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 that was after the dorm, when they were living on 93rd street. Goodness. Please protect my kids from drugs, metal illness, and cults. I can deal with anything else.
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?
Sophomore year, a girl on my floor was dating a much older guy. At least late 30s. Possibly early 40s. Not a hot professor type. He looked like a sad dad. He typically stayed over 1-2 nights a week. She discovered he was married (shocker) and booted him out one night around 2 am. We didn’t see him for 6 weeks. Then, he returned and actually moved into her dorm room. His wife had kicked him out. I remember that we all talked about them, but to my knowledge no one reported it to Res Life. He lived in our dorm for about 2.5 months. This was definitely not allowed, but I think we all just wanted to see how it panned out.
That's crazy. I was trying to think of how the SL thing could have worked out that way, so I ask -- was there an RA on the floor? Usually there is. Didn't that person notice? Did the building have security and security guards to check in? My dorm required a card to swipe in and there were usually security guards hanging around. They recognized most people by face. I think they would have questioned a 40-something man who kept coming in and out, as he would have stood out as not a student!
I posted earlier about touring SLC last fall. The college seems to have some dorms that are actually houses right on the edge of campus (as in, single-family homes that maybe SLC bought up as they went on the market--?). I wonder if the dorm Slonim (named in the article) is one of those; they seem like they could probably house only a relative small group of students and might not have room for any "resident faculty" living quarters, which tend to be larger living spaces. Also, not every college puts an RA into every small dorm. Don't know if there was anything like a RA living in Slonim at that time (these students were at SLC in the early 2010s mostly if I read the article right).
I can see how this situation might happen especially if all the students were under his sway, or not under his sway but a bit scared of him, or...worst of all, apathetic. Parents, let's teach our supposedly independent young adults to BE adult and REPORT crap that seems odd (or violates rules like, no non-students living in dorms) because they may be helping someone like these vulnerable students who got sucked in by this sicko. I'm sure many college students just tell themselves, this situation might seem weird but I don't want to judge, i don't want to interfere, I might be wrong, I want to tolerate all kinds of relationships, I don't want to get the student into trouble, etc. So they do as the PP above did -- nothing-- and don't report things.
But this was reported to the school, by at least one of the parents. The school did nothing in response.
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.
Liar, LIAR, pants on fire!
The article says it was ON their campus!
Anonymous wrote:https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.vulture.com/amp/2019/05/mark-wahlberg-to-adapt-the-stolen-kids-of-sarah-lawrence.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The one chick, Claudia, has a pretty nutso website - looks like it is still active:
https://claudiadrury.com/
Holy shit! That is crazy.
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?
Sophomore year, a girl on my floor was dating a much older guy. At least late 30s. Possibly early 40s. Not a hot professor type. He looked like a sad dad. He typically stayed over 1-2 nights a week. She discovered he was married (shocker) and booted him out one night around 2 am. We didn’t see him for 6 weeks. Then, he returned and actually moved into her dorm room. His wife had kicked him out. I remember that we all talked about them, but to my knowledge no one reported it to Res Life. He lived in our dorm for about 2.5 months. This was definitely not allowed, but I think we all just wanted to see how it panned out.
That's crazy. I was trying to think of how the SL thing could have worked out that way, so I ask -- was there an RA on the floor? Usually there is. Didn't that person notice? Did the building have security and security guards to check in? My dorm required a card to swipe in and there were usually security guards hanging around. They recognized most people by face. I think they would have questioned a 40-something man who kept coming in and out, as he would have stood out as not a student!
I posted earlier about touring SLC last fall. The college seems to have some dorms that are actually houses right on the edge of campus (as in, single-family homes that maybe SLC bought up as they went on the market--?). I wonder if the dorm Slonim (named in the article) is one of those; they seem like they could probably house only a relative small group of students and might not have room for any "resident faculty" living quarters, which tend to be larger living spaces. Also, not every college puts an RA into every small dorm. Don't know if there was anything like a RA living in Slonim at that time (these students were at SLC in the early 2010s mostly if I read the article right).
I can see how this situation might happen especially if all the students were under his sway, or not under his sway but a bit scared of him, or...worst of all, apathetic. Parents, let's teach our supposedly independent young adults to BE adult and REPORT crap that seems odd (or violates rules like, no non-students living in dorms) because they may be helping someone like these vulnerable students who got sucked in by this sicko. I'm sure many college students just tell themselves, this situation might seem weird but I don't want to judge, i don't want to interfere, I might be wrong, I want to tolerate all kinds of relationships, I don't want to get the student into trouble, etc. So they do as the PP above did -- nothing-- and don't report things.
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?
Sophomore year, a girl on my floor was dating a much older guy. At least late 30s. Possibly early 40s. Not a hot professor type. He looked like a sad dad. He typically stayed over 1-2 nights a week. She discovered he was married (shocker) and booted him out one night around 2 am. We didn’t see him for 6 weeks. Then, he returned and actually moved into her dorm room. His wife had kicked him out. I remember that we all talked about them, but to my knowledge no one reported it to Res Life. He lived in our dorm for about 2.5 months. This was definitely not allowed, but I think we all just wanted to see how it panned out.
That's crazy. I was trying to think of how the SL thing could have worked out that way, so I ask -- was there an RA on the floor? Usually there is. Didn't that person notice? Did the building have security and security guards to check in? My dorm required a card to swipe in and there were usually security guards hanging around. They recognized most people by face. I think they would have questioned a 40-something man who kept coming in and out, as he would have stood out as not a student!
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?
Sophomore year, a girl on my floor was dating a much older guy. At least late 30s. Possibly early 40s. Not a hot professor type. He looked like a sad dad. He typically stayed over 1-2 nights a week. She discovered he was married (shocker) and booted him out one night around 2 am. We didn’t see him for 6 weeks. Then, he returned and actually moved into her dorm room. His wife had kicked him out. I remember that we all talked about them, but to my knowledge no one reported it to Res Life. He lived in our dorm for about 2.5 months. This was definitely not allowed, but I think we all just wanted to see how it panned out.
Anonymous wrote:I'm waiting for this story to be rolling stoned. Seems like if no one else can verify there are holes a mile wide.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The one chick, Claudia, has a pretty nutso website - looks like it is still active:
https://claudiadrury.com/
Holy shit! That is crazy.
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?