Friday, August 21, 2020

I like to break a mental sweat, too.

I like to break a mental sweat, too. If you commented any questions in the past few weeks or so, Im going to go through and answer them all tonight unless they were so inspiring that I got the inclination to write a whole entry on them. So, if youve posed any queries recently that have gone unanswered, check back and see if I responded. Cant repeat the past? Why, of course you can! Later tonight, this will be an entry about IM Sports Conner 2 has got a dodgeball match tonight and afterward were having a post-dodgeball fondue study break. Well, this is nothing if not bloggable. But, anyway, first I had to comment on Schrock, even though I was already scooped in reporting this news by both Matt and Bryan. By my count, this is the third time this year Ive failed to meet an almost-famous person, and to be honest, Im becoming quite discouraged now. First I was too late to get tickets for Bruce Campbell, and then nobody told me about super-hot Phil Keoghan doing a book signing ten minutes away at the Cambridgeside Galleria. Now Professor Schrock has to go and win the Nobel Prize right after he takes a semester off from teaching 5.03: Principles of Inorganic Chemistry. True, the visiting professor from UC Irvine who taught the class last term was not bad at all, but I still havent achieved my MIT goal of taking a class with a past or future Nobel Laureate. Well, it actually might have been a little imposing to have Schrock as a professor, since about two whole lectures of 5.03 are devoted Schrock catalysis, Schrock groups, Schrock metathesis, Schrock-type carbene complexes, and so on I wonder how youd actually go about teaching something thats been named after yourself? And now three, two, one, dodgeball! MIT has something like twenty-one intramural sports and it just so happens that Im terrible at all of them. Well, Im not bad at Darris-style ultimate frisbee (tm Kevin Miu 06), but thats another story for another day. There are over two thousand teams playing these intramural sports, often representing a club (ACF), department of graduate school (DNSE), fraternity (ABP), or, in our case, a living group (Conner 2!). Now, Ive played three intramural sports in my three years at MIT. The first two were just because they couldnt find enough people to make quorum and the team gets find if you fail to field a team. Well, you cant ever waste money, ever, especially when it could be used to buy free food for the floor, so I was kind of committed. The first time I drowned was doubles tennis. I didnt really know how to serve or anything, and my hand-eye coordination leaves quite a bit to be desired, and all I really know about the rules of tennis is that you have a lot of Eastern European women who go wa-PEE! when they hit the ball, but luckily I was paired with Shannon Dongs Dong 05. Through her childhood tennis lessons and my relentless cries of wa-PEE!, we were able to fight our way to a very non-embarrassing loss. The second time was ice hockey. I borrowed a girls skates, and thats just not a good way to start a game. Now, intramural sports have different leagues, and you put yourself into whatever one you feel most comfortable based on the skill level of your team so you get the fairest competition possible. So, Class A ice hockey might require that you be able to control the puck really well, Class B maybe just that you pass it between your team members, Class C that you be able to shoot on the goal. Well, our floor does Class D ice hockey. The only requirement for that is does not skate well. Sometimes its as fun to watch as it is to play. Still, we brought in a bunch of ringers for other floors and let them destroy the other team for us, which is also common practice. That technique, while perhaps a little dishonest, did lead to this most interesting of conversations. Ringer: What do you usually play? Offense or defense? Me: Uh, this is my second time ever ice skating in my life. Dodgeball is most assuredly my best IM sport experience; Ive actually scored points and won games. Im not so good at the throwing thing, but I saw the movie four times in its first run, so I figure Ive already got a little advantage over the other teams. The basic principle is that balls are thrown by six player teams, and dodging said balls results in victory. Get hit with a ball and you are out. Catch the opposing teams ball and they are out, and one of your own team members is additionally resurrected. Its all well-documented here. Also, see those official tournament balls? Weve got those at MIT. Oh, yeah. The greatest moment in IM Dodgeball history came last term, when Amanda 08, a tiny distance runner who weighs all of 96 pounds or something, came face to face against five hairy, sweaty guys with one of MITs hairiest, sweatiest fraternities. Now, there was a rule in place at the time that a cone would be placed in the center of each teams playing area, and knocking over said cone would result in instant victorykind of like the snitch in Harry Potter, I guess. Anyway, the five hairy and sweaty guys leered and dripped at Amanda with their five balls between them and Amanda gracefully tossed the ball into the air, underhand, and watched as it came down in a perfect parabola on their cone. Rock. Anyway, we went 0 for 4 in our games yesterday, with two heart-breaking losses and two complete blowouts. But I caught a ball once. And MIT goes on.

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