About: Harold Osterweil Cooperative House   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

The third house bought by the ICC was the Harold Osterweil House located on East Jefferson Street. It was named after Economic's Professor Harold Osterweil. Conveniently located about 3 minutes from the University of Michigan's Central Campus, Osterweil appealed to many students. It's first residents were men during the summer of 1946, but in the fall of 1946 Osterweil became a women's house and in 1970 became co-ed. By the time of its purchase, all new student housing had to be approved by the University because students were legally considered minors at that time. Because the ICC moved so fast in its expansion, the University was not asked for approval until after the house was already purchased. The first house that the University granted approval for retroactively is most likely Osterw

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  • Harold Osterweil Cooperative House
rdfs:comment
  • The third house bought by the ICC was the Harold Osterweil House located on East Jefferson Street. It was named after Economic's Professor Harold Osterweil. Conveniently located about 3 minutes from the University of Michigan's Central Campus, Osterweil appealed to many students. It's first residents were men during the summer of 1946, but in the fall of 1946 Osterweil became a women's house and in 1970 became co-ed. By the time of its purchase, all new student housing had to be approved by the University because students were legally considered minors at that time. Because the ICC moved so fast in its expansion, the University was not asked for approval until after the house was already purchased. The first house that the University granted approval for retroactively is most likely Osterw
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dbkwik:coop/proper...iPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • The third house bought by the ICC was the Harold Osterweil House located on East Jefferson Street. It was named after Economic's Professor Harold Osterweil. Conveniently located about 3 minutes from the University of Michigan's Central Campus, Osterweil appealed to many students. It's first residents were men during the summer of 1946, but in the fall of 1946 Osterweil became a women's house and in 1970 became co-ed. By the time of its purchase, all new student housing had to be approved by the University because students were legally considered minors at that time. Because the ICC moved so fast in its expansion, the University was not asked for approval until after the house was already purchased. The first house that the University granted approval for retroactively is most likely Osterweil. Osterweil is the Westernmost co-op and the smallest in the ICC. It is located a couple blocks from campus and walking distance from downtown Ann Arbor. The LSA Building, Student Activities Building, and the Union are a few minutes walking distance away as well.
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