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Page 29 text:
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4 il . [i MIDDLE PQs | have female visitors in the dorm. “I think col- lege students are adult enough to be respon- sible for their own actions,” Greene said. “Butsince it’s ajob | have to follow the rules.” Miss Reinert said she does not agree with the rule against drinking in the rooms, even though she realizes it is a state law and not just a university policy. ‘My parents instilled in me as | grew up that it is much better to drink in the privacy of my own home instead of being out on the highways somewhere,” she said. “And what is the dorm now be- sides my home?” The R.A.s said they felt they are under- paid for the amount of work they have to do. “We get paid $1.70 per hour for the hours we work the desk, but we're on call 24 hours per day,’ Waddlington said. ‘‘Ideally we should be paid two dollars per hour.” Miss Reinert said she was under the impression that private rooms would be available to R.A.s as sort of a fringe benefit, but the overcrowding of the dorms this year has made it impractical. Greene said he also thinks the private room is almost a necessity. “When in a private room you can counsel a person easier if he has a problem,” he said. “If an R.A. has a roommate you have to take into consideration it’s partly his room, too, and you don’t always have the liberty to talk to people.” The R.A.s insisted, however, all the things that happen to them are not bad, and they wanted to tell about some of the rewards of being an R.A. Miss Reinert said it was rewarding to her to be in a leadership capacity. “| was in- volved in a lot of things in high school, and being an R.A. is bringing back a part of my leadership capabilities that were missing my freshman year in college,” she said. “There was a freshman girl on my floor who was the only freshman among juniors and seniors and she was lonely,’ Miss O'Hara said. “She would just look out the window all the time, and she would avoid me like | was some sort of an ogre or something.” She said she made an attempt to draw the girl out one night during an open house, and the girl opened up, talked about herself and seemed much more happy and relaxed. “That was a reward — getting that girl to feel like a part of something,” Miss O'Hara said. “It just thrilled me to death.” Other rewards were not as complex. They mentioned favorably the pay for the job, which is approximately $80 per month, even though they said they are underpaid, the involvement with the dorm they might other- wise miss, and getting to meet many people both in the dorm and from other dorms. They said they attend periodical workshops for R.A.s on campus. Asked if they will consider taking the job again next year when the time comes to decide, all the R.A.s responded favorably. Greene said, “I'll say yes because | like the money, | like to be in charge of people and | like to have some authority. The only bad thing is that it cuts free time,” he said. Wadlington at first said he would probably be back, then he said, ‘| know | will be. The bad thing is a lot of residents don't realize you're a human, too,” he said. “You have to live up to a lot of expectation.” ry 2S) Resident Assistants Profile
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Page 28 text:
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Sharon O'Hara stuck her head out the door of her Central Hall dormitory room, listened to the shrieks and giggles coming from the opposite end of the hall and con- templated going to tell the offenders to shut up for the third time that night. Meanwhile, across campus, Cindy Reinert as facing a similar problem at Bates- p 2 nannies noe e onace dormitory. She Discarded washrags litter the bathroom knocked on a door down from her own, and memories of last night’s water fight from which an unpleasant ordor was seeping, linger in the mind of the resident but there was no response. “I! know that girl is smoking marijuana assistant. Although he feels reluctant because we can smell it coming from her to reprimand friends in the dormitory, room pretty often,” she told her dorm di- : 2 - Z A rector the next day. ‘I’ve tried and tried university policy still prevails. In but I just can’t catch her at it.” reality, the resident assistant is... At Hugh Poland Hall for men, Carroll Wadlington, a senior resident assistant, was working behind the lobby desk when he glanced up in time to see a girl glide quickly past him and into the stairwell. Luckily he was able to catch her quickly before she reached her destination. Robert ‘Bo’ Greene at Douglas Keen Hall came in from a meeting and found stereos blaring on one end of his wing. He asked the music lovers to quiet down a bit, and soon the floor was reasonably quiet. These four people, as resident assistants (R.A.s) in dormitories across campus, have the responsibility of enforcing rules set down by Western Kentucky University’s Office of Student Affairs, yet all will tell you they feel they are caught in the middle between uni- versity policy and the approval of their friends. “| try to handle things pretty much on my own, but it’s extra hard to jump on my friends,” said Miss Reinert, a senior from PeeWee Valley who has been an RA. for two years. “The girl who is smoking (marijuana) is something different because she is breaking the law,” she said. “For something like that | have to go to the dorm director.” Wadlington, who is a junior from Eddy- ville and a senior R.A., which means he doesn't actually supervise a floor, said they use a system in the men’s dormitories called the instant report. “It's kind of a crutch or an easy way out because you don’t have to go to the guy yourself if he’s made an offense,’ Wadlington said. The complaint is filed directly with the dorm director. All The R.A.s said noise is the major problem with which they have to cope. “The rule says they have to be quiet at 7 p.m. but | give them a break,’” Wadlington said. ‘| start enforcing quiet hours at 10 p.m.” Miss O'Hara, a junior from Owensboro, said she thought a lot of her problem with noise stems from the fact that she has only been an R.A. for a year and she was friends with most of the residents before she be- came their R.A. “Now they just don’t seem to have any respect for me as their counselor,” she said. Another problem for the R.A.s is being required to enforce rules they do not neces- sarily agree with. Greene, a sophomore from Morganfield, said if it were left up to him he would take away the rule that says a resident cannot Zl Resident Assistants Profile Clockwise: Sharon O'Hara .. . Central Hall Cindy Reinert . . . Bates-Runner Carroll Wadlington . Hugh Poland Robert “Bo” Greene . . Keen Hall
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Page 30 text:
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Studying computer science with ‘The Three Stooges’ as background from Madisonville. Keeping King company is Ned Johnson, a friend is no problem for Wayne King, a junior office administration major of King’s since their freshman year. King has no roommate GETTING INTO The “SWING OF THINGS...” Dorm Life AG)
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