Tuesday, August 4, 2020

Brass Rat 2017

Brass Rat 2017 The MIT Class of 2017 Brass Rat was revealed on February 13th during the 2017 Ring Premiere. I had the pleasure of serving on the 2017 Ring Committee, and I enjoyed designing our classs Brass Rat. As a lover of MIT culture and traditions, it was an honor to be able to contribute to the Brass Rat design. The night started off with the entire class crowding together into Kresge Auditorium. *All photo credits go to Daniel Mirny and Lenny Martinez   Pictured: half of the auditorium. Then, the Ring Committee walked on stage. The class president gave a forward before the presentation was handed off to RingComm. Raivo and I were the first to come up, giving a quick talk on the history of the Brass Rat. We then raffled off one grand prize of a free Brass Rat and a free hug from me. Afterwards, the next two RingComm members went up and revealed the design of our 2017 Brass Rat bezel. *drumroll* Astonished faces. The crowd was split between cheering and booing. Some roared in disbelief. Others murmured to their friends. I saw one person shaking his fist proclaiming F*ck yeah repeatedly. For our Brass Rat design, we decided to abandon the beaver and use an actual rat. We then put it on a tank because tanks and we as a class made plans to purchase a class tank. The ALS Ice Bucket Challenge was also very influential for our growth and development as a class, so we feature the Greek goddess Athena dousing herself with a bucket of ice water. We also feature a three-headed Doge Cerberus flying a rocket ship. Dont ask why. Sprinkled throughout the bezel are descriptive, well-constructed phrases like very space and much cool. The bezel is also a scratch-n-sniff, with the available choices between rose petals, your mothers home cooking, freshly printed computer paper, and feet. Ok, so this isnt actually our bezel. Heres the real bezel: We still getting a tank tho. The beaver sits on a dam made from eight ivy leaves and a pinecone. In its right hand it holds a diploma that transforms into a telescope, personifying the adage knowledge will guide you. On its left hand is a pocket watch for a touch of classiness and old traditions, as well as to remind us to take control of our time and our lives. Every human on Earth has the same 24 hours in a day. Its how we choose to spend it thats important. IHTFP (I Have Truly Found Paradise/I Hate This F*cking Place) is scratched onto the beavers tail as a parallel to us being forever marked, even subtly, for better or for worse, by the effects of IHTFP. Punt and Tool are seen floating in the waters. To tool a pset is to work on it and get it done while to punt a pset is to not do it or not hand it in for various reasons. The pillars beneath the dome form the Roman numerals MMXVII, representing the pillars of our class that hold up MIT.  And so on and so on with much, much, much more. The beautiful thing ab out the Brass Rat is that its open to interpretation. After presenting the rest of the design (pictured below), we revealed the location of Ring Delivery, the fancy-fancy event where people get their rings and take an obscene amount of photos with their friends. This year we decided to hold it at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston. Funny story: As part of being on RingComm, each member also got a sample ring before the premiere to showcase to friends while everyone else got theirs at Ring Delivery in April. When I got my sample ring, it was too small to fit, but I squeezed it on anyway because I was too excited to wear it. People were also taking pictures of the committee and I didnt want to be the only one not wearing a ring. The ring got stuck. It would not come off. And my finger swole up. Badly. After the premiere, while the other members of RingComm went to a fancy celebration dinner, I spent one and a half hours in the student center rubbing Vaseline and spraying Windex on my finger to slide the darn thing off. Twisting and pulling the ring around my finger, I slowly but surely got it off. I angrily threw it onto a couch then I quickly picked it up because its a brass rat. Luckily, I still made it to the dinner before everyone had finished and got to enjoy some nice steak. The steak made up for it. Brass Rat 2017 Design Class Shank                                                                                 Seal Shank Boston Skyline                                                          Cambridge Skyline Hackers Map Some of my favorite things about this ring: The diploma-telescope on the bezel The balance between mind and hand on the seal shank Showing a woman as an engineer on the seal shank The laurel and oak leaves on the seal shank, representing strength and wisdom Symmetry The shield guarding Athena guarding the Cerberus guarding the gates of Hell on the class shank. The Collier Crane on the class shank. All the secret stuff people have to figure out on their own. For a list of all  most of the objects and symbolism, check out the Brass Rat 2017 Design on our RingComm Website. Recommended Readings 16 Brass Rat 2016 by Michael C. 16 on Feb 8, 2014 15 2015 Brass Rat  by Ana V. 15 on Feb 24, 2013 14 High Class Brass by Emad T. 14 on Feb 17, 2012 13 Put a Ring On It by Hamsika C. 13 on Feb 11, 2011 12   T Minus One.  by Sharon M. 12 on Feb 11, 2010 11 The 2011 Brass Rat! by Chris S. 11 on Feb 9, 2009 10 The Class of 2010 Ring Premiere by Jess K. 10 on Feb 20, 2008 09 The 2009 Brass Rat  by Laura N. 09 on Feb 20, 2007 08 Presenting The 2008 Brass Rat!!! by Melis A. 08 on Feb 11, 2006 06 My Brass Rat by Mollie B. 06 on Aug 20, 2006 What stands out to you most on the 2017 Brass Rat? Post Tagged #Brass Rat

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.