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Lonely Campus, Hospitable Houses

On a campus made empty by J-Term, students find warmth and food at Houses

Pizza and Comfort
Sarah F. Choudhury

Students gather for the Symphony of Pizza night in Winthrop dining hall to beat the cold and emptiness of January term.

The first week, Zachary C. Sifuentes ’97-’99 cooked “aji de garbanzos,” a spicy Bolivian broth with tomatoes and garbanzo beans that he served with white rice. Alongside the stew was a salad, and he made a sorbet with green mangoes, basil, and Thai bird’s eye chilies for dessert.

That morning, Sifuentes, an Adams House tutor and Expository Writing 20 preceptor, went to Whole Foods Market to buy ingredients—always vegetarian, usually vegan, and almost all organic.

The diners at this Jan. 7 meal were a group of around 14 Adams residents, including students who did not head home for the January term and were only able to enjoy a home-cooked meal thanks to Sifuentes. For the three-course meal, he charged students $5—less than the cost of a burrito in the Square.

As a result of these meals, Sifuentes says that people who normally do not interact with each other—be it because they live in different entryways or travel in separate social circles—have come together and “rearranged themselves.”

“You may see people in your entryway, but you have no idea who’s milling around,” he says. “We’re just trying to do things here in Adams House that bring people together.”

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In the face of sparsely occupied residence halls and regulations that discourage some social activities, many House tutors and administrators are trying to promote a spirit of community during the College’s first-ever January Term, filling the void with activities in which students can bond over food, film, and friends.

A WINTER NO-MAN’S-LAND

Many J-Term residents say they sense a palpable air of desolation in the Houses caused by uneven occupation of the entryways and a lack of events.

“It feels like a ghost town,” says Jacqueline N. Nkuebe ’10, a Winthrop House resident who is staying on campus during January. “It’s nice that it’s quiet and also bad that it’s quiet, but I have some friends that are on campus.”

The silence filling the Houses can be explained, in part, by rules put into place by the College that ban parties and overnight guests. The regulations threaten non-compliant students with dismissal from housing this winter and potentially during future winters.

Then, there’s the simple fact that fewer people are in the Houses. Although a total of 1,316 students were granted January housing, Interim Director of Advising Programs Inge-Lise Ameer said in October that the number of students at Harvard at any given moment would be around 1,000. With a total enrollment of 6,655 students at the College, according to the Registrar’s Office, that means less than one out of every six students has been present at a given time in January.

Not only are there fewer residents, but the distribution of students across some entryways appears to be skewed, with senior-heavy entryways being more populated because of students working on theses, according to Adams House tutor Matt J. Corriel ’05. He added that as some student groups, such as the Hasty Pudding Theatricals, return to campus, the proportion of non-seniors to seniors has increased, ameliorating the imbalance.

But to those in the Houses, people still seem few and far between.

“I see some boys watching TV in the big TV room, and I’ve seen a few people in the JCR eating, but it seems like a lot less to me, less than I expected,” Dara B. Olmsted ’00, a tutor in Mather House, said of the number of students in the House during January.

IN SEARCH OF FOOD

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