University of Chicago Scavenger Hunt Returns
mresolver writes "We've discussed it in previous years, and now the world's largest scavenger hunt at the University of Chicago has returned. The event may be best known for the working breeder reactor students built for the 1999 hunt. This year, some of the 330 list items (PDF) include 3-D (and 4-D) Twister, a hand-built Theremin, a recreation of the Moon landing, the world's largest Newton's Cradle, and hyperbolic crocheting."
We're gonna need a whole lot of Mentos and Diet Coke for that one!
My blog
a recreation of the Moon landing
The moon landing was staged at the university of Chicago!
Libertarian Leaning Political Discussion Forum.
The first item on the list is the list itself.
You don't want them to make it too easy to get, do you?
Well there's your problem! What the heck are you doing trying to print from MY browser?
-Rick
"Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
...because Scavhunt often has extensive typographic needs. Consider the 2006 list--upside-down text, non-roman scripts, fractions and greek letters aplenty. TeX is clearly the tool of choice.
I don't think they exist. >
excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
252. While at Carhenge, drive the earth into the sun! [1,000,000,000 points; 2 points for effort]
Someone better get homeland security on the phone.
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As the PDF was downloading I was saying to myself 'Please be LaTeX, please be LaTeX'.
For some reason the fact that they did restores my faith in humanity.
-1 not first post
The point of the U of C Scavenger Hunt is not to go find things and bring them back. That would be exceedingly boring. The important thing for each item is that the solution be interesting. That means that would be great if you bring back a vintage theremin from 1960, or if you built one yourself. Even better would be to bring in a real theremin being helf by Brian Wilson. The main point of the Hunt is creativity. U of C is not MIT.
Did you ever notice that *nix doesn't even cover Linux?