From selengut@MIT.EDUMon Oct 23 20:33:26 1995
Date: Mon, 23 Oct 1995 15:28:44 EDT
From: Jeremy D Selengut <selengut@MIT.EDU>
To: frc@nvg.unit.no
Cc: selengut@MIT.EDU
Subject: Round Summary

We're off to a slow start so far, but hopefully things will pick up now
that the weekend is past.  Here's the status so far:


Round 46
Begun Thu, 19 Oct 1995, 09:00:00

Member      Expiration Date     Style
------      ---------------     -----
Dug         The Witching Hour   +1.5
Vanyel      The Witching Hour   -2.0
All Others  The Witching Hour    --

Total number of rules posted = 2
Valid rule expiration date bonus = 9 days
Valid rules will now extend expiration dates past The Witching Hour

--------------------------------------
Summary as of 3 p.m. EDT, 23 Oct, 1995
--------------------------------------

Proposal 46:A (temporary R.O. overrule)
Voting ended Sat, 21 Oct 1995, 09:41:36 EDT
Proposal passes 5:0

>>> Temporary RO change proposal 46:A >>>

For the extent of the current round (#46), R.O.'s #3,4 and 5 shall read as 
follows:

3. Starting a Round and posting Rules.
   Whenever a round of play ends, a new round should begin as soon as
   possible thereafter. The (new) Judge shall determine the exact time
   of the start of the round, and e may also suggest a theme for the
   round and nominate a member to post the first fantasy rule.
   Only those persons eligible to play may post fantasy rules.
   The Judge is not eligible.

4. Eligibility to play.  The first valid fantasy rule posted by each
   member shall make its author eligible until midnight on Hallowe'en
   (12 Midnight, Eastern time, October 31st, 1995), hereafter known as 
   "The Witching Hour."  The posting of second and subsequent valid rules
   by each author will change eir eligibility expiration date by the following
   formula:

      Expiration date = T + 9 - N/5 (Rounded up)

         where Tp = the time at which the rule was recieved by the judge,
         and   N  = the number of rules (valid and invalid) posted so far
                    or the number 25, whichever is smaller.

   The posting of an invalid rule (after the first valid rule) will
   reduce the expiration date by one (1) day.
   The expiration date shall never be sooner than The Witching Hour.

5. End of Game.  If at any time after The Witching Hour, there is
   only one person eligible to play, then
   (a) all current fantasy rules are repealed
   (b) the round ends
   (c) the sole remaining player is declared winner of the just ended
       round and becomes Judge.
   If at any time after the Witching Hour there are NO persons eligible to 
   play then all persons who had posted a valid rule after The Witching
   Hour are "reanimated" as if they had just posted a valid rule.

<<< End Proposal <<<


Rule 46:1
Author: Dug
Judgement: VALID
Style: +1.5

>>> Rule Start <<<
  The hour is not late, but the darkness has come quickly.  The abandoned
hunting lodge which shelters us has become more ominous than rustic, and the
sounds of the night creep steadily toward us.  We stare into the dimly
burning fire, talking quietly in turn, more to ourselves than to each other.
The time has come to let our fears leak through our stories, to share what
we can't truly believe, but somehow do.
  We have all been touched by something we do not understand, something
perhaps we cannot understand.  But we have come to know that the experiences
we have had and those we have heard share a common thread, a horrid, evil
thread.  A thread that, as far as we know, has continued throughout all of
human history, sometimes large and ropy and other times almost disappearing.
  Can Evil be embodied?  Can It exist in solid form?  Can It live among us,
breathe, hate, laugh?  Certainly, people through the ages have thought so,
but we civilized, modern, _scientific_ people are not used to real
believing.  And yet our collective evidence is overwhelming.  There can be
no denying this basic fact:  Evil walks our twentieth-century world as
surely as we do.  And It knows we mean to stop It.
  Still we must convince ourselves, make our rational selves understand.
Until the Witching Hour strikes, we must share the stories we have gathered,
the stories we have experienced.  We must illuminate the commonalities of
our stories, highlight the pieces of understanding we can form of this
creature we revile, learn what we can before it is too late.  For after the
Witching Hour has come, the hunt has begun.  Then we will have no choice but
to plan, plan for Its destruction, or ... if it should come to that ... our own.
>>> End Rule <<<

Commentary:
   Although it seems difficult to craft an invalid first rule, it is easier than
one might think (I know, having done it myself...), and coWizard Dug skates 'spookily'
close to the edge here.  His restrictions can be interpreted to apply to this rule
as well as all future rules and, if so, has he 'shared a story,' 'illuminated' any
commonalities, 'highlighted' any pieces of understanding?  If I say yes, then I
should accept future broad interpretations of these restrictions.  To avoid this,
I will interpret this rule as applying only to future rules; reading 'we must' with
an assumed [from now on] derived from the 'The time has come' in the first
paragraph.  I only do this because this is the first rule and I like it so much.
(Dug should be particularly careful not to rely on my good nature in the future;
especially as The Witching Hour approaches...)  -1 Style point for putting me in
such a spot.  +3 Style points for being _wonderfully_ thematic (if a little cliche')
and neatly incorporating the <hopefully> new Hallowe'en ground rules.  -0.5 for
length.  BTW, the phrase 'large and ropy' gives me the willies for some reason,
why is that?


Rule 46:2
Author: Vanyel
Judgement: INVALID
Style: -2.0

>>>
Yes, my friends, it is true, for the CIC tells me so.  Evil though it
may seem, there seems to be a crackdown on the net, over such pastimes
as our own...  my guess is that like many other crackdowns, it is a way
for the evil to prevent the good from uniting against it.  (After all,
the evil don't follow rules anyway...)

But this cannot stop us!  We must become more circumspect--do not, in
the future, refer directly to the name of this committee.  In fact,
don't even refer to the "game" nature of this committed, or that you are
"making restrictions"... this, hopefully, will keep them off our track.
>>>

Commenatry:
    Clearly, my instructions about when the round should start were
ambiguous and self-contradictory.  I said the round would start not before
9 AM EDT and also that it would start after Dug's first posting *sigh*.
To remedy this, I accepted Dug's rule at 9, and this one one second later.
    This rule is not consistent with the 'share a story' restriction of
46:1.  Vanyel's crackdown on the net is in the form of an informational
posting, not a story (which is generally typified by a plot, among other
things)
    As for style, I must say that I don't see what's punny about yet another
reference to the CIC, or how that is relevant to the theme of the round.
In fact, the only thing 'spooky' about this rule is Vanyel's use of 
grammar and syntax.  My opinion of the stylishness of the restrictions:
*yawn* (sorry, but I call 'em as I see 'em).

From selengut@MIT.EDUTue Oct 24 20:23:37 1995
Date: Tue, 24 Oct 1995 10:51:07 EDT
From: Jeremy D Selengut <selengut@MIT.EDU>
To: frc@nvg.unit.no
Cc: selengut@MIT.EDU
Subject: Judgement 46:3


Rule 46:3
Author: Jesse
Received: Mon, 23 Oct, 19:19:31 EDT
Judgement: VALID
Style: 0
Expiration Date: Wed, 1 Nov, 19:19:31 EDT
Total Style: 0

>>>
Lying snugly in bed, thinking myself immune from the Darkness that lurks
without (indeed not thinking about the Darkness at all), I dismissed the
sounds I heard that night.  A soft rapping at the window: no doubt a tree
branch.  A howl somewhere between laughter and a dying sob: an owl, or a
raccoon.  The repeated scratch at the door: surely it is the cat, I thought
to myself.

That morning, the chickens were gone without a trace.  Not a speck of blood,
not one more feather than usual lay about the henhouse.  Yet only one chicken 
remained, wide-eyed and terrified, cowering in the corner nesting box.  
Others in my house say it must have been the raccoons that carried the 
chickens off.  But if you could have seen that chicken's trembling, heard 
the sound of its squawk as it died of fright at my approach, you would have 
known as surely as I that the Darkness was near that night.

The Darkness acts subtly, never quite revealing Its true form or intent, 
never leaving evidence of Its passing.  The Darkness always tries to keep us 
off our guard.  For as long as we can believe that what we see and hear 
around us is due to animals, or the wind, or merely a trick of the light, we 
may rest peacefully, unguarded and soft, while the Darkness gathers Its 
forces.  Thus is the method of the Darkness, until the moment of Its cold 
and terrible strike.
>>>

Commentary:
   The only quibble I can find as to validity is the "illuminate the
commonalities of our stories" restriction of 46:1.  As I judged that
stories were only required after 46:1, this is the first story given.  
I have two choices - fulfilling this restriction is impossible (in which
case no further valid rules are possible), or the restriction is trivially 
fulfilled in this case because it is self-similar (which, of course, implies 
that all future rules can trivially fulfill this restriction by being self-
similar - *yuck*).  A third, and less consistent possibility, is that this 
and only this rule can get by on self-similarity because it is the first 
story.  I feel that, for the good of the round, I must choose this last 
possibility, resolving to punish myself for being soft and not invalidating 
46:1 when I had the chance by wearing uncomfortable shoes all week.
   Some interesting questions are raised in this rule: Are Evil and
the Darkness the same manifestation of It?  How subtle is subtle?  What
qualifies as "quite revealing"?  On style, however, my vote is split.  The
rule is unnecessarily long, but completely consistant with the theme.  The
pilfering of chickens, on the other hand, seems small potatoes for something
thathas permeated all of human history... on the other hand, even Evil 
incarnate has got to eat, right?  There are restrictions in this rule, but
they could be finessed.  I'd go negative on this but I'll throw in a small
first-posted-rule-is-valid bonus and settle up at 0.

- coW-J Jeremy

From selengut@MIT.EDUWed Nov  1 21:25:51 1995
Date: Wed, 01 Nov 1995 13:40:27 EST
From: Jeremy D Selengut <selengut@MIT.EDU>
To: frc@nvg.unit.no
Subject: Round 46


FRC members,

   Round 46 is now over, although it seems that it never really began.
Did everyone just go on holiday, or was the prospect of writing ghost
stories too daunting???

   I think an apology is owed to Jesse, who not only gets in his first
rule, but wins by default!  (BTW, I suggest that Jesse not accept the
judgeship of round 47, but instead nominate either Dug or I for that
onerous duty).

   Is there any precident for just expunging the record of this round and
just try playing it over from the top? (new theme and all?)

- co-W Judge (ret.) Jeremy
