Location: Hill Area
Meal Serving Unit: Yes
Extended Hours: No
Breakfast Served: No
Resident Population and Composition:
635 if all beds in triples are used; predominantly first-year
and sophomore.
Resident Staff Size, Composition, Special Features:
3 Resident Directors, 1 Head Librarian, 1 Minority Peer
Advisor, 10 Resident Fellows, 14 Residents Advisors --
RFs teach Lloyd Hall Scholars courses; 11 sophomore Student Advisors, 1
Resident Computer Systems Consultant, 1 Academic Peer Advisor.
Student Government/House Council/Minority Councils:
One House Council with budget exceeding $10,000.
Minority Council - MYSTIC (Minority Youth Striving to Incorporate Cohesiveness.)
Academic Programs:
Lloyd Hall Scholars Program, LSA academic advisor.
Special Corridor/House Arrangements:
4 Substance-Free corridors, 4 all-male corridors, 3 all-female
corridors, 12 co-ed by room corridors; 170 substance-free rooms,
400 non-smoking rooms.
Special Facilities:
Art room, library, 2 laundry rooms, vending room, game
room, piano practice rooms.
Micro-Computer Cluster:
20 work stations, 13 Macintosh SE computers, 7 Dell Optiplex
computers, 2 Imagewriter printers, 1 Laserwriter printer, 1 optical scanner.
Study Space Description:
Library, 7 corridor lounges, Umoja (Minority Lounge),
West Lounge, East Lounge, Klein Lounge (open 24 hours everyday for study).
Meeting Space:
Alice's Restaurant, West Lounge, Brown Conference Room,
Klein Lounge, East Lounge.
Public Area Space:
Lobby
Special Traditions:
High level of cultural and educational programming.
Living-learning center approach to classes and programs.
Special Programs/Opportunities:
Lloyd Hall Scholars Program open to all residents; Student
Advisor positions open to all returning sophomores who have participated
in the LHS Program.
Professional Staff in Building:
On-site Dining Service and Facilities Managers; Coordinator
of Residence Education (CORE); 1/2 time secretary, Office Coordinator,
and student temporary employees.
History:
Alice Lloyd Hall was completed in 1949 - in the midst
of a labor and building materials shortage - at a cost of $2.9 million.
Alice Crocker Lloyd, a highly revered member of the U-M community and the
hall's namesake, was the University's Dean of Women from 1930-1950.
The houses within Alice Lloyd are named after important women for the University's
past: Sarah Caswell Angell, Caroline Hubbard Kleinsteuck, Mary Louisa
Hindsdale, and Alice Freeman Palmer. From its commencement, Lloyd
Hall remained an all-female hall until 1968, when the Pilot Program (now
the Lloyd Hall Scholars Program) moved into the all-female building and
the hall became co-educational.