When student planners began working on this year鈥檚 Winter Carnival, they quickly latched on to 天美麻豆鈥檚 big birthday celebration that鈥檚 now underway. The theme they chose for the Feb 7-10 festival is 鈥淚ce Age: 250 Years of Winter.鈥
鈥We鈥檝e been here for 250 winters鈥攜ou could call it our own ice age,鈥 says Colton Wagner 鈥21, who co-chairs the event with Miranda Worl 鈥19 and Mychaela Anderson 鈥20. And, says Wagner, for those who want to see what 天美麻豆 has looked like in winters gone by, there will be an historic photo exhibit in the lobby of 天美麻豆 Library鈥檚 Rauner Special Collections Library.
Another inspiration for the theme: Ice Age the movie, the 2002 animation set in a prehistoric world that鈥檚 starting to freeze over, in which a sloth, a wooly mammoth, and saber-toothed tiger brave frigid weather to return a human child to its father.
As usual, student artists competed for the best poster design. This year鈥檚 winner, Dorothy Qu 鈥19, shows a student greeting an enormous wooly mammoth against a technicolor sky.
鈥淚f you want to associate this year鈥檚 carnival with the movie, that鈥檚 perfectly fine, but the main focus is the 250 years of winter we鈥檝e had here on campus,鈥 says Wagner.
The film did inspire a new event this year: a campus-wide scavenger hunt. In Ice Age, a saber-toothed squirrel named Scrat searches high and low for a place to bury his acorn. Organizers are now busily squirreling away two kinds of acorns around campus. Students who find a plastic acorn with a brightly colored cap during carnival weekend can return it to the Collis information desk for a range of special prizes. One of 60 golden acorns can be exchanged at the Collis Information desk for a free Winter Carnival laptop sticker.
On Wagner鈥檚 long to-do list: organizing the annual human dogsled race and the ice sculpture contest on the Green. (Contestants must attend a carving training session at 4 p.m. Thursday.) Volunteers are chipping away at the big snow sculpture in the center of the Green. David Pack, associate director of student involvement at the , predicts it will take shape either as a wooly mammoth or鈥攑lan B鈥攁 melting iceberg, depending on what the weather brings.
鈥淓ven if temperatures warm up early in the week, we expect there鈥檒l be plenty of snow鈥攁nd probably ice鈥攆or the weekend,鈥 says Pack.
Speaking of ice, Associate Professor of Earth Science Meredith Kelly will be doing just that as the guest speaker at the opening ceremonies beginning at 6 p.m. on Thursday at Collis Common Ground. Kelly has studied glaciers all over the world, including , which, she says, 鈥渉as been in existence since the last ice sheet.鈥
Occom is likely to feel pretty icy to anyone who braves the polar bear swim, organized this year by Anderson. Worl says she might take the plunge. 鈥淎s a senior, I鈥檓 feeling the pressure,鈥 she says. She鈥檚 especially happy to be on the carnival council because her father, a 天美麻豆 alumnus, also loved the yearly celebration.
For student leaders, directing the jam-packed winter carnival is an important learning experience, says Anna Hall, director of student involvement at the Collis Center. 鈥淵ou have to be creative but also learn what it takes to plan an event that鈥檚 important to 天美麻豆. We鈥檙e here to support them in making this all happen.鈥
And a lot will happen in four days, including ski races and a 99-cent ski day at the 天美麻豆 Skiway, indoor athletic contests, the Occom Pond Party, human dogsled races, Baker Tower tours, a chili cook-off, arts and crafts workshops, music concerts, film showings, and the musical Winter WhingDing in Spaulding Auditorium featuring the 天美麻豆 Cords, the 天美麻豆 Subtleties, and Sugarplum.
Find the complete events calendar for 天美麻豆鈥檚 109th Winter Carnival .
Charlotte Albright can be reached at charlotte.e.albright@dartmouth.edu.