Thursday, July 23, 2020

Friends, Carafes, and the Infinite Corridor

Friends, Carafes, and the Infinite Corridor (Note: to everyone who has emailed or commented with questions, I got your messages! I will reply in detail soon. Thanks!) This has been a busy week. Yeah, there were p-sets, but there were also crazy kitties. It rained for the majority of the week and everyone generally stayed indoors ah, New England weather. More time to do homework? Something like that. While I rested most of the weekend, Sunday proved interesting. Join me for brunch, electronics, and numerous hijinks involving Tetazoa and long hallways. ;-) After an aborted hall photo that saw us walking all the way to the Z Center with nothing to show for it, I headed up Mass Ave to Sidney Street, the location of the ubiquitous Star Market and the [emailprotected]. Gregs mom, Diane, was staying there for Family Weekend and had some extra brunch vouchers. I dined with her, Greg, and Christina. (Its about a fifteen minute walk from East Campus.) The food was pretty good! I had my first omelette since coming to MIT, so that was very nice. We then moseyed over to the Swapfest at Albany and Vassar Streets. Several times per year, a swap meet-style event takes place where you can get all kinds of obscure electronics and computer equipment for really low prices. They borrow a parking lot and some other nearby space, and set up shop around the liftgates of pickup trucks and sport-utes. I got an older machine suitable for a server, with delivery to my dorm, for a mere $10! You have entered the Dollar Zone! ! ! Oh, mercy! Who could this possibly be? Never will I know with that MASK aka turtleneck. And yes, only at MIT can you walk past Building 32 (yeah, fine, the Stata Center) on a daily basis. ;-) Back at East Campus, Greg basks in the ambient light of his new $3 construction lamp, acquired at the Swapfest. Alas, basking blondes are no match for pillows in flight. Back on Tetazoo, I met up with a certain Tim. You see, this fellow has a passion for playing instruments, particularly copper pipes from unknown construction sites. He has seven distinct notes that he plays, and hes got this ridiculously low voice to go along with them. Tim wanted to demonstrate his musical prowess to a wide audience, so I donned my corridor gear and gathered Ben and Hannah for a little excursion through MITs internal highways and byways. Ingredients: modified dorm room chair outfitted with Rollerblade wheels, copper pipe, coffee carafe, and a camera. ;-) The carafe acted as a prop to distract onlookers. (Thanks to Hannah for the photos.) Its important to keep in mind the loud harmony of Tims pipe as accompaniment to the chair-rolling and general carafe mayhem. We reached the top floor overlooking Lobby 7, at 77 Mass Ave MITs front entrance. Tims piping ability resonates quite soundly through the lobby. Confused tourists and pedestrians were pondering the lobbys new orchestral feature for several minutes. (Sound Recordings One, Two) Thats Tim lurking behind a pillar. Heres Greg again he sauntered in to enjoy the tunes with us, and brought his hallmate from Fifth East, David Sheets. We got Tim down from the top level for some wet-floor chair rolling and pipe playing, along the slick surface of Lobby 7. Thats Ben commanding the ship from behind. With my and Bens assistance, Tim plays his way down the Infinite, attracting quite the looks from passers-by. Here, Tim serenades Lobby 10 demonstrators as he passes. Theres Dean Redwines office This staircase leads to the basement and provides an interesting acoustic environment. Ben such a showoff. ;-) Yes, the Infinite is quite long. Tims still going! Ah, the Ellen Swallow Richards Lobby, near the Math Department. Tims horn works wonders. We ventured out onto Killian Court (in front of Building 10) for some outdoor pipe playing. Tim and his horn they make a majestic duo. Ben observes from a distance, atop a statue. I look ridiculous! But thats the whole point. Tim found a new perch. Understandably, all of this fanfare on Killian Court attracted some attention. Several tourists and visitors made their way over to investigate and marvel at our ingenuity. They took several pictures to bring back for the family albums. This man remarked that Tims pipe utterance strongly resembled that of an Alpine horn. We investigated the acoustic properties of another statue on the Court, but first had to establish the location of a prop. He is ecstatic! Apparently the statue was cold and it felt interesting on his back. The carafe was empty. Back indoors, we explored a hallway in Building 14 near the Hayden Library. Yet another person stopped to gaze. Much later, Tim and Hannah located more pipes and tubes through which to emit musical melodies. And then I went to bed! :-) Back soon.