Crusin’ for Booze

Crusin’ for booze

Hash House Harriers scour the streets for one reason: Cold beer

Wednesday, September 22, 2004
By Courtney Greve
Staff writer

More than an hour into their run, 11 members of the Chicago Hash House Harriers are gathered around a picnic table in a Beverly back yard throwing back Miller Lite.
Eric Oliver, a Chicago police officer and the “hash” host, quiets the crew to dole out trail tips before the second half of the weekly romp.
“There’s a spot up here you can’t shortcut,” he says. “It’s not dangerous, but no skipping.”
When the cans are emptied, the runners — “hounds” — set off to follow the chalk symbols marking the Chicago neighborhood’s sidewalks, trees and railroad tracks.
A bit more sluggish than before the beer stop, the hounds slow down when they reach the northwest corner of Beverly Park. The arrows point over a fence and through a sprinkler.
“Anything that’s not a war zone is considered acceptable,” said Bill Wojtas, who is known as “Rearloader” because he piles cargo onto airplanes.
Wojtas and the other pack leaders jump the metal barricade and get a welcome shower on a sticky night.
Then a 29-year-old photographer from Chicago’s North Side Lakeview neighborhood takes the slick surface at full speed, loses her footing and lands on her face. Stunned, she stands up and blood oozes from her mouth and lips.
“I’m OK, really,” she says to the concerned pack as she moves in the direction of the end-of-trail party.
“If she thinks she’s all right, she’s all right,” says Tom Leeds of Oak Lawn. “Hashers are troopers. We’ll talk about that for the next few months.”
Welcome to the weird world of hashing, an international phenomenon that’s jokingly described as “a drinking club for those with a running problem.”
Hashing traces its origins to the late 1930s, when the British occupied Malaysia and a group of runners modified the old English school game of hares and hounds.
The story goes that a group of expatriates looking to hasten their hangover recovery from the weekend would meet on a Monday to run it off. An enterprising pub owner started meeting them at the end of their runs with beer in his car trunk, which gave birth to the idea of combining the two activities, according to Jay “Hops” Hopkins, editor of Half-Mind Catalog, an Internet hashing magazine.
There are two types of hashes: live hare and dead hare. In live hare, the hare sets out just before the hounds.
The hash through Beverly was a dead hare because Oliver set the trail — which weaved through alleys, around a cemetery and over the Rockwell Street train tracks — ahead of time. The goal is to follow the symbols to the beer, avoiding those signs that lead to false trails.
While beer figures strongly in hashing, camaraderie is the real draw.
Just ask Amy Kozy. The 29-year-old started two years ago at her boyfriend’s recommendation.
“He’s not in my life anymore but this stuck,” she said. “I like this group more than I liked him.”
For Oliver, hashing reunited him with a high school crush. While a sophomore at Mount Carmel High School, Oliver went on a blind date with Maura Lux to a St. Ignatius turnabout dance.
“He ditched me,” said Lux, a 32-year-old flight attendant.
“I should’ve told the story,” Oliver said, laughing.
“Seriously, we were 15 and didn’t have driver’s licenses,” she said. “He went south and I went north on the Halsted Street bus home.”
They never saw each other again until they met at a hash four months ago. Distance is no longer a factor.
The drive to the Beverly did prevent a large turnout for Oliver’s hash, only the second on the South Side this year.
Wojtas, who lives “as far north as you can go and still be in the city,” pretended to be surprised that Oliver had indoor plumbing.
“Very funny,” Oliver replied. “It’s the South Side, but we don’t have outhouses.”
There are three “kennels” in the Chicago area, one of which caters to suburban hounds, but hashing doesn’t have the prominence on the South Side that it does on the North Side.
“There are family-friendly hashes and college-frat party ones. We’re kinda in the middle,” said Wojtas, who started hashing while in Japan with the Marine Corps.
Athleticism isn’t a requirement, but determination is. Oliver said he enjoys running, but the drinking aspect keeps him hooked.
“It’s like one step up and two steps back,” he said.
The group is fiercely noncompetitive, so anything goes. Chugging is required for the leaders as well as those who bring up the rear.
Solange Zangiacomo has been hashing on and off for five years and has proudly never come in first.
“I hate running,” she said. “I’m the kind of harriet who walks more than runs.”
Horn-E is a 19-year veteran with some 1,300 runs under his sweatband and at least that many hashing stories to tell.
“I’ll run anywhere there’s a hash,” he said. “(Hashing) is a chance to let your hair down once a week and get away from the rigors of the world.”
Horn-E declined to give his name because he’s known in hashing circles only by his given nickname.
From now on, the photographer who slipped in the sprinkler will be known only as “Bloody Lips.” After the hash, between bawdy songs and drinking beer (known as a “down-down”), the hounds held a naming ceremony.
“We normally sprinkle you with beer to christen you, but we won’t do that since you’re going to the hospital,” says Michael Bendas of Bridgeport, the group’s religious advisor. “You will do a down-down next time.”
Somehow, through a swollen mouth, Bloody Lips says, “Here, here!”
For more information, visit chicagohash.com or the Half-Mind Catalog at www.half-mind.com.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Courtney Greve may be reached at cgreve@… or (708) 633-5983.
© 2004 Associated Press — All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed

CH3 #1351

Mon 9/20/2004 @ 7PM

Chicago H3Run # 1351

Hare: Meister & Virgin Banger
Venue: Lakeshore Grill 221 N. Columbus drive
312-616-1234

Annual End of Summer Ravage the New Millenium Park Beach Party Hash.

Lower Wackoff and Meister will attempt to not get arrested for anthrax as they lay trail in and around the spankin’ new virgin Millenium Park. If you’re good you will get to see the Mega-Bean. In addition to spectacular trail, the bar features cheap beer, beer garden, good eats, and FREE PARKING. In the spirit of the annual Beach Party theme, wear a Hawaiian style shirt or something beachy-touristy. Those who don’t will get a lame, stupid-looking straw beach hat for the trail.
Getting there: Located at the old golf course off the northeast corner of Randolph and Columbus. The Lake Street L stop of the Green/Brown/Orange/Purple lines is closest. Walk east 3-4 blocks on Randolph and follow the following:

Stairs: Take stairs two flights to Lowest Wacker from Randolph/Columbus and go one block north to the old golf course. It’s inside the one story structure. For the lazy, there is an elevator on Upper Columbus next to the fire house, off of Water.

Drive from Michigan Ave: Randolph East to Columbus, then Left (North). Turn left on the ramp going down (Water St). At the end of the ramp, make a U turn left. Turn right at the stop sign and the parking lot is on the right.

Drive from North LSD: LSD to Grand/Illinois/Wacker. Wacker veers right, then move to left lane. Turn left on Columbus Drive. At the next stop light , turn right down the middle ramp, E South Water St. At the end of the ramp, make a U turn left. If you’ve been paying attention, you know the rest.

Drive from South LSD: Similar to above, without the veering, I think.

If you are coming from the Kennedy, there is another set of instructions. E-mail Meister at [email protected]. My fingers are getting tired.

CH3 #1349

Monday, September 6, 7pm: Chicago #1349 Labor Day Hash
Hare(s): Mount Me Please & Coffee Tea or Me

Starting Venue: 10721 S. Rockwell, Chicago

Directions / Other Details: Metra is the best public trans, the Rock Island Line starts at Lasalle St Station at the Board of trade, Lasalle & Congress pkwy. Take the Metra south to 107th, and walk 3/4 of a mile west to Rockwell

Welcoming the Hash back to the Far South Side after much time up North. Mount Me promises new and fun trail near 111th in the Beverly Area.

If anyone is interested in car pooling from the far north side (Rogers Park / Evanston) I will be leaving at about 5:30PM from Near Touhy and Western area. Contact Me (Rear Loader – [email protected]) if you are interested at this e-mail address!

CH3 #1347

Mon 8/23/2004 @ 7PM

Chicago H3Run # 1347

HARE: Horn-E
Venue: Rabbits 4945 W. Foster Ave

Horn-E will lay one of his special Shiggy trails out of Rabbits ( 4945 W. Foster Ave in Chicago). Rabbit’s is also a long time favorite and You can’t miss one of Chicago’s Most experienced hare’s Shiggy filled trails. I suggest a flashlinght, dirty shoes…..and if I remember the last Horn-E trial, a survival pack with food and water and shelter and first aid kit…..

Hashing gives real meaning to beer run – Chicago Tribune

Hashing gives real
meaning to beer run
Here’s sport that lets Old School
types act like college kids, get
exercise and have fun

By John Keilman
Tribune staff reporter
Published August 1, 2004

For two sticky hours, Dean Giannasi joined a pack
following a trail of chalk marks through the alleys
of
Northwest Chicago, blowing whistles, shouting
nonsense and scrambling to overcome wrong
turns. By the time he reached the finish line, he
was
sweat-soaked and primed for the reward that marked
the end of his first hash run.

“Everyone keeps their eye on the ball, which is the
beer,” said the 37-year-old Chicago firefighter, gripping a
cold one. “I’m very proud to be associated with it.”

Of course, that was before his fellow runners
started drinking out of a bedpan.

The night was a bracing introduction to the weird
world of hashing, a phenomenon that is equal parts workout,
treasure hunt and frat party.

Hashing sends runners along winding, intentionally
misleading paths and repays the effort with ritualized
debauchery at the finish line. It’s a formula that
has caught on from Brazil to Burkina Faso and spawned at
least four hashing groups in Chicago.

“I like running. I like beer. It struck me as
ingenious to combine the two,” said Dawn Klingensmith, a
30-year-old freelance writer who runs with the
Chicago Hash House Harriers.

Some accounts say hashing began almost 70 years ago
in Malaysia. Bored British expatriates, meeting at a
restaurant they dubbed the Hash House, decided to
put a twist on a schoolboy game in which a lead runner
left a trail of shredded paper for his comrades to
track.

The expatriates’ innovation was simple but
revolutionary: At the end of the path was a tub of cold beer.

Tami Hoffman, 44, a Chicago attorney and experienced
hasher, said pairing a respectable sport with a bit of
decadence opened a new social realm.

“You have your grown-up life but can get together
with your buddies, act like you’re in college for four hours,
then go back to your old life with–hopefully–no
repercussions,” she said.

Most hashes begin with a course designer, known as
the hare, laying down chalk arrows or other signs to
direct runners along the trail. Chicago hashers used
flour until 2002, when authorities found the white powder
markers and evacuated the Lincoln Park Zoo in a
bioterrorism scare.

Deception is part of the game–split arrows send
runners in two directions, and only one is correct–and
solving the puzzle is a group effort that equalizes
faster and slower runners and keeps the focus on
socializing. For an extra dose of harmony, a beer
stop usually waits halfway through, and a full-blown party
comes at the end.

The Chicago Hash House Harriers run on Monday
nights, advertising the meeting spot on the Internet. One
recent outing began at an Albany Park bar, where 25
people, ranging from lawyers to the unemployed,
gathered for the start.

Most followed the custom of adopting hash nicknames,
many of which can’t be printed in a family newspaper.
E Foertsch, 63, a lean and ponytailed Chicagoan,
called himself Horn-E, ostensibly for the makeshift bugle he
totes along on runs.

He was a 19-year veteran of the chase and sported a
medallion proclaiming him a grand master. He said he
had hashed from Atlanta to New Zealand, developing
along the way a fondness for red-dress runs in which
participants must wear red dresses.

“I’ve been to 15 of them,” Foertsch said. “I’ve got
more red dresses at home than any girl out there.”

The runners started en masse but quickly dissolved
into small packs. They darted through the garbage funk of
alleyways, across the emerald lawns of North Park
University and past a pickup cricket game behind
Roosevelt High School, all the while shouting “On,
On!” or blowing whistles as signals that they had found the
right path.

The commotion puzzled onlookers, including a driver
who leaned out of a pickup truck to ask why everyone
was running. The answer–“Beer!”–prompted him to
hoist a can.

“Hey, I got beer right here,” he said.

The group took a break mid-course at a bar for a
quick drink, then resumed the pursuit. But by the end of the
roughly 4 1/2-mile path, with the chalk marks nearly
impossible to see in the gathering gloom, many slowed to
a defeated walk.

Finally, the hare drove past and pointed stragglers
to his nearby Irving Park back yard, which served as the
finish line. That’s when the party started, but like
so much in hashing, it came with rules and rites attached.

Mike Bendas–also known as Mudsucker–a 55-year-old
retired Army colonel and one-time congressional
candidate from Bridgeport, called the participants
into a circle and heaped earthy but good-natured abuse on
most of those present.

The penalty for drawing his scorn was chugging a
small cup of beer, a convention known as the “down down.”
The daring took their gulps from a bedpan, serenaded
by naughty songs borrowed from rugby teams.

While alcohol and rude language are typical in
hashing, they’re not universal characteristics. Jay Hopkins, 43,
a Northern Virginia hasher who helps run a Web site
dedicated to the hobby, said many runs are
family-oriented. “The athleticism, the camaraderie
is there, but you don’t have the silly names, you don’t have
the bawdiness,” he said. “That’s not an integral
part of hashing at all.”

Even the Monday night hashers, with their proud
tradition of intemperance, said that what they most enjoyed
was being with their friends and discovering the
hidden side of city neighborhoods. And besides, Bendas
said, other hashes are much crazier. “You go down to
Texas, those guys are wild,” he said. “We have a
reputation for being conservative.”