The actual “parties” in the dorm were sedate enough to stay under the R.A.’s official radar, and keep Ed and his crew from shutting them down. However, there was something, non-party or alcohol related, about Bray Hall that inspired high damage bills.
and removed it.
The
year after we left Bray, the amazing technological advancement of computer terminals was
added to the lounge.
Naturally, someone threw a pizza at the ceiling over them, where it stuck and dripped cheese into their innards.
Our
year had some special considerations, and that’s not counting fluke occurrences
like the insanely overthrown baseball from a game of catch attaining the
perfect angle to break through both of the upper and lower open windows on Jesse's side. This finally ended our debate on whether or not to sleep with the windows open. He liked it, I maintained it made me stuffy. He pointed out I slept in the cabins Up the Lake, which was basically outside. My rebuttal that Up the Lake was magic did not carry much weight.
Naturally, someone threw a pizza at the ceiling over them, where it stuck and dripped cheese into their innards.
I am not making this up.
Whoever
signed up got a miniscule water pistol (from a dollar store
multi-pack, although in fossil times it was probably a "Five and Ten" store) and a slip of paper with whom their “target” was. The game was
banned during actual classes and traveling to or from them. In a vain attempt to prevent chaotic
situations, hits had to be made in secret. That is, there could be no
witnesses. However, you were allowed to defend yourself and squirt someone coming after you.
If you made a successful “hit,” you took that person’s target and the game
continued until there was a single player left- the winner.
I
made one attempt. I had noted my target on his way to the floor rest room alone. I
entered behind him, slid the tiny water gun out of my sleeve, pulled the
trigger…
And
the cap popped off soaking my hand while he turned around, pulled his pistol (holding his thumb on the plug) and shot me.
These
ineffective weapons led most of the floor to purchase upgrades. There were
electric versions, pump action, and all manner of water blasting devices. Long
after T.A.G. ended, there were continual, and constantly escalating, water fights in our dorm.
Alex
was an unusual, intense and quiet individual who shared the floor with us. He
was known for wandering into people’s rooms while they were reading or studying
and looking around without actually acknowledging the resident. He’d stare
silently at books on the shelf for ages, occasionally taking one down to flip
through it, but never speaking.
After
weeks of this behavior, I finally had to tell him he wasn’t welcome to do it
anymore, because it was insanely creepy. I was not the first nor was I the last to tell him this. We did have actual conversations after that revelation.
People
had occasionally seen him practicing martial arts katas in the lounge, but it
wasn’t something that led to follow up discussions given his silent nature. The word “wiry” (say it with the accent)
comes to mind.
Big
Steve was one of the less patient guys with Alex’s room visits and nailed him
when one of the never-ending water fights had upgraded to the use of Tupperware as small buckets. I remember a similar one reaching a point where, after I was soaked, I took Jesse’s plastic trash
can, filled it in the upstairs bathroom shower, and came down the other set of stairs
to get flume level saturation revenge on someone. (That was probably Big Steve too.) Alex, up to that point, was not participating in the
day’s conflict, but after getting hit by Steve, he ran into our room and asked if we had an empty two-liter
bottle. We did and he took it.
Wondering
how this was going to help, we watched him go through the long and tedious
process of filling it at the bathroom sink. Our recommendations of who had good
water guns (and available Tupperware) when he first asked were ignored. We figured the best
he’d get out of the bottle would be an aggressive sprinkle.
His
former assailant returned to the hall when Alex was lurking around with his bottle. Alex advanced toward Steve at haste, with the bottom of the bottle pressed against his chest. Steve looked
ready to hit Alex with a second container full…
Then
Alex put one palm in either side of the full bottle and in an incredible show
of strength
…wiry…
mashed it flat instantaneously.
The entire two liters shot out all over Steve in a single, powerful, soaking blast.
Steve
was too stunned to retaliate, and had to admit that was an excellent hit.
Various
others reacted when stress boiled over to the regular danger of getting soaked
on the way anywhere.
In
a rare moment (yet tame compared to later events) Jesse snapped one night and was in
the middle of the hall with two borrowed battery-powered water Uzis and a purple cowboy
hat with a big orange feather in it. (We were jugglers, this wasn't the oddest piece of clothing in the room.) He was screaming at any and all residents: varieties of, “Do you
want some!”
The
results of these frequent battles was an eternal state of squishiness for the hall carpet, and a well established moss garden at the end of the hall.
The
water fights blended in as a sub-set of an overall practical joke war that raged throughout freshman
year, ramping the damage bill up further.
The entire two liters shot out all over Steve in a single, powerful, soaking blast.
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