PAPS Granted Power to Bust ic C bu

Transcription

PAPS Granted Power to Bust ic C bu
No way-Too
What do yo
PAPS Granted Power to Bust
Bartlet and
Taylor ~~~~~~~,
Overhauls
Administrative Policy Expands
1New
/PPsRoeiRleEnforcement
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~the
for1994
S~~~~~ateiii.
to Back the Project
counselors and teachers-have 'been
responsible for enforcing rules on
utplc cagsence
caps
by Scott Kaiser and Jeff Herzog
.
PIUiPIAN STAFF WRITERS
A sthe result of a$35 million
made
-Bartlet
T)A
~~
'T'¶ri-Iu~~rE~r~.wrhf
$35
n in.
t-~-'i
by
the
.*~,i
~ment bankers, eventually choosing to
STAFF W~~~~~~ifER
~~
Phillips Academy's $42 million
debt of deferred
maintenance
de-
its Academy's urgent attention, and has compelled the school to
borrow $35 million through tax-exmuniipal bonds. The school
empt
oe
nowt planimpeetth
deits
of
to both rid the Academy
ferred maintenance, and to prevent
fr~ ...
fuuebacklogs ofmaintenance problems.
41mands
The Academy's only other
source of revenue for campuis repair
ecuitis.
work with Prudential Securities.
Two ratings agencies evaluated
the Academy for credit, providing a
"'
have extended this responsibility to Public Safety officers, causing controversy
among both faculty and studns
Several disciplinary incidents this term created further
confusion over the disciplinary responsibilities of faculn ulcSft
t ebr
officers. "In the past, the role
of Public Safety has not been
enilycar"sdHny
W~ilmer, Dean of Students
and Residential Life, this
'"
''-
~~
~~~~I'"
TI
PblcSft
Wdedy
ofieshvrutnlrprt
ihs
ftet
e niet
Officers were not previ- Public Safety Officers: Passive watchdogs no
ous instructed to uphold the
rules of the community in any diect inrae.Cob
S anar Picy Infencepreere
way-for example, "busting" den
Roe
quent students. Over the past wekCaginPPs
the
expl~ained
further
Wilmer
been
has
however, - the policy
in
the
its
role
and
Policy,
Sanctuary
free
changed to give Public Safety
enforcePAPS
broaden
to
decision
i
involved
reign to "bust" students
ment obligations. "There are two sepincidents of drinking and drugging.
The broadening of PAPS's en- art ie we eln wt rning violations]: the disciplinary pile,
forcement right has upset both stu
and the Sanctuary pile."
that
dents and faculty. Many feel
Recently, it has been decided that
thatsure
PAPS is on campus to make
a
student is caught without sanctuif
are
students
and
buildiigs are locked
and his intoxication is deemed
ary
students
make
shouldn't
PALPS
saf.
dangerous, he is liable for
medically
looking
are
officers
that
feel paranoid
in the case of a first
even
expulsion
crack
and
privacy
their
invade
to
down on activities, elicit or not," time offense.
takesk
the studentde
If, howeverwev
commented one perturbed senior.
sanctuary and the drinking violation
"IafelEtatmtistcangeissmkcn
ex
early ashnexttil
Taylor ass erlyas
ndTayor
artet and
Bartlet
year.
Annual Maintenance
Though not as financially press-
tions. The school received a rating of
AA and AAM, w~ith the possible highest rating at AAA. 'This is an excellent statement of how credit worthy
we are, " said Cullen, pointing out
how many other private schools in
Massachusetts can't compete on this
level,
With such a high credit rating, the
ing as this deferred liability, annual
main~tenance may raise problems everal years from now. "We need to
spend $6 million every year just to
stand still," stated Cullen. Currently
bonds sold quickly, and mutual funds
oraiain
ogtthmi
5bL
is the endowment, a less "cost-effec-
million chunks. Individuals interested
devoted
in purchasing bonds then contacted
ic C
are already under-way to renew
bond buying organiza-
criterio'n for
U FINANCE
Cotinue On age 6
nPg
otne
i
J.E
£
L 9
u c
s
P1HILUPIAkN
Ahnflopaetvicdhir
siandaho
du
cocpsabout
abuseat apaneldiscusionlast
T2
to)Ce
L~.LAL.~Dean
lf-I .,'rd u TT1LT
ate
Ilb
vi
ndvrDu
h
reettvsfo
and Alcohol Awareness Committee
(ADAAC). The panel addressed the
fdu n loo bs y
ntr
lcolauseycn
nturenofdr and
tudens andfocued on"bing
drinking," as the campus' new enem.Mr.
of Stutdents, declared that "the
ethos of the school has to be
7
UNi W eek
ftentr
nte rud
fo
afte ak, yand, ifbec
AS hyaesbett
teeb
disciplinary action of some sort, regardless of the fact that they may not
be breaking any chemical laws.
These new rules and concerns by
att
teamnsrainaedei
the community's sentiment that student safety was at risk under previous
policy. The administration is concerned of all dangers - whether selfinflicted or imposed by an outside
source. The hope of students' is that
the administration will set policy that
achieves increases in safety, without
hindendngnstudent-facultytyorrstudentadministration relations.
bu
s
chlj
Cilla Bprnney-Smith, Associate
~
more.phtDInse
e~A
Fri day that included faculty and repCampbelline
byenatvElizabethdve
STAFF WRITR
)j-m.yg'j"lLd ~f
.j
T.-f
Also new this year is a rule in'Evolving the Sanctuary area of campus. Students are no longer allowed
who were looking out just for us.
Now the oppression felt by the presof scrutinizing adults is greatly
of
Dean
DeferredMaintenance Targetedfor Fundingisdedmdcaldngruh
Timi
byRay
off will be a hindrance to his health.
New Rules Govern
~ ~~~we
Visiting Bird Sanctuary
Students and Residential Life
,
ALLbond issue and meetings of
..L JLthe Long Range Planning
Committee, Bartlet Hall and Taylor
Hall will be renovated in the 1994-95
/D. Ingster
enewa of te two It's the end of Bartlet Hall as wknwt.poto
Theyear
schoo
dorms will be made in an attempt to dorms on campus. Taylor needs both for both dorms.
While changes have not been
diminish the school's deferred main- maintenance and additional faculty
planned solely for aesthetic purposes,
tenance problem and to strengthen housing.
"Behind those walls are problems rooms will be made more modem
student-faculty ties.
Dormitory renovation is one as- just waiting to blow up," stated and efficient. Dean Wilmer empha_pect of the deferred maintenance Henry Wilmer, Dean of Students and sized that the administration is look
ing for a plan that is not outrageously
problem in long-range school plan- Residential Life.
The main reason for the renova- expensive but does not cut comers.
ning. But with an estimated $40 milAs for housing students during
lion need-down from $60 million tions are the fire codes concerning
several years ago-accomplishing; high schools. Fire code dictates that the renovations, Dean Wilmer Said
the maintenance goals will be diffi- all exits be clear and that students be "There are many ways to skin the
able to to leave the dorm easily in a f cat." Though next year's housing
cult and costly.
At the game time, the trustees and ire. Michael Williams of the Office of arrangements are up in the air, some
administrators want more faculty to the Physical Plant said, "Many of our Bartlet students will inevitably need
live in dormitories in order to make older buildings are not built in ways to move.et.othDansfic"
Another uncertainty is the housAndover "feel a little smaller" and to that the current building code recoinof the house counselors.Will they
ing
allows."
or
mends
"slipping
from
prevent students
have to switch mid-year?
also
square
24,000
has
Taylor
Because
change
through the cracks." This
th plannd re- feet of floor space compared to Fortunately, an as-yet unformed comnwould omplemnt
Bartlet's 13, 110, Taylor's renovations mittee will resolve these problems.
duction of the student body.
said,
Wilmner
Dean
As
Because the school's credit is will be most costly, at $15 million.
considered good, Andover has re- Taylor's renovations may include "Unfortunately, renewal will never
ceived a high bond rating of $35 mil- rewiring, the addition of a faculty happen without inconvenience."
lion. However, the $35 million must apartment, reworking of floors and Every year Dean Wilmer has had to
intervene in the housing process,
ive ears walls, and the removal of asbestos.
spnt i
be appoximaely
Bartlet, however, has wiring re- making temporary alterations to at>
and may only be spent on renewal
projects lie dorm renovations. (See cently put in circa 1987, but it still commodate unexpected factors like
has 1960's fixtures, and some 1930's an increase in the number of Juniors
below for more on schoolfinance.)
Bartlet and Taylor were selected incandescent lights The cost of re- and girls. I'm tired of moving peoas the dorms most in need of renova- working the walls and floors of pie around!" added Wilmer. Unlike
is estimated at $800,000. past situations, however, the changes
tion. Bartlet has the largest deferred'
maintenance problem of any of the Sprinler systems are also planned have been planned for.
M ffi
Bo mo ws $35VV
will not be sent home unless the time
gap between adults and kids even
wider," one Upper noted. "Before,
Sarah
byKlipfel
SSCIT
PHI11PAN EW
[students] could know that there
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'Until recently, faculty-house were at least some authority figures
Bond-Issue $35
$35ViIJfi
October 29, 1993
Phillips Academy, Andover, MA
VoueCXVI, Number 17
policy, however, is that students
rikngar labe oo
rnigaelal
agtbne
first offense. Mr.
their
on
dismissal
Wilmer explained that the Academy
tdn'
cnntgaatesc
sl
student
a
arainthec
nosfty
safty an retaningtheesudentcoul
be risky for the school.
Wilmer also distinguished be-
tween experimentation with alcohol
and the use of alcohol to deal with
problems. Graham House offers psy-
changed" to properly fight drug and chological services to students in the
lterceoy(hyaekptofi
theiralooabs.Tentrofdikg
invest
to
chiefly to the operations of the these organizations
cateoy ste re etunfdlate cpti
enureornking
bs.T
fobloo
from
Spikba
patatesge
Eckely
Noelle
school. "If we were going to move moe.by
il cases wheroedtu
dentisalxt
respqo,"sid
yo
being
tom
asdal
from
crepes
and
cakes
Arabia,
Saudi
WRITER
STAFF
PHIlLUPIAN
at
yearly
The school pays interest
forward quickly, we were not going
wilreompromied)
helth
dn'
ad al ttol youreiqor s ofaid
France, and dumplings from China,
to wait for fundraising; to address the 5.375% to the organizations, who
frorm Chemical
pandenFr eem
loia eviet, Dito"rikn of
Maych
sample
also
can
community
The
will
Club
International
lIn
bondholders.
the
pay
subsequently
major portion of this," said Chief fioftu
DpdnyWekapora
PscogiaSevetodrnng
Korea.
and
Iran,
India,
from
food
bud
oprting
yersthrugh
tirt
ulln.
Nil ffier
nancal
Monday,
beginning
workshops
dent
irresponsiand
as
unconscious
be
to
ilsl
nentoalCu
International
the
sponsor
u-s
of
opai
yheashoogilhv
..
Culen.
nancialeilfficer
everyone else.
Theenteaatioalslubbill ellfor
L Festival on Friday, October
In addition, interest rates reached getthscolwlhaepiofis
adr."tiue
eposible
e
b
and
festival,
the
during
cards
29 from 5:30 to 8:00 PM as a part of Unicef
an all-time low in June, at the tine of current $35 million debt.
Temeiglaesatiue
they welcome donations to provide
UieNaonWekThFstvl
"Borrowing isn't always an indiborrowing. "It was a very good time
the binge drinking problem to the naesia relief for those affected by the recent
ek Th
fd
Uited Ntion
ation that you don't have enough
te det ry t ge deb,"
inmrketto
ture of boarding school life. Because
imcude ood, music, and enterwhateyouehavetowdo,"
debt market
in the ttotdo
hraloliseytotrast
timnfrmheifrntcountries' earthquake that has devastated India.
money tdo hayohaetdo"
said Cullen.
rqise rfera tonor, asd litde aloho
- haris
ilbea nefat
Thr
taimentefrme deren t
Thefaclitesaudt pblshe by exlaied Cllen. He asserted that the
deis noeiet reefritiadt
vice celebrating United Nations
whchdmy aredrepresentef'atlPhillip
OPP last spring informed the current deferred maintenance backlog
andwilkbefoloweubytleiseeddttobeomeintxicted
to be fixed,
needs
which
crisis
as
a
otPP
ht ti
lie
neyhsrieinCcrntepne
Aad
Academny of the size and costs of the
otpp
ti
tepnlcamdta
entiservice,
Tflis
Chiapel.
Cochran
Ccha
evicein
e
itrth
Ca
rewon't
hopefully
that
a
crisis
and
as
problem,
maintenance
deferred
alar with students.
tled 'orngues of Hope," wfi coinChpltenx nmlg
well as the possible courses of action turn. Maintaining the condition of the
The root of the problem, suggestaysiiultaiinad
prs
of
the
coordinator
general
The
to alleviate it. The audit determined campus after this mass restoration
Bonney-Smith, is that, because of
is Vanda Mikova 94.ed
Festivafurtherbacklog,
but prevent
hould
tadiinsn
y
rtal
an
pisle
~
ioa
ad
Fetvli
the retail value of the physical plant shol prvnwute akobt
wallhpresint the American economy, many
Michael Fang taped and collected willdet led ay
steps necessary for such maintenance
to be $270 million.
tenagers feel that they do not have
com- likely require more money than the the-music, Ahmed EI-Gaili arranged
tem
The
"phsicalplant
A
Hindu
music.
and
chants,
prayers,
the entertainment , and Ana
prie thatm "pyia Directo cof- Acdmycnafod
claimed that this creates an apathetic
Kardonski organized the food for the paeaBdschnndrdimpovementDividing the Proceeds
"very dubs
Facilitis
attd oad efhat nhg
ings in Hebrew and in English will
clbrtos
onciltis amus "all bildngroadfthe3milinbrrwde$2
tive"
alternative
that is
'h
I s a
.
'n
"
-COMMENTARY
'October 29,1993
Th~PILLJIPIANTHE- GENIDER
~~~~~~~~~To
the Editor:
VolumeCXVI
'Tehllpa
ISTSUES CENTER: OPEN FOR ALL,
W colntagemrewh
Scott Kaiser's sentiments, "A
women's center doesn't sound like a
place for men to go," and with India
Leval that "The Center will only be
truly effective as an educational resource if men use it also." That is
why we were dismayed by several
that such a center would be exclusive
mnales and some females, whoid~htiyheoinof a women'~ceiter
with a brand of strident feminism. n
June a workshop brought together
male and female students, faculty and
staff to plan the center's program. -As
the participants debated the center's
purpose, they concluded that a center
that encouraged both women and
lion with an additional $1.5 million
slated fr endowments for programs
and maintenance. The center's costs
ar nlddi
hs iue.Academy.
The center for gender issues will
be only one of several functions in
the renewed Abbot Hall. The building will also house an apartment for a
visiting artist-in-residence, a storage
and preparation space for the
This center is an exciting new
venture for Phillips Academy, yet if it
is to serve the school as a whole as its
planners hope, it is vital that its purpose and role within the- school be
'clearly understood. Program planning
aspects of the Phillipian article including the headline that the Trustees
had voted unanimously "to create [a]
$40000WmnsCntr"Te
Trustees were unanimous in their ap-
men, girls and boys to reflect on gender issues was appropriate for a coeduicational. secondary chool and inde-ol
strengthen Phillips
Academy as it seeks to serve all su-
Addison Gallery, and office space for
summer focus programs such as the
Institute for the Recruitment of
Teachers and theAndover-Breadloaf
Writing Workshop. Clearly, most of
for the center continues this year as
the fund raising for the, renewal of
Abbot Hall is completed. Interested
men and women students and faculty
are encouraged to contact us.
proval of not a Women's Center but
rather a center to address gender issues in a variety of ways. From the
dents equally.
This center on gender will not
cost $4 million; indeed the entire ren-
the money and most of the space in
Abbot Hall are designated for purposes other than this center. It is true
Sincerely,
Susan R. McCaslin
~ ~~~~~~~~~~earliest
discussions last spring about
ovation of Abbot Hall where the cen-
that Donna Brace Ogilvie '30 has
Rebecca M. Sykes
a proposed "women's center," there
was concern expressed by both fe-
ter will be located will not cost $4
n'illion. Construction costs for Abbot
given a major gift to the center for
gender issues. Moreover, her gener-
Patricia A. Edmonds
male and male students and faculty
Hall have been budgeted at $2.2 mil-
otis gift is $500,000, not $50,000 as
Phillipian are committed to this vital issue. Here is what we
To the Editor:
"Minority = Unskilled." He puts
forth this idea, by writing, "So what
want to see in the new Head of School:
-We feel the Head should have lived and worked at a boardIn
response
to
Michael are the choices? Hire 150 unqualified
school as a'house counselor and as a teacher. While some
Hackmer's article on October 22.
minorities?"
administratve
is neede,
experiene
a Head wih boardingwould first like to say that a staff and
later
adiiiinistrative~~~~~~xpeririterforite
Phieipi, shoulehave writigbtaaruote
scoo experience can better understand and address modem
mreitegrit thePian oul
misuoe shouldg thet
mor inegitythn
t miqsayingld
hea
boarding-school issues: gender relations, alcohol and drug use,
somebody, and then base an argu- c o mp a ny
*diversity, and residential life.
ment on that quote [Ed's Note: move to a tha 'Revese
-*The
Head should be realistic about these boarding-school
Hackmner is not a Phillipian Staff suburb with
problems, as well as progressive in solving them.
Writer. He is a columnist, and his a
smaller
-The new Head of School should be young, energetic, and
views do not represent those of te percentageand
*Hed
frienly.
shoud
Suhbe
a aproachale, th type f perPhillipian.]. I was quoted as saying of minorities,
soindany. Sudentawould wantl to akptochblThe
ne tpe, of choo
that "Reverse discrimination is justi- "the chances racist for
should
t for
lsosudentsand
beeasy
faulty t get i touch
fiable," and later labeled as a racist being greater
for that statement, which I never that at least
with, following the lead of university presidents who post open
made. It would have been great to these
fifty
office hours,
hear any type of respectable response [minorities
-It is also important that the Head command the respect of
to my article; however, by misquot- hired] are educated and skilled." We
students and,faculty, acting as a leader as much as a friend.
ing me, Hackmer showed that he is would hope that by 1993, Americans'
-Improving the quality of academics should be a top priority
incapable of legitimately proving an would have progressed further than
for the new Head of School, going hand in hand with the strong
argument.
to still believe in the racist ideology
Andover
attracting
legacy
a diverse
of
student body.Had
he taken the time to actually that all/minorities are inherently unHead School
ld be
~~~~d
strenth- ~check his facts and think before he skilled. However, Hackmer shows us
en*tue nwfauof ti
s hou
ratnga covernt
ne of go
wrote, Hackmer would have seen that that this is still a common belief
eningtiesand
tudentfaculy
ceatingan oveall snse ofcornwhat he was saying was based on the among some.
munity. To do so, the new Head of School should, when the popopular opinion of racists that
In Hackmer's example of a comn-
pany, he points out that the company
the first place. Therefore; Hackmer's
would move to a whiter neighbor-
statement that "Blacks do not have
hood, because supposedly, minorities
the original 150 jobs that they would
"unquali-
have had without affirmative action"
Editor--Cheoshu Roefedof
-
Senior News, Greg Whitmnor~
George Michell, Business
News, Nicole Frielander Moacir de 6 Pereira, Design
News, WicleiaeWodne
Commnentary, Kim Figueroa
-sFeatures,John
Aam Guer, Photgraphysig
Dan Ingster, Photography
Anne Albrecht,Advertising
RajaskarFaAdesingyu
Richard Ends, Publishing
Jack Cardwell, Subscriptions
Udell.
-Sports,Mark Sabath
Seventhi Page,Cohin Gallagher
Associates Nik Olney, Office
-
nn'Cpy,
Bslad, Lsa Lrson Nesoaahcipf a
-
mes Mk
omnay
ui
a
Features, John Guschov, Melissa Shatzberg; Sports, Mike Shin. Ryan Spnng; Seventh Page,
Timothy Rob~erts; Layout, Leslie Dise, willie Lihn; Design, Maria Taft; Crculation, Daniel
-
~~~~~Frank,
Anstey,
Rieh
Cecil Sebastian
E
D
I T
0
R
I A
L
Head
and
Shoulders
Witha lck
iput
of in
sudent
te Head f Schoo Search
anda ambiguous suet ncrtri eead y th
lSearch
concretebigou
set of charateri
rteewe Hed.ea
Sac
the
M
no individual or group has come forward with a
-Committee,
a
fled."
"7 wasqastates
'R v re
e e
e
sitions rotate, choose Cluster Deans who will make each ClusterN
,a cohesive unit of students and faculty. The new Head shouldat
company
1000, in a
~of
iscimi
that statement,
whc
He
that if
nation is justifiable,'
later labeled as a
a e"be
community
of 30% minorities, ire
150 minorities, or 15%,
they would
hiring
"150 unqualified minori-ties, staying,
and facing a lawsuit... because local
minority rights groups wduld deem
[15%, instead of 30%] unacceptable." Hackmer is literally stating
that not one minority is qualified to
To the Editor:
that all minorities are unqualified, as
Hackmer states, they would not have
gone to'the minorities' community in
special, often intricate recipes, and
the remarkable variety in the menus,
I was surprised and distressed by and,
the results of your poll on Commons
2) The pampered, complaining
Food.
majority, who must have been
Surprised because, like most of brought up on Stouffers' Gourmet
our day students, I think our Dinners, or be blessed with devoted
Commons food is excellent. I realize family cooks (including, perhaps,
that we who have kitchens can decide themselves) to respond to the
whether to go to Commons or not. Phillipian's poll with so much faultBut even those who eat every meal finding. To be so particular is to in,there are offered so many options, vite unhappiness. I suggest to them
thlat one could choose a different type that they offer to spend two weeks in
pf meal (soup and salad for lunch, December or summer holiday shopmneat entvie for another, etc.) every ping for, preparing and serving all
day of the week. Since the frozen yo- family food. No Stouffer dinners or
.gurt arrived, Commons fare has been MacDonalds trips allowed. Then
t!he, best institutional food I have ever judge Commons food,
*paten. In the boarding school I went
Or better yet, don't wait till
tp, we ate beef from wom-out dairy December. Offer to help cook and
cows, and peanut butter on toast with serve for, the hungry people who
Vtewed tomatoes for Friday lunches. come daily to Bread and Roses soup
We were so hungry that even that kitchen or Lazar-us House. You can
.!,sted good.
speak with Jenny Niles or Wendy
Distressed for the sake of two sets Bewig.
tpf people:
1) Our Commons staff, who work
Susan M. Lloyd
Aard to give us fresh baked goods,
Keeping up with the Clintons
The Student Advocate
'PA
..
AWh9ite Ho-Tuse Halloween
by Noelle
Eckly
P11I'MNu
STAFF
The followng
converation beAveen Bill and Hillary' Clinton was
taped in~the White House last week.
This top secret transcript was faxed
ig sorce
mftoma n Wahingon.
~, 'Hilary:Bill!You'v eate four
Hillary:
eateneBill!
~ionus
aleady
If ou et tht, yu'll
nvrfts aleIn
you elvicostmeyourll
neverowfiin paryis ostudyyo
know,
if youkeep
an
eatng like
lni, ou'r ing o hae etn
dr e p
ny believes that all minorities are
"unskilled," as many companies do,
the company would not ire any minorities at all. This is a discriminatorypolicy, which goes unchallenged,
without affirmnative action.
Again, I would like to state that
misquoting somebody, and further
drawing conclusions based on those
falsehoods, shows little creativity or
class. I would hope that the Phillipian
staff writers would have more talent
and integrity than' to sink to the level
of tabloids. [Ed's note: Please see the
first paragraph.]
hold the job. If the company believed
the school, but also includes being on
a fundraising mission. These deWith the selection of anew headimands pull the headmaster away
master, Phillips Academy has the op- - The new headmaster is a vital from the main focus of P.A, the sportunity to finally achieve the goals piece of the committee's plans to dent. Mr. McNemar cannot help that
it has established for itself. Even as point P.A. in a new direction. The the endless handshaking and memo
prospective students, we are told that man or woman who is to become the signing are all in the job description,
Andover is not only an academic in- new leader of the s~hool rrust be sup- The school needs a headmaster who
stitution, but also a "residential com- portive of each and every person on will alter this description to make
munity." The school prides itself on campus. We all see Mr. McNemar at himself or-herself more accessible to
how it has made "a big school feel athletic contests, commons, and the student,
small" through the residential lives of dances
T he
the students. In reality, there is a He al:
process
dreadful inadequacy in the education w a y s
of enthat Andover claims to provide after has a
hancing
the last class of the day has ended.
s milIe
residenThe Long Range Plamning on his
tial life
Committee has recognized this short- f a c e
on camfall in its plans to overhaul the cur- No one
pus logirent residential system. They have denies
ca 1 y
not yet divulged the all the details of thiat his
s ta r ts
their plan, but the number -one item friend- _______________________with the
on the list should be the improvement liness and boundless enthusiasm are headmaster. By developing genuine
of faculty-student relations. Julia to be admired. But there is something friendships with the students, the
Kahir wrote several weeks ago that that places him up' above the level of headmaster enables them to feel as if
PA. students lack "the continuing in- the students. It is something that there is someone on their side.
terest of a caring adult." By failing to makes him unapproachable with Furthermore, if the headmaster is acprovide genuine relationships with one's personal problems. He likely cessible, the faculty will no doubt foladults, PA. is putting its students at a does not ask for this image; it is low his or her lead. A headmaster
severe disadvantage. The school is forced upon him,
who is eager to get to know the sway too big for a student to have to
Being the headmaster not only dents will help to create the caring
go-it-alone. To have no ally in one's entails overseeing the operation of and nurturing community that the
f~o the Editor:
is incorrect. Without affirmative action, Blacks would have had no jobs
because according to Hackmer, they
are unqualified,. f Hackmer's compa-
Nikki Bilwakesh '95
r
N~aers95:NewHead,
New Direction,
thus encourage, even sponsor, school-wide social events.
s Food IS EXCeiflent
-
isq uo e Bila k s h"
-ing
.JlloydkC0MM
previously reported, and celebrates
the long tradition and history of education iAbo
Hall at Abbot
odyssey through the perils of daily
life at Andover does not build character, it diminishes it.
"
"In reality, there is a dreadful
inadequacy in the education,
Andover claims to provide
after the last class of the day
has ended.
EUIN
l
trustees seek.
While it is impossible for the
headmaster to' hold one-to-one talks
with every student on campus, nor is
it likely that the headmaster wl
spend all of his or her time hanging
out in the Ryley Room, it is the little
things such -as sitting down at a tablein Commons with a few students and
talking over dinner that will help to
culture friendships. Headmasters at
some schools even have open houses
for students every Saturday night.'
Mi. McNemar is not to be citicized for the work he has done at PA.
However, the burdens of his duties
have restricted his ability to be the
caring nurturer that the'-school now
needs. The Headmaster Selection
Committee should select a headmaster who is concemed for the well-1,eing of the P.A. student The trustees
must enable this person to be effective by distributing some, of his or her
duties among other faculty and staff.
If these things can be brought about,
look for Phillips Academy to prodper
under the new headmaster.
-
Nat Waters 95
BISAANTGRs oNCiiu
pie. are going to get mad at me.
Hillary: Okay, okay. I'll order
by Julia Kahr
some peasoup.
PHILUPLN STAFF WRITER
Bill: Have you decided on your
costume yet?
Through the mischance of being
, Hillary: Yes. I decided to be trapped in a room from which I could
Eleanor Roosevelt. I've dressed up as not gracefully depart, I found myself
you for the past three Halloweens,
and it was time for a break. Anyway, recently attending a meeting of a P.A.
did you hear what Al and Tipper are group which is comprised of a num_
You've
ofbos ad to grl.fTeubys
wearing to the party?beofoyantwgil.Teosuet
Bill: No, Al won't tell me. Says spoke forcefully and argued with
its a secret.
each other. There was seldom even
Hillary: Well, Tipper called me momentary agreement, and nothing
t-a n ple h eas hyr
a eie
n n ujc.Drn
.so
The first few meetings, I talked
al tally, you can confirm that boys
sometimes, but they never listened,
I stopped."
I'm not a psychologist but I think.
I can explain this pattern of behavior.'
"They leamn it in the classroom."
frequently shout out answers (or irrelevant comments) without being
called on, and they sometimes interfere with the class by talking to each
other. Girls very seldom do either of
A well-documrented fact: in coeducational classrooms, boys tend to
talk much more than girls, and girls
talk much less than they do in singlesex classrooms. Teachers (including
female teachers) typically are more
eetive to boys' than t gil'cn-wa
istration' considers
worth talking
about are only the ones which they
anachronistically perceive as perturbing large numbers of current and potential parents: residential ifeimagined to be a stinking sinkhole of
sbtneaueadsx
these things.
sbtneaueadsx
Teachers do little if anything to
I'm not a feminist. I just hold the
discourage disruptive
r impolite', view that unequal treatnt in the
e
conduct. It's a case of "I, don't like classroom is more of a problem for
this, but I don't know how to get him most of -the girls at PA than date rape
to stop.", Teachers are responsible for' or alcohol. It's a problem we're
-apnsi-hi-cas-m,-sae-o
akaotbcue'
*
The Plhillipian
Classical, and
Jazz,.
SEVENTH PAGE §October
Wi1th in- Mlemory Debuts
Inc a Sun:
a h
Musical Absurdity This Fall
by Matt Goldstein
29, 1993
and Benny Goodman.,
Some people to watch for in the
Jazz Band are Aaron Russo on flute,
From piles of leaves to piles of Mark Sabbath on keyboards, Eli Kao
snow, the Fall tenn days are begin- and Mike Graffeo,011 giwas, Eric
ning to catch up to us, and we begin Daily and Phillip Pidot on trumpets,
to feel worn and tired. Yet, we still and trombonists Alexei -Doohovskoy
want to make the most of the fall at' and Scott Blair.
PA, to lunge into its vdiy bowels, to
And for that extra something spetake a deep step into its frosting soil.
cial, tonight's jazz concert will inPerhaps it's time to glance over dlude a Benny Goodman solo played
the fall term music schedule, to let on the clarinet by Dale Chon as well
the sweet sounds of cellos and saxo- as many more instrumental solos. Mr.
phones and African drums seep into Thomas says to keep an eye on "hot
our souls and make us gleeful. And if new saxophonist" Peter Robbins if
Curico, Florence Pearson, and Enic
Mazoson on Sunday the 4th in he
by S. Kaiser and S. Frank
Timken Room at 3:00 PM. The
PIULUPAN' STAFF WRITER
Faculty Chamber Music Concert will
be held on Friday-the 19th at Davis
Today, Friday the 29th of
Hall at 7:00 PM and the following October, the Addison Art Gallery reevening
the., Student/Facultyprdcin
Chamber Music concert will be held
at 7:00 PM in the TIimken Room.
December offers the Symphony
orchestra's final concert of the fall
term where Rex Chao will follow in
the footsteps of great violinists of the
past and perform Mendolsohn's
Violi Cocroo
rdyte3d
~extend
that's what you're in the mood for,
The choir will serve up sing seasonal
PHILLIPIN STAFF WRITER
you chose the right sason to lunge Of soul, be-bop, fusion, and swing
into the PA music scene. -'This sea- miusic that he- has mixed into
son is hot hot hot," says Eric tonight's performance.
Thomas, director of the jazz band and
And once October passes, there is
a coach of chamber music.
always November, and along with it
The azz band is bigger and better an incredible music lineup. On
and the whole music department has~ Friday the 5th at 7:30 PM, Latin Arts
undergone some changes. Heidi Weekend will sponsor the melodies
Yenney has been replaced by Robin of Inca Son, voted the Best Andean
Cavalier, a graduate of the New Band in New England by the Harvard
England Conservatory of Music and Square Business Association. Inca
Andres Mojica is filling the place of Son, perforns traditional Andean mu-
b
new songs for the first time. The opening songs, "Go" and
"Animal," set the tone for the album with driving bass
and drums, surging guitars, and Vedder's passionate angst
filled vocals. "WM.A." starts off with a tribal drum beat
persistent bassline, and
on the "Singles"
rises and falls through
guitar swells.
-
track to keep us shameless-
ALn
bum, so it seems odd that
-
hills outside San Francisco
Bedeau, a&d Eric Arias.
Performances will take place on
October 30th at 7:00 PM, October
31st at 2:00 PM, and November 5th
66U"
expeffences with pain and'hurt and
brings to light their triumphs with
self realization."
A...99
vg
t;eu
Bd
Yu
,"C!N
L
the songs are about suicide._________________
late last winter to record a
new
~ album.
~
After spending the
past year wearing through
my 'Ten" tape, and collecting bootleg odds and
ends like "Dirty Frank",
"Leash",
and
"Footsteps"(the third p~art
of the "Alive"~-"Once" tr-ilogy), I was more than
It s PTo Ilo
catchier songs on the al-
:
r e*@
N
and
"Gorfid" reto f h
ly lusting for more, Pearl
Jam finally headed into the
is Enuf ' by Ntozake Shange in the
Tang Theater.
Directed by Linda Carter, the
play portrays the experiences of
.droning
sound-
omGlahrwmno
,~and
rI"Rearviewmirror,"
s Tn
-
~
0
pn
oo hog
ait fad6ha
:0P
nteTn
poems and monologues. A fine crew Theater. Tickets are $5 for general
thespians will be gracing the stage in admission but with our student D'4,
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~This
weekend, the Phillips this play including: Jackie McQueen, we students can purchase our tickets
~~~~~~~~~~~~Academy
Department of Theater, Walidah Duprey, Anitra Waller, for a paltry $2 at the box office. Cast
Speech, and Dance presents a "chore- Nicole Rattles, Tiffany James, Leslie member Tara Bedeau offered some
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~opoem"
"For Colored Girls Who Brown, Leah Bradford, Adayna insight, "The play gives an undistort-
7/
S
s 0,0A9
PHIILIPLAN
-
7
and a handful of songs released either in Europe or
tional scope, diversity in the actual
artists represented, and finally to exhibit something new and different.
Given the time restraint of eighteen months, the Addison's curators
looked beyond Phillips Academy for
assistance. Thus an elite search party
was recruited. Artists and curators
C o o rdhk
outside, suck in some fresh fall air,
and then run to the Chapel or Graves
or wherever the place may be and let
sweet sounds soothe your soul.
worldwide photographers (assisted by modemn day technology:
computers with the capability to manipulate images). The solid connection, in this exhibition, between human memory and these pictures and
their implications is how both are
"volatile, malleable and changeable."
nte
, J
*
With an outrageously successful virgin release, and
nothing but a few B-sides
is a smatter-
ntridpnet
with earth shattering melodies. So go
PP[LPAN STAFF WRTE
'
Chamber Music Concert, which willItsWhiMeoypt/D
trombone, Morris Anderson on tuba,
and Robin Cavalear on hom, will
play in the chapel at 3:00 PM..
Chamber music heats up in
November with a recital by Stephanie
by Geoffrey Bucknumn
.
mng of pseudophotograph s
made by eleven
Monaco on trumpet, Peter Cirelli on
e
previous photographers and premth
ods exploring issues beyond the
content of tradiom.
eenr-
-sult
Philip
Amadeus Mozart while the
Band will churn out tunes by
Thelonius Monk, Bill Chase, Josef
Zawinul, Dave Wolpe, Don Sebesky,
-orie
-
These changes are not nearly as
critical as the presence of many. new
talented musicians, who will be featured throughout the fall. And the
first time to dive into the music of PA
is tonight at 7:00 P.M., when the Jaz
and Concert Bands will move al
those souls who chose to linger in
Cochran Chapel.
The Concert Band, directed by
Vincent Monaco, will feature the music of Aram Khachaturian,
n
Wolfgang
-
-
feature the American Premiere of aItsWhnMeoyptoD
piece written by Samuel ColeridgeTaylor that bad been lost for years turns frm its dormancy with the exand only recently found by William plosive and contemporary exhibit
Thomas in a library in England.
"Within Memory". It's a collection of
Beyond Mr. Thomas's picks, artwork from around the world curatchoose what sounds you want to hear ed by our own James Sheldon. The
most and take a firm grip of the PA design focuses on the relationship befall music offerings. As you sit in the tween the photographic mediu and
library listening to the off key hum of human memory.
your neighbor in the Garver Room or
twiddling your thumbs, just a few
steps away buildings are overflowing
and
from around the world with one objective, to send slides of artists who
"working individually or in collaborative teams, go beyond the creation
of discreet objects and, turn to the
o
sets of photographs and obects, often, incorporating
texts, video and
sound. Their approach
should
the series
Of
original compositions, plays for
WGBH, tours around the world, and
makes their own instruments. Man oh
man, they do it all, so don't miss this
performance.
Continuing the celebration on
Saturday, you will be greeted by the
fllinois Wesleyen Camerata playing
songs of peace from decades past under the direction of Vadirn Mazo.
And then, to make your weekend
complete, on Sunday, the Faculty
Brass Ensemble, including Vincent
Sousa,
Two years ago, in the fall of
1991, the idea of curating an exhibition devoted to artists who pursue a
"project focus" was proposed. The
original criteria included an intema-
music on Sunday, December 5, and
on the 10th, Handel's Messiah will be
performed.setio
That just about wraps up the fall
music lineup, but for those of you
who are now eager to engulf yourselves in the music of PA, but are re-toa
strained by time, Mr. Thomas picks
out his favorites from all the incredible fall performances. He says to be
sure not to miss the Jazz and Concert
Bands, Inca Son, or the Faculty
sic in their own unique style, writes
cal.
alr
.
you go and to enjoy the sweet blend
Carolyn Skelton, who is on sabbati-
dio
~~
~
~
~
~
~
~
~
~
-bassline,
-Vedder's
-The
-
'
.
-.
ready for a new release. The new album, originally entitled "Five
antOne," then "per jm"adfnly
"Vs." is an amazing follow up to one of the bibles of 'a..
"Vs." is funkier than "Ten" with a more driving rhythmic feel, as opposed to the layered waves and washes of
sound on "Ten."
"It's like an orgasm," an anonymous member of the
Burtt House tribe commented after hearing a few of the
_____________
_____________
____________
____________
Domi
"Rats" is -next, and begins
wiha ucuae fnyPHILLIPIAN
that smoothes out
to a even pulse behind
impassioned
lyrics.
album also has' a
cool somewhat slower version of "Leash," and two
ballads: "elderly woman
behind the counter in a
small town" and "Daughter," a likely first single. Jeff
Ament and Dave Abruzzese the bands bassist and drummer, are a tight rhythm section, laying down a solid base
tars. McCready's short explosive leads fire up the songs,
and Vedder sings with a dark angst-ridden passion retniniscent of the great Jim Morrison. In sumrnay, if you
liked the first album, buy this one. If you didn't like the
first album, buy this one.
_____________
0
_________wrong,__theeventwronghthe
Pizza
D
O
M
IN A TES
Pliffi
Acade
ps my'.
Now thru Nov. 30th order a cheese DoMinator PiZ~a
for only $9.99
and also receive a free order of TwiSty Bread.
bBeStfodWhile
I supported them and enjoed their music even just last win-
STAFF WRITER
Parents' weekend has come, and
gone, some of you have returned
from a brief stay in
Jerusalem, Ohio, and
life is starting to get~
to normal. Ahif
yes, with this return
IIf
to reality, comes the
IL
-back
ter, many of Rage's supposed fans
merely looked on in derision, scoffing at my musical taste. Now, we'll
see
whose
laughing.
eh
el
I'm going to
see
Rage
Against the
SATURDAY3:00-5:00 PM: The kind ladiesii
Cooley House, after a bye week, wl
be spreading out their tasty treats for
all you to enjoy. Hot Chocolate and
old yearbooks, what could be better2'
6:45 PM: Once again it's movi6s
admr
nKme A udiorun
This time the most recent version d5f
"Dracula" will b~ shown. Report~
have been drifting in that this is a tru-
realization that yet
Mciethis
ly great film. One of the greatest of
another
weekend
weeken d all time say some youthful critics.
looms ahead.
friends,0
M:Tefis bgi o
time, most of you
you aren't. Consider Suicide When the Rainboiv
have probably real-He's
te i Enf"orgaly wtenb
ized that the weekscoop...
Ntozake Shange, goes up in Tang this
ends here can, sometimes, be a little. .
weed h rc o l o t
slow. Now, don't get me
THURSDAY
dents is $2, five for those without a
ventsaweohave spreadwoutaTeretwas aolot oftcoolostufuonecurrent
oshool .I ForFormore iinforma
before us are tempting, but every Thursday, but you missed it. . . way tion regarding this joyous occasion,
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~once
in awhile the need arises to to go.
please see the corresponding articlei
.well,
break the routine,
While most of you are sitting
around wondering how to do this, 1,
-FRIDAY
7:00 PM: Strike up the bands!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~along
with several of my cohorts, in The Academy Concert Band, under
~
cluding two of the illustrious editors
of this publication, will be enjoying
~
~~~~~~~~~~the
voluble tunes of Rage
on this page.
8:00-11:15 PM: The Blue Key's
are pulling out all the stops this time,
sponsoring the first ever, at least in
the baton of Vincent Monaco, and the
Academy Jazz Band, lead by Eric
my ,rference frame, Halloween.
Masquerade Ball. Dust off all your
Against the
Thomas, will be gracing the stage of
old costumes, grab your ID)and head
Machine as they tear up the stage at
the Cochran Chapel at the appointed
to Borden for some true entertain-
the Avalon in Boston. For those of
time. The concert Band will perform
ment. I mean you never know what
you who may wish to join us on this
venture, I must offer my humblest
apologies... .the show is SOLD OUT!
Yo a'
etayoetikt.Mrclhu
-
their rendition of "Three Dances"
from the ballet Gayane by Aram
Khachaturian; the "King Cotton"
by Jhn Philip Sousa; a
sort of surprises those Blue Key~
might have in store for you.
8:30-10:00 PM: The Uppet
Ciounl spnsor of a recet tip t
~ ~~~~~~~~~0
SPORTS
October29, 1993
>FOOT'BALL
GIRLS SOCCER
Harris
Sicilano
'for
The Phillipian
Three.
CTwo
TD's
Gamres,
Soccer
inBowu
Shtu;
NMLI, St. Paul's
Blanks
by Gem Karsan
Dan Marks
Much to the joy of the crowd, Kate
Schulte '96 began the game with a
of the ball into the NMH goal.
Paul's proved to be no match for the
powerful PA squad. Dowling netted
two goals as the rugged offense took
As the whistle blew, signaling the
control of the game.
end of the first forty minutes of play,
the score remained 1-0.
When the first half concluded,
Advrfedtny-two shots on
Becky Dowling '94 initiated the
After spending an agonizingly
literally ran over the NMH defense
women on her way to a goal.
Dowling described her tally, "I"I honon
estly scored because I'm so big, they
goal, but nothing to show for it except tired feet. The rejuvenated Blue
emergediter
emrged inn theove
th secod
secondHhalfse
underndrthe
lead of its captains, as Dowling
volleyedescrbed
vo
assists,
ssist from NicolecoRhodese
'94 and Honor MacNaughton '94,
ong afternoon being chased around
school by its parents, the Girls
Varsity Soccer team reemerged calm
colkected as it trounced
~~~~~~~~~~~~Northfield
Mount Hermon 2-0. Four
h
just couldn't stop me. If you want to
play soccer you have to be big!"
Dowling's goal would be the last
of the day for both sides, and the girls
left the field with their 2-0 victory.
The team was especially elated with
into the depths of the St. Paul's net.
St. Paul's was never able to recover, as the exceptional defense
turned in by Abby Harris '96 and
Jeanne Ficociello '96, kept them in
check. When the-game ended, the 2-0
Big Blue lambasted St. Paul's, 2-0.'
The two shutout wins improved the
aiJ
irls' record, bringing it to an as~~~~~~~~~tounding
7-0-2.
NMH
~~~~~~~~~~On
what would become one of
the nicest days of the fall season,
Andover put on a beautiful display of
athleticism as its parents looked on.
its shutout because of the fact that score marked Andover's fifth shutout
goalie Paige Heiler '95 suffered from in ninegames.
a wrist injury. However, the Blue's
This Saturday the girls venture
tenacious defense boosted its level of out to Newton Country Day. A win
play to compensate for its goalkeep-playto
theresatefor
wouldaleep
propelwold
theelteam'sam
recordr
er's ailment
to a phenomenal 8-0-2.' Then, on
St. Paul's
Wednesday, the team remains on the
Despite being the fastest team road as it attempts to shatter the egos
Andover has played all year, St. of th6 college girls of Dartmouth.
by Kevin Mendon~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~a
~~and
and John Fawcett
Two
PHLIINSAFWIESstrike
PHILU1PL4N STAFF WRITERS,___________________
___________________________
I
~~~~~.~~~~~~beginning of second half play, as she
Competina
underthe watchful
eysadce- u
ietadrt
oie
fterpr
*6
eyesand cheerfulvoicesof their par-
haln thewetur of5 defn
Brendan Kennedy '94, Andover
-steamnrolled to a44 - 10 annihilation
of NMH
this~~~~~~~~~~~~~'
past Saturday. Andover
proved that it has what it takes to re~
mainon the road to the promised
an.ntera
oteprmsd.asltrdeausrcwe
']'~
nV
`the
~and
The game started slowly for
Andover, a possible repercussion
~Y~
from the lack of concentration during
Friday's
of a practice. In the midst
promisingdrive, the Blueshot itself
in the foot as an NMH defender
blindsided Mike Siciliano '95, who
'fumbled the ball away to NMH. The
Hoggers used this opportunity to
strike first with a forty yard field goal
by capai Sean Lynch.,
'
GIRLS WATER POLO
~Ru
Andover later returned the favor
on
the
sweet
foot
of
Cory
Powerho~iituse Gil
Munsterteiger '95. With only the two
field goals,'the first 4uarter remained
a defensive battle, as Andover failed
to establish its usual foirmidable
ground attack.
The second quarter looked to be
more
sam,f thas ndovr cotinued to search for its running game
and fubled
aay, anther soring
-opportunity. While the offense was
busy trying to find a flaw in the
NNEI defense, the Andover defense
led by Kiewlich and Josh Carroll '94
'"
~
-
Captain Todd Harris '95 hauls down a pass against NMH
rocked the ground out from under the
phtOI
'
Gurry
Matt McGirt '94 complied by cornpleting the two point conversion to
Carroll after faking the hold on the
extra point.
FOOTBALL
Continued On Page 8
BOYS CROSS COUNTRY
0
0
PHILILPFXAN STAFF WRITERS
____________________________
PHILLIPIAN STAFF WRITERS
iWif~)L.
With the pool area filled with a
of spectators, the Girls'
Waterpolo Team swam circles around
its competitor from NMH Playing
aggressively and carefully, the
Andover squad emerged victorious
with a score of 13-3.
The Blue Wave virtually dorninated the ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~first
quarter of play, allow-
j v~~~~~~~~~~~~~i
N
Traditiol-t-I"I Rival"
by Dan Koehler
and Aaron Cooper
and I only edited four Phillipian adles."
Andover runners captured seven
,-
NAIH
."I'm
~ ~ ~ ~~~engNM to score only
~~~~~~~~controlling the offensive
infectious mononucleosis. He state ,
thankful to be over my illness
and to be a part of this incredib
-. <.
"
once while
side of the
po.CpanCryBrrn 9 n
t lnr
5cnrbtdo h
ofesvefotNt-wbg
seah
offnsiv efforrt
lsw'96oalso
ah
prtet amaingt wit. Our re runes tekike '9,ail Dedaee '9,
Kanu knocked one in. By the end of the
bengts closen," sidh Boyus "Thirunes
Anstey '94, roun de ou 's5 top sDv- quarter, the Andover team, up four
bein
Balissocloe,"sai
"Tis
nsty '4 rundd ot P~s op ev-goals with the score 5-1, ha ul
is the most depth we've had since I en.
demonstrated its power
COnr
M
to get the most out of the touchdown.________________
Hogger's feet. As the half came to a
close,, the Blue Wave's offense
showed its first signs of life in form
of a fourteen yard Siciliano touchdwpastCrol.multitude
ThEocent
ueta
h
Blue would hit paydirt again, opted
Traoditi
ou
b
oyGra
and Alison Bartlett
ŽA-'
0
_
ht/0nse
v'"
SaaMaio95dfeeN
aa
aio'5dfee
M
HbdpooDIntr
quiet with Bertrand scoring the peniod's only goal. Andover remained
strong on defense, shutting the NMH
team out for the second straight peni-
i
er, had an especially good showing,
finishing with six goals and four
steals. 'Welles also played a great
game both defensively and offensive-
met
agaisth Bort'CeodCountyaganst
met ~rthfeldMount Herman turned out to be another blowout victory for the Blue.
Co-captains, Greg Whitmore '9
and two spots, and
new school record,
16:05.Askedwhat
to prepare for this
replied, "I actually
can remember."
With it's undefeated status yet to
Drn
th
seod pid,
od.
ly, tallying two goals and four steals.
The pace of the runners led by be truly challenged, the PA runners AdvrmitneisladwhsoThe Andover squad continued to Goalie Sarah Marino '95 played a
Wimrappeared fatrta
-aatsm
elcmeiin
It
id Adefsve ntacntsla
shtigthel
dispa itaents during the fourth solid game saving six shots, and
al in the stretch run through the Great the team's ready for a real ~,hallenge, Ni-ddeesuad t.Btrn,
asiste quarter, scoring five goals while a- Danielle Debrule '94 also played
Lawn. "I'm surprised nobody broke like Exeter and Interschols," re- both times by Welescrend,
t
theionly lowing the NMH. team only two. well in goal, as she recorded a
andne
Tr~vraBaylis,
lug," commnted
'94 tok the JVrunner Mke markd
goalsr.ofaythe
WKealy
quarter.or
sO'Connor
Aththemeend
o'96KeledOthennoffensedtshutoutsewithoufivetsaves.saeOveralllthe
Whitmore set a Daly '96.
Interschols, we're looking to get a lit-tw gofscn
the
quarter Adove had capitalizing on three of her six scor- game proved to be an opportunity for
with a time of
Tim Roberts '94 also continues to tle revenge. Last year, we kind of fell attained a commanding lead, with the mng attempts. Welles and Bertrand put the girls to howcase their talent in
e diddiffeently shine. Roberts has placed third for apart." The team next faces Deerfield score 7-1.
the finishing touches on the game, front of a roomful of fans. The team
race, Whitmore P.A. runners in both of the last two on Saturday.
The third quarter was relatively each adding another goal.
travels to take on Deerfield in its next
got some sleep, raes after returning from a bout with
Bertrand, the team's leading scor- contest on'Saturday.
CLUSTER SOCCER
pCo~_~,G,Girls Deliver Against
~~JVI1U~~UNL_______
by Peter Caperonis and
GIR~LS CROSS COUNTRY
Sharma
PIMLIPIAN
by Gilberto Francis Gil
STAFF WRITERS
Boysof(and
Girls)
a couple
JY Football
Boys(anda
V Fotbal
cople f Gils)
6 vr
4~ rad ldYeller?" asked coach Chuck Richardson after the game.
Li_."That's the only way I can describe Wednesday's game. We looked
slow, fat, and diseased out there, so I shot and killed some of the players out
of pity." Chuck is now facing three counts of second-degree murder, but the
judge will likely be lenient in view of how bad the players really were. The
Franlin School "Little Tigers" battered the team in a blowout, 35-3. The
gmwas, in fact, so bad that "Joke" Levin '95 had to be brought down
from Varsity to give pointers on putting on equipment correctly, making
sure
to maxmum
the wter bottls
capacty,
areand
filed
haing an ovrall
sure
to maimum
th watercaacity,
ottles rendfilld
havig an ovplayer.
positive attitude.
SoccerCin
Girls JV Soccer
( 4 ou know, this is a pretty cute team!" said Rich Enos '94, JY girls
IL soccer aficionado extraordinaire. Rich was at the game on
Wednesday, serving his punishment after being convicted of aggravated
sexual harassment six months ago. The girls ended up losing a close battle,
4-3, on account of a giant hole in the midsection of their own oalie,
Katherine Jollon '96. When asked about it later, Jollon said, "Oh yeahta
happened in 'Nam, when I was sludging through the rice paddies and
Charlie shot a hole clean through me with a bazooka. Hurt like crazy!" Next
week, the girls will face a big mirror, and it won't be pretty!
Boys JV Soccer
Tnan exciting game against Danvers State, the Cuties in Cleats were crImated by a score of 5-1. The game was relatively close until halftime,
when some madman got hold of an eraser and changed the scoreboard.
PHILLIPIAN
Thog ofuto'ison
F'4Aaron
-by
Fluto Shinzawa
ThrouhSnoAfautRofTitsand HweGoldberg
'94 finds itself in a struggle for first
Last week, Flagstaff '94 held
a c.IskytewhWstQa
comandig led Zon te Clsta South on Friday followed by a bye on
commanding leadit on thentClusterriLeague, leading the quasi-formidable
val Rabbit Pond eamned four.
Rabbit Pond squad and the surging However, F-'94's destruction of RPD
West Quad South team by three yesterday reestblished their position
points. Now, after three days of corn-- at the top.
petition, F- 94 finds itself only two
'It is evident that some strife has
ponsaedo abtPnadoe
divided this team, already leading to
ahead of WQS.
Thisclashtateheutoprofthefstandn the rumredsdefecionoof2atleastAone
John "Viper" Stubbs '94, anste Oae
hmrae oe
,
gry about his lack of time in the goal,
criticized his teammates. "The Peace
the extra tier of playoffs from the Dudes are terrible. I'm going to West
postseason. After the final day of' Quad South." Stubbs, who has
play, the teams with the top twoAfeanrdoswkofpc-Mlr
records will face off under the lights, petroven hi cotec
s
notli on asea
turning these final few weeks into a filsge
eue 23mlin
etdpnnn ae
xie
contract with the West Quad South
Thechng asbrnsteOrganization on Monday. His first
meat of mathematically eliminating game is today.
Ateafrmd
F als.
Soh
a b, r oth
Basically, for this team to stay on
AbtadFasafhvbenretop of the charts a Id Garth Brooks, it
gtdt
h
vtro
h egehas
to simply keep either beating or
Aleksandras Stiiliginskis has a bigger tying teams. Another loss may jeopchneo
eoig
Ltuna~
ardize this team'~sure bet to advance
PHILUPIAN STAFF WRITERS
-caught
This past Saturday, the~Girls'
Cross Country team ran to a stunning
victory over traditional powerhouse
Northfield Mount Hermon by a score
ofe22-38.Anlarge cotingentLowparents was on hand to watch their
daughters toy with the helpless NMH
~~squad.
This latest victory improved
the girls',e~dt
pcaua -.
Afennadoswe
fpaie h il
atdt
rs hi
opposition for all of their parents to
see.
On a picture-perfect Saturday aftemoon, the girls did not disappoint
their spectators. When asked to comment upon the conditions of the meet,
CoachSteve Anderson replied, "The
weather is ideal. When it is a little
chilly for spectating, it is excellent
'
starter's horn barked, one NMH athlete
pulled
early lead.
HoeeJnLnI9 out to an meitl
up to the lead runner, and the
vo remarkable competitors ran
stride for stride as they headed into
the sanctuary. A wave of blue,' urged
on by the fans, eagerly chased the
two.
As the onlookers nervously
awaited the girls return to the Great
Lawcaevoice
thoutede"eadrrunne
in sight!" and a multitude of heads
turned to see Long ascend onto the
Great Lawn, 30 yards ahead of her
naetavray
ati
yti
Mer'94 aesa
Cal ainne sytea
9wsasoirnetaiy
lsn h a ewe e n h
second place NMI{ runner.
Long burst through the finish line
with a time of 19:07. Miller placed
third in 19:40, and Laura Torbert '94
finished fifth in a time of 20:39.
Rounding out the top five PA runners
were - Germaine Earle-Cruickshanks
'94 and Katie Schlesinger '94 with
respnective imes of 2)1:-08 ndl?210
-
@
SPORTS
The Phillipian
October 29, 1993
ATHLETE OF THE WEEK
A~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
THLETIC SLATE
Whitmore
_____
Pt IIILIPLAN
STALTF
The summer after lower yar,
Greg spent the majority of his time at
Olmi
\VRITIEiS
ainl
ak
wt
Oympic
Nationl
Park
with
Andover's own Dave Reeder There
he worked as a back-country ranger
and a volunteer firefighter Amidst
_______________________
"Dropping ten to fifteenseconds
each race, I wouldn't be surprised to
for the two-mile event because,
"Nick needed someone to traini with
n
uh
i.
of
uttwo
spring,
Greg
third out of forty-
'i;placed
Intershcolastic
competitors in the
'seven
states
NEPSAC
(ae
tDefed
BV Cross Country
day
-
Last
the pack ,in the closing meChampionships,"
fe
nd push him."After justBdys
of training, Greg shocked the PA
community as he lowered' the twomile record to 9:36.
see Whitmore at the front of
ters
FAN BUS TO DEERFIELD..-SATURDAY, 1 1:00
~~~~~~~~~~~~~Saturday,
October 30'
__________________
by Chuck Arensberg
and JedI Donahue
circuit
race
CrosCrossCo
at DEERFIELD
tryratatEDERFIEELD11:3
GV Cross Country
G
Field Hockey
-at
GJV Field Hoc key
GJ2FedHc yatD
BV2Fotbl oce
at DEERFIELD
1:45
D)EERFIELD
1:30
at DEERFIELD
E ILD13
at DEERFIELD
BVFoblatD
championships in front of
his cheering home fans.
BJY Football
BV Soccer
at DEERFIELD
at DEERFIELD
dlashing to a cross country
record setting time of 16:05
in front of a screamning
Parents Weekend crowd,
This, along with numerous
other top ten placings,
BJV Soccer,
at DEERFIELD
BJV2 Soccer
at DEERFIELD
placed Greg in the upper
BJ3SceatD
echelon of the prep-school
V3SceatD
Greg Whitmore
awarded Athlete
'94 iscyls.
of the
Over the summer, for
1:30
2:0
ILD20
teammate and co-captain
Trevor Bayliss '94. After
-
1:30
1:30
1:45
1:30
1:30
E F LD10
E F
BV Water Polo
GV Water Polo
LD10
at DEERFIELD
at DEERFIELD
1:30
2:45
Week. Handily crushing his
competition all year long,
Gregr has exemplified the
the first time in his life,
Greg set defimte goals for
the upcoming cross countr
WdesaNvm
willpower nessecary to sueceed on the prep-school evel.
"I was bom, baked, and
fried in Beverly, Mass.,"
season, including breakiig
the sixteen minute barrier on
PA's sanctuary course, qualifyig for Kinneys, and placing in the top three in
G
il
okyv.MD
GJV Field Hockey
GJV2 Field Hokyvs.
BV Soccer
BJY Soccer
LSX23
vs. MIDDLESEX
WINSOR
vs. MOSES BROWN
vs. CONCORD ACADEMY
GJV Soccer
G 2Socr
vs. LOWELL HIGH
vs. LOWELL HIGH
F IE LD
sttsra
h
Intersehols.
Greg states, "I
ways excelled at athletics.
Following a soporific JV3 soccer sea-
this hectic schedule, he still managed
run every hill as if it were
the finish to 'schols." Greg and
his Junior year, Greg competed
on the ill-fated Recreational Ski team
to run 35 miles a week as training for
the upcoming season.
Trevor have both been running extremely well.
group.
"Nick Thomson '93 now became
Outside of his athletic pursuits,
Deciding a sport change was in order,
Greg then took an interest in Cross
Country. Running an impresive 17:25
during his fii-st seson the next year,
Greg was an important asset and
showed potenti al for future sucesses.
Following his affinity for endurance sports, Greg was drawn to
Nordic Skiing . After four strong
finishes, Gregr qualified for the
Massachusetts Jr. Olympic team and
displayed the intensity that would later aid him in all of his endevours.
Spring term, Greg returned to PA
yearning to hit the roads on his new
bicycle and compete on the cycling
team.
the biggest influence in my life; his
adittude towards helping me was
purely genuine." Upper year had now
Z,
become the springboard for Greg's
running career, as he ran a 16:18,
qualified for for the Kinney
Nationals, and placed an astonishing
fourteenth at Interschols considering
the amount of blood he lost during
the final two miles of the race.
Greg began Upper winter leadig the Nordic Ski Team, yet ended
the term on the indoor track team
amid controversy and record setting
times. After four weeks of cross
country skiing, Greg decided to quit
the team to help his frend Nick train-
-son
and Search
and
Rescue
B
r3
HO0C KE Y
~
+
~
T ii~d
D ea~l Firs
le
L
3:45
3/ 3
3:00
3:00
3:00
3:00
~rI-
ossF~ of1
Greg spends his extra time living in
the Phillipian room where he spends
an average of 24 hours a week as the
by Kito Robinson
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~PHILLIPLN
STAFF WFiTER
Senior News Editor. "I have been
swallowed up by the paper. -I now
fester in the bowels of Evans. There
are those who have crashed and there _______________
are those bound to crash; I am expecting this any time."
Expecting a great finale to the
season, Greg envisions a powerful
and healthy team, in which the runThe Andover girls field hockey
ners give it their all and crush theirtemsrgldfrh ulsiymi-.unfortunate competition.
States ue atStra
ne h ihs
Bayliss, "We would both be in a lot I'l
ossetytraee
h A,,
of trouble if we didn't train together.
team woistts
hartnd
y
ack PA
s hlispeald hoevr whe
3eas
'
'-
E
Jordyn Kramer '95 tapped a ball in
VOLLEYBALL
for the Andover squad.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Wednesday,
the twenty-seventh,
the field hockey team traveled to St.
*
i~~~~i~~
S-4if e N MIH, Cus ig
Uo-Surge
by Francesca Antifonario
and Jessie Drench
PI IILLIPIAN StIAFF V
RES
.1n'6time
~~~~~,
~~~~~~In
~~~
7
j~~~~~~
After two dissapointing losses the
previous week against Exeter and
Stonehamn High, PA volleyball approached its next two matches with
vengeance 'and determnination. Its
hard work paid off this past week
against NMH and Cushing, as the
Bigr Blue
aidded
record.NM
Fo
Saturday, the Andover players
treated their parents to an excitingbyDreDin
-three
.500
teamI needed to get out of our slump."
Cushing
Wednesday afternoon, PA faced
Cushing Academy. For the second
this season, the Big Blue defeated its rival in a competitive and
exciting mac.rallied
the first two games, Andover
~had little trouble with its opponent
and came up victorious 15-7 and 158. The team's momentum and solid
play was highlighted by consistent
blocking and hitting by Sharon
Petranic '95 and strong serving by
Christina Costas '95.
The third game was truly an
BO
OC E
BO S
OC
E
two more wins to itsNMKn
match, culminating in a well-eamed
Z~~~
and satisfying victory. After dropping
th Igm
toN HthPAea
came back to claim the next three,
sealing the victory.
Andover had to work hard to sustamn its morale after a tough loss in
the first grame, 16-14. The team was
able to come into the second game
with the focus nd perserverence
which carried them through the rest
of the match. Andover won the last
grames 15-9, 15-6, and 15-12.
It wa evient
rom P's sberb
It as vidnt
romP~ssubrb
play that every member of the team
contributed to the victory. And over
had several, kills, even against
NMH's impressive defense, and the
back row dug up some hard hits from
the opponent. Ps strong serving
also factored into the victory,
Nineteen stifling, kills by Jill
Above
iP-ILUPLAN STAFF WRiTERS
BOYS
Andover's
field.
WATER
POLO
digC
'9Yu§i
Contention
4o
mid-
un
y s
lfb
_____________
Haying
proven himself as
Murungi
has
emerged as a
prime factor in
every game.
Harvard JV
In Monday's -7'
game, Andover
hotd Hrad
a
emege
loss.~
wt
- os
Both the coaches
and
players
ged
ta
-7`
-This
IMN
~-
:
-r
.--
-place
4
nitely been the
toughest match- Joey McCannon '95 looks to tie NMH. p1•0t0 A.Gurry
up so far this His shot was just high, grazing the crossbar.
year.
Although
the back of Harvard's net.
the team suffered a close defeat, it
Early in the second half, Harvard
gave an impressive overall showing,
put the- ganme inner behid Dn,
Ml
H
by Dan Hatfield
into the second half, coach Paul
PunI=P~IN TAFF WRITER
Murphy was given some room to ex-
past weekend at Northfield
Mount Hermon, the Boys' Varsity
Water Polo Team kept its win streak
alive with a fairly easy victory. The
win improved the team's record to 82anhodtemsailinhrd
2'n
odste
tedl n
in the prep school league.
The boys in blue speedos showed
its obvious superiority from the very
beginning of ths match-up. By the
end of the first quarter, Andover had
already established a 4-0 lead. The
entire starting lineup played extreme-
periment with some different combinations of players. The confident
Blue squad dove into the third quarter
and continued to control the pool.
New goalie Ben Cathcart '95 played
very well, allowing only one goal in
four shots. The continued cooperation of offense and defense resulted
mn a further extenuation of Andover's
lead, 12-2.
TeBuWveemdtooeis
h Bu
ae emdt-ls t
strength in the final quarter of the
game, however, perhaps in part to
overconfidence. NMH took advantage of the situation, and surprised
the Big Blue with six goals.
Andover's lead proved too great,
however, and it still pulled out the
ly well, and captain Omar Farah,'94
victory, 12-8.
*
*
inspiration it needed for a victory,
photo IA Gurry
against NMH on Saturday
a lethal attacker,
Tendvery
Boysslupoc
ae
lub
isdfntl
nasupo
ae
Losing by a narrow margin of 2-1 on
both Saturday, against NH, and
Mody gis avrteta'
rcrhadrpeto31.HvrdasefNMH
Saturday's loss against NMH was
a huge disappointment for Andover.
Although the sidelines were lined
with supporters, the Blue lacked the
Heidi Cline 94 (r), Meghan Madera 94 race upield
amazing one, and PA came away
NMH
ball and jabeh
routy
stic
jst ine madevcontac
ih he aloithen shot
with a hard-fought win. Trailing at
Saturday, in the midst of the par- time oapsit nrarsowl past dthewa voidtamS
h
diapontentr
au s
for
game point, 14-7, the Blue won the ents' weekend hoopla, Andover cametemwa
serve and put the ball in hands of out charging. In the cold October beteol
Sn ftmt
ch.au
quitpla esied
withtitnplay a te
captain Laurie Galaburda '94. In night air the girls in kilts etxpulselyesribee
as Adoert
front of a cheering crowd, Andover difficulty stopping the long passes of sTickplayerswlinedup as the St. dceado
the frlst timoerhasen
behind Galaburda's powerful the NMH team, despite their high Paul's fiaeslnTedu
m omentuhev-t. deethis upomigtra the firtim
hsseldon
serves to score nine straight Points leyel of intensity. With fantastic stops PalsfedThmo nt ,hwv-hiup
mngSurytefed
and win the game, 16-14.
by Molly Bell '95, Vanessa Kenry er, never blew Andover's way. Shot hockey team will head on up to
The steady sets of Lauricella and '95, and Julie Gwozdz '96, however, afeshtkimdheMHgle'
Deredweeteyrexpcngo
solid all-around play by Jessie the ball crawled up the Andover half.
padls, butno olne woud4 in the
fo
encountfpla
erilb atcng
girls team the
Drench, '95, contributed to a morale
The highlight of the game oc- grs e
aln~i
h is af
lyr ilb rciighr
o h
boostn vitr o noewih
cre
hnBl 9 htan icedi- slapped a cross ball towards goal and remainder of this, week, and are lookhas come back to improve its record ble chive into the NMH circle, as the forwards watched, the ball ing for-ward to redeeming themselves
to 6-5.
Kramer '95 cut to the rapidly rolling bonei.at
Deerfield.
But, because no Andover player
Dunbar Cup
n
game, Phillips lost its first game of
the season and its record fell to seven
~~~~~~~~~~~~and
one,
sD
f
KncsDfnigCap
byand
DrreSDinee
Ben Barnett
Paul's, where despite dominating the
()T ENWS Ar SIX §
October29,1993
RabidRaccoons
The Phillipian
Russell Reynolds Job'Description and
Qualifications for the New Head of School,
~~~~The
in Andover Raise,
Risks. of Infection
by Ja Lee
nowand
from
Alik the
Widge
byandJay
Albekofiwildceived
Lee
l'i-IiLLI~~~~~iAN
numr
ST~~~ll'
~~~~~~~~~~Students
who attended last week's meeting with the Head of School Search Commitee (See Oct. 22 Phillipian) re-
aies
i
typicalets-
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~School
11
On July 1, 11-year old Kelly ing
rabies,
Arndt of Mamakating, New York said Mr. Robert
died of rabies, signaling the gradual Wegner,
the
return of a disease once thought to be deputy director
eradicated
States. offrom
PAthePublic
United
miglh hfiav
ntracte
ae
th dsae
t
fromt a econtrer
e
the daidsrac-
a copy of the job description and qualifications for the Head of School RseleyodAscites Inc. the
search finn selected by the committee, published the description, which follows.
~~~~~~professional
wsrrass
Phillips Academy, Andover, founded in 178, is an independent, residential, multicultural and nonsectarian school
serving grades nine through PG. One of the nation's preeminent secondary schools, Andover emphasizes rigorous acadeinic study and global outlook through symposia, off-campus study opportunities around the world, and fomal student
exchanges. In 1973 neighboring Abbot Academy est. 1829, and- Phillips Academy merged, effecting coeducation.
~~~~Located 25 miles north of Boston, the Academy consists of 500 acres of land and 160 buildings, a faculty of 230, a
nonfaculty staff of 300 and a student enrollment of 1,200 from across the United States and 51 foreign countries. The
ltl uzalcnb ehl
ht ~ ns
operating budget for 1992-1993 is $36 million; financial aid is over $6 million and approximately 40 percent of the stumined from
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~dents
receive some degree of financial support The endowment has a market value of over $230 million. The Academy
coon. rabieswld
Though
ismals
normallythouah
otetacvegr."eolhudanticipates
major renovations / improvements to the campus faculty and targets total fund-raising (annual, capital and
minor threat, the number of rabid rac- wild animalsp
through do-anuay
ay aimatbeahumansmet)
coons across the country--and in the mastic animals infected with the ineve uturahlpy any animaldbea-edwet
t$0ilo
nuly
Andover area-as increased, raising virus. Health authorities therefore Pic unafturally,
abut soud callsosiiite
withoft nfecion.urgeall
th ris
pet owners to vaccinate their Pubicaety intaIsilLTe
Head of School is the educational and administrative leader of a large, complex, multidimentional school coinwthi thers f ifeto n.sc o y
urge n as A Advrpton
W ener.
onlwsdmis
munity. Reporting to the Board of Trustees, the Head should come to the position with a clear educational vision for the
is
yearnsfive to t
een
kod
dos andt as. fAllAo ve Phe
own
t
Thrbei con e onlyom thatug Academy and be prepared to work closely with the trustees, faculty and students to relate this vision to the historical
is
on campus, but because of the high Law Ordinance and always leash scratches and bites from rabid 'ai mission of the Acdm n t nqeacademic an cultural chrceitc.The Hedis ultimately soibefor the
their dogs
area.
any
costs of rabies tests, none of the ani- thi
Cosi
n pbi
ra inThe
h public
mals, but pet owners can also be in- ~development of academic policy and for setting the standards of personal conduct. Working with and through approprimals found have been tested for the main reason for the ordinance was to fected by cleaning up after a wound- ate academic and administrative officers, the Head will be responsible for the hiring, nurturing, support, evaluation and,
virus unless contact with a domestic prevent dogs from biting people, but edaiafrtevrscnsriei
when necessary, the noncontinuance of faculty and staff. He or she will oversee the admissions policies and practices of
animalor
humn wasconfired. m it also helps in reducing the chances edaiafrteVrScnsrieilthe
Academy as well as the college guidance programs. The Head must manage the physical and financial resources of
animal
confirmed.
or human
Inwas
~~saliva
for up to three or four hours.
Andover, a police termninated a rabid Of their dogs getting rabies," said Mr.th'aey.
H-rsewl bthciespokesperson to alumni / alumnae and friends of the Academy and must be
Immunization against the rabies virus teAaey
eo h ilb h he
raccoon last week, and in northern Wgr.must
bei within ten days of infec- able to articulate the goals of the Academy to its many constituencies.
Andover, two dogs attacked and
Other precautionis to take include
Qualifications
killd a ws
accon
laer
whch eepig pes beind ence to im- tion. In the past, mmunization conkilld a accon
wichwas
aterkeeing etsbehid fecesto Mni-sisted of a series of painful injections
The successful candidate is probably now in a leadership role at an independent school, college or university. The
found to be rabid.
mize contact with wild animals, inotesoah oeie
pt 3Head of School must be a strong communicator who enjoys teaching and who has had significant classroom experi-,
"There certainly is an increased putting tight lids on garbage cans and shots a day, but now, the number has ence. An earned doctorate is not a prerequisite for consideration. The faculty and students will look to the Head for acadanger to the Andover community not leaving any food outside for any been reduced to five.
demic and administrative leadership and guidance in a collegial setting. The Head must combine academic and intellectual vision with the inner strength to maintain that vision. The Head must also be an effective and empathetic listener
A
~~~~0
who knows when and how to build consensus. In addition to demonstrated experience in academic leadership the Head
IilinBorrowied forM
$35
resut.
raiing
Fr exmple
oney
* FINANCE for building renovation is much easiContinued From Page 1 er than for the fixing of leaky
however, the Academy spends just rooftops. "Walking into a building
$700,000 yearly on maintenance, and adsyn
'Ww I'
noben
Cullen hopes that from the $35 mail- 'rained on' doesn't have the same
ofSho
and complex
utb organization
klh
aae
and eager
ihbsns
to assist incmn-H
raising the funds
rsesol necessary
ecmotbewt
tosupport it. Our successful
h aaeetolarge
candidate
hav to et lss pysicl plnt udermust have the highest personal integrity. It is essential to the job that the individual have an unyielding, affection and reroof." The Academy's planned de- spect for young people, for whom the Academy exists. A sense of humor, decency and fun and the ability to attract the
crease in student population could loyalty and support of the many different constituencies are also prerequisites.
combine with a reduction of campus
Compensation
sietealehecoltoavaeSalary and benefits will be competitive and commensurate with experience.
quate funds for maintaining the cam-
lion borrowed, the Academy can both
jazzy effect as wailking into a new
pus .
reserve funds for annual maintenance
building," said Cullen.
(gb
C oi
1 1 1 1 e ~
it e
Cullen predicts that tuition will be
Problemn Not Easily, Solved
The fundamental problem with
operating budget.
affected by this deferred maintenance
deferred maintenance is that it never
According to Cullen,
the
Academy can at best afford only $2.5
problem. The Long Range plan has
set the maximum tuition increase at
the near future. "That means we're
falling $3.5 illion in the hole
again," he added. If annual maintenance is consistently deferred then
the Academy might soon face a second maintenance crisis.
One possible fund-raiser is a capital campaign,' which could solicit
money for sound residential facilities.
Campaigns initiated now, however,
likely wouldn't generate "a cash
flow" for several years.
In addition, donors are generally
more apt to give money that will
eventually produce a truly tangible
3.5%, tuition could increase by 5.5%.
Even though almost all maintenance
problems plague dormitories, tuition
increases apply to both boarding and
day students,
Since capital campaigning might
not yield 'tremendous results, the
Academy has to seek other alternatives, and though borrowing more
money would temporarily solve any
future maintenance problems, the
Academy would face an escalating
debt. Cullen offers one final alternative: "We have to get smaller. We
ceases. As Dean of Faculty Pete Joel
mentioned, "e
minute you fix~
by Nicole Friedlander
something it starts to deteriorate."
PHLA NEW EDITOR
In the 1970's the Academy believed. the faculty was being neglectActively working to reduce 'the
ad, and then spent much of its funds large number of candidates, the Head
focusing on that problem. The school of School Search Committee recently
thus consciously postponed campus outlined its recruitment techniques
maintenance, and is now feeling the again, and asserted its faith in the tuconsequences of this decision.
dent body's interest in die search
As values change, the next gen- process..
eration may -feel differently about
The Committee, consisting of
campus maintenance than the school five Trustees and three faculty mem.does now. "In any given year you've bers, advertised and communicated
got to decide how ou're going to extensively
with
the
Phillips
spend your money, given the money Academy community. To this end, it
you have," said Cullen.
sent out thirty thousand letters requesting advice on the selection
proces's, ~
~Ig30letr written
by Headmaster Donald McNemar to
heads of schools. The Committee is
furthermore contacting many presidents of colleges and people active i~
and gradually draw funds from the
million per year on maintenance in
2% above inflation;
if inflation is
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
education world
~the,
such as Patricia
~~~~~~~~~~~~Graham,
former dean of the Harvard
~
Graduate School of Education, and
d~~~~~~~~~
- i-~F.C(.D. Week
~
. Proce ssDitn
-Search
-
N
zzIzza
H
au
Ut~~~
C
all
4
3
9
5
Call 4 3 9 5
u
O u tDraw
Supplement of the London Tunes.
"From
there,"
said
Vic
This IWeek's Special Offree-r:
Get 2 Medium Cheese Pizzba's for $9.99
L c ue ~i
K-ilbourne
dsinise lecturer
JenKlorespeakting
T
this Monday, this year's
FCD (Freedom from 'Chemical
Dependency)
week comprises
twenty-five workshops dealing
with topics of substance abuse and
its effects.
The discussions, films, and lectures cover alcohol and drug use,
stress, eating disorders, and the insidious intoxicants tobacco and eaffeine. Most of the wprkshops are
intended to hammer home the detri-
get longer, and eventually they will
mental physical and emotional ef-
devote a full day every two weeks to
discussions concerning the search
fects which substance abuse causes
to friends, family, and users.
~~~~~Ted
Sizer, former Headmaster and Process-
Delivery Hours: 6-1 Opm Mon-Fri
4-1 0Opm Sat & Sun
Distinguished_____
Henningsen,
member
of
the
Committ~ad Instructor in History,
"we saw a ripple effect of eople
telling people about the search. As a
result, we received a lot of advice on
how to go about the search and on
who would make great candidates."
He reiterated the Committee's desire
to include as many qualified candidates as possible: "Basically, we try
to cast a net as widely as we can both
nationally and internationally in finding out who's good and why."
Although many schools consider
less than thirty candidates for Head
of School, the list of candidates being
discussed by the Committee might
indeed exceed three hundred. As the
list gets shorter, the Committee's deliberations about various candidates
______________
by Scott Kaiser
P~iLUPIAN STAFF WVRIT
I it
j
At six and eight PM Monday
-
~
To D a
us e
professor in education at Brown
~~~~~~~~~~~~University.
Despite low student attendance at
evening, Jean Kilboumne, an inter-
Committee meetings to discuss the
nationally renowned media critic
Finally, the Committee retained
the services of Malcom McKay, a
consultant with the New York search
search for a new Head of School,
Henningsen expressed confidence in
student interest in the process. He
and lecturer, will hold her presentation entitled "Under the Influence:
The Pushing of Alcohol Via
firm of Russell Reynolds Associates.
McKay has experience with school
head searches and has worked for
non-profit organizations as well. He
has placed advertisements in two
well-known American education
journals, journals targeted at blacks
and women in education, and the intemationally-read
Education
stated, "Lack of attendanceI to the
meetings we've held does not mean
lack of interest. I don't sense wide
spread discontent I do think that
there is a sentiment on part of the students that they do not really know
what to look for in a headmaster and
therefore want someone they can relate to.
Advertising." Presented by an
Abbot Association grant, Kilbourne
made national media waves about
ten years ago with "Still Killing Us
Softly," a presentation on how advertising portrays women as sex
objects.
The Student/Faculty Fishbowl,
another unique FCD Week opportunity, is a small meeting of five to
fifteen students, intended to allow
student to discuss drug- and alco'hol-related issues intimately with
Personal Periods and uppers and efaculty members. The discussion
niors would get a full year's worth,
opens with predetermined ques~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~The
proposal has some added re.- tions and continues into an open fostrictions however. If a student has
rum.
one unexcused absence from a class',
The Prep School Students and
.
--
Personal Day Proposal Receives
Opposition from StudentCouncil
by Mc~~rea-Cobb
PiannPiAN STAFF-WRITER
or
After recently reciving an outline
Get
2Medium
Pepperoni
Pizza's for $10.99
Get2 Pepperoni
Medium
Pizza's for $10-99
L
©©
next
Kfor
eek's special......
L~
~~K
next
for w
week's
special,
good at. P
-- Iferonl
Uzz
Hut®-Ry
y1DRoom Loato
of the new Personal Day policy, the
~~~~~~~~~~Student
Council responded construc~ ~~~~tively
to remedy what they saw as an
he or she will not be allowed to take
Alcohol Workshop consists of of
their Personal Period from that class
six student panelists, and FCD fa-
unnessicarily restrictive and conservative proposal. The proposal, which
includes thie substitution of present
during that term. In addition, a student accruing three or more excused
absences or recieving a grade point
cilitato, -and the assigned students.
The group will discuss the specifics
of the prep-school drinking epi-
~ ~~~~~~~~~~~Personal
Days with more modular
~~~~~~~~~Personal Periods fails to realistically
accomidate students, says Student
average of 2.0 or below in a class will
demnic a FCD facilitator, and the as-
be given a Personal Period only after
signed students. The group Will dis-
the teacher's consent. Five or more
cuss the specifics of prep-school
":wThePhillipian
E T R S0Oct+ober
"
What
acult
Wan
a Shool
Victor
enningen
ead:
Interview, with Dr., McNemar:
he Grid Be hind the Glory
'~'
they'
W would
reasonable
schedtile~that period.
D:sthr
a
inesetadand
msmaeteidvdaavialto
'
way.'
by Dede Orraca-Tetteh
FHILLAN S T
29,1993
WRITE
by~Monica Duda
Bijit Kundu
Jar budget, to talking, with teachers
new currcular ideas or a meet-
-
.about
ing with alumnae and encouraging
PHILLIPIAN STAFF WRITFRS
a maximum amount of people in a
DO:Whatare some
~
~
~
DO: What are
~
some
~
~
~
'fthe things you are,
4
loolking 'for in theste.Weaeo-'caijilidates?
VH: We are looking
fdr somieone with a
breadth of experience
whdcan manage
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:
~~to
'-6omplex
organiza~'iions. We are looking
for someone with experience in teachuing
as well as someone
with a track record
that's long- enough to
persuade us that comnhere will not be a
pro.oldest
training
2
'When
~ in ~doubt,~we ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
'keep~a person in the
~pool. The difficulty
bgns when we have Victor Henningsen, Search Committee member
cut downthe candicut -downhheIdaall-d
dates' to 50 people who coul a 0
the job well .The new head should be
,
able to lead the school to the imple-
,,M~mr
"~
-'
-,
'dealing withse__ouscurr__ulumissues that need to be discussed.
DO: Is there a type of mentor givena to
kid
th ofnew
trnhed;
'sition team?
VII: It depends on who is chosen and
what he or she wants to do. Often
times the search committee becomes
the transition team but somte can a
gue that that may not be the best idea.
/DO: 'Does age play a role in the fijnal decision?
VHI: Well, I should think that the canshould be old enough to have
'a driver's license. It is illegal to set an
'age barrier. Some people are in their
mid-thirties and are mentally, tired
,while there are some sixty year olds
who have the energy of 28 year olds.
'Basically we are looking for some'one with a lot of energy, experience,
~Lnd breadth of vision.
~~DO:
see the
Dowe
final
get 3to
"
-
,
'this
"Cluster
'
~
it'
t"
Wh
-
"
-ing
mentation of the long range plan
''-
'bekat
"'
, WenNeed i
CmiebyAdeChtreePHULPAN STAFF WRITER
"Thenew Heamaster eeds to
increase the quality of education either by shrinking sections or increasing the number of faculty members.
Henest eal od htad
silpeev h ult ftesu
dent body. Also, he should be capable of creating an atmo(sphere in
which diverse opinions are easily exprse.
ihod'4
Na
a
aNqL-% Ha
aster?
''
"The Headmastei needs to be
someone who will identify with the
residential 'needs of the students as
well as the academic needs. Rather
than seeing us as academic robots,
te ea asrshudvwus
people."
-Melysa Sperber '95
with all aspects of students life, and
will be active in the Diversity
Alliance. He or she'needs to be highly visible and approachable."
-Wonbo Woo '9
"We need someone who pays attention to constructive criticism and
compliments of students and is willing to initiate change based on stu'dent'disconte nt."
-TinyCue94needs.
"The Headmaster should be dedneed someone who will is- icated and very energetic."
r
Ra iik~Every
e osuetoiinadral
'The Headmase 'should'
be to work with' students to make nec-haelnhtghrwihkydm"The Headmaster should be serisomeone who is 'open-minded'and essary changes."
-Matt Concha '95 ous, but not cold; he or she should
to work with the students
to better the school rather than imsomeone who commands rset
and is looked up to by the student
press the 'trustees 'to better the reputa"Imagination."
'We need someone who will tion."
-Jennie Bradway '95 body. He or she should know who
each and every student is and should
cotnewt-h
sm
tutrs'
Anonymous '95
and methiods that were followed unW
edsmoewowl
elycr
bu AdvradiS
cocnrt
naaeisis
n
tdns"'dinate
der McNemar. This person should be
-Tim Wexler '94
liea n ecm onwi~""We
need someone, who is will- foremost."
lib'96
and nwida. Lizmeting to mlake changes in the residen-Chester Lee '94
Ihp
hee hyget is
Vacco '96
tilsser ihu elcigaae
~~~~mics."
"I think we should have someone mean, cold, and imposing enough
~can~iates?..
~'~'- ~Am'~A
-'~'We'nee&somede ~'wio~thes'
Liridey Shw~'9L
4ndw 'why ydsey lj
ali, hegoohthatoodr sebgi~sa.th srushtsiare
faculty at this school are leaving like enough of a jolt that we wake up
'VHI: Thea3 finalist will come to camstudets' seriously, someone wvho
"The Headmaster should be 'hoteakes and do something about it." from our daily routine and our overid tagtowr
wl ehns
pji al
itrtr.Orepca
nmosal'4
alleagy ndphpshnwe
tion at this point is that the 3 finalists
with students and open-minded to smoefo ouidAnvrwth-A
casabuwudbgito
ieadmn nd
Wilt have to be public that they are finew issues. The Headmaster sol
ne prpctvwh
"'We need a Headmaster who is make our changes as one united
mnalists. We want them to get actaeise ieteevrnets
n
ivdulsand is able to handle
going to get very involved with stu- pissed off student body. Yeah."
well."
ously."
quainted with the school and we need
-Sebastian Frank '95
:to
will plan
be like.
whatthese visits
-Jessica Lunt ~~94
-Sara Green '94 dents, who is going to be concerned
We, might ask the candidates how
'"We
'
'''
'determined
-didates
'be
'
'
,
-~
'
'
'
''
'
'
A111HL'stov ,
'
"money
'
Since
'tieth century, Phillips Academy has
Parents' Weekend and activities durn
aet'Ween.Imgthv
meeting about future plans for the
science building, and what kind of
science teaching we will be having
frtenx
hryyas n
o
Evans needs to be adjusted, or expanded, or changed to meet those
I might have a meeting with administrators.
two or three weeks we
istrators and talk about what the
Trustee decisions were, what safet
susw r aigo aps
o
adisosregnwhtheelh
status of the community is with the
o h
dco.S ti utacac
administrators to share -ssues or coorprograms.hn ehp
etn
ihsu
d
hen
t
ehas
a on en abothecycling and how we can do a better job
anwhtkdofcngsenedo
doto caryefowardehatspogram
Thn dinner in Commons in Lower
Right with Mrs. McNemar and a
chance to talk a little about our day,
but also to see students there. And
te nteeeig
pa oprn
______________
D.MCE A
On Page 8
'Continued
Bant
r
e1a
f o rL(M
Leadership
considering both the boy's welfare"- events by having faculty dinners and
that of the school when a prob- meetings frequently.
Theodore Ryland Sizer was aplern arose~
by Melysa Sperber
¶ PHIL~iAN
'
STAF WRITERand
work.
Q:W tisacedeofy
r
VH': I hope when these people come,thmosuprtescolSoi'a
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~we
understand that
Q:
What is your
eescol.Sai'sa hmtosppr
Q
Wahieashdueofyu
~
~
~ ~ ~
rleashed
very broad challenge and, one that typical day?
oa
i t is a two way mseD:Wl
Donald McNemar:
7A~i'~~'"'
began with Suniise
Basics, which is a
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~serving
them but Terl ftehams
class that meets
they are observing ter is strictly to set the '>yBasics
us as well. We tone and the direction of
at 6:45 in morning at
.
the track, with Mrs.
should remain alert the school. A lot of that ~
ow tr
~.
that. I'm also re- is working with the facalyimrssdwth utyt upport them in
~
~running
there. We then
teaon
fpo
their teaching and develhad breakfast from
oprnent, the direction of ?,7:45
to 8:45 with the
i wocr bu
school. Not Just the school. The head- "'
Presidents, and
the School President,
students and faculty master is responsible for
utL alumni. I'm ieverything. The person
and tle Heads of Blue
Key. They come to
pressed by the corn- is chosen by the Board
o Tusean
thnPhelps
House and help
mtettaevrus cook the eggs. We
T
one has from the asked to provide the
te i onadhv
the
for
alumnus to' leadership
ad tl
~ ~~~~te
oungest junior school. So you get to
about general issues of
etiJosework in all areas from
the school.
ously but serious- talkcing to an individual
suet opann
photo D.Ingster ness is reinforced
when you see how thirty-seven million dol- Dr. McD.marphoto/
Mc~~~~~~~emar
photo.
I.mighterthennhaveea
muhnpeoplse aret-svnmilondl
meeting with people
fromuctheeOfficeaof
Acdey
rore talkfig aot
:
"v
''
you need to can-y out with lots of other people in order to make things
01b
the
Fuess
beginning
also keptofPhiPHILli'IAN
the twenAcadedent
stable duing the Great Depression
ters, from
ranging
anand
Army light-
Wr
feself.'t
"i'
LY
sin
7
i oig~e laa 01,
yearsin
th Aomrey
a
ain
po
Tr
MTRdnt
ofo
~,colonel to a Dean of Harvard
After Fuess, the trustees sought a tion at Roxbury Latin School, and a
erigashoAeteeohCl
GraduatofSchoo
Edcation Each
an with a totally new outlook on M.A. Teaching Degree from Harvard er options for the executive position?
Harai1tonCiontributed tremendously to Phillips Phillips Academy. They found Army School of Education. He also taught
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~grammar
school in Mehlman, the editor- "'
Academy, but each
while In-chief
of
the ""s #
Very
~ differently.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~MMAustralia
In 1933,
the
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~studying
the coun- Phillipian in 1977 was
""#'4
try's educational sys- responsible for intro
Trustees ofPhillips
Academy
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
elected
tern.
ducing this question ~.AHe
At thirty-one, he in a Friday Forum
ClaudeM.Fuessas ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
became the Dean of ~~~~~consisting of former
the ~~~school'stenth
editor-in"i
<n'""
Headmaster. Born in
~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~Harvard
Graduate Phillipian
School of Education, chiefs. He approached
Waterville, NewYork
in 1885, Fuess gradu~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~He
also published the question comn~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~two
books, "TheAge pletely open-minded7"''''todhategalf
ated Phi Beta Kappa
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~of
the Academie"s ly with the intenrtion ''4:from AmherstCollege
~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~and
'Secondary of providing an area
He then became
:!l , ''I,
Schools At the Turn for debate.
President of the
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
the Century."
~ ~ Donald
~~of McNemar ~'
Alumni Association
and later wrote a hisUo bemig is at the top of the
tory of Aml'ierst.
~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~Headmaster
of pyramid. Next in line
*Fuess went on to
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Phillips
in - 1972, for power and pres-~ s'
Sizer informed the tige are the Deans of
English
atstudy
~'Columbia Graduate
trustees that' he had Studies, Residential
School, then decided
noitrs nhaig
Life, and Faculty, andl Just a Figure
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~a
single-sex school. then the cluster deans.
* teaching. He
eCaueM
us
ht PA Archives HES maoaccomnUig
tedealt
to tr/ecig
~'started
a Quaker insti- ClsdingFes
pothmjo
plishmentas
mtpoofabinsorcprtution outside Philadelphia,, the
George School,'and was then recruit- light-colonel John Mason Kemper.
Headmaster was to' deal with cedu- tion, Mehiman introduces the idea
ohr h enofFclywih
in turn performs many of the duties
'
'"
-.
~'"
'
""""than
VWe
.'
""
""''
Sc
spconcrnedHwthdfunraisigifine.rHe amitsyllVthietentaively
aHLIIN
scend
budgtinthscool
with
aing tHae doets nolthiknwahimself
Tlips\
1972. His background included at-
e
uo 40%
"
"
"~~~~~~~~'~"~
X
the search committee was to find a
suitable replacement
'
"'
7,
n
"""'~"
'"
ha tPilp s eia
odr
if perhaps some of the burden can be
fpwews
delegated to a specific people, other
one central figure.
admits that
eme
ftr
wards that his question had already
been addressed in
the process. He was
'"'
ffor
~~Teie
>
'-
''"~"~
"
'
Head?
Mr. McNemar.
fcag
ing the organizational structure of
the executive role at
this school was not
photo D.Ingstertbedsue;th
issue will not be
with.
generally associated with the role of
Headmaster. For instance, his job in-
Thus Mehlrman presents two
ideas. He questions the need of a
0 BACK OF THE BOOK Q
October 29,1993
The Phillipin
abbit Pond, South Close Gap..
ofthe Chrles Wekend
Head
.*CUTRSCE
NotjU a Fraterni
~~~~~disappointing
4~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~Bash
~~~~~~t
ie.
Critics are pointing their fingers
at the offense, which has only score
to the Finals.
twice in the past three weeks, the
West Quad South
Flagstaff trounces notwithstanding.
Following an important tie on The defense, it seems, has been doing
Friday against F94, West Quad its job, keeping the difference. of
South continued to do what it does goals small, but the offense still
best: win games by a difference of needs to score. Those days of four
two goals. Now playing with a solidi- goals per game seem to have gone,
fled defense, supported by Nick and this team desperately needs them
"Window" Olney '94, and Mike back. Coach Torn "Westerns" Regan
"Washer" Shin '94, the West Quad blamed (insert violin music here) the
South team has let in just three goals wind, the crossbar, and most imnporover the past three weeks; as consid- tantly, bad luck. What a shamne.
In more interesting news, some
erable difference from the five goals
it had let in after the first two days of Pine Knoll operatives were caught in
play this season.
the F- '94 team room recently, trying
toihitethisotstealtoFstealsF'
playsplays.
Tisebk-ak-in
lteoofF-'4Thed tCmetingedicussngrhenehics
held by theeines Kicuno
te egans
istrtsging f
heubs
wlailte oid
latly
riaewl filledthSa
voia
hareld by the edi fnortem second
ayrow, gliyr exclaim d
Renif97i
e.O
ney, hen asweeki
asked about the news, gushed, "The am not usually a crook." The
Cluster
Football
added firepower of Stubbs will' International
launch us to the top." When in doubt, Committee on Rules and Regulations
for those players looking for ways to has yet to decide what courseoac
make up good quotes, use a motif, es- tion to take with respect to the inpecially tile rocket motif.
tegrity of the job of Pine Knoll
Rabbit Pond
Coach, not to insinuate that Regan
Inspiring images of the Boston had anything to do withit...
Continued From Page 4
To the Editor:
Few people actually paid atten- students can refrain from partying.
tion to the races; actually, as the races Our fiends can attest that going
This past Weekend, Harvard were time trials, it was impossible to through the festivei sober is actually
Square was the site of the ultimate -know how they were going even if a very easy thing to do. With the
social gathering of prep-school stu- you were paying attention. The Head strict attempts to keep students away
dents and ahimni/ae. The Icrowd (an abbreviated term used by prep- from the Head of The Charles, the
reeked of social energy and a little' pies meaning The Head of the school has denied many students a
beer too. While the preppies moved Charles Regatta) was actually just a potentially positive experience.
'social happening' or an excuse to
Many students would really enjoy
from one social subject to another asking the standard "Oh really you have some picnics and a good time.
gathering with old friends or, watchStill, everyone got something dif- ing the races. Instead of denying the
to... [Andover or any other prep
school] Do you know .. [someone ferent out of the event: some came students a right to go to the Boston
they barely know and- probably for the rowing and others to meet up 'area, a wiser decision would be to
ditched after kindergarten]?" - the with friends. Not everyone goes to have school supervise buses to and
fro thehevent.esthenbiggesthnew
sound
alL
crunchng
the
of
cans
Thefilledthe
Charls to drink,
sound
the
air.
ofofcrunching
the Hed
Hthesiningofatubbd
cans'filled
Students perpetually complain of
As Saturday night became
One St. Paul's student said that'
Sunday morning the Patagonia jack- over two hundred kids from his boredom on campus, using drinking
ets became beds in the many hotels, school came to partake in the festivi- as a scapegoat. Why then give the
and streets of Boston. ties. Although many Andover alum- students another thing to complain
Amazingly, by Sunday aftemnoon the ni/ae were at the Regatta, because of about? Why not support an alcohol
layer of aluminum cans covering PA's attempts to keep kids away from free excursion?
Harvard Square had been removed. the festival, not many Andover stuScott Kaiser '95
As the cans went out; the boats came dents were there.
Sebastian Frank 95
in for the annual Head of The Charles
It is unfortunate that the adminisRegatta.
tration does not trust that Andover
-go
-dorms,
Blo
w (I~~~~~ut
Sicilia n o , B ~~oyTs B ou
passes, bursting open the scoring
* FOOTBALL flood gates. Harris brought two more
Continued From Page 4 Siciliano offerings into the endzone.
After snatching the ball from the air
At the half, after conferring with ten yards past the line of scrimmage,
skybox observer Coach Carter, the Harris juked and smashed forty-one
coaches recognized that NMH was yards to six points.
committed to stopping the run, leavWith the crowd still on its feet
ing themselves vulnerable to the from his last score, Harris scored anpassing game. Invigorated by the other six, this time on 31 yard
coaching staff, the Blue charged onto pass/run combination. Again the
the field ready to put on the show that Hoggers had trouble holding onto the
the parents were waiting for.
pigskin. On the next possession, Eric
Andover wasted no time testing Arias '94, in the play which exemplifled the gamne, simply overpowered
-the NMH secondaiy. Throwing their
way down the field, the Blue Wave, the overwhelmed opposition. Arias,
one. again, found itself knocking on catching sight of a lofty pass, outleapt
the door. Siciliano made up for his the intended receiver, intercepting the
fumble earlier mn the game by laying pass and returning it fifteen yards.
Shortly after Arias's pick-off,
the ball into captain Todd Harris '95
awaiting palms for a thirteen yard Caroll, after a long day of blocking,
was rewarded with a 10 yard touchtouchdown strike.
donrt.In feeble tackle attempt,
Andover, not allowing N Ht
catch its breath, quickly regained the the defender literally pushed Carroll
ball thanks to their swarming de- into the endione, cleary discouraging
fense. From this point in the contest, NN~s already battered deen.
!ee.
the Big Blue unleashed a flurry of
Clinton
r,
Continue1 0
M
DR. MCNEMAR
Continued Fromt Page 7
I
de S Pereira '94, who is in charge of
the stock. He urges all West Quad
Northerners to show their support
and make tax-deductible donations.
Abbot
It's the end for this bunch of
trashy youths from the Northern
Campus. Yes, Abbot has been
drummed out of contention for the
game Under the Lights. Abbot's offense, still held together by Anthony
"Voltage" Huben-nan '94, might as
well buy some tickets to Aniba, be::
cause btherwise, they'll be watching
the Finals from the cold Brothers
Field bleachers. Not a lot of fun;
oshudd'vewwoneeh
Unfrtuntel, thvlog-awite
iet
anfoftuatlyth
Francisco
frorial
haseen delayerthi
plane w las hoedon ae
fro
ove thes
Caribbean; not that the point is moot,
or anything. Though all of the passengers survived, Gilberto has two
brknlgndw
'tealeo
play for the Abbot team. As a result,
Abbot has revoked his scholarship,
and Gilberto has to pay for the plane
trip back home.
This is a team slumping towards
the middle of the pennant race, a truThe Blue, caught up in the glory ly admirable feat. The'togakeof the slaughter, relaxed to early and ers, Adam "Wintnie" Gurry and Fili
allowed an 87 yard kickoff TI) return "Volkswagen" Barajas, racked up a
by Sean Lynch of NMIH ending the pair of shutouts this week, and the Ofquarter on an unfortunate and sour fense, spurred by a new collective renote. The Blue, not yet ready to re- ligious unity, netted three goals in
tire, put the final nail in NMH's cof- two games, good enough to win them'
fin on a 4 yard touchdown scamper both.
However, yesterday, these reby Siciliano.
Taking the field in the remaining fuseniks by that sewage Plant lovingminutes was the second string squad ly called Rabbit Pond lost to the pow"The Golden Warriors", led by Brian erhouse F-'94. This defeat effectively
McEvoy '96 and Dan DiZazzo 95. stopped its momentum, and RPD
Though the defense prevented any finds itself in third place this momPieKol-and
NMII gains, the offense was forced ing.
es cetnlfllenit
PiTis
to call in Seth Knight '94 to punt.
The Blue and the parents walked some dire straits as of late. With West
Quad South's unprecedented surge
away happy with the performance.
Andover should not expect anoth- these past two weeks, Pine Knoll has
er easy win this Saturday. The Blue slipped into fourth, far away from the
will face a pped up Deerfield Finals. The key to Knoll's filuh
team, looking to make their own been its schedule. In the past three
weeks, the only
easy tasit
Parent's Weekend, and aowith
win over the Blue. The team has been faced were Flagstaff twice, both easy
preparing all this week, and hopes to victories, and West Quad North, a
disaster. Itts last goal was Eric
"odro"Rys'5kok'edead tally against F-'94 two
Mondays ago. Since then, North has
not stirred, managing just a tie
against a slumping Pine Knoll. This
team plays Flagstaff today, a game
which may indeed be the spark to
jump-start this dying car. Other than
that, trouble is only a few losses
away, once the team files for mathematical elimination,
-Dan
"Wily" Smulian '95, Colin
"Way-house" Bradley '95, John
"Vector Calculus" Swansburg '96,
Ray have all begun to renegotiate
their contracts. This presents a probthe est ntNorthi organzemtioasbt
nateadatine asdbo iailbth
reetsi
the
the te am
dance nd18 tinnia t
tookhains98 (tavi
tell QNefa
mechnds) havetrimedtthei
bud
e
mmaos
ey
players soon, unless it finds the money they want. If you want to help out
Fluto "'Verini" Shinzawa '95 re-
cently met a religious revealation on
tebre
ilso
iei.H
el
ized that he was the most important
and best player on the team. Too bad
these kids are also out of the pennant
race.
However, even with his big head,
he managed to prise teammates Alex
"Wanda"
Tiro '95
and Dan
"Vocationally Technical" Marks '95.
Shinzawa also found place in his
ego to congratulate Sarah "Wicked
Awesome" Klipfel '95 on her recent
achievements on the field. "She
seems to be hustling, and she'll take
out anyone on the field." Klipfel's
dormmate,
Amanda
"'Viscosity.
Breadwn" Mogteret
'94
scrbate
Shinzawa's TateMnt eribingh
KDpeoar'h
Mnte
f h
Dom
msee hems ae
somtwies even thedmostajaded
aofesportswrterstemuslkthe aRear for.
But, at least the Red Sox won a couple times.
rain on Deerfield's parade.
,
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~that
they share. And how do you look
at the overall education, we have a lotPrm
of education that goes on here outsidePe
of the classroom between eight and
two-thirty. Some of it is how we treat
each other, some of it that we contrbt otecmuiytruhTotalTraining
work duty or to this larger cominunity through community service. Do
we care about the environment? Do
we recycle? How do we use school
meetings to educate ourselve on
conmmon topics? And just the dinner
conversation or dorm meeting discussion, there is an awful lot of educan o oke prigalo
tiomnd
a
hw tou
g psortin alleof
hti oehn o
oko vr
yer
Expert Teachers
etCe
t nt es
r
Q: Is there anything you would
banit to helpvolleaguesain theirework
adnivoem tadeggmntlike to add about your job as
Headmaster?
with students.
Q: Are there any goals you set
DM: It's fun. You get to work
for yourself at the beginning of wit wonderu studentsadwt
each year?
tremendous faculty. It's really a wonDM: You have goals that are con- derful opportunity to work in an instistant: How do you support teachers? tution that is really committed to edutHow do you work with student gov- cation, to values, to young people,
erment and student leaders in the and to have such talented people to
course of the year to develop goals work with. It's an exciting role.
.
Kair Continued..
blazer all the time. He called me to-
day and told me he had to bring
Aristide, the President of Haiti, who's
staying with him.
Bill: I hope Aristide brings his
saxophone. By the way ..is it too late
to invite Barbra Strdisand?
Hillary: Only if I can invite
Robert Redford.
seY, r oster fromi Moacir "Victory"
Flagstaff
West Quad North
superstars, has scrounged its way into
cNemnar..
volunteers who help with the parent
U ECKLEY fund-raising effort and having a reContinued From Page 2 ception with them.
Bill: What a match! It's perfect I
So that is a range of the kinds of
never thought we'd find anyone for things that might happen in a day
her. I had to invite Bob Dole, too.
Part of the fn of the position is that
Hillary: Oh, no. Maybe he'll you are very involved in all aspects
come as the one-armed man from the of the* community and you're still
very involved with students so often.
Fugitive,
now. AenayI-Shad Many of us [heads of schools] go into
BoiniInte
tuonit
sme
l
enwats-toma
these roles because we love to teach
Thunnnd
tod mehe wa comig asand work with students. The nice
George Bumns. Since he's 90, he final- tigaotti
oebigha
fto
ly put away' the famous zombie cos- thngoeabou this rol cobin ad of
tume. I've heard so much about that Advri htyucmieamn
performance,
too, him
~
istrative responsibilities, the responsiaround the White House yelling "I
still not dead! I still not dead!" Joe
Biden called me, too. H-e found ut
that Strom wasn't going to be a zombie this year and now he wants to be
one. I guess he still has unoriginal
thoughts.
Hiliary: We couldn't fit the
whole Kennedy gang in here, even
though they entertained us on
Martha's Vineyard this surnmer I
onlydivited Ted and his new wife,
what's her name, who wears the blue
j~~44j[~~~jf[J~~~.RedSox,
this team, with no specific
.
N M.
the team, you can buy a team hat, jer-
*
KARR
Continued From Page 2
We are not fairly represented in the
governance of this institution.
Girls receive an inferior educat~.
ion at P.A. because their contribu
-
E~~~~~~1_
j-
I
tions in the classroom are less valued
by many of the faculty, both male and
female. The results of this discrimination permeate our community life.
A few determined people could
tnad o
cag hs sals
studntehari
sals stlnarssrm
the
C li'
student
behavior
intBOOcKAPsroSm,
AT
and see that they are enforced. (Why1184
chould our nly ep.Ylic iles, of tu-