRichards stresses that, "There are no study hours - - b.wreo tesudns Trges o re, bu

as far s I'm oncerne." 'Bu unlikeSizer, So Studet feel tie81 m td or xswhereas others usIgnore t. ht/men bawrofhesuns'pgesfcusbtRshrd as th ret'ytm c haend. u ngied "Wze,"' they can only go so far in making sure that theRcas waf th ersnlyse hngd W student i studyinig." Sizer agreed, saying that,

are jut a litle to loos. We ned to emind d erve the freedom of being able to study when he will be "very interested" in faculty reaction 'to "utbcueasueti itn thsds iith y like." . ~ ~~~~~~~~~~ these'pirop6sals Thestbehave abeenen turstednovters tos theeverybody just what the rules are." He added that ane"l.Te.hv ee undo~rt h openl Math book in front of him doen'

although he system9f learnng to budet on~'sRichards agrees that, "Most seniors can handle Curriculum Committee, which will study them and ansarl menh'suyn Thre s n ea~me oftn was asuccess "some tudentsmight ths responsibility. I favor the idea that seniorsl prepare a rep'prt on their feasibility,.a o cl'

suffer too much while learning." - .haemore privileges than underclassmen." Botb Students iat An4pver generally pay little or noItidficlto eernehescss fRihrsattributes the occasional disregard aIf fee that the Pub has had little or no effect on' attention to the regulations on study hours. Asdoone ~stud' hor oiy- lhuh ti o

studens sho stud hour in pat 'tothe ause o sehirs' studyj habits, 'and is "responsibly upper put it, ','My study hours basically depend on Advr~ yhusplc.Atog ti o'the "special permission" clause in the Blue Book -' h ndled." 'how uhwr I have that night. The Be cerhterhefetofhepsntsdyoustatement. He nted, "The fact that' there are so T he issue of the effectiveness of study hours i Book's study hours are neither re-ally necessary nor sytmipotvengave or-ncsqutal

I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~what is clear is the administration's lack ofamany exracurrcular ctivites andclasse which thir present form was reopened recently when thf are they upheld' 4 '00 .,fn re ot ofthe aculy Stdy~ om~iteei One senior noted thattesuyhusae" 'meet at night has 'spawned the idea that 8 p . r r ~teFclySuyCm~tea h td or areI"A adeintv oini.ar s a meae iaor noI ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~ ad tdnswa icse tTe oke ' far as~ enforcing the' is concerned. could' atoRcad&aosmdrt cin n~sn't really a serious hour. This *ofteni results in D sdanae 1ISuet a icse tTe. Jea Sykes' cmmittee, favors relatively major action.

students starting their homework late. and staying day's faculty meeting. The Committee made two~ start my wor~ at midnight if I wanted, but overup late." ~~~~~~~~a ecommendations concerning study 'ors my career hete I've learned better than tiat" Nor The faculty mfust establish a policy that is not onlyup late." ' hours~~~~~~~ .. .iorsound in theory u lopasbei rcieSizerin reponse comtunted,"The otion that all juniors be enrolled in a secial course*o~ are th duors, usually considered to be 'the ms yu lopasbei rcie

that everyone should study, only at night doesn't study, to include regulated supervised study hours-'' '

'. hold." Many students,, he feels, study btter in the and two, that all new lowers, uppers, and senior morning or the afternootn, which is why the rule 'be subject to similar study programuni'te about class period stiq4y hours is so important. - c~n demonstrate, competence and sufce

Although Sizer and Richards both feel that it Idiscipline. Chairman of the CommitteEwiis'imposible to drawia, specific line determining Sy'kes' rational for these proposals is that "th~which group of students is mature enough to be only group of students we can identify a~ trusted with unregulated study hours, they expe;ct uiliifornmly disadvantaged is the new student", and'' " '' "s """''

that the Senior is generally more able to handle 'that too often a new studen wh is uaccustome '

such a responsibility. "We are deliberately less t? the pace and discipline required at P e sintrusive on the lives of seniors," Sizer says, "nd swamped, withl work and' finds himself inwe think that after three or four years 6ire they situation he is unequipped to deal with. Sizer sy

K' Newivv "Af-LatK rP BoardlMore Than Just A Dised

BJr AVERiL POWERSt haethter.,e~lefr up~nada lcTeAo-Latino-Amnericati Society tecently where tudents could g to do, reseac onblacki'

eected the new board for the '78-'79 school year. history and literature. Hopefully the neiW boardtric Sheffield will replace Terry Robinson, w'II be able not only to fulfill its original objectiv~ e-, heading the new board as President. Deidra b t to further it and create a real cultural cente~. Gilliard was elected Vice-President, and Eunice Sheffield plans, "to let people know Athe cente'rMartinez, Craig Lewis, and Nigel Hubbard are the exists for other reasons." He does not wantnew Senior, Upper, and ower representatives Paody Hall to be imply a place for people t~'respectively, Steve Bowman was re-elected as head dnce, for he feels that the dances alone do' not ~,of social functions for the center lund Marian j stify the xisten~e of the society.

'Banner as Secretary.. Plans for next year include developinThe Af-[Lat-Amn Society has gained tremendous ' library, planning trips to, Boston, sponsoring filnis

I school-wide popularity from "Saturday Night like this year's "The Autiography of''Miss J eFever" atmosphere created every. weekend at' Pitman", atd arranging for' guest speakers t Peabody Hall. The discos sponsored by the society ' alid give lectures; Edwin Sykes and onathanrhave become extremely popular only just this year Stableford will continue to be the Af-Lat-Alhnand are cons'Idered by many to be the best of the ' advisors, lending faculty assistance. Shefid Eric heffild, psldent of Af-lat-Amn, Intends to expand the 'program at Peabody House. ht j'social functions. Although dances \ at the Center expressed hope that people would make mor of a '

have only received acclaim recently, the dances Commitment to'the society onc e the center was the Center was' becoming increasingly important improvemient, and-I hope it will continn'l"1have been part of the society's functions for 4sdmr fe.H ugse h osblt ht and agreed with Robinison that there should also Robinson stated, "Last year's cieif concernseveral years. ' h oiety will be open three days a week from be more' black' histoiy and literatu e courses was to try to get the whole student body involved."*

Originally the Center served as mor shnjs :0to 80 m nMna n rdyteman ofrda hlisAaey He feels that this was accomplished and echoeda place for a disco. It was also a ocation for a room at Peabody Hall would be used as a place Regarding his role as one of the advisors of the Stableford's view that the society will continue tovoluntary t4ring service and a place where for students to read magazines and literature' Af-Lat-Am 'Society, Stableford said, "The organi- get better by saying, "Eric Sheffield is verymembers could gather and study. The tutoring ~ pecially chosen for the society. On Wednesday zation is very responsible. Terry Robinson would qualified. He is a strong ~leader." Robinson alsoprogram, however, did not last very long because the center would be open for the re-instated check ideas with me., , personally, believe' in stated. "I feel that he administration is veryof a lack of attendance. Members found that often tutorial program.' letting students run their own organizations." 'concerned with minoujy students," something hethey had other activities or academic work to do. The' newly elec'ted board members of the Stableford said that h found the Af-LAt-Am 'was. not sure of befo~

Two yers ag, the ociet's orgin I objdctive, ociet re~ulize that what they hope to, achieve may Society very well run. " Terry took care of thingsprovidilig a place for new minority tudents to iot be feasible within a one year' time span as himslkT" Mr. Stableford sees his osition as ' Althhugh there are problems facing thecongregate in order to allow them chance to tue feel it is unrealistic because in the past, advisor to Af-Lat-Am, as a place which members Afro-Latino-American Society PA students canadjust to PA life, was not working. Tery Robinson tXfiat-1Amr has never been lie this", according to may~ turn to for suggestions. Sykes has also been look forward to seeing the Center thrive anddid what he could to rmedy te suation and ~ heffield, but "they all agree we should give 'it a assisting the center and makes sure lbe is available expand as the new board members take over from'succeeded by expandingThe society to ore school try." We (Terry Robinson and ) had the, same if needed. The advisors are most needed for where Robinson's hard working board left off.wide participation and encouraging n-members ideas, but he could not get the cooperation. We organizing excursions t Aostofi such as this year's. Hopefully 'students will find that in the very near,to -attend the Saturday night 'dances. 'both want'to see the center go school-wide. I think trip to the play, "For Colored Girls Who Have future there will be a rapidly developing black

This year he new' board plnIocotne erry did a 'great job. He did a lot of school-wide Considered Suicide when the Rainbow Was cultural and research center on campus. Membersdeveloping the uses of the Center. Shtffield stated hings. I want to do school-wide things, but also Enough." Stableford feels that, the school has have already begun to gather for meetings o startthdt he was, "not planning to ue t just as a icoiie utf 'the center." Sheffield felt that, beefited fiom Robinson's term as thIed the 'planning-'for next year and will continue o meej'socidl place."-Next year Sheffield wudlkto 4ith more and-more blacks coining into the school. Ar-aioAeia Scey for it "was an frequently. '' 'I

w d like to Afro-LatineaturmnrtieaFULLcLItE,

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0 r~~~~~~~~~I

-Ba eball, rr N as'hua~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'

By DUNCAN MacFARLANE blek wit'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

By DUNCAN MacFARLANE come bcwih two more, to finish 'theWednesday, May 3; Andover It Blue s ring. Garden ca ne in on a

finally happened. Andover basetall MacKe ~ie hit, while Rdr, alreadyfinally proved successful after four ng having fine day, scored his, third ruji.weeks of losing in eveiy way possible. ut A Field DayWednesday, Andover suffered' an iden ity Mea while Andover was !also havingcrisis, thinking it wa a good ball clut it its day :in the field. Garden~, who-'hasactually dealt a strong Nashua High an been making hsi laundry service misera-11-9 loss. ble all year trying to clean the stains- off

All jokes asde, however, PA's squad his uniform, finally made its effortsweht out Wednesday, played probably its' worthw~ile by making fant~stic divingbest game of the season an d it paid f catch which shou# be pictured on ain the form of Andover's first "W" in e Sports Ilustrated over. Highlightinj thepitched 8 and 3innings of solid ball In throw frp~m right field to thurd basemanhis first start of the year. T i Solomon t make the out. Nashua's finalperformance is the longest an Ando r atiempt at* a comeback started with apitcher has stayed on the mound, solitary n in the eighth,~and two more

,--~.~ Nashua's first time at bat seemed alI in the ninth. Only then did Pitcher .- ,'.

too fmiliar of PA baseball's previo IRoberge corne out) having five strikeouts jj 'play. Nashua scored five runs, coming iff in eight full innings of play.OlyatroeoulidenntInngddrivrDAEM R N eacon'two errors and a walk. Nashua's eni e '.yatr ou4,tennh un i eleeAEM RM e cinbatting order came to the plate in te ' "cr

first inning. Tim Reeder and DH Dan y "S l -- ~ n~Janis teamed up, to put Andover on e - S Psdorelipard with two runs during tie ,tBE~PALB~CSUR

bottom half of the frqt in acombinatic n yNC'SUR'which worked for 'the first time th s 'r ~ uuy Jru, I h Wednestlay, May 3; Andover-season. Reedcer and Janis both claim . boys' varsity tennis team travell&1 .to l~~~~~boys'varsiy tenisftemrtthirty years ofrty yintenseine rsvalryr,'thestolen bases in the inning; the first. Deerfield and came out ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~n toperi7-2 in aae oundoverp tennis teamer oncesteaagain a beat eaSt.of five that the team would have at t e , '~~~~~~ . . ' well played match. CaptainlayedSteve. Bakaai Steve'Bak-..-ul' in a7 hnrd and a excitingngtennislo,. -~~~-a ath ccrig oS Pu'end of the aftern~~~~on. - . .~~.. commented that the team 'was "really match. A~~~~~~~~oordingommtotSt.haPaul'samtreallBlue Blazes psyched to play on 'Deerfield's incredibly Coach Rich Lederersyced to"Playinge agied'sainredibt

Andover's fielding held the Purp i iuvri eyfutaigeprecechoe Baklar'~4e~lngs,"It was nice to since St. Paul's usually loses."~perplexed offensively for the next eclayond Baome eentgos.:" innings, while the Bluesbatters lammn OaI d BktioIKen MacKenziel"home in the secondeuihlip a aa s The play began well with Andover'shis match in thre6 sets 46, 7-5, ' 1-6. captain Steve Bakalar trouncing tregistered four hits and six runs in t e . ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ,, Bakalar played ~~~~4elkalduringedthelfirstn two fPaul'so Dau's Darrc Car 6-3l6- 6-26ininaawell

third, however, to seal the game 9- . , sets, "The best i've played all season," thoughtst intelligent match." hougt ;ot ' ad 'itellgentmatcEddie Garden and, Marty Solomon bot i~ ~"~ he added. Bakalar's opponent was Carroll, )who has only lost t,matches insteadier and playing superbly, and w yerhsmtadlttoBkaastart off the scoring that innin .aalrwa fred toatc osay in 'several times before. St Paul's numberMacKenzie'scored his second run of te the game. but ejs the game and balls 'two ran, Jamie Barrett, finally suc7,day on an errbr &rm the catcher. Reed r slowed down in the third set, Bakalar umbed to Bill Way in a 6-4,7-got his second stolen base on his way ~~ wasn't able t aack aeffectively, and tiebraker, match. Way, who has been his second run, while Jainis followed h

- . as a result he ropped the final, and playing "a little steadier ately," man- Iacross the palte 'I again. Captain~~~~~~~~~ui s '~deciding set. brikelar remarked after the 'ae o oewem hs opponent.Bigwood registered the ixth run of th-macItwsahikn mth, e And,9ver' number four man, Rich Oasis,inning to round o the sthreinnwere both trying to maneuver the other d1rew exclamations of ad iration fromof play. aon th co an asarslte the spectators as he beat Judd Nel'sonNashua made 'a feeble attempt ponswr-vy n" 6-A, ---2. Accordingt ach Lederer, Pmatch Andover's new.ly found power wi¶ t Bill Wy suc 'bed to his Deerfield "hiisanyNlo'seo lssntwa run in the fourth, only t have the Blq Th loetthing t~ flying: JAMLE REYNOLDS soaurs over die b.- counterpart 36, .6. Way wasn't ~playiqg years. 'Fied Wassonha tough timehis best against is relentless opponent defeatiung his opponen in nthe first set

and his overpow rn serve and crisp winning 7-5, but had no difficultyBoys' T,~ack 0 r mesHav d'Unversaome volleys didn't pro e nugh to win on the finsighmof62H arvard Lfniverstty; ~~~~~~~~~~~slow~er clay cours f Aihn i oFew losseI - -. 1.. ~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ower' der WinIs St. Paul's co---captain John Old, who~~A ,~~~~1 r Girl Tr a k S r t P t ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~S t 1sau teHowever, the est of the team used' has ben on the varsity tennis team forlT~~~f~j~~jjIJI~~~~f$I .~~~. C J)Z1'fl~ri s the~S fine courts ad 'the beautiful day to fout yea s toppled McNerny's hopes ofSk p ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~their advantage a they swept the rest of ~winning !by beating him 6-1, 5-7,BjRYLE SXY.~~~~~~ p~ea15'an surpriset, fiblshing-thiird in the ',The janie dame in second overal! piid the matches.' Ric McNern eanJt f pamenr i 'notd eliad SUZAINNE HEI p~ al.Bl et showed his many PA's Ellen Solowey took third. the team after amio injury had the sin e achs heeh'ls-tStda April, 29; Andover- In taet bei hefr 1Lu4yshe yd Sir p'ue first 'plalce in sidelined him last week to win 5-7, 60, Robin C rriez 6-2, 6-1, but he playedSaturdai~~~~ t~

winningook hisndan thmpiscus secrolen

in bthethe dscoryndforsurprisingly easy meet, Andover u-nokscn ntedsuscn nte bt h ics'n h javelin, thrIowing 6-0. He breezed o victory, ynighs a imottrlentevjoyfr1an under-manned Harvardhi squad12 hgh4trdes ad 884-7d 7'repetiel. atyBet Ian under-mannehodhi iHtea20hihrvarde sndquad,*nd.6' esecivly Kth Bstlast two sets afte dopping the first set. Andover later on in the doubles n'atches.'Coach Richards attributed the ease of th third in he hammer throw. 4 tending a captured second and third between 'the Number four rack. tiran Ridh Oasis cameThDole .victory in part to the fact that Harvar hn to Best's cause were Primo two events. bakowi3-,-.64MttPmer'Aer s ewrmn upad'ihLobri tidi th shotcktown and- Billat Shoti Atesoe am'gup ad-wtonly brought niie rnners., This va Lobell i h htan il So py~tting for the: 13lue were overpowered, his opponent with' his Andover ahead 4-2, te two teams werit Arovershadowed, in his eye', by the stron ism~seodnthha erhow SepneBmsad Margaret' 'Best. distinctive "Ma'litu' forehand 7-5, 6-3. on to, the doubles matcIhes. Andover<overall performa'nee of the PA team Wednesday, May 3, Concord, N.H. - Bemnis put the shot to a second place FrdWasson ~ h ia ige ed4js n oemtht euewhich included poingshowings -Th gil vasttrc tem ano aifinsh wh ethae h htfr mth aiy h Ighiopnent 6-2, lanother victory over St. Paul's. As inpromising ~~~~humihiatin~g finish..humiliating for the third. IIboth the sprint and distance events. 6ohrta hti.Th noerrnes InteI other, matches, the Andovey- team'sThewu:tan i e d 'le ande teuhti. h noerrnes Inteln jump, Michelle ThmsnThe PA squ swept the dube biggest vyeapons were its superior servesThe utsandi' lrforer f th andfielde final score against St. Paul's and Tammy Glumnicich seized second competition with akalar and McNerny 4nd volleys. While the team of BakalarNew MIe waa6 ndtidrspcieymeet was~ senior Torm erforme wofe th ws 634' se defeating eir op onents 10, and ay and, M erey continuied warming up;clocking in th mile establise~'d him a Bo .jndover girlsswp the 440. Team captain Annette Andresen and Oasis did te' same. Wasson 'and Wso n ameimt bathe top Andover miler. His time is th Bone W gner placed first with a time of commented about the rmeet, "It was Palmieri played a l1ose match and fial Ir opoet 6I -. a nftet rundsovfar i spIg minute, 7.2 seconds. Second was Grace intense, diffuse, and cosmic." felled tiraduo t108. Oais wpontense they pl ay a-ndand it wa Oseki wit 1:09 and Diane Hurley came ops erilonly bettered one during the winte intid

indoor campaign. Normally a two-milerBenton, with contitnued work and mor InA n dvDrstanceoatSuccessest I'the half mile Annette Andresen A dvr iis oa Duk M un erman;expreience 'in'running the mile, should b I

'a~ he :30 arkby te tme o th took first~ with a spectacu!ar time of Interschols. Also rning in good frn -2:39..8& E~ ally phenomenalI was Sall"ls"aldwin's best time every of Crw Fods Tabor, uccum bs To, CrimsonBill Montgomery placed behind Benton 2:43.8 aemrable second place finishByTAD GEI Kiblcomne,"erwaegh Dug rradDnNrt.Ts!iveIn the sprints Eric Sheffield was fastes sh wa IADOGETslightlymete',"Worout ofh shapeisnoicout of the blocks, as he rancnsideinfinewastimestland

DoIMOrrLndSDNoutofth bock, s e anfin tme 2 i.9considering IMELISN individuals and have to work on rowing crew, organized and coxed by Dalewiningthe'10 yad dsh nd'the22 because of an injury. For the mile,winning the 100 yard agindookafirtspace Satrda, Ah11 9; ill The as body, tgether as one team."' Horne, , is. working hard and should 'yard dash,.h Annette ~'nudresen in togetherrs pand anuuulystog Iurn and Satur~day, Apri 29; Andover- The provide good competitign'or the secondEd Hill, fillng in for th injureditohAmy Morton second. in the two Andover girls' 'varsity eight donminated Mermc rirwastefrheistbt'sasinheerfuueEd il, Alig i fr he njredJo imile ever It, Grace Oseki and Annette the Northfield-Mount Heion crew, Mriakrvrwsst o h is otssasi h erftJeHostetler, showed that! he will giv Anrsnpae themselves etera' ualysrg'urel 'n victory of the seaso for the boy's crew Wednesday, May'3; Harvard VictoryHosteler al heAandhndlenn the8ced team. The home c rs e, with its tricky alluded the "Ramblin' Blue' 'at HarvardHostetler all he can handletiin forf ' with Amy Mortoo coming in a head wind. The 27 second viotory ahe ran a 2:06 half mile, earning a fi tied for 1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~st 4~ ws cretpovdav tgoutohe Blue this week. The first boat rowed one of itsplae inih a is runhafmle ning ellirt right after their. Andover's third straight this year.; cretpovddv itaeutohplace finish kso runningwell in th as they stroked to victory, in the first, best races of the sason but the HarvardSpeadsters Dseadn h ocso aueTeBu ,spoe togrtruhu h aehalf was John Burgess, who took thi Disreardin thedorcesofdifloate reacees.The PA record breaking: 440 relay Andover remained' calm, cool; and seod n hr a ae.T spoe togrtruhu h aeTaylor Bodman continues to wo tem ddnt bat pviu collected. stroke wlrwed' in the outside lane in all three Havr tok dange"fwtrhimself into s e as he ' ran queEeyo ~ring races which, accord ng to Coach Brown,tringadlgewtrtmendocshaje ~~~~~~~times but did very well. St rter Stacy together like a well oiled machine. tan adlre ae ieadocrespectable54 flat in he 440, go Schiff sprinted out of t losan Ro~'ving at a low but powerful 32 trokes cotiue tohepdvritres ' agaii defeated the Blue. Coach Johnson-,enough'for scond lace. Not far bee Un ediately gra Inwasu-Dav ecnnig wh won eu hird mbe Ihela fo SS emnte noe" srnt ane Tefrtbatrwdoeofisfns ws"elypodo h eate tc

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A71 S, 198 PAGE F

Lax GIve ayTDeerfdd, Masters HarvardBy NICK SMR second half at 2.40. Attackmhin Ken Ing Harvard lead to one.

Satnrchy, Aprl '29:ieerfield- Be- Miller cored eight minutes later to give Doiaini crn d h ost-ause..o someha ~mo tP noe its third straih oaaste obvious impiovmrent in Andover's s~ndoffense, which executed: well but had Blue e da possible comeback. The half of play. Ken Miller brought his teamntrouble locating the Deerfield goal, a ~ mercile s. Deerfield teamn downed An- 'the much needed momentum aftermore aggressive and accu 'ate Deerfield -dover's hopes for retalliation' and netted another Harvard goal. Miller's goal camela~rosse squad dominated I today's con- twb mo e goals shortly before the end of from - a beautiful fast break -whichtest. The powerful Green shooting the thi period., With Dee~rfield's two featured a 'pinpoint pass by Man'-accounted for ten goals, `hlAnoes 'goals i two 4minute span of the fourth MaE 'hsspcaulrpapsat

attackmen managed only six. The loss Is period, the victory fooked secure; but ed the PA scoring surge. Uppei TimPA 's second defeat in! the last three midfiel r Marv Mahoney scored late in Schwartz followed with, a shot thatstarts. .the ga e, trying to keep Andover. alive. deflected off a teammate and into the

After a minute of hard-hitting plai' Miller yeAndover its sixth goal, furi e.Ptr"u"Fic etdoeo hisDeerfield picked up the first goal of the short of tevictorious Deerfield squad. many oals of the season just before thegame. Andover's- captain Josh McCall W edaMay 3; Cdambrldge : end ofj the third period. courld n?)f let the Green get'ahead, so'h Total, do iation in the second half was Himlly Tiedshot the ball past the Deerfield defense the ke toAdvr's victory today Ha ard began the fourth period withto tie it up' The Deerfield shooting againstoe fth Blue'Is favorite a cvoal in-. an attempt to prevent anattack proved' to be, much too powerful opponn ,teHaard J.Svno Andov~r victory. Mahoney connectedfor the PA defense, however, which was PA's ee nSoaCwr scrAduring the again or his second goal of the game tohampered by the limited service of Rich crucialecn haf giving Andover put A~dover even with Harvard for the Waid.'Blue goaltender Peter Colombo 'enoiligh al od at Hatvard by the first time in the game. Josh "J.D."also had a little trouble as Deerfield score of 1-.I IMcCall tallied a minute and thirty-fivenetted two more goals b'efore the end of With is ez~ onal quickness and seconds later to give them a one goal

hefirst period, giving the!Green a 3-1 spectacul r moves, midflelcqer Nick St- lead. - Stoneman and Acheson I bothedge and momentum whi ch sustained oneman etted PA'flrst~tally only a few collected' their second tallies of the gamitself throughout the game.! minutes fter the tam allowed two within a one minute span of each other.

Slow Improvement ,Harvard oals, The ecellent defensive Harvard finished the game with'a littleThe execution of plajs by'Andover play of g tender Peter Colombo, along respectability, scloring their ninth goal at

was near perfect all day, but in the with defe eman Rich Thard: and George 11:09 of'the period. *PUIE COAMMO Is the last line of. the strong lacrosse defence.second period the attack couldn't muster Vien,withhed the strong Harvard attack,Wnough goals to pull out a victory. Th e shutting tem out for the remainder ofdesigned plays only produded one goal, the first period.for the' Blue which wa~ scored by Isolation G r sL ao se Dn ia es S . r u lsmidfielder Jim Day. It seemed Deerfield PG star Jim' Acheson displayed hiswas determined to keep Andover out of great one o on e' moves and flew by By AMY-HAIGH into the St Paul's goal. S. aul's putting it i for a scorIe.IAndover

the contet as. theGreen scoed three dismayed opponent to score a beautiful Wednesday,, May 3; Concord, N.H. - attempt to rally, but the uique attemptdtcm ac a otnThe girls' varsitS' 1lar tmheddogoals in the period to gb ahead by 'four unassisted goal. This goal occured lonearos.temhaddt harassing techniques f ithe Ix~lent Abbott, Jenny Ben slpy and Mary Buttrickbefore halftime. after Harvard's [fourth goal, which wa-s Concord, New Hampshire: re'ady to' face. Blue defensewomen put the up sn o f ht.S.Paul's ontinued- the* Comeback Altenipt tallied at 1:38 of the secbnd -. ~what was rumoited to!I be one of ts, down. T e Andover attackwomen con- surge-as they tallied two hard, 1fast goals.

As an integral pr of, the "towe Senior Manv Mahoney received an togetponn.Thtamrund tinued t widen the margin, as Moro As its la iiihd ooe!1 oeHos oneto" Ifedr Nik.xeln asfo ifedrJmDy to Andover victorious after trampelinig snuck a other ball by the St was not to be put!down. Off a %wellm~d

StonemaIn tallied the first goal. o' the and scored to close the steadily decreas- the St., Paul's squad 7-5. Captain Perrin goalie of a pass from second home Lisa pass from Buttrick, Deery wven~ in on aTingley revealed the key to the win: "The Chedekel Chedekel then received alpass one-on-one for the sixth And ver g7"

(~~~1-u. ~~~~~~~ attack used quick accurate passes, which from M ron from behind the goal, Buttrick put a bo~incing shot past the St.U ~ ~ ~~~~~~ ~~~~~-'' ~~~~~~~~enabled six attackmen to score. This was which she promptly netted to make ~t 4-0 Paul's goalie-to make the score 7-4,IE~~iac~i~ervvo m en JjJLIL 'JtL~~ a good indication of the offenses' in favorn favor AndovAr.oSt. Paul'sulmadeaonenelasttaa-temptto

By ADRIENNE YOST Paul's opponent, ranked in Coloradobalance. The defense stayed tight and 'he s cond half opened with the Blue even the score, which did-result in a goal,- - 29; Weilesle After Perlsrver et winked tibre oa dor53, prevented St Paul's from shooting., in ontrI once again. An excellent give but this was not enough to overcome the Saturday, Apri 9 else fe esree o~i h ibekr53 Overall, everyone worked well together and go f om Abbott to Morton to Abbott powerful Blue. I

traveling through scenic, suburban Bos- and capture another point for St. Paul's. and the aggressive play showed a lot of esldinteffth Andover goal. t. Judy 'Morton 'cmetd ''ewrton, the~onll 'Ynan tenonothingedinth times ocasiionall and then other ~ Katherine Ford ost 2-10 after suffer- thought."' Paul's retalated by digging the ball out -so psyched for the game 'hat wereintmsoff th ytcRiver! Parkway, the ig through her match with an energy- The first half opened with St. Paul's 'f a muddle in front of' the goal and could have stopped us frdm wining.And over girls varsity tennii, team, arrived draining cold. ULz Anspach, unable o' in control, the opponent got off ivenehalf. hur la~for, their match against ooetdopdhr e i hswih A I Sel ueone,, ou lat9, , ~~~~~overcome her ppnt drpe e e quick shot whch goalie Sel ueDana Hall~ The girl~!prevailed to sture 5-10. Playing. in the fourth 'osition, deflected-with amazig agility. Andover'sa weaker Dana Hall squad, 5-3, nd to Karen Hilton lost 8-10 in a match thatmansrgtwsisbodenehchrd Sll o fa

continue n their uest-1 fo a steak was primarily a trial against the wind, prevented St. Paul's from getting nside -

dinerall~eSizer's. Adrienne Yost, frustrated by' the Sahara- and forced them to take wild, utside yE.AO ASN itn.I h o fte-hr nigClaiming four of the five -singles like conditions' of her court, lost 4-10. shots. Defensive wing Tory Read made S dayANRl PARONe - hiHlltinglne top fth reahed sendg

matchesAndove scre off the timid -In the doubles,' St. Paul's deptilr, two excellent steals, which were s'moothly Advrgrs otalta ufrda~'e teHradfedrbhld'h- Dana Hall squad. RoinRsbrg prevailed, winning 2 of the 3 matches in passed upfield to the eager offense. The I

Kathrine Pod, Liz Ansoach and Ad- nev-wakngegtgm pr sesat.,.ls otie ncpiaiigo humilit ng defeat when the Harvard ball. Jesse Drury then drove her homerienne Yo, iy n cifae unsteady nev-rcig eg gm r es atcmnls otm ncptlzn n nine~c iched the PA squad 27-7. with a base hit ip the mniddle!Yost, annihilated , without ads' Connie Barrett fille din for this advantage as Eliza Deery took a shot we . gtoft necletsat ' ' -Ipesv

opponents. ~~~~~~~~~~~a drastically ill Katherine Ford to play which resulted in a free Oosition for udy WihIhtahnern ih- rr reachessagainRosenb6rj,7 whemMng h'l Witumhi '' bse ibegan her match -,g number one,'frtdobe with Rosenberg. hey i'os--in Morton.'- Morton wound' up, shot'and on as Hoeer i onan rerane bae gin the nlrl-mth slowly, but was!'qil match 38. Yost and Hilton scored for the first goal of the game. catn'V~icky Hull onb~" oe~,'n na'errad continued 'to exploit

encouraged when another 'team member -ol o 'get their acttoehradls the s nd half of the! first inning, their errors as she stole second and thirdcould not ~ ogthr ndalo With a one-goal Andover .lead; the Hradmaaetosoesiruswh an fnlysce nceefIlr Kae 'I triumphed, nd proceeded from the curt lost- 3-8. 'Ha balldcontaneddtoobounce!bckxandnforthh an'ial coe-ncnerile.Ktahead of the usually quick Rosenberg. WessWisbetweeon teo nmaced ad res only two hits, because of Ierrors and a Thonmes' sacrifice fly. I L

Sh eton! to destroy her opoetin '1 Anpc icvrdwalk on the art of the Adove' em 1n the seventh,, Thomes dubled toSn~hewe opponent ath 1-. npahdicvee that playing with Morton and center Darcy Fernald kept- -' One'Inningje 4 tadsod'arnn is Zdrsan otherwse1 shortlived math, 10-2. Weiss was the necessary key for another up the pressure with shot aftfr shot and tleadsoe. uno ls Zee'

'Ford,,Anspach and Yost were spared Andover win. They played a close match,goleGyrmdmre.nstcav. In t e' third inning, alter three -PA til. Zaeder then stole horn for PA'strouble and pain, easily running through cornmet wihpteraewihte enl hnrcie batflps batters ame up nd thiree PA batters second run of the 'inning.' u Landytheir matches 10-3, 10-5, and 10-5 wn53iodfa h poiin rmDey hc h rcee orl were ret red, the- Crimson Started to play reached first' a base hit to t-t field,

respectively._____________________________________ for blo . In an especially long inning4 , aided, by two Harvard errcxs scored-- Karen Hilton attempted to brace, Harvard scored 17, runs jith ten, timely on Mary Williamson's single' to centerhrscvely. n'eethrfmla opponent, h A ~ 1 e eIits, and eight untimely rs field.I This last run rought h iaherself and defeat-her familiar h bht 1 the final~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~obut was incapable of surviving through juIhI V I e (st wh n the Andover tam began to score ito 27-7. "Ithe tough exchange of lengthy rallys. lose hop,-, things started to look up. The I Coach Chuck Willan4~ compiented on,-Ldia, her Dana Hail adversary,4 -oVer- ~~ + PA defer se tightened and Harvard scored the game, "I was disappointed in thepowered Karen with 'persuasive playing, 4~~~nyf more runs in the remaining number of errors, buit Om confident that10-8. innings./ the t4am will recoil in its next match

-Andover now needed only one, 'more jI'i As s defense picked up, so did its again~t Cushing Academy."point to win the match, and were fairly -'

-. assured of a victory in one of the -three 4 StraMy'IAwydoubles matches. I S asebal vs. ' WIeterwaade

-Hilton and'- Yost, the nuiber two ID aeal s ocstrAaey. ... .............. 23

thoustamin ; an-sie *Crew [B] vs. St. Paul's ....................... *3.00)point for PA after blasting their rivals off 'ICrew :GI vs. St. Paul's ... .'A . ........... .. *3:00th cur' n oe-idddisplay of play, '' lacrosse [B] vs Pnkerton...... .......... ~...2:00

and a final score of 10-0. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ -- Softball vs. Cushing Academy ..... i......,.. *2:30Rosenberg nd Ford yielded t an Tens B v.Havr ........-............ I 2. :39

Track [] vs. orceste ca. my..... ....... ......... 23agile team 5-10. Anspacfi and Weiss Trck' -sWrcser dplayed a close match, but lost in a ['--tiebreaker at 9-9 with the final score of I~, Wednesday, May 10 --

this ndrve-wracking fiii-IAUUver-, , ~ -Baseball vs. D' rtoth.'. .... ........... *2:00-, ' - ~~~Crew [B] vs. St ..hn' .J. ............... 3. :00Dana Hall-5.N..- '

Wednesday, May 3; Concord, NH. ~~~~~~~~~~~acrosse [B] Datouth ................. *2:00The, ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ I Anoergrl'va 'ytnnssqa lacrosse [G] vs. Governor Dufnmetr..2............. :30The, Andover girls' varsity tennis squad -- - - Softball vs. Buckingliam Browne & Nofballvs. uckighamBrone &Nichlsc..ols.2:45:4

suffered its first loss at he competent - I' ' .hands of a surprisingly good St. Paul's 'T '1~ - - ' , eamis [GI vs. Noble & Greenough................uu0

team. Andove was troubld by the Loer wonder MARK ROBERGE went eight and a half Innings to becomeTrc[]vsDatot' -*20- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Track [GI vs. vernor D2:30adverse conditions, and the lack of wind ,te ist winning PA pitcher this sprng. photo/PHELPS -

screens and clay on the courts.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'

-In the number six position Heidi ' - ,:Weiss, the only Andover 'player to win' -------------- ' -

both' singles and doubles, defeated a b,. ors C aosize

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PAGE SIX "T he P IL L PIA N4 __ _ _ _ __ _4A l,978,

Ha~~rd Lnu Policy MSt Co tinueBy'IUGIMANOLAN codcnin gitepoeso erig nj n adhering to the policy as it now stands and

The tnost striig feature of the Teaching entirety, with both its positive and negative isu I nesod h sc alotn~o oevr

Fellow program s that it is not a program. In the expe~iences, is valued and encouraged to a~peater valuable and talented individuals, to be sure.abec ta: formal progrm which would serve to extet th 9 the final, polished roduct. However, in so doing., he integrityothprga

ioa tefellows fr~in the rest of the faculty, one ~ sTahfgFlos elanyr'qiky is maintaiiied. as a ye% r of intense absorption in

develops A~ physical characteristic which temporar- that this is a community which esteems not onWk the process; of learni. Creativity, independence

ily srves* as the sole:-means of idenhification: the the degree of" one's commitment, but also the- and experimentation 'Would be frfe~ted In a

stiff-uper lip.This ~uous phyical phnomenon length tereof.N Teacing Fellows 'iorme to Andover cmeav program hich would exisi'Then only

i the manifestation of the firm but' naive expecting thit they will leave at the end of that as a feeder into the fa lty. At it exists, the year i

convictign-that one can indeed accomplish ail that year. This phenomenon i itself is difficult as one an nvitation to ex rient, to become. totally .

is implicitly or explicitly required. The fellow feels ,ms bgi toerat nslfjtas he absorbed, for better r for worse, inthslre

'that this duck, face s his unique distinguishing environment is ecoming familiar and more demanding,, exciting c mmqunity. It is an nvitation * mark. However, at s~me point, h6 or she realizes maaebe a n fta adu fFlos -to give a lot of ydursel to a lot of different people

that all around hi, to some de~ge.o nte, wowr frd'oiin lastyea frtior whonytepmis of ain intense, educational

wathsstiff- upper lip' and that indeed, his is BcneiayarHvngsntlsterinhe year. In re~nainlng a non-program, the' students

only Mm p;onunc~. From that point on, the yather unique position of developing, designing, and faculty will cn ue to benefit 'from the

Teaching Fellow. fIs himself to be bearly 'and teaching cou~rses new fo the department and energy, concern, and p~ctive which Is brought

distinuI~hale frm therest of the Taculty. It is myself, I' welcomed the opportunity tQ remain here by these new faculty emers. To do more than

this non-distipguisha lity that is one of themost inatnionetnwmch more familiar, to provide a supportive environment would negate

distingihdfaueoftepor. polish 'myr techniques and curricula. However. a the validity; of the prcc~ of learning.

Inherent in the on-progamn s an implicit the risk of being accused of hypocrisy, I believe I___________confidence i th ablies of earnest' young 'that the'schorol 0hiouldi .naintairi, a hard Mife policy A Teaching Fellow last year R~ion and -;' V ''

professionals; a confidenchicIiane and not rehire fellows for the following-year. Philosophy Instructor Regina Nolan i 'the house ' '

rarely een violated or, resulted in regrtblcounselor of Pemb Cottage-' ' . 4

associations. In giving few formal guidelines, the, e orschool provides a raie opportunity for teaching,

not student teach' g or substitute teaching,gO fan-L r ssvcomplete with all the challenges, excitement,anxiety, and frustration which one can claim as'one's bwn. "It is a year in which you feel all1 one- I YDN ONI

becauj~~~~~~~~~ ~F e llo w s , 'hen aeach ing-f lwlooks back at Vs1 fi-S- appare t him. His suits feel rumpled, lie seemsother Aih.The comment was not only witty, but year -of teaching h e s that its patterns resemble to wemrethan he used to, and sometimes his

ast~~~~~~~~~~~te-, ~~~~~~~~~~~~the cyclical course Of~ an-epressive. 'A series socks do' match. The self-examination caused

!Thc'aloneness is expedrienced. both positively:; 'TeAdvsTahn of classic highs an osbecomes- apparent. In' by mi-er gdigcnbderssing for dIC

and n~gatively ' Positively in, that it stresses Ionwsip program esalse hi conversaton with ohrfellows he find. that the teachl flow. He cati, however, keep utter

independence and responsibility, and provides the, car,* ,r e proeo patterns a not umo.Ms teaching- despaii~~ bay by reminding himself that mid-termenvironm ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~esetilfo elosnt a' -' ga awys be changed.

envrorrintfor experimentation esnilfr"preparig able college graduaWe elw'cs ltre ei ihtemnao rds'naw

piofessional and personal growth. On the other fracrerI adnpstc- pre-September anricpt on. The job is still n - Tendof fall term raises the tahn-elA

hind, isolation can occasionally cause paralysis as lary In the secondary school." unknown, tl~e scheduld is, still relaxed,, and there to a ilasant evel of mania once again. Kri4

o~ie attempts to cope with the fstrations alonb. Each yer Phnii Ac -m are only fait hints about the hard work :of Kringl& fireplaces, nd holiday expectations,

However,, one soon learns how to gain support 'In' 74J hr ml ubro on teaching. Inathe last days of August the fellow can' remid suents and faculty 'alike of home. For

such times of confusi'on and relies on the sge ri male and female Instructors wit cloister himself safely in the library and plan for the tesclting-fellow, who is very new at being

advice of people more experienced thaj oelfthe expectatIon that thy will not his clse.Ti ctiv~ty resembles toeo ii 'epnil o te epe h huh fglg

who will provide a erspective' temporarily 10lo I ' be refilred for the following year. college days and he begins to think 'Jhat he knows-

There are some ostndine fr"'ltk members. I Lost year, however, a record. what he is doing.

frends, who know ~ how to~ check-in without ' 'uhrr of seven Teaching Pol- TYhe depressio s ~when the fellow discards

cheking uou and thereby offer support, and again, Ioawr se oreun h tdn role and a sumes the role of teacher.

that implicac confidence free 'onf traces of - After 7 years of gramrmr school, 3 years of middleIschool, 3 years of hio school, 4 years of college,A Post i-'ost-'.~~~~~~~raauaL~t Ex e in e and 1 year of graduat4 school 'the teaching-fellow

FArT, SPELLANIE fepls suddenly that hi~ (a knows nothing aboutdon't be what I ' A'idov Cr' 15. I heard last ~~~~school or -(b) has forgo n it all. In tact, the

ditremenier whtIexpected .~ proIl Atog hasic teaching-fellow knows 4 lot about being a student

hnd its Teaching FelwhpProgrami to be like. September htti day, was as bleak s the at' school. His dismay omsfrom the realizationCertanly, neve exetdto laugh so much. Nor proverbial ominous clouds, not until the night thteainisoth am asbngatun,

dild I suspect I'd rmiss it as much as I know I will, before did lirealize that all the warnings were not and hence, different frmwhat he calls 'school."

To say-the least, thisl year has been, filled with new hyperboles. To defend against the worst, the big Hebcmsdpse a hi inilt toI

experiences. most of them pleasant. woofers and tweeters were called out. To relieve remember how any of his "good" teachers were

The following fragmentary thoughts are a fair the heaviosity of the' chlns before the, storm; we n go. oehoaastdthtokIfr

sample of ~vhat accounts for my unequivocally needdd a disco - open to seniors only. grne httahr dpeoIndcpb-

posit~ve reaiction to being at Andover. Simply 'Andover is an excellent school where students ties. He had assumed atlike royalty the~' carried'

being in Pero ~iadbigsrone yiS' ' -their destiny in'their b .olRecognizing, now. that~

f'dust busts, pictur sue sketches, fade pitrsI '4.all thosptlershdolearu howt e'od",of ancent 'Ahens u Rome,:carve-up wooden ' ' Iadta ewl a to earn too,,' can be

deks andtte ind Rcomsticsa(whe andhone a`v'e ' ha home is; tremendously comforting. At '-me the,

neerks mp rible'rin a lost abouhlt ho'tne a- depressing. Iin any cas he wonders how he iull -binsof providing for others falls to Mom and'never improved; reaming a lot about' Utinevry b [techerIt'mal.Dad. The fellow is rarely too proud toior 'the

almost ashame~~~~~l to admit how much]; watching ' ~~~~~~~~Mania sets in' s 'after classes bein 'The benefits 'of being "taken care of" at this time of~students solve'the seemingly absurd puzzle of ecigflo sa uddt idta h, ya. I fat h ecig-elw myrvr

Latin grammar; laughing as Philip Zaeder leads a ' tueahns iemao in ath undseator anarentireevrain dance during a 'thanksgiving service. almost entirelys toa his prer-responsib enireiitymoste mentality.'pe-reponsbilty mntalty.

Onofth~getet~dvnags f h Pogam 'minutes. Granted th -ydo' not look ~ exactly The college rituals - movies, bier and wine,

/ironicall last precarious and at times ' - ' "animated,", nor do tht applaud, but then, muses unpreparedness - all become happily reinstated.'

uncomfortable situations. Since my arrival in ' t floop nedsm rom orImrv- Vcto is. mania. Winter term is depression.

September1 have aways fetta i n 'mn"Pras, on escnhayo ls Then' finally spring comes. The cross country

somewhere between a student and a' faculty 'sctntat his I n ae omn skis, ilnithe hall of 'the dorm, that have been

member who would'6i in the front row at faculty idctn ta ehas otonly read the material, falling, down at midnight for the last three

meetings. However, the combination of my age but that lie- Is also will~ g to risk saying something monthsIget safely stowed in a closet. The pile of

and academic1 ~ experience (expertise?) put me ' abuitThtecngeloIscttc.H sgs, ugly' snow in the yard goes away. Studqnts smile.

closer to the students. Not only am I still learning'OU thI king hqw won 'it feels to establish And the' teaching-fellow knowi that true mania

but I am learn1ig from some people whom I now can receive a superb education. However, "sgnificant, dialogu. isons of profeiorial has arrired when boys a~uc girls walk within three'

regard as I did - my favorite professors froni smwmedrn ter"ntuto nte rss ooay d oae, n ulse' feet of each other. Spripi term still promise%,some

'A college. I am alwayd';somewhat taken back when I! Englisti, Latin, and Greek languages, together ltehasombeo.hsys.Tiiste dprsinTeeaegadsagain. There"i tne

conjidr the~teilgenceand talent devoted toWitnAthecMsadteArof m ia urge to be in Harvardi Square wearing jeans and secondary education in Andover. Such reflection 1 Speakirip",oo, many students seem to have begun If lucky,' the teac g-fellow wit!' mAnage -to eaig f~znygr,~t hna Atahn

lead me to one of the\ few occasions when I must to believe the road to "true Piety and Virtue" runs stave off depression u til the mid-term. After 5 Othello. ~There is the ever-present, "and what are

respectfully disagree with Alvy Singer and his' only through Cambridge, New Haven and weeks of eachn _es' s enning to enigy his your. plans for next year?" There is the sick feeling

belief, "Those who can, do. Those who can't,, Prnetn By no means do I intend to deride bnvlt iaohpinhecss'mwenis of not' haigayp1n.Btte teei h

teach." ' studpkis who will follow 'those routes; in fact,'T Idel on slte~ mbe. t mania of green grs,-oes and the Bicenten-

Given th%* two fa Iors (my age' Iand my being! congratulate them. After witnessing Black Mon- give mid-term, grades. ~or the teaching fe low this nial. Anid therei sm o in knowing that

cannot help but feet lIi* a veteran PG r ather than Piety and Virtue can also be harvested (sans disco) in 'judgment, of his stud nts.and he reme ibers Ian should le neither happily high nor "lonesomely"afaculty member. Wy this situation ca eoe in Williamnstown, Brunswick,' Me., and even in to elthi iu tio I is gluied by memorles low btIipybisul oig

an uncomfortable preicament is ol$'ious. Balanc-1 Clinton; New York. 'fal'hujs a eee eev a - w'u ipy bisul oiging friedships ith studnts (an tI ofdne' _____________________ student himself and lic begins to see thl face of English IFellow Dana Don eell recgived her

inheriens therei) the ne (and, th biengesa A house counselor ol the boys' dorm Will HflaiL Pohtius Niot when he Iooks in the mirret' For the MatriDge inEuton(rnHaad

facult membr on t~ othr, I smetims feellike' PhilSpellane is a Teaching Fellow irl Classics, first time in weeks hi, hum~an frifities become Universjt..

a tightrope -walker. I ' Imost lost my balance in afew 6heesey situations involving students and the I '4,

been us~dj but I prefer (n~aively?) tz, dcul~t that A n se rThtu au students fn question would strain olir mutual -By PEER BARAN I I '' *~

respect and knowin~gly dupe- me. I greatVyA yug tahn elw b~ul o for three days in a row and he became catatonic.

apprecate faulty mmbers'neverteless nder- possessing the commonly respected powers of I consider the teaching fellowship, program not

standiprg and supoorting me during such times. I 'atoiy(~.ae adoe oiacdsac,' 'only beneficial to the fellows, but also potentially

never try to teach in Puerto Rico It's easier for a student to assme a' greater - withfacfreshosAnsdabou. thereducationnthey'vepjus

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THE SEVENTH IPAG~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ESEE

* Not J~~~~ust nothr on anace'BYCEMRISCHUELER Magic" dove the female soul-lovers wild.

T eIbaum has neeien ol The group of Chris Leggett, Greg Moten,Vegas. AShard as it may be'to believe DetrWdwrhIn ar~lt~efthe ne At haurd PAihful secn sang the Commodores' "Easy", and

an~~~ua~~ Talent~~~~how~~it night's second ~~~~~~iEarth, Wind, andFire's "Love Holiday",in j beforeatel-strutting tain-style ofstage.

ba moked giggled,land danced his way Tatelbaum arrived back' oUt on stageacross the Kemper stage delighting the ashIi fe 'eyati i ie4

ihrongs ~~~~vith ~~~ truly exceptional slww of ~~~~~~~medium crushed! blue velvet dinnerPA talent~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~jacket, to: help out the 'team of Tim

The crowning moment of the night Rgnad hri iea nawas the return ol~ Peter Piselli and Mike hilarious tal sow spoof. WisemanRauseo, both. cl sfof '77, who playe~1 ilayed tlhe partl of PA _- trainer Aland sang some oldrdin tunes including a olhr~ n ~rcatn o hl

Sinatra's "My Way"i which brought the ihhotRgdaidysmnTelu,crowd to it feet, in both the early and outa Ipromdhsnw "ic

laesos is I4an Rueoha ramner" ,oc wiiich produced tears of- late shows. Pisqili and Rauseo had ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~an her frm the adience.

travelled from Wileyan and Brandeis to ' ii erJonTilnmake fina apaaconteAdvrOce gain ti!ya onTilnmake a f Ina ap.rac on thInd rand Mark Lpolla performed iano

stage, and sang our songs well V~.;,out duticrprtn mayIan ogmore thah a few minutes of i.:actice. on cmoiin.Mc rcie

TePsell.iasep duet was a perfect tlnmc plueway to end he night whi~h included muc1' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~The show r~quired extraordinar,

mostfors o 'tlen oncmuIoto I 'effort from a multitude of people.sculpting , ' Minero, not only wowed the, crowd, but Her", wfiich'was su'sqesta h rdcer-drco aebuFoloing a~ brief, Tatelbaurn monolo- also seehmed to impress his female crowd called them akfo an encore, a assistance fromn his ight-hand a, much

from last :sopened wihtoreturnees partners, on fwihdecidedito drw runchy versioh of "Lay Lady- Lay" Ward, from qSteve Fritzinger and Jamnesf Io latya hw-LlyCroaad an ovation by showing th~ atidience'that dedicated to thelAcademy's young female Reynolds on ight'adson esetvI Ste eta's ho il Cerfrmd ieond she- was indeed a female. The crowd fculty members. The crowd went wild. ly, lus ushers, pra sou lsd reaeci -

octopae fet war! while showing th crw notntl nd predicdably ate it up. Jenny'- Kimball ad Sara M4oore whole brnch of hangers-on.the Hus~e Mark Oliva followed with a Girls track coach, Steve Marx played slowed ~down the temno with a "weet" In the end the~ Iwas Joe, standing in

supisiglygood comedy outine, much "An Original Composition" a country- r ndition of Carly Simon and Heintz's the spotlight wihhl4 eimtxto the imay of the rotten produce blues numnber on his guitar and roused "Anticipation". Unfoiinateiy, the mic- daring the crowd 'iu boo his jkes,'crowd inthe first three rows. Following the audience to a state of fuiry before the r phone sounded lik.- sporatic mortar dancing for them, 4and laughin, knowing"'Take ive '- a jazz tune by Dave show-stopper of the evening. Petie Baran, fre every time one pf them chose to all along that he wfs bringin' to themBrubeck, David Disco" Daskal put his Lou Bernieri, and Phil Speplline exploded e hale atd hindered t song's potential. one of the most entertaining eenings 6famazing aicn tlnsto work. Daskal, onto the stage 7to sil g, dance, and ham Returning to the how this year to the entire year.Chicago's apparent answer to Tony up the fifties hit 'Tell Laura i Love s ng and dance fo r songs, "Black

AiShowers Bring "Som .. Bizarire May-Calend rs1BvIMR C AUE11:00 am - Kemper Chape.Foetn

Saturday, May 6 service conducted by Philip Zaeder. fOIerS' 'Arabia - Harvard Sq., 6:20 and 8:00* ~~6:45 - GW Hall. "A Might at the 3:00 p - Addison .Galeiy. Beethoven I m - The story of a Los Angeles radio' respectively.'11 ~~~~~Opera" tarring the Marx Brothens. This meets Debussy, a faculty, recital. tation, starring Clbavon Little' and The Fury - A Brian DePalma rler. Pi

is prob ly one of the best movies the 8:00 pro - Coolek; House. Deborah Martin Mull, featuring original music by' Alley, 7:45, 0LI. 1 ~~~brother eyr made. Dzens of memdr- Hughes-Haket, Perceptor in Math a Steely Dan. PG. Sack Cheri, Dalton St.,'810able, hil ous moments. CoordinatorIofSineaHrrdS4 810

1.. mac f"JB''Thnigin Mathematics. ' bout the first pregn nt mah. PG. Sack'* f~~~q 8:30 p -~~New 'Gym. Last BIFY dance of -Ar,61,8 :5UIP1 ~the ye featuring' "Second-'Wind",tay Jnmarried Wompan - Starring Jill11 ~great fny5 piec'e band Ctie buck C0NCVT§ iayburgh. Sack Cheri 5:30, 7:45, 10.

On Sunday, May 7th at 300pm. in Garden, North Station. Tickets $7.50. ietnam vet, faun Jane Fonda.the Addisorr Gallery of Americdn Art, the Sunday May 7 -$8.50' at box office, Ticketron and all -harles Theatre on C mbrdige St., 5:39,

Philiplcdem MuicDepartrfient il 9:30 Cooley Hpiuse. Quaker meetinig major ticket outlets. ' -:5 0present a faculty chamber music rctl spnodbyheSctyof Friends. rueSrgten-May 29-30 at the oodbye Girl -A cdm wr

The ecial tis unda wil cosis of 9:45 as eprCae.Eucharistic Music Hall, Trem'ont St.' Tickets $7.50. tinning comedy With Richard Dreyfuss 175Aco8ro.M onl)sonatas for cello and piano, and trumpet celebra incodctdb Father Thomas $8.50' at box offic , Out of -Town and and Marsh" asn write b NeilSTEVENS ST., ANDOVERand piano. Works by BoethoVen, Martini Hennig n. '.'Tyson. 'mn Charles Theafte,5:45, 8, 20.and Debussy will be presented.Pororin i s Sunday will anbgeh ol a ,8p tBotn mn h aeo eunn

William Thomas, 'cello, and Richadi aWilson, trmpet Both of these musicians 'ayVVLthLJLCXA 1.are members of the music faculty of theacademy and famiiar to concert goers inSthe Andover area. Joining.. Meeesrs. dJB B a drama based upn the Book because he is a good mna6t They decideThomas and Wilson will bethristopher of Job, s being performed this Friday at to pub .B. through a series of tests toWalter, piano. 6:30'anl Saturday at 7:00 in IteDaa sewhy he is so pious.

Wafter" is a member of tl~e Frencu Lab. ' premiered on Broadway in Auberach is confident hat the playI~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ undergraduate work at Oxford and went the Pulitzer prize for dram' Cameron the character Nickels tSatanf figure.

on to receive his teaching degree in Rejali .plays the leading role, J.B., He describes Nickels as, a very complex 45 MainSte , Andover, Kass'music from the Royal College in London. 'Isabelle

1 Layton is J.B.'s wife, Sarah, Se th guy." He's introspective,-4yot at the same Stet,)iasThe public i.crilyivtdt Lloyd I sthe role of Nickels, a at~n time he's a raging cynic. Auberach also

attend. There is no charge for admission. figure, and David Durkee is featured as. likes the three minor characters thatMr. Zeus, a god fguic. Steveu Auberach coi fort'J.B. towards the end of the play.,-is the director,' and also has~ one of 'the He describes the first "a soap-box- ~eight minor parts. marxist", the seconld as 'a man of the A ndover "Th ~~~~~~~play is ieally a play within a cloth whose schitck is original sin" and- ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~ ~~ play, sy Auberach. The god and Satan the third as " twisted Freud". A llj o ut u etasI

.' ~~~~figures are portrayed by two and out Auerach wants people~to realize thatactors. Nickels and Zeuss argue their "this is not a boring y it 1' earthy ' IIB ookstore. espctvepont of view back and forth, and ulgar." Finally he ol~served "J.B. is 'I Sportswear

Nclsfeels that i J.B. is so pious an intelligent play that demands a lot ofbecaise he has been given everything, the actors and he audienice," Weston e, Chestnut Hillwhile usWils~htJB spos '''Ivellesley

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