- Gamma Delta Chi
Gamma Delta Chi (also known as GDX, Gamma Delt or Gamma Delta) is a local fraternity at
Dartmouth College inHanover, New Hampshire . GDX is one of fifteen currently recognized all-male Dartmouth fraternities [http://www.dartmouth.edu/~orl/greek-soc/cfs/fraternities.html] .History
The local fraternity Gamma Delta Epsilon was founded in 1907, disbanded due to lack of interest in 1912, and was resurrected in 1921 [http://www.dartmouth.edu/~atheta/cfs-history.html] . By 1928 it had affiliated with a national organization, Phi Kappa Sigma, of which it became the Kappa Chapter.
Also in the late 1920s and early 1930s, Dartmouth's 1918
Phi Nu Chapter ofAlpha Chi Rho , founded as a local organization in 1915, was looking for a house lot. It had sold its College Street property to the Church of Christ, whose building had recently been destroyed by fire, and was renting a temporary house. After Alpha Chi Rho offered to buy the rear portion of Phi Kappa Sigma's Main Street lot, the two groups decided to merge. In the spring of 1935, the Kappa Chapter of Phi Kappa Sigma and the Phi Nu Chapter of Alpha Chi Rho merged to become the local Gamma Delta Chi, which still exists as of 2008.In August 1936, alumni of Dartmouth's defunct chapter of
Lambda Chi Alpha formally affiliated with Gamma Delta Chi, providing a third source of funds for a new house. Finally, in December 1936, the Dartmouth chapter ofAlpha Sigma Phi merged with Gamma Delta Chi after a fire destroyed their house on North Main Street.After studying fraternity houses on campus and elsewhere beginning in 1935, Gamma Delta Chi started building its current house in September 1937.
Physical Plant
One distinguishing feature of the Gamma Delta Chi fraternity is the pride the membership typically felt for the physical building itself. For example, an integral aspect of pledging the fraternity involves house improvement projects, whereby each term new and existing brothers work together to refurbish a room of the house. Brothers’ initiation into the house traditionally required memorization of the name and history of each room, and, in many instances, the history of unique features in each room. [http://www.dartmouth.edu/~ifc/gdx.html]
The physical house is a white-washed brick structure that features a blend of classic
New England Federalism and earlyArt Deco details. The building was designed by the New Hampshire architectural firm of Wells, Hudson & Granger [http://www.dartmo.com/halls/hallsappendix.html] and is located at 30 North Main Street in Hanover, New Hampshire, a few hundred feet north of Webster Avenue (Dartmouth’s fraternity row) and across the street from the currently under-construction Kemeny Hall / Halderman Center. The house’swhite-washed façade, hunter green trim and grey-slate roof stands in contrast to the nearly ubiquitous red-bricked façade of other campus Greek houses [http://www.dartmo.com/halls/hallscontent7.html] and aesthetically ties the house to Dartmouth Row [http://www.dartmouth.edu/~tour/walking/19dartmouth_row.html] . The house sits adjacent to the Choate’s dormitory cluster [http://www.dartmouth.edu/~orl/housing/communities/choates-north.html] and the Webster Cottage, a small museum located inside the former residence of Daniel Webster during his last year as a Dartmouth College student that includes colonial and Shaker furniture as well as Daniel Webster memorabilia [http://www.dartmouth.edu/~dwebster/1801/lodgings.html/] .From a grey slate patio with two-story square-wood columns in front, visitors enter the house to find a grey marble vestibule. A white-washed living room, originally decorated in a classic 1930’s Art Deco style and containing a small library annex in the rear, sits to the left of the front hallway. Immediately to the right of the front entrance is the Phi Nu room. Opposite sits the Guest Room, the only room in the house with a private bathroom.
The front door directly off North Main Street is rarely used. The small entrance
vestibule inside this entryway was historically known as the "Airlock" by house pot smokers.The central axis of the house is a four-story spiral marble stairway that reaches from the basement to the third (top) floor. Starting at the top of the second floor landing, to the left of the stairwell and separated from the rest of the floor by a private door, are the Jungle and the Presidential Suite. Turning right from the stairwell landing, visitors find the second floor bathroom and showers overlooking the southside porch. The rooms along the hall to the right are the Library, the Doghouse, the Barn (so-named because it was once lined with the clap-board siding of a 19th century New Hampshire farmhouse), the Den and the Island. From the third floor landing, visitors find the Bridge, the Shaft (so named because of its diminutive size), the Wall, the Bakery, the Icebox, the Closet, and the Lips (featuring a massive reproduction of the Andy Warhol-designed Rolling Stones’ logo on the wall). From the fire escape of the Bakery, brothers can scale to an almost-horizontal roof-top deck called the Crow’s Nest for mid-afternoon sun and relaxation.
Down below, the house basement’s geography consists of the laundry room, Mosgibfo (the boiler room, historically an integral component of the fraternity’s Hell Night initiation ceremonies), kitchen, and the Tap Room. The narrow interior floor of the four story marble spiral staircase has sometimes been known as the “spit pit”; particularly insolent pledges have reportedly been made to stand in the spit pit while brothers from the stairs above drop beer and other liquids.
The Tap Room is the wood-paneled “Basement” known to generations of Dartmouth College co-eds and is the most well known public accessed area of the fraternity. The Tap Room is fitted with a working fireplace, two or more pong tables, wood benches, and a brick-and-wood working bar.
Perhaps the strangest and most interesting architectural feature of Gamma Delta Chi is a two-storied sub-basement known as “the Pit”. Originally a squash court, the Pit has been reinvented multiple times, from a mid-fifties make-out parlor to a half-sized basketball court to its current iteration as a multi-table arena for pong tournaments. At other times, the pit has been flooded with water and used for alcohol-infused naval battles, or filled with fog machines and laser lights equipment for rave-like techno parties.
One particularly notorious incident occurred when three members of the Phi Delta Tau, sneaking in through a basement fire escape in order to steal a keg, mistook in the dark the Pit’s fifteen-foot high fire escape balcony for the Tap Room bar. One brother hopped over the balcony, expecting to land safely on the other side of a four foot bar, instead plunged fifteen feet below onto the hardwood floor of the Pit.
GDX Pong
Lob
Beer pong (“Pong”) is a central feature of fraternity life at Dartmouth College. Brothers are expected to learn during their pledge period to become familiar with the fraternity’s specific house games and rules.
As in most other Dartmouth houses, the default House game is lob – a four player game of 2 two-person teams. Players hit the ball in an upward trajectory with the aim of hitting the side of the opposing players’ cups or, preferably, sinking the ball inside the opposing cups. Scoring is done with a four-point ascending count (i.e., one, two, three, and four). Players must drink when the first two points are scored against them. At three points, the players being scored against must finish their beer to the half-cup mark. Four points constitutes a win; the losing players should empty their cup before returning to the table.
Missing the other side of the table on a serve constitutes a “fault”. Two faults in a row on the serve results in the loss of one point. A brother who commits four consecutive faults (i.e., two double-faults) is punished with a Tap Suck, wherein a brother puts his lips to a
beer tap and continues to drink while the collected brotherhood chants one of an assortment of house songs, most frequently, “Why was he born so beautiful? Why was he born at all? He’s no fucking good to anyone. He’s no fucking good at all.” Non-brothers who commit a double-fault are simply asked to leave the table in favor of more sober players.It should be noted, though, that the fraternity stresses a “gentleman’s game”: only above-the-shoulder lobs are considered sufficient; it is impossible to win a game based on the opposing players’ double faults.
One differentiating feature is the GDX “slam”: when a player’s lob overshoots the other side of the table, the opposing player may wait for a single bounce of the pong ball and slam the ball after that bounce into the opposing players’ cups. Knocking over the opposing players’ cup or cups in such a maneuver constitutes a clean win regardless of the points otherwise scored during that game. A particularly rare but satisfying slam will result in two full cups of beer being spilled directly onto the opposing players’ pants (a feat that requires no small amount of muscle, coordination and athleticism).
Gamma Delta Chi’s pong rules are also different from many other house rules in that balls hit off the Tap Room’s various fixtures (spectator benches, steam pipes, beer mirrors) remain in play through the first bounce on the floor. Similarly, a ball that hits a cup may none-the-less be saved by hitting the ball in an upwards lob so that the ball is returned to the opposing half of the table with a single bounce or less. If done properly, the ball remains in play and the rally continues with the point “one on.” If the opposing players miss their next return, the point drops and play continues as normal. Should another player score another hit, however, then the rally finishes but the successful players earns two points. Such rallies may continue with successive “one on”, “two on,” etc. until one team either scores a point or fouls out.
Rallies have been known to continue with as many as “six points on.” Under strict House rules (i.e., rules played on meetings’ nights, Sink Night, or Hell Night), a victory accomplished by greater than four points on requires the losing team to drink one additional beer (10 oz. regulation cup) for each point greater than four before being allowed back to the table. Visitors to the House, or indeed to Dartmouth College, may perhaps marvel at the rigid demarcation of social practices incorporating heavy alcohol consumption, esoteric rulemaking, and basic math.
Other games
The other traditional House games include Slam; Death Star; Battleship; and Pearl Harbor.
Death Star is a derivation of Lob that consists of sixteen beers per side with fifteen in a circular pattern and a single beer offset to the bottom right quadrant of the table in imitation of the
Death Star from the original film.Battleship consists of a college-aged derivation of the popular
Milton Bradley strategy game. The game requires two teams of two players. Thirty two beers are placed on the table, with sixteen on each side. Each team places their sixteen beers in formations akin to the classic strategy game (i.e., one sting of five beers as the carrier, another string of four beers as the battleship, a three-string row of beers as the destroyer, two cups of beer as the cruiser, and single cup submarine). Players proceed under traditional lob rules. However, empty cups remain on the table; an opposing player’s hit on one’s empty cup results in a quarter-cup’s worth of damage to the rest of the ship. When any single hit (quarter-cup worth of beer) results in the ship having less than half of the beer that existed at the start of the game, the entire ship is “sunk” and must be drunk before the game continues. Battleship is typically played during daylight hours, before the more social aspects of Dartmouth’s nightlife become available for brothers.Among Dartmouth Pong enthusiasts, the ultimate challenge of pong athleticism and alcohol tolerance is Pearl Harbor: a double-game of Battleship played amongst four teams of eight players over two pong tables, encompassing sixty four (64) beers. During Freshman Week and Senior Week (the periods where many students remain on campus but there is relatively little course work to be done), it is not uncommon to see teams of bored brothers playing as many as three consecutive games of Pearl Harbor prior to heading out to other social venues.
GDX brother "Zod" invented the game of "War" in the nineties: as one commentator has stated, "If Tree is the checkers of pong, War is the chess of pong". Each side has 10 cups of full beer. 7 "soldiers" near the center back of the table, 1 "cannon" each on the back left and right corner of the table, and 1 "general" convert|1|ft|m|sing=on away from the net. Opponents only drink on hits, and sinks capture cups and bring them to your side. The cannon represents your ability to slam. If the ball goes off the table, opponents may slam the ball, off the floor, back at your cups for hits. Every team must have a general, and once teams start losing cups, they move cups from their cannon and soldiers to replace the general. Aces are worth half of a beer. Note that the sink = capture rule will sometimes result in the superior player drinking more; this can swing the momentum around as the game progresses.
Since the late nineties, Tree and its softcore cousin, Shrub, have emerged as popular variations of Lob, although more traditionly minded brothers scoff at the notion of playing such inelegant varieties of pong.
An even less-elegant version of pong is "Tower of Boot" ("Boot" being the Dartmouth code-word for
vomit ). This arrangement is a Shrub on top of a Tree, with three cups on top of the Shrub, and finally a single cup on top of the 3. The formation is 4 cups high and includes 22 cups per side. This game is allegedly common at the House, much to the horror of many House alumni.Finally, it should be noted that under House rules, Dartmouth social pong, wherein an unlimited number of male-female couples are stationed in pairs of two around all four-sides of the table for a round-robin free-for-all game of lob, is strictly prohibited.
Trivia
* The Latin motto expressed on the fraternity’s coat of arms and memorized by each new pledge on Sink Night is: "Vite sin amicitias morte" (“Life without friendship is death.”). The motto is an intentionally truncated version of the Spanish proverb, “Life without friendship is death without witness.”
* The frame of the house consists of steel
I-beam s, which allows the entire house to serve as a massive AM/FMradio antenna for amateur radio enthusiast brothers during the 1950s and 1960s.* The official house dog is named Riggy Mortis and is a life-like ceramic replica of a
German Shepherd featured in many of the annual house “composites” – the annually produced poster-sized photo compilations of the entire brotherhood.* There is an electrical access tunnel that can be accessed from a hidden location in both the basement and the third floor. It is reported that vintage bottles of alcohol are hidden mid-way inside the access tunnel.
* Each floor of the house can be cleaned by hosing the entire floor with water; the marble floors are slightly concave with a water drain conveniently located in the center of each.
* For a brief period in the seventies, the fraternity was informally co-educational, as the house accepted three female members. Since then, while the fraternity has remained officially all-male, women have been allowed to live in the house (either as renters or as live-in girlfriends of brothers).
* Gamma Delta Chi’s preferred method of punishment of brothers for petty offenses such as missing too many house meetings, incompetent performance on Dartmouth’s sports teams, or mangling of relationships with the fairer sex consists of the “Tap Suck."
References
External links
* [http://www.gammadeltachi.org/]
* [http://www.dartmouth.edu/~greeks/history.html Dartmouth Greek History]
* [http://www.dartmouth.edu/~greeks/chapters.html Greek Houses at Dartmouth]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.