Carnival is coming!!!
I cannot tell you how psyched I am. Here's one reason why:
Sculpture combines comic strip, Olympics
By Ashley Zuzek , The Dartmouth Staff
COLD MOUNTAIN: Currently a mound of loose snow and plywood, the snow sculpture will take form over the next two weeks thanks to the labor of over 100 students and with the use of 7,000 trash cans of snow.
Amid the numerous construction projects in progress on campus, a unique building plan is taking shape in the middle of the Green. What is now an amorphous pile of snow sitting in the center of campus will soon become the snow sculpture for this year's Winter Carnival, entitled "Stupendous Games 2006: Mischief in the Snow."
The sculpture will depict cartoon characters Calvin and Hobbes bobsledding down a large, slanted "D". A snow version of the Olympic torch will serve as the spine of the "D," and the inside of the sculpture will honor past and present Olympic athletes.
The design of the structure is more complicated this year than in the past, chair of the snow sculpture committee Dan Schneider '07 said. The committee includes a studio art major and a number of engineers.
Bill Waterson, author of the now-retired comic strip "Calvin and Hobbes," is notorious for refusing to grant outsiders the right to use his comic creation, but the sculpture's plan was approved because it is a temporary work of art.
Sculpture-builders will erect the structure around a wooden base, which is currently sitting conspicuously on the Green. The base, constructed by Eric Klem '08 and five other students this past weekend, will be removed at the completion of the sculpture to make the opening in the center of the "D".
"We start with the wooden structural elements, and then we build up the snow in layers of four feet, hose down the snow, remove the plywood panels, and add another layer," Schneider said. "Then we start carving it down."
Constructing the 24-foot-high sculpture will require roughly 7,000 trash cans of snow and will take about 12 days.
The sculpture committee expects the help of 100 to 200 people, including varsity athletic teams and Dartmouth Outing Club groups.
Although the snow on the green was trampled by the most recent school-wide snowball fight, new snow has already been shipped in from the Scully-Fahey lacrosse field. The committee can also get ice and snow shavings from the local Campion skating rink and Thompson Arena, if the Green can not provide enough snow.
Although the sculpture is made of snow and ice, it will not be a static structure, Schneider promised.
"Last year we had a pirate ship with exploding cannons," Schneider said. "If you missed the opening ceremonies last year, you won't want to miss it this year, because it will be just as cool."
The opening ceremonies will begin at 7 p.m. on Thursday, February 9 on the Green.

2 Comments:
i'm beyond jealous. our school doesn't do any of that. i mean for gosh sakes it's like 50 degrees here! wtf?!
sounds like you've got good reason to be anxious. i like the theme, too...
~kate
Your school is too cool..get it, too cool like snow is cool because it's cold and they're making a snow sculpture. I'll do my best to never leave a comment like this again.
-Rachel
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