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Students who live in the Dudley Co-op or the Jordan J Co-op, the University's other co-operative living option, say their housing choice may give them a little more freedom, but it also demands more time...

Author: By Arnold E. Franklin, | Title: Granola and Herbs, Hold the Bell Towers | 3/21/1900 | See Source »

Approximately 35 students live in the Dudley Co-op, and 15 others lodge in Jordan for about half the board fee paid by house residents. According to Leo Cabranes-Grant, a resident tutor in Jordan, each co-op is a half-way house, a middle ground between "life in the real world" and a Harvard house...

Author: By Arnold E. Franklin, | Title: Granola and Herbs, Hold the Bell Towers | 3/21/1900 | See Source »

Although Jordan is technically on-campus, while Deadly is off, residents in both co-ops agree that there are not really many differences between the two--except for aesthetics. "I didn't want to live in the Jordan Co-ops because I don't like the architecture there," says Redoubt...

Author: By Arnold E. Franklin, | Title: Granola and Herbs, Hold the Bell Towers | 3/21/1900 | See Source »

Although students say it is impossible to generalize about the people who live in the co-ops in 1990, most of the residents have something in common--they have taken time off from Harvard...

Author: By Arnold E. Franklin, | Title: Granola and Herbs, Hold the Bell Towers | 3/21/1900 | See Source »

Students are frequently "overwhelmed with the possibilities for socializing," she says. The biggest problem facing students who choose to live in the co-op is the adjustment to close quarters, she adds...

Author: By Arnold E. Franklin, | Title: Granola and Herbs, Hold the Bell Towers | 3/21/1900 | See Source »