Room of Your Dreams? You Bet


February 2, 2011

group of male students play blackjack seated at casino table at Martha's Marathon

Last night Kevin Weiss won his room of choice in a game of blackjack. Well, several games to be exact.

The freshman beat out dozens of competitors at the first-ever casino night portion of Martha’s Marathon, held in the Marvin Center’s Columbia Square.

A university tradition since 1966, Martha’s Marathon has in past years enabled students to secure their housing choice for the next academic year in one of two ways: by winning it through a raffle or by bidding on it in a live auction.

This year the Residence Housing Association added another option. In a casino-themed evening that included games of blackjack, poker, roulette and craps, the student left holding the most chips could pick his or her room.

“It was a really fun night and was even better that we won,” says Mr. Weiss, who is leaning toward choosing Ivory Tower for next year but wants to look at a few places with his roommates first.

Martha’s Marathon proceeds, which come primarily from the live auction, benefit the University Scholarship Fund. This year’s event raised about $26,000, says Cameron Smither, a junior and publicity chair for the Residence Hall Association.

Mr. Smither says Ivory Tower quads are typically the most popular housing choice, and last night was no exception. A quad went for $10,100 in the live auction portion of the night. An Amsterdam Hall quad went for the second most: $2,700. Seven other rooms were auctioned off including a double in Munson Hall, a South Hall quad and a single in Guthridge Hall.

Junior Tabitha Minke won the raffle drawing. Mr. Smither says the Residence Hall Association sold approximately 2,500 raffle tickets at $2 a piece. The casino games also required a $10 buy in per student.

The original Martha’s Marathon of Birthday Bargains, as it was then known, was a small auction held in the men’s gymnasium. Items up for bid in 1966 included lunch with the speaker of the house, a curfew extension for a freshman and a football autographed by the GW football team. There was a 25-cent cover charge, and the $2,084 raised was used to buy books for the school library.

“It’s such a tradition,” says Mr. Smither. “It’s great to be part of it.”