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Crew increases cool by a factor of four
By Philip Brune Published: Thursday, April 8, 2004      Our second race of the year was the UAA Championship in the Indianapolis. The
location is significant because it is roughly 577 miles away from Rochester. Our status
as a Club precludes the use of airplanes and bullet trains, meaning we arrive at races
via a van ride. In North Wales, there is a village named
Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch. Our trip last weekend
wasn't quite that long, but it was certainly long enough. 10 hours there, 14 back, all
in a full day's work. These lengthy treks may seem horrible but in general are actually
somewhat beneficial. When we finally arrive at the race course, close confinement has
made us ready to kill a man - or, more aptly, the other team. Either that or we're
really tired and need to go to bathroom. It can go either way. I think it has something
to do with the entropy of a closed system always increasing. If you're fortunate enough
to not know what entropy is, imagine spinning Ozzy Ozbourne around ten times then
asking him to recite the alphabet - backwards. Suffice it to say at the end of the trip
we're either biting the head off of a bat or mumbling incoherently before passing out,
sometimes both. Accordingly, the state in which the team finds itself upon arrival at
the race course can make for a good performance or a lousy one.
Brune can be reached at pbrne@campustimes.org |
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