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Housing Results Released

Many First-Years Happy; Some Sad

The laughter of the triumphant seemed to overpower the tears of the defeated in Harvard Yard yesterday, as first-years shared the results of their housing lottery.

As always, some were disappointed with the house name that appeared on the notification slip they found on their doorsteps yesterday morning, but most seemed content with their house assignments.

"People seem to be pretty happy," said Crystal A. Redd '98.

Redd, who received number 3 out of 375 in the lottery, said she was up working on a paper at 8:30 yesterday morning when her blockmates called to tell her that she had been assigned to Currier House--an assignment that made Redd "very happy," she said.

"The distance doesn't really matter," Redd said. "I just think [the Quad is] pretty."

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Redd also said she knows several students who already live in Currier, as well as other first-years who have also been assigned to the house.

Though Redd said her blocking group really wanted to live in the Quad, they also wouldn't have minded if they had been assigned to their fourth choice, Kirkland House.

"As long as we were together, it didn't matter," she said.

In one of the more ironic twists in yesterday's housing drama, Garrick V. Lau '98 and his five blockmates chose four river houses only to be informed today that they had been randomized into Cabot House.

However, his roommate Husani K. Barnwell '98, who had wanted to live in the Quad, was informed this morning that hewould spend the next three years in his blockinggroup's fourth choice, the ever-popular KirklandHouse.

"There's the prospect for trading," Lau said,"But of course that's not allowed."

Though initially disappointed, Lau said hisblocking group made the trek to the Quad yesterdayand decided that Cabot isn't so bad.

"Now we see why they wanted the Quad," Lausaid.

Adding to the strain of the housing lottery, agroup of upperclassmen decided to have some funwith the stressed-out first-years awaiting theirresults.

The Crimson business board distributed severalfake letters notifying its first-year compers andeditors that they had been assigned to CurrierHouse.

Rachel Rosenthal '98, who is a Crimson editor,said the suspicious envelope was slipped under herdoor at 1:30 a.m. yesterday.

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