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The Summer Times - July 15, 2010

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The radiant sun nearly blinded my eyes and my exposed skin sizzled under its overwhelming rays. As I walked toward my dorm seemingly miles away, my energy was zapped as if it was sucked right out of my body, and my cold water instantly became warm. Does this situation sound all too familiar? Well my friend, you have unfortunately been introduced to the infamous Exonian heat. During our first week of Summer School, Exeter experienced a bi- zarre weather trend consisting of over five days of unbearable heat inside and out of our dorms. Faces drenched with sweat, shirts discolored with distinct pit stains, and handmade paper fans dominated campus in dorms, classrooms, and assemblies alike. Strolling through endless heat waves after sitting in warm classrooms can be tiring without a doubt. As reported by Amaryllis Bernitsa, “The heat makes me more tired and I want to drink water all the time.” When comparing Exeter’s heat to that of her hometown in Athens, Greece, 16-year-old Amaryllis stated, “ You feel the heat more here because of the humidity.” Teachers were not spared, although the temperatures often resulted in relocation of classes to cooler spots. Global economics teacher, Noah Freeman bears the heat in his un--air conditioned classroom day after day. With his oscillating fan near his desk and drinking water close at hand, Freeman described the recent heat wave in two simple words: hot and sticky. Now for the ultimate questions: why isn’t there air conditioning in dorms or classrooms, and what can we do to defeat the stubborn heat? “I think that goes back to years and years ago when that wasn’t an expectation in most summer programs, if there would be air condition- ing,” said the head honcho of Summer School, Ethan Shapiro. “In fact, there wasn’t air conditioning, if you go back probably 30 years, there wasn’t air conditioning anywhere.” He continued: “But the dorms never have had air conditioning and I don’t know if they ever will, maybe in 20 or 30 years they will. But typically for most of the year in New England, this is an unusual kind of Heat Wave Crashes Over Exeter ‘The Summer Newspaper of Phillips Exeter Academy’ Vol. XXXIV, Number 2 Thursday, July 15, 2010 Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter, New Hampshire CUP CRAZINESS By AMANI LOGGINS Summer Times Staff Writer Students show their support for their favorite soccer teams while watching a World Cup game on the quad. Student Activities set up a screen to make the match available to be watched by all. THE SUMMER TIMES First Class Mail U.S. Postage Paid Mailed from 03833 Permit Number 78 See HIGH, page 2 Five students who were eager to attend the summer program at Phillips Exeter Academy are not here. Their visas were denied by the U.S government and so, they couldn’t come. In an interview about this issue, Ethan Shapiro, the summer program director, declined to provide details, citing government security operations and the privacy of the students. However he said the staff and also the students here at PEA are very sad about the incident because obviously we wanted them to come here to enjoy Exeter with all of us and also make new friends. Recently, a mother of one of the kids, who lives in England, blogged about what happened. In her account, found on the Internet, she said: “First we were told that he may not need a student visa, as the summer school, strictly speaking, is not ‘studying’ in the traditional sense. But then we were told that it might be better if he did get a student visa- so off we went to apply for it. His three fellow students were given the visa within one week - and with Dan, they decided that they needed further ‘administrative processing.’ We were never told why him.” This tells us that visa problems can happen and that we are all very lucky to be here with our friends and that we have to make the most of this experience and spend a great summer here at Phillips Exeter Academy. On Monday afternoon while the Exeter campus lay drenched and deserted, a tree limb on Tan Lane fractured under the stress of heavy winds and crashed down onto the lawn and sidewalk below. The Bradford Pear tree at the intersection of Tan Lane and Main Street is approaching its life expectancy. It bears the scars of the many New England storms it has endured, including a long gash in its side which has since re-grown new bark but remains as a constant reminder to the barbarity of New England weather. Tree limb failure recently made the news in Manhattan, where a 6-month-old girl was killed by a falling branch at the Central Park Zoo. According to a study conducted by Kent State University, an average of 31 deaths in the United States alone are attributed to tree failures each year. “There’s very few of those trees left be- As we grow up, we start to need more time on our own. We give more value to our privacy and sometimes all of the “excitement” in our house is just too much for us to handle so we just want to get away. But in the end when we do so, we are surprised to see that we actually miss that excitement. In short, we get homesick. When we get homesick, according to expert advice found on the Internet, we miss familiar things such as our friends, family, pets or our bedroom. This is because mundane surroundings and routines give us comfort and safety. In a new place, we realize that the contentment of our own house and loved ones is lacking. So we can’t feel as happy as we could have been and we struggle to fit in to this new and unknown world. However the good news is that almost everyone feels homesick from time to time, even adults. So if you are feeling homesick you are not alone! Amy Hudgins, 15, from Albuquerque, N.M., says “Yes, I am homesick. I miss my sisters and my mom.” There are degrees of being homesick. Some people might feel anxious, lonely or sad. Others might have physical symptoms, such as headaches or stomach aches, or even depression. In situations like this, one should bear in mind that these feelings are not permanent. In most cases when the new surroundings and people start to become more fa- miliar, the feelings of homesickness start to ease. Also there are always additional things you can do on your own to make you feel better. Here are some tips to help you overcome feeling homesick: Bring something with you that reminds you of home. It is always a good idea to bring an object that has sentimental value such as your teddy bear, pillow or blanket so that whenever you feel homesick you Students Battle Homesickness On Monday, a branch from a Bradford Pear tree fell down. Ancient Tree Poses Danger Visa Issues Prevent Five From Coming Smiles of Summer School - Can you guess these smiles? By JOSE SOSA Summer Times Staff Writer By MIKE DUNBAR Summer Times Staff Writer By NAZLI TUNCER Summer Times Staff Writer Ralph Blumenthal/The Summer Times See STORM, page 2 See STUDENTS, page 2 Courtesy of L. Gene Howard 1. 2. 6. 5. 4. 3. 7. 8. 12. 11. 10. 9. Try to guess the identity of each summer school student based solely on his or her smile. Answers are on page 8. Compiled by MADAI MONTES Summer Times Staff Writer
Transcript
Page 1: The Summer Times - July 15, 2010

The radiant sun nearly blinded my eyes and my exposed skin sizzled under its overwhelming rays. As I walked toward my dorm seemingly miles away, my energy was zapped as if it was sucked right out of my body, and my cold water instantly became warm.

Does this situation sound all too familiar? Well my friend, you have unfortunately been introduced to the infamous Exonian heat.

During our fi rst week of Summer School, Exeter experienced a bi-zarre weather trend consisting of over fi ve days of unbearable heat inside and out of our dorms. Faces drenched with sweat, shirts discolored with distinct pit stains, and handmade paper fans dominated campus in dorms, classrooms, and assemblies alike.

Strolling through endless heat waves after sitting in warm classrooms can be tiring without a doubt. As reported by Amaryllis Bernitsa, “The heat makes me more tired and I want to drink water all the time.”

When comparing Exeter’s heat to that of her hometown in Athens, Greece, 16-year-old Amaryllis stated, “ You feel the heat more here because of the humidity.”

Teachers were not spared, although the temperatures often resulted in relocation of classes to cooler spots. Global economics teacher, Noah Freeman bears the heat in his un--air conditioned classroom day after day. With his oscillating fan near his desk and drinking water close at hand, Freeman described the recent heat wave in two simple words: hot and sticky.

Now for the ultimate questions: why isn’t there air conditioning in dorms or classrooms, and what can we do to defeat the stubborn heat?

“I think that goes back to years and years ago when that wasn’t an expectation in most summer programs, if there would be air condition-ing,” said the head honcho of Summer School, Ethan Shapiro. “In fact, there wasn’t air conditioning, if you go back probably 30 years, there wasn’t air conditioning anywhere.”

He continued: “But the dorms never have had air conditioning and I don’t know if they ever will, maybe in 20 or 30 years they will. But typically for most of the year in New England, this is an unusual kind of

Heat Wave Crashes Over Exeter

‘The Summer Newspaper of Phillips Exeter Academy’

Vol. XXXIV, Number 2 Thursday, July 15, 2010 Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter, New Hampshire

CUP CRAZINESS

By AMANI LOGGINSSummer Times Staff Writer

Students show their support for their favorite soccer teams while watching a World Cup game on the quad. Student Activities set up a screen to make the match available to be watched by all.

THE SUMMER TIMES First Class MailU.S. Postage PaidMailed from 03833Permit Number 78

See HIGH, page 2

Five students who were eager to attend the summer program at Phillips Exeter Academy are not here. Their visas were denied by the U.S government and so, they couldn’t come.

In an interview about this issue, Ethan Shapiro, the summer program director, declined to provide details, citing government security operations and the privacy of the students. However he said the staff and also the students here at PEA are very sad about the incident because obviously we wanted them to come here to enjoy Exeter with all of us and also make new friends.

Recently, a mother of one of the kids, who lives in England, blogged about what

happened. In her account, found on the Internet, she said: “First we were told that he may not need a student visa, as the summer school, s t r ic t ly speaking , i s not ‘studying’ in the traditional sense. But then we were told that it might be better if he did get a student visa- so off we went to apply for it. His three fellow students were given the visa within one week - and with Dan, they decided that they needed f u r t h e r ‘ a d m i n i s t r a t i v e processing.’ We were never told why him.”

This tells us that visa problems can happen and that we are all very lucky to be here with our friends and that we have to make the most of this experience and spend a great summer here at Phillips Exeter Academy.

On Monday afternoon while the Exeter campus lay drenched and deserted, a tree limb on Tan Lane fractured under the stress of heavy winds and crashed down onto the lawn and sidewalk below.

The Bradford Pear tree at the intersection of Tan Lane and Main Street is approaching its life expectancy. It bears the scars of the many New England storms it has endured, including a long gash in its side which has since re-grown

new bark but remains as a constant reminder to the barbarity of New England weather.

Tree limb failure recently made the news in Manhattan, where a 6-month-old girl was killed by a falling branch at the Central Park Zoo. According to a study conducted by Kent State University, an average of 31 deaths in the United States alone are attributed to tree failures each year.

“There’s very few of those trees left be-

As we grow up, we start to need more time on our own. We give more value to our privacy and sometimes all of the “excitement” in our house is just too much for us to handle so we just want to get away. But in the end when we do so, we are surprised to see that we actually miss that excitement.

In short, we get homesick.When we get homesick, according to expert advice found on the

Internet, we miss familiar things such as our friends, family, pets or our bedroom. This is because mundane surroundings and routines give us comfort and safety. In a new place, we realize that the contentment of our own house and loved ones is lacking. So we can’t feel as happy as we could have been and we struggle to fi t in to this new and unknown world.

However the good news is that almost everyone feels homesick

from time to time, even adults. So if you are feeling homesick you are not alone! Amy Hudgins, 15, from Albuquerque, N.M., says “Yes, I am homesick. I miss my sisters and my mom.”

There are degrees of being homesick. Some people might feel anxious, lonely or sad. Others might have physical symptoms, such as headaches or stomach aches, or even depression. In situations like this, one should bear in mind that these feelings are not permanent. In most cases when the new surroundings and people start to become more fa-miliar, the feelings of homesickness start to ease. Also there are always additional things you can do on your own to make you feel better. Here are some tips to help you overcome feeling homesick:

Bring something with you that reminds you of home. It is always a good idea to bring an object that has sentimental value such as your teddy bear, pillow or blanket so that whenever you feel homesick you

Students Battle HomesicknessOn Monday, a branch from a Bradford Pear tree fell down.

Ancient Tree Poses Danger Visa Issues Prevent Five From Coming

Smiles of Summer School - Can you guess these smiles?

By JOSE SOSA Summer Times Staff Writer

By MIKE DUNBARSummer Times Staff Writer

By NAZLI TUNCERSummer Times Staff Writer

Ralph Blumenthal/The Summer Times

See STORM, page 2

See STUDENTS, page 2

Courtesy of L. Gene Howard

1. 2. 6.5.4.3.

7. 8. 12.11.10.9.

Try to guess the identity of each summer school student based solely on his or her smile. Answers are on page 8.Compiled by MADAI MONTESSummer Times Staff Writer

Page 2: The Summer Times - July 15, 2010

NEWSTHE SUMMER TIMES2 THURSDAY, JULY 15, 2010

weather, even in the summer,” he added with a slight tone of awe in his voice. “Last summer we didn’t have anything like this. So if we lived down south where it was always hot like this all summer, we would probably have it but up around here it’s not standard that dorms have air conditioning.”

Expected to hear that your dorm would be air conditioned this sum-mer? Sorry for the disappointment. Maybe your children who attend Exeter in 20 years will have that privilege!

But Shapiro had encouraging words for students still not adjusted to the heat. “Do your best to fi nd cool places that are both cool and “cool”, he said laughing. “They’re not hot right?” he playfully asserted.

“I think even though we’ve been having this heat wave, it’s going to get better, it’s not going to be this hot in the next few days coming forward. But I have been really impressed that the kids have had a really positive attitude, smiles on their faces and are dealing with it really well. So I’m proud of everybody!”

Still hassled by the heat in the second week? No worries, just follow these simple tips to ensure instant coolness!

Wear loose, light colored clothing.Take showers regularly with cool water.Drink plenty of water (preferably cool).Store lotions in refrigerator to use on feet after a long sultry day.Refrain from drinking caffeine and alcohol, because they stimulate

dehydration.Buy a fan, stay hydrated, and BE COOL!

Young men and young women from all over the world gather for fi ve weeks at Phillips Exeter Academy. Here they spend fi ve weeks of their sum-mer experiencing something magical, and perhaps one of a kind.

But why? Why have all of these kids chosen to spend time at summer school? And even if they had chosen to go to summer school, why Exeter? There must be something all of these young men and women have in common. Research, however, made clear that there was not simply one reason, but unique situations from all over the world that have led all of these students to Exeter today.

Andrew Jacobsberg, 17, from São Paulo, Brazil,

has come to Exeter to experience the campus life so that he can prepare for college. Jacobsberg under-stands that Exeter is a great place to learn and meet new people from around the world. “I’m Andrew and not just a number,” he said when asked why he likes Exeter. In some major universities the teachers are more interested in their subject than the students but here at Exeter, Jacobsberg feels that the teachers truly care about the students.

A major trend discovered during interviews was that family had a huge impact on the student’s attendance at Exeter. Ernesto Avelado, age 16, from Caracas, Venezuela, has had a brother and a sister attend Exeter in the past. “I want to continue my family’s legacy,” said Avelado when asked why he wanted to come.

Bob Owlett, 15, from Wellsboro, Pennsylvania.,

had strong family ties as well. Owlett’s dad attended the regular school of Exeter for four years. Owlett is a third child and his older two siblings have both at-tended the Exeter summer school program.

Many students are involved in programs that help students stay focused in school. Nancy Tran, 16, from Seattle, is involved in the Rainer Scholars organization. Every spring, 60 new incoming 6th grad-ers are admitted into the Rainer Scholars program. The kids work in their own schools and also with Rainer Scholars. In return they are put on a fast track to success and can stay with the program all the way up until college. “I’ve known about Exeter since 6th grade,” said Tran, a rising 11th grader.

Justin Liu, 17, from Boston, is involved in a similar program called Minds Matter. Minds Mat-ter is a non-profi t organization and has locations in

multiple cities. Liu joined the program as a 10th grader and works with Minds Matter every Saturday during the school year. Every student who is involved in the program goes to summer school. It just so happened that Exeter was Liu’s fi rst choice.

Mike Dunbar, 17, from Hampton, N.H., has heard about Exeter his whole life. Being so close to the school, Dunbar noticed the positive impact it had on the community. He began attending Exeter summer school in 7th grade and has continued every summer ever since. “I love the way they teach here,” said Dunbar, now in his 5th and fi nal summer at Exeter.

This just scrapes the surface of reasons students come to Exeter. It is clear that each case is unique. But one thing is always for sure: it will be a summer never to forget.

Q&A with the Deans of Fun

Summer School Attracts Many For Many ReasonsBy AZOR COLE

Summer Times Staff Writer

Welcome Exonians! Are you excited about trips? Good! Then you may want to know what features are coming up this summer. We asked the Deans of Fun – led by Jan Trueman the “Queen Dean,” Brian Calnan, Lisa Frenzel, and Matthew Gargas – to introduce our upcoming exciting trips and events.

Question: What kinds of fi eld trips are there?Answer: Starting off with Hampton Beach,

there are; Dartmouth College, N.E. Aquarium, Downtown Portsmouth, Fox Run Mall, Ice Skating, Canobie Lake amusement park, Whale Watch, Free-port Outlets, Boston Common, York Beach, Boston University, Bowdoin College, Tufts University, Sa-lem Witch Museum, Rockingham Mall, Mt. Major/ Elacoya Hike, Cambridge, Mass., Bowling, Tanger Outlets, Water Country, Portland Sea Dogs, Boston College, Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Burlington Mall, Museum of Science/ IMAX, and Old Orchard Beach.Don’t forget to also sign up for Boston Logan Airport or Manchester Airport! We know you want to stay in Exeter, but you might want to go home!

As some events, we have DDR, Karaoke night, massages, talent show, and sports tournaments for basketball, volleyball, badminton, and dodge ball.

Q: Which trips are the most popular?A: Canobie Lake, Boston Common, Rocking-

ham Mall, and all Beach trips.

Q: How do you like this job?A: “I love this job! I love it, love it. I do most

of this job during regular school too, so I get to have fun for year long.” (Trueman)

“I love this job. I teach during the rest of the year, so it’s a nice change, it’s a nice break, I re-ally enjoy working with faculty here, and meeting students. It’s one of a kind collection of students.” (Calnan)

“It’s the most fun job because everyone is happy to see you.” (Frenzel)

Q: What was the scariest thing that ever hap-

pened in any of the trips?A: “A kid missing a bus.” (Gargas) Q: The most unusual trip?A:“We went to Harry Potter [theatre] last

summer. Mr. Calnan and I dressed up like students at Hogwarts, and we put signs on a bus for all dormitories. We had capes and everything, sold the T-shirts and hoodies that said “Varsity Quidditch” and “Muggles in Denial.” (Gargas)

Q: Finally, what would you like to say to sum-

mer Exonians?A: “Give Polar-Bear a shot!” (Calnan) See Blackboard or visit the summer school of-

fi ce on the second fl oor of Phelps Academy Center for more information!

can look at it and feel better. For example Ana Claudia, 14, from Laredo, Texas, says: “I miss the Mexican candies from my city. My mom sends me Turbos Flamas and takis.”

Donisha Thaxton, 17, from Atlanta, Ga., says “I brought my pillow case that my mom made me when I was little.”

Also Chelsea Shaffer, 17, from Arkansas says “I had my mom send me some sheets.”

Call home when you can. To hear from your friends and family will instantly make you feel better. Telling them how your day went and how you feel will give you comfort.

Do something you enjoy. It is always a good idea to get a hobby and stay active. When you spend the whole day sitting idly you have more time to feel lonely.

However, if you throw yourself into activities and have fun you won’t have the time to feel homesick.

Talk to a friend. Sharing how you feel with someone else will help you feel less overwhelmed with being homesick.

Write in a journal. Sometimes putting your thoughts on paper can make you feel as good as telling them to a friend. Especially if you are embarrassed to talk about being homesick, this is the best option for you to feel better. Seeing your feelings can make you realise what you miss and so you can fi nd ways of your own to overcome them.

Talk to an adult. It is very natural to feel home-sick but after a while if your feelings start to interfere with your daily actions it is best to seek advice from a trusted adult.

Don’t feel embarrassed if you are homesick -- it is perfectly normal. Just remember that you are here for only fi ve weeks and try to make the best of it!

Students Miss Families and HomesSTUDENTS, continued from page 1

Sudents from all over the world arrived at Phillips Exeter Academy on Sunday July 4, 2010, with the intention of settling in and unpacking to explore the large campus. A few of those 760 students got off their planes, went to retrieve their luggage -- and looked and looked and looked.

Every year, one in 150 students ends up missing his or her checked bags because they are not at the luggage carousel.

Sophia Orellana, 15, from Venezuela, was one of them. “Annoyed” was what she answered when asked about how she felt when she realized her luggage was missing and nowhere to be seen.

She arrived at Exeter with her carry-on bags and no extra clothes. Others also reached Exeter in the same state.

But the next day, Orellana received her lost luggage around 12 p.m. and was finally able to start unpacking. “I was relieved because I wanted to take a shower really bad,” she said.

There are some ways to make sure that if your luggage gets lost (again), it will be easily and quickly sent to where it needs to go:

Make sure you have tags on the outside of your luggage and inside. Also, if you have valuables that are expensive or very important, keep them in your carry-ons. Carry extra clothes with you. Ship as much stuff as you can -- there will be less for you to carry and it’ll be waiting for you when you get home.

Most importantly, check in your luggage early! It’ll most likely get on the correct plane rather than get left behind because there wasn’t enough time to get it onboard.

And when summer school is over and it’s time to head home, remember; don’t over stuff your bag! Delays with overstuffed bags tend to be a main cause of luggage getting left behind.

High Temperatures Strike CampusHIGH, continued from page 1

Lost Luggage Disrupts SomeBy RAVEN SANCHEZ

Summer Times Staff Writer

By MINAKO YASHIROSummer Times Staff Writer

Minako Yashiro/The Summer Times

The Deans of Fun from left to right: Lisa Frenzel, Jan Trueman, Matthew Gargas and Brian Calnan. They plan trips and events for the Summer School students.

cause over the last few years we’ve had some wild weather,” said Joe Kovolyan, the Grounds and Automotive Manager at PEA. “It’s a soft-wood tree and that kind tends to break apart. It also has a lot to do with how Tan Lane is shaped. It ends up acting like a funnel for the wind. In the past four years we’ve lost a dozen or so trees to weather.”

Bradford Pear trees gained resounding popularity after their introduction in 1963 be-

cause of their beauty and resistance to disease. Since then, the Bradford tree has been shown to be short-lived and even dangerous.

The storms we witnessed on Saturday and Monday have been mild by the Seacoast’s standards. Still, the damage sustained by the Exeter grounds was a solemn reminder of why PEA faculty as well as Exeter residents take New England storms so seriously.

And on Wednesday morning, another big branch was lying on the ground from the same tree at Tan Lane and Main Street.

Storm Fells Bradford LimbSTORM, continued from page 1

A student suffered slight injuries July 9th during a game of football. The student, fourteen-year-old Brandon Zhao from Washington D.C. was playing football on a fi eld along Elm Street where students from both Access Exeter and the Upper School join together in games of vol-leyball, soccer, and American football. Shouts in Turkish, Greek, English, Spanish, and other languages from every nook and cranny of the world can be heard.

But this Friday night, the collision of sights and sounds, a combination of cultures, became all too literal.

On the lawn next to the library a crowd gathered. An ambulance had come cutting across the grass, and a stretcher was brought out to load the semi-conscious student on board.

Zhao was fl at on his back, one arm waving faintly. The cause of his injury and brief fainting was an innocent game of football. One moment the football had been on the grass, within reach, and the next, Zhao had collided with fellow fourteen-year-old student Nathan Li from Las Vegas, who was also charging for the ball.

The paramedics rushed Zhao to the local hospital where he had several X-rays taken, was hooked up to several machines including an IV pouch, and was injected with a dose of morphine.

“I was panicking so much,” he recalls, “I was screaming.”

Fortunately, the X-rays did not detect any broken bones or any other permanent damage to his health. Apart from a sore body, and a few regular checkups at the school infi rmary, Zhao is back to normal. While he has to temporarily stop playing his sport (lacrosse), Zhao is still able to enjoy the rest of what the Exeter summer school has to offer.

Student OK in Football Mishap

Brandon Zhao was shaken up by a collision in a football game.

By THO TRANSummer Times Staff Writer

Oscar Santiago/The Summer Times

A mystery object found on campus that students and faculty alike were unable to identify.

Tho Tran/ The Summer Times

Page 3: The Summer Times - July 15, 2010

SPOTLIGHTTHE SUMMER TIMES 3THURSDAY, JULY 15, 2010

Exeter exhibits Kahn’s idea of reas-surance through its colonial and modern architecture. When Exeter was founded in 1781, the campus consisted of a single three-floor building with a chimney through the center of the roof. Though the campus has preserved much of the colonial atmosphere, it has evolved from a single building to a campus of 127 buildings.

Most of them are built of red brick with limestone detailing around windows and within the cornices. These buildings create a traditional feel and mostly con-sist of dormitory residences, classrooms, and gathering spaces. The academy building, the fourth in Exeter’s history, was built in 1915 and set a standard for the campus’s architecture. Most of the other colonial-style buildings were built between1920-1940.

The most renowned architectural structure on the campus is Louis Kahn’s Class of 1945 library. Kahn designed it in 1965 and the construction ended in November of 1971. The building is

known for its architectural marvels as Kahn exposes the geometric structure within. This building plays a major role in creating Exeter’s distinct academic and social environment.

Drew Gallo, Head Librarian for summer school, gave his interpretation of the importance of Kahn’s building: “The Library is an intellectual center. The architecture creates an atmosphere for individual and community work”.

Edouardo L. Desrochers, interim academy library director, explained his perspective on Kahn’s masterpiece: “The library is the heart of Exeter’s campus. You may notice that many of the paths on the campus lead to the library intention-ally by the designated design of the class

of 1945 and Louis Kahn. The library is the main intellectual center. As well as representing the community, Kahn de-signed as many as two hundred distinct study carrels for individual study.”

The carrels, made from white oak, are placed by the large perimeter win-dows. They give students a peaceful place for study. Individual sliding shutters with small window openings allow each student to adjust the light and view out to suit his or her own study needs. They provide an alternative to the vast sky lit central areas giving students choices for individual or group study options while using the library. These modern spaces are created with brick, stone and wood, the same building materials used by the colonial architects, but in a clean eter-nal style, more reminiscent of Roman architecture.

The architecture of each building is not just about materials or their indi-vidual styles, but also what they bring to the campus when they join together to form Exeter’s rich architectural history. This coming together of each individual building creates a beautiful and archi-tecturally rich campus based upon the essential principles of an intellectual community.

”“Every time a student

walks past a really urgent, expressive piece of archi-tecture that belongs to his or her college, it can help reassure him that he does have that mind, does have that soul.

– Louis Kahn

The Buildings and Masterpieces of Louis Kahn By LINDSAY DUDDY

Summer Times Staff Writer

Considered one of Louis Kahn’s materpieces, the Class of 1945 Library was completed in 1971. The Library has nine fl oors, contains 160,000 volumes and 10,000 bound periodicals.

Lindsay Duddy/The Summer Times

80 years ago, Edward Harkness revolutionized Exeter in just one let-ter he wrote. “What I have in mind is a classroom where students could sit around a table with a teacher who would talk with them and instruct them by a sort of tutorial or conference method, where [each student] would feel encouraged to speak up,” he told Exeter’s principal in 1930, “This would be a real revolution in methods.”

Consequentially, we are all spending this summer sitting around wooden oval tables all day developing a passion for learning while voicing our own opinions at the same time. Mr. Harkness might have made Exeter history, but what do summer school students here from all over the globe think about this new concept?

“It isn’t a good method in a way sometimes because it makes some of the shy students look very bad if they aren’t used to the new learning method,” said JiaHong Chen 14, from China. “They might not dare to speak out among people that are more confi dent in expressing their thoughts.”

Lara Tasan, 16, from Turkey found the process more familiar. “It’s ef-fective, but it’s hard,” she said, ”I’m not used to doing it, and in my country we have something like the Harkness Table or a seminar, but different. We ask the questions and the teachers answer them.”

Sara Fonseca, 17, of Chicago said the Harkness method worked better in some cases than others. “For math classes, a question would take up a lot of discussion time in our lessons, it is pretty time consuming,” she said, “But it does allow you to understand the different ways to solve a problem.”

Crystal Hou 13, from Iowa, found the process enriching. “The Harkness Table allows the students to offer more of our opinions while in a regular classroom, the students would just answer the teacher’s questions, almost no need to expand on ideas,” she said. “So when you go to a Harkness Table, you can discuss and have other people’s inputs to improve your learning experience.”

Taking research to the limit, this reporter conducted a random poll and here are the results: 86 percent of 35 Upper School students consider the Harkness Table effective.

Unwrapping Harkness

Rampant Lion Leaves its Mark

By BETTY CHENSummer Times Staff Writer

What do President Lincoln’s fi rst-born son, Robert Todd Lincolm, Dan Brown of “The Da Vinici Code,” Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, and “Simpsons” producer Greg Daniels have in common ?

They all graduated from Philips Exeter Academy, along with many other luminaries like Walter A. Brown, (original owner of the Boston Celtics), and Sam Fuld (major League outfi elder for the Chicago Cubs).

Keeping Exeter dear to their hearts, they have been infl uenced by the essence of this divine place in their work. John Irving, also a former graduate and a well-known author has based a majority of his books and short stories on Exeter.

It is said that Zuckenberg was infl uenced by Exeter’s “Photo Address Book”, which was referred to as “The Facebook” by students, to form the actual facebook net-working system that now captivates the whole world.

Some graduates have even gone out of their way to give funds to the school and have buildings constructed. Benjamin Price Davis, an early graduate of Exeter, funded the Davis Student Center. Merril Hall was given to the school by Abner Merill.

Jeremiah Smith Hall, Lamont Hall, Lamont Health Services, The Thompson Science Building, The Thomp-son Gym, and McConnell Hall are all buildings funded by former graduates. It is obvious that Exeter leaves a huge mark on the hearts of its graduates.

But not all buildings are named after graduates be-cause they funded the construction.

Notable Alums Give Back

Left: Phillips Exeter Academy’s seal; Right: The Rampant Lion

Courtesy of www.exeter.edu

It is seen in a notebook, in a shirt and even in a catalog, almost anywhere on cam-pus. Phillips Exeter Academy’s mascot is the Lion. A creature many students from across the world, and even some day students, may have wondered about. But what is the mean-ing of it?

Throughout Exeter’s long existence the origin of the symbol has remained obscure. It’s even unlear what it meant to the initiator of the academy. From the academy’s archives, however, it is obvious that the original slogan came from Nathaniel Hurd, a seal cutter and die-engraver who designed it for the acad-emy’s founder, John Phillips.

Although the reason(s) for choosing the lion may be vague, students have had their theories over the years. Konstantine Cheish-vili, 17, from Tbilisi, Georgia, said on July 7, “someone with knowledge and goodness holds the chain” of the lion.

Nathan Merrow, 17, a day student from Loudon, New Hampshire, said that not only did the lion represent “excellence in what they [staff and students] do,” but the color of the lion signifi ed “nobility.” Nobility was also the word chosen by Lizzie Weindling who said she saw in the symbol “someone who helps others.”

Answers differ. Jade Bath from Portland, Oregon said that it symbolized the “strength of the students’s mind.”

Answers changeda with the students. Nick Johnson, 17, of Exeter,, another day student at the academy, stated that the mean-ing just “goes back in time.”

After all these variations, the summer school director of Phillips Exeter Academy was asked the question as well. What does the slogan mean to Ethan Shapiro? In an interview he gave a straightforward answer—“cool.”

Much was said between the students and staff, but in the end, Phillips Exeter Acad-emy’s lion rampant may have one meaning to all—“a piece of me.”

By OSCAR SANTIAGOSummer Times Staff Writer

By LEYLA ATESSummer Times Staff Writer

Lamont Health and Wellness Center was built in 1923, thanks to the generosity of Thomas W. Lamont, who graduated in 1888.

Langdell Hall was named for Christopher C. Langdell, a former scholarship student at Exeter who drastically changed the way law was taught world-wide. His method was named “the case method” and is the core of Harvard Law School’s education system.

Cilley and Wentworth Halls were named for two notable Exeter graduates and profes-sors. Bradbury L. Cilley served as a Professor of Ancient Languages while George A. Wentworth taught Math.

Bancroft Hall was named for George Ban-croft, a historian, as well as the founder of the U.S Naval Academy.

Webster Hall got its name from Daniel Web-ster. He was one of the infl uential Whig leaders of the Second Party System as well as an early graduate of Exeter.

Exeter has been the home of many extraor-dinary people, which makes this place even more interesting than otherwise.

Top: Phillips Exeter Academy’s regular session students engage in a discussion around the Harkness table. Bottom left: A Latin class from 1947. Bottom right: A Latin class from 1965.

Photos courtesy of www.exeter.edu

Photos Courtesy of www.exeter.edu

Page 4: The Summer Times - July 15, 2010

The moody New Hampshire weather has really taken its toll on Summer School this year. Be it the ex-cessive heat in the dormitories from the blazing sun, the cancellation of long-awaited field day because of sudden rain, or the deadly threats of abrupt thunderstorms: the recent course of events has been way out of the control of Exeter’s administration and been a direct expression of Mother Nature’s temperamental mood.

In their first week, students experienced unprec-edented heat. First timers at Exeter, whether from the nation or overseas, had not been aware of New Hampshire’s unpredictable weather. Many blamed the absence of air conditioning in dorms on Exeter’s poor facilities, but frankly, this was a peculiar case new to the administration just like to all of you. Although reaching highs of 98° Fahrenheit last week, one year ago, tem-peratures failed to even pass low seventies. So te heat and humidity was a real shocker. Exeter could hardly have anticipated such weather and provided adequate air conditioning for everyone in time.

After a sweltering week of hot, sunny weather, things changed right before field day. A swing of Mother Nature’s mind, and less than an hour before the long-anticipated field day, intense rain broke out and drenched the campus. Caught in their dorm shirts and shorts, students quickly changed into warmer clothing. For many dorms this ruined a day to show spirit; the field day could not be rescheduled. Over the course of many years of summer school at Exeter, this was the first time this tradition had not been exercised. But again only Mother Nature was to blame for this sudden change of events.

The unpredictable weather expressed Mother Na-ture’s mind-changing persona, as the first weekend at Exeter was filled with occasional squalls, some that lasted no more than 5 minutes. How crazy was it? On a Sunday afternoon reserved for the finale of the World Cup, students and faculty were surprised to find it rain-ing under the blazing sun. Some called it a first while others just yearned for a rainbow, but nevertheless,

Mother Nature’s mind was clearly unreadable. Just as the sun broke through the rain and the cam-

pus began to dry, monstrous thunderstorms shattered a peaceful Monday. A severe weather advisory was in effect, and students were ordered to stay inside for more than an hour. For many, sports were cancelled, and there was nothing to do but listen to the ominous thunder bellowing throughout the campus and wonder when the next random thunderstorm would come.

OPINIONSTHE SUMMER TIMES4 THURSDAY, JULY 15, 2010

The Summer Times is written and edited by Mr. Blumenthal's A and B format Journalism classes. It is produced by Summer Times Proctors Yun Jee Kang '10 and Nari Savanorke-Joyce '11.

The Summer Times welcomes Letters to the Editor, which can be sent via email to [email protected]. The editors reserve the right to print Letters to the Editor in a timely fashion and to edit them for content and clarity.

EDITORIAL BOARD ISSUE 2

Ralph Blumenthal

“Hong Kong – that’s where I come from”, I told a random guy at the Elm Street Dining Hall that day, following the standard “name-hometown” procedure of introducing myself.

That random guy… well, he seemed intrigued, and asked “Oh… so you’re from Japan?”

Trust me. This scenario is not rare.

Some foreigners tend to think that Hong Kong is a part of Japan. Why? Because somewhere in the back of their mind, Hong Kong is synonymous with modernity and sophistication, but it’s so tiny that they can’t really locate it on the world map, so Japan is always the safe answer that they go for. After all, Japan is home to some of the greatest Asian metropolises.

Hong Kong is a city in South-East China, not Japan. True, it occupies an insignifi cant dot on the vast world map, a dot that shouldn’t have even been marked. Yet, the ever-changing sands of time have molded this isolated fi shing harbor into such a vibrant and charismatic island that it is nowadays claimed as the “Pearl of the Orient.”

Hong Kong’s hustle and bustle is one of a kind. It is a machine, perfectly oiled, working day and night without any frictions.

The roaring crowd, thickets of concrete, vast network of roads, swirls of black smoke from air-conditioners, scuttling of cars on the ground, and ships on the sea – these are all what Hong Kong is made of. The city is restless.

And when you view the shimmering skyline of Hong Kong from the peak, you would be amazed to realize that everything is orderly. Buses, MTR, trams – they arrive and leave at exact intervals. The skyscrapers that dot Victoria Harbor light on at 6 p.m., light off at 6 a.m., never a second later. No wonder Austin Cheung from Shanghai, a student of Access Exeter and previously a regular resident of Hong Kong, said, “Hong Kong is a small pearl with immense energy wound up tight within.”

Exeter is definitely a lot simpler. It is quiet and laid-back. Buildings are short and sparse. There are more areas of greenery for people to admire nature. The air is clean, and the sky is clear blue most of the time. Drivers present courtesy that would be considered “nuts” in urban Hong Kong – they actually wait for pedestrians to cross the road, patiently, without the use of horns or offensive language. “I feel easy in Exeter,” Nathan Merrow from N.H., a student of the Upper School, said. “The environment is comfortable for studying.”

But while it may seem that Exeter and Hong Kong are very different and diverse in style or appearance, they do have one thing in common. Both possess a rich colonial culture.

Hong Kong was once the

colony of the British Empire. It is the one and only place where Chinese and Western culturen blend perfectly. That’s why tourists are so keen to visit Hong Kong to experience “East-meets-West.”

Similarly, Exeter also radiates a dynamic colonial culture. “Exeter is located in New Hampshire, in New England,” Dan Walden, a history teacher at Summer School, said. “New England has been traditionally known as the place of settlement for Europeans in the past. Europeans had been living in Plymouth, Mass., ever since Columbus first discovered the American continents back in 1492. They were here to do trading. Later their influence spread all over New England. That’s why New England is called New England, right? There were 13 legitimate European colonies around this area in those days.”

According to Haley Wahl from N.H., a day student of Upper School: “There’s no place like New England. It is different from its southern neighbors. There’s a hint of European culture in the architectures of this region.” Walden also said, “New England is very sensitive to architecture. People here insist upon preserving historical buildings. Most of the buildings here are the legacy of Europeans.”

The style of the academy building is comparable to that of the Legislative Council Building in Hong Kong – both are colonial architectures. The pediments, arches, pillars, domes recall the neo-classical features the British liked to use.

Hong Kong and Exeter are

Culture Shock

THE SUMMER TIMES

Betty ChenAzor Cole

Mike DunbarDaniel HoffmanJose Maria Sosa

SUMMER TIMES STAFF REPORTERS

Leyla AtesLindesy Burgess

Teddy ChowLindsay DuddyAmani Loggins

There have been some odd occurrences at Phillips Exeter Acad-emy this summer but whether they prove that we are haunted is open to question, as an article in this issue of Summer Times makes clear. But what if there are ghosts here? Let’s err on the side of caution.

Whether it’s an annoying ghost or a horrifying ghost, assume they are always there. Ghosts are leading causes in sleep deprivation and are fueling insanity numbers off the charts. Something must be done to stop this madness.

We need all hands on deck to deal with this massive problem. First, purchase and watch “Ghostbusters” repeatedly until their methods are drilled into your head. Now, most would attempt to mimic the same routine that worked so well for our beloved Ghostbusters. Wrong.

Ghosts have been around the block their fair share of times and by now know how to avoid all of those classic methods. Instead, think outside the box and simply use the movie as inspiration to making your world a ghost-free world.

Some recommended methods include: ghost hypnosis, poison, or my personal favorite, trickery. Now, to trick a ghost can prove diffi cult. Ghosts come off as not easily trusting beings but their hard exterior can be cracked. There has been a professional team of ghost specialist for some time looking for a ghost’s secret weakness and just recently it was uncovered: the ear-piercing screech of a vuvuzela. Once exposed to the noise, any ghost will be at your mercy both physically and emotionally.

The next step is to, ironically, spook the ghost. Being in the sorry state that they are in, this can be achieved with the uttering of the single word that ghosts have been using to terrorize humans for as long as we have lived. “Boo!”

Upon hearing this word, the ghost will return to the underworld, never to be seen again. And that my friends, is how to get rid of a ghost.

Who You Gonna Call?

America is different. For me it is, anyway. I come from England, and I’ve had an interesting time adapt-ing to life here. The 4th of July, the day when America celebrates its independence from England, may not have been the greatest place to start!

However, I enjoyed the buzz of excitement that the holiday generated among the American students and teachers, and it was great to witness.

Some things I just have to get used to. Crisps are chips, chips are fries, and the date is the wrong way round! These things, whilst strange and new at first, I adjusted to within a few days. Of course, those first few days were confusing for everyone involved, I don’t think anyone understood me at first!

O t h e r t h i n g s t a k e slightly longer getting used to. Coming from a fairly densely packed suburb, I was surpr i sed a t how open and spacious Exeter, as well as Boston, were, compared with the densely packed, concrete jungle of

my hometown in England, Swanley.

I think the main reason for this is that America is a lot larger than England. Lots more room, means there’s plenty of land for towns to spread themselves over, whereas in England, real estate is a lot more valuable, especially in the city.

Food is a big part of my life. And over here, I’ve been introduced to won-derful new types of food. Believe it or not, before this Summer School, I had never eaten a waffle before. Now though, I can’t get enough of them! The dining hall’s constantly changing menu means that I am always trying new things, which is great.

Most of the buildings in and around the campus are very old and ornate looking, giving a sense of age to the place. Where I come from, it’s very different. I live in a fairly urban area, with lots of new, tall buildings, which give a totally differ-ent ‘vibe’. Exeter gives me a sense of wisdom and maj-esty, whereas my hometown just gives me that homely feeling that I’m sure you all know.

Accents are also a big part of Philips Exeter Acad-emy life. It’s great to hear the many tongues around the campus, and each pass-ing day people have taught me new words in their own

language. I’ve learnt greet-ings in Greek, and even soccer terminology in Ger-man!

There is a sense of com-munity among individual dormitories, as well as the school as a whole.

It’s not just the social aspects I’ve been adapt-ing to either. My courses required some adapting to as well.

Math in America uses completely different termi-nology than math in Eng-land. Had I not come here, I would have been absolutely thrown had anyone asked me a math question using American terminology. I’ve learnt some musical theory that a few weeks ago I would have thought was gibberish, and as you can see, I’m still learning about journalism!

Whilst Phillips Exeter Academy has thrown me out of my comfort zone, I am grateful for it. I have expe-rienced things that I would not have, had I not come here (waffles!). I’ve gained knowledge in subjects I wouldn’t have dreamed of trying before. I’ve made new friends who I’m sure I’ll stay in touch with. But most important, I have tried something new.

So go on, do yourself a favour. Try something new, from a new food, to a new country, you won’t regret it.

Mother Nature, Mama Mia!BETTY CHEN and DANIEL HOFFMAN

Summer Times Staff Writers

TEDDY CHOW, Summer Times Staff Writer CHARLES WRIGHT, Summer Times Staff Writer

Tho Tran/ The Summer Times

AZOR COLE, Summer Times Staff Writer

Tho

Tran

/ The

Sum

mer

Tim

es

FACULTY ADVISOR

Irmak SaritasTho Tran

Nazli TuncerCharles WrightMinako Yashiro

Madai MontesTanisha Raj

Raven SanchezOscar Santiago

Page 5: The Summer Times - July 15, 2010

On July 4, 2010 a wave of s tudents crashed over the quiet campus of Phillips Exeter Academy. Dazed and confused for the first hours, many students made it back to their dorms, settled in, and then went to sleep. That night however was much more complicated than that. According to the summer school office there are 47 different countries represented on campus this summer.

With Turkey tak ing the lead with 50 students and Venezuela coming in close behind with 27, the countries include: Australia, Austria, Bahrain, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Czech Republic, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, England, Ethiopia, France, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Mexico, Morocco, Nicaragua, Nigeria, China, Pakistan, Philippines, Poland, Republic of Kazakhstan, Republic of Korea, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Spain, Switzerland, Taiwan, Thailand, Turkey, Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, and Venezuela as well as 37 different states in America.

What made this one particular night complicated? The fact that the time zones in different areas of the world are way off compared to New Hampshire. California alone is three hours behind and that itself had an impact on how many fell asleep immediately because of jet lag, or how many felt it was not late enough to collapse yet.

A n o t h e r r e a s o n was that many different countries and cultures are nothing like Exeter, and the adjustment to such a small town was difficult to make in one day.

T h e r e f o r e h e r e a r e some phrases to reach out to someone you have never met before from a different country or region who is here for the same reason as you. Make him or her feel

welcome to this great school no matter what country you’re from. Challenge yourself to say “hi” to someone in: Greek (Yia), Arabic (As-Salam Alaykum), Turkey (Merhaba), Chinese (Ni hao), Japanese (Konnichiwa), French (Bonjour), Italian (Buon giorno), Hebrew (Shalom), Hindi (Namaste). Or tell someone from Turkey “I love you” by saying, “Seni seviyorum.”

Jump out of your comfort zone, take advantage of this opportunity given to you. Embrace the local lingo, meet new people, and learn new languages.

”“T h e r e f o r e h e r e a r e

some phrases to reach out to someone you have never met before from a different country or region who is here for the same reason as you. Make him or her feel welcome to this great school no matter what country you’re from.

DININGTHE SUMMER TIMES 5THURSDAY, JULY 15, 2010

Walking across the street, you’ll find our second favorite dining establishment, the Ioka Cafe. Built in 1915, this opera house-turned-movie theatre-turned-cafe is one of Exeter’s newest and best kept secrets. Walking under the old marquee into what was once the front lobby, you instantly step back in time. The old concession stand has been transformed into a 50’s soda fountain, complete with checkered floor tiles and round swivel seats lining the counter. The magic of the place is lost on no one, including the people behind the counter.

“It’s got a good vibe,” said employee Nick Bal-doumas, age 20, of Exeter, just before he brought me my free bite-size sample of the popular “Cow Tracks” flavor ice cream. “You walk in the doors with the music playing and you say, ‘Oh, I want to be here!’”

“I saw Titanic here when I was 7 years old,” Bal-doumas said. “It’s exactly the same. Look at that old

ticket booth.” He pointed to an old, ornately decorated nook in the wall near the door. “It’s still there. There’s a little cash-box under there from the 1910’s.” He couldn’t help but smile as he described it.

Locals pack the Ioka every day around 3 p.m., ordering warm pretzels, pizza, fried dough, ice cream, chicken nuggets and even hot dogs with topping choices, named after classic movie stars. The ice cream is trucked in from Rhode Island, making the Ioka the only establishment in New Hampshire to sell ice cream from Ice Cream Machine, chosen as the “Best New England Ice Cream Stand,” by VisitingNewEngland.com and described as “By far, the best, most flavorful homemade ice cream we’ve tasted in New England.”

When you visit, try their “Cow Tracks” flavor ice cream. It is made with Reese’s cups, chocolate swirls and chocolate chunks, churned in vanilla ice cream. All ice cream is $1.64-$4.63 depending on its size.

On Portsmouth Avenue, in the direction of CVS, we fi nd Margaritas Mexican Restaurant. Another New Hampshire-born chain, the fi rst Margaritas was opened in Concord, N. H. in 1985. On walking in one is greeted by two wood-carved Mariachi men. Mariachi music is playing, and every nook and corner is decorated with authentic Mexican folk art imported from Mexico. Before each meal you’re given salsa and chips.

I asked my waitress what dish is most popular with Ex-eter Regular Session students. She told me to try the Chicken

Baby Chimis ($7.99). I did, and it’s not a bad choice if you’re eating out with friends but don’t like spicy food. The Steak Burrito ($9.99) has much more fl avor, is much more substantial, and though it won’t set your mouth on fi re either, I still recommend it. For dessert, you have to try the Peanut Buttercup Pie ($5.75). At fi rst you’ll think it’s some sort of cake. Then, to your amazement, you’ll realize it’s literally a giant slice of Reese’s.

Nothing says dorm life in America like a box of pork fried rice. Penang is a conveniently located Asian restaurant directly across from the bandstand. The in-terior is open and lined with table clothed booths. Along the walls is an assortment of cultural art. If you plan on getting takeout for $10 or more, be sure to ask about their free delivery.

Penang and Tokyo serves Chinese, Malaysian and Japanese cuisine. James Mac-Donald, 64, of Hampton, N.H., said of his meal: “The pork fried rice was properly done

and very tasty. The chicken wings were a real treat, perfectly done as well [as having a] good taste.” With a smile he added, “And that Chinese mustard sauce will really clean out your sinuses!”

If you’re lost on what to order, and like sweet BBQ Chicken, try the General Tso’s Chicken ($10.95).

Walking into Me and Ollie’s, a relaxed yet stylish cafe on Water Street across from the bandstand, one instantly feels at home. If it’s too hot to eat out on the European-style patio, the air conditioned interior is a great place to recharge.

Walk in, look up at the chalkboard menu above the counter and choose from a variety of sandwiches, cof-fees, pastries, and fresh bread. Me and Ollie’s bread, voted “Best Bakery Bread” by NH Magazine from 2004-2006, is delivered daily from its Portsmouth bakery, just one town away.

Patrons include bearded 30-somethings on Mac-Books, seniors, young adults and even children.

Me and Ollie’s offers free wifi, which is just one reason why the cafe is a favorite among PEA’s regular session students.

Ollie’s takes pride in offering healthy, inexpensive breakfast and lunch options. If you’ve been wondering why there doesn’t seem to be a Starbuck’s around, it’s because Exeter already has its favorite hang-out spot.

When you visit, be sure to try their Turkey Havarti ($7.00). I had it, and was impressed.

During your time at Exeter, you might get homesick. You might get tired. One thing is for certain; you will get hungry. When you do, don’t head for the Dunkin’ Donuts down the street. Get a taste of New Hampshire. With that, use dining out in Exeter as a way to grow lasting friendships with the people you meet here. After all, as my Penang and Tokyo fortune cookie so eloquently put it, “Mutual assistance in despair will make the ugly situ-ation more fair.”

ME AND OLLIE’S, 64 WATER STREET

PENANG & TOKYO, 97 WATER STREET

IOKA CAFE, 55 WATER STREET

MARGARITAS MEXICAN RESTAURANT, 93 PORTSMOUTH AVE

Four Exeter Restaurants To Eat At Before Going HomeBy MIKE DUNBAR

Summer Times Staff Writer

Due to space limitations we are unable to review all of Exeter’s eating establishments. Here are some other nearby restaurants worth trying.

Loaf and Ladle, 9 Water St.11 Water Street, 11 Water St.Green Bean, 33 Water St. Szechuan Taste of Exeter, 42 Water St.

Pimentos Restaurant, 69 Water St.Exeter Inn, 90 Front St.Las Olas Taqueria, 30 Portsmouth Ave.Blue Moon Cafe, 8 Clifford St.

Mike Dunbar/The Summer TimesMike Dunbar/The Summer Times

Mike Dunbar/The Summer Times

Courtesy of Google

Courtesy of Google

Courtesy of The Exonian

Local Lingo: How Many Ways Can You Say Hello?

By MADAI MONTESSummer Times Staff Writer

Yia

Merhaba

Ni Hao

Shalom

Bonjour

NamasteAhoj

Hej

Tere

Ciao

Page 6: The Summer Times - July 15, 2010

SPOTLIGHTTHE SUMMER TIMES6 THURSDAY, JULY 15, 2010

Student Spotlight: Who Are We?By THO TRAN

Summer Times Staff Writer

There are 760 stories at Summer School. Here are a few of them:

Walking alone at night, nobody around, you hear a rustle in the bushes and the lights start to flicker. All of a sudden, your friend jumps out to scare you. But what was going through your head during those few moments? Was it all those scary stories about ghosts lurking around and the witches jumping out to turn you into stew and eat you?

Exeter is a historical town with 372 years of happenings. Maybe it’s just a quiet, small town. But maybe not.

From February 1692 to May 1693, the New England states started to have witch trials. The Salem Witch Trial involved the prosecution of people accused of practicing witchcraft. The trials started off with a small girl falling sick in 1692 in Salem Village. Her “fits”—convulsions, contortions, and outbursts of nonsense—baffled everyone. Other girls soon showed similar symptoms. Their doctor could suggest but one cause – witchcraft.

The Puritans, a group of Protestant church-men who dominated the Massachusetts Bay Colony, launched a series of inquisitions that took 25 innocent lives. Places like Hampton in New Hampshire and Andover in Massachusetts were pulled into the “witch trial frenzy”.

Historians came up with different explana-tions for the phenomenon. Some put the blame on local disputes and racial discrimination, while others blame religious extremism. But one thing is almost for certain: as close as Exeter was to those other places, somehow it escaped the menacing surge of church accusations. Witch trials in Exeter were unheard of. In fact, it is interesting that Exeter never got caught up in the witchcraft melodrama that gripped other parts of New England.

“Perhaps it was because Exeter no longer considered itself a Puritan theocracy by the late 1600’s” said Barbara Rimkunas, the curator of the Exeter Historical Society. “Although we were founded by religious dissenters from Massachu-setts, the town did not govern itself with the same religious fervor that took hold in Massachusetts Bay Colony. The town had become quite secular by that time period and was something of a wild lumbering town.”

But that doesn’t mean there are no ghosts here.

There have been some odd occurrences, stu-dents say -- things being moved and bumps and bangs and that gut feeling that someone is with you but when you look around you see no one.

I, Raven Sanchez, can testify to that. One day while checking out the basement to see where the washers and dryers were, upon opening the door to the basement. I heard a loud bang. It was the scariest thing. When I opened the door to the basement and went to the next room, no one had heard the bang.

This incident was so outrageous in fact that I believed there was no ghost, just pipes banging. When the whole dorm house went down to see where they can do laundry there were no bangs or bumps.

Rachel Perelli, 17, from Concord, New Hampshire had no idea what happened when she suddenly saw a soccer ball come out from a corner in her room. “I was on my bed and I saw you come in and get the soccer ball and go back out, and then you came back in and saw that the soccer ball was back in my room,” said Perelli.

Perelli was in her room both times when the soccer ball rolled in but didn’t notice when the soccer ball rolled in a second time. “It was weird. I didn’t see it.” Perelli stated.

Maybe I’m just a freaky, paranoid girl who happens to be around when something happens but one thing is for sure; no one touched the ball before it happened to roll into Perelli’s room a second time.

The floor boards aren’t perfectly straight and the pipes bang when they are being put to use. So it was most likely all just a hoax and no ghosts. The Exeter Historical Society maintains that there are no ghosts in Exeter (but two good ghosts in Stratham N.H.), and one witch caught in Hampton, which is as close to Exeter as the witch trials came.

The Salem Witch Trial and “ghostly” events pose the question of whether or not witches fled to Exeter to escape capture and unimaginable death, and whether or not the dead really just died and never came back to haunt the living that live in Exeter. So when you hear bushes rustling and see lights flicker, it’s probably just your friend about to pop out any second to try and scare you.

Probably.(Anyone interested in learning more can join

a school trip to the Salem Witch Museum next Wednesday, July 21, at 12:30.)

The Ghosts (?) of ExeterBy RAVEN SANCHEZ and TEDDY CHOW

Summer Times Staff Writers

It had been a seemingly ordi-nary day for Ernesto Aveledo—his parents were on vacation, leaving him at the house of his aunt and uncle. As any other day, his uncle was leaving for work when things turned ugly.

Four or five men entered the house through an automatically opening door. They were tall and muscular. As Aveledo recalls, the leader was fair-skinned with a towel covering his face, and the others were tanned, wearing dirty clothes and baseball caps, look-ing like housepainters—except for the pistols that each man was armed with.

The family was terrorized. Everyone, with the exception of Aveledo, was tied up while the gang stole every valuable in the house. It was not until there was nothing left to loot that the men finally left.

Since his experience about f ive years ago, Aveledo has learned to take precaut ions : “When you’re in the streets of Venezuela, you have to be very careful.”

“My motto is slow but steady,” he says, “For everything.”

Ernie Aveledo, 16, Venezuela

Sci-fi books and shows like “2001: A Space Odyssey” warn of mankind’s over-dependency on tech-nology, and the possibility of that technology coming back to harm us. Ogul Uner knows first-hand just how true this prophecy can be.

When he was nine years old, Uner was staying in London with his family at an eight-story high hotel. At the time, he was attending a British summer school oriented toward sports.

At about one o’clock one night while everyone was sleeping, the fire alarm went off. He and his fam-ily rushed out of the ground floor in pajamas, confused about what was happening. It turned out that a man on the fourth floor had fallen asleep with his toaster oven on, causing a blaze. Luckily the fire department was able to put out the fire, and there were no casualties from the accident.

He jokes, “I learned not to use the toast machine [at night].” But more seriously, Uner has formed a strong opinion on the great debate over the pros and cons of technology. “Technology can be both good and bad,” he says, “It’s a paradox.”

Ogul Uner, 15, Turkey

Who knew that an evening bike ride could take a deadly turn? For seven-year-old Nina Sanchez, her routine outing with her mother ten years ago nearly jeopardized her life.

Young Nina was riding with her mother. At a crosswalk, she sped ahead and forgot to press for the walk signal. That was when a car came at her at 40 miles per hour. The wheels of the car collided with the wheels of her bike, and she slid under the vehicle.

“All I can remember is that everything was pitch black, and then suddenly I was awake and I could see my mom running to-ward me in the distance, crying hysterically,” Sanchez said.

She described it as “kind of a freak accident.” Luckily, she was left only with road rash, sus-taining no broken bones. Now, Sanchez is more careful crossing streets, and has used her experi-ence to caution others.

Nina Sanchez, 17, Florida

While it might sound clichéd to say that everything can change in the blink of an eye, for Katie Mouffett the statement could not be more telling.

Mouffett was riding on the pas-senger side of a golf cart at age three when the cart suddenly fl ipped over and threw her into a thorn bush.

“One of the thorns went right into my eye,” she recalls, “right into my pupil.”

She was rushed to the hospital where doctors wanted to extract her eye and replace it with a fake one. However, one doctor suggested sur-gery so she could keep her eye, though she would still not be able to see any-thing out of it, save for the occasional bright lights.

Since the accident, Mouffett has been able to adapt; she never even thinks about how “weird” or “cumber-some” her condition is. She lives like any other person, not letting it hamper her ability to play sports, do school work, or enjoy life. Mouffett says, “I feel a stronger woman because I’m unique.” If you look closely, her left and right eyes are different colors. She has taken what others would fi nd a hindrance, and made it something that sets her apart.

Kati e Mouff ett ,15, Arizona

Youssef Abdat lives in a country where, as he describes it, “everything has two sides, the open and the close-minded.” He lives in a country where clubs and discos are not allowed, a country where there are only private parties, and where the people, “don’t have the right to say everything they want to.”

But in that environment, he has still found a way to not only do something that he enjoys, but also to send a message to his country, and to the world, as a DJ.

More than just a teenager trying to express himself, Abdat is an activist.

“I’m just trying to send a message to make my country more open-minded,” he says. Abdat emphasizes that, “We’re just normal people, just like you, trying to live our lives.” He wants to improve the conditions and culture of his people, and change the negative opinions of Saudi Arabia by making a statement through his work with music.

He believes that since he is one of the few people who have the ability in Saudi Arabia to make a difference, to bring about change, he should go for it. His parents encourage him to advocate for his ideas, and he believes that others should do their part as well, wherever they are, for their countries, and for the world.

Youssef Abdat, 17, Saudi Arabia

Ogul Uner, a student from Turkey, learned about the pros and cons of technology on a vacation to London.

Tho Tran/The Summer Times

Though partially blinded in an ac-cident, Katie Mouffett has embraced her situation with a positive attitude.

Oscar Santiago/The Summer Times

In Saudi Arabia, where freedom is limited, Youssef Abdat tries to make his country a better place.

Tho Tran/The Summer Times

After experiencing a robbery in Venezuala, Ernie Aveledo now takes precautions at home.

Tho Tran/The Summer Times

Nina Sanchez, a student from Florida, survived a car accident when she was seven years old.

Tho Tran/The Summer Times

Left: The Salem Witch Museum in Massachusetts where students can visit to learn about the witch trials. Right: The Exeter Historical Society in Exeter, NH

Courtesy of www.google.com Photographer/The Exonian

Page 7: The Summer Times - July 15, 2010

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SPORTSTHE SUMMER TIMES 7THURSDAY, JULY 15, 2010

Storm Dampens

Field Day Spirit

Weeks before the Exeter Summer School program even began, some Upper School students had already chosen to participate in an “intensive athletic experience.” This “spe-cial” program, according to the 2010 catalog, was limited to only 60 students, and spanned the entire five-week session. This physically demanding and traditional sport is known as crew.

The crew program offered at Exeter appealed to students who were both experienced and novices at the sport. Rex Johnson, a rising junior, has “been rowing since [his] fresh-man fall.” He is at a very competitive level, as he won the NEIRA Championship, a competition for high school-level rowers, by four tenths of a second.

“I was anticipating a crew program with a multitude of experienced rowers from different backgrounds,” said Johnson when explaining why he chose to participate in the program. “However, I found it was mostly beginners.”

This is yet one of the flaws of the program for an experi-enced rower like Johnson, who trains six days a week during

the year. “I row in a wooden single that was built in 1943, which is kind of a bad thing,” he said.

But this does not stop the crew program from being beneficial. In addition to supplementing his training at the gym each day, Johnson said, “The coaches are good, they come from a wide background of collegiate and high school rowing.”

More beginner rowers, like rising junior Bob Owlett, are thrilled with the opportunity to work hard in a new sport. “I didn’t have any experience, but I wanted so see if it would be fun,” he said.

For Owlett, who runs cross country and track year round, the crew program succeeds at complementing his running training. “It is a really good workout in addition to my morn-ing run, so I feel like I am staying in great shape,” he said.

Although the crew program is “more technically based, not conditioning based” which may be negative for experi-enced rowers, it’s a way for people of all skill levels in the sport to train together and enjoy the “nice, curvy, river” ac-cording to Johnson.

Owlett agreed. “It’s a great program, and I’m glad I will be able to do it all five weeks,” he said.

By DANIEL HOFFMAN Summer Times Staff Writer

Courtesy of www.exeter.edu

Phillips Exeter Academy’s Girls’ Varisty Crew race during their spring season. Summer Session’s crew program will run for fi ve weeks, offering an opportunity for students to learn about this traditional and challenging sport.

The world’s eyes have been glued on South Africa this summer for one reason: The World Cup. And Phillips Exeter Academy is no different. Semi-finals and the third place playoff have been shown in the Agora and Forum in the Phelps Academy Centre, and the final was shown on a large screen on the field outside the Elm Street dining hall. And so, The World Cup has reached it’s highest point, the point that it has been building to from June 11th, and the winner has been decided.

However, those who did not make the final still had one last game to play. The third place playoff is a chance for teams to regain some honour, and establish their place as one of the top soccer sides in the world. Uruguay and Germany both felt

they had something to prove. Germany wished to show their young side could compete at the highest level of soccer, and Uruguay wanted to prove that their place in the semi-finals was no accident.

Germany eventually came out vic-torious, scraping through an exciting game with a 3-2 win. Uruguay’s Diego Forlan had a last minute chance to level the scores, forcing extra time to play. His shot went just off the mark, hitting the post of the goal and securing victory for Germany.

After the game, students were keen to share their views. American student Maxwell Black, 14, said “I thought it was a great game; beautiful playing by Germany’. Theo Goetemann, 16, from Mass., said “I was very happy that Ger-many won, they really deserved it.” The game excited German students, as well as students from other countries.

However, the focus was on Sunday’s

game, the FIFA World Cup Final between Spain and Netherlands. A tense, physi-cal game led to a stalemate after ninety minutes, with the score level at 0-0. Extra time followed, with Spain launching at-tack after attack at Netherland’s defense. Just when it looked as though the game was destined for penalties, Iniesta ran riot through the Holland defense, giving Spain the winning goal.

At Exeter, Spainish students began to celebrate. We spoke to Eduardo Teran, 15, who said “It was a tremendous game at the end”. When asked how he felt, he replied “electrified”. We also spoke to some students not from Spain. Josh Spector, 17, from NO., said “I’m pleased Spain won, they played the best football. Holland played well too though.”

So, the World Cup has reached its final conclusion, with Spain as the cham-pions, Holland as the runners up, and Germany in third place.

By CHARLIE WRIGHTSummer Times Staff Writer

World Cup Frenzy Ends Well for Spain

Spain celebrates its victory after winning the World Cup in South Africa.

“We know how to make something ugly, beautiful!”Lisa Frenzel, a dorm advisor for Langdell Hall, and a Dean

of Fun, thinks that her dorm has the most spirit.Others might disagree but Exeter with its perfect mix of

cultures, languages and personalities was looking forward to the fi eld day event that takes place on the fi rst weekend of summer school. Everyone was decorating outfi ts and rehearsing cheers. But this enthusiasm was washed away by the rain that fell on Saturday afternoon.

Beth Reidy, age 15 from Connecticut and a student in Langdell Hall was downcast. “My roommate and I were walk-ing out our room when someone told us fi eld day was cancelled,” she complained. “We were so excited to show off our outfi ts!”

The rain pelted down as students struggled to fi ll unex-pected free time. “It could have been postponed instead of cancelled because a lot of kids were excited about it and were ready to show dorm spirit,” said Abbey Schlangen, age 15 from Raymond, N.H., also a student in Langdell. In previous summers, fi eld day was important to bring the spirit of Phillips Exeter Academy together.

Within dorms, faculty advisors try their best to bring stu-dents together and excite them with pride for their dorm. Katie Van Wert, the dorm head for Cilley Hall, said, “I think our dorm has a natural silliness that takes over when we’re all together.”

Several advisors plan dorm trips to motivate their students. “I’m planning to organize a blueberry picking trip for Cilley Hall, we’re going to make blueberry pies and stuff our faces with them at the next meeting,” Van Wert said.

Another factor that increases spirit is the variety of cultures that occupy the dorms., “It’s insanely diverse here, especially coming from Connecticut where there is no diversity,” Reidy said. “My room-mate is from Hong Kong!” Schlangen agreed and added that she likes how everyone is really friendly in Exeter.

Several students felt that the day was wasted. Van Wert also commented on the lazy atmosphere in the dorm that night, “I think everyone’s a little tired ‘cause it’s the end of the week.”

As the weather improved on Sunday and the World Cup brought back spirit, smiles lighted up Exeter. “We have a lot of spirit,” said Andrea Rodriguez, of Hoyt Hall, “Yesterday we sang and danced songs from Glee like crazy people, it was so fun!”

By TANISHA RAJSummer Times Staff Writer

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Photos Courtesy of www.google.com

Courtesy of www.google.com

Summer Crew Program: On the Nice, Curvy River

Page 8: The Summer Times - July 15, 2010

PHOTOSPREADTHE SUMMER TIMES 8THURSDAY, JULY 15, 2010

Smiles From Around the World - Summer School Edition

1.

Compiled by MADAI MONTESSummer Times Staff Writer

Ernesto Abeledo, Venezuela2.

Judith Kruse, Germany

7.Aisha Khan, Washington

8.Nahivy Avzate, California

3.Ogul Uner, Turkey

4.Funglun Chan, Shanghai

12.Natasha Cessant, New York

10.Andrea Maldonado, Puerto Rico

5.Richard Oshadin, Nigeria

6.Sophia Alguilera, Spain

9.Mohammad Al-Jishi, Saudi Arabia

11.Martin Arredondo, Illinois


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