8
Vol. CIIINo. 13 PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASSACHUSEI A '5*18 6 COWrseS Added to 15*83Criuu By RICHARD EISERT ~ -Physics 33, a physics curse inelc- -courses given at- PA last term. had 'The Cufriculumn Commteea-tronics. that,.provides necessary enrollments under" 13. ' 1 nounced the changes in the 1982483 "hands-on" experienc replaces Smith said sucerllettr curriculum' anil -propsed thateah Pysics,51 n the'curriculum. "ludicrciusly, luxurious" and tha .'N'• gi dprment review its, core n Fec 7 a o alisn course, "there are both education and make reductions in its offering$ each replaces two terms of Frnh3 ext economic reasons for the expnin" ¶2.A term. .year. . . in the number of courses to stop and The Comnmittee approved the addi-; Religion and Philosophy. 45, Man's for the start of the difficult process of ~ 'tin of- six- new courses advanced Search for Meaning, as' officially pulling back."~~ ~ seminars. in Math and History,. and accepted in the ciulum.. The *Smith sai that it- is difficult fr I ' slight changes in the History urric- course wasi'aught'this year, but was ..those not acquainted with the work-''~ i .~*~~ ulum. Other courses were dropped never proposed to the committee. It. ings of the Cormitee to fully ap- ""~' ~ "~ r'cnsolidated to compensate for will satisfy the diploma requirement pediate the "comnplex ramifications the additions. in Relgo an hlspy asdb ny, curriculum change." Chinse 0-20wil beavailable for Tw art courses will be con- 'As an eaple, the Committeems ' '' " "~ 'Seniors in the next two years as an x- solidated into one course because of determine which courses' enrollments ,' perimental course. The course is:.the low enrollment, would drop if a new course is in- f less intensive of the two, possible Math Instructor Nat Smith, corn- troduced. cussconsidered, created in mittee chairman"' said that before any "Other, Curriculum Committees of response to student demand and the new course will even be considered as 'teps ave benad hc ordsign-, ' need for Chinese speaking 'Americ-ans an~ addition- to the' curriculum,, "a.- ed to handie aspecific task and and'' in the present political situation "compelling, case for including the then cease t exist, Snmith said. Fundingand an nstructr are-course, in the alreaidy diverse cur In- order'o'ana much informa- available for the course. It will be riculum. "must bmae"'tion on the curriculumnas possible and repeated afer: the t exeietl'Such a case, according to Smith,' report it back to the faculty, this Ye=x iit roves to be sUccessful.:. ol incuepoff "su e e year s committee is the' first. perma-~ .Math 7,:a' course in APL a corn- ~mand or need for the course,". the nent or staniding one.. The Committee puter language, ~enters into the. cur- .presence of''a faculty' member is currently studying, the. following MahmtcIsrcorN Sih'.ht/ilr riculum. This is a course primarily for qualified to teach the course, and a issues for fture proposals: Juniors that complements beginning 'definite reason why. the ppsed 1. The Ninth Grade porman h algebra students'. work. An advance cors shuld be taught at PA.foryastdn. ' ' 71 7 J A A m . math semiinar, Math.68, .was c- The Curriculumn Committee propoe 2. Language. teaching and politically P(AI .1M~I~4 Lv~) , P cepted. The, course is for. students that each department look at~ its "crtalanguages. who have completed Math 65. Thbat course offerings and reduce, the. .3.' The role of computees and corn- - was "acepte [on'thel rincile tht numer ofdiffeent curses itofr uing intecriuuA e i i s C l na the most adaced studentg'should be' each term. ' - 4. The science Curriculum. able, to. continue th Oe5cusshdeir study of Math Oe5'corsha enrollments SJ. ~The elective' system andl the at Andover" '.under ten last fall, and 78 of the 185.. distribution: of electives.' XDRK B. Topics Under:.Discussioii i the;~curriculum C6mmittee ,DaofRsdenceDavid Cobb an-adtm foit civythugte 1) The development of. clear' principles and secific "criteria for assessing proposals for nw corses and for the none e rcdr nshdl aendar. Committee, headed by: cdnsideration orelmination 'of existing courses."..-quotes from ifaculty voe of April,28, 1981; figets iwn ornde tiprevetcn eno Suis hlisPwlta 21Te ninth grade program and the four-year' student. fit ewe lne ciiis osntitreewt n te 3) Languae teaching and pollticaly`citca languages. Events that do not apear in the event 4)The rol of coptr n optn ntecriuu..Social Activities Calendar, the Guide'Exetn Saudy igs, o e , lie computers and computing in the curriculum. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~more than two events will be schedul- .5) The science6 curriculum, to Events, or the PA School Year dvn ~li 61 The elective system and the distribution of, electives. Caedrmut ergitrda d erasevn iN eent inolving mg ~~~~miinium of two eeks prior to theunecasnwilrnpt8:0m 7). The role of the commfittee vis-a-vis the committee of Department Chairpersons c oncernin' dateesqlioccurance. an'wdays Workload ad the consolidAtio of existing', Oil wrses-' n-weka An orgnizaton: rust~select a date Activities that will: be s o ordinated 'are ll' evening social The Curriculum Commnitt Announced the Followin New Courses: , events, club events* and trips,-.and P hiee 0-O- nroucoy~iesefoSeir "" evening. lectures anid seminars. PMath 17 -APiL Computer Pogamminig fr uniors Daytime; Cluster meetings nd cf- P'. Math 68 -'Advanced Mathematics Seminar. for students, who have completed Math 65. .ferlgosevnsadscdud athletic events are not 4icluded. P- Physics:33 - A "hands-on" course in electronics Cb oe oeimnt ofit P French 37 - French journalism ' '' ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~betweenwevents and thus insure, max- imumn attendance t every event. "Students and teachers often' set up [~~~~bators~~~~~~~~in-IN~~~~~~~i~~~tc~~~ '~~~~~~~~~~ ~ events and have' limited: turnout ''N Fs, -FLAW ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~4ed ~~~~~~ecause of competition with other ac- -Team Conquers 7 Other Schools titis ByHANS W~~DLER The topic for the first roupd was Abramowitz, Research Managers ~~~~ - He also'ahopehopes""o'o restorethe .'By HANS VMLER The topic for the firt round was Abramowitz; Research Manaesemblancean of 'studyd hohrsrs in "the Andover won both' the'. novice that extremism i eeseo ibryi Rob Baron and Nancy Taggart, and V' evening, "by not having-events dur- categr~' nd te bet ovrallteam no vice; for the'second, that the arts Membership Chairmen Ted Connell ~igtoehus" trophy in the:Milton Dana Hall Ex- should be federally supported; and and Tim Cahill. " ~ Cb ilcmiea atrcln temporaneou Deae nSunday, -for the third, that US Feign policy Newly lected co-President Tamar 'droevnswihilaparnte February 28 should be based on a moral code. Gendler said, "I am very pleased with Pilpa vr w eklsigte competing at the ebate The other he leadership of he new board, al ng a number of no ices andPtheyioiaeventsroltwtheeucoming itwo nweeks participntswereExeterilton, Th weae anouned larst w ee . heli erylt welf the' nkeb te i yer'sTrug aeflsheuig;Cb Pal's, Belmon o Higomshbadfrtht928. colya team hasalodo ptntaundd-es tthu Andover w eaina Lamtin tte' eae.Te heringer lads T ar'ener;bVice- alhopetaecagtrc a numberofnvcsadte Each scool set fouradvancd~ Preidentas arouSchw at andkimee ofl new embers. In the pinghi eand Nirob ht/ nd nitllgn e f roiis sparsand for, novices. ac MiteamS WohsonoTrashersaTdeMftcadscallemkeuheindoerdebtebea of four as furter subdiidedin o aNed. Rfoste Secretary achl . tam str aon fpoe n two "affirmate patnrs arguingoe htAdve ilrmi inhavoreo thW ivenr, 'attoisK amndy Sit fcomc sP 1b iepeaks Oantialveypc ing the debate topics.dTaar'enle; 'Vie- I tPetht eor ls LBarn. ananatrat'Scottr Dvi Bertetttiad:anine weret f rit unefated in thePonsadte reietMa ShatadAie ofnwmmesi tesrgadn affirmative00 counerp r anc eda-.BYHLE SRM speakers and four novices. Ea~~~team 'Wolfson; TreasuProfssorTof Biology Edwrdeall"Whenkwetdo smething tobour enam fart nd An ter Coffivian finsh 9 Knod fteUiesiyo iomn ti lkl t o oehn edth'cmeition wite anrxellnt: .- Suhr an pk oBooy s irtr, ad amny two afieod Advanced speakers R aloArazntz aivnd Ed't Hoicssuet eelatTusa ih" tesd ht inew o''hv also temebae undefeated urey0on0theilemmafcdi riio ulmitd se,,wtr n "Baron ~~~~~~~~~~~~~Iand 'S'Cott Bertblacetcholgca pores nd esure, eiano afodtowat Andvaned 'detr 'Mndarc Scharz.eooia osrain h possible speaker points; Abramowitz :" - . th~~~~~~~~~~~~Poe or o iselbtwe 'watdJ e we indta ontsof'thfossil' fueino fled ine opeighn th ance with'6 Kaneed olfe tes and.vdamit g "th v en it.' ie teo.soetlincg points. . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~' ' ~~~~~ ~ ~ thevrnMaien oe o ilher t uuat v~er syr'onthy are- Since the debate was extem- , i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~setivably lst Thu'sda nih' utsed -tht. sthey ae viota v'e poraneous the participants had no ad- photo/Taggart replaceable.lmmafacd n tyin to unlmied pac, wter An vance knowledge ofthe subjects to be The 1982 Debat~~~~blane echoloica pogrss nd resu ngfrdClubst daed ''bti" cShat Krmondy 'eli thaahmasnod ec~o ialconernoite 'h.oenilfod ee ame in ~~~~~~ seven p-la~~~~~~~~ce''Anio romthesugeficintl.de eplane .C th, .':'~~~~~~~~ u' neg.i ubett h van SI Dsekr Eih6u:o:'90 Karmondy~'t n ~ z ri cl L5 U "pyraid theat-ites prgrefivel ' ' ' . ' . . los~~asie e upse theeyce cha. ~~~~~rrisonfi willabeo' guidingmpromram. beten ha ben:wsemc ftesnseeg. wi nepperdAnnnolemr aidfat Tp-yThsnewneadsresposibl Inlwe te vev o wlfeatheAmssosOfie'-oeognziganspevsngtetudngsne ipuiryer ndhs' sKamny dresdwhth'5el student uide proiam nextyear, 'tudent gide progam. "Stuent "pu a lot o time inovit.nCoeman thiultitht'sequeston whic s the envirelcigrugonosudnnmienuitg sa otly tdet-utoer-sadththiei.imoratoointt umn' uswonier'resad .Point i~~edr Aren yekadMt 'to, ad disosOfie oe iesgou fsuet "Hwumuanvey o'thes eerse effs Pagne 4:teWahelyWietToa hie dpetrswasIIxt"It oc- idres."vl caleorvetdwitutusetn Both~ipton and Cfrmanwere ex- upies an iinpdrant'position oncam- ' ' ouru'on . lifestyles'tooidrastically poraneous the participantsCoemn hTiad rconie hethy il d ateriicjoinxtyer. met?

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Vol. CIIINo. 13 PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASSACHUSEI A '5*18

6 COWrseS Added to 15*83CriuuBy RICHARD EISERT ~ -Physics 33, a physics curse inelc- -courses given at- PA last term. had

'The Cufriculumn Commteea-tronics. that,.provides necessary enrollments under" 13. ' 1nounced the changes in the 1982483 "hands-on" experienc replaces Smith said sucerllettrcurriculum' anil -propsed thateah Pysics,51 n the'curriculum. "ludicrciusly, luxurious" and tha .'N'• gi dprment review its, core n Fec 7 a o alisn course, "there are both education andmake reductions in its offering$ each replaces two terms of Frnh3 ext economic reasons for the expnin" ¶2.A term. .year. . . in the number of courses to stop and

The Comnmittee approved the addi-; Religion and Philosophy. 45, Man's for the start of the difficult process of ~'tin of- six- new courses advanced Search for Meaning, as' officially pulling back."~~ ~seminars. in Math and History,. and accepted in the ciulum.. The *Smith sai that it- is difficult fr I ' slight changes in the History urric- course wasi'aught'this year, but was ..those not acquainted with the work-''~ i .~*~~ulum. Other courses were dropped never proposed to the committee. It. ings of the Cormitee to fully ap- ""~' ~ "~ r'cnsolidated to compensate for will satisfy the diploma requirement pediate the "comnplex ramificationsthe additions. in Relgo an hlspy asdb ny, curriculum change."

Chinse 0-20wil beavailable for Tw art courses will be con- 'As an eaple, the Committeems ' '' " "~

'Seniors in the next two years as an x- solidated into one course because of determine which courses' enrollments ,'perimental course. The course is:.the low enrollment, would drop if a new course is in- fless intensive of the two, possible Math Instructor Nat Smith, corn- troduced.cussconsidered, created in mittee chairman"' said that before any "Other, Curriculum Committees ofresponse to student demand and the new course will even be considered as 'teps ave benad hc ordsign-, '

need for Chinese speaking 'Americ-ans an~ addition- to the' curriculum,, "a.- ed to handie aspecific task and and''in the present political situation "compelling, case for including the then cease t exist, Snmith said.Fundingand an nstructr are-course, in the alreaidy diverse cur In- order'o'ana much informa-

available for the course. It will be riculum. "must bmae"'tion on the curriculumnas possible andrepeated afer: the t exeietl'Such a case, according to Smith,' report it back to the faculty, this Ye=x iit roves to be sUccessful.:. ol incuepoff "su e e year s committee is the' first. perma-~

.Math 7,:a' course in APL a corn- ~mand or need for the course,". the nent or staniding one.. The Committeeputer language, ~enters into the. cur- .presence of''a faculty' member is currently studying, the. following MahmtcIsrcorN Sih'.ht/ilrriculum. This is a course primarily for qualified to teach the course, and a issues for fture proposals:Juniors that complements beginning 'definite reason why. the ppsed 1. The Ninth Grade porman h algebra students'. work. An advance cors shuld be taught at PA.foryastdn. ' ' 71 7 J A A m .math semiinar, Math.68, .was c- The Curriculumn Committee propoe 2. Language. teaching and politically P(AI .1M~I~4 Lv~) , Pcepted. The, course is for. students that each department look at~ its "crtalanguages.who have completed Math 65. Thbat course offerings and reduce, the. .3.' The role of computees and corn- -was "acepte [on'thel rincile tht numer ofdiffeent curses itofr uing intecriuuA e i i s C l nathe most adaced studentg'should be' each term. ' - 4. The science Curriculum.able, to. continue th Oe5cusshdeir study of Math Oe5'corsha enrollments SJ. ~The elective' system andl theat Andover" '.under ten last fall, and 78 of the 185.. distribution: of electives.' XDRKB. Topics Under:.Discussioii i the;~curriculum C6mmittee ,DaofRsdenceDavid Cobb an-adtm foit civythugte1) The development of. clear' principles and secific "criteria for assessing proposals for nw corses and for the none e rcdr nshdl aendar. Committee, headed by:cdnsideration orelmination 'of existing courses."..-quotes from ifaculty voe of April,28, 1981; figets iwn ornde tiprevetcn eno Suis hlisPwlta

21Te ninth grade program and the four-year' student. fit ewe lne ciiis osntitreewt n te3) Languae teaching and pollticaly`citca languages. Events that do not apear in the event4)The rol of coptr n optn ntecriuu..Social Activities Calendar, the Guide'Exetn Saudy igs, oe , lie computers and computing in the curriculum. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~more than two events will be schedul-.5) The science6 curriculum, to Events, or the PA School Year dvn ~li61 The elective system and the distribution of, electives. Caedrmut ergitrda d erasevn iN eent inolvingmg ~~~~miinium of two eeks prior to theunecasnwilrnpt8:0m7). The role of the commfittee vis-a-vis the committee of Department Chairpersons c oncernin' dateesqlioccurance. an'wdays

Workload ad the consolidAtio of existing', Oil wrses-' n-wekaAn orgnizaton: rust~select a date Activities that will: be s o

ordinated 'are ll' evening socialThe Curriculum Commnitt Announced the Followin New Courses: , events, club events* and trips,-.andP hiee 0-O- nroucoy~iesefoSeir "" evening. lectures anid seminars.

PMath 17 -APiL Computer Pogamminig fr uniors Daytime; Cluster meetings nd cf-P'. Math 68 -'Advanced Mathematics Seminar. for students, who have completed Math 65. .ferlgosevnsadscdudathletic events are not 4icluded.P- Physics:33 - A "hands-on" course in electronics Cb oe oeimnt ofit

P French 37 - French journalism ' '' ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~betweenwevents and thus insure, max-imumn attendance t every event."Students and teachers often' set up[~~~~bators~~~~~~~~in-IN~~~~~~~i~~~tc~~~~h/)ana

'~~~~~~~~~~ ~ events and have' limited: turnout''N Fs, -FLAW ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~4ed ~~~~~~ecause of competition with other ac--Team Conquers 7 Other Schools titis

By HANS W~~DLER The topic for the first roupd was Abramowitz, Research Managers ~~~~ - He also'ahopehopes""o'o restorethe.'By HANS VMLER The topic for the firt round was Abramowitz; Research Manaesemblancean of 'studyd hohrsrs in "theAndover won both' the'. novice that extremism i eeseo ibryi Rob Baron and Nancy Taggart, and V' evening, "by not having-events dur-categr~' nd te bet ovrallteam no vice; for the'second, that the arts Membership Chairmen Ted Connell ~igtoehus"

trophy in the:Milton Dana Hall Ex- should be federally supported; and and Tim Cahill. " ~ Cb ilcmiea atrclntemporaneou Deae nSunday, -for the third, that US Feign policy Newly lected co-President Tamar 'droevnswihilaparnteFebruary 28 should be based on a moral code. Gendler said, "I am very pleased with Pilpa vr w eklsigtecompeting at the ebate The other he leadership of he new board, al ng a number of no ices andPtheyioiaeventsroltwtheeucoming itwo nweeksparticipntswereExeterilton, Th weae anouned larst w ee . heli erylt welf the' nkeb te i yer'sTrug aeflsheuig;CbPal's, Belmon o Higomshbadfrtht928. colya team hasalodo ptntaundd-es tthu Andover w eaina

Lamtin tte' eae.Te heringer lads T ar'ener;bVice- alhopetaecagtrc a numberofnvcsadteEach scool set fouradvancd~ Preidentas arouSchw at andkimee ofl new embers. In the pinghi eand Nirob ht/ nd nitllgn e f roiissparsand for, novices. ac MiteamS WohsonoTrashersaTdeMftcadscallemkeuheindoerdebtebeaof four as furter subdiidedin o aNed. Rfoste Secretary achl . tam str aon fpoe ntwo "affirmate patnrs arguingoe htAdve ilrmi inhavoreo thW ivenr, 'attoisK amndy Sit fcomc sP 1b iepeaks Oantialveypcing the debate topics.dTaar'enle; 'Vie- I tPetht eor lsLBarn. ananatrat'Scottr Dvi Bertetttiad:anine weret f ritunefated in thePonsadte reietMa ShatadAie ofnwmmesi tesrgadnaffirmative00 counerp r anc eda-.BYHLE SRMspeakers and four novices. Ea~~~team 'Wolfson; TreasuProfssorTof Biology Edwrdeall"Whenkwetdo smething tobour enamfart nd An ter Coffivian finsh 9 Knod fteUiesiyo iomn ti lkl t o oehnedth'cmeition wite anrxellnt: .- Suhr an pk oBooy s irtr, ad amnytwo afieod Advanced speakers

R aloArazntz aivnd Ed't Hoicssuet eelatTusa ih" tesd ht inew o''hvalso temebae undefeated urey0on0theilemmafcdi riio ulmitd se,,wtr n

"Baron ~~~~~~~~~~~~~Iand 'S'Cott Bertblacetcholgca pores nd esure, eiano afodtowatAndvaned 'detr 'Mndarc Scharz.eooia osrain h

possible speaker points; Abramowitz :" - . th~~~~~~~~~~~~Poe or o iselbtwe 'watdJ e we indta ontsof'thfossil' fueinofled ine opeighn th ance with'6 Kaneed olfe tes and.vdamit g "th v en it.' ie teo.soetlincgpoints. . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~' ' ~~~~~ ~ ~ thevrnMaien oe o ilher t uuat v~er syr'onthy are-Since the debate was extem- , i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~setivably lst Thu'sda nih' utsed -tht. sthey ae viota v'e

poraneous the participants had no ad- photo/Taggart replaceable.lmmafacd n tyin to unlmied pac, wter Anvance knowledge of the subjects to be The 1982 Debat~~~~blane echoloica pogrss nd resu ngfrdClubstdaed ''bti" cShat Krmondy 'eli thaahmasnod

ec~o ialconernoite 'h.oenilfod eeame in ~~~~~~ seven p-la~~~~~~~~ce''Anio romthesugeficintl.de eplane.C th, .':'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~htth u' neg.i ubett hvan SI Dsekr Eih6u:o:'90 Karmondy~'t n ~ z ri cl L5 U "pyraid theat-ites prgrefivel' ' ' . ' . . los~~asie e upse theeyce cha.

~~~~~rrisonfi willabeo' guidingmpromram. beten ha ben:wsemc ftesnseeg.wi nepperdAnnnolemr aidfat Tp-yThsnewneadsresposiblInlwe te vev o wlfeatheAmssosOfie'-oeognziganspevsngtetudngsne ipuiryer ndhs' sKamny dresdwhth'5elstudent uide proiam nextyear, 'tudent gide progam. "Stuent "pu a lot o time inovit.nCoeman thiultitht'sequeston whics the envirelcigrugonosudnnmienuitg sa otly tdet-utoer-sadththiei.imoratoointt umn' uswonier'resad.Point i~~edr Aren yekadMt 'to, ad disosOfie oe iesgou fsuet "Hwumuanvey o'thes eerse effsPagne 4:teWahelyWietToa hie dpetrswasIIxt"It oc- idres."vl caleorvetdwitutusetnBoth~ipton and Cfrman were ex- upies an iinpdrant'position oncam- ' ' ouru'on . lifestyles'tooidrastically

poraneous the participantsCoemn hTiad rconie hethy il d ateriicjoinxtyer. met?

PAGE TWO -/ ACB18

EDITORIAL~~~~~~~S OPINIONSAD"LTTR

~1Uhc11.I L(( r1r.1(11~IIA~' -Lettlets

EDITOR IN CHIEF

PETER CLEVELAND PA Goy't, A Bastion of DemocracyEXECUTIVE EDITOR MANAGING EDITOR

TAMAR GENDLER CHRISTOPHER THOMPSON To the Editor: power in affairs which aff~ct the.stu- which the student leaders have goined

-- Recent issuegrof 'the Phil lipian have--dent-body--intimately.'--Oiir-student'-' -- for --us--discredit- any.-accusations -of--- - --

SPORTS EDITORS NEWS/FEA TURFS EDITOR B USINESS MA NA GERS carried letters and editorials critical leaders are our chosen representatives -indolence or, ineffectiveness. - For in-

SARAH ROSENFIELD MICHAEL LANDRUM - RAHUL SONNAD -: of PA student -government. Many committed to advance our -infest~s, -. stance, the parals_4ebatewoudnotJOHN SHAW JSUSTIE hae atced he alleged although they mutoften labot nerb burning ijssue without tdn

bureaucracy, ineffectiveness and even the most adverse circumnStances-an government to clhmpioni the cause ofCOMPOSI~~iON EDITOR ' 7th PAGE EDITOR the necessity of student government.- ofentimes--cynical- faculty, an indif- human _ dece n d ignity -to wage-

JOSHUA HUBBARD MACKY ALSTON Until now, nothing has been written ferent student body, 'and a Web of war against an evil system riddledin its defense, nor-to its credit. bureaucratic, procedures which im- with inequity and injustices, until it is

PA student government is a bastion pede proposals rather than aid thee.' orever eliminated. We would neverof democracy-a bulwark of student Nevertheless, the achievements have had a student center without a

'GRAPHICS EDITORS: ICHAIRMAN/ DANIEL MILLER, ISPORTS] GRAEME -School -President_ -who. -pressedHENDERSON; 7th PAGE) PATRICK MfcCORMICK; CA RTOONISTI BARRON . unrelentingly for one; furthermore,

SNYDER , t d ti - O v ~ L( L~ IK we would still not have one. today,ASSOCI-4 TE EDITORS: (GENERAL MANAGER) JAMES COHAN; INEWS) RICHARD u., suffered from crime and abuse,. had

EISERT, KARL JACOBY, AMY KELLOGG; [FEATURE$1 JOHN WEISS: ISPORTS] - ,not our School President persevered,and saved it from failure by issueing a

LAURA CULBERT, JEFFREY CURLEY. STEPHEN GUSCHOV*;.(COMVPOSITION) To the Editor: visiting, and some water-tight stirring plea, for students to actJOHN HWANG, ELECTA SEVIER, DAVID YANG; IAD VERTISINGI JANE NUlT, As our present 'systemn works (?y arguments behind it, yet nothing has, responsibly.

STEPHANIE WILSON; ICIRCULA TION MANAGER) JOHN KIM, JOHN STERITI now, for the 1200 students at Phillips happened -- even though the faculty Iin these and other instances studentAcademy there is niot one vote that has come up with no reasonable ideas gvra~thspoe t ot.

.u-~~.uj represents them. The students are ~in. support ofthe present system other Granted, the system, may be im-E-4~~~~~~'11It~~~~T ~perhaps the group most, affected -by than the fear of sexual intimacy bt'S tudent F ie.dty li LInm I'VI 'each movement' or stagnation of ween teenagers. b- -perfect, -for the student government is,

polic here yet hey hve abolutly Anover as alays ben . not an institution steeped in tradition

Last Sring erm, he Comitte on Rsidenial lfe aprovedof a polsay iheir etiy.hv abouely Adovler amoysbn recogniz- or experience, but the principle forLastSprig tem, te Comitte onResienti lie aprove of Thiosack of terdstdnt. poeesdnn s laoter aof g ts secondary which it stands-the right of students'

proposal that called for a consistent procedure for implementing Tcslclfsuet oe si oshol.Aohro t aim to fame to have a'say in the operation of this

school policy. The new systemf was formed to give worthy ideas a way to the discredit of our present states, "It's the students that make school----must never be losL For as

chance to be discussed by the rnemb6bq of the various committees student leaders. These elected'- of- this place great." Why, then, can't long as we have student leaders work-and councils and not get lost in the clutter of the student govern- ficials (the CRL reps, cluster presi- we fuse these two ideas together and ing to make this Academy a better

dent, and school president) have let the student government be the place, the more--all 'of us wili profitment system. The Student-Faculty Council, one of these r'#wo devoted vast amounts of time and ef- leaders and decision makers ratherfrmorsanwadfralth

polic planing breaucacies hashardl-playd an ffectve roe in fort toward their ideas, and,. have than simply advisors and sounding years to come.reviewing proposals for residential policy, come up with some strong, boards for the faculty's actions?

The Student-Faculty Council 'was organized last spring termnand thoughtful, reasonable proposals and GireCulis13Gregory P. Herdlby '83

-consists of twenty-nine students and faculty. The specific purpose equally solid arguments to back themGegeCuks'3of the'cdmnmittee is to review proposals from the CRL and to make up, Why, then,. has so little action

been taken, or so few changes arisen?Hth nmeou omitee adconclswoktoetem enntiel. tOnt ov M unsasbeoc Before the Student-Faculty 'Council members can exchange (or perhaps was always intended to H aen On-OI

view,* on a certain proposal, the idea must first be discussed in the be) a farce. The faculty is responsibleCRL. If the CRL decides that the idea is worthy. enough of being for this mockery, because for all thediscussed further, the idea Is given to the .Headmaster, the School discussions of student responsibility, -i sdet osp wiHn

President, Cluster Presidents, ClthesfacultyacandonawayuwithranyuideasT the Eaitor: awcredithiaue todJosephtSwaintHanPresient, lustr Preident, Clster eansand luste Counils. by simply voting it down, or worse The Phillipian article Mrusic and nah Clark, Richard Wilson,, and

The idea, if approved by all of these people, is then sent back to h yet ignoring it by deai~ a vote More Music of February 26 coti other faculty members youi haveCRL and drafted into an official proposal format for the Advisr beas fmnr dly otisoverlooked.

becase f mnortechnicalities, a few errors that I would like to cor- 'ScntesnecAlvl nCommittee and the Student-Faculty Council. Nocobettereexampleceof"theseeryct.

- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ecting piece,it-snehlssdfBut what ne -'osals, could have these twenty-nine people bureaucracies exists than the present First, -the statement, "Theexitisnehls d-

reviewed if th yeonly met twice this entire school year? And question of pariefals. The CRL has, Academy Chamber Orchestra con%,.. fiult tomplay's' is illroglre sflw,how could the ~ veaided in managing committee'and' cou ~l- devoted the majority of its time-this sists totally of students" is completely Wh'iiepaax"nntles

based government if they have met so few times? The answers to year to this question, yet there has false.-As correctly stated on page~l, Ihiplies? -

these questions ire very simple: the council has yet to -discuss been no action, only the proverbial paragraph I of the Andover Course Third and finally, you state, "the-

anything except parietals in last week's me eting, and has not even CRasd nceate"disomeessonablTe, membShip988 includes. , "tsevea trio will perform arias by the seven-

attempted to cut down on all of the red tape which exists in the idea- pRoohals fonrae moe ealnroom members he acult." . thinkra teenth Italian composer Scarletti and

proposal process. pr-sl o oelbrlro ebr ftefcly"' hn the eighteenth century German comn-poser Bach.' Ate you aware that-

In its most recent meeting, the Council discussed whether House,.hr r w ~h etr-Iai~Counselors should be in the dormitory during parietal hours and if thoer awed7t Scetti Iaiuppparietal hours should be uniform throughout the school. Discussion E31and Alessandra) and three 18th cen-

s'uch as this is productive, but following through with the plan to eri tury German composers named Bach

discuss the topic with House Counselors in order to get feedback is (Johann Sebastian Bach and his

even more important. If the Council could gather together at some sons)? Giving the full names of comn-

point in the near future with the compiled responses of House posers would be helpful.

Counselors as well as students, and then make some decisions as To the Editor: -with a 24 per cent chance of destroy- ifrecome haelyo chec youreto which way it wants to go with this issue, It would be taking its I ol iet lrf h ogic of ing a silo hardened to 1,000 p.s.i., ftr.Teeerr r n

first step toward credibility, my "muddled" and -"incomplete" while the Soviet SS-18 carries 8-10 in- characteristic of the high standards ofaruents in my letter which a-dependently targeted warheads each accuracy maintained by the Philipian

FJ, * ~~~~~~~~~~~peared in the January, 15, issue of the with a 61 per cent chance of destroy- in the past; with a'bit more attentiontO Phillipian. The reason for Mr. ing a 1,000 p.s.i. silo). This gives the they should vanish.

ff l'in ter T erm R eview , ~ ~~~~Spiridigliozzi's unfortunate USSR a significantly greater counter- -Stephan Hamenn '84misunderstanding of my argument is force -capability (deploying misslesthat it wasn't clearly stated that my against enemy silos) than the USA.

the months of January, February, and March disappear into the back Hood and Elizabeth Weinberg's letter that some military analysts on bothThe reay witerter is mot beindus ow, ut efor letin le wasiwrittn iasw er torssn Vic ideA countierorcennulearon warion W iso U rges

of our minds, we would like to highlight some of the positive and to thePilpa attrade~n ie osdrwnal (n hcnegative things which have occurred in the past eight weeks. the points they made. If oine reads would not result in'total annihilation __

their letter first, my letter will read of civilization); many, I among them, ar v l nFirst, the positive things. Headmaster's day was easily the-best clearly and logically. .- feel that a counterforce war would C a t

administrative move of the term. Mr. McNemar's decision to give I would also like to say that I am only escalate into full scale destruc-

everyone a day off came at just the right time. Hopefully, there will not ignorant of factual data nor am I tion.I fear that if our -counterforce c frbe more of this type of surprise to come. The Admissions Office unaware of the capabilities of the capability is net developed to be at Stimu1lu ants -had another stellar year in terms of the number of applications sub- strategic defense iriad, composed of least comparable to theirs-as a result

mitted. Director Joshua Miner expects to end up with roughly 3600 an airborne leg of bombers, a land- of a freeze,'the Soviets may, if they -

applictions rom' opefulcandidtes. he musc depatment based leg of ICBM's, and a sea-based had a reason to, launch a-nuclear at-apesetnte Geoge hf. l anddHactes fThe ighdptsmnt leg of submarine - based missles' tack in the belief that they could winl, To the Editor:

presntedGeore F.Hanel'sHeicles or hreenighs inthe (SLBM's). resulting in the destruction of civiliza- It has come. to the surface again-Cochran Chapel. The opera was a smashing success as nearly one Although the strategic defense tion. -thdt there-is a chronic problem- with

hundred students participated. The Blue and Silver, a special dinner triad offers various securities, the An improved guidance'system for caffeine usage iii pur com~munity.

organized by underclassmen and help at Commons, raised one Soviet Union also has a strategic trial Miuea I hc ol ake an Caffeine is a stimulant..drug that is

thousand four hundred and fifty dollars for the Senior Prom. which offers greater offensive effective counterforce weapon and found in coffee, tea, cola,. and

Although not all of the tickets for the occasion were sold, everyone capability and greater securities than the new MX missle await deploy- various over-the-counter diet andwho wnt enoyed he god foo and he luury o'havig waiers. ours. Our airborne leg, currently bas- ment, but a freeze would prevent arousal -medications..,Caffeine doeswho ent njoyd th goo foo andthe uxur ofhvingwaitrs.ed on Boeing B-52 stratofortress, will their delivery. Only our slumarine- help a person to -stay awake, but it

And then there were GORIES. Who were the people bekind all of 'remain inferior to the Soviet bomber based leg of the-triad is superior to also can cause elevated pulse andthose witty yet deraugatory descriptions? The answer to come in focbsdo h dvne uoe h oies(ihornwOi cls-blood p~resure, flushing, and excessive

graduation issue. ~~~~~~~~~~~~Tu-26 Backfire, until the Rockwell sbaie)busbmrn ises stomach acid' secretions which can

Now for the negative things. Who is going to be able to afford to - International B-l becomes fully are neither powerful or accurate lead to ulcers. The side effects of

send their kid to Andover next year? Are low income and non- operational sometime after ,1988; a enough to be used in a coun't-rforce palpitations, nervousness, and nauseaprofessional families going to even think about a school with an freeze at present would prevent the 'role.inraefcfenes-cob-

$820 tuiionWillAndoer lse is diersiy an attact olel i h- completion of the B-I force. In closing, I'd like to makc -lcar ed with tobacco and accompanied by$820 titin? illAndverlos it diersty nd ttrct oley iiie Our land based leg of the triad is that I only oppose the belief that a fatigue. Also, the caffeine tablets

wealthy poulation? WAA is in dre straights. The sttfionn as neirt ha fteSves freeze isneednw adta i t such as Vivarin which contain up too--rgaiat, and issil awiin arpyfo fhFC thtwl teUnedStsaNAO(in-beie eetew shold sart tat'o titffc~soldn etknm

DyBREDOAR Answer: Definitely.

No one as donemore fo Phillps Answer: Well, first of all a good coachAcademy Athletics in this century than FreWW W uf '~ w know his stuff. He must know what iHgarrison. Attending PA from 1935 to 1939, [a r n s o nF iiing and the drills related to what he's he won nine varsity, letters in Football, 9 e a csli Secondly he must have the ability tcHickey, and Baseball In 1952, he returned, talent or find the right person for th(anihas been here ever sln~e. In addition to position in any kind of team sport. Andteaching History, Mr. Harrison has become exception of Crew, which Bill Brown and I breast so they won't leave them. So we can't I think, he must be firm but fair andthe mythic figure of Andover Athletics. While started in 1955. cminteeadsgsthtteyoeto have a sense of humor. f Laugh I don't-

*coaching, Football, Hockey, Baseball, and Question: When did P. G. s first start coming Phillips Academy, or if we do, we may be hur- you can develop an effective team rennis, he was the Athletic Director for to Andover? ting them in their own community. So thfink pretty much iron discipline. There ca:twenty-thr-ee years. The creator of programs Answer: P.G-s have been here forever, that football has now become much more of a that much deviation. Individuals must Iranging from fencing to crew, Harrison Questlon: Wha syu pno ntercn pcao pr hnapriiaigsot the larger group. You see it quite of'

helpe broden he ±ope f sprts t Phllip _ fcult yote regarding the reduction of pos -lot of schools are seriously considering dropp- hcey hr yoatonadogt -Academy:-Mr.-Hatrison is in the, iratiessf graduates? in otalatgtewihIwudhtnored, and instead of going with the pafinishing a historical account of Andover Answer: Well, I think frankly it depends on ieeg fotlle aogethle rhc uld haExte t everybody tries to do it himself.. Aathletics. This history is duefor release in the -see. [haardsaIhorribleerumoreuprattExeterithaathltic; Tis istry s de' or elese n te -~what way the faculty wants to discriminate, they were seriously considering dropping it. cahsIhv enhv raehiafall of 1982. We applaud Harrison for his Thycadiciiaeaantoeorte ustn:Hwhsheodctonaetd ty and some others have bliinders on w>character and integrity, b~oth in the classroom other. 1I think that the P.G.'s hiave added athletics? comes to picking the right fellw Whe.and on the playing field. tremendous flavor to this school, a tremen- Answer: There's no doubt that going co- e oeoywohste lyuh,Questiorn How dtd your book get started and dous adition. For example, John Watson, educational certainly did not help athletics., I odcah nmydaig ihk

how iv it coming? ~~~who built Nathan Hale, also left us 5 would argue that with anybody for the simple yur tagtwt hmaltewyAnswer. When we went off on sabbatical tis million dollars. He-was a one year P.G. Tom reason that you don't have the same kind of react. And they do remarkable things. was what I was to do. Marge and'I were also Cochran, who built this campus, was here for draw-the same numbers. Furthermore, you' got to be a mutual trust and understaneasked if we would help on the [Bicentennial] two ears. George Case, his classmate, (he have to cut back on your budget because now Question: Are there many coaches, i.

you have girl teams and boys teams that dou- opnnwoaesrljntuaf[

ment and uniforms. Also you need more space Answer: I am not sure. I stick pretty m,in the gym, ice space in the rink, field space my baseball. I was tempted to coach

outside. . ~~~~~golf this spring [laugh] and footbal.

-mnt in equipment? answer that question now. The girls ha.Answer: I do and I hope it's in the works. I good racquet teams. They seem to havc-~ mentioed it t peopleand I'msure ofwomen coaches. Somebody must bethat Joe Wennik is conscious of it. What we tejbt eeo hs is

........ ~~~~~~~~~~~~Question: Can You learn to be a good did was build thtaddition and do that cage AuerWlthbstxapeoawhich I think are beautiful improvements, but cohwaLuHitm.WeIwanow we should go back to work on the fields.

A ~~~~~~~~~I think that is natural, however, for Phillips frasus och okoe nAcademy as Well as any other institution to fantastic job. He learned the sport wh,program its activity ahead of its facilities. went to Barnaby at Harvard. He learnes think we're on top of it except for the outside drills, the technique, and he turned out s,facilities which I just Mentioned. I think very ta fe qahta.I os' ee

definitely that we need a new-running track mentabypyighesotour:outside, and that we need to refurbish tennis tobagodcchrviees.I !courts. You can't possibly take care of clay taedditonndarlinsp i• -

- ~~~~~~~~~courts without water and rollers. We have to kids-anybody who goes into a classro-..,ptin an irrigation system to keep the grass on this institution unprepared is stupid.

History Instructor and Athletic Coach Fred Harrison photo/Sateblel those fields. We would have wasted fourteen knowehs stuff.ak Ifkowlo Amrc H!fund drive because we know so many alumni. built the Memorial Cage), was a one year P.G. to sixteen thousand dollars every year just to alotkoenowf. Bu kno neercgo iI had the whole Southeast as territory-from. So they have- made significant contributions try to keep grass in terms of seed, turf builder, classroom without rereading the assigni-;Virginia to Florida to the Missis'sippi. Then, aside from athletics. But the assumption is, fertilizer in between seasons. You get another idea on another way they sent us to San Francisco and Cuba; we think, that in the minds of too many people, Question., Do you think there'Is been a change trgehekdWenyustarcicwent to Colorado, and so we were spending the P.G. athlete is stu pid and is coming here in quality of coaches?trgehekdWenyustapcicten or eleven days at the airport every month.- under false pretenses. Now we love to take in Answer: The tradition I was reared in said if have to decide where you are going to F.,-We were working out of our condominium in talented musicians or any people from all over you were capable of doing it, you coached soa you sensetyudrls, fore they netifwolor

-Florida, where I had just gotten the book the world who meet the academic re- three sports, you ran a dormitory, and first dasttrandojtth.'jogether after getting stuff from the library, quirements. If they have something to con--- you. had to be proficient in the classroom- dasttrandojtth. -

so actually it's been a prolonged exercise. -tribute, why discriminate between what is bet-,-ta' h motn hn.I o ol dHopefully, by the end of the summer it will be ter to contribute and what is not. smtigesfn n ad.Teesapr finished. I've got- eleven chapters right now, Question: Do you think it is fair that P.G. of young people that don't take on that-and it's a straight history. Among things very athletes take the spots on Varsity teams when responsibility. Let's put it this way: it's the -

few people know, for example, is that we have a number of three or four year Seniors work kind of a decline in tender loving care. To me,played baseball since 1866. Our first opponent their way up to Varsity only to sit on the beninadrhsbenalf.W hda

was Tufts Varsity, and we had our first bench? chance to get out of the dormitory years ago,was Tufts Varsity, and we had our firstwewaned benche ad ddn' wat tscholastic football game in the country against Answer: ILet me tell you something. I would buweandthsosendin'wnto

Adams Academy. We had the earliest involve- love to see a slew of ninth and tenth grade lose all the kids so we've had a very nice ar-Qetin: Wnescastre leico any peio hoAn crleas u chnes -o getting them.id ianete wingft house But Hal Plotoin the country. Question: Do you think there's any way to in RvradNtn-Hlwgotosicksx

dovr Ahleicswer doinat s fr a Ne Anwer Wel, e alkd aouttha; wtaled people who got the chance got out. Fun- -

dov Ahltic wre omnan a fa a Ne Aswe: ell w tak was thte, Athlei damentally, aside from athletics, to me, to run - ---

England competition? about it for years when a.h aAordntchoyo'egoeotaepepeic Answer: It's very difficult to draW a corn- Director although we seemed to be getting parison. In the old days we were playing the more of them then than we're getting now.- I maning the ramparts. In other words, you've -A

Harvard Varsity in football. Baseball think the whole tone has chahiged-for exam- gtt aeHueCuslr n hyv o -- ~ ~%~-schedules extended as far south as Virginia, pie, we take a great number of kids from pre- to do a good job at it as well as in something -~ ~ ~and we were playing Princeton. prep school private schools. I-ow many of else. When you begin to split and have ,-

Question: What was the heyday of Andover them play football?-not many. So we got a specialists ' running the dormitories and ..--

--Athletics as an overall program? lot of kids who are soccer players. Not that specialists begin to coach and specialists to ~jAnswer: The heyday of Andover Athletics as that is bad, but we don't get any football teach, you're in trouble. You lose that full- ~ -- .- t:

far as the program was concerned was the players. Now if we were to go to a public flavored relationship between the student and Speriod between the wars, 1919-1940. We had school system and, in a sense, recruit or try to the faculty and it also gets frightfully expen-fencing. We had water polo. The club, system entice athletes to come to Andover, they will sive.

was ealy gongwith the Greeks, the Saxons, not come, because they are ostracized by their Question: If you are looking at a job applica-the Romans, the Gauls. The're Was trem en- own community. High school coaches wine tion, would you look for experience in Fred Harrison pho(('dous interest. By 1920 sports blcw up with the and dine them, they clutch them under their coaching?

Mulvihill, in a combined effort, decided that Sarah Pynchon simply responded, "I-they like five day weeks better. "..The two them. In a sense, with a six day week, Nv,

-day weekend is a necessary termination' of a ensconsed by a "formal education!"

A re 6 'D a y V~~~~~e e k s H e lp f u l~~~~~a fivet day week (Friday night) is beneficial to noted the preisure and depression peneti -

athletes who must prepare for athletic con- PA's campus as of late, as Mr. McNemnartests." us the Headmaster's Dav to "relieve prvs>

Lower Abby Schumann prefers five day at this low point of thle year." Yet. heBy ASHLEY THOMPSON things into z nice perspective. I like that par- weeks also. She says, "When you come to the fesses "no strong sense of six day wve,

It's Friday night (7:30 pm); you're sitting in ticular mix of acddemic, athletic, and cultural end of a week you have two days instead of terms of pressure," but feels they' are "i-your room writing your History paper tuned -aspects of school life altogether.' Pam Patton one free, and thus a lot more time to enjoy to vary the rhythmn during the school yciin to WBCN; the disc jockey announces that likes the rotating scliedule. "I think it is im- yourself. What I hate about six day weeks is However, the'essential question still s tzithe weekend is upon us once again~. Or is it? portant to have a two day weekend and also a that Saturday is the day you have to do all Does the six day week actually accomplh--l

Six day weeks, an established entity at PA, spread out workload." French Instructor your work. You don't have any free time to be original objective, to alleviate the 'Pressui,_-defyi the notion of "weekend" by Hale Sturges also thinks it is important to with other people." Sue Philipp says she Phillips Academy,' or does it intensifynecessitating Satu~rday classes in addition to a have a change. Some students, however, -thinks students would prefer more courses 'nressure by giving both the students anl,,universily traditional Monday to Friday work feel thay may actually profit from the trauma each day if they could have Saturday morn- teachers of PA m'o %weeks of work andschedule. Although six day weeks wer e of a five day week. "It's ironic," said Senior ings free to relax from a week of classes, a weekend?,'

jr~ ~ ~ ~ e

By LA URA CULBERT, and Northern Arizona State have allSTEP"HEN GUSCHO V, shown extreme interest in Andover's

and SARAH ROSENFIELD _ top wrestler.In choosin-jAihlitei of t Termn,

the Philliplan Sports Department Of 3. Feinl ObNkioth the 1982 and 1983 boards first -Femni Obi is Mr. Clutch on the.~'iscussed nominations and then voted Track team. Twice this year .' .ersusfo;. selections. This term was especial- Holy Cross JV and MIT JV), a trackhv competitive, with Andover fielding meet has been decided by Obi's last41ietes from all classes and all df. minute high jump victories. Obi ferent sportfs. .broke the high jumnp record at PA this

As the winter of 1982 melts into winter (6'3") and has led the team inoblivion, the Phillipian Sports board- scoring this past season. Coach John --

is pleased to announce its selections Richards calls him "a superbof the top five male athletes of the athlete-the most gifted on the team.Winter Term. Andover is fortunate to He is a solid team member and has anhave so many fine student-athletes; excellent attitude-he would -be asome are standouts on the national as superb coach. Femni has fine leader-welcl as prep-school 'level, but comn- ship qualities." ,mon to all is outstanding athletic Besides'excelling in the high jump,ability and contribution. And so now, Obi also runs the mile relay and doesthe. envelope please. .. the hurdles. In his finest all-aroundI. Randy Wood performance of the season, Obi got ~'~bt/~knphoto/ms,

Andover's own Wayne Gretsky is a 10¼ 4of Andover's-25 points in 7cet -

fcour year Senior who led the Hockey against Harvard.team in both goals and assists this Obi, in his third year on the track -

year. Coach Chris Gurry summed it team, is the captain of the Spring - -

up well when he said, "He's the guy I track squad, where he is a member of ___

look to wheli we need a goal . . .he the record-breaking sprint relay team.' Idoes everything." Indeed he does. - -l T Besides starting at center, Randy 4. Paul Hochman 'W o o d~t Wood skates on the power play, kills Alpine Skiing Captain Paulpenalties, forechecks, backchecks, Hochman was this year's recipient ofand has been compared by Gurry to the Peter Q. McKee Award, given tosuch former PA icemen-turned- the outstanding member of the skicollege All-Arfiericans as Dennis team, and is the Philhipianps fourth O iIffifMYurphy (Dartmouth) and Billy Army athlete of- the term. Hochman is(Boston College). undefeated in Prep meets this seasonK

team:, During his four years, Wood Region Championships at CannonThis is Wood's fourth year on the and has won the Giant Slalom Lakes E~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

has never missed a single gamne-a Mountain in New Hampshire. Hefeat worth noting. For the past three also placed first in the Eastern Circutsyears he has played good, steady Slalom Championships, and placed Yr-hockey, but, as Gurry puts it,, has third in the actual championships __________madea "quantum jump" this year. themselves. On the weekends,He was named All-Tourney player of Hochman competes in the Eastern 41

Nobles before Christmas, and has age group (18 and under). * 1A 4th turaen hsedbyMltn-met, hrehei rte irt nhi *4

been nominated by Gurry for the All- Coach Diane McNab calls * . j ~ 4 New England Prep' School -teamn. Hochman "a tremendous help to the,* Wood is being heavily recruited by team. He is a great athlete and per-* IHarvard and, Yale, and Gurry feels son-a good leader for the ski team. * RX- htoHndrothat he could play or either team He always pulls through in all ofthe *I~Iright away. He has proven to be an races-he has great concentration. h1 immeasurable contribution to the -He is a high quality student as well as *Phockey team, and Gurry remarked in athlete." * I t.-closing that "it is hard to describe all The people up in Hanover, NewL ithat he has contributed to this-team. Hampshire, have noticed Hochman; He has done everything." he gained early acceptance at Dart-h-

mouth and plans to continue skiing * 1 **2. iKeviri Wnttles .next winter. * 4

Kevin Wattles is by far the most 4 ., i-important member of the Boys' Var- 5. Scott Malcolm *-e~~Asity Wrestling team. Last weekend At Lawrenc~ville, New Jersey lastWVatties v~on the Interschols in the weekend, four-year Senior and Swim -* Samunlimited weight division, and is Team Captain Scott Malcolm ac- *4 a -- FooSgbetraveling to Bethlehem, Penn- complished a phenomenal feat as he* 44444 * 4 - ~- - -pooSgbe

sylvanite, for the Nationals this broke the one minute barrier in te girl with the "electriFc!~c1"Sheweekend. Wattles has been 100-yard breaststroke. Malcolm, who 1. Torrance York - constantly deke.6 the opposingundefeated this season and virtually had swum the trials at a 0:59.98 clip, B o s ir s As otstanding- athlete of the defensemen and the goalie.unscored upon. His quickest pin has went into the finals and finished at * Winter term, the Phillipian It is this combination of Hall1-ceen seventeen seconds. He is as good 0:59.68 for a New England record. * * od -. Yr recognizes gymnast.- Torrance York know-how and Chivers strength that

many college wrestlers, and in fact Malcolm, named a High School *.W o 1.Yr o for her superior ability and ac- has brought the Girls' Hockey teamspent weekends in ambridge All-American as a result of hisac complishment. In the season of six to the conclusion of their season at

w;rvstling against members of the complishments at Lawrenceville, was; . meets, York received first place in 22 11-2.H-ivard team. originally a diver when he began his *2 Wattles 2. Oden - of 24 events and placed first overall in

Coach Nicholas Kip says, "He is PA swimming career four years ago. * the Dana Hall Invitational Meet last 4. Maria Ellas & Leslie Bofleau by far the most proficient His record in dual meets this year was* week. A new Lower from New York, Sharing fourth place honors, thishoav'yweight I've ever seen. It is hard eight wins, one loss (at the hands of * Ob3.Hl! she earned her place on,- the, Girls' term are two veteran swimmers-theto compare him , with other Exeter). Coach Charles Willand com- *..O i3 al Varsity Gymnastics Team as she mainstays of the undefeated Girls'lightweight wrestlers, but he may be ments, "He is one of the finest young *Chiivers swept their first meet against Milford'- Varsity swim team, four year Seniorthe best wrestler ever at PA. It is hard men I've dealt with. He's receptive, * High School. She began the term by Maria Elias and' two year Upperto find competition for him in prac- anxious to learn, and willing to 4 HOChlfaf 4. Elit2sI competing in the vault, balance Leslie Boileau. While combatting

tics. e cn dalwith -any- type of change. Scott is someone I can count Boea * beam, uneven bars, and floor exer- recurrent bouts of sickness thisticent-He a ea gra-elwt nudravrecod*os ehs*-B ieu 4 cise, and was one of the two all-round *1W Elias completed her outstan-any type of opponent. He has no'- done a fine job as Captain, he is a * 5. Malcolm S. McBride *W competitors on the squad. Word of ' ding career as an Andover swimmer:great technique weaknesses. Kevin is 'fine leader, and communicates, to me -it er, outstanding talent circulated at' the end of her first season as aquick, precise, and very adaptable." and other members of the team very, quickly and her breathtaking routines Junior, Elias broke six school records

WVattles wrestles at 189 pounds, well. He'll be a big loss." 444444,,4 ,4 4became somethingof alegend schol-_.Jnl~cLpecialties, the 200 yard and theand is rated high in the nation in his Malcolm's holding of the school, 4 A wide. York combined strength with 500 yard freestyle. In her career, she.class. At the Interschols last week, pool, and New England breaststroke - ~poise-perfect grace and throughout 'has maintainea her clonuince o,Wattles won the Ted Seabrook records has attracted collegiate inmt - the season improved each of her these events, taking first in nearlyOutstanding Wrestler Award. terest, most notably from Dart- - routines. She not only improved her every meet this year, while also a-

Wattles, who hails from Seattle, mouth. own scores until many were well choring Andover's nstoppable 400Washington, is aso being heavily This weekend, the Captain will lead above 8.0, but her contribution to the yard relay squad. Elmas ends herrecruited. Harvard, Princeton, the troops to Suffield, where they wijll team as a cheerful and motivated season holding two New EnglandOr-~gon, Rhode Island State, Iowa, compete in the Interschols. athlete was substantial. records, and the Andover/Exeter

2. ,MaryOgden - ------- record in the 200-yard freestyle.In scon plce s Atlet oftheBoileau also overcam. physical'adver-

Ter seniorac May Ogdleno theo sity this season; suffering from bothTemi eio ayO etec-shoulder problems and a brokenCaptain of the Nordic Ski Team. Her vertebrate, Boileau overcame pain tosuperior performance in the Eastern be-Andover's leading 100 yard breast-Jinior Nordic Championships on stroker, 100 yard medley, and but-February 21 earned Ogden selection tefysimr Apwros ito represent the Eastern Ski 'Division PA'l sngsqua, Boleue is

/ ~~in the Junior Olympics at Lake Pseaso ong thead Niewu enndhiPlacid,,New York. In the Interschols, recon hing yard edlElandeshe competed against the top 54 skiers 10yr ratsrkwieasin the Eastern United States and cap-inre 5 lcCah etctscapturing the Andover/Exeter record'

- tued th lac. Coch Bet ctesin the hundred yard breast,- stroke.Ogden as probably "the best peP- B oth overcoming physical adversity,school girl skier and in the top ten in wiebigAdvrstpsoesthe country." Mary is an outstanding wle an oers an p int regrsarskier, thte~e, captain, nd in- ia mandntaining the Wninter posn

~~ ~EIJIILU~~1~L~ PAkGE FIVE

~~ #~~~;~~~ Finish Season With 11-1 Mark

Boys' TakRns B eBY JON BHUSHAN Wemple, running the mile for the 'winning time of 3:46.5.

The Boys' Varsity Track team end- first time, won the event with a shat- Before the meet on Wednesday,ed the 1982 season on Wednesday by tering time of 4:42.5. Wemple also Head Coach Richards stressed thatdefeating Phillips Exeter Academy- took first in the photo-finish 1000 by "every performance is a key perfor-55-40, finishing with an amazing I11-1 edging out Exeter's Campbell. 'mance," while Assistant Coach record. The Blue's only defeat came Co-Captain Courtney Shriver, who Graham, reciting Admiral Halsey'sat-the-hands -of Harvard JV,- which- has suffered, from,,back --injuries -for- famous quote; -declared, "there -are-

;A also defeated Exeter for its only most of the season, hurled his way to no great men, just great challengesi - ~~~~~~~~season loss. Coach Richards knew the victory by vaulting over eleven feet. that ordinary men must meet." There

-meet',would be close, predicting a Versatile performer Richard Baldacci is no doubt that the Andover track48-47-victory for the Blue. contributed eight points with a first team met that challenge.

Key- performances accounted for place finish in the hurdles and a e-the fifteen point Andover victory cond place.- finish, in the shot-put, Andover vs. Exeterwhich gave the team its best indoor while star athlete Femi Obi grabbed Shot Put: Diquattro (E) 53'6 V"record in recent years. After breaking second in the 50 yard dash, hurdles, Long Jump: Okivu (E) 2 2 V2 away from Exeter's top man Hacket and high jump. Mile: Wemple (A) 4:42.5in the last ap, Co-Captain Steve- Stephen Donahue and John Aje- Hurdles: Baidacci (A) 6.7

mian captured second and third place SO: Oklvu (E) 5.7finishes in the long jump, leapinig Pole Vault: Shriver (A)i'

-, ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ -"~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~" ~~~~~over twenty feet for the firs time all 60: Kaluzney (A)'year. Other notable performances in- 2 Mile: Moor (A)1:0.cluded Jim Moore's mile- winning High Jump: Martin E) 64m ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~finish, Steven Kaluzny's first place in 1000: Wemple (A) 2:26.8

-~~~~~~ - --. -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~the 60 yard run, and the mile relay's Mile Relay: Andover 3:46:5

Exeteir opponent. photo/Casytor,~ l i eS ir a e lG IW S , A week ago, they ~~~~~~~~~- -rambled down skiers a squad of unbelievable racersG irls' - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~the -faces o Pat's Peak and Loon not seen before by the P.A. squad. In

t ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~ ~~~~~~Mthee They beat the moguls of the particularly grueling and lengthy~~1A,1J117/31 ifla. .'~~~~4 thes mounts, finishing high in a field Giant Slalom course, the Blue placedw r im i nggj- F~f7 which1 included the top prep school four skiers in these two moring runs. competition in New England. Led by A Holderness skier captured first

Vi - ~~~~~~~~the Hochman fraternity, Paul and place with a time of 1:44.36:. Depen-~~~~'U n b eaten ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Steve, the Boys' Alpine Ski team dable Hochman placed only fourth,U n b %Po I I .7 te n ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~dominated the Lakes Region Chain- though his time was only three-fifths

pionships at Pat's Peak, finishing of a second behind the leader. Kevin- ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~first overall in a field of ten teams. In McClure and Steve Swallow came in,in 1 -982 C-CapanSeeplsaedo i e poet ht/edro the highly touted Interscholastic at the fourteenth and fifteenth slots

championships held this year in New with times of 1:53.47 and 1:53.72.-By KYRA TIRANA Hampshire's Loon Mountain, the Not a particularly strong showing.At the 1982 Girls' Eastern Swimm- __ skiers finished third overall, behind The afternoon runs turned out to being meet on Sunday, eight girls, Ni E 1 the squads from Vermont Academy marginally better.

representing Andover's Girls' Varsity N oiofi I c 1 ~E EU E E E E~~ and Holderness. - The elder Hochmnan cruised to aSwim'- team, continued Phillips On the Peaks 1:19.39 time in the slalom, capturingAcademy's fine swimming tradition. Though Vermont Academy came first place in both runs by one secondThe team fared very well, taking fifth By JOHN DEVINE back to defeat Andover in the In- and thus first overall. Fil Reichen-place overall in a meet that included To~the delight of most of the PA Doggett slid into twenty-first. Phil terschols, the Blue topped these op- bach- was the next Andover skier toteams frorr all over the country. community, the snow and ice which Harrison captured a hard-won forty- ponents at the Les Regionals. Paul finish as he crossed-the line with aIn~the medley relay, the tean- of has threatened the life of many a fifth. Hochmnan cruised to a first place ie 1:24.16'second time, good enough forSusie Kito, Susan Deer, Leslie Quaddie crossing main street is nearly Having completed a season of good as he posted a 44.3 second time in the eleventh place. Besides Chris Dayton;.-Bioleau, and Maria Elias placed i fth.- gone. But for the Nordic Ski Team, snow and great skiers, Coach Best slalom. Little brother Steve came in who- finished in eighteenth place,Beth Serlin, Courtney Carmody, the season is not yet over. On Sun- was very pleased with this year's at a respectable fifth, with a 46.1 se- Steve Hochman suffered a disappoin-

-Susan Deer, and Edna Wqng made day, February 2 1 st, the team travelled teams, saying that the mostly Senior cond run. Just half a second behind ting fall in which he injured his kneeup the freestyle relay team which to Vermont Academy o compete in squad was the best this school has raced Kevin McClure. Their point and McClure spectacularly hit theplaced a very impressive third. In the the Eastern Junior Nordic Chamn- seen seen in at least five years. The totals were tops in the ten team corn- gatekeeper in the middle of his run.individual events, Elias took tenth in pionships. For their superb skill girls team finished a well-deserved petition, a pleasant prelude to the In- With its combined morning andboth the 200 and 500 yard freestyle. displayed in this meet and throughout first place in the New England In- terschols. afternoon totals, the Blue finished-Boileau placed ninth in the 100 yard the season, Captain Mary-Ogden and terschols, while the boys came in Interschol morning brought an ex- third overall, thus ending a successfulbutterfly and tenth in the 100 yard Thayer Tolles were selected to repre- fourth. -hibition of Holderness's Eastern 1982 season.breastroke. Wong placed tenth in the sent the Eastern Ski Division in the100 yard free and eleventh in the 50 Junior Olympics in Lake Placid, Newfree. Representing the divers was York this week, Robert - Best was By ' Hc a hr w Diana Powers, who placed fifth. The chosen as first alternate for the Boys'team swam well, especially in the division. No-rth~field Kimball Union Defeat Blueclose races in preparation for the in- - At the meet on Sunday, the G irls' t&LlL4 ~I&JI& terschols this Sunday. - Team, victors of the recent' n- By TED McENROE- decision to an excellent Kimball would control the tempo of the game.On Sunday, the entire team' will terschols, put out, its best effort in the and TOM NOVELLINE Union squad in overtime. The loss KUA increased their lead to 2-1finish its 1982 competition in the in- five kilometer course. In a coin- Bad luck and scrappy opponents was their fourth in a row, leaving fu iue ae naNrs httaterschols. Although the season ended petitive field of 54 of the best skiers in spelled a couple of one-goal losses for their record below .500 with only the fourgite aermon aoit ot sthatn-with the Girls having an undefeated the Eastern United States, Ogden the Boys' Varsity Hockey team this Exeter game remaining on the- agtD~mn oto oiin9-0-1 record, because of different pushed her way to capture fifth place. week. In addition to getting some of schedule. The action continued from end-to-scoring at the interschols, any team of She was followed closely by Tolles in their street clothes stolen at Nor- A Rick Apgar goal with 9:50 re- end, and the Blue power play, whichthe top five could win. The team, with seventh place. Hilary French, in an thfield, the icemen played to the wire maining in the game tied the score at had three -chances in the period,hopes of winning the interschols, is admirable run, crossed the line in with these opponents, unfortunately 4-4 and set the stage for the exciting played quite well, culminating in .atapering in practice in order to better nineteenth place. cmn po h hr n fa43 oetm.TeBu u rsueo Steve Moreland goal-the individual times. With a very suc- The boys also notched three places decision. Wednesday afternoon, a KUA. very quickly,-and had a major cromerwistet-oedsecnd lftr-cessful season behind them, the girl in the top half of the 97-contestent sals ibl no cdm opportunity halted when the Kimballchwihtey-nscodlftnare excited as well as confident, for the ten kilometer race. Best chalked up a squad topped the Blue in overtime by Union goalie was just able to tie up, the preridyn the gamnderaito l-

interschols. - ~~~masterful fourteenth place, whilIe Jeb a 5-4 margin. the puck before Captain Steve PA setted theal secon period slw-cThe NMH Effort Moreland could jam the rebound into -~lting imball3 non oe pro.Twiey

Andover suffered its third straight thpetuimalUnoeelzigho n theirt3 other perod.eyiSW T~~~~~~~i 'l'IA~~~~~~~~~~~r efa against NMH, in a ight game close they had just come to being pulledfo thefirt toher, howeverriG irl's 'M ock e W ins. defetat could have-gone either way. Ran- defeated, took control of the game, tim f the fistle, to scoe its thirdy ~~~~~~~~~dy Wood put-PA up 1-0 at 6:06 of the and with--jurji 1:44 gone in the OT a golfthgaetisimbyW d

firt prid o a as frm Rlp wrst ho fond tswayint te Bue from LaMarche, leaving the Bluefirst period on a pass from Ralph wrist sdown by one at the end of the period

By LAURA CULBERT Hartmann, a two-year Senior from' net past a screened Rich DeSimone, and setting the stage for the finalThe Girls' Varsity Hockey team who performed n excellent lifted Beaconfield, Canada. NMH ending the game 'with a 5-4 score. stnandAgrsalyshowed Goton what they were made shot. Groton interrupted, though answered two minutes later on a good The beginning of the game was a stnandAgrsalyof last Wednesday in a tense but with a half minute left in the period, shot that handcuffed goalie Rich little more encouraging for the Bluetriumphant game that resulted in an unexpected goal brought the con- DeSimone to tie the score at one. At rtesland he Blube inede to the ga, witho 9:5 eainin indtheir 5-4 win. Holderness 41so fell to stantly changing score to 3-3. With 10:28, NMH moved in front on athmevsemdtobdsindo tegacmenabaufled--the Blue last Saturday with a score of only- sixteen seconds left, Chivers power play and 'continued to hold break their three-game losing streak, end rush by Apgar, finished off with2-1. once again pulled her team ahead. PA's offense in check for the rest of scoring just 0:46 into the game on a a backhand shot past the beaten KUAThe girls face Exeter tomorrow Swiftly skating down the ice, Chivers the period, maintaining a one goal goal by Steve LaMarche from Randy goalie. Kimball Union had an oppor-and with a win their final record will passed off to Hall, then had the puck lead.--WodadRlhHrmn.Tttutyowitegmenrglto,

stand at 12-2. -- returned just in time to deke the NMH tabbed its third goal at just lead only lasted 13 seconds, however, but a slapshot hit the post, and the--Deadlock Groton oalie a auick- backhand. The 0:46 into the period and at this point be om ontaigtetp'ball Union Aaedak- ae etinooertm wher im-llSilence pervaded- the immense control held by PA during this period the Blue tur ned the gamearound and wihamoldmnsrtigthgyellUicorcaemowulsfnal

Grotonrink. he clok read a scor nonyrsulted from their ofensive- began a comeback. of physical, end-to-end action that eeg itrosof 4-4 with 7:30 left in overtime. Two aggressiveness, --, but from At 4:55, Hartmann backhandedminutes flew by with each team con- defensewornan Bernie Larriuiz, Londi the -the puck' past the Northfieldstantly breaking away but failing to Fannin. and Po&l Warner. who con- goalie following a scuffle in front ofscore. At 5:05 Sam Chivers captuied stantly prevented Groton from scor- the goal. Three and one half miinutesa rebound and slipped the'puck bet- mg on breakaways. pelatth Blu aitalizedgaon aeMHed - -ween the Groton goalie's legs, tally- Groton scored in the third period, pnly sHrmn gi med ~ -

A .,' '' ? I 7 " '

NJ'3

0P " . 'iir

PAGE SIX too -11IFfll4ht,1 1"T& IIXuIMR,, ,1

By JEFFREY CURLEY At the Squash Inier'schols at closest cntesit Of the Season, with

Choate last weekend, all three An- 'fdu4r out of tbo fivq games decided by

~~ l~usi~~urnfl I~~O~~~*LIIUSF3Q ~dover players made it to the quarter- a tie-breikei. the fl'F ame couldA/aeTr v lto E ser sfnas ndoeplyrfLwrlonhveeslygn Iihr a,-adiNiale S to ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~McCarthy, made his way to the was a timely combination of luck andHaving receie MiahyI addition, twoplayers, skill that enabled Tsai's Opponent to

By JOHN DEVINE dream into, act as he shattered the Al-Aercnaonraltmhyo and Ming Tsai, lost very wrap uip the 'victory.

Records were made to be broken; one minute barrier in his event, while ~ rattoeclose matches of five games in a three The Final Victory

Scott Malcolm will attest to this any capturing All-American honors for status for his chzool ratsrk out of ive series to their ranking In its last away game of the season;

da.Malcolm, the Captain of ocintedametssnthsthe his all-New England record. Malcolm record, Malcolm was beaten only number one seeds. the Blue beat Brooks School, 5-0.On

Boys' Varsity Swim team, has had his notched a close third place in a com-_ year, by Dyer of Exeter. M~rh nSmfnl yoemthwn omr hntre

eye on thie New England 00 yard petitive fieldof-thirty for-his time-of- Saudys'eehwvr eft -McCarthy;-the-number-three-rank- ---'games,- the-ninimum--amount- -

breast stroke record which stood just 59.68, while he, Steve Jones, Randy teehonors as .mere trivialities as ed player fr the Blue, faced his "necessary for a victory in a best of

ove oe mnue.On Saturday, at the Burke, and John Mayock went on to the lmcopeseal toseod level's number-one,,seed-in atense-_ five series. It_was _iard tostythis...

Easterns in Lawrenceville, New take eleventh in a field of seventeen in off his previous record. In the trial semi-final number one seed in a tense -match was even, a contest and even

Jersey, Malcolm turned a pre-season the 200-yard medley relay. heth eaetefrtpe colsemi-finial round match. McCar-thy harder to compare it to the two teamsheas, e bcam th fist repscholPlayed tremendously, with-' inex- -encountered- earlier this season which

swimmer in New England ever to haustable energy despite having just' Andover also defeated 5-0.,break the one-minute record, clock- played the number three seed, from The only obstacle the players en-ing in at 59.98 seconds. In the subse- Belmont Hill School, who he countered against Brooks was the

quent finals, Malcolm overshadowed defeated 3-1 in the quarterfinals. Yet frigid temperature of the courts,N E WS ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~his New England rivals as he placed in this match, McCarthy was struggi- which took ailthe-rebound out of thetffhi and sved n aote 59.3 Wt sec nds g with his opponents aggressiveness hall. Benedict won his first twooffhis tie, swiming aeod 59.68cWit and the score reached a 2-2 tie. The' games, then dropped two. He finish-

this Nw Engand reord, alcol tension mounted, and both players ed off his opponent in the final fifthnow holds three records for P.A., t avoided making a mistake at WIl costs, game, althbugh defeat never seemedschool record of 59.68, the pool for each point was crucial for the vic- an imminent threat. The remainingB R I E F S ~~~~~~~~~~~record of 1:02.2 (against Noth field tory. Finally, however, McCarthy's four players, Tsai, McCarthy, Tomthis season), and the New England St. Paul's opponent adapted to the ' Ullman, and Steve Fern, all demolish-

re cor. hisauomaicllyqulitespressure and took the offensive and ed their opponents in three games.him as an All-American swimmer. the match, 3-2. Fern remarked that the. Brooks

The relay team, a selection of the Playing at number one for An- players seemed "intimidated" by theA. ~~~~~~~~~~team's best sprinters, expecting to dover, Doug Benedict defeated his se- Blue, justly attributed to, the strong

S h o p lift in g N o tices ~ ~~~~~~break its qualifying time of 1:45.8,,. cond round pponent and found ,reputation the teamhs eeoe

- ~~~~~~~~~~~shaved an extra .4 seconds ff its -himself nmatched up against the this year.-mhadveoeBy TAMAR GENDLER ~~~~~~time. Each swimmer beat his personal number one player from Choate, who10VI,3 se

best split times in the trial heats, turndWotntobe nothr fnalit.s

An information sheet explaining Within the public schools, enabling the team-to advance to the Benedict lost 3-1. With one match left to play, the

"facts, policies, and kwi-onshoplift- members of the committee will give finals, in which the boys dropped - Four Tiebreakersl Blue's record stands at a mighty ten

ing" has recently beervp§jie'din every lectures in regard to shoplifting. their time to a mere 1:45.1. Eleventh Ming Tsai also fced a Choatie in wins' and only three losses. Its final

dorm. -Cobb decided not to institute a in a field of sixteen, the boys the quarterfinals, who happened to match is this Saturday against Exeter

The information sheet, which at- similar program at P.A., but opted displayed the culmination of their be the number one seed in the tourna- on Andover's home courts, and is set

tempts to dispel many of the myths rather to post the fact sheets in each season efforts. ment. Their match was perhaps the to begin at 2:00 pm.about shoplifting, was distributed dorm. During the next few weeks,under a townwide plan to reduce the Cobb hopes that the school will holdamount of shoplifting in Andover. either dorm or cluster meetings

Within the town, a committee to discussing the problem. 1NT ,Dv.e ' ri s ~ ~1

combat shoplifting has been formed, Although the recent emphasis of D eer'I ~ fl ~D s~ e u of which Dean of Residence David the issue was not' prompted by a ,fel 1"p B o s'B sk tb lCobb is a member.. The committee- single incident, Cobb remarked thatalso includes the superintendent of the problem of shoplifting has been dpatetAnorwsld-b

the Andover Public schools, the An- spreading for the past several years. By STEPHEN GUSCHOV man-to-man defense-a device that'dprmnA ovrwsldb

dover Chief of Police, and a number Consequently, local merchants aske Andover spelled defeat t-u-r-n-o-v- proved to be quite successful. A ThmBad(1,Jns9)ad

of local businessmen. for the' cooperation ofthe police -r-s last Saturdav. dropping a 63-60 tough defense led by Burke Doar, Helmers (7).' Deerfield's leading re-

Cobb explained that in the past An- department, the local community, contest to Deerfield. .Rufus Jones, and John Helmers bounder, Duggan, had 8.

dover businessmen have caught both and the Academy in an attempt to Andover started the game without' allowed Andover to move back to Probably the mo~t favorable

local and Phillips Academy students reduce the amount of stealing. Paul Wagner for the fourth straight within three, 48-45, at the end of the statistic to Head Coach Tom

stealing, but that the P.A. incidents 'game (he is out with pneumonia) and third quarter-despite having sharp-- Hodgson was the team's free'throw

had not been widely publicized. Since Cobb commented that "It's very with a 1-2-2 zone, which would allow shooter Bob Butera on the benich with percentage: 73 per cent (Remember

therehavebeenincientsinvoving important for P.A. kids to know that theBlue to be down by only four, four fouls.4 New Hampton and 31 per cent inAce ae stuents aniet invofacltyn this is a crackdown by Andover mer- thea h edo h irtqatr Alm~ost But Not Quite -January?)). Theg Blue now faces Exeter

member was selected for the commit- chants. They've had if, and they As previously mentioned, it was An- Andover could not make up" the* in the fina game of a disappointingtee.' - ~~~~~~~mean-business. I don't blame them." dvrstnoesha'lttegmefinal three points in the fourth season. Hodgson wants to' see more

for them; they lost the ball on seven quarter, however, and Deerfield ball control, and a better containingof their first nine possessions, and ten escaped with a 63-60 victory, of the Red's penetration, both inside

~~Sto~~~en times overall in the first half. Deer- The final statistics of the game and out. Exeter uses a very effectiveP A D aa t S field was led by Schlichman (16 showed Tim Cobb to be the Blue's fast break, and is blessed with 'finepoints) and Casey (11 points) in the leading scorer (16 points), followed outside shooters-these are the twofirst half, and at the intermission by Butera and Frank Ciota (9 main assets that the Blue will have to

By LISA PRITCHARD maintained a 37-27 lead. each!;-Ciota 7 for 8 at the foul line), stop, in order to make up for their

The cast of The Skin of Our Teeth, or two of the panels, but "we have In the third quarter, the Blue swit- Deerfield's Casey and -Schlichman previous 88-51 shellacking at the

directed by H.H. Owen, will be heard indirect reports," said Director ched out of the 1-2-2 zone and into a each had 20 points. In the rebounding hands of the Red.

traveling to England over Spring Owen, "about students seen in thatbreak, performing throughout the area around the time the panels werecountry. Due to a lack of space and taken." Hillman has designed amoney to bring a full set to England, 'modular' set, one which is easilya special set has been constructed. packed and directed. "This is the firstUnfortunately, the panels needed to time we've taken a set with us and weconstruct the set were stolen last were aiming for one that would be kw

Thursday from the sculpture court-, easily packaged,." said Owen. I

Technical director Tim Hillman The panels -were reordered, and fl I1L0 'tI

drove to New Hampshire last Hillman had to return to New Hamp- /// O1t 1 1Wednesday to pick up the panels and shire to get them. Meanwhile, thestored them, routinely, in the cour- disappearance has "set us back attyard. By the next day, the panels, least five days during a critical rehear- bAVD L4 Fo'r (Ila-~ 8

costing several hundred dollars in all, sal time," according to Owen. Seems pe.8e i~c $ Ac ohad disappeared. The wind is being as though they'll be ready for perfor- s~Q I Ifblamed for the disappearance of one mance by the skin of their teeth'!'~ k& TQ~L

Independent Proj ectsBy TAMAR GENDLER

47 students will be undertaking per term. Off campus projectson or off campu s Independent Pro- generally involve more of a work orjects during the Spring term, Dean of apprenticeship sort of experience,Studies Phyllis Powell ,aid yesterday. and take the place of all coursework / C ..

Normally open only to Seniors, In- during a given trimester. All Indepen-dependent Projects o fftr students the dent Projects are graded Pass/Fail.opportunity to study subjects Examples of off-campus projects"beyond the achievement level or include a study of ballet in New Yorkoutside the scope of normal offer- City, experience etching at the Cor-ings," explains the application form. coran Gallery in Washington D.C.,

The purpose of these projects, said and work training horses at-a profes-Dean of Studies Phyllis Powell, is to sional center in Virginia."6move learners to the point where ,On-campus projects include the Athey can operate as indepedn stdy such topic asGalcnlearners."' It is similar to college, she Hebrew,_ actual work in composing, D pointed out, in that students are forc- choreography and fiction writing, yed to find their own resources and and research projects in the sciences.

develop their own ideas. "It allows Students who haye undertaken In-~~~~~rL ! VK

MAR~~~~~~H 5,1982 ~~~~~~~~~The H[HU(A--iPIAN PAGE SEVEN

Th e Andover Touring CompanyPresents 'Te Skin Of Our Teeth~ '

By KIMI SATO Supposedly the season is summer, Eve, who have survived everyTonight and_ .tomnorrow night,,the but they- are.,struck by reezing- calamity, the worst. of them. only by-

Andover Touring Company will pre- weather. Thea ice age has come. the skin of their teeth.'sent The Skin of Our Teeth by Torn With much'toleration, the family Katie White gave an amazing prton Wilder- -In G -W halt at eight -overcomes-the-total chaos resulting trayal of a restless, nervous wife,ci clock. Directed by 1-.H. Owpni and firom the change n temperature. while HB. Ward convinces the au-~fr-il1ian.- the play. wlit nt' only The second act takes' place-in dience he is a typical, aggressive,

be' petiormed here, but also ,ln Atlantic City, where Mr. Antrobus all-American man. Extremely suc-various schools throughout England has been elected resident of he cessful was C.C. Richards, whoduring'Spring Vacation. - United States. -Everything seems to makes an intense t ransition from an

The production begins with an be going well, until Miss unproductive maid to a whore andabstract slide show by Upper BiffY Fairweather, ~plajqd_ by. C. back to the maid again. Judy Flynn

"'. ~~~~~~~ -. ~~~~and Win Clevenger both fulfilled their tasks by being a nervous little girl

* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~and a furious unloving boy. Other-~~~~~ ~actors such as Liz McHenry, Peter

Eliopoulos, Gita Khadiri, Nico Frec-cia, nd Stephanie Yoo, al con-tributed in making this production abig success.

Despite the fact that the set wasstolen last Thursday, the members ~worked twice as hard rebuilding the " ht/.Mleset. Mr. Owen said, 'We were badly The Skin of Our Teethpht/.Mlehampered by chronic failures in thelighting, sound, and communica-tions system in GW Hall." He con-tinues, "Also. many thanks to Mr.Hillman, who i ids a6ne anl incredible M

job doing two plays [this and As Youmarvellous work!"

Biffy Herskovits, the assistantdirector, adds, "This play has a lot By JUDY FLYNN

the show and despite the technical mance of As You Like It last the show lasted almost three hours,

difficulties, the cast has steadfastly weekend was magnificent; superb nearly every moment in every scenekept up an incredible amount of acting, blocking, and te wonderful was interesting and a joy to watch.

Scene-From The Skin of Our Teeth ~~~energy and excitement-we .can't addition of music and dance really-- The cast was brilliant. The leadScene.From Te Skinof OurTeethphoto/H. Miller wait till Friday night!" showed off this Shakesperian com- 'roles were commendable while the

Herskovits, the co-director, in which Richards, seduces Mr. Atrobus, The Skin of Our Teeth is a com- edy in its best possible light. seveoraln cast, manes ofewho hdthe main characters are introcuced. and convinces him to divorce his edy, indeed, but it is definitely more From the moment the play began serachatrcanskptethese people include Mr. and Mrs. wife, and marry her. At this time, a than a simple funny story. The play with a melee of dancing, skipping, play moving a its incredibly quickAntrobus, played by H.B. Ward-and 'tremendous storm occurs, causing explains the essence of human and exchanging couples, the au- and amusing pace.Katherine White, their son, Henry lerrible destruction. As Mrs. An- life-the happiness and the chaos. dience realized that this perfor- Courtney Starratt and Rob Long,portrayed by Win Clevenger on Fri- .trobus searches for her sori during Celia and Touchstone respectively,day night. and Yuki Ishizuka on this storm, he husband finally cmbiedsy oo theirlne mn actinsSaturday, ineir daughter, played by realizes the true meaning of mreosy oho hmgvn

-Judy Flynn on Friday~ and Lisy fife-family unity. As a means of very strong and uniquety humorous-,Crowther- on Saturday; and the .survival, the Antrobus's gather promne rgLk aea x -,maid, Sabina, played by C.C. every species of animal, and set out tremely talented portrayal of theRichards. to make a new life, love-struck Orlando. The audience

The Skin of Our Teeth is a story Then comes war. Henry enlists delighted in the performances of theconcerning the history of'man; how but' oin the wrong side, iieTore shepards with their hilarious countrythe human being has overcome once again causing the seperating accents, and Chuck Richardson and

-natural catastropes and human ag- of the family. After the war ends, Chad Rosenburger. who both played gression. The first act takes place in both Mr. Antrobus and Henry return, ~ 'their many characters with definate

-a typical New Jersey suburban and the family is once again whole. ttie flrair.stegteehome showing the. average - In the midst of the fainily's suffering, adrifre h oeyi

American family. This family is not all promise to live their lives as fully hesperormAcs striengthee

so average, though, for it has both a as possible. They realize that they Shakghespereasiit ou Lik tdinosaur and a mammoth as pets. are the descendents of Adam and dithrgh the catyo hoh

missed these performances indeed~- Faculty R eview of ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~missed one of the reatest, funniest

Faculty'R eview of ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~dramatic events that will hit PAstage this year. Evidently the playwas not only qreat fun to watc u

The M argaret G ho'st ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~as Upper Saran moort huiiiuurousiY

- The Margaret Ghost ~~~~~~~~~~Scene From As You Like t photo/H. Miller commentked "Gsh. fun goly gee itso

By ELLEN OLIVIER aeoefn od lo

Last week's Drama Lab offering, Chuck Richardson and Rob Long The Margaret Ghost, by Carole did ample justice to perhaps the two -

Braverman of P.A.'s English Depart- best roles in the script as Horace

ment, was a treat for the emotions Greeley, Margaret Fuller's h rr Hy fifteen characters in the Ibsen tradi- poet-lover-journalist-cad in her life.

-'tion. it turned the mature years of These two actors, with Brad By SHF-RI CAPLAN aristocratic Hungarian family, come to De Known as Ln,Margaret Fuller Ossoli, "the Boston Zodikoff as the Italian patriot Joseph throughout most of his career. Paukenmesse or Tympani Mass.

-Sybil", nto the story of every Mazzini, seemed the most ex- Choruses from Harvard, Phillips Haydn innovatively injected his per- The pening Kyrie further con-worfian writer and intellectual in the perienced in the cast, had the surest Exeter, and Concord Academy will -sonality into his music while the tributes to a martial feeling with thewestern world before the s exual touch, and used the best comedy join Phillips Andover students for a Classical style evolved. A contem- -.presence of the tympani and withrevolutiort Acted with understand- technique. Parker Quillen as performance of Joseph Haydn's porary,' Mozart, remarked that trumpet calls. The final Dona Nobis

/ ng and passion by a cast that variec. Nathaniel Hawthorne, Struan Coll- Missa in tempore belon Sunday, "Haydn alone has the secret of Pacem is an especially heartfeltin talent and stage- experience, it - eman as Sam Ward, Adrian Clough March '7, at 3:00 m in Cochran making me -smile and touching me plea for peace.,captured the audiencewith the first, as Rober - BrowNning, and Keith Chapel. Jameson Marvin, conductor to.,the bottom of my soul". Also performing at Exeter thesharp cry of the poet suffering the Lowery as Angelo Ossoli, while ap- of Harvard's Collegiumn Musicum, Haydn's library of- choral preceding Saturday, this concert

-classic female headache; and held parently less experienced, met the will conduct the combined chorus literature includes rri-any ma~sses, concludes the winter term's pro-through intricate and friction-filled demands of their roles and struck and orchestra, and Dr. Santo the greatest of these coming toward gram of the Andover chorus. Onescenes to the final smiling "That's just the notes ntended by the Cataudella of North~ Andover will the end of his life, between 1796 and chorus member commented that-

-good enough" .of the pregnant wife playwright. ' .. perform as bass s"oost. -1802. Composed during Napoleon's "'the group worked twice as hard asto the husband who worships her Patricia Finneran, Lisa Kulson Born in Lower Austria in 1732, -invasion of Vienna, the Missa in tern- they ever have for this production."

-without being ab~le to follow one step an hitn eesnhdeat~Jsp ad eaeivle ih pr el ae uhefctive and The public is cordially invited to at-on her intellectual path.~~osphHyd bcaeinole wthprebel mke uc ef

herlisabectuaBod' willow height hst o sue eiine ceesn harm-xa theptrng system whereby he extensive use of the tymnpani in the tend this special choral event. There

and lghtlycarrid sel-assuanceto emphasize Margaret's painful worked for the. Esterhazys. an Aqnus Dei tha h niewr a Sn hreframsolack of charm in the nineteenth cen- oisLwec

made her believable as "the Ms tuyainspsblcomdy.Showcase Cnamas(686-2:21)-n-ll--intelligent woman of our age" and tury-n intdispen sevmodtye shws$400-her slight stoop and awkwardAsimotgdplyenthsmall roles were rewarding, andMai Lv(Rl 10740950gestures, which might be handicaps e la e n ( aLr' ()-1Of740 950

in oter rlessuitd a omancon-Robyn Weisman as a nineteenth The Boogens (R)-1 -30, 730, 9:40.in the~rlds site a omn cn-century groupie, Rebecca Routh a § The CALEN'DAR §§5:30, (5, 0:00. On Golden Pond (PG)-1 :00. 7 45,

sider'ed phenomenally homely" by MisFle'Ieoe oa nwhich Ralphis Waldo dvoed or, ndOne From the Heart (R)--1:15, 3:30, 9,45.

Irtlp in inpaticlahgetig teialaghhinGWaado - 745 10:00.o i Aav#(,_

jA-ACH 5, 1982 JI ic .1t11JfIrdpIAN PAGE EIGHT"

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