Goodwin, Phillips Selected As Morehead Nominees

by Stuart Drake newed for the next year. group of about 26 private prepara- Carl Goodwin and Lee Phillips Awarded By Merit Alone tory schools participate in the pro- have been designated as Deerfield's The purpose of the program is gram, each nominating two stu- nominees for the 1971 John Motley to attract outstanding secondary dents. Morehead Foundation Awards. If school students to the University Nominees Came As Sophomores approved by the trustees of the of North Carolina by offering them Goodwin, now in his third year Morehead Foundation, the two sen- substantial grants for their college at Deerfield, is from Harwinton, iors will be eligible for four annual careers. Financial need is inconse- Connecticut. The chairman of the grants to finance their undergrad- quential, as the awards are given American Studies Group, Goodwin uate career, at the University of on a basis of merit alone. They is also co-captain of varsity swim- North Carolina, Chapel Hill. were established in 1945 in honor ming. Serving as a proctor in Selected by a group of faculty, of John M. Morehead, a prominent Mather, he tutors French and Goodwin and Phillips were chosen North Carolina businessman and Russian. on a basis of academic excellence, scientist, noted for his work in the From Shaker Heights, , Participation in extra-curricular ac- field of practical applications of Phillips is editor-in-chief of the tivities, and the recommendations acetylene. SCROLL. Also coming to Deerfield of faculty members. The program, primarily aimed at in his sophomore year, Phillips has North Carolina students, receives been active in debating, and cur- Visiting the Chapel Hill campus a great number of its nominees rently is a member of the Senior in early March, the two seniors Carl Goodwin and Lee Phillips talk over their Morehead nomination from that state's public high school Council and the Discipline Com- —photo by Cowan will be interviewed extensively by with Mr. Russ Miller. districts. In addition, a selected mittee. the Central Selection Committee of the Morehead Foundation, as part of the final selection process. If chosen for one of the approxi- mately 100 awards, and if the nominee does accept the award, then each spring at Chapel Hill his The Deerfield Scroll accomplishments will be reviewed, Academy, Deerfield, Mass. 01342 January 23, 1971 and usually the award will be re- Vol. 45, No. 6 Deerfield Art Workshops ark Winter Term

In response to the success of period of time, the Festival will Arts and Crafts program will also last year's Winter Arts Festival, a enable students to participate in all sponsor dances and drama present- similar program is planned for this activities. Although many of the ations to which Stoneleigh-Burn- term. A different facet of the Fes- participating artists have not been ham will be invited. tival of Arts and Crafts will be pre- confirmed, some of the sessions may Students Contribute Money in- be led by Michael Antonakes, Philip sented each winter weekend, Again this year, students will be Doughty, Alfred Einsenstadt, Erling cluding lectures, workshops, and asked to donate money for the Heistadt, Dwight Little, Archibald discussions. Student coordinators Winter Festival to help pay for IVIacLeish, and John Oakes. Garry Bowne and David Lee an- workshop supplies, artist's fees, and ticipate that their schedule will The Winter Arts and Crafts Com- for bands at concerts and dances. afford increased student interest mittee hopes that students will be The committee hopes that this and participation. able to participate to a greater year's festival series will be a step Format Changes extent this year. Thus, many work- toward establishing the arts as an The Arts and Crafts Festival shops have been planned to allow integral part of the curriculum and opened on Friday evening, January students to become directly involved set a precedent for future cultural 22, with a performance by the New rather than mere observers. The innovation. Steve Pelle, Gordon Sadler, John Olesen, and Ted Finch initiated —photo by Cowan Haven Dance Ensemble. Each fol- the Friendship Program. lowing weekend a different field of the arts and crafts will be pre- Admissions DepartmentInstitutes Friendship Program Is Organized sented: drama, music, ceramics, prose, weaving, journalism, poetry, leathercraft, and film-making a- More Flexible Entrance Policies Between Students, Area Children mong others. Unlike last year, there will be no student scheduling The beginning of the Winter their diploma requirements but Four seniors have organized a The goals of the program are to and all programs will be optional. Term brought bo the Academy who have shown the abilities cap- Friendship Program at Deerfield, widen the students' perspectives, The last two days of the winter what may be the advent of a new able of surviving successfully in similar to the well-known Big Bro- enlarge community activity, and term also have been set aside for trend in the procedures of admis- an academic atmosphere. and more ther organization, to help broaden make life a little happier a general conclusion of the festival. sions, the institution of a flexible In a manner similar to colleges' fortunate the views and perspectives of stud- meaningful for some less This will include additional dis- entrance program. innovative admissions procedure, Pyn- ents here and to increase commun- student, Headmaster David cussions, workshops, and an ex- With the termination of the Deerfield has allowed four new been in ity involvement. The program has children. The program has hibition of art and craft work. Fall Term, two seniors left the students to enter as of January 6. weeks, and been designed to place Deerfield progress now for two campus to pursue college careers. Two applicants, David Ofer and sev- Participation Is Stressed students in situations different from the four planners have hosted Jeff Cockey and Stan Reid were Peter Beutel, received their let- games. In being held over an extended those they would encounter at eral area children at varsity admitted to St. John's University ters of admittance for the Sep- school, and it also will provide com- and Presbyterian College, respect- tember registration. But due to Panionship for area children. Intern Aids History Department ively. Both have enrolled this an injury to the former and a 10- Williams winter in their colleges as fresh- cation problem of the latter, both Program Will Grow men. were permitted entrance upon Bryant, a senior that he is glad to be receiving the At present, seniors Ted Finch, Mr. Douglas This measure indicates an in- their convenience. Rick Prentice College, is currently "full dose" of teaching. Steve Pelle, John Olesen and Gor- from Williams creasing elasticity in admissions and Tom O'Keife, however, repre- History Department co- don Sadler are the participants in assisting the Deerfield embarked on its procedures at the college level. sent a trend that may become in- intern. with the program, which is under the as a teaching operative intern program Universities are initiating a pro- creasingly frequent at Deerfield. Williams last year when two guidance of Mr. Judd Blain. In the As one of 30 students teaching gram of accepting students who Both were admitted for the be- junior economics majors spent the future the number of members will in the Winter Studies Program at may not have formally completed ginning of the Winter Term, due January teaching here. increase to about 20, with both Williams, he plans to remain at the month of to their strength as candidates faculty and students participating. Academy until the end of this and vacancies in the Academy's presently The program, which will run the month. Mr. Bryant is enrollment His- entire school year, involves the teaching classes in European Though, admittedly, to enter an Amer- formation of an informal relation- tory, American History, and academic society at mid-year cre- helping ates ship between a Deerfield faculty ican Government. He is also additional difficulties for a basketball member or student and a young to coach the junior student, Headmaster David Pyn- boy from one of the surrounding team. chon feels that all will adjust quickly. Moreover, he stressed that areas. A native of Cincinnati, Ohio, Mr. flexibility is a necessity in the graduated from the To Meet On Weekends Bryant was school's approach to admissions Regular get-togethers will take Choate School in 1967. Explaining and that education must, to some Place both on and off-campus. On his interest in the teaching profes- extent, break away from past some weekends the children will sion, he remarked, "I really enjoyed standards and experiment with come to Deerfield to view a sport- my experience when I was at prep new concepts. is ing event or just to see the campus, school, and since then teaching This liberality in allowing stu- to me." While on other weekends Academy something that has appealed dents to graduate and enter an students will travel to activities Mr. Bryant has found both fac- educational system at times other and organizations in which the ulty members and students "ex- than the traditional is reflective he of a program children are involved. tremely helpful" and says that initiated by Phillips has gained valuable insight into Exeter Academy. Mr. Pynchon, in "The program will not be too teaching through the classes he reference to this approach, stated, demanding," Mr. Blain said, "but has held thus far. Meeting criticism "It is a trend that makes sense Bryant, a Williams senior, is spending a month at Deerfield consistency will be important to as well as praise from the teachers Doug and I hope to see it continue student teacher of history. —photo by Cowan achieve a meaningful relationship." he is assisting, Mr. Bryant added as a here." 2 THE DEERFIELD SCROLL January 23, 1971 Revaluation Toward Change Errant Leadership It has been two months since the SCROLL has published, There is a feeling that senior leadership an issue cancellation necessitated between the vacations for is beginning to recommend itself as a serious financial reasons, and the long Christmas break intervening, candidate for inclusion in a Deerfield diction- but this has been a time for serious reflection over many ary of things hard to locate. When found, so events — though no major trend changes have swept the the argument runs, it is somewhere to the Deerfield scene. shady side of inspiring. Certainly change is a most desirable and necessary phen- It is true that the workings of senior re- omenon, but it is not always natural and usually must be aided sponsibility have been rather invisible by since progressive thinking and by flexibility — of mind and sys- the election of class officers last October, and tem. Yet ours is a system characterized to a disappointing a disconcerting result has been that the fasc- degree by inflexibility; and since we hopefully still control our ination of the group of seniors in Hitchcock system and not vice-versa, its inflexibility is a direct product with the idea of "Power To Hitchcock" has of inelastic thinking. However, if we as a school are prevented reduced senior leadership to a process more from pursuing our ideals, it will be a sin, for we will then appointive than elective. The class president, have violated both our purpose and our potential. Jon Rosen, has privately urged critics to One of the ills of Deerfield, and largely of all formal edu- countenance such ineffective concentration of cation, is that it is made extremely difficult for the student power on the grounds that he is working with to learn what is not taught to him. He is given time to a small band of very talented people. OK. ponder, but neither the time nor opportunity to think things But this doesn't sit very well with others in out to a conclusion. As a result, he loses the faculty to con- the class who suspect that perhaps they too clude logically because his life is so categorized for him and, have some ability and interest. The division tending to think piecemeal, he himself perpetuates the inflex- defeats the kind of unity which is the suppos- ibility of his system. For example, this school's numerous ed object of the theory of prep school leader- committees are after a certain point self-defeating, for they ship, and it gives inspiration to the few whose tend to increase the fragmentation of our community and, delight it is to traffic in the spreading of while solving some problems, create new ones. rumors and the perpetuation of unwarranted Our motto is: "Be worthy of your heritage." Deerfield's friction. heritage is a tradition of moving ahead with quality. And if Leadership is an implicit sort of thing. Because it's there. we are really to follow this motto, we must not put so much At Deerfield, it is taken too seriously in a stock in our tradition as to worship it above all else — it must much too formalized sort of way. Leadership, not overshadow a desire for progress; for if we do, we will The New Discipline Committee if such a thing truly exists at the prep school, have betrayed our heritage, not celebrated it. If we do not finds its meaning not in the almost bureau- strive for change, we have not performed our duty, and those Last fall when the faculty considered the ques- cratic formation of committees, not by dele- who deplore change and are loath to experiment have reached tion of student representation on the Discipline gation, but by individual example. To con- a point of psychological and intellectual stagnation. Committee, it rejected that possibility for the mom- sider important issues (and they are few) It is interesting to note the extent to which the society of ent. Recenty, though, the committee by its own ad hoc committees, well-represented, are Deerfield limits individuality. For instance, when teachers and authority invited the addition of three seniors, to be more to the point. administrators revert to the old saw, "If we let you do it, then nominated by the class officers and appointed by the The conservative viewpoint should com- we'll have to let everyone do it," it reeks of an essentially Headmaster. mand attention at Deerfield, where the school backward inhumanity that thwarts both individuality and The reasoning behind the action is that it will community is small enough to sponsor the change, inhumane in the sense that it is condescending, back- lend a broader and more precise insight to the importance of the private opinion, where the ward in the expressed idea that those who conform are con- committee whose function is two-fold: first, on a ideal should not be an oleaginous unity of structive. The system must not only tolerate exceptions, it fairly regular basis, to consider patterns of expected thought but a competitive mental diversity. should be made of them. It must have enough faith in its conduct and the evolution of attitudes toward these; M. B. D. members that they might verify that faith, else they will never second, to meet as the occasion demands to resolve be able to do so. Trust, then, is directly commensurate with particular disciplinary cases. Three senior repre- progress. sentatives should afford a balance that two might Saturday Night Movies When an institution becomes not, though among some seniors there is opposition unmalleable, it does not January 23 — Tonight the signify its impending death — it merely means to the idea because it is felt that peer judgments imported thriller Z that it is grow- will be shown. Z has received nothing but ing fat; and no one person — leader or member — can tend to be unfairly severe. praise from the critics. Vincent Canby of the Times change it without understanding and direction and cooperation. In the event where a boy's behavior is called calls it a story "of sorrow, of idealism, of bravery, into question, his corridor master will —L.S.P. and B.B.R. deliberate of defeat and of terrible irony. The movie is not with the committee, whose faculty members are one of ideas . . . but sensations — horror, anger, the Messrs. Dixon, Kolster, Miller, O'Brien, Smith, frustration and suspense . . .commuted sometimes Weekend Situation Altered and Terry. However, the advisory role of a proctor with all the subtlety of a hypodermic needle stuck The calendar a free weekends this winter will inclue February 26, to the committee in some underclass circumstances in a nerve." contrary to previous schedules. Because boys are now permitted to instead of the master is being weighed. January 30 — Next Saturday, The Ballad of travel more readily and to choose from a wider selection of dates, the On January 17, Mr. Pynchon announced the three Cable Hogue is to be presented. This little-known short Friday schedule has been eliminated. Charter buses will be senior members, chosen from among 12 nominees: but highly praised film was judged one of 1970's best routed to Springfield in time for express connections to New York Jim Hancock, Lee Phillips, and Doug Wilson. The ten films by the New York Times in its year-end and Boston should enough interest be shown by midweek. committee has had one meeting since that time. summary. The Ballad of Cable Hogue stars Jason Robards and Stella Stevens and The DEERFIELD SCROLL Early Acceptances deals with a fight to retain indi- Random Shots viduality in the fast-changing A- merican West. Cue says: "It is a Rube Goldberg, longtime friend of Mr. Frank L. finely Vol. 45 Number 6 Eleven seniors have at this date wrought ode to the dying Boyden, and of Deerfield, died December Renown- 7. received early acceptance to col- individual." ed as a sculptor, author, and syndicated cartoonist, lege. Mal DeBevoise and Charlie February 6 — Alfred Hitch- Goldberg once presented Mr. Boyden with a stat- Holmes will be attending Amherst cock's highly successful Psycho, January 23, 1971 uette, "The Old Country Doctor." He is survived next fall, while Dave Caras has released in 1960, will be seen in by two sons who graduated from Deerfield, Thomas been accepted at Bowdoin, John two weeks. Bosley Crowther of Lee S. Phillips Editor-in-Chief R. '36 and George W. '37. Mills at Cornell, Mark Semmes at the New York Times commented, Malcolm B. DeBevoise Managing Henry Varnum Poor, Editor nationally known mural- Duke, Tim Wheeler at Georgetown, "You had better have a pretty ist and potter specializing Emmet E. Finucane Copy Editor in tile decoration, has Chris Hall at Hampshire, Jim Gor- strong stomach and be prepared also passed on. Among his works is the fireplace man at MIT, Steve Pelle at Tufts, tor a couple of grisly shocks when Timothy F. Wheeler News Editor ornamentation in the Hilson Art Gallery. Boonie Brill at Vanderbilt, Bob you see Psycho." Mr. Crowther Steven R. Wickes Feature Editor * * * * * * Powers at Wesleyan, and Stuart goes on to commend the stars, Clough at William and Mary. Allan L. Reagan Sports Editor In furthering the proposal for a student-faculty Anthony Perkins and Janet Leigh. table, an experimental meeting was convened De- Rory J. Cowan Photography Editor cember 8. Such gatherings, which include faculty, Mr. Bryce Lambert Faculty Adviser administration, proctor, dormitory, and class repre- EDITORIAL BOARD sentatives, provide a medium for direct communica- Barkus, P., Clarke, D., Craven, R., Dellenbaugh, D., DeWitt, tion on topics of general interest such as coeducation, S., Dinkel, J., Drake, S., Ferguson, D., Foltz, D., Gallaher, D., Goodwin, B., Hampton, J., Hussey, P., Johnston, J., which was discussed at the first meeting. The Landon, W., Lewis, R., Marshall, J., Nelson, P., Schaffer, Q., minutes of table discussions are relayed through Shingleton, B., Smiley, S., Watson, C., Wesson, F., Whipple, C., Zauche, J. dormitory meetings and by individual members. SPECIAL SERVICES * * * * * * Patrick C. Graney, Business Manager; James T. Zauche, Ad- vertising Manager; Frederick N. Schoeffler, Circulation Man- The Science Facility Planning Committee is ager ; Charles R. Conklin, Publications Manager; Lloyd A. Clarke, Exchange Editor. continuing its weekly meetings to anticipate the BUSINESS BOARD most efficient usage of the proposed new building. Agry, B., Amling, J., Biggart, R., Bloomer, R., Boeing, W., Represented are students of the various sciences, Brown, S., Daly, J., Fenzi, C., Gallaher, D., Howard, H., the entire science faculty, a planning consultant, Kerans, M., Martig, W., McGraw, J., Prior, R., Pulitzer, P., and Reade, J., Sanderson, D., Scholnick, J., Stoltzfus, W., Stone, a representative of the architectural firm of Robert- P., Wadman, D., Wickser, J., Wyatt, M., Young, W. son Ward. PHOTOGRAPHIC BOARD Cowan, R. Ramsay, K. C. Ray, P. * * * * * * Robert Creeley, poet and essayist, THE DEERFIELD SCROLL is entered as third class is scheduled bulk at the post office at Deerfield, Mass. 01842. It is to present an evening reading of his work, Febru- published 12 times yearly, in the interests of Deerfield Acad- emy. Signed letters to the editor are welcome on any matter ary 9. During his campus visit he will attend Eng- of interest to the Academy. Names will be withheld upon lish request. classes at each level, as well as answer related The late Rube Goldberg presented Mr. Boyden with this statuette, Advertising and subscription rates provided upon request. questions. "The Old Country Doctor." —photo by Cowan January 23, 1971 THE DEERFIELD SCROLL 3 John Jay Presents Mr. Charles Baldwin, 67, Dies, Latest Ski Feature Academy Master For 42 Years To Area Students Mr. Charles H. Baldwin, a mem- in students' extracurricular en- by Steve DeWitt ber of the Deerfield Academy fac- deavors and coached a soccer team, John Jay, the celebrated ski ulty for 42 years, unexpectedly along with varsity tennis. All stud- film producer and photographer, passed away at his home Thurs- ents fortunate enough to live on his came to Deerfield to present his day, November 19, 1970. corridor in Plunkett can testify to latest movie, John Jay Jamboree, He joined the Deerfield faculty his active interest in people, his on the evening of Friday 15. Ski in 1926 and became one of the devotion and congenial personality. fans from Northfield, Eaglebrook, school's most accomplished teach- and Stoneleigh-Burnham crowded There are many here at Deer- ers until his retirement in 1968. will regret his loss. A- the Auditorium to hear Mr. Jay's field who Mr. Baldwin was born March 19, Mr. Robert McGlynn, informal and humorous narration. mong them is 1903, in Brooklyn, N. Y. After grad- who said, "He was a great man. He was highlighted by The film uating from Erasmus Hall High believed in what he taught and Vermont, and visits to Stratton, School in 1920, he went on to Cor- showed respect and concern for Crossing the Pa- Vail, Colorado. nell University. As a Phi Beta those he taught." cific, Mr. Jay then ventured to Kappa graduate of Cornell, he re- the crowded slopes of Japan, and ceived his A.B. in English. followed Stein Eriksen through towering seracs of ice on New Inspired Students Bob Vuyosevich prepares an affirmative argument as Jim Bernstein Zealand's Mt. Cook. At Deerfield, however, Mr. Bald- the Hotchkiss debate. —photo by Cowan speaks in win found that he was not to teach Demonstration Shows Turf-ski English but French, the subject in Back in the , his Debaters Win Against Hotchkiss which he would be most fondly re- camera captured summertime membered by Academy boys. down Turf-ski experts sailing His teaching techniques inspired the annual Junior Vuyosevich, and alternate Rob grassy trails at Mt. Snow, Ver- Deerfield won many French students to continue Council debates with Cramer. This team lost 3-0 against mont before completing the grand and Senior their studies and his insistence on combined score of a well-prepared Hotchkiss nega- tour in the isolated Buggaboos of Hotchkiss by a a strong foundation in grammar January 15. Only the tive team. Rich Perry, Fred Rich, Canada. 3-1, Friday, gave them a solid base from which affirmative team and Tom Fleisch of the Junior Mr. Jay plans to edit the Bug- Senior Council to work. was not victorious. The two suc- Council defeated Hotchkiss 2-1. gaboo segment of the film into his In order to keep up with changes cessful negative teams traveled to next movie. As owner and chief Debaters are judged, in part, on in French culture and language, Hotchkiss for the debate, while photographer of his firm, he has the content of their arguments, Mr. Baldwin traveled to France the Deerfield affirmative teams de- created over 25 feature-length speaking ability, and response to many times to study at universities bated here. productions in the past 27 years. questions. Outstanding in these there. It was his rare combination Mr. Charles H. Baldwin The topic was "Resolved: the respects for the Senior Council of meticulous Other Ski Films Shown attention to the maximum size of a family in the were Foltz and Black. Noteworthy French language and culture that John Jay Jamboree was the Aided School's Growth United States should be limited in the Junior Council were Drake made his classes a truly rewarding fifth ski-oriented film shown in As a member of the Deerfild com- by law." At Hotchkiss both Deer- and Rich. experience. Deerfield this season. Mr. Robert munity for 42 years, Mr. Baldwin field negative teams emerged vic- Showed Diverse Ability Larkin has been instrumental in Places Fifth At Andover witnessed the growth of the Aca- torious, arguing that the proposi- attaining racing and promotional His depth of knowledge was de- demy, and contributed to this tion would be an inexcusable in- In the Andover Debating Tourn- films for ski fans. By the end of lineated by the fact that during growth. Perhaps Mrs. Frank L. trusion into the moral rights of ament last November two teams the winter term he will have his career at Deerfield he taught Boyden best summed up Mr. Bald- citizens. David Foltz, Mark Ma- from Deerfield participated and "shown every single ski film on the algebra, Latin, and American His- win's successful career at Deerfield dia, Tim Black, and alternate placed fifth out of 12 schools. First market today." In the past two tory in addition to French. when she said, "His loyalty, his Andrew Munro were the members place went to Belmont Hill, but weeks, Moebius Flip and Karli: But by no means was Mr. Bald- charm of personalty, his interest in of the Senior Council negative among the schools defeated by The World of Karl Schranz have win's ability limited to the class- the boys, were among the greatest team, while the Junior Council Deerfield was Andover. been offered. room. He displayed great interest of any teacher we ever had." negative team consisted of Tom "Groups advocating the use of Within the next two weeks The Snell, Mike Murphy, Stuart Drake Incredible Skis, Ski The Outer and alternate Jim Lance. violence to effect or prevent Limits, and The Great Ski Race change should be prohibited" was Ski Group, Russian Study Tour Crisis will be shown. All the films util- Argue Population the proposition. The Deerfield af- ize techniques of multi-color ex- The Senior and Junior Council firmative team of Bernstein and posure which ski coach Dils call- affirmative teams took the posi- Chris Watson won three debates Traveling To Europe This Year ed "technically innovating and ex- tion that a child-limiting law was and lost one while the negative citing." According to Mr. Larkin, necessary because a population team of Tim Black and Andrew Over 30 students will be travel- to Zurich, enroute to a second ten the movies demonstrate an "ex- crisis is imminent. Arguing for Munro had a 2-2 record. Black ing abroad this year on two sep- days of skiing in Zermatt. Prior to cellent study of the development the Senior Council were Jim was noted by the judges as an arate trips, each organized and ac- their returning home, two days will of ski filming." Bernstein, John Hampton, Bob outstanding negative speaker. companied by Mr. Richard Dils. be spent exploring Amsterdam and The The first group departs during Hague. The spring vacation for three weeks of trip is set up specifically for Schedule As Students Direct Deerfield students and their Dramatics Expands skiing and travel throughout families, and Mr. Dils has tried to Europe. Primarily a trip for the keep it from being merely another The Deerfield and Stoneleigh- the one-act plays in the collection relying on the word of a senile serious skier, whether beginner or ski tour, but rather encourages Burnham dramatics clubs are col- Collision Course. prospector. expert, the itinerary is carefully side trips and new experiences. One laborating on four more produc- French Comedy and down- Presents However the poor planned to offer maximum oppor- of several added attractions this tions after an ambitious and object to the The production of the 19th cen- trodden of the sector tunities to encounter new people year is a visit to the World Cup expanded schedule last year that tury comedy The Madwoman Of ruining of their city and plead and adventures through visits to Hockey Games. included Death Of A Sales- been undertaken by with the eccentric madwoman of different countries. Chaillot has several The second trip leaves the day man and several one-act plays. Mrs. D. Day Lee. In the play, Chaillot, whose elaborate plot for First Stop Kitzbuhel after Commencement on a rather February is -hungry men plan to solving the problem works per- Planned for early three money different sort of adventure—a lan- Woolf?, the district of fectly, preserving "her" Paris from As in the past, Kitzbuhel will be Who's Afraid Of Virginia drill for oil in guage study tour of the Soviet de- center of Paris, the evil forces of progress. the first stop, followed by a visit Edward Albee's explosive play Chaillot in the Union. Organized for Russian lan- between picting the fierce conflict guage students, the objective is, in two married couples, and the Mr. Dils' words, "an in-depth cul- Probing and testing that each en- tural probing of another country dures. Charlie Holmes, vice-presi- . . . to provide a first-hand, per- dent of the Dramatics Club, is sonal contact with the Soviet peo- directing the production as well ple and their world." as playing the part of George. President Bob Walters, Bambi Russian Seminar Planned Jacobson, and Kathy Breech will The trip is to begin with nine play the other major parts. days in Leningrad, which will in- clude a Plans Contemporary Drama language seminar to aid the participants to speak only Rus- Bruce vanDusen is directing The sian throughout their 33-day so- Homecoming, a contemporary journ. The tour then moves to English drama. Lauded as one of Moscow for seven days, followed Playwright Harold Pinter's best in turn by visits to Sochi and Odessa works, it portrays the return of on the Black Sea, where some a successful oldest son, Teddy, to students will visit pen pals. Then his lifeless family. Teddy, played it is on to a two-day "review" and by John Noonan, reappears with renewal of acquaintances in Mos- a wife and a doctorate after a cow before flying home. six-year absence, creating com- plicated relations within the fam- Personal contact will be en- ily. hanced through visits to youth camps and schools. Students from Tentatively planned for produc- Walters, Charlie Holmes, and Kathy Breech in rehearsal for Who's Afraid of other schools will be invited to tion in the spring by Craig Kelly Bambi Jacobson, Bob presented in early February. —photo by Cowan participate. and Kim Thompson are seven of Virginia Woolf, which will be 4 THE DEERFIELD SCROLL January 23. 1971 Committeedom Grows, Prospers At Deerfield

Goodwin by Bruce faculty members and an alumni The American Field Service Pro- member to the committee, and one Among the burgeoning number representative. The function of the gram Committee is in its last year sophomore, one junior, and two of student, faculty, administrative, committee is to provide a line of of existence due to the expense of seniors were elected by their re- and trustee committees, a surpris- communication through which the the program to the school. Chair- spective classes. ing number are actually active and faculty and alumni can advise the manned by Mr. Judd Blain, the The Social Committee has contin- useful—and in some cases indis- trustees on current trends in ed- committee includes four other fac- ually expanded its program to in- pensable. ucation. ulty members and last year's two clude a large number of concerts AFS representatives, Ward Penne- Committeedom is now an in- Since trustee meetings are in- and cultural events in addition to baker and Hank Haff. tegral part of Deerfield Academy, frequent and the various com- mixers with many girls' schools. and it is doubtful if many phases mittees operate independently, the The Curriculum Committee con- The future of the Student-Facul- of school life could function prop- Board saw a need for a coordinat- sists of Mr. Miller, Head Librarian ty Committee is an open question. erly without it. ing body. Therefore the Planning Mrs. Harrison, and the chairman With new membership in the Com- Among the most important and Committee was recently establish- of the six academic departments. mittee, perhaps regular meetings least known committees are those ed to keep each committee inform- The committee is responsible for could resume. But while elections Cinema Club adviser Mr. James of the Board of Trustees. The ed of the decisions of the other implementation of new courses, and may be held shortly, the committee Marksbury is working this year Trustees meet four times yearly, committees. also makes recommendations on may just expire, perhaps giving and in between those meetings the such policy changes as the pass-fail with Co-Presidents Mark Moss Administration and faculty com- way to expanded representation on Board's duties are conducted al- grading system and the establish- and Bruce vanDusen. mittees perform a variety of func- a student-faculty table. Originally most exclusively by committee-de- ment of diploma requirements. tions, ranging from yearly decisions formed after a petition was sub- ployment. to weekly consultation. Among the The Athletic Committee was mitted to the Headmaster two Cinema Club Plans The Executive Committee in par- latter is the Administrative Com- formed before Deerfield had an years ago, the Committee has suf- ticular is empowered to delegate mittee, the Headmaster's cabinet. athletic director. The members, ap- fered from low visibility and a lack Enderground Films authority and act as it sees fit be- The Committee's nine Administra- pointed by Mr. Pynchon, have met of communication with the student tween meetings of the entire Board. tion members, appointed by Mr. infrequently this year. body. For Winter Term The Finance Committee oversees Pynchon, meet weekly to advise Last fall Mr. Kolster requested The Science Facilities Planning the financial operation of the school him on school policy decisions. that a Discipline Group includes the Science faculty Committee be The Cinema Club welcomed its and the management of endow- formed. and 10 students who were chosen In 1968 Mr. Pynchon established Though the Dean of Stu- membership January 10 with the ment funds. The Building and dents still at random after a sign-up. At its the Admissions Committee, which handles the day-to-day shocking but fascinating movie Grounds Committee is in charge of problems weekly meetings, each member re- includes three full-time teachers in of discipline, the com- Freaks. When this film first ap- maintenance and all major new con- mittee is ports his individual research and addition to the members of the Ad- responsible for more peared in 1932 it was banned by struction. Its primary accomplish- serious disciplinary suggests ideas that could provide missions department. The com- matters. In ad- the censors. This was the first of ment this year was the selection of dition to the five or six flexibility in the new Science Build- mittee, headed by Mr. William individual five underground movies planned an architect for the new Science ing. Tyler, was formed to encompass a cases it has handled so far this for the Building. winter term. wider range of educational back- year, the committee meets weekly The Winter Program Committee The annual fund-raising camp- grounds and teaching philosophies to establish guidelines for its ac- will stress student participation in Theme Chosen aign is the responsibility of the De- tions. Recently three seniors have its weekend workshops through the in decisions on borderline candi- This year's club has more than velopment Committee. The Nom- been chosen to serve on the com- winter term. Consisting of nine dates. 200 members. Senior Bruce van- inating Committee selects candi- mittee with a full vote. seniors, four juniors, and five fac- The Financial Aid Committee de- Dusen, president of the club, stat- dates for membership and nomin- The Spring Term Study Com- ulty members, it has developed a ed that the club has decided to ates the officers of the Board. termines how much an applicant's mittee approves, disapproves, or program emphasizing individual pursue an avant-garde theme. The Trustee-Faculty-Alumni Ed- family can afford to pay in sending modifies senior proposals for alter- creative involvement rather than a This categorization would include ucational Practices Committee has him to Deerfield. nate study projects in the spring. spectator role. Until three years films that display unorthodox or more than a breath-taking name. ago, scholarship In addition to budgetary considera- Other committees, such aid was negotiable, as the experimental methods. Along with four trustee members, but it is now determined with the tions and parental consent, the Senior Production and Class Gift the Headmaster, and Mr. Miller, the aid of the computerized School committee must take into account Committees, have been planning This Sunday's movie was Has- committee includes four elected Scholarship Service. the recommendations of teachers for specialized objectives. kell Wexler's Medium Cool. which is concerned with the in and corridor masters, and specify The Food Committee has met riots during the in full its reasons for disapproval twice this year and the report is "tumultuous summer of '68." of a project. that a good time was had by all. It is, as van- Dusen put The first faculty committee to And then, of course, there's the it, "a low-budget. Easy Rider type film." include students in its ranks was Pizza Committee, and - - no kid- the Library Committee. The de- ding - a Committee to Form Antonioni Film Planned partment heads each appointed one Committees. Following Medium Cool will he a film made in 1965 by the re- Glee Club Plans Joint Concert, nowned director Michaelangelo Antonioni, entitled The Red Des- ert. The film is basically a con- Will Also Compete At Dartmouth flict between sensitive individuals and the changing environment. It takes place in Ravenna, Italy. The Deerfield Glee Club will The Band will travel to MacDuf- launch its first concert of the 1970- fie for a concert to be followed by The fourth movie, The L-Shaped 1971 school year February 21 in a a dinner-dance February 27. Room, is a 1965 English film. It joint is mainly concerned effort with Stoneleigh-Burn- The Spring Day effort with the with a preg- ham, Northfield, nant French girl and Eaglebrook. rest of the school will be the and her inde- cision about During the fall, the Glee Club Band's last major performance for abortion. She lives in a dingy met infrequently for practices due the school year. Reporting on the lodginghouse with var- ied to the fact that Dr. J. Clement quality of the group, Band pres- personalities that include a black Schuler was hospitalized for a good ident Ward Pennebaker said, "We jazz musician, a writer, a variety part of the term. The club there- have the potential to be the best artist, and two prostitutes. fore work to do Mr. James Smith is teaching the newly instituted Driver's Education has a good deal of Band since I've been at Deerfield At the moment, the fifth movie course. —photo by Cowan in a relatively short time to pre- and possibly even before then." remains undecided. pare for the concerts and activities planned for the balance of the Driver Education Offered On Campus, year. The concert following the Feb- Course Receives Overwhelming Response ruary 21 program will be held the next weekend at Dartmouth, where A long-awaited driver's education books as further aids besides the Deerfield will compete against course has been initiated by Mr. movies supplied by Farrell's. several other prep schools. James S. Smith in cooperation with As with similar existing Show For Spring Day Farrell's Auto Driving School of pro- grams at Stoneleigh-Burnham, At the traditional Spring Day Greenfield. Enrollment in the course Mt. Hermon, and Northfield, the Concert, the Glee Club, together is overwhelming, according to Mr. driver's education students will fulfill with the entire student body, will Smith, who offers several sum- the in-class requirement present a program to parents and mers of experience with Farrell's for a Mass- achusetts operator's friends. In anticipation of that event to two classes including over 75 license. The total the school puts in several hours of boys. of 30 hours is also honored by most other insurance rehearsal. To finish up the year, During the meetings, held Sat- states and companies. Dr. Schuler expects to perform at urday mornings, in the afternoons several alumni meetings and pos- and Tuesday evenings, Mr. Smith According to Mr. Smith, the sibly any special events which may will be leading discussions concen- course will be received well not arise between now and the end of trating on "proper driver attitudes." only by students because of its im- school. The laws, rules, and regulations of mediate advantages, but also by the road as well as car maintenance parents. According to the National Band To Perform will be reviewed. Safety Council, although 35% of The Band, like the Glee Club, Before passing, each student will accidents are caused by teenagers, suffered because of Dr. Schuler's be responsible for the completion a much lower percent are caused absence, but it is also beginning by teenage of a project. Mr. Smith foresees graduates of driver's ed- to work hard to assist the Glee Dr. J. Clement Schuler and President Doug Wilson discuss the floor talks, scale models, and scrap- ucation. Club for the February 21 concert. Glee Club's winter concert season. —photo by Cowan January 23, 1971 THE DEERFIELD SCROLL 5

few years, and plan to create something worthwhile. As Seniors Devise Projects Phillips stated, "It will be a tangible end to an intangible experience." For Spring Term Study; Cowan and Phillips plan to do all the writing, photog- raphy, plating, printing, and collating themselves. After a short course in layout at a Vermont printing plant, Include Writing, Traveling they will return to campus to do the actual photography and other details, going to Boston to work in a printing by Chris Watson plant and complete their project. After much talk and predisposition, independent study Steven Jennings plans to go abroad to study archi- has finally come to Deerfield. Response has been wide- tecture. His definitive purpose is to make a comparative spread. For several years a means of initiating a program study of Gothic cathedral portals in Southern has been sought, and this spring seniors whose projects England and Northern France. have been approved will proceed in an independent study of their choice. He is leaving March 20 and plans to return July 3. Not all of the projects have been approved, though The product of his studies will be in the form of individual most seniors should know within the next week, for nearly reports on separate cathedrals, including a final compara- all have passed preliminary approval and only await the tive study of all eight cathedrals plus photographs and final decision. sketches. As a result of the large amount of work he has faced in preparing this project, he has decided to compile Each project has been or is in the process of inten- information for students who wish to do similar projects 3 sive screening by a committee of teachers and adminis- in the future. trators selected for that purpose. The projects themselves cover a wide field of interest Also traveling abroad is David Place, who will work and represent considerable student planning and imagina- and study in France. In the desire to improve his French Tim. Black talks about the Intern Program tion. Students in many cases have the opportunity to he will take language courses while also working as a with Mr. Robert Crow. —photo by Cowan leave school, in large part to work on their own, and a trainee for the Societe Generale Bank of France in Paris. Symington of Missouri. Gordon Sadler will work with few are even going abroad. Others have chosen to remain This period of training and study will last from April 4 Congressman James '37 of New Hampshire, Tim on campus, using the facilities available, where they can to August 4, after which he will travel through Europe Black will assist Representative Ogden Reid '43 of New be in school activities. until September 1. involved York, and Jay Regan will work for Congressman Hastings to write a book Lee Phillips and Rory Cowan intend Interested in experiencing a Walden-type experiment Keith '34 of Massachusetts. The program will last from exposition on Deerfield, a combination of photography and in the woods of Mississippi, and hoping for approval of April 1 to the end of May. that will present Deerfield as they see it today. They their project are David Foltz, Tim Bowe, and Jeff Brown. Among others working off-campus are Ward Penne- are impressed by the evolution of Deerfield over the past This venture will include building a log cabin and living baker and John Olesen. on subsistence food that they will grow or hunt them- Pennebaker plans to work for the United Fund in selves, while also compiling individual journals and mak- Franklin County. He wants to pick several agencies, ing a study of their ecological system. learning how each runs and how and where the collected money goes and then write a final Hopefully they can have the use of labs at the Uni- report to present for inspection. John Olesen will hope- versity of Mississippi with the counseling of a faculty fully be involved in the production of a movie, to learn member there. In addition they will work in conjunction as much as possible about that field. with the rangers in their forest area. The trip will last Mike Bernhard will be remaining on campus and six weeks, leaving two at the end of the term in which teaching a course entitled Twentieth Century Art. He to write a final report. will have at his disposal the advice and assistance of both The Washington Intern Program is being continued Mr. James Giddings and Mr. Daniel Hodermarsky. The this year. In past years students have gone to Washing- course will concentrate on art since 1945 and include both ton, D.C., during the spring recess to work for Congress- the historical aspect and application in the studio. men. Many felt that this period, which consisted of only Another course this spring, Creative Writing (for 15 working days, was too short to gain from the experi- freshmen), will be taught by Todd Gieg and Steve Pro- ence. kesch under the supervision of Mr. James Knox. Several This year, with the introduction of the Alternate other students are hoping to teach off-campus at elemen- Study Program, will offer at least seven weeks for stu- tary schools in the nearby area. They are Shawn Ash- dents to learn as much as they can about the intricate baugh, Robin Guion, Steve Pelle, and Bob Powers. processes of our national government. Hank Haff and Lloyd Clarke are defining a study of the town of Old Deerfield that they There are six students involved in the program. Will hope will give a new impression of an old place. Through PVMA Hutchins will work with Congressman records and Wayne Aspinall the recollections plans for their of the more knowledgeable people of the Lee Phillips and Rory Cowan go over of Colorado, Dirk McNichols with Senator Charles Percy —photo by Cowan town, they will compile a report that will tie into the book about Deerfield. of , and Jim Bernstein with Congressman Stuart Academy as well.

ENGLISH ELECTIVES Academy Expands Spring Elective Program 0 Introduction to Poetry by Fred Wesson offered exclusively to freshmen and hopes that the course will be a a Drama direct result of the student ideas. While underclassmen have a sophomores. Course selection, limit- "rewarding learning experience." Courses Composition number of English electives ed by a student's commitment to Offered Seniors greater Students Respond Literary Criticism from which to choose this spring, other subjects, ranges from seven Although the history, science, and In a questionnaire circulated last foreign British and American Poets other departments as well have for freshmen to 25 for seniors. language departments are fall, students were asked what limited by of Today offered elective courses for seniors. staff commitment, they Seminar Offered courses of those offered last year Many English electives have been have offered elective courses to Advanced Composition For the first time in Deerfield might interest them for this offered this year to freshmen and seniors. The Mathematics Depart- Public Speaking history an interdepartmental semi- spring. Also, they were encouraged sophomores which last year were ment might add another section Romanticism nar will be offerd. The course, en- to criticize the program of last of open only to juniors or seniors. Probability and Statistics as well titled The Baroque Age, will meet year and to suggest new courses. Classical Literature Seniors planning to take some or as some computer projects on an for double periods twice weekly Reading their five courses this spring The student response was better individual basis. Developmental all of and will involve six teachers at- tentatively offered a wide than anticipated. Many suggestions Drama - Reading and Writing are simultaneously. Courses such as The Cold War, history, fore- tending were variety of electives in incorporated into the pro- Constitutional Law, and Current Journalism mathematics, and Mr. Suitor comments that this gram. ign language, A course called The Lit- Events will be offered by history Literary Historical Per- arrangement will supply "in-depth erature of and science. Science Fiction, to be teachers. A proposed interdepart- American courses to resources for the student" and spectives on Among new English taught by Mr. Richard Allen, was mental course is called The Roots Developmental Character be offered are of Fascism—From Romantics to and Two Rebels in American Lit- Reading, Black Literature, Hitler, and will be group taught interdepartmental erature: Melville and an experimental by the Messrs. Christopher Dixon, Whitman seminar. Day Lee, Steven Oberon, and The Literature of Science Program Improved Robert Perkins. Fiction Suitor, head of the Mr. John Science Is Limited The Whitman Tradition English Department, hopes that the The Science changes in and additions to the Department is par- Creative Writing ticularly English curriculum will "fill in limited in extra courses The Contemporary Novel it can offer some of the gaps" of last year's by available space. Transcendentalism in Nevertheless, highly successful program. He cites courses have been America proposed for the new Developmental Reading seniors. Possibly small groups will be The Modern Voice in Ameri- course as "our biggest project." able to meet with a teacher to study can Poetry The course will be taught by Mr. a particular sub- ject. Greco-Roman-Norse Charles Hohner, a licensed reading handle the Mythology teacher, who also will The foreign languages, French, Dostoevsky and Tolstoy Black Literature elective. Spanish, Russian, and German, also Black Literature Mr. Suitor feels that a major im- have introduced a variety of courses The Expanding Universe of provement of the program this for interested seniors. The future James Joyce year is the greater number of for the proposals in the history, The Messrs. (1. to r., sitting) Lee, O'Neil, Dixon, McGlynn, and Literature in Print and Film courses open to freshmen and soph- science and foreign language fields (standing) Howell, Chisholm, and Hoclermarsky will teach The Victorian Dilemma omores. Two new drama courses the is, however, quite uncertain, as interdepartmental seminar called The Baroque Age. Philosophical Analysis to be taught by Mr. Christopher senior response to the offers is im- —photo by Ramsay Dixon and Mr. Moreau Hunt are possible to determine at this point. 6 THE DEERFIELD SCROLL January 23, 1971 Spirited Swim Squad Features All Americans

With three returning All Ameri- by new boys and several swimmers can swimmers providing the nucle- who were on the j.v. team last us, Coach Lawrence Boyle feels year. that this year's varsity swimming Four new boys who should be team has the ability to produce a able to make significant contribu- highly successful season. He is tions to the team are Bob Opel, quick to add, however, that unlike Dave Kewer, Gary Wheeler, and other years "this team does not Greg Gerber, who will perform in hinge on the performance of three the breaststroke, backstroke, free- or four swimmers, but rather upon style, and butterfly, respectively. the hard work of each individual." Up from last year's j.v. team are several swimmers, Mr. Boyle also pointed out that among whom are with the leadership of Co-Captains Mike Edwards and Rob Magee. Pete Ray and Carl Goodwin the Deerfield should also get fine per- team's spirit is high and that this formances from returning letter- year's squad is possibly "the hard- men Boonie Brill, a diver; Pete est working team I've had." Galuszka, a freestyler; and Cory West, a butterflyer. Brill is possibly Dave Gillmore shoots on the St. Paul's goal in the 8-1 win. —photo by Ramsay Led By All Americans the best diver in New England and During the course of the season should consistently place well for the team will call upon each swim- Deerfield. mer, and they should be led by last Face Tough Schedule year's All Americans: Carl Good- Hockey Team Blanks Belmont Hill The schedule Deerfield faces this win, Bruce Goodwin, and Ray. In year is difficult and the opposing Captain Goodwin's second year on 0 teams will undoubtedly provide a the varsity last year he consistent- by Chris Whipple shadowing strategy, reached a peak Driscoll Scores Two high level of competition. ly performed well as a sprinter and Deerfield, Mass., Jan. 16 — of frustration in the final minute The team will peak for its first Anderson scored for Deerfield was able to establish a new school Avenging its pre-season tourna- of play as Scannell was led to the test February 6 against Andover, midway through the period on an record in the 50-yard freestyle. ment elmination, varsity hockey penalty box for elbowing. and it must then maintain that assist from Gillmore before St. Bruce Goodwin also raced well last upset Belmont Hill, the Lawrence- level for the remainder of the sea- St. Paul's — Deerfield crushed Paul's trimmed the margin to 4-1. season as a sophomore and Mr. ville tournament champion, 4-0 to son when the meets get progres- a weak St. Paul's team 8-1 in its However, Gillmore and Hausmann Boyle feels that "he is just now remain unbeaten in its first two sively tougher against the Dart- opening game, here on January added goals before the end of the coming into his own." Ray per- games. mouth freshmen, the 13. period. Driscoll monopolized the formed in many different events Harvard freshmen and finally Williston on Deerfield stymied Belmont scoring in the third period on two last season but still managed to set St. Paul's Shorthanded March 6. Hill's attack by shadowing its star breakaways to round out a career- a new school record in the 100-yard St. Paul's never threatened as forwards, Gordon Scannell and high five-point performance. backstroke, his specialty. At the end of the season several they were forced to play perpet- Leigh Hogan. Phelps McIlvaine swimmers will travel to Lawrence- ually shorthanded due to penalties, Commenting on the Belmont Squad Features Balance opened the scoring midway into ville for the Easterns and the cli- two of which were misconducts. Hill game, Coach Wyllys Terry This year's team should also be the first period, batting in a re- max of the season will be the Kevin Gaffney began the rout on cited the outstanding play of bound from Tom Driscoll while fortunate enough to display a great Interscholastics March 13. Coach a low slap shot from center ice Powers and Gillmore in their Hogan was serving a holding deal of balance in every event. In Boyle sums it up by saying, "We which trickled off the skate of the checking roles as well as Bern- penalty. addition to the returning lettermen have the potential; we just have to St. Paul's goalie. Three minutes hard's performance in the goal. the squad will also be bolstered put it together." Belmont Hill threatened through- later Hausmann fed Driscoll for The team faces a challenging out the second period, but Mike a score and then tallied himself as schedule this year with Andover, Bernhard was sensational in the Deerfield led 3-0 at the start of Dartmouth freshmen, and Exeter Gymnasts Open Season With Win Deerfield goal, and the defense jell- the second period. boasting talented squads. ed despite many Deerfield penalties. With Corky Powers and Dave Gil- After Dropping Two Scrimmages more blanketing Hogan and Scan- nell, Tim Hausmann widened the Out Of Bounds gap to 2-0 in the second period Getting off to an auspicious unusual for the season's first meet, when he flipped the loose puck start, the varsity gymnastics team and well ahead of the team's de- over the Belmont Hill goalie. Freaks won its first official meet of the velopment last year at this time. Both teams displayed hot tempers season, defeating Auburn High Two pre-season by Allan Reagan scrimmages, the in a penalty-filled period. School by a score of 66.9 to 63.7. first on January 9 against Cath- Deerfield grabbed the lead in the edral and the second on January Anderson Nets Two For a good part of our three any beach-bum bully to kick sand first event, the floor exercises. 13 against Minnechaug, found the In the third period Deerfield years at Deerfield, we have been in one's face. Or perhaps it is to Fred Schoeffler was high man in Deerfield squad as yet unprepar- intimidated a fired-up Belmont fascinated by those body-building become the beach-bum bully him- ed, and the event, contributing 4.3 points Deerfield dropped both Hill squad with fierce checking freaks who live in Coach Will Lan- self, flexing his bodacious biceps contests by considerable margins. dry's weight room, conveniently menacingly while padding in a performance notable for its and unrelenting hustle. Nine min- out in Today the gymnastics squad located one floor down in the sports search of the perfect poise and variety. For the re- utes into the period Powers won wave. faces Tantasqua, away, at 1:30 emporium off Albany Road. mainder of the meet the lead zone However, for p.m. a face-off in the Belmont Hill some, "getting in never left Deerfield's hands. and passed to Rick Anderson in Being avowed non-athletes our- shape" is but a prelude to the 50- Last winter, the varsity Auburn Shows Strength dropped the slot. Anderson gunned the selves, as fully 75% of SCROLL foot shot put, or the 56-second an extremely close meet by under The Auburn competitors out- puck by the goalie %I' a 3-0 Deer- sports editors in the last four years butterfly, or next fall's football a point to this same Tantasqua weighed their Deerfield counter- field lead. A minute and a half have been, we viewed these freaks season, or even a 6.769582 in gym- team. Hoping to avenge that loss parts almost to a man, and ap- later, he again broke free to put with considerable bewilderment. nastics. We wonder whether lifting and to continue this year's winning peared to have been better con- the contest out of reach, 4-0. Bel- Donning an inconspicuous gray is the answer when we see a record, the team will be gunning ditioned. Their exercises, often mont Hill, shackled by Deerfield's sweatsuit and posing as a devoted fanatic weight-freak (for three for a victory this afternoon. difficult and strenuous, showed exercise nut, we ventured into this years, no less) play on six j.v. teams their superior strength. Orrell, land of sit-ups and dumbbells. in two years. Yet, hope springs Budzinski, and Elinskas were Find Sit-ups Excruciating eternal, and the freak hopes to play football in college. particularly effective for Auburn. Between sit-ups (we had to keep Poise and ease of motion often up the cover, excruciating as it See Muscles Grow being more important was), we gymnastic noted three types of The bod-men seem to be waging advantages than size and people strength. who periodically appear for a mighty war on those of us with However, Deerfield was able to "work-outs." First are the bod 98-pound weakling builds. As we turn in enough better perform- men, running around sans-chemise opened a Marvel comic book to ances to win. flexing their perfectly proportioned read of Nick Fury's lastest ad- muscles In addition to Schoeffler, Deer- for all to marvel at. venture, an ad for Mighty field's standouts were Steve Ku- Second come the Joe Straps, Muscles, Inc. blared, "Just minutes backi and John Futter on the those massive tackles and burly a day and you can see the muscles sidehorse, taking first and second fullbacks calmly bench-pressing 300 grow and feel the new strength and places, respectively, and Futter pounds or curling 150 twelve times. confidence surge through your again on the rings. Then there are the anemic misfits, body!" such as your reporter, lifting ap- Deerfield Confident All of which leaves us with one proximately two or three pounds Despite the loss of several of question: Brother, can you spare at a time in the hope of becoming last year's lettermen, some through a dime? one of the above. graduation, others through defec- tion to other sports, Coach Will Shaping-up Landry is looking forward to a Most weight freaks are there, as When Shopping season which will not be a build- some rather nebulously put it, "to in Greenfield, ing one in the sense that last get in shape." say you saw it in year's was. Already his gymnasts Steve Kubacki practices on the long horse in preparation for the Presumably, "being in shape" is have shown a confidence and skill Auburn meet. —photo by Ray to impress one's girl friend or dare THE SCROLL THE DEERFIELD SCROLL January 23, 1971 A, Deerfield Graduates Basketball Squeaks Past KU Play Major Roles Victory Comes In Final Second For Teams College by Jim Zauche junior on the team, came in late Meriden, N.H., Jan. 16 — As the in the fourth quarter to make four Across the nation, Deerfield a- climax of an incredible fourth key points. lumni starred in college football quarter, Jay Regan pumped in a KUA Had Experience Mike to give Deer- this fall. Junior quarterback 28-foot jump shot KUA was led by Dave Pierson Dakota State win over Kimball Bentson '67 of North field a 93-92 with 31 points and Don Makay led an unbeaten the buzzer sounded. Led his team through Union as with 29. Since they had already Bowl win and Mike Panaggio, and season, a Camellia by Regan, played five games, including a a Caras, Deerfield overcame top national ranking. Dave 100-36 rout over Tilton, KUA was a nine-point deficit and scored 33 Bentson, who captained football, more experienced than Deerfield. points in the fourth quarter. basketball, and baseball while at It had three starters back from Deerfield, broke all North Dakota Starts To Press the team that lost to Deerfield school passing records, broke the With five minutes left in the 82-66 last year. school quarterback rushing record, game, Deerfield went into a press. Comparing his team to his and ended the season thirteenth After three minutes of exchang- 12-2 team of last year, Coach nationally in small college total ing baskets with KUA, Deerfield Hanlon observed, "We are strong- offense. combined a stunning offense with er than last year, but our final defense to close depend on how we do finished in the top an impenetrable record will North Dakota Hanlon rankings the gap. As coach Robert in close games. It is a good shoot- three in small college against fights for a rebound in the varsity's scrimnuige stated, "We were nine down with ing team," he continued. "We after a 33-16 victory over Montana Dave Carus by Ramsay College. —photo a minute and a half to go, and have good speed and good defense." in the Camellia Bowl, and Bentson Greenfield Community then, suddenly, everything in our He felt that rebounding was the scored three touchdowns in the press started to work. We just team's only possible weakness. romp. Today We Face started stealing the ball." Team Has Depth Big Bill Coghill '66 started at left, Finally, with 10 seconds Deerfield has five returning defensive tackle for Syracuse this off tonight at 7:00 against Andover, away. 92-91. Varsity hockey — faces Deerfield trailed by one at lettermen led by captain Panag- fall and is considered a pro pros- -scoring forward Dan Bolduk, who tallied The Blues are paced by high They had the ball in their back gio. Boron, who started against Pect. John and Drew Marchano '69, Andover's 6-4 victory over Belmont Hill Af- two goals and an assist in court and called time out. KUA, scored over 1000 points for also at Syracuse, played well. the last week. ter taking two seconds to move Frontier last year. Coach Hanlon at well and make few mis- Deerfield used Quarterback Jeff Doolittle '68 Deerfield must skate superbly, check ball up the court, noted, "Anybody on the starting was 20th in Andover's home-rink advantage and edge its last time out. Caras put the Hofstra University takes in order to counteract five is capable of scoring 20 national small col- in a thriller 4-3. ball in play, but, amid some con- good Passing in the in experience. We pick Deerfield points in a game. We have lege rankings. Jack Burns '68, Hermon for an 8:15 p.m. game fusion, he and Regan collided and really field two Varsity basketball — travels to Mt. depth. We could Deerfield football captain, Kimball Union by 20 points. lost the ball to Mike Ellison of by former the Redmen. Hermon bowed to strong teams." He concluded football at against To get the ball back, Mike was elected captain of scorers, Jay Regan, Mike Panag- KUA. saying that the team is "the best Deerfield's triple-threat outside fouled Ellison, Wesleyan University. to offset Mt. Hermon. Kiner intentionally I've seen here." Caras should be more than enough Brown gio and Dave who then missed both free throws. Leading ground gainer for 83-65. We see Deerfield on top Regan grabbed the rebound, drib- this year was Gary Bonner '68. His p.m. swimming — hosts Exeter at 2:00 the way down the court, Deerfield running mate, Willie Varsity bled all the results of its prior swimming The ball flew up, hit the Of The Week Roberts '68 has been a starting Exeter has refused to disclose and fired. Athlete the far side of the pool today is anybody's as the buzzer sound- halfback at the University of Hous- meets, so what happens on backboard victory in a relay meet. and dropped into the basket ton. guess. Our guess is a Deerfield ed, Mike Bernhard white rooms of Andover today at for the winning margin. Harvard's big tight end Pete Varsity squash — visits the Deerfield Trails Varney '67 will get pro offers both 2:30 p.m. in Ed Vena question is: Can Deerfield's lower- Except for an early 8-5 lead, Veteran goaltender Mike Bern- football and baseball. The sixty-four thousand dollar started at offset Andover's advantage in the upper Deerfield trailed KUA the whole hard sparkled in the nets while '69, also at Harvard, ranked players sufficiently Andover 5-2. end. Deerfield ran leading varsity hockey to wins of Middle guard. The crystal ball says no. game until the ranks? against St. Paul's and 4-0 down the schlopes at St. Paul's in an into some foul trouble as Bob 8-1 Varsity skiing -- schusses Hill last week. in alpine events, and should win. Keenan picked up four in the first against Belmont -only meet. Deerfield is strong alpine and Panaggio and Henry Bernhard was one of the major INKWELL NEWS travels to a tough meet at Tantasqua. quarter, Varsity gymnastics — Al- factors in Deerfield's upset over by just a few decimal points, Boron eventually fouled out. NAME IT and Deerfield lost to Tantasqua Belmont Hill last Saturday. Time YOU Last year point something to though Deerfield had almost 20 Tantasqua has scored a high of 78 the sen- WE'VE GOT IT but this year turnovers in the first half, KUA after time, 70. from Deerfield's high of held a mere 40-38 edge at half ior netminder 72 Greenfield New Federal St. time. Port Chester, York scrambled a- Regan had a total of 35 points, HALL TAVERN ALIBER'S round the goal to including 15 in the final quarter. GIFT SHOP block shots that Fine Women's Apparel Caras put in 22 and Panaggio net- T H E - BOOKS looked like sure GIFTS - SYRUP ted 19. Boron had seven points HAND MADE ITEMS red-lighters. 231 Main St. • Greenfield and Brandy Trotter, the only APOTHECARY 773-3300 In registering his Deerfield, Mass. Main St. shutout, Bernhard made 31 saves. SHOP THE In the St. Paul's game, Bernhard FREE DELIVERY tallied 20 saves while allowing only When Visiting Greenfield GREENFIEtD RECORDER one goal. Tonight Bernhard will be R. Barengo CITY CAB Kenneth LIKE it is — called upon for another outstand- '60 RENT A NEW FORD tells it Robert R. Wolanske ing performance against Andover, FROM The NEWS, that is beat Belmont Hill 8 Federal St. - Greenfield • a team which Tel. 774-2201 6-4. SWEENEY FORD RADIO DISPATCHED ask about CARROLL'S Greenfield, Mass. Fly Now — Pay Later Plan • — SULLIVAN'S FOR OVER 60 YEARS Carroll Travel Bureau CAR DRUO STORES WE HAVE HAD THE RENT* TEL. 773-5600 393 Main St. - Greenfield - 772-0861 Fast - Courteous - Efficient Service PLEASURE OF OUTFIT- Greenfield, Mass. TING DEERFIELD .STUDENTS ACADEMY La J. A. JUBB CO. CLEARYS GRIBBONS • Student Charge Accounts 773-5047 Oldest Jewelers 35 Bank Row Invited Greenfield's Pierre's Greenfield, Mass. BAND INSTRUMENTS Complete Selection of • Telephone Orders - WATCHES - GIFTS JEWELRY APPLIANCES — § — Next Day Delivery Benjamin Moore Paints Quality - Integrity - Service • TELEVISION RADIOS Imperial Wall Papers A Complete Line of MICHELMAN -CARSON's Graduate Class of 1919 MUSIC Greenfield Fiberglas Insulations INSTRUMENTS 242 Main St. 772-6353 248 St. Greenfield 193 Main and ACCESSORIES St. Mass. Greenfield, Mass. Main

When in Greenfield stop at CARL'S RESTAURANT for charcoal sandwich or steak or special luncheon '' '''''''' '' ....„ -• • • . Greenfield, Mass. 8 THE DEERFIELD SCROLL January 23, 1971 Varsity Squash Displays Depth Reserve Basketball As Team Defeats Kent, Choate Downed By KUA. 0 Juniors Lose Also by Jay Dinkel Choate and was unable to play. In two similar Reserve basketball brought its matches, varsity Individuals Win Decisively squash nosed out Choate 4-3 and 1971 season's record to 1-1 by los- The match was characterized by defeated Kent by the same score. ing to Kimball Union 29-28, Janu- shutout 3-0 scores, the only The team relied upon its depth in ex- ary 16. ceptions being Dines' match and the lower part of the order for Despite a good defense, an in- Scott McCallister's 3-1 loss. victories in both matches; Mc- ability to score hindered Deerfield's Callister, Deerfield's number one performance throughout the game. Kent, Conn., Jan. 16 — Deer- man, faced a player whom Deer- Kurt Carlson was outstanding for field's last four players posted field coach Edwin Reade called, Deerfield with 11 points. victories to edge out a fairly "one of the best in New England." strong Kent squad 4-3. Sandy Mc- The new Kent courts, where the Beats Appleton Lanahan, Gordon Sadler, and match was played, were the site of Reserve basketball in its first Andy MacGruer, numbers four, the 1967 National Juniors Squash game of the season defeated a five, and six respectively, all won Tournament, in which former weak Appleton team 41-35. their matches by decisive 3-0 Deerfield players Ted Plimpton '70 Displaying a solid defense, Deer- scores. The top three Kent play- and Dave Talbott participated. field dominated most of the game. ers, two of whom were returning Choate — In another 4-3 match, Junior Basketball opened its Cross-country skiers glide along Mr. Dils' lower lettermen, proved to be too strong Deerfield squeezed by Choate on level snowmobile season with a disappointing loss course. —photo by Ramsay and tied the team score 3-3. home courts January 13. Again to Clark 59-37, January 15. Peter Bruce Dines, playing in the the victory was a result of the Finley was high scorer for Deer- number seven spot, came back last four players winning their Comp Skiers Get New Facilities field with 18 points. "Finley play- from behind 2-1 to nip his oppo- matches. ed a good game," commented nent 3-2, giving Deerfield the vic- Redfield Breaks Tie Coach James Fabiani, "and so did The Deerfield ski coaches have butes this to the development of tory. Dines was playing in the Bruce Cazenave on defense." But After the top three Deerfield been working hard since last sum- many good runners and to the number seven place because Ted he added that the team needed players dropped their matches, mer to provide many new facilities closeness of the times of the first Finch injured his knee against more work. McLanahan and MacGruer each for the 1971 competitive ski season. four runners. Mr. Burdick points bounced back to win 3-1. Sadler Fresh-Sophs Lose Warming huts were built at the out that although the jumping team then blanked his Choate opponent First top and bottom of the ski hill. The has sufficient depth, the squad is fresh-soph basketball suc- J. V. Hockey Beats 3-0 to tie the match at 3-3. Dwight trestle for the 35-meter ski jump still untested in competition this cumbed to a strong Suffield team Redfield, number four player, has been completed, and a new season. 33-24 in its first game. The team, Formidable Hoosac broke the tie by winning 15-14, giant slalom trail has been cut. A showing a good defense, could 15-13, 10-15, 15-11, giving Deer- Intra-squad Meet Held large sno-cat was acquired for only hit 10% from the floor. field the 4-3 victory. The ski team held a three-event Mr. Joseph Morsman's j.v. hock- packing, and video-taping will be "There's a lot of potential on the ey squad thrashed a strong Coach Reade commented after used extensively. Also, this year intra-squad meet last Saturday to team," commented Coach Steven Hoosac varsity contingent 6-4, the game that he "knew the top the Deerfield Ski Patrol will be help determine its strengths and Oberon. "It's just a matter of get- Choate players were very good," ting our shooting warmed up." January 16. patrolling the competitive hill weaknesses. Terry Ball won the so they would have to win the Don Flickinger was high scorer Sophomore John Reade was daily. slalom, Lie and lower matches to take the con- followed by Henry with 10 points. outstanding on offense against the test. That is exactly what the Alpine Team Strong David Dellenbaugh in a tie for Hoosac team, scoring four out of team accomplished, showing a second place. Dellenbaugh placed six goals for the j.v. According to alpine coach Mr. FISKE & STRECKER team effort with "no real out- Robert Larkin, this year's alpine first in the giant slalom with Mark With only one day of practice standers." squad is "significantly stronger Fagan second and Lie third. In RICHARD F. DUPREY, Reg. Phar. to rely on, the j.v. dropped its the cross-country race, David Lee Team Displays Depth than last year," and has a "good 353 Greenfield first contest of the season to won and was trailed by Dellen- Mr. Reade attributed the two chance of beating any school it Main St. Mass. Springfield Tech. Community Col- baugh and Lie. victories to the fact that Deer- skis against." He believes the jun- Tel. 773-5002 lege 8-2, January 8. Reade again ior varsity team will be very played exceptionally for Deerfield field possessed "more depth" than their strong due to great depth in slalom Compliments of as he tallied the Green's first goal, opponents. He added that how and giant slalom. after passes from juniors Peter their record will depend on FAMOUS RICHARD D. SMITH INC. Pulitzer and Rob Stone. Deer- this depth is employed. Head ski coach Mr. Donald Bur- DISTRIBUTORS OF field's second goal was provided In sizing up the squad, Coach dick believes there is "every reason BILL'S RESTAURANT PAPER perform- AND PAPER PRODUCTS by Pulitzer on an assist from Reade stated that the to look for a good cross-country 30 Federal St Greenfield Stone. ance in the opening matches was running squad" this year. He attri- 155 Main St. Greenfield, Mass. even better than he had expected, Citing the defensive potential of and that the team had "the po- the team, Coach Morsman singled tential to go a long way." Once GRIBBONS GREENFIELD out junior Bill van Siclen as the again he emphasized the great MUSIC HOUSE most improved j.v. defenseman MONUMENTAL WORKS depth of the team. George F. Giovanazzi, Prop. thus far. The Hoosac upset was "YOUR MUSICAL .7112 971.wir Sliov Varsity squash has 10 more HEADQUARTERS" DISTINCTIVE MEMORIALS preceded by 10 days of hard work is: main Si. matches scheduled, including one 9 Mill St. 773-5748 54014-e4f by the j.v. in hopes of avenging Greenfield, Mass. Greenfield, Mass. 774-2836 at Andover today. their loss to that school last year. They will play Hoosac again later QUALITY in the season. CLIFFORD J. AKEY, INC. Expert Floral Stylists "Everything Photographic" STEREO COMPONENTS The junior hockey team, under INSURANCE Burdick's Flower Shoppe the tutelage of Coach Richard FORBES CAMERA SHOP Allen, succumbed to the Provi- AKEY REAL ESTATE Eileen H. Burdick, Prop. SALES and SERVICE dence Pee Wees 17-0, January 9. 10 Federal St. Greenfield 60 Federal St. Greenfield 286 Main St. Greenfield

HAMILTON FINE IN GREENFIELD IT'S SKIERS FURNITURE COMPLIMENTS OF VILLAGE PIZZA CLARK'S 42 Bank Row Greenfield, Mass. I 377 Main St. Telephone 772-6815 INTERIORS Greenfield, Mass. GREENFIELD SPORTS SHOP Specializing in The Only Place To Get SUPPLY CO. Pizzas, Grinders, Spaghetti, COMPLIMENTS OF DEPENDABLE SERVICE and and BBQ'ed Chicken - THE BEST EQUIPMENT LAKE ASPHALT WILSON'S 18 - 20 Deerfield St. Open 7 Days a Week Signed: TELEPHONE 774-4326 Greenfield, Mass. & PETROLEUM CO. From Noon til Midnight Arthur H. Ruggles, Jr. '33 393 Main St. Greenfield, Mass. FRANKLIN COUNTY'S LEADING Tel. 774-4308 Monday through Thursday Ski Coach 1937 - 70 DEPARTMENT STORE Until 1:00 773-7626 — SINCE 1882 — a.m. on Friday & Saturday

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