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Archive for February 18th, 2008

Here’s the second in our series of short video interviews with GUSA candidates. Kyle Williams (SFS ‘09) and Brian Kesten (COL ‘10) (whom the Voice endorsed) sat down with me in Copley Hall’s Williams Chapel to discuss their priorities, Ben Shaw and how to speed up by slowing down. Look for more interviews as we head into voting on Thursday…

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Hayes and Madorsky have found their thing and they’re sticking with it. This time, though, instead of UPS, they’re parodying a Nextel commercial. If this ad is to be taken literally, Hayes and Madorsky plan to spend the first few minutes of their term issuing terse to their cell phones and laptops to fix Georgetown’s problems and dance for the remaining time left in their term. And, really, that wouldn’t be the end of the world because their dancing is pretty spectacular.

H&M have also come out with two new UPS-style commercials that you can check out after the jump.

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If you’re a Georgetown student, chances are that at some time you’ve walked by the “265 Kappa Hops” message taped on the sidewalk of the Key Bridge’s D.C. side. Like me, you’d probably never given it much thought.

But, for some reason, when I passed the message on Saturday, an article that ran in the Washington Post a few months ago came to mind. The article, “The Measure of this Man is in the Smoot,” tells the story of some MIT frat brothers who used 5′ 7″ pledge Oliver Smoot as a yardstick to measure Boston’s Harvard Bridge, marking every ten Smoots with a spot of paint. From the Post:

Somewhat miraculously, the markings have been repainted ever since — meaning that while Smoot was pursuing a quiet career in the Washington association bureaucracy, he was also becoming a Boston area landmark and a nerd legend.

“The first time I went to an MIT gathering of undergraduates,” Smoot said in a telephone interview this week, “I introduced myself to this young man, and he said, ‘Oh, I thought you were dead.’ “

Even the government got involved with the Smoots, the Post reports, scoring the bridge’s sidewalk every five feet seven inches when it was renovated a decade and a half ago.

At the time, they [the frat brothers] didn’t understand what they had done. But their Smoots were destined to become part of campus culture, since they contained two key elements of a classic MIT prank: a hint of science and a low level of vandalism.

Jay Keyser, a professor emeritus at MIT and a chronicler of the school’s wacky side, said: “What the Smoot does, it makes fun of measuring. . . . It makes fun of the precision of engineering.”

Could the Kappa Hop be the Smoot of Key Bridge? Hard to say. When I emailed Xavier Aguirre, the co-president of Alpha Kappa Psi, Georgetown’s Business Fraternity, he assured me that AKP had nothing to do with the Kappa Hop. Also, if 265 Kappa Hops does refer to the span of the Key Bridge, each Kappa Hop would be roughly equivalent to 6′ 5″. That seems to me to be quite a distance to hop, especially 265 times. Still, if the Kappa Hop isn’t a unit of measurement, I’m not sure what it would be. Thoughts, anyone?

Photo by Sam Sweeney, Blog Editor

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