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“Scream” Runners Face Frosty Temperatures

Primal Freeze
David E. Stein

Hunter A. Maats ’04, coated in war paint, runs naked through the Yard Saturday at midnight in Primal Scream. Around a hundred students stripped and carried on the pre-exam period tradition despite the freezing cold.

Braving sub-zero wind chills that threatened to turn Primal Scream into Primal Whimper, around 100 stripped and shivering students made their tradition-inspired dash around the Yard last Friday night.

There were no major casualties in the event, which students ran with the mercury hanging around 13 degrees and a windchill of -7 degrees.

According to University Health Services (UHS), there were no cases of frostbite or alcohol sickness reported Friday night, though at least one student was diagnosed with frostbite later in the weekend.

While many students ran fully nude after throwing off bathrobes and towels, some students took their barely-there costumes seriously.

“I’m all business,” said Carle D. Stenmark ’07, sporting a striped tie and fuzzy hat.

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Drums and horns provided booming spirit amidst students’ cries. While runner participation was slightly lower than most years, the Yard was still packed with spectators.

Members of the women’s varsity hockey team ran in their uniforms, albeit slightly more revealing than the standard pads and masks.

“Hockey girls look hot in soccer socks,” Caitlin K. Cahow ’07 said of her lone item of clothing.

Running props were popular this year as well, with students toting a shopping cart, a surf board and a banjo.

Undergraduate Council representatives stood outside of the Matthews and Straus common rooms to swipe students in so that students could thaw and dress.

Many upperclass students made the trek over to the Yard, including the boisterous members of Mather House who held a “war rally” against Kirkland House as the opening salvo in their recently declared “House war.”

With the Soviet national anthem playing in the background, Matherites draped a two-story-high House banner from Matthews while four members stood wearing only jackets.

Mather residents claim Kirkland residents are behind the disappearance of the Adams House gong and letters threatening to send the gong to the Russian monastery that has been seeking the Lowell bells.

“We Matherites have real House pride and are not afraid to demonstrate,” Daren S. Morris ’05 said.

For others, the mere survival of their extremities through the frigid run was enough cause for celebration.

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