I "0 0. 0 9 0 0 0 I C h Mchgn.aiy- edesdy, c0oer 2, 008 Wedneday, ctobr 22,20:8 -hMiignD ly 3 The party must go on By Trevor Calero 0 Daily Staff Writer Beta Omega Chi, the faux f rat It all started on a quiet Sunday after- noon in a West Quad dorm room, a couple of guys nursing a hangover and tossing back a few beers, trying to decide where they were going to live the next year. And now, seven years later, a house stands on State Street, among fraternity senior houses and other football Satur- day pregame hot spots, with the letters BOX above its door. Modeled in jest after its Greek neighbors, the "fake frat" Beta Omega Chi, pronounced "box," has been passed down through three generations of residents who were selected by their pre- decessors to protect the sacred trust of the BOX house brotherhood: huge parties. Engineering senior Brian Russel, who lives in BOX house now, said the house's original residents were a large group of friends who decided not to rush fraterni- ties but wanted a similar lifestyle. "It was kind of anti-frat," he said. "It was, why would I pay money to be in a frat when I can just make my own friends and do whatever I want, have all the benefits of being in a frat without actually being in a frat?" John Mittelbaclk, who helped start the "fake frat" with longtime friend Tom Champion in 2001, said the BOX house was founded on principles of unconven- tionality and creativity. "The whole idea behind BOX was to provide a forum for novel behavior and friendship," Mittelbach said. The group, originally made up of more than 40 people, bought a couple of houses in the same area, one on Arch Street, a house on Hoover and another on McKin- ley, with the main location at 933 State Street - the house known today as the original BOX house. Beyond just novelty, BOX housers take their house traditions seriously, and in their few short years of existence they have racked up enough of them to rival any fraternity. From keg walking, the house's way of discarding empty kegs by riding them - logrolling style - across State Street, to street dancing, where housemates crowd the intersection of State and Hoover and jump around every time OutKast's "Hey Ya" comes on at one of their tailgates, it takes a special skill set to live at BOX house. CHANEL VONHABSBURG-LOTHRINGEN/Daly Beta Omega Chi, known as BOX house, hand picks residents to carry on the tailgating tradition. But rather than the many pregame ritu- als involving massive amounts of alcohol, Mittelbach said his favorite tradition doesn't require a keg. "Although the BOX house might be best known for the partying, one of my favor- ite traditions was the Thanksgiving din- ner we had," he said. "BOX members from the various houses we lived in were each responsible for a dish, which led to a meal of epic proportions." Over the years, the BOX house has often been mistaken times for a real fraternity, at times attracting freshmen asking how to get a bid. "Some people really confuse it with a real frat house," Russel said, "Especially guys who visit here from other schools. They'll come up to the house, 'hey, this is a cool house, we don't have you on our campus."' In the end, although he said he doesn't "explicitly hate frats," Russel said he's glad he doesn't live in a real fraternity house. "I walked by one of the frats on State Street one time on my way to class and I just saw all these pledges outside raking leaves," he said. "If you need to rake some- body's leaves for them to accept you, why don't you just come down to BOX house and have a beer. I'll buy you a beer."