Nearly a month after a fire that devastated their sorority house, the last of the Delta Delta Delta sorority members moved out of their temporary housing in Baker Hall. As of now, 22 members of the sorority have moved back into the house, and 21 have moved into an apartment building on Chittenden Avenue. Ohio State placed the women in the dorm two days after a Nov. 2 fire ravaged the third floor of their house, located at the corner of 15th Avenue and Summit Street.”Everyone should be able to move into the house by spring,” said Jody Busby, president of OSU’s Tri Delt chapter. “That’s when the third floor of the house will be done.”Busby said the time that members spent in the dorms was pleasant.”We had meal plans for the cafeteria, and the university was really good about helping us out,” Busby said.Bill Hall, interim vice president for Student Affairs, said he authorized for the women to eat for free for the first three days of their stay in the dorms.”Some of these women lost almost all their belongings that were in the house during the fire. We let them use a meal plan for three days so that they could have a chance to sort their finances out,” Hall said.Steve Kremer, director of Residence Life, said OSU extends this sort of assistance to all members of its community.”We’ve responded in similar ways in the past about other things, as with apartment fires,” Kremer said. “The university will take these students in temporarily, because they are part of the university family,” Kremer said when off-campus students are in a crisis situation, Willie Young, director of Off Campus Student Services, often notifies him so the university can provide assistance.