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Serve This! Tennis Enthusiasts Have Their Stage

On those cherished days when the sun shines and the ground is dry, students can hope to find some court time at one of the school's outdoor hard courts.

At the Berren Tennis Center, hidden behind a wall of trees near the outdoor track, eight courts are available for undergraduate use on a walk-on basis. Unfortunately, the Beren Tennis Center is also the home of the men's and women's tennis squads who have first priority to the courts.

There are only two sure ways around this handicap: play on a Sunday, or memorize the variable practice schedules of the two teams.

Those fortunate enough to live in the Quad can benefit from, among various amenities, the use of the QRAC's three outdoor courts.

Two of these courts are located on the roof of the athletic center, and the surfaces are less than ideal.

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The third court is located across the parking lot and caters to those who don't mind playing with scorns and leaves underfoot.

Students may reserve these courts in person or by phone for one-hour slots.

"If you want courts, you should reserve them," QRAC desk attendant Edna Powers advised. "If you've reserved courts, you can ask people who don't have courts to leave."

There is another court in this complex, but it belongs to the Harvard Center for Astrophysics and, though open to the public, cannot be reserved.

When the weather does turn to the cold, wet norm of the Harvard school year, tennis die-hards can find refuge on the school's eight indoor courts.

Three of these courts, located at the Palmer Dixon Tennis Center, are open from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. Monday to Friday and 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. on the weekends. As with the Beren outdoor courts, these courts are reserved for the varsity tennis teams, and scheduling around their practice times is the only way to get a court.

Some of these courts are also contracted out in the evenings, at rates few students should even consider paying.

The Gordon Indoor Track and Tennis Center provides another alternative for indoor tennis. This sports complex offers three doubles courts and two singles courts with Decoturf II surfaces.

The ITT is open is open for tennis from 6:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. and from 6:30 p.m. until 10:30 p.m. on weekdays (until 9:30 p.m. on Thursdays and Fridays) and from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. on weekends.

Here too, however, use of the indoor facility by varsity and junior varsity teams of all sports (track, baseball, football) takes precedence over recreational tennis, and calling ahead to check the availability of courts is advised.

Two courts at the ITT are left open for walk-one while the other three can be reserved for ten dollars per singles court, per hour.

For Quadlings, though, the walk across the river frustrates many tennis dreams. No courts are available in the Radcliffe part of town.

"Going across the river is too much of a hassle," Criqui said.

"Last year we took up squash, though," Bloom added. "Those courts are always available at the QRAC in the winter."

True, but can a sport named after a vegetable really take the place of tennis? To most serve-and-volley enthusiasts, probably not.

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