Anonymous wrote:Sarah Lawrence used to be a women's college and trust that this sordid tale would not have happened if it still had been.
Cannot believe this even happened -> So in late September 2010, at the beginning of sophomore year, when Talia told her housemates that her father was getting out of prison and needed to crash with them for a while, they were mostly unfazed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How on earth did the school allow this man to live there? When you rent a house, there’s usually a clause limiting the number of times someone not in the lease can stay over. How does a college allow an adult to basically move in to a dorm?
Seriously. A grown man (a parent no less) MOVES IN to a dorm -- nobody says anything? There are not security guards, RAs, resident deans or anything? Or other students did not complain?
It wasn't a dorm. It was off campus housing. The landlord went to court to get this guy evicted eventually.
No - it was a dorm at first. The apartment in NYC was for school breaks and the summer. The dad was living in the dorm at first.
Yes, Slonim is the name of two SLC dorms. Small houses, not larger dorm buildings, but undoubtedly college property. Would love to see the college called out on this even if there isn't any legal liability (and unfortunately there likely won't be at this point). SLC has several of these houses that look like they're part of the neighborhood but are actually college dorms. I'm waiting to hear if there were no RAs, no faculty advisers for the dorm (some colleges have faculty who are assigned to certain dorms as "fellows" just to build good relationships). Maybe no janitorial services inside the house either--? Because if figure a regular cleaner would notice an adult squatting in a college building.
Appalling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How on earth did the school allow this man to live there? When you rent a house, there’s usually a clause limiting the number of times someone not in the lease can stay over. How does a college allow an adult to basically move in to a dorm?
Seriously. A grown man (a parent no less) MOVES IN to a dorm -- nobody says anything? There are not security guards, RAs, resident deans or anything? Or other students did not complain?
It wasn't a dorm. It was off campus housing. The landlord went to court to get this guy evicted eventually.
No - it was a dorm at first. The apartment in NYC was for school breaks and the summer. The dad was living in the dorm at first.
Anonymous wrote:I know someone like this guy. He’s close to 40, I first met him 20 years ago. Obviously a smaller scale, he doesn’t know any world leaders as far as I know. He’s crazy. Always had crazy stories about nightclubs and directing movies. Truly bizarre. I look him up sometimes and he always has a willing group of minions singing his praises.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The one chick, Claudia, has a pretty nutso website - looks like it is still active:
https://claudiadrury.com/
Listen to her recording with her mom. OMG.
https://claudiadrury.com/talking-with-my-mom
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How on earth did the school allow this man to live there? When you rent a house, there’s usually a clause limiting the number of times someone not in the lease can stay over. How does a college allow an adult to basically move in to a dorm?
Seriously. A grown man (a parent no less) MOVES IN to a dorm -- nobody says anything? There are not security guards, RAs, resident deans or anything? Or other students did not complain?
It wasn't a dorm. It was off campus housing. The landlord went to court to get this guy evicted eventually.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How on earth did the school allow this man to live there? When you rent a house, there’s usually a clause limiting the number of times someone not in the lease can stay over. How does a college allow an adult to basically move in to a dorm?
Seriously. A grown man (a parent no less) MOVES IN to a dorm -- nobody says anything? There are not security guards, RAs, resident deans or anything? Or other students did not complain?
Anonymous wrote:How on earth did the school allow this man to live there? When you rent a house, there’s usually a clause limiting the number of times someone not in the lease can stay over. How does a college allow an adult to basically move in to a dorm?