From: Neil Weisenfeld
To: all-ai@ai.mit.edu
Subject: Got Milk?
Date: Fri, 30 Oct 1998 16:41:07 -0500 (EST)

``To whomever stole the water pitcher from the seventh floor coffee machine, please return it!'' read the e-mail. It was just another thorn in the side from a week that went like dancing in a rose bush. No good deed will go unpunished, they say, so no doubt I will be punished for taking the water pitcher, no matter how noble the cause.

Things have continued to be difficult for the scouts. While the support has started to come, they were in such a state of disarray that it will be a while before the damage is undone. Without money to fund their scout activities, they've resorted to simply sitting around and eating the girl scout cookies. It wasn't until they'd each eaten several boxes each that they realized their predicament. Incapacitated by upset stomachs, they were unable to go fetch drinks. By the time I stumbled upon them the troop looked like refugees from some horrific ``Got Milk?'' commercial gone awry.

I ran as quickly as my legs could take me into the building and carried down a five gallon bottle of spring water from one of the water coolers. I immediately left them and went inside to search for another cooler to raid. When I arrived back on the scene, one of the scouts was trapped underneath the bottle. It had taken several of them, in their debilitated state, to raise the bottle, but when one of the scouts lost her balance the bottle rolled over on the littlest of the group. She was nearly bruised by the incident but quickly recovered once I had lifted the bottle. Clearly I had to do something more. I did some fairly rough biological halflife calculations for the various girl scout cookies consumed and decided that if these girls didn't have more water, they'd almost certainly glue their insides together with caramel and guar gum. I cut off the top of one of the massive water bottles so they could drink more easily, but when one of them became faint (one of the first signs of caramel poisoning) I realized that we needed a way for them to drink without having to move the large bottles. That's when I took the water pitcher from the seventh floor.

I'm happy to report that everyone survived the incident, this time, but I'll never forget the look of those dehydrated scouts nearly buried in glassine wrappers and brightly colored cookie boxes. After witnessing such near-tragedy, things can never be the same again.

So yes, I took the water pitcher from the seventh floor and I'd do it again in a heartbeat. Come discuss these and other issues concerning today's troubled youth at this week's:

G I R L S C O U T B E N E F I T 7ai. See you there.