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[[Image:twodickinsonst.jpg|thumb|Dickinson St. entrance two 2D]]
[[Image:twodickinsonst.jpg|thumb|Dickinson St. entrance to 2D]]


The '''Two Dickinson Street Co-op''', or '''2D''', is one of the two student dining co-ops at [[Princeton University]]. 2D is a 40 member [[vegetarianism|vegetarian]] (and [[veganism|vegan]]-friendly) [[cooperative]] located across the street from the Princeton University campus.
The '''Two Dickinson Street Co-op''', or '''2D''', is one of the two student dining co-ops at [[Princeton University]]. 2D is a 40 member [[vegetarianism|vegetarian]] (and [[veganism|vegan]]-friendly) [[cooperative]] located across the street from the Princeton University campus.

Revision as of 18:23, 23 November 2006

Dickinson St. entrance to 2D

The Two Dickinson Street Co-op, or 2D, is one of the two student dining co-ops at Princeton University. 2D is a 40 member vegetarian (and vegan-friendly) cooperative located across the street from the Princeton University campus.

2D is an alternative to the eating clubs, which constitute the most commonly selected eating option for upperclassmen at Princeton University.[1] Unusually for independent dining co-ops, it is based in university-managed housing.[2]

About

The co-op uses consensus-based decision making processes and collective self-governance. Teams of members alternate cooking dinner each night,[3] and often prepare and eat informal lunches and breakfasts at the co-op. Each member pays dues, cooks at least once a week, participates in a cleaning schedule, and has a chore. Chores range from bread baking to treasurer to dishrag washer.[4] Members join for a variety of reasons, including a commitment to eating vegetarian or vegan food, cost, political beliefs, and a lively social community.[5][6]

The building is officially a university-owned dormitory subject to university housing restrictions and fees,[2] but most residents choose to live in 2D in order to participate in the dining co-op. All residents are given the opportunity to join the co-op and the remaining members are chosen through a lottery. Approximately half of the members of the co-op actually live in the house, while the other half live either on campus or elsewhere.[7]

History

2D was founded in 1977-1978 as a result of two years of student activism demanding an alternative to the eating clubs, including a student occupation of Nassau Hall in the spring of 1978.[8]

Members of 2D have been at the center of political activism at Princeton over the years. For example, 2D members were among the key organizers of the 2000-2002 campaign for a living wage for Princeton janitors and dining hall workers and some meetings were held at 2D.[citation needed] Peter Singer, a noted controversial philosopher at Princeton in favour of animal rights, was invited to eat at 2D on two occasions.[9]

In 1999, a group of 2D alums founded Boston Community Cooperatives, a 501(c)(3) organization that owns and operates a no-equity model of communally owned, democratically controlled and affordable residential housing cooperatives, similar to the NASCO model of cooperative ownership.[10]

Former members

Spelling bee champion Rebecca Sealfon was a member of 2D.[11]

In fiction

Although the author was not a member of the co-op, 2D figures prominently in the mystery/thriller novel The Muse Asylum by David Czuchlewski.[12]

References

Further reading