8
1988~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~o '- ibralthe The PRILLIPLIAN~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~01 Vol. CXI No. 6 AfOE PHILLIPS ACAI)EMV ANOE, MASSACHusETFs My1,18 IL- Celebrate rs oe enyFaculty Reads T~~~~~~rom n.Fa vo__rihe Works_ Declares PA.' By ANNE GIMM /4a ur os STThe, greatest English-writing ern Ireland is reflected in Heaney's announced that as a poet, he) ST poet since Yeats" read certain selec- poetry including his first volume, metaphorcy dis ihh , ~Draft Needs Editing zion fro hi poery n Wenes Death of a Nat uralist(1966). The Even in his first poem, Heaney '' day, May 11, at 7 p m. in Kemper next poems he read concerned his hints at the violence of social and"B AK EAL Auditotrium. upon the invitation of experiences as a child. Swteet zs-the cultural divisions iii Northern - .2. ovee T uePilisdaycamin toccrty fellow poet and friend, Bruce Life of a Scholar compares the life Ireland w*th the simile "The squat~ covndTedy.onn'oc Smith, an Instructor in Erigllish at of a scholar to that of a frmer in' pen rest/snug as a gun."tqetervse saeeto Phillips'Academy. Seamus Heaney, Northern Ireland. The opnn i om n Wintering, purpose" of the school. The great the Irish poet; critic, essayist, trans- poem of his first voluime,Digging, Out(1972) reveal a gradual shiftnubrocmetsadocrs laoran eitrdelivered an hour tells about a young man's reponse from personal to public themes. He'~~ expressed about the content and of a combination ofpoems. trans- to the timeless beauty and harsh- begins to take the stance as a corn- - ' wording of, the statement will lations, and humorous-comments. ness of nature. He evokes the rural mnentator rather than a participant. "necessitate the creation of a third- Heaney opened with a ransla- landscape where he wa's raised and After reading P.V. Glob's The Bog, rf eoetesaeetwl as tion rom a Angl- Saxon poem comments on the skill of his father People,, anaccount of well" : rdafbeoetestmntwlps. called Ship of Dead;- His childhood and ancestors farming the JIrish preserved centuries old bodies Written by faculty members: in a rural area near Ulster, North- land. With a en, he gestured' and found in Danish bogs, he wroteLynKeySsnM ali eo pesabout- this phenomonon. - latMoes rf ftesaeetras Laest gtheraPnihet .Moste, and Jon Stableford, the which tells about the unfaithful :: ~ ~~ "Phillips Academy is a national women who were traditionally high school open to young men: punished with tar and feathers. and women distinguished by their' Punishmnt for hem wasdeathIrish Poet, Seamus Heaney, who poke in 'Kemper Wednesday night. character and intelligence. It seeks sinking in bogs. Photo/Htchok to gather a body of students com- In North(1975), which some prising ethnic, racial, socioeconom- consider to be his finest colle ction, ic~1 ~ ~and *egahdivprogram ofe Heaney continifes to use history AcfJ k 1I 1 "aemy provides a centered in and myth to trace the universality ' J L E ,~I academic excellencecetrdi of violence.' Field Work(17) critical and creative thinking. The' covers a wide range of subjects. n NL1faculty strives to help all individu- 1984, Heaney's - Station Island, e i Y earb~ oUk Editorsasi h omnttt ufl hi' received much critical success dis- potential in intellectual power, aes- playing he rang of Heany's ta- By ALFREDO JOLLON' tent either this year or last. thetic sensitivity, physicalwel lents. He,- read a sonne Pot Pourrn heads Lisel Goetze Pot Pourr being and athletics, and moral: (foureen-ine oem)abou foling~and Tahisa Paul announced the in- The yearbook is divided into awareness and action in order to sheets with his mother dividual editors of next years year- three major sections, Photography, lead full and responsible lives. "V capturing the human relationship book staff. Business, and Sports. Photography "Because the school is a deliber- between a child and a mother. The two co-editors named to the captures many of the candids for ately multicultural community, at- oHeaney stresses the importance top positions are Uppers Catherine the yearbook. Sports does the same tention to isues of genderrc n techniqe as ameans o chan- Kirtland and Anne Gimm. It is cus- job, including organizing and lay- social class enriches the school's ,~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~neling creative energies. He at- tomar for two people to share the ig out photos of the year's athlet- cdmcad eieta rgas Head of PA's Amnesty Intern ~~~~~~~~~~~lot of -mapping pages,, cropping getting the students to buy the pluralistic faculty and student PhotoLydon where meaning and sound, are Photo/Lydon ~se Heaney page 8. Pictures, and pasting things yearbooks and handling the Pot bodyto understand and appreciate see ~~together:"' - Pourri's money. In addition, there diversity, and to respond thought- Five tudets wre apointd tOis a oiinfrpooraphy assis- fully to problems raised in a mul- J alali R elates P ris o n E x ' V, ienc the other remaining four major edi-. tant to help bring in the hordes of ticultural setting. Our commitment p~~mipsen ~cetors spots. They are Photography pictures needed to fill the pages. is to discover authentic sources of Editors Justin van Wart and Rob 1988 co-editor Lisel Goetze- is community, while respecting real .s. A i . . f~~~~~~~~~~~~~ *ig.* ~~~~~~~Schick, Photography Assistant very pleased with this decision, differences. Anne Volkwein, Sports Editor Eu- though she mentioned that it was 'Andover's Constitution charges Promote s Amet O'rganization gene Parks, Business Editor Geoff not made until Monday night be- the Academy to prepare youth ByZAYDEANTRIM onsisteny of puishment around arday, reile Hseh, Cailin An-King, and Assistant Business Edi- cause the positions wefe still "wide from every quarter' for 'the great OnMy 81988 foRM Iroin itenworld pItishnots serious- dso Izan Ryan, aaclt A- tors .Lou Gonzalez and Rob open. They're just all such hard end and real business of living! On~ay8,988,fomer~mnin the orld. "t is nt the srious-ddsonKinney.ynAlldare UppersKinewithl the workerswth'tThisrkobs'igationli challengesengstudentst Ii, spoke in Cooley House as an standards which determine the has hooked into the Urgent Action ecpino oken h sa Icmn oeio itadt e eodtesle n og avid advocate of Amnesty Interna- treatment of the convict," he Network of Amnesty Internation- lower. All htave to rkdconsi thabe pot cli se e stardby the eci beonet e Falto raeain tional. Invited by the PA chapter of claimed. For instance, in the past al which deals with only thosePorisaftacnidabee-e yroopge6seFcuypge. spoke on his experience in an In- Michael Jackson tape could war- stead of following one victim for Mn r' Mg l i -S l r dian jail, rant a firing squad, while he be- months on end, this subdivision of Jalali lieved that in the United States a Amnesty enables the PA club to storylo recounted his ownth moving murderertuhcar could escape the etrc writeevs on behalf we of a different per- T e d 1 8 omn t e v c East. Jalali was exiled from his factors, such as race or geography. So far this year, Amnesty has ByWOS.LE % home country of Iran at age sixteen Jalali felt that no state has the right been in more or less of an organiza-ByWOSLE for publishing innocent writings, to take a ife, but he was even more tional mode. They have sh'own On Tuesday May 3 Community grams including: Easter Seal ation, candidates had to write an such as pems, which, although outraged - at the injustice with - several movies obshmn Service Head Mary Minard an- swimming, ARC, and Bread and essay explaining how they define -nonpolitical, the secret police which death sentences are ad- rights, but have more in store for nounced that Michael Megalli and Roses. Megalli stated that one of service and in what direction they seemed to find threatening. He ministered. ' the future. They are going to fea- Jen e il ednx ya' higolfrnext yar ist ro- would like to see PA'sComnt spent the next couple of years in Jalali stressed the need for hu- ture a country focus on Argentina Commun ity Service program. mote recruiting methods. Instead Service Program go. Also, Minird India educating himself with books man rights awareness. In the Unit- on May 13, a formal -dinner soon, Replacing Barry Crume and Kate of only having sign-ups at George interviewed each candidate Minard and resources forbidden in Iran. ed States basic rights, such as and a tee-shirt contest and sale for Hollenbeck,-Megaili and Siler were Washington Hall, Megalli plans to also took the present co-heads op- However, even in India, the publi- freedom of speech,' are guarned un asr nansools chosen from seven male and twelve have a rally where prospective par- pinions into account when making cation of an English newspaper rending most ignorant of the was certain that the group would be female candidates ticipants could actually-speak with, her final decision. opposing the Iran-Iraq war brought "plights of people in other coun- "more active next year." Jen Siler more experienced students. He Minard stated that she was look- Indian secret policement to his tires." For the past three years, Anagnostopoulos felt that one Jenny Siler has worked with claims that this would allow peo- ing for a "variety of things" in the door in 1981. The,Iranian poli tical while Jalali has lived in the United of the main reasons that they Community Service since her low-. pie to be more informed about the applicants. She wanted -from the network had made a-bargain with States, he has been making a ser- formed this Amnesty chapter was ,er year and has played an active particular programs that might in- student coordinators "passion, ab- the comparable Indian forces to ar- ies of speeches on campuses. He to educate students of the problems -role in several'of it's programs. She trest them. Megalli stated, "I want solute commitment to the impor- rest Jalali -for them. He was then cited education of youth as the key of injustice in places outside of has tutored at the Boy's Club in Community Service .to become a tance of Community Service, new taken political -prisoner, all per- to the cooperation that will make PA's careful haven. "There's very Lawrence, assisted the staffs of larger part of this school." ideas, and organization.- sonal rights ignored, until, Amnesty justice and peace possible. "It's little awareness of international is- Lazerus - House in Lawrence, at Community Service.- Consiaering the value of Coin- interfered on his behalf in 1982. -such a nice feeling to know that sues at PA." she explained. She felt Bread and Roses in Boston, at the Presently, Community Service is munity Service, Gross stated, The United Nations has taken there are responsive kids around," it necessary to produce a way to Windrush Farm, and at the An- faced with a lack of male par- "There is no question that the Reza Jalali's case as a landmark he declared. emphasize human rights issues dover Child Community Care Pro- ticipants. Siler believes that there is school's goal is strong academics indication of corrupt secret police, PA Amnesty Internationall which would - present "tangible gra, lo' ated on the Abbot much support for Community but the purpose of this education especially in third world countries. The Phillips Academy division results:' Students do not only learn campus. Service but stated that she would should be used towards the build- His plight has caused a number of founded in the beginning of Janu- about third world countires as part Siler stated, IThe] Boys Club is "like to increase the 'number of ing of our community. To merely countries, at the -urging of the ary'has already been quite success- of Amnesty, but they also actually my favorite.' I really enjoy it., I get people, especially boys." Megalli develop a strong education for the United Nations,, to make an agree- ful. The prominent members' are do something to relieve the desper- a lot out. of it. [It is] perfectly strongly agreed. Faculty director sake of one's self could be a -ment not to arrest foreigners as a Effie Anagnostopoulos, - Donna ate situations found all over the, natural that I should give to -the less' Richard Gross commented that the tremendous mis-use of the extraor- result of underground deals with Coppola, Hillary Cloos, Nicolette world. -fortunate. I love to do it:" "more boys the better." He vocal- dinary resources that we possess. other countries. alali's sig-..- ,Siler declared that one of her ob- ized that it is "~more valuable to To use these resources for the sake niiac in fomn fr I hu- m w11:1:1 ja ectives next year is ',to get the- men tlhan anybody else [to havel a of r cmuiyiouete

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  • 1988~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~o '- ibralthe

    The PRILLIPLIAN~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~01Vol. CXI No. 6 AfOE

    PHILLIPS ACAI)EMV ANOE, MASSACHusETFs My1,18

    IL- Celebrate rs oe enyFacultyReads T~~~~~~rom n.Fa vo__rihe Works_ Declares PA.'

    By ANNE GIMM /4a ur osSTThe, greatest English-writing ern Ireland is reflected in Heaney's announced that as a poet, he)

    ST poet since Yeats" read certain selec- poetry including his first volume, metaphorcy dis ihh , ~Draft Needs Editingzion fro hi poery n Wenes Death of a Nat uralist(1966). The Even in his first poem, Heaney ''day, May 11, at 7 p m. in Kemper next poems he read concerned his hints at the violence of social and"B AK EALAuditotrium. upon the invitation of experiences as a child. Swteet zs-the cultural divisions iii Northern - .2. ovee T uePilisdaycamin toccrtyfellow poet and friend, Bruce Life of a Scholar compares the life Ireland w*th the simile "The squat~ covndTedy.onn'ocSmith, an Instructor in Erigllish at of a scholar to that of a frmer in' pen rest/snug as a gun."tqetervse saeetoPhillips'Academy. Seamus Heaney, Northern Ireland. The opnn i om n Wintering, purpose" of the school. The greatthe Irish poet; critic, essayist, trans- poem of his first voluime,Digging, Out(1972) reveal a gradual shiftnubrocmetsadocrs

    laoran eitrdelivered an hour tells about a young man's reponse from personal to public themes. He'~~ expressed about the content andof a combination ofpoems. trans- to the timeless beauty and harsh- begins to take the stance as a corn- - ' wording of, the statement willlations, and humorous-comments. ness of nature. He evokes the rural mnentator rather than a participant. "necessitate the creation of a third-

    Heaney opened with a ransla- landscape where he wa's raised and After reading P.V. Glob's The Bog, rf eoetesaeetwl astion rom a Angl- Saxon poem comments on the skill of his father People,, anaccount of well" : rdafbeoetestmntwlps.called Ship of Dead;- His childhood and ancestors farming the JIrish preserved centuries old bodies Written by faculty members:in a rural area near Ulster, North- land. With a en, he gestured' and found in Danish bogs, he wroteLynKeySsnM ali eopesabout- this phenomonon. - latMoes rf ftesaeetrasLaest gtheraPnihet .Moste, and Jon Stableford, the

    which tells about the unfaithful :: ~ ~~ "Phillips Academy is a nationalwomen who were traditionally high school open to young men:punished with tar and feathers. and women distinguished by their'

    Punishmnt for hem wasdeathIrish Poet, Seamus Heaney, who poke in 'Kemper Wednesday night. character and intelligence. It seekssinking in bogs. Photo/Htchok to gather a body of students com-

    In North(1975), which some prising ethnic, racial, socioeconom-consider to be his finest colle ction, ic~1 ~ ~and *egahdivprogram ofeHeaney continifes to use history AcfJ k 1I 1 "aemy provides a centered inand myth to trace the universality ' J L E ,~I academic excellencecetrdiof violence.' Field Work(17) critical and creative thinking. The'covers a wide range of subjects. n NL1faculty strives to help all individu-1984, Heaney's - Station Island, e i Y earb~ oUk Editorsasi h omnttt ufl hi'received much critical success dis- potential in intellectual power, aes- playing he rang of Heany's ta- By ALFREDO JOLLON' tent either this year or last. thetic sensitivity, physicalwellents. He,- read a sonne Pot Pourrn heads Lisel Goetze Pot Pourr being and athletics, and moral:

    (foureen-ine oem)abou foling~and Tahisa Paul announced the in- The yearbook is divided into awareness and action in order tosheets with his mother dividual editors of next years year- three major sections, Photography, lead full and responsible lives.

    "V capturing the human relationship book staff. Business, and Sports. Photography "Because the school is a deliber-between a child and a mother. The two co-editors named to the captures many of the candids for ately multicultural community, at-oHeaney stresses the importance top positions are Uppers Catherine the yearbook. Sports does the same tention to isues of genderrc n

    techniqe as ameans o chan- Kirtland and Anne Gimm. It is cus- job, including organizing and lay- social class enriches the school's,~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~neling creative energies. He at- tomar for two people to share the ig out photos of the year's athlet- cdmcad eieta rgas

    Head of PA's Amnesty Intern ~~~~~~~~~~~lot of -mapping pages,, cropping getting the students to buy the pluralistic faculty and studentPhotoLydon where meaning and sound, arePhoto/Lydon ~se Heaney page 8. Pictures, and pasting things yearbooks and handling the Pot bodyto understand and appreciate

    see ~~together:"' - Pourri's money. In addition, there diversity, and to respond thought- Five tudets wre apointd tOis a oiinfrpooraphy assis- fully to problems raised in a mul-J alali R elates P ris o n E x ' V, ienc the other remaining four major edi-. tant to help bring in the hordes of ticultural setting. Our commitmentp~~mipsen ~cetors spots. They are Photography pictures needed to fill the pages. is to discover authentic sources ofEditors Justin van Wart and Rob 1988 co-editor Lisel Goetze- is community, while respecting real

    .s. A i . . f~~~~~~~~~~~~~ *ig.* ~~~~~~~Schick, Photography Assistant very pleased with this decision, differences.Anne Volkwein, Sports Editor Eu- though she mentioned that it was 'Andover's Constitution chargesPromote s Amet O'rganization gene Parks, Business Editor Geoff not made until Monday night be- the Academy to prepare youth

    By ZAYDEANTRIM onsisteny of puishment around arday, reile Hseh, Cailin An-King, and Assistant Business Edi- cause the positions wefe still "wide from every quarter' for 'the greatOnMy 81988 foRM Iroin itenworld pItishnots serious- dso Izan Ryan, aaclt A- tors .Lou Gonzalez and Rob open. They're just all such hard end and real business of living!On~ay8,988,fomer~mnin the orld. "t is nt the srious-ddsonKinney.ynAlldare UppersKinewithl the workerswth'tThisrkobs'igationli challengesengstudentst

    Ii, spoke in Cooley House as an standards which determine the has hooked into the Urgent Action ecpino oken h sa Icmn oeio itadt e eodtesle n ogavid advocate of Amnesty Interna- treatment of the convict," he Network of Amnesty Internation- lower. All htave to rkdconsi thabe pot cli se e stardby the eci beonet e Falto raeaintional. Invited by the PA chapter of claimed. For instance, in the past al which deals with only thosePorisaftacnidabee-e yroopge6seFcuypge.spoke on his experience in an In- Michael Jackson tape could war- stead of following one victim for Mn r' Mg l i -S l rdian jail, rant a firing squad, while he be- months on end, this subdivision of

    Jalali lieved that in the United States a Amnesty enables the PA club tostorylo recounted his ownth moving murderertuhcar could escape the etrc writeevs on behalf we of a different per- T e d 1 8 omn t e v c

    East. Jalali was exiled from his factors, such as race or geography. So far this year, Amnesty has ByWOS.LE %home country of Iran at age sixteen Jalali felt that no state has the right been in more or less of an organiza-ByWOSLEfor publishing innocent writings, to take a ife, but he was even more tional mode. They have sh'own On Tuesday May 3 Community grams including: Easter Seal ation, candidates had to write ansuch as pems, which, although outraged -at the injustice with -several movies obshmn Service Head Mary Minard an- swimming, ARC, and Bread and essay explaining how they define

    -nonpolitical, the secret police which death sentences are ad- rights, but have more in store for nounced that Michael Megalli and Roses. Megalli stated that one of service and in what direction theyseemed to find threatening. He ministered. ' the future. They are going to fea- Jen e il ednx ya' higolfrnext yar ist ro- would like to see PA'sComntspent the next couple of years in Jalali stressed the need for hu- ture a country focus on Argentina Commun ity Service program. mote recruiting methods. Instead Service Program go. Also, MinirdIndia educating himself with books man rights awareness. In the Unit- on May 13, a formal -dinner soon, Replacing Barry Crume and Kate of only having sign-ups at George interviewed each candidate Minardand resources forbidden in Iran. ed States basic rights, such as and a tee-shirt contest and sale for Hollenbeck,-Megaili and Siler were Washington Hall, Megalli plans to also took the present co-heads op-However, even in India, the publi- freedom of speech,' are guarned un asr nansools chosen from seven male and twelve have a rally where prospective par- pinions into account when makingcation of an English newspaper rending most ignorant of the was certain that the group would be female candidates ticipants could actually-speak with, her final decision.opposing the Iran-Iraq war brought "plights of people in other coun- "more active next year." Jen Siler more experienced students. He Minard stated that she was look-Indian secret policement to his tires." For the past three years, Anagnostopoulos felt that one Jenny Siler has worked with claims that this would allow peo- ing for a "variety of things" in thedoor in 1981. The,Iranian poli tical while Jalali has lived in the United of the main reasons that they Community Service since her low-. pie to be more informed about the applicants. She wanted -from thenetwork had made a-bargain with States, he has been making a ser- formed this Amnesty chapter was ,er year and has played an active particular programs that might in- student coordinators "passion, ab-the comparable Indian forces to ar- ies of speeches on campuses. He to educate students of the problems -role in several'of it's programs. She trest them. Megalli stated, "I want solute commitment to the impor-rest Jalali -for them. He was then cited education of youth as the key of injustice in places outside of has tutored at the Boy's Club in Community Service .to become a tance of Community Service, newtaken political -prisoner, all per- to the cooperation that will make PA's careful haven. "There's very Lawrence, assisted the staffs of larger part of this school." ideas, and organization.-sonal rights ignored, until, Amnesty justice and peace possible. "It's little awareness of international is- Lazerus -House in Lawrence, at Community Service.- Consiaering the value of Coin-interfered on his behalf in 1982. -such a nice feeling to know that sues at PA." she explained. She felt Bread and Roses in Boston, at the Presently, Community Service is munity Service, Gross stated,

    The United Nations has taken there are responsive kids around," it necessary to produce a way to Windrush Farm, and at the An- faced with a lack of male par- "There is no question that theReza Jalali's case as a landmark he declared. emphasize human rights issues dover Child Community Care Pro- ticipants. Siler believes that there is school's goal is strong academicsindication of corrupt secret police, PA Amnesty Internationall which would - present "tangible gra, lo' ated on the Abbot much support for Community but the purpose of this educationespecially in third world countries. The Phillips Academy division results:' Students do not only learn campus. Service but stated that she would should be used towards the build-His plight has caused a number of founded in the beginning of Janu- about third world countires as part Siler stated, IThe] Boys Club is "like to increase the 'number of ing of our community. To merelycountries, at the -urging of the ary'has already been quite success- of Amnesty, but they also actually my favorite.' I really enjoy it., I get people, especially boys." Megalli develop a strong education for theUnited Nations,, to make an agree- ful. The prominent members' are do something to relieve the desper- a lot out. of it. [It is] perfectly strongly agreed. Faculty director sake of one's self could be a

    -ment not to arrest foreigners as a Effie Anagnostopoulos, - Donna ate situations found all over the, natural that I should give to -the less' Richard Gross commented that the tremendous mis-use of the extraor-result of underground deals with Coppola, Hillary Cloos, Nicolette world. -fortunate. I love to do it:" "more boys the better." He vocal- dinary resources that we possess.other countries. alali's sig-..- ,Siler declared that one of her ob- ized that it is "~more valuable to To use these resources for the sakeniiac in fomn fr I hu- m w11:1:1 ja ectives next year is ',to get the- men tlhan anybody else [to havel a of r cmuiyiouete

  • PAGE TO hfs* .3 r411 .E II (' , - ~13,198

    Commentary~TheIt. and' -'Letters

    -Purpose. In Practie Artihur Bradford'sAt their last meeting, the faculty reviewed Phillips

    Academy's "statement of purpose.7 The faculty effort torevise this statement shows dedication to the Phillips' Life In. A. Blender.Academy education. However, the problem with the -"statement of purpose" lies notonly with the wording but ByATU BAFR- the radio for a dance club in Boston ranks of th e smoking elite. Why didn't

    also with h~w hisinstitutio attempts to~ttain~hese~ -The-end is very near. I am almost which called Mr. Meese a "fat usehispowr tAdgoals and ideals. thoghwtemaldvrlxie fy di tt tyaa i~rom tese something about this? Hekiimaiii The currentstaterentdescribes.Philips-Academy~as -and with its culmination comes the characters, but each week their names other crusaders in this countr Is fight-

    -. - -~~Th curn-ttmn-eciehli--cdm-s termination of-"Life In A-Blender."-kept--popping-up--and-so---into thie igaenmrhihhbepetry,a school devoted to academics and diversity. It states, .This is the'last of the blenders ever to blender they'd go. - ate and could haveeliminated long ago.- -"The faculty strive to help all-individuals in the commun be written.'There will ne ver be- ano-ther. Things havetrulygotten rdiculous, .. It is-truly getting Jate as I -write this

    * ~~~~~nity to--flfill their potential in intellectual power, aesthet- Something in the stasguess e-tresndob.sa nhnwshrinmromoIllayoyfw* ic sensitivity, physical wellbeing and~athletics, and moral thing out there just had to mkthsfew days ago a%;arybout a couple moir-things.'I've been talking aboutic sesitivty, hysicl wel-beig an~athitics and oral the perfect week for people hike me. It who kept their son locked in a bad guyIs this whole time and I figuredawareness and action in order to lead full and respon- is almost iis f my work has been done bathroom for seven years. Eleven year that should mention some good ones.

    sible lives.' Certainly Phillips Academy maintains high for me; mtean, iro one really needs to old-kids are-nwis~onsidered the best, I1cannot~let yselfgraduate from-this academi standad~and atempts to divesify-our insti- pon u~h toiiso hsweek.7 crack dealers, bgause of their immu- pace without saying publicly thatI

    tution. And leading a "full and -responsible life" sounds Everyone~knpws, right? Everyone has nity to the aw./WVe.are a trillion' dol- think Al Feirucci,' our WQS clusterlike a ladable purose. Howver, the tatement oes not' heard the big news: the Reagans are in- 1arsin debt.PF'trkk eyolds,, who custodian,- is-one 6f'the nicest people-

    define what a "full and responsible life" consists of. And toatoor ireet nwihOToc aemlions.off of the sales of on earth. We could all stand a few ls-it does ot provde methds to acieve ths type f life. President y.'As to take part were all cigarattes fron1 his huge tobaccocom- sons in the spreading i6f happinessit des nt povid mehodsto cheolhi cotribe to f. shdedc g towa oea-pany, is now maz6"u money, off a fromiJay Rogers, whose smile is some-The nclarified purpose of this hocntiueto trologer ih San Francisco said was $19.98 Stop'Stn~kinig Program which thing I'll never forget. And I-should

    * ~~the lack of cohesiveness of the total educatioh at Phil- okay. I redlWq don't know what to say he devised hinis lf. One might think mention Mike Kuta. Not only has he-' lips Academy. Without knowledge of what the Phillips about tis. l, for one, am not surprised. -that itis admitable of young Patrick to been bugging me to menonhsamcan pro- People close-to our leader have said for ab~andon his muldti-million dollar bus- in this column, es also a nice y.Academyeducation hopestoachieve~~~theschool years that he was ot of it. The first iness in order-tohbelp smokers kick the That said, I'd lice to explain one last

    vide excellent classes and adiverse community, but it timeI wrte thi un I aseif any- '-unhealthy habit, but if-Mi- Reynolds-is thing.-I call this column Life iicannot provide a total education. We believe that the one- was.bothered by the fact that so determined to fight the evils of nico- Blender" because this is where it allfaculty should, instead of producing more rhetoric, cre-' Ronald Reagan didn't even dress him- tine, why didhbesell his company? Why comes togethier. Each week Iput piecesate a clear purpose. The Phillips Academy education self in the morning. Does-this recent does he coritiue to let it exist? I still of life into the pot and let the blades

    could then bestructured twardC~this dfinite goal.news concerning where President Rea- see at l-east five colorful ads aday for- fly. It wasfun maling it- [ hope it allgan puts his faith bothdr anybody? On- R. J. Reynolds cigarette brands, each tastes yummy in the end.ly 53 percent. of all the elgible voters in one of them urging me t ointh

    % A~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~T America chose to cast a ballot in thelast presidential election and I'll beta5 P ~~~~o't of money that that percentagewil-go even lower'.in the nt election.f

    IN ALIIJAL. (S1 T1AES Statistically, almost half of our voting 'eo rr eaA"FOUR: Gt4 -' th6 country. Ronald Reagan was, 'at

    *.form (A1011 ~~one time, said to be the most popularforth that Ronald Reagan was, and still - On the night of Mody My2 Hlodaerdtiaeaobeagd

    / ~~~~~~~~~~is, the stupidist American President sometime between'the hours of 6:30 andtefor the thief's next attempt.10 po~~nts: Go to ' 15 points,.per bag: ever. I recntly heard a comedian im- and 9:30, nine lockers were pried open Then, Phau hexecmlifie te denia-

    Commons, aand try to See exactly how many - personate Reagan and portray him as in the boys locker room. Many teamfobyhdnintelceromnfind a clean bowl, classes you can cu.t even more of. a severe bumbling idiot uniforms were stolen as well a prbohWdnedyadTusynih.within 4 hoursti! without getting on than he actually is. Reagan, it turns -sonal property. The boys who had~ Peauln oe tth upi ol

    / "" ( -restriction.!!! ' ~out, likes this comedian. He said he the victims of this criminal act report-stieainndhcolapredthinks this guy is funny. What is going ed the incidents of Paulino Ortega, hmrdladd hnssee obon here? This really is far beyond be- had of the custodial department in the

    05W!.D ing. amusing. The leader of the free gymnasium. gigt Paulinosw for boyndrdayworld is an absolute unequivocal Mo- The investigation began on the fol- ngt aln on o adrnI ron. But that's t opinion. 1 day -and from the . around the locker room. The boy was

    ron Bt ha'sjust an opno. -owing y-adfothinraina member of the lifesaving class, andJ/ ~~~~~~~~~~Actually, I've tried to stay off the he was able to gather, Paulino conclud- Paulino confronted him. Although he'50 points if you / ~. 15 points for everysubject of Ronald Reagan, because the ed that the thief was most likely supceahttebywstepro

    you tuleratesorwomf o'envrJilnam aero im ek Andovero ws dtrietocchdays earlier, Paulino could not accuse-next year! -,heard in your life, an im ae rJmywe.Puiowsdtrie ocththe boy, because he was not found with

    that runs for a schoolSwaggart, or even that lovable guy, the thief before he was able to strike\ ~46~ IW"v"rh? ofc.-Oral Roberti. I could have talked-about again, and in order to accomplish~ antoostatculibsuet roffice. -~~flinancial leaders like Ivan Boesky orhe was prepared to go to great opnaeokenAfetsachnste.bk

    Donald- Thump. I could have talked Paulino began by hiding a microphoneeromPuiowsaltofnthU a. 1~~~~~~~~~~~C~~~ ~~~~ ~ about lead~ers in the world of justice, in the ceiling s, that he would be ablewrnhtatetifhdusdopy~~~~~ s"'' / ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~the lockers open with. It was a typical

    Meese III. I heard an-advertisement on sation in that area of the locker room. which old a car tire on. Paulino got thePu,' Calls ~~~~~~~~~~~~~name of the suspected byfo h n

    50 points forbeing such Bonus 5 po~~~~~~~nts: Lui~~afl ror ' structor of ~struto e lifesavingsaiclass.s. aaul-"a generally swell person Shut your mailbox no was then informed by somethat you get asked to so hard that the next members of the lifesaving classithat the

    remain another year atone over pops opnI A fll 'U h~~ suspected boy had indeed been the oneremain another year at C ani e''ContU olF who broke into the-lockers on Mon-

    this beautifW institutioTonhe .io ,day. With these witnesses, Paulino wasTo The Editor. z ~~~~~~~~~~~able to confront the boy. On Monday,

    I would like to address a problem one of my E&R. towels, thinking to My a 9, the lifesaving ,class met asconcerning sanitation on campus. Tis self, "Must I put up with this [exple- shdld nta ngt aln nThe PH ILLIPIA N past weekend, after playing a game of. fort tiei ek. the Director, of Athletics Paul Kalstienultimate frisbee. I entered my room to forhtm ntowes pke privately with the boy before thefind a peculiar stench. After briefly I elz ta osms oterclass began. They asked the boy if he

    President -looking about, I glanced down nat my thing, butin wth vprntie hersie, and was the one who had committed theRichard Leonard feet to'find that my lower leg and shoe pepebgnt etr usdIakcrime. The boy 4enied the charges, but

    wer caed ithdogfecs. thn fundthat dog owners make an effort to con-wer caedwit do fces I he fondtrol their animals. 7 before he left,, he was informed that the

    myself standing over a sink, sacrificing - oh¶bgn'1 continufed page S.Production Manager -' Commentary Editor ________________

    C ~~~~Nils Gilman -Robert Mockler F.' ~ 4-~~- .,c~.os s4.~): 4k1 e pete446v% spi.rk5 --a,.0

    +0: npeeA )$ m.44evrnNews Editors Business Manager - rV 4- kote I 4 s . e 4Samuel Doak Florence Crisp ozbe r. & i'-1'4 ay

    James McLain III ~-

    Sports Editors 'Advertising Managers '.Curtis Eames Joshua Bienfang I

    A. Alexander Jaccaci Patrick Herron III -' ,

    Graphics EditorMichael Faraci

    Executive Editors:- Features] George Kaye, Seventh Page] Orin Her-skowitz, [Production] Robert Neal, James TilghmnanAssociate Editors: News] Jay Jamnison, [Sports] Seth Dunn,Eric Zin-ierhofer[Graphics]Matthew Abernathy, Amanda Lydon[Seventh Page] -SlV ~,

  • 88 May 13.`198 0It"PU1 J I ~ A PAGE THREE

    Bartdo Bed and Batman ~B3y ZAYDE ANTRIM -

    "Oh, t's the door at the end of the hall with who refused to pledge allegiance to the flag in O Rthe John Lennon quote on it, a student directs high school. This incident not only caused a o- me.-Even standing outside of the office of Seth cal controversy, but also appeared in'the New Bardo, PA English teacher, one picks u" -ueil, York Times and on CBS news. With his growing ~ '~~.about his interesting personality. His door sports political interest, Bardo "began to see what the r.: : 'a picture of John Lennon followed by Lennon's ramificAtions of a certain act were:"'. ~~" 'Give Peace a Chance" quote, a card picturing Bardo left high school a month early to attend -\ $~~s

    the globe balanced on a missile, another card the University of Wisconsnn16.I 968, hecaricaturing Ronald Reagan as a puppet i the moved to Australa where he spent five months

    --hands'-of-anape,-and a-graph-following-the shift--at4the University-of-Tasmania-.-Soon, after;-Yale -~--U of the goals of freshmen in college over the past University, having read some of his works, asked twenty-years from-acqiring-god-philosophy him to apply- there. -After-returning-to the-Unit- -

    "For e thewholestruggle seems~to--be be- -:it tween politics and love, family and art."

    - -Seth Bardo ElshInstructor Seth -Bardo.PhoWienaeS on life to being extremely financially-suclessful. -ed States because of the draft, Bardo studied two he-believes that the-same emotional intensity is -childifin have a great relationship with- the stu-r knowf~h loking at his office door, I. feel 'as if years at Yale And for senior year moved to 7-amp- lacking in today's music. He is pleased, however, dents. The students in Will Hall are just as en-

    I have Alred beinroduced to and gotten tshrUnvsty with the continuing interest in old music. "I go thsaicbotimAlweinBr'sdmko.Mr. Bardo. - Music becam~ea driving factor in all aspects into thi dorm and sometimes I think I'm in a -exclaims, "He's so unique. He makes living in

    Bardo lived in Long Island through high of Bardo's ife as he grew older. Bardo explains, time warp. I hear the Doors, Jimi Hendrix, and Wl alwrhi.SWiHalwrhi"

    school. His youth was shaped by an interplay of "I think I can chronicle my life by when a Bea- Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young. All that limus- -. As far as the future is concerned, Bardo wouldreading, politics, and music. When Bardo wa tles album cam~e out, by when a Rolling- Stones ic] is still here." -lv omv akt Tsai n h plfourteen; his father died and Bardo began read- album came out." He feels that' in the music of Maried ten years ago, Bardo now has two lit- Isles 100 miles south of Australia. He would Al-i ng in ernest, often at the urging of his teachers thteaecudrblfrmteodvle f-tie boys. He decided to comeAtO Phillips Acade- so like,'to revisit New Zealand because of a

    whom he acquired as mentors in the absence of, the upper-middle class white community in which my after becoming frustrated with the public --favorite bar in Fiji. In this bar, there are urinalshis father. Bardo was part of a group of teenagers he lived. With a few exceptions, Bardo-states that school system in Western Massachusetts. He and under the counters, so "you never have to go

    , -. - ~~~~his wife; Sarah, had planned on opening a bak- -anywhere." The west coast of reland is another- - ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ery in i college town where. they could promote -of his "magical" places where he travelled withI(Iept S ecret - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~political. awareness over a spread of fresh breads. his wife on bicycles and, with bcpcs-ec ney~~itill make all their own breads,"I haven't, - Bardo feels very strongly about the points

    bought bread since college," e asserts. However,, made in Paul Murphy's letter fall term. "It's real-one of his former students recommended Phil..- ly clear that Andover can produce lots of people

    By GEORGE KAYE U lps Academy to him because of the success it'had, for the corporate world. It's not really clear toThere is an average flow of I browsing student the mural, the group did extensive reaserch in the brought her. Bardo was so impressed by the' me that it can produce people who are embrac-

    in the, Robert S. Peabody Museum per every two -Museum's librAry .Ms. Steinert regrets that she school that he immediately applied for a job here, ig the values we espouse of non sibi." The lackdays. Why is this?? Not only does the only such cannot allow students to simply 'hangout' in the as an English teacher. Now, he and his family live' 'of free time in an atmosphere as pressured as PAmuseum on a high school campus house an ex- library upstairs, lhowever, as some students have in Williams Hall in Abbot Cluster. futtehi."oknwi'salteczyHw

    hibitfeatring he rmnant of an frm doe in he pst, bcaus it mst kep itopen Bardo states; "For me, the whole struggle -can we blame the students for not knowing who

    every corner of the continent, it also contains a for the archeologists wanting to use it. sest ebtenpltc n oe aiyad-te r hnw o' iete ie-ofn5,000 vouelbayddctdecuieyt h' -h xiisart."' He finds it difficult to feasably combine all out?" Teaching for him is "ike holding up.a nmir-'

    volume librarydedicated exclsively to the'1be~ Exhibitsof his priorities within his present lifestyle and rorn" He wants to make teenagers feel free tosubject of Archeology Dept hs usat h uemhsbe e ydrcosWirn financial situation. However hard to accomplish break away from the expectations o their par-

    contributions to this learning community, the in- Moorehead, tDouglas Byers, and Richard Mac- hi1 goals may be, Bardo still maintains, "One Of ents, the school, and society, and to become on-stitution is still mysteriously ignored and for- Neish. Each director was an archeologist by trade, my very favorite things to do is to get in my bed ly that person that you see in the mirror. Sethgotten..- and each one contributed heir own digs to the at night after I've put the Batman and 'Robin Bardo can turn, -something as sought after as

    I The museum, locate d on Main Street directly museum., The exhibits. presently on display in- pajamas, with capes, on my kids and to have Making money' into a mere trifle next to the im-acrois from the Addison Gallery for those entire- dlude a period by period description of the evo- them snuggle up on either side of me and to' read portance of reading Dr. Seuss in Batman and

    ly oblivious to its existence, was founded in 1901 lution of mankind. Several 'meticulously Dr. Seuss, or even better,- Where the Wild Things Robin capes.by PA alumni Robert Peabody. Peabody, ob- reproduced skulls of pre-historic man. "This is Are." He loves his dorm and finds that his young

    sesd with the tragic history of the American a pre-historic museum," says Steinert, "all ourIsdian duighsyasa A eaeapoe ehbt rc h hsoyo u nestors." -of the art department adorns a wall of the muse- directors, have been in progress." "At present- '

    siona arceologst ater h grauatedin 157. nother main attraction of the museum is a urn, displaying the locationsodifrntib:-eam trDnMceaiscigdrcobuPeoaod doa t trhe esayduntdt fonietrofBso.Tenoltnae wsarg-mao18yialNwEgadIni5vlae7restm t eoet hemsu, lamAtiet

    the instittion. Latr, once h saw the useum larmetropoli in the pot Stone Ae timesfndeevery isitorlattheadoorsof thenmusum. Rightnowogtei ,rtais theonlysfulltimeestafAste akucess h cnicrasele fundo an ap std week rhitri oyso artoaembr.n" onyehaenteNathortygoltaedcreA

    peaoin onted hi twsnhre Peaoud te fdirc nero 'LtnaTolsto couplasa eu ao tyicl e simly ofinvlae rest t encia nedsefmth cmus shastor of the Institute. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~ out!" subscriptions toth varioust publicationsowStenertis te oandfll order-af

    the is Acttiontr inc he awthMuseum msinte ingsal thtnecssarysuppies.sSteiend s acSince then the Archeoogy Museum has Adminstrative Assistant Eizabeth Steinert mcompniedobyla janitorefoutwoohouysteveryeday

    was a success, he increased the fund, and ap- of~~~~~~~~~~~~~~bu ther thnanilneso thate quiteum lonel job'sthrived Ahisoughon wihaones Peekodin the dorsc its ekac ul-a e nh r i pyt uscitost aiu ubiainadodr

    tor of the Institute. make out! inga~~~~~~The taffThenertScesabysues eiritonth- looks ast n mueu reseesamogethr fihnwatemstpulrudorpr.B-

    Th msumsadinsraie sssan liaet lre ih ei uitbyth'nhbtat of Bosto sbdyseum. FrEliastbeceth emsu th deadcenter of ampus.ort Whnr netr moainhere ten lthrop rom o sutmtw ad sieak.h xavatinstnebythePao ecnacopihntig"sy Steinert asmettsofwtunstkedvtgef

    lonce asi ye Recetym roupbls fromth ntere Joshinon and tifaots fourotedigore npowt on- yers bcusn e digs, whcTre yte h obuchtofe!ionl Insitutei o Lawecetcein; with was on fr camus Pudenthel roofin of s the nstut. The r satai iet h toyo h e- a oGae aln bo;i atisrgti

    Tohse puepeum ainovr thve, 'worldan comzeth lrgeeohy Meium als thousesabianso extnsiveuem o h ps eaetemsu teda etro amu.We etmvnMuseu." Dr Mc~ea teches clas on Ari- 0 a nies oectio ofAmerca Inderteana n ultm irco."ihu ar-ire C drc ,ynronak ..pekisie "Itscan Stdies n themuseu's lirary s wel. sidrwalks. Thncsaton dis -of e bythe Ma- torweca acom lntice" ay Sti. f hm hts e tdet aeavnaeo

    alway havte lte excite rmen o t kicin tonlan~e .Usar et h eia n efrpomple utafrth seuols," cae vsi teet Mexica colectis. urtorahet ctedr by th e hae'benbltocngexits-fr [emuu],asrsSenrt"easet

    "latcee a a.Rcupl am inou hereosmpl toe mnerake AcmadZn rbs n ftems It s onn,81.Cmosi nagoptout!" Insthte ummaerte aio in; t musefum camped fo rorwr th at caefro the prin.Te

    astin s ci entisfrotal Eugente wntrdcm taught andfo whvere youli stn righ now!ca hor.ndisevngldesattind hsmonatesmmr-cheog cls Dro su~mmer sesonsuensaThchut2eeasaoses raizdal h xciginlarsihtsnoytebra veoofen:Ohys oAors.Wfgttmeofbewe

    ohibtsad thenk coeis hic Byers oanly Mc- n os.Teitriwbgn rdainadtetm h umrssinuclass wadis ig stcess utm' iraas oel fro A l c-fomntheaycurriculum lastet yea siply g bcunset-eig Ustar n t the icand aid themw y~lHwaeyuti onndnsarie u ewr h eto h umr

    Mexican collections. The pots craftedM boumusyge tokno te safffailyhelwasn'tl eougf he dem. Hop, eulye itirbe ouBob ipae namr rfsioa a- Href eyWlTak you!I TWH

    Acornaand Zuni tribes, one of the mostt Crismastim wegettogtseoanhdothigsyear wka oiuple gromp id aer smrly whic isae all delicatelyydispayed,,in an aestheically morningu

    avstndovcetfrom preneistrtie touh arsnt.'- ssiom ahriststand deigrs w!ie t rai (poins tWo ofee)n ais ttoe ti on h umrcheology clas to summer ession studets. "The AbH: 2Whenawe're, workingrweizhavelmealsexheregMinWhatr arehtourjofeelingsetowardscothe

    hibis, nd he ollctins hic we6 nlyC We anorallyTh justegrabiwhateve'an dyie tdns

    Class was a big sccess, but it was removed frothough. Hwaey dse rve da.budt knowor any nes t sumgrethe curriculum last year simply because thereM What aretyou'ruworkingthourseotssofastudentsI knowdbyhfacecoming morninth

    -demand. Ho efully it Will-be out to b displayedH:nIaonlyeworkfepartntime;nIHtakeltheVbreakfast, line. Its!lotsYofmfun tot seekthe kidssgetfolderywhile.p ner. Te exhibit you see oday in teu shift.- Wha riseeveymornn hate 5:30 bradago hmi o'etees ae ovrain ih n

    offered again this summer,"'says Steiat10:0ntetaercretf th chldrn.iher ar fClt a meme ege to o ge raddhnsarealldelcatly ispayd, n a aetheicaly m~ orkeswosmlywriinrnbtmsgHo otesuenstetyu

    'i 'm,,gro did a mural whiwoktwcmash ay sxdas ee.Ou H fiosdn' ik id yushudnt ehee

    pleaingmanerthaks o Ber' wok. rof- Hois easeal yone know heni yorng day hvealways gotten aulog terriiallnithd them.hcurrently being displayed in the Addison depictne-f hethigsI hteto o n te ob s sk

    ssinalarist ad dsiner wre ird t oganzl(pont Do -tcommnwrerelwy)sa atoihgvkidsstotleavegthe dininhlls tatsoting Andover from prehistoric tthimese taln? : Wathapene toalltheoldKeltg

    the xhiits A ugemurl pante bya mmbe H: No The wordlyea here flxileoEeybdyceeasIn order to gather all theinformationneededfor h toe weeI theyin neae ouain therish H:- IWsuppose r liply goarete de

    How lng hae youbeen t PAreall ao myseryomery onlyhe wor there!syotwn Ius he s bee workin therae fooveryour Attate850rsowpn.Wt hr4r th~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ya ohav ena niejno ls gsed e kind y wodash jumped' u kn wit haer, coffeetnat., Soehave breehreago yearwrin o rs. The ~ofsdet frin w by e, cramneddeggsandc oo wostair ave; e e the lone.as Yo lin. oso- u osetekd e le hl

    The Peabody Lastltutlora Headquarters ' Pli~~~~~~to/Bi~R~d~~fl ' ~should meet them, they're nnvarveryninterestingn

  • PAGE FOUR - Ilr jirA ~ >.- i,9

    Baseball SlidesThrough Eete,

    Domintes Doubleheadr 8-2,-5-4' error,- Exeter took the lead 21. bottom of the final nning.

    By MICHAEL GENOVESE Thir lea wa short-lived, as Mas- Ini thq Exeter top of the seventhLastSatrda, asmal cowd'~ ingham, camne up in the noe David Fransoza took the mound

    on han to winess'he Boys Var- half of the third with his second for the Blue. Fransagveuon~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~sity Baseball team dismantle Exeter RBI by singling in Andy Sheai, 3.17 hit u sae'h nigu

    ..8-2 in the first game of a double- this seasofl. scratched. With Andover's final,. header, and rally in the final inning In the next three innings An- turn at bat coming up they were--,f te-eon-am-o- . 5-4*-----dover-added-sixrunstotheir-taly----dowir-two.-'The-teanrrealizedihat

    tr" These wins ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~transform the Blues In the fourth David'Franzosabt it was time to wake up their bats.,1 --------.--- ~~~~~~~~~~~. ~ ~~ recordtowiniiifg.§4tig 40, siged-n Chris_ The-crowdteased- in-aticipatiou

    The story of the first ae' Sapuppo. The fifth had Sapuppom and prayed for a miracle.- . - ~~~~~~~ - ~ ~ ~~ '~~~~-~~ i~~~~ Colln Kessinger. Thieiexalteid Y~es- Kissinger, and Brennen Keefe, get- Danny Phelan walked to lead of

    -- -' ~~c: ingerwho has an-amazing 115--ting-its-ioodfo-RBI's;-Their-sew;--tk* ~~~~~ -~~~~~ ~ ~ c nEAfr, torenfigi iere~i~ on an

    *. 1 ~~~~~~~K- EA fr he season, pitched a cond, third, and eighth of--the-error-by-the third base-man. And'~~~ II ,~~~~~ ~~- ~~~ ~~ ~ ~ ~~ complete game for the Blue. Col- seson, repectively. When .ICs5 Chris sappupo singled off the first

    # ~~~A~~4~&' uIn struck oatet bsbatoldupheae.An'~~' ~~-. he ~~ut the first four batters singer got the last Exeter bte o bs a ola ptebss n

    - -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~efaced, and six more after that, pop out, the score read 82. dy Shea stepped t the plate with-4

  • 30, 88~ ~~~~~~~~~~~.U ROI'd4LII. AGE FIVE

    Ic ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~' S~~~~~~~~~~~~t. Paul 's SnsT Boy'~ CrewBreaks 19 Year Losing Curse4 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~. NICK CHERMAYEFF and sch'ols." out the race. At the 500- meterREUBEN PERIN Andover's first boat included: mark, Andover gained a couple of

    'he Boy's Varsity Crew team Eric Hawn, rowing bow, Miguel seats, only to be challenged by a St.tR~'elletoS.Pu'Scolat Sancho, Tom Pollock, Ethan Ayer,Palsprntkeathe70m kmbund S~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~a* cay and conquered. Both first Barry Crume, Reuben Perin, Nick (halfway to go). Their moveadsecond boats left troubled Chermayeff, and Chris Schulten at reduced Andover's lead to onlyup one ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~water* for the Saint Paul's Crews, as Stroke, while Mark Driscoll coxed. three seats. However, Andoverupg one they swept the red men for thie first Coach Peter Washburn said of md eea mlqiksrnstinal timeeins9vyears races,,Itqwasniceptowinsthi

    time in 1 'years.the cs"Iwanietwnthscompensate for St. Paul's move int.7 Were ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~This was a big race for both An- one. I t 4ink we have two very fast he last 500 meters. Andover's__ed-were --- "-dover--ot, ater-heysixfferd--boats; and should-row-our next two--as---the--ir bats, marginal defeats to the Kent and rcsvr opttvl. taeypoe ucsfl a hipation ------ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Simsbury Schools in the preceding- --- With, good- rowing conditions: the sSifand one again.her oweeks. They-needed to win a warm, sunny weather with a light The line-up on second boat in-----confidence-builder,- in order to side wind second boat notched it F, chddGune er at Bow seat,

    pGrove, themselves capable- of suc- first deicisive victory of the season, Matt Patrick, Drew Dougas Josa. And , .Z.cessfully combining raw power by edging ahead of Saint Paul's Se- HatanCdi e , Nc Joehheist An Bo" with refined technique. They did cond by four seats at the finish line, man, Chris Wiedemann, and Kevines n oy'f a torpedoes down he Merrimack. Photo/Bedford just that. -Jumping to a quick two. seat lead Donlon (Stroke) with Chris Olivet-ran wih

    kndover's first boat took the at the starting line, second boattiaCosanru nshirts off the backsof the'mien on held -off the, men inrdtroirhWhed ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~St. Paul's first boat, as they blew)ag for abaMas. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~length. The strong was not asIly and ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~strong as they had hoped for, as ~- 'ŽW

    le aind Th'Ie Se tOf S jc :several oars washed out. However,oed this ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~the men in blue gradually inched tic:, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~their way up to the St.-Paul's boat to mi. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~iris~~~~~~~~ '~~~~nd held a slight edge by the 500

    nesday Girls ~~~~~~~Cycling mjeter mark. 'At that point, Andover madeL.They ' Ddth y KRISTEN CRETR ing up competive cycling on arrival. sonal interest in the sport and fully intetwinceaing n chiuel-and DANIELLE GRAHAM Intense Preseason cycling in North individual attention to each team wtCarolina with several fellow team- member motivates us to our best wihall out power, Andover held The Grs Cycling team must be mates sparked the real- turning pefracs"toteasheire te t.oalsBotto thei70mt r kAndover's best kept secret. Many point in Thomson's cycling career. plains that, unlike their peers from shrntt. aulgh too thei restudents have never heard of the ti- Thomson now shares the spotlight other schools, thsndvrwo rgind touathi there moen

    ny squad of three cyclers which, with Goetze, placing in the top en Practice withi the men's .team, doverd won ietsbc in andi ook, A- desite is por- pulicit and three places i n each race, cycling thirty-five to forty-fiveminute size, boasts'a perfect record Although this season gave Ariel miles per day, which lands them far sprint of their own. From then on,,-for its five year history. Who'areaheadrofnthe otherUwomen cyclerssAndover slowly pulled away footfothsie yoear whijstry.l Whot bae tandeofrsn iwUpr e is by foot. The enthused St. Paul'sthes womn wh jus wil notbe tste f copetitive cycling, she has in terms of conditioning. . crw covte isdfainbeaten? rail cuired skill and strength The team and its coaches predict cer osgso iapitet

    Captin Lsel oetz, a our earin the sport. She consistently fin- great- results for te rapidly ap- -a noe uidisfrtba 'Senior, began her cycling career ishes in the top five to seven naeachdproacbingednterschoss meet.ATheduring her Lower year, not forsee- race. Next year as the only return- have seen all of the competition in hopefuls by a boat length at the -.-ing that her mild interest would de- in ylr nesnscnitnyraces this season, and look forwr iihln.-Velop into dedicated excellence; Her will carry the team through,- a to a challenging but definitely vic- S.Pu' ogauae n ,~ ,~z- -doveru's firstgbatu adn-r.--"-

  • ikESIX TePULWA

    .. Yearbook .A.>;~z.: ~uclQi'.jecontinued fom page I.ty oif the 1988 Pot Pourri cover.

    ByAAtM RI

    sion. I received phone call sports a rustic look: a hand-drawn1 B DMM RI

    a ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~On Ilhesday, May 10, the Student, Satterthiyaite proclaimect" the

    Thursday night [May 51 and I was Phillips Academy seal (non-ib . .'" ' ~ oni dsusdteBu ey- .need to imrv trmln orBu

    told that I was being considered. and the, tite Bhilips Academy url'-, ~i re~n e i~mmes e rliwud

    By Friday morning; i had gotten derneath, also hand~~~~~Written. students st nden thearepresentationta ofo emphasihaeiaeyeayernongrrelttoonshi

    It. ~~~~~~~~~Goetze commented that the book ihnwsuet,.rte hnjs

    As to any possible changes or is not and was not intended to be the International Club on the Stu-wihfestdnsrhrtanjt

    aditions to the 1989 yearbook, Kirt- classy one thisyer"thaa dent -Congress. Councilmen also acquaintance 'durins 'orientidiofl.

    land hesitated, then explained,, "I laid-bc fltoi.Wwatp- introduced ideas for 'a student - Shdlt "Congrss:

    wouldlike~~oseemor~pi995~~fld pie to be able to page through it .. centercenaecampusastoreorandalightsh TheTInternatitioallClubbaskeddfor

    'people working for us?' i11" ' - - -~~~~~'"~'~ '~" -. A ~~-" - for the athletic fields. fierepresentationtiin thehstudentntcon-

    Bot Krtlndand Goetze clar Whenaseabunxtyr'

    ifie tha it s' easy" to become in-cvr ase about nex ypehers.~" ~ Council members decided that tion is imnperative. They. informed

    volved with tl ~ Ptori.Tee"I'm going to work on it over the .~' . Bu e cdmcavsn onw te tdn-Cuclta h

    is-a sign-up rally at the beginning summer," she said with a smile. ' sdntwilrmnnfma.I lnggebrerkesntfatf-

    of the year. How~ever, they coarie iigs,,students recoin atilstet -Acaomy-indgraingino

    explained that the majority of the Receiving Yearbooks mended -that, in adton to previ--PhlisAadm nd--loig

    staff "just seems to find its way osr sposbiiisBueKythmrrsorecto in the euden

    here." Both strongly stressed their - Returning students may expect 4members, become year-long aca- Cnrsswudrcgietene

    - feelings- that anyone who warnts to to rcietiryearbooks during demiadso.tompvelf-fo trainl

    work laying out material for the Fall Term Of the 1988-1989 school-, "'-- New ,Blue Key co.-head David students.theStudeft Council not-

    pages can join the staff. The Pot year. Seniors will have their books Satterihv~vaie dermonstrated con'-dteIeraiilClbfrps

    *Pourri office is located- in the m~iled to them in August or Sep-' cern in allowing members to coun- sible initiation next 4tar.

    basement ofEashl.tember of this year. The arrival of'Nt year's Pot Pourr diosCtei Kradan'neGim 'cil newsudn:"I'jutgvg

    Mebralo eceeiht

    Yearbook Cover the yearbooks depends heavily on - l'hoto/Iariici the Bluehe Keye K memberseasneone rerresentativesesfrommttee inority

    Goetze also rev'ealed the identi- deadlines and is not definite, sg-nhersosiIlt' Sat- gruswud ecoe by thoseterthrwaite expressed uneasiness giv particular groups and no systemat-

    ing Blue Keys leeway to shape new Ic manner ivould be adoptel by

    students academic goals. tHSen Sth ounci dth

    u ' e rs e c' ia ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Next, year's School President, Hvery am yeth emphsitYzedthC lusters E lect 1988- '8 9 0i/"icials ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~mission' of an improvement over students that the Student Congresswho won in a run-off with Jason -gone. This year the emphasis wa the present system. He assured

    that --had been, passed.By'KATHY HUIBONHOA ty good, with most keeping the'"

    suetavsr 'woul be-' Student Interests ---Lind, will replace Steph Lovell as on keeping things

    the same". "rls dadmr eroa"ta htudent Councils members

    All six clusters held their annu- candidates' speeches in mind while D.C. Rep. ''Zinterhofer

    emphasized isin fraulty adsor Wesal decan -dbTethe ue Coni f mems'f rsal elections last week, choosing new voting. Nel lce

    afr vlit cutrsprttruhicesds-alydcae

    Presidents, Senior Representatives, -Flgtaff Nel lce afr vla-cutrsii hog nrae o that Blue Key members would deal

    dentiterests such as a- student

    and D.C. Representatives to serve "The speeches (at the Flagstaff edgh hwis le the, only polemcial founcio anpopd an Cluter- with fewer numbers and

    could con- center, a campus store, and lights'

    for the '88-'89 school year. elections) were particularly good rightyr nowvis with i atthe . soiy. CounterilyHepropsnted rngner centrate more on individuals.

    -for-the'athletic fields.

    to akether psit-nsseuatly iuaton;nnexter year kesuI'dht makeng osuremaldthatsndplanningdd opomore, qeformala dinnersls wuldiandv

    Arguably, Pine Knoll had the totk hi oiin eiul, at a D.C. everyone knew all the cir- dances for the cluster, and a c:on- tie rvddopstoqe

    the atholsrtic aieds th w ould impoe

    most controversial elcinPeople voted with good judgement, 'o"mngj1 -. "Who knows how Blue'tesho prt n h

    oillf

    a game showatosr looking at the platformsit was less cumstances (surrounding each tinuation ofthe cluster paper. Fur- Ke members would advis new' on Saturday

    nights. However, Mar-

    providing .~~~f oplriycotsttani case). Basically, I'd like to keep thermore, he wanted to raise the students, and what advice is going shell Jones

    asked if there were not

    that proved to be both helpful and ofapplrt ots hni things running as smoothly as they number of Cluster Council meet- to betebs? hnsae

    i d etrwyosed the -money.-

    harmful. "It was certainly interest- cudhvbenconnt hs are nowv?' .ings to allow for more communi-

    L rse httetdn

    ing, but I'm disappointed about year's Flagstaff, President Roddy ' esQadSuhctowiinhelser"Basevice would different

    from many. uran Cox strse htteSuetbe succeededQudSut aio ihi h lutr ''eauesoudkowwa

    teiu

    the whole thing, especially about Scheer. Scheer will besc- ee by~ West Quad South President Kari. this school is so big already, I want others. Another member

    asserted' Councilshudkowhthet-

    the way ____________________________ ~~~Rosenkranz described her cluster's to get it so everyone knows every- thtdohrsureoidief rdet bod wantsecle.o

    ___________________________ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~new students would be c9 rfusin.dretsuntip.ed their speeches. Sadly to say, the elections,

    as "very smooth (even one in their-own cluster?'

    elections turned into a circus:' Cluster Presidents . smoother than Abbot's), pretty____commented this year's President PieKol ' low-key, and

    with'-clear winners,

    Tanya Selvaratnam. Her elected - dmPctralthough all candidates received

    successor, Adam Pechter thoughtstrong support." Replacingdifferently : "I have never seen WetQa ot . F a lty successor, Adam Pechter thought West Quad NorthRosenkranz as President will be PKN that energetic before. They~ Justin JefferiesJaeGrywieEnSte

    were not only excited, but they were Fi~tf was elected to the position of continued from page 1. hardly mentions the

    residential Purpose. --

    happy to be there." Caleb Tyler Merson- Senior Rep, presently held by Al- commnitted to developing what is aspect of the school. Instructor

    in Finally, Meredith Price noticed

    Jlacobson-Sive was' elected to Abbot lnRee.Scesr o DC finest in themselves and others, for EgihMrdtPicsadhtno mention

    of the personal rela-

    replace Senior Rep Mike Dome- Corey Sanford Reps'- James Tlhte -and Sam Stout ,others and themselves." this is what distinguishes

    Phillips tionships developed at Andover be-

    sick, while D.C. Reys have yet to be West Quad South 'have yet to be chosen. According to co-writer of the Academy from other

    schools. He- -tween students and faculty. lHe

    chosen to replace lbrri Stroud and Jake Garmey' Jake's 'pfrmary concern is the- statement Lynne Kelly;, the three felt that the'"Achilles

    heel" of the emphasized the importance of hay-

    George Hanna.' Rabbit Pond D..sse."hr eealto Vpargahs boil down to three' statement was that it does not

    ing One of our purposes be to en-

    Pechiter asserted that PKN's Eric 'Zinterhoffer questionable happenings in D.C~s major ideals: strong academics, a present an accurate view

    of PA as courage strong bonds between the

    main problem is a psychological lattrm n 'mgi- omk mliuluaPluralistic'- commu- far as actual residential

    life goes. A students and the faculty members.

    lack of cluster pride, citing the fact' run-off with Alex Friedman. Other 'sr htteear oecnitn nity, and a balance between one's fclymme ugse hta -

    Student Input

    that ech yer overhalf f the winners were John Morgan, who D.C.'s. It's not the punishments self and others. The final version Jfourth paragraph be added to the LyieKeyfengtasudt.

    cluster moves out. To amend this, will replace Marsie Jones as Senior taweeufibtheneces- of the statement will appear in the statement to include something had not sufficiently,

    contrib~uted

    he put forth a 'Pechter Doctrine" Rep, and Chase Madar, superse e- sayqetoig uigteDCS. inside cover of upcoming Blue about PA as a residential

    &~Om- enough. to the ideas in the state-

    which included proposals for a ding D.C. Rep Eza Gadson. haaDC.lstemwrerrle - Books, 'to replace the original munity. ment, brought the issue to

    her

    Blue Key-sponsored winter carnival A priority for Merson next year vant issues were brought up, and I statement Written in 1979. Dean of Studies Frank

    Eccles 12:00 Competence class. The stu-

    similar to the Abbot Bazaar, and will be to take advantage of the don't want that to happen next The Discussion expressed concern about

    using the dents -generally agreed that the

    for dormitory improvements. "We power of the six cluster Presidents, year.' Aside from his D.C. interest, Chara fteGra phrase "lead full and

    responsible statement is a fai represetonf

    live here," he rallied, "let's make along with School President Alex he plans to revive the cluster paper Department Joseph Wenmik ex- lives" in the statement

    of purpose. Phillips Academy. One student felt

    the best of it. Let's have some fun." Walley. As he said, "The seven, asamnsopr otgclte -' pressed concern that Andover's He'felt that "An important goal

    is that something should be said

    West Quad North' together with the Cluster Deans, unity, and in general, "I want to academic "cutting'~ edge,' is not to graduate people who will active-

    about the unusually strong stu-

    Though participating in the can do a lot to change residential maintain, and try to build on the represented in the statement. Other ly contribute to the good

    of soci- dent/student relationships that de-

    Washington Intern Program this issues?' Working with this group, great job that Kari has done this faculty members supported this ety. Perhaps this is implicit

    in the velop here. Another felt that ,the

    term, Justin Jeffries was still able Merson would like to implement a year." claim, -asserting that too much of idea of preparing 'students to live document sounds

    "like someone in

    to captue the WN presidncy, scootwide olicy smilar tothat ofRabbit Pond the statement is about the diversi- "responsible lives". But some may the faculty wroteit, ',and does

    not

    creatively presenting himself the SADD (Students Against Returning from the Washington ty and cultural aspect of the school read this'to mean paying

    your tax- present anaccurate student's view-

    through a videotape set in the Drunk Driving) organization. In nenPormfrawdy n rather than the academic rigor -Of es, obeying the law,

    and being point. Kelly commened'that she

    canitol. Chosen to succeed Molly addition, Merson has a couple of order to run for Rabbit Pond PA. otherwise respectable.

    I'd like to se plans to take her students' ideas in-

    Lewis as Senior Rep was Sarah ideas for his Cluster Council : a Cluster President proved worth- As certain other faculty mem- the goal of contribution to society

    to account when drawing up the

    Davis, with Alex Tibbetts and An- cluster common room, and Friday - while for Eric Zinterhofer, as he se- bers pointed out, the statement made explicit in our statement

    of. third draft of the statement.

    gel Stanislaus taking over for Neil night entertainment by the seniors cured the position currently held by

    Weiss and Johanna Lee as D.C. Rep. for the cluster. Guhan Subramanian. Although he wm

    According to this year's- Presi- - Abbot performed a striptease for the au-C o i e Iar r

    urged for cluter unity, ofering "Smoothas a baby's bttom," Ben Shn for SeniorCepepresentlyGuocaca gg tfun

    dent Jed Gore, most candidates How were Abbot eldctions?. dience, Dave Frechette still lost to

    various ideas-such as spotlighting related President Jopi Schluep, odsnEks.Tefficeo - ~ ~ U

    one dorm per month with an 'open "Things were calm, cool, and col- D.C. Rep, belonging this year to Liz T c u r r.

    house' cotinung te clster lected." Elected as new President Doyle, went to Eugenia Naro. ~'p~

    paper, and creating a cluster hand- was Corey Sanford; Caitlin DeSil- "Things went pretty well," comn-

    book. Even though only 50 percent vey was chosen to succeed Sarah mented Subranianian, "'The usual-

    of WQN day students participated' Perkins as Senior Rep. while Bea- criticising of the cluster, and a

    WINNER A~~ndo e,- .Tonight at- 8:00 In Kemjper.'WRZ~hC~AMEL~ Y u have

    ' - great~~~4 taste!4

  • May 13, 1988 =IIM~=.tlh Jie Iif LJL4 I ANt 1 i~' PAGE SEVEN

    EL.xtremitnies RattesPBy JOSIE KA RP this bitter and frightening scene Patricia, who upon returning homethings ae wortfrthe demanded. The scene, eslth finds for the first time a situation *~~~wl-atl ls of lemonade after Most violent and disturbing five she cannot control with herte-

    a long, hard day n the sun, a-World minutes the Black Box has ever book logic. Winship, a newcomerSeries_*C-q!g§-~,hampionshlp-after,7o0 -§_en,_evoked s-uch '-reactions-from to, th-e PA stage bOroug htout her.,years. After t was scratched from students as, I had to hold my character's indecision, as her all-the Drama Lab line-up Winter Term, friend down from going up and too-calm facade began to crumble

    --and-alm~stj6ff~Id-ddth&-Wri6-fate rescuing Jen. It ooked-so'incredi.' beforodur-eyes-to reveal the con-again - hsSrnEteiis l el' -fusion and frustration underneath. .- 4-''-

    -directed--by-Steve-Trussell,--flnally--- Throughout the remainder of the These deteriorations, -difficult-to -'--- -went up. And let me tell you, t was Play, Keller maintain ed her energy portray; were brought to life bycertainly worth the wait. in what appeared to be an extreme- Winship's fine acting.

    This Weekend, Andover theater ly draining role.' The role dem-and- Molly Freemar( gave us a talent-goers were treated to an evocative ed that Jeni repeatedly draw on the ed performanc&. as Marjorie's ~

    -drarnatic-production, as Trusseli same energy that, drives her-'to -roommate. hidind,!,he smoldering took on a monumental task in knock out her attacker, tie him up 'secret that she, too, was raped, ex- -~~decidin to mae hls'-directing in the fire place, and then proceed cept that her assailant had not Atriyn ala fo xrmte hl/ud

    written by William Mastrosimone, tomatoes and the flowerbed" in told anyone.' Before we find this-tells the story of the attempted which to bury him alive. Keller's out, the audience was beginning Rligh B hiIIL-e F arape of a worritn in her own home. searing portrayal of a victimized to dislike her seemingly callous at- mnDealt with as the plot progresses woman in serious psychological titude. However, t,is to her creditare the-woman's white-hot hatred~ pienbdthauec oraltat after we learn her background OlnN~Ywhmse ref&rsto ize that all to often, the victims are ~and he depths of her character By JOE KA DNE1)

    kqwu~~~~~~~~~~~~*her motiv~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~a pelrations tobcm cyr her motivationsbecome crystal evin Heelan the Thieaei s iperfect black comedy.."Ihad-to--hold my friend-down Majrespih hit home. Department is well materiplaywl-b utitExreiteswas a valuable knwn at Andover, -plywl-beutio-'from -goi gu n e c i g' presentation not only because of novative Shakespeare productions preview May 27th, wi-Iopen June_Jen,, its acting and direct- ad for his unending support f 15th,.and close' June -26th atoing up an rescuingJen., itsexceptional acigaddrc- student theater. Yet it is Kevin Hee- PLaywright's Horizons, on 42ndS ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ing, but. also due to the issue it Ian the playwright,. the 'lesser Street between Ninth and TenthSO com~~~~~~~ws mni. Unotnael, tnoe ieorh'a h s eertn ut egnig fRgtBhn,~~ looked incrediblj~~/ real." was examining in the Andover ~~~known (to PA students, at la~t) Avenue. This, Kevin hopes, will be"'

    - ~~~~~ many women- in each graduating sd ftemnwoi eert ' e mu of he 'lasshaveto',or prhap,-aleady right now: Kevin's newest play, the Flag does well this summer, itas Lathe Animal;' and her room- shou er much of the 'class haveigh ton orhe perhapsbehg as, goo chace o wining dymates reactions as she decides to blame for the crime, when in real- have had-to come into--contabt- RihIein h. a.i ei a ago hac fwinn-rehearsed At-Playwright's Horizons coveted commercial off-Broadwaytake the law-into her own hands ity that is all they are just victims, with rape. More people need to be in New York City, and is scheduled alot for production this fall.'and-kill the criminal. As Raul, Chuck personified the made aware f the di'lemma-beMieBonncsadtt eit ~As the lights went up,,Keller set dilemma inherent in the felony, made to understand that it'is the tapntrh ulc nJn 5h e rownl cey sai hat e-t-~~ fe a ifcly oe h rtevcis ' Kevin's fifth full length play, ar xteel ukyt hv Kvnout to demonstrate her acting skill that soit fe'hsdfiutywmnwoaete itm and.,ircebyRJCulstsKvnandaokathpawigigir ~by mastering one of acting's most deciding against whom the wrong that rape is a violent 'crime, '' iece yR..Cteretr Keviean aokirmat his~ pbyogng

    dificut tsksstndig o-stge asdone. With his outstanding ta- that women certainly 'don't 0 !2isk aese otrcnl c aercnim hsbyn difficult tasks-standing on-stage was "55k ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Broadway as Jack Lemmon's el- doubt. Kevin's play Distant Fires,by oneself for a long period of time' lents, Chuck's -Raul fluxuated be- for?' Congradulatiansjo-Truss6ell dest son in the highly- acclaimed which won both regional and na-'without dialogue. Then, with the tween imposing, terrifying, and for taking a risk f rom which we can ytda wrsfo h rnaitsrumble of a male voice, the conf lict depraved,, and endearing, mis- - production of Long Day's JourneytinlwadsfothDrmit'_-Into Night. The play tells the story Guild and from CBS networkjirst~---,-was ntroduced, as Raul, in work- guided, and sensitive, leaving the -' ~of ayoung Princeton graduate who closed in Los Angeles after receiv-

    ,boots nd a vst, askd polielyauinecfsdabtwhhr V learns that- a close friend is in- Ing excellent reviews, and isenough if he .could just use her we wanted to kick his teeth in o ~.vle nadu dal -aighadshdld to reopen ir Dfl-~Now began the real challenge. finest moment came at the close thsifraonrmanivti qteon.Hsistpyer-

    -,ed Few drectors atthe high chool of te play, a he lay culed up ingative journalist, the protagonist land, opened in 1981 on Broadwayla l~ewe drcors hate thledhgsho of the efrpla, yihe lauledg upinh sets out to "save" his friend. As anri starred Sean Penrn.-Since thenla- . level could have pulled of the en- the fireplace, crying along with Kevin puputstitItIt'sboaboutparpershn heshascaccumulated amprepressivebe- -z~uing rape scene with the same Keller over the situation he had put ~ hdseaeywnst eogrsm:hsoemnso e He 1 Ishgck value without stepping over himself in. The audience iswhdeprtlwastobon rsu :hioemnhwTnav- -the line, as Trussell managed to. Of brought close to believing that ~.-to something'lagr thnhrelf, Es o i h etPa wr en- ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~smthing that matters. This is a of 1982; a -1983 screen adaption of-e-course, Steve's job was made sig- Marjorie in fact brought the attack solamerayonmnwihb-SitCerTeesredCln- -the nificantly easier by the dynamic on herself, and it is not until she plyweeayudmnwtVb SltCer resardCleacting duo of Senior Jennifer discovers a husguestmoralsfinds Ief adrift Dewhurst and earned him an~rS. actng duo o Senior enniferdiscover a hugemenacinghunt- .in a reltive' wold?'AWhedheyAcaemydAwarmnominanon;Splt

    Keller as Marjorie, the victim, and ing knife in Raul's vest that we are biiga heie pprlass libelcn- ecin wihprmeedih~ftTeaching Fellow Chuck Richard- reminded that we just fellI into the vitosebucru s noaPiadelphicetvah fNe ly.ted son as Raul, -the attacker. One trap, the one people. have been vitoh abeout f u ofsmuersto Pin1985,hattracticard Deyfulasat--could sense the hours or hard making for years. - pcyfnshmefwt teto do a staged reading o the playher -work that went into becoming to- Verity Winship played the calm pobems f"a pimerso from inNehYrk

    itu- tally at ease with each other as and 'composed social worker ~: the ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~-' --- -V another century, who suddenly _,:Yes, Kevin has done it again,walks into Ithe present] one?' Kevi 'and, luckily, has dode it at a per-

    ~'f__emphasizes that, despite the sern- faect time for Andover students to" 'mid S ta rting. H ere, albeit an extremely dark one. This creative faculty/has done outside

    Stu- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~idealistic, sheltered kid confront- Andover. Tickets are available: callde- C'~A 1 ~I, Kevin Heelan Photo/Lydon- ing real dru smugglers, Kevin- Playwright's Horizons,3 New Yo-rk,-,the St''ar)fLiLIgJ INLJwV New York.LeCif

    notiew- - '

    s in-she " M~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~useumnOoI'ections.-,

    BY LISA LEVY were, Jake B3arton, affectionately s i, Tesgiiac st1V.*.useum- for most people that called Bake Jarton by the cast, as laugh. By the end of the play,word conjures up images of a cold the typical photo stud, and Andrew-- everyone has gottenl their fairand austere atmosphere, people Ott, obnoxiously perfect as the -share of good-natured abuse, from

    - ~~speaking in hushed tones, securi- somber, by-the-book sec rity the deaf to the edryt h uvty guards fading into the walls like guard. Jean-Claude, played by and ntellectual. f course, all part of the artwork. But in the case Nick Lehman, is, in his words, the stays wvith the boundaries of good

    ____ ~~of the Drama Lab misadventure, "most cultu'ed part" character, taste (in the liberal sens.eof'Withirdirected by Tory Stewart, .nothing- and even if you don't parlez fran- and-actually even of boundary). So

    -~could be further'from the truth. cais, you'llbaveto agreejust from if you enjoy-humor,.-if you can-; Don't be misled, by the sterile his classy accent. Certainly every - laugh at characteristics you may

    taupe or, in the wrds of the cast, member of the cast merited recognize in yourself, then Muse- --"cream"- backdrop, for from the recognition, only I jus~t couldn't um is the place to bethis weekend.

    --Cst-and-Crew-of Startinq Here, Starting Now. opening moment,:Museum is one keep up with them all!'big, lovable, loornby spoof. When asked to define the sig- In the Drama Lab,' Friday at 630,

    -- ByCHARMAINECHAN -'~t But what is the play about? Cast nifigance of Museum, Stewart Saturday 7:00, and.5dunday at 400..1id someone say dinner- Carrie-Ann t. and Sherry ividti-- resoneohis______vared___-theater? Yes! Andover has its ver tin. The cast is accompanied by ,epnet hsqeto aid -~-.

    wndinner theater in Ropes, now AnnGeshfkonpio qut'padi Steari"eoalmusemc -- '-eaturing the musical revue Start- Unlike the dramatic plays of the qupeStwr."Pol'rac tion to'mocdern art'"a cast mem- ''rgHere, Starting Now, directed by past two week~1rids, Starting Here,beadd.FnlymyprolRebecca Galler with Dominic' Starting Now is a jazzy, upbeatfaoie"t'abuaransc-

    Rambaan asistnt drectng. he msical -- "All about love and relaast consists- of seven singers: tionships', says Rebecca. The etanpolewokwnthgabout either?' This play differsody Cashman, Charimaine Chan, song range from energetic rock to frm anotesiislckfaobin Hessman, Ida Hsu, Ted traditional Broadway, ragtime. Ifocusedy po.ther tn ds awin of atham, Danny Lee nd r Alyss-a Although completely lacking inorfomasryiean-

  • -1 J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-

    PAGE EIGHT - IULi U II~ % ~ .~~--,. "-~> May 1Z~

    WVeekend Scoop.. Pauino.Henecontinued from page 1.

    continued from pap~ 2. other boys involved, the police would intimately related,FRIDAY hsvliSeirrctltdyTe police would be called in to continue not be brought into the situation. This resulting in po-ems of richly descriptive -

    Graves Hall, 7:30pm. puic iinveie a to daend. the investigation. The .boy then was all the incentive the boy neee; ajcie n ignosmtposGuenter Meyer '88, a veteran LAWRENCE reurned to his class.' After the class, .and he confessed tha yshantw Heeposawie rangeo bisi

    soloist with the Academy Oirches- There's no better ativity than 'was Over, Paulino told the boy tha~ this other boys from Andover had broken his poetry, such as love, nature, thetra, will give his Senior recital. The th oisfrariydy t was his last chance, and that if he did into the lockers. The boys were given relationship between historical patterns-public is invited to attend. Lawrence Showcase Cinemas, you break into tfi~,lbkers, the police would 'until Monday, May 16, to return all the and contemporary issues, and legend

    SATURDAY ~~~coulId see one for ohlIy.$2.75 for the sonfid 7 and he would be in equipment they had stolen, and pay for and myth. His use of language creates

    Thme6me this week wilb first showjng, $3.00 f or the second trouble with the law. The boy realized the lockers that had been broken. depth and insight while remaining ac-SiTe Canles t 6ee andl The adtidan$47fo ghme, the consequences that he faced, and Thanks to Magnum PO Paulino'Orte- cesbetaidauen.

    Sixteen CandleSudayssandholiays.ThemvheS wished to talk wtih Mr. Kalstien. Mr. ga, the boys locker room is safe once Seamus -Heaney was born o pi-World --- ccodn oap t8m hs-ekae---6-----.-.--_ Kalkstien informed the boy that if'he again. 13, 1939, in' Castledawson, County

    Ofcus,you never know who'll Colors, Sunset, Moonstruck, cofsead -t~~ Wh~~Henry-Gourd~tau 'jq i'er~rr~ran~otenrla;be at thedoor, so bring your iD. Critters Part II, Salsa, Above the 'eatne nhrs col t

    - Graves'-a ,7.0m-- .-. ---- .------ Columb's-College, -Londonderry-fromHall, 7:30pm. ~Law, Beetlejuice, Sakeon, c .- 14 L 1951 to-1957 .and receivedhbis B.A. inAnn Gerschef ski '88 will be giv. Dead Heat:-V .ot k *

    ing her Senior recital tonight in the -J----LgFL - English in 1961 from Queen's Univer-,BOSTON .- sity in Belfast, Northern Ireland. He,Timkeni Room. The public i h ih eoe nEeigo ~g~ 1I L J ns married Marie Devlin-in 1965, and they

    invited. The Night Before: An Evening of A d B oat Vik~~~~~~~~~~~~gs have two ons and one daughter. FromSam Phil Steps, 8:,30pm.. A Cappella Song," May 20th,19697,SauwsLetrriEn

    ~Providing it actually stops rain- 7:30pm at Goddard Chapel, Tfts By Erik Sabot16-97,eauwsLctrriEnheralds inUniversit, Medford.- Featurig "Y'all rady? GIT!And An- Autin seemstshovetthepain'they 1970rsiUniersityraning at some point,. Don head inUiestMdod] etrn - em olv h ante 90t 97LlfC&vis a Gdeif LUcturerSpring with our-f irst outdoor-dance such groups as Peking and the -dover Boy's Third is off to a roar- prdc.Stigi i eti ae at the University of California, Br-of the season. If it is still raining, Mystics, the Bosstones, Two by -igsataantrvlBysfut. Clmn h eue orwwt keley. H6 taught at the Carysfort

    *the dance will shift a few hundred - Fours, Shawslheen River Rowing in a shell that 'outweighs the rest of the Iboat. Preferring to Training College in Dublin fromyrsve t th familiar shod Mrt eue NoatS., nd five the average warship, the crew 1s be an individual, Coleman rows at 1975-1981. Heaney, a Catholic, left

    Gym, inwhich cse you hould Mre GuysThat Sig. $2, 1 for ,moving well. Te muddy brown his, own cadence, doing things his Northern Ireland when the "troubles"bring your ID (one can safely as- students. -Call 926- 9208. water is carved by the boat's corn- own way. It figures that he is the resumed in 969. After teaching at'-surne that ID will not be checked Dizzy Gillespie, May 28th, pm,' pletely blunt bow. The boat pad- only senior on this boat. seven-seat Berkeley, he stled with his fatnily in'out on the Vista.) at Newton North High School, dies with almost complete is rowed by Eric "Is it sunny to- County Wicklow in the Republic -of

    SUNDAY, Newton. One of the Giants of Be- disinterest, looking at the many day?" Gregg. Gregg, another 'Ireland in 1972. le presently teachesGraves Hall, 3:00pm. Bop, Gillespie will be giving this fine shacks on, the bank of the rookie oar, has the pivital job of at Harvard University as a Visiting

    Megan Conway '88, famed An- concert to celebrate Newton's , rvr~-floigsrk.Dsiehsie- Poesrsne18.doversoprao an co-sar o last trientenial.The concert will be - Boy's third is going fast today perience, Gregg performs his job - For someone who has won every

    yeias Codyra. willpugie her Snied O anRoniorfeeCl 5-72 GoilfortMan despite the storm which ravages the very well, allthough he ha.5 been major English-writing poetry award inrecita toda. The-ublicis invted Oe tta nd Ronie GibertMay -Merrimack. he third shell, made known to miss the water on occai- Ireland and England as well~as having

    to attend. -21st, 8pmn, at Harvard University, of the heaviest woods available, ~son and soak the Cox. Stroke John tenure at Harvard University, SeamusCochran Chapel, 3:00pm. Cambridge. Tickets are $13 and slams through the huge waves. "Fast Hands "Roesler sets the ca- Heaney is a hu mble man. While being

    The Merrimack Valley Philhar- $15. Call 661- 1252-for info. Powering the shell this year are 'dence and power for the boat. Cox- flooded with comments of admirationmeroi cio speCal oe tie The Btyonyops, throuhJne nine of the most unique people on ing this boat is Giles " Captain from Bruce Smith, the IrishpoetperforanTe ioncr the Chae thi 20t atrf SymphonyHall, Boeston. the -Andover campus. Rowing Bow -Crunch" Bedford. Bedford has his responded, "I'm just a beginner." Mr.Studna.thceris freerig toi PAs Prformhanceseey T8m uesdays from Greenwich Conneticut is Jay problems, as nobody past five seat- Smith's response sums up the accom-

    studentsWhoNbring thitog Saturday aikts 8pme Sundam "Junior" Crutcher, who spends can hear him. plishments of the modest Seamus

    Graves Hall, 700pm atal:30p.Ticket rag f more time looking at the bank of Today, Boy's Third is racing Heaney. "If hes just a beginner, thenPhilip Chung '88 will be giving 269-$238CalO 66N49CoEtenRethnayoeele Rwn against rival Boy's Fourth. In this- I'pr-aa" .

    266.2378(CONCERT). ~two-seat is Rob "Cowboy" Kinney, race. B4 has almost caught B3. ____________COME ON DOWN COME ON DOWN COME ON DOWISI ~~from Woodville, Texas; I'm sure Rowing hard, B4 is able to catch up

    you've heard of it. Pulling hard at to the storming B3. Disaster strikes-do e-Ir CHAPEL -THE SWEE TEST PLACE IN TOWN - three-seat is Stanton "The Mouth B4 as they row into a tree to end A ndove

    Mor ~~ - IS AT LANE'S END 36 PARK STREET From The South" Denman. the race.Mori on~~~~~~~~Pht... HELP YOURSELF... Despite having rowed for only three - Boy's Third's favorite'activity Ph

    -..ICE CREAM SMORGASBORD... weeks,- Denmnan has mastered the has to be the daily splashfight. InCheitnut ...14 TOPPINGS... basics of the stroke. owing at this spectacle, all the Rowers at-

    HOME OF FRYE VILLAGE -CHOCOLATES four-seat is Sean, "Sick Puppy" tempt to splash the Cox, or eachFRESH, HAND DIPPED Gottlieb. Although he probably other 'of themselves. By'holding~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~otle. lhog h roaly oheor heslvs B oligFRE~~h, HAND DIPPED - ~~ weighs less than the Cox, Gottlieb- their oars at strange'angles and

    PAR] ST. EUROPEAN PASTRY AT ITS BEST... is a keystone i n the center of this -smacking the water, they can directgourmet cakes, tortes, mousse, tarts boat. Gottlieb's performance is gallons of the Merrimack onto '~-

    Olene petit fours 'sceones ruggalach, croissants, most easily seen as he rows the boat almost any part of the boat. Cox-danish, french bead, rolls, etc.-off the dock-with a little-help from swain Bedford is a frequent target EPESSRWC U L

    ESPRESSO, CAPPUCCINO, bow, two and three seats. Rowing ofthese sneak attacks,a and often EPESSRIERRLSOFT DRINKS, FRAPPES, ETC five-seat is, Pete "Insane' Ausqin, has to dry out after practice. ABLE-FROM OUR-OWN

    L E'S ~~ALL4 THIS AT THE END OF THE LANE... - whloves torwo he ono Boy's third is looking forward toNE LOLA.basement rowing m~chines. Most it's upcoming race against St.-

    LANE'S END 36 PARK STREET ANDOVER 475-7757 people avoid these-machines, but Paul's. With the slogan "If we win, MAXELL XLII TAPES- ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~--Giles goes in", the crew is highly $1 9.90/CASE

    motivated to set a course record WHEN YOU PEEEfJI - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~against SPS. Boy's third is also TI AD,

    - ~~~~looking forward to vanquishing _ _ _ _ _ _ 'rival- Exeter on Grandparent's 4515 7BRADS

    --weekend.

    M

    The Cycle, Stop -

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