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With stellar performances in academics, athletics,
administration and residential life, retiree Meredith Price leaves
Phillips Academy several pairs of shoes to fill.
I probably shouldnt be saying anything, since Im about
to retire, but I care deeply about the school so Ill speak
out anyway.
Anyone who has attended a recent faculty meeting has heard this
disclaimer from the mouth of Meredith Price, who concludes his 39-year
career on the Phillips Academy faculty this June. He does care and
he does speak out, for few have been involved in the life of Phillips
Academy to the extent he has. Much is made of the notion of triple
threat. With nearly four decades of significant contributions
to the academic, athletic, residential and administrative life of
the school, Meredith has been a quadruple threat.
Born in St. Augustine, Fla., Meredith spent his childhood in Washington,
D.C. Following graduation from St. Albans School in that city,
he attended Amherst College, whence he graduated cum laude in 1954.
Upon graduation, he began a long association with the U.S. Air Force.
Active service as a first lieutenant took him from Florida to Morocco
to Turkey during the height of the Cold War. Subsequent reserve
duty from 19561976 saw him rise to the rank of major. Even
today he is a familiar uniformed figure at Veterans Day and
Memorial Day services. Fortunately for Andover, a job at General
Electric didnt retain its initial appeal, and in 1958 Meredith
accepted a teaching position at the Landon School in Bethesda, Md.
Two years later he embarked on graduate study at Harvard University.
In 1961 he received the master of arts in teaching degree. Finding
Harvards School of Education an exciting environment under
new Dean Theodore Sizer, who later became headmaster of Phillips
Academy, Meredith stayed on as an administrative assistant. In 1963
he came to Andover and has been an English teacher at PA ever since.
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With
students,
Meredith was never
afraid to offer
advice, yet he could
also listen. He knew
how to be firm yet
compassionate.
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I came
to know Meredith well when we were both house counselors in Adams
Hall. He presided in Adams North from 19651971. During our
three-year overlap, we were part of a changing era: The cluster
system had its first experimental phase in Adams, Taylor and Johnson;
there was talk of coeducation; there was discussion with students
about social and political issues but not yet dissent. Coats, ties
and chapel requirements were in decline. Sharing this exciting time
with Meredith, his wife, Nancy, and two children, Douglas 81
and Amy 83, was a happy experience for me. With students,
Meredith was never afraid to offer advice, yet he could also listen.
He knew how to be firm yet compassionate. He completed 18 years
of dormitory service in 1981 in Stearns West.
From the outset, Meredith showed an inclination and talent for administration.
Summers at Carleton and Dartmouth colleges with ABC (A Better Chance),
a program that gives talented minority students scholarship opportunities
to attend top-notch schools, led to a position as director of the
Phillips Academy Summer Session during the racially turbulent time
of 197475. A champion of increased minority presence at Andover,
he became associate dean of admissions and for 12 years played a
significant role in bringing to PA students with names like Torrance
and Nicole, or Nikki, names that now grace the award walls of George
Washington Hall.
From 19881993, Meredith was editor of the Andover Bulletin.
The issue he took greatest pride in included a group of articles
on AIDS featuring former colleague and poet Paul Monette 63
and former Adams Hall resident Dr. Charles Vander Horst 71.
Merediths many other assignments included chairing the Faculty
Benefits Committee. It was during his watch that the trustees established
a low-interest mortgage plan that helps faculty purchase real estate
in order to build equity.
Ive heard that Mr. Price is a great teacher is
an exclamation countless advisees have passed on to me in the hope
they might be so lucky as to be placed in one of his sections. Forsaking
a teaching load dominated by senior electives, he preferred to concentrate
on lower-level courses. Teaching proper use of the English language,
asking penetrating questions about writing and literature, and inspiring
younger students were his passions. One student, Mary Ziegler 00,
named him a Presidential Teacherthe educator who
had most influenced heron the occasion of her selection by
the U.S. Presidential Scholars Program. In addition, he was named
to Whos Who Among American Teachers in 2000. National recognition
also came in the form of almost 10 years on the College Board Test
Development Committee for the English Composition Achievement Test.
Ever since a childhood of rooting for the Washington Redskins, whom
he still reveres as an adult, Meredith is an ardent spectator, coach
and participant in athletics. At PA he was first assistant varsity
soccer coach under Frank DiClemente, then head coach from 19751986.
He was also a lacrosse coach his entire career until hip-replacement
surgery forced him to stop two years ago.
Meredith will continue to be a spectator fixture at athletics events,
for he has decided to spend his retirement in Andover. Hip and shoulder
surgery have slowed him down a bit, but it is certain his retirement
will include summers at his cottage on Kezar Lake in Maine, singing
basso profundo for the New England Classical Singers and playing
a very competitive game of tennis, marked by a nasty left-handed
twist serve.
Hale
Sturges has taught French at Andover for 37 years. |
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