Tuesday, August 11, 2020

My Brass Rat

My Brass Rat Brief note: I am currently in Ohio, shopping for wedding dresses. And yet I bring you this bonus blog entry. Do I love you, or do I love you? Questions from last entry will be answered when I get back to Beantown. Well, Melis has written about her 2008 Brass Rat, Mitra has written about her 2007 Brass Rat, and Matt has written briefly about the Brass Rats for the past six years, but nobodys ever written about the 2006 Brass Rat, which I humbly consider to be the most superior Brass Rat ever. (Hee.) My class ring was unveiled during a premiere at Walker Memorial, then distributed at a swanky event at Top of the Hub, a very classy restaurant at the top of Bostons Prudential Tower. (In case anybody missed the implication, Top of the Hub is not somewhere students usually have the opportunity to dine they dont serve hamburgers and fries there, you know what I mean?) Bezel The 2006 beaver is supposed to look a little more benevolent than the rough and tough beaver chosen for the 2005 ring. Hes holding a scroll to represent knowledge, and a globe to represent the way MIT graduates hold the world in our hands (cheesy, but yes). If you look closely, youll see that the beaver is also wearing a Brass Rat. At the beavers feet, there are some leaves shaped like Kresge Auditorium. Also at his feet, there are reeds in the form of the Roman numerals for 24 not for Jack Bauer, but to represent the fact that MIT majors go from 1 (civil/environmental engineering) to 24 (linguistics and philosophy). Course numbers are pretty fluid at the moment, theres no 13 (used to be ocean engineering), no 19 (technically), and no 23. Next to the reeds, there are blocks with the letters A, B, and C on them. This represents fundamentally the fact that we were the first class to have A/B/C/no record second term (all classes before ours had pass/no record all of freshman year); it takes the form of a hack which also commemorated this change. Our beaver is sitting on eight ivy leaves. Ill let you fill in the blanks on that one. Theres a tree behind the beaver; you can see IHTFP spelled out in the branches (note: this detail is not at all subtle in this picture, but its subtle on the ring itself) and a map of the Infinite scratched onto the trunk. A gnome peeks out from behind the tree, celebrating the gnome hack. My favorite part of the ring is the companion beaver in the river. He represents the idea that no one at MIT succeeds due to his or her own abilities alone, but that all of us rely on other students for academic and personal support. In the background, a double helix stands next to the symbol from the top of the MIT chapel. The symbol on the chapel is meant to represent religion, and the juxtaposition of the religious symbol and the double helix is meant to show the need for a dialogue between science and religion. Class shank This is the side that says 2006 at the top. In the sky at the top, there is a shooting star, drawn from the logo of the space shuttle Columbia. In the background, the Stata Center (opened at the beginning of my junior year at MIT) looks like a piece of abstract sculpture; if you look closely, you see the letters ILTFP hidden in it. I like the inclusion of ILTFP as well as IHTFP even though IHTFP technically has both positive and negative meanings, the negative one is usually inferred when someone uses it. Im glad our ring incorporates ILTFP as well we all have strong feelings about MIT, and its definitely possible to love the school strongly and hate it strongly at the same time. Both domes can be seen in the class shank, and the Green Building towers in the background. Four students stand in the foreground; they represent the variety of students at MIT, but unfortunately it is 1 AM and I cant remember what they are I know one of thems an artist and one is an athlete, but I forget what the other two are. Im old. Sorry. Seal shank Look for a bunch of small details on the seal shank: punt and tool in the leaves around 1861 in the center; a TEAL clicker in the pocket of the scholar; a snow shovel, representing the Presidents Day 2003 snowstorm, in the hand of the worker; a coffee cup in the workers other hand; the number 81, representing our sister class, the class of 1981, coming out of the mouth of the lamp at the top. Skylines The most notable and coolest thing about the skylines is that, if you join fists with another 06 wearing a Brass Rat, the skylines will meet and form the letters MIT. Go look at the website if you dont believe me. On the MIT skyline, there are two Greek letters, phi and theta, representing the fact that our class was the first to force all freshmen, even those who were fraternity/sorority-affiliated, to live on campus. Some non-Greek people were roundly annoyed at this, leading some people to show up at Ring Delivery with Phi Theta t-shirts on. Hackers map I have to admit, Ive always been tempted to take off my ring and point out locations to lost prefrosh when they stop me and ask for directions. I wear my Brass Rat every day. Its heavy, so it takes some getting used to, but now I feel funny if I dont wear it. After graduation, the ring is turned over 180 degrees prior to graduation, the beaver faces you, but after graduation the beaver faces the world. This is politely explained with reference to the skylines: prior to graduation you look over the river at Boston, and after graduation youre an outsider looking into Cambridge. Less politely, prior to graduation the beaver is thought to defecate on you after graduation, the beaver defecates on the world for you, because the world is your oyster now. I always heard stories about Brass Rats being recognized on planes and at job interviews, but I thought they were hyperbole until I went on my graduate school interviews. I wear my ring on my right hand, and its obvious to anyone shaking my hand I had several professors look at my ring and say, Oh, you went to MIT! The Brass Rat is not a subtle thing. Post Tagged #Brass Rat

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