Newest Little Bro

November 5th, 2003 4 comments

The big/little ceremony went well. I have a new little bro: Welcome to the lineage, Ted!

Big/Little

November 2nd, 2003 6 comments

“Blog,” Perenic once wrote. “It’s good for your soul.”

In just a few weeks, I’ll be back in Minnesota for Thanksgiving break. I’m looking forward to being home. Hopefully, it will be reasonably cold out, so that I can go snowboarding. Before I go home, there’s plenty to be done in both school and Fraternity. In the Fraternity, I am (among other things) the Associate Educator, which means that the duty of pairing Big/Little Brothers falls under my committee.

I have been lucky with my big/little experience thus far. All three of my little brothers have are great people. I was especially fortunate to have had the opportunity to spend extended amounts of time with each of them. My first little brother, Willis, was my roommate during my junior year. I worked with my second little brother, Vince, at Medtronic last summer. This year, my third little brother, Tyler, is my roommate.

The big/little experience is something special, something profound. For me, my little brothers have become almost as family. In the words of Scott Himes:

“In a fraternity your little brother is someone younger than you, [someone] that you take in and treat almost as a son during their time leading up to initiation. You support them through the difficult times, teach them what they need to know and celebrate with them when they accomplish great things. The best part was the special friendship that always formed and would last long after they were initiated.”

Yesterday, Matt Gordon (my Big/Little coordinator) and I sat down to pair the Associates with their Big Brothers. It was anything but a simple task. The Associates and the Brothers submit short lists of people they would like to be paired with. In an ideal world, an Associate’s top pick would correspond directly to a Brother’s top pick. Unfortunately, such is not always the case. In some circumstances, all of the Associate’s choices are “taken” before they can be assigned a Big Brother. In other cases, the opposite occurs. Either way, the challenge becomes making a good pair with effectively no input from either side.

After three hours, we completed our task.

I am happy to say that the K’Allen Lineage will be growing by 9 people to a total active membership of 23. For those unfamiliar with the concept, our lineage traces our big/little pairs, much as it would in a family. The lineage of Kyle “K’Allen” Allen, my Big Brother, is especially close, which I think is really cool.

During the selection process, I decided that I would only take a Little Brother if an Associate listed me as his top pick for Big Brother. There was one person in particular that I really wanted for a Little Brother, and it turns out that the preference was mutual. Who? Well, I can’t say quite yet (the secrecy of the pairing before the pairing ceremony is a long-held tradition), but stay tuned for an announcement of the newly expanded Keacher Lineage.

Bid Tuesday

October 19th, 2003 3 comments

Bid Tuesday.

Type type type. Check watch. Type type. Check watch again.

Duck out of work early. Drive drive drive. Go to grocery store. Endure odd looks for buying 10 Chips Ahoy cookie packages and 44 liters of pop. Head back to House. Drive drive.

Check on the fire trucks. Hmmm, one of them won’t start. Will a battery swap cure the problem? Click, growl growl growl; vroom! Now the other. Click, growVROOM! Quickly, inside to grab the letters (t-shirts with the Greek letters Pi Kappa and Alpha) for the freshmen. Toss the letters in the pumper cab, riding shotgun. Back pumper out of barn, turn to make exit from grounds. Slow down so others can hop on; fire trucks are cool!

Drive towards campus. Politely smile and wave at those motorists honking. Start slowing early for the turn into campus. Will the repairs to the brakes made at 3:30 a.m. earlier today hold? Park at rendezvous point. Admire Pike flag flying 100ft in the air off of the ladder’s ladder. Grab box of letters from cab. Check watch again. Almost late! Rush to Moench, outside of EE lounge. Mingle with Brothers. Hypothesize at new class size. Do last minute Bid Tuesday assistant recruitment. Debate safe and practical limits of pallet bonfires. Listen to credible rumors of a rushee signing with a rival fraternity.

Here comes Snyder! Here comes Brandt! Do they have the list? Yes! Mass excitement, growing noise level. Their hands go up; it is their time to speak. Move to the front to distribute letters. How many? Thirty-two, plus one who signed late, so thirty-three. Largest class in several years!

Names are read. Letters are distributed. Where are several of the freshmen? D’oh, two of my rushees signed elsewhere, including one with a chapter that had been on probation. Suck. Ah well; the other ones I really wanted to join (Speed 3!) are all signed with us. Go through the list again. Does every freshman have somebody to present them with letters? Yes? Good! Run to the dorms, find the freshmen. Congratulations abound! Quickly now, back to the fire trucks. Everybody pile on the trucks for a spin around campus. Start up the pumper, wait for the ladder. Wait, where did the ladder go? Ah, there it is; long vehicles make for long, tedious 12-point turns. No, 13-point. Watch out for the building! 14-point. No, 15-point — there, now it’s facing the right direction. Turn on the lights, prime the siren. WeeeOoooWeeeeOoooo.

Attitude check! Pikes Number One! Fun times, the freshmen are confused but loving it. Once around campus. Twice around campus. More noise, more noise! Is anyone taking photos? Thrice around campus. Park the trucks in the lot — wow, fire trucks turn sharply. Everybody off the trucks! Time to learn the cheer.

Teach the cheer to the freshmen. Whoa, slow down, they didn’t get it all, though they’re learning quickly. There, now they have it. Walk back to the house!

Back at the house. Make final preparations for the night’s activities.

Time for traditional milk and cookie toast! Rah rah rah, go Alpha Eta class, KAllen lineage, and Minnesota. Everybody outside for the bonfire and [optional! traditional!] milk chug.

Wow, fire is still cold. Probably cold because of lack of flames. What are they doing; is that kerosene? And a monster propane torch? Uh-oh, stand back. Good, nobody got hurt. Grab gallon of milk. Chug. Feel really, really sick. How could fresh milk wreak such havoc on one’s stomach? Idle by the fire for a while, in recovery. Yikes, the inferno is getting hot. Find the hose. Squelch the flames. There, that’s better.

Supervise the remainder of the evening. Chill with longtime and newfound friends. Chat about life, the universe, everything. And nothing at all.

Sing “American Pie.” Goodnight world!

Part 2: The trouble with power tools

October 4th, 2003 1 comment

If there’s one thing I can’t stand, it’s stuff breaking while I’m using it.

While building our new loft, Tyler and I needed to drill dozens holes and drive a multitude of screws. I started drilling a 1/2″ hole with my corded drill. I’m not sure when I got that drill — I remember using it to work on my Thunderbird, so it must have been at least three years ago — but I do remember where I got it: K-Mart. Yup, I got the drill from K-Mart. As you all know, K-Mart sells nothing but the best, especially when it comes to store-brand power tools (riiiiight…). I probably shouldn’t have been surprised when my $10 K-Mart drill came apart, but the reality was that I was a bit shocked.

I was drilling the hole when the bit broke through and jammed. I tried pulling up on the drill to free the bit. The drill body came up with no hassle. Unfortunately, it left behind the bit and the rest of the drive shaft. I got out a pair of vice grips, freed the bit from the wood, and reinserted the drive shaft into the drill. After the repair, everything spun as it should have, so I attempted to tackle the hole again. The same thing happened.

At this point somewhat irritated, I removed the bit from the drill and chucked the drill out the window. Muwahaha! Primal aggression having been taken out on the piece of shoddy crap, I returned to the problem at hand.

Unfortunately, the only other drill I had at the time was a cordless 9.6v Black and Decker device. Earlier in the day, that drill started emitting an odor reminiscent of an electrical fire, that sort of pungent ionization stench. Burning or not, it didn’t matter: the drill was too underpowered for 1/2″ drilling anyway. Time for a new tool!

The archetypal American male enjoys shopping for tools, and I am no exception. I’m not sure what it is: perhaps it’s some deeply engrained instinct present since the first rocks were used to cut meat. There’s definitely a childish fascination associated with searching out the perfect drill, saw, or wrench. I think that the imagination runs wild with the possibilities made realizable by the tool.

Of course, even the most versatile tool is of little use if it is broken. I have been inconvenienced too many times by broken tools, so last year I made a commitment to myself to never again purchase flimsy tools. The result? Unless exceptional circumstances warrant, I vowed to purchase only Craftsman hand tools and contractor-grade power tools.

Mindful of the limits of my quest, I decided that I wanted a Makita 18-volt drill/driver. Four hundred inch-pounds of torque, all-metal drive train, NiMH battery, 1/2″ chuck… (insert HoHoHo sound from Home Improvement). Mmmm… Now, where to buy it? I went to Lowes. D’oh, sold out. Next stop: Sears. They had it, but it was $30 more than Lowes. Will they price match? Yes! Plus, I got a few extra bucks for completing the price match. Even better, and much to my surprise, there was an additional $30 rebate. Score!

The drill bored through the wood with aplomb, and we finished the loft.

Part 1: The short story

October 2nd, 2003 2 comments

Last year, I decided that I really wanted a particular room at the Pike house. I convinced my little brother Tyler to be my roommate, and we started brainstorming renovations. In the middle of July, I took a trip down to the house to start tearing down the old loft and carpet. When I returned in late August for school, Tyler and I finished the destruction and got on with the construction. We then proceeded to work more or less non-stop for almost ten days on the room. On at least several occasions, we worked eighteen hours straight, pausing only briefly for food.

Here is a summary of what we did, in approximately the order we did it:

  • Tore down the old loft
  • Ripped up the carpeting
  • Sanded the hardwood floor
  • Put several coats of polyurethane on the hardwood
  • Painted the walls
  • Built a new loft
  • Installed new lights

I can’t find any photos of the room from before we started working on it; however, my July trip photos hint at the room’s former look.

The result? It looks good, if you don’t mind my saying. I took some photos of the work in progress and of the finished room, such as my desk, the emtpy room, and the finished view from my desk (more photos are available). The photos make the room look smaller (and messier!) than it really is, and the walls are not really *quite* that red, but you get the idea.

Up next: The trouble with power tools