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Christy Dewitt of #86 Derminators takes the baton from Garrett Dejesus (c) as Ashesh Thaker of team #85 Hughes Your Daddy (l) dashes past. |
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There’s always more than one competition during
the annual NIH Institute Challenge Relay. There’s the run, of course, but there’s also the challenge of adopting the wittiest name. This year’s race, held on Sept. 20, did not disappoint. Although no prizes for this genius are awarded, its creative process bears examination.
For some teams, it’s just a matter of working with the letters you’re given. Take your IC’s initials
and, er, run, like these teams: C uS Run, To Run OER Not to Run, eNIGMaS, Over Early Racers, I’m ODd.
Some names incorporate the name of someone else, say the head of a section or lab: Wurtz Possible Runners (for NEI senior investigator
Dr. Robert Wurtz), Gottesman’s Gang (for NIH deputy director for intramural research Dr. Michael Gottesman), Blair Swift Project (for NIMH principal investigator Dr. James Blair) and Hughes Your Daddy (for NIH neighbor,
Howard Hughes Medical Institute).
Or you can use your work to inspire you.
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Top left:
Race to the finish—Nick Knuth (r) of Biomechanicals just edges out Cameron Dezfulian of Nitrite XP for third place.
Top Right:
The Velocity Raptors’ Mary McLaughlin hands off to Chad Koratich.
Above:
NIH director Dr. Elias Zerhouni (l) prepares to start one of two relay heats as racers take their marks. |
“I was one of the original founders of the Bolting
Electrons, along with two other people,” said Jeff Lengyel of NCI. “At that point in time we just thought [the race] would be a fun thing to do and a good excuse to do a little exercise
outside of lab. My lab does cryo-electron microscopy, so my supervisor, Sriram Subramaniam,
came up with the name Bolting Electrons.
Our first year [2004], we came in a very impressive third place. The following year we also came in third. We were bolting indeed!”
Last year, Lengyel took a break from the Electrons
to create a new team. For the last several years, he has been both an NCI postdoc and a grad student in a joint graduate partnership program
with the University of Cambridge and NIH.
“I thought it would be good to start an annual
Oxford/Cambridge relay race team because I thought it would be a good way to foster graduate
student interaction,” he explained. “We decided to call the team ‘the Roundabouts’ as roundabouts are common circular roads in England.
The Roundabouts came in ninth in 2006, while the Bolting Electrons came in second. This year I returned to the Bolting Electrons and we came in second.”
Former Electrons captain Rachid Sougrat of NICHD’s Cell Biology and Metabolism Branch also changed squads. “This year I moved to another lab,” he said, “and the name of my team is Goal G, since we work on the Golgi apparatus, an organelle that was first described by Camillo Golgi more than 100 years ago.”
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Top: First place Rapid Relaxation (from l) Ava Asher, Tony Gill, Tyler Jones, Peter Bandettini and Eliana Bonifacino claim bragging rights in the 24th Institute Challenge Relay.
Middle: The 2nd place Bolting Electrons include (from l) runners Jeff Lengyel (NCI), Megan Dennis (NHGRI), Ari Halper-Stromberg (NCI), Patricia Zerfas (OD), Adam Bennett (NCI), NCI/LCB lab chief Dr. Michael Gottesman and LCB section chief Sriram Subramaniam.
Bottom: Taking 3rd place were Biomechanicals (from l) Vipul Periwal, Hollie Metcalfe, Will Heuett, Karen Ong and Nick Knuth. |
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2007 NIH Challenge Relay Results Top 40 |
Place |
Team# |
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Name |
Time |
1 |
84 |
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Rapid Relaxation |
13:54 |
2 |
09 |
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Place |
14:10 |
3 |
01 |
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Biomechanicals |
14:21 |
4 |
14 |
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Nitrite XP |
14:22 |
5 |
16 |
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Spit Fires |
14:29 |
6 |
68 |
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Goal G |
14:33 |
7 |
60 |
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Wurtz Possible Runners |
14:48 |
8 |
41 |
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Proud Snail Hunters |
14:57 |
9 |
62 |
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Blair Swift Project |
15:09 |
10 |
50 |
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Decibelles |
15:22 |
11 |
08 |
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Catch Me If You Can-cer |
15:39 |
12 |
80 |
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Rate Limiting Steps |
15:43 |
13 |
85 |
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Hughes Your Daddy |
15:48 |
14 |
69 |
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Eyes on the Prize |
15:54 |
15 |
22 |
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Runners of Interest (ROIs) |
15:57 |
16 |
79 |
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Beauty and the Geeks |
16:11 |
17 |
77 |
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Five Women |
16:15 |
18 |
87 |
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Anything but Last Place |
16:18 |
19 |
91 |
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Long Legged Crazy Mental Runners |
16:24 |
20 |
03 |
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Ezruns |
16:27 |
21 |
30 |
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Kiss Meiosis |
16:31 |
22 |
34 |
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The Roundabouts |
16:41 |
23 |
24 |
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Clinic 8 Velocity Raptors |
16:44 |
24 |
56 |
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Cancer Chupacabraas |
16:49 |
25 |
83 |
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CD5 Runners |
16:50 |
26 |
35 |
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FIC Globetrotters |
16:51 |
27 |
88 |
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Gottesman's Gang |
16:53 |
28 |
06 |
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Move Your Fatty Acids...Faster |
16:55 |
29 |
26 |
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Snot Docs |
16:56 |
30 |
17 |
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Apoptotic Buddies |
17:01 |
31 |
42 |
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The FastA's |
17:05 |
32 |
12 |
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The Running Buffers |
17:10 |
33 |
82 |
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Clot Busters |
17:12 |
34 |
39 |
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Racey Ears |
17:13 |
35 |
52 |
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Distortion Products |
17:14 |
36 |
86 |
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Derminators |
17:16 |
37 |
07 |
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Running With Immunity |
17:29 |
38 |
65 |
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Eye Ai Aie |
17:30 |
39 |
29 |
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Bad Breath All Star |
17:31 |
40 |
02 |
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Spin Doctors |
17:36 |
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John E. Ingeholm of NIMH’s Laboratory of Brain and Cognition noted, “Our team name [ROI] is a play on words of a step used in analyzing
our neuroimaging data. Areas that are expected to contain activity based on a hypo-thesis are called ‘Regions of Interest.’”
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Top:
Isabelle Suffia (2nd from l) of V “eye” P takes the handoff from Arrash Yazdani (l); Snot Docs’ Todd Wilson prepares to pass the baton to Nayoung Kim (r).
Middle:
Zerhouni holds the standard for I’m ODd team members (from l) Tim Hays, Tom Gill, Ravi Sawhney, Penny Burgoon and Camelia Owen.
Bottom:
Morgan Mandingo (l) and Nick McBride of the Roundabouts successfully
negotiate the exchange. |
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For the second straight year, OD’s Office of Communications and Public Liaison—which handles the way NIH comes across to outsiders—
chose Spin Doctors for its race handle. V “eye” P of NEI, FIC Globetrotters, Running with Immunity of NIAID and Catch Me if You Can-cer were easier to figure out, but still clever
ways of referring to work.
Quite a few groups describe the runners themselves
in the team name.
“Velocity Raptors comes from the word ‘velociraptor’
and has nothing to do with our work in clinical research,” explained Cathy Rehm, whose teammates all work in the NIAID 8th floor outpatient clinic in the CRC and also run informally apart from the NIH relay. “It has more to do with the fact that some of us are ‘fast dinosaurs.’ The name was decided upon prior to any of the members even suggesting
that we would be participating in the NIH relay. Since we already had the shirts printed, and plenty of team members, we decided to use what we had already in place.”
Then there are the names not even team members
can explain.
“The name Supersonic Pancakes came to us in 2006,” said Alexey Iskhakov of NLM/NCBI, remembering the details only vaguely. “There were two Russian women who formed a whole Russian team that consisted of Russian-speaking people from the former USSR. I do not know how they invented that name. I think that it is better to ask them about it.”
“‘Pancake’ was Sveta’s contribution,” interjected teammate Leonid Khotomliansky, clearing up (or further muddying) the issue. “‘Supersonic’ was a collective thought. I personally was trying to ban ‘pancake’ from the name, but failed and it stuck there eventually, which now seems to be a good thing. So I’m glad I failed that time.”
Still researching the name’s origin, Iskhakov added, “Seems that ‘pancakes’ is a free translation
of the Russian word ‘bliny’—Russian-style crepes.” Okay.
As for the winners of the 24th Institute Challenge
Relay, which consists of five loops around Bldg. 1 (and completed in two heats because so many teams registered), Rapid Relaxation finished
first in 13:54.
“That was just about the course record,” said Randy
Schools, president of the R&W Association, which, along with NIH’s former Health’s Angels Running Club, manages logistics for the race.
The Bolting Electrons took 2nd place at 14:10 and the Biomechanicals rounded out the top three at 14:21.