ScavHunt211
VoidEngineer writes "Well, it's that time of the year again... the World's Largest Scavenger Hunt has begun again. (This is the same annual Scavenger Hunt where the students built the breeder reactor, for item #240, back in 1999...) Anyhow, you can find the list here. This year, the competition is between 9 teams and there are 307 items. Nerdy items include, but are not limited to: #2 From the fetid swamps of Lotan to the teeming forests of Jojojop, Endor is an ancient, mysterious, beautiful land, deserving to be rendered as a full-color map fit for National Geographic, circa TA 3019; [51 points] #46 Mobius stripper. Must be non-orientable. Must not emphasize the one-dimensionality of the stripper's personality. [28 points]. #98 A piece of the Space Shuttle Columbia with NASA verification [155 points] #101 A hologram of an entire team member. [50 points]
#136 Explain string theory using only sock puppets. The Judge must understand. [19 points]"
I remember summer camp scavenger hunts -- we'd just have to look for trash on the last day of camp.
first post
Eric... You suck...
they can hunt for that nigger's body I threw in the creek.
goatse.
Here.
Am I the only one who thinks offering up a piece of the Columbia for a scavenger hunt inappropriate?
A piece of Columbia for a scav hunt is not Nerdy its a desecration.
"It's so convenient to have a system where everyone is a criminal" - A. Hitler
I think some people should take a serious look at this article about Apollo 8. Just a quick introduction first. Don't forget that there has been scientific evidence that God actually caused time to stop for a period, as mentioned in the Bible. In addition, prophecies from the Bible have and continue to come true.
Orbiting the moon on Christmas Eve of 1968, the astronauts of Apollo 8, the first manned flight around the moon, gave a surprising Christmas message to the people of the earth.
As the telecast neared its end, Colonel Borman said, "Apollo 8 has a message for you." With that, Major Anders began reading the opening verses from the Book of Genesis about the creation of the earth.
"In the beginning," Major Anders read, "God created the leaven and the earth. And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the waters."
Captain Lovell then read, "And God called the light day, and the darkness He called night."
Colonel Borman closed the reading with "And God called the dry land Earth: and the gathering together of the water called he Seas: and God saw that it was good." (Based on Genesis 1:1-10).
The astronauts showed their belief in God, the Creator (Maker), who made the world according to the Scriptures despite the general and widely accepted view, the idea of evolution.
And more than that the 1960's were the time of low interest in spiritual matters-the era of "God is dead." Getting impressed by what the astronauts had seen in space, the moon to which they were traveling was described as "vast, lonely, and forbidding sight...not very inviting place to live or work." However, in contrast, at every turn of the orbit of the moon, Apollo 8 crewmen welcomed the beautiful view of their home, the earth, which was about 230,000 miles in distance.
Like a tired and lost traveler in a hostile environment of desert, Lovell saw the earth as a "grand oasis in big vastness of space."
Through this experience, they admitted that God is the only answer to the questions of the beginnings and the existence of every living and non-living matter in the universe such as stars, sun, moon, earth, and life upon the earth.
The Christmas message from Apollo 8 not only brought hope and good will to all mankind on earth but it also may have caused a great blow to the very foundation of the idea of evolution.
Probably many people, especially those who were Christians who were having problems in deciding whether the Bible and its account of Creation were true or false were encouraged to hear this hopeful message that strengthened their faith in God and His Book.
I remember very well when I was in college as I was struggling to accept the creationism or not, this message touched my heart that God is the Creator (Maker) of all living things. The 1960's were the time when the general church attendance decreased and the doctrine of Creation was mostly left out of public schools curricula across the nation. Most scientists felt that the Biblical account of Creation was unscientific and untrue. The theory of evolution had its "heyday."
One great British anthropologist I met when I was in high school, L. S. B. Leakey, made exciting news to this scientific world about his "very exciting" discovery of what he then called "our earliest man" -- the supposed "missing link" between the modern man and his ancestor, the ape-like creature. Its discovery "proved" the idea of evolution which is the opposite of the Biblical account of Creation of man -- "God created man in His own image, in the image of God created He him." Genesis 1:27.
Furthermore, many geologists continued attacking the idea that God made the heavens and the earth in six days because their studies showed that the evidences and findings in the earth conflicted with the Biblical view.
Generally, the geologists believed that the earth and its living things evolved through millions of years, not through creation in six days.
Since the Christmas m
NASA has said that any one who is in poession of said parts will be liable for criminal conduct.
I remember back in the day, we'd bug the neighbors for different things, beer, wine, cigerettes, and ya know what? They actually gave it to us because they saw it on the list!
Item #94: Dead nigger in river
...wtf?
...#98 A piece of the Space Shuttle Columbia with NASA verification [155 points]...
Does anybody else think that this is in bad taste? Why not ask for shrapnel removed from a Iraqi bombing victim or one of the envelopes that anthrax spores were mailed in last year.
I appreciate that NASA may have given away or auctioned off parts of Columbia prior to the recent disaster but, legitimately acquired or not, why ask for a piece of that particular shuttle? Why not a piece of Atlantis, Discovery, Endeavour or even Enterprise?
I'm sorry but, even though I enjoy a good scavenger hunt as much as the next man, I can't see how anyone could possibly enjoy the 155 points they could get from a Columbia debris fragment. (And, clearly, getting hold of a debris fragment is the target goal here.)
Sick, sick, sick.
"Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
Whooooooo let the H4X0R out?
l33t! 1337,1337,1337, l33t!
Whooooooo let the H4X0R out?
l33t! 1337,1337,1337, l33t!
Whooooooo let the H4X0R out?
l33t! 1337,1337,1337, l33t!
Whooooooo let the H4X0R out?
l33t! 1337,1337,1337, l33t!
Whooooooo let the H4X0R out?
l33t! 1337,1337,1337, l33t!
An original Idea for the scavenger hunt that doesnt weakly attempt to show how witty, creative, pretentious and just plain lame we actually are. The Judges must look like the morons they are. [242 points]
A "mobius stripper"? Why is it always with the nerdy population that we find such blatant sexism and a desire to exploit women? Are you people still wondering why no women want to enter the fields of engineering or computer science? It's a hostile environment, plain and simple, and you assholes are the cause.
--sdem
What's funny about this item is that last year I wrote up a PBS-oriented kids show, about a mad professor black hole (think of a black sock puppet with a mustache, googley eyes, and a black swirley patterned outfit) called "The Great Abyss". He went around talking with his sidekick, every now and then making hilarous jokes about Twistor Theory.
I'm sure we could dig up the old material if anyone wanted to adapt it to string theory. Heh.
For some of my (former) TAs, this would be 19 easy points.
Wait.. they said "The Judge must understand. ". Oops, never mind.
All the organizers are going to be arrested for soliciting a piece of Federal property (piece of the space shuttle).
how about a LUG member who has had sex?
Umm, who said it had to be a woman?
GeekNights!
Late Night Radio for Geeks!
(Note: a 'phrenologist' is a guy who studies the brain by the bumps on the skull.)
--
"103. Phrenological examination of a Judge.
Points: (IQ of Judge) / 10, with IQ as determined by the phrenologist.
Double points if you have a licensed phrenologist."
--
Cover your eyes and click this link!
On top of that, how many women do you know named "Mobius"?
308. _______ An clear and understandable methodology that will enable scavenger hunt organizers and judges to get a date, finally! [532 points for an actual woman] [54 points for compliant farm animals]
#158. Yarr!
(Of course, I must assume that all slashdotters actually read the article like good... um.. slashdotters.)
GeekNights!
Late Night Radio for Geeks!
Just one. Her arguments are all totally one-sided.
-rimshot-
GeekNights!
Late Night Radio for Geeks!
"The Hand" trollbot v0.06bv
#136 Explain string theory using only sock puppets. The Judge must understand. [19 points]"
Anyone else feel that Mr. Rodgers or Seaseme Street ruined our childhoods by not doing this.
see the Count, count dimensions....it could work
Yes they are muppets, but it's still just a glorified sock puppet.
Why is it always with the feminists that we find such blatant cluelessness and absolutely ZERO sense of humor?
Like the people who bitched about the NASA thing, get a grip! This is the group that put a breeder reactor on last year's list. They're JOKES, nobody seriously expects people to do a lot of the items; they're there for laughs. Go on. Read the damn list, it's hillarious.
Are you people still wondering why no women want to enter the fields of engineering or computer science? It's a hostile environment, plain and simple, and you assholes are the cause.
Isn't it funny how the people who bitch the loudest about stereotypes, never hesistate to use 'em themselves? Your statement is about as true as "all girls like frilly dresses, dolls, and playing dress-up, and hate math." You've just blanket-labelled the CS and engineering profession as male pigs.
Most CS/Engineering types I knew in college were practically -scared- of women, not beer-guzzling chauvenist pigs. They were some of the nicest, most intelligent, well-balanced people I knew, and a number of them were involved in long-term relationships with rather indepentent, intelligent women. Pick someone else to vent your "I hate the world" rage on, please.
PS, you're still using a written-by-male-pigs spell-check, otherwise your post would have spelled womyn correctly, right?
Please help metamoderate.
I think the real reason for these is to see how clever the participants really are. I remember doing quite bad at scavenger hunts as a kid because I was too literal. "Find a Fish" so I was angry because the time limit wouldn't allow me time to go fishing or to go to the store even, but wait, every other person got it! They made a "fish" out of paper, or drew one on the back of the item list.
My point is that some of these are meant to be stupid or un-realistic. The challenge is to see if the participants can think in a way that isn't a straight line. How clever is the guy who got every thing on the list, but just went out and bought/stolen each item. How about the gal who was able to fake it and still got the credit. Better yet how about the other fellow who declared the whole universe to be an illusion, and won because there was no contest in the first place.
Ignore me because I'm not really here.
Can they be Me, Myself, and I?
According to this story from 1999, the guys who made the breeder reactor were U. of Chicago physics majors Justin Kasper and Fred Niell. They assembled it in Justin's dorm room.
"Weapons should be hardy rather than decorative" - Miyamoto Musashi
I think that goes for OS's too
...you insensitive clods!!!!
A "mobius stripper"? Why is it always with the nerdy population that we find such blatant sexism and a desire to exploit women? ...
Wait, wait, wait. Where did it say that the stripper had to be a woman? Please review:
#46 Mobius stripper. Must be non-orientable. Must not emphasize the one-dimensionality of the stripper's personality. [28 points].
Unless I'm missing something, the requirements for Item #46 on the list could be fulfulled by either a man or a woman, as long as they're "a stripper." So who's making the sexist assumptions now?
And topologically speaking, it might actually be easier to construct a Mobius strip from a man's body anyway, assuming of course that he's limber, big *ahem*, and stupid (1/2 gen[i]us).
-Mark
In Canada, we don't fancy things like socks
...that one must be one of the people with *legitimate* access to the actual debris? And while it was, yes, a tragedy, that'd point to one of the people actually looking for the *answers*, which I don't think is in bad taste at all.
oh sweet pussy lips
you desire
waggling cocks
car crashes turn me on
i have a moist tight vuhgina
< )
( \
X
8====D
In honor of our new Freedom of Information, inform as many people as you can of the home phone numbers of John Poindexter, John Ashcroft and Tom Ridge in a massive publicity campaign.
"Weapons should be hardy rather than decorative" - Miyamoto Musashi
I think that goes for OS's too
Perhaps only if the scavenger picked it up and hauled it in for a prize. If the scavenger simply points it out to the proper authorities and got a receipt, it could be a good thing, sorta.
I'll stick with GeoCaching :o) (see journal entries)
A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
It'd be funny, although sad as well, if the hardest working team forgot item #291. Forgetting it means disqualification.
They had done an item:
Verified and confirmed by Matt Groening - The one true state in the United States that Springfield exists in.
And no, the official "No state" answer is not acceptable.
GPL'd web-based tradewars themed space game
a correctly formatted version of the pdf with no bitmapped fonts (200 points).
tired... the list this year isn't as good as it was last year: we had to go rummaging around 57th st beach and dig for it-- meaning only two teams actually got a hard copy, so the judges gave in and released the list to everyone early. catch is that everything is in metric time, so my team missed item 291... anyhoo: in case any of you are interested: i finished item 66 a this morning at around 2: a uofc-themed pr0n site... after a short nap of 2 hours, now i'm on item 214, wolfenstein in the regenstein: use the quake level editor. another teammate is programming an entire game of tetris from scratch (item 58).
is killing me.
Only 19 points for explaining string theory with sock puppets?
I know theoretical physisists who don't understand string theory well enough to explain in a years worth of lectures.
IMHO this is an extremely underrated item =+/
All right, they so did not build a breeder reactor. Even given the definition that anything that produced Pu is a breeder (which would make every reactor in the world a breeder reactor), they did not do it. You need U-238 and a lot of neutrons.
While they claim that they observed emissions from Pu, this is not well documented and they may have simply been observing cosmic background or Pu desposed globaly from wepons tests or Am-241 x-rays
Stupid, and in poor taste. I am sure I'll get bitched out for being far too "PC" (never heard this one in real life, for some reason) or for not having a sense of humor, which would somehow apply here, but that doesn't make it any less stupid.
Oh someone mentioned that they want it "NASA certified" so it's not debris they are looking for, well why the fuck don't they ask for Discovery, Atlantis or Endeavour then?
sic transit gloria mundi
9XR11SWY7A3
V0VOD5GM WJ66HPEG9 M65TCLWR
110GERH2ZLSMDFUUFJ4 1MZXFZ
YP3ISM59GN7ZW1GM8I6Y Z3VSX
EREB20N0KGBCMROAMV489 C5ST
3GOU5MEKETBPW7N9EG196 73AE
I947D7O08ANUYEK74PEV K6FTF
CQDU53M718WLQXJDN07H1NG 8Y
IVPS55CWI8EPEL1J8XQL2QRN B
314DYYZVIEDOPAEDZQ4WXADM R
61IWJ8G28JCTZ4104VSDZFJ G4
JGTEWY2P3M4N7081HLISB E98F
GOAS993MT A0LFW4AK 0P7VNLUB
just like the humble blood clot... turboporsche@telus.net
nt
I know...do you? Let's test the Slashdot smarts.
-R
UChicago's scavhunt: Pandering to judges, indefinite goals, monetary prize for winning team.
MIT's Mystery Hunt: Puzzles with definite solutions. Done for the hell of it. Winning team administers the next year's competition. Find the coin.
Just find whatever state has a Shelbeyville, and it'll have a springfield too!
Any additional states having Shelbeyvilles must be destroyed immediately.
"I don't care about the Constitution!" --Bill O'Reilly, November 17, 2009
This would make a wicked "reality TV" special! Of course it would have to be Nickeloden or Discovery channel, but it would do wonders to actually show something "useful" like this on Kids TV. [edited for content of course, but anymore that's not a big deal!]
Any minute now I'm going to succumb to the urge to figure out what that says.
"I don't care about the Constitution!" --Bill O'Reilly, November 17, 2009
211 is hex for 529!
"I don't care about the Constitution!" --Bill O'Reilly, November 17, 2009
The point of the item is not to get a piece of the Columbia, but rather the NASA signature, which would be impossible for an actual piece of the Columbia.
Now, as a Public Service, Phoenix Does Dallas Presents:
John Poindexter: (301) 424-6613
John Ashcroft: (816) 471-7141
vacation home: (573) 334-7044
Tom Ridge: (610) 274-3276
Did you ever notice that *nix doesn't even cover Linux?
Check out The Hunt.
-R
Skeet Surfing is on the list (#15)!
This is the sport introduced in the Top Secret! movie (1984), where you shoot skeets while surfing... and that's surfing as in ON A SURFBOARD. ON WATER. ON HIGH, TRICKY WAVES. WITH A LOADED SHOTGUN. This has got to be the world's most difficult sport to master...
I have no doupt that somewhere there is a piece of derbies that they will let you borrow for a short time. I don't think a piece of the arm mount is of much use to the investigation for instance, so if they have that they can be talked into letting you borrow if for a short time. Finding the right person is likely difficult, but that is a different story.
P.S. I know the arm wasn't installed, I'm refering to whatever part of the shuttle it would attach to if it was installed.
Lawn Gnomes! [Points: World conquest.]
"Much work is lost, for the lack of a little more." -Edward H. Harriman
Yep, lots of folks, even semi-famous celebrities, are touting the benefits of drinking liquid fresh from their own fleshy spigots.
Puzzling to me, however, is whether proponents of "urine therapy" chugalug their drink of choice on the rocks or, as the Europeans do, at room temperature.
The time I drank some, the liquid, golden waste was as lukewarm as the closed atmosphere of an old station wagon.
My friend, let's call him, "Bud," has a bad habit of relieving himself into beer cans or just about any open container that will hold waste liquids.
I don't know whether Bud has weak kidneys, efficient kidneys, diabetes, a small bladder or an enlarged prostate. But I do know the man can't hold nature's call for more than 15 minutes, max.
He will stop a vehicle in the middle of a residential street, jump out and flood the pavement. Bud has been known to run to the closest alley, nook or cinder-block wall and spray a torrent. He has polluted many a public pool.
Bud even has been cited for indecent exposure -- urinating in public -- such is the urgency always pressing on his internal reservoir.
So it was that Bud had partially filled an aluminum can that once held cool, refreshing and fermented Rocky Mountain spring water. We were drinking Coors beer, shooting the breeze in the parked station wagon.
I momentarily placed my brew on the floorboard. I reached down for the can, drew it to my lips and took a hefty swig.
My conscious brain was expecting a swish and a swallow of a cool, malty beverage. What exploded against the nerve endings in my mouth and tongue, however, was warm and the saltiest liquid on Earth. A cup of water dipped straight from the Dead Sea would have been less-alkaline.
The shocking taste triggered an immediate autonomic response. The muscles from my abdomen to my lips contracted and expanded in a reflexive spew. So quick were the response and rejection of the foul liquid that my lips never opened. The contents in my mouth sprayed with such incredible force through such a small slit that droplets the size of those from a perfume atomizer rained throughout the interior of the car.
"Hey, what is this?!" I asked Bud.
His hysterical laughter, his failure to answer and my knowledge of the contant urgency of his urinary tract were enough information to precisely identify the substance in the beer can and make my stomach retch.
But proponents of urine therapy would have urged me not to worry: "Go ahead and swallow."
Indian yogis reportedly have been slurping their own juice for more than 5,000 years.
More than 600 scientists gathered in Goa, India, for the first World Conference on Auto-Urine Therapy in February 1996. Some proponents in attendance believe human urine can treat everything from baldness to cancer and AIDS.
The use of urine as a topical rub and drink not only is common in India, but also in Japan and Germany and a growing number of countries.
The Internet is home to the Urine Therapy Home Page.
At least two books, "The Golden Fountain: The Complete Guide to Urine Therapy," by Coen van der Kroon, and "Your Own Perfect Medicine," by Martha Christy, provide buckets of knowledge.
Imbibers say the "medical establishment" has been keeping these wonderful treatments a secret because they're so inexpensive and accessible.
The believers say "old urine," aged much like a fine wine, mixed with sulfur powder works wonders for a balding pate.
But what would people close enough to catch a whiff of such aroma say to a person wearing this miracle poultice in public? "Hey, pal, I don't know how to put this delicately, but you smell worse than the men's room in a wino bar and a basket of rotten eggs."
Users say urine is sterile, antiseptic and non-toxic. They point out that it's 95 percent water, 2.5 percent urea
No, it was offtopic.
He was replying to the parent, which the moderator most likely missed because they failed to view at -1 like they should. If the parent is off-topic, it should be moderated so, but there's no reason to mod someone down for defending themselves from a flame.