News

Harvard’s Graduate Union Installs Third New President in Less Than 1 Year

News

Harvard Settles With Applied Physics Professor Who Sued Over Tenure Denial

News

Longtime Harvard Social Studies Director Anya Bassett Remembered As ‘Greatest Mentor’

News

Judge Dismisses Part of Harvard’s Lawsuit to Recoup Millions in Legal Fees

News

John Manning ’82 Will Serve as Harvard’s Next Permanent Provost

Summer Postcards 2011

The Housing Game

By Aixin Wang, Crimson Staff Writer

WASHINGTON—One sublet offer for every 40 emails sent, or a 2.5 percent success rate. By the numbers, my housing search hasn’t been pretty.

It made sense that renters hold the upper hand in a city like D.C., where thousands of interns converge every summer and make affordable housing options scarce. But the D.C. housing game was complicated in a way I hadn’t anticipated: with so much demand, the renters were looking for more than trustworthiness or the ability to pay—they were looking for a winning personality.

Some renters called for “interviews.” One asked all “applicants” to submit paragraphs summarizing their interests and favorite TV shows so she could select a subletter that fit best with her roommates. I pondered what to write: would I sound loud if I said I like to listen to Muse? Would I impress with my knowledge of Japanese dramas, or should I emphasize my more relatable love of True Blood?

Thankfully, I didn’t get a chance to write those paragraphs. Unexpectedly, the dates worked out with another renter, and the apartment was in a neighborhood that looked gorgeous under Google Street View’s perpetually blue skies. After so much trial and error, I found my home for the summer, and I breathed a sigh of relief at having earned the right to bid farewell to Craigslist—until next year, at least.

Alice A. Wang '12, an editorial writer, is a Government concentrator in Dunster House.

Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.

Tags
Summer Postcards 2011