|  | The Cavalier daily Wednesday, February 25, 1970 |  | 
Housing Hassle
Traditionally, the Housing Office has been 
a source of irritation and frustration in 
student relations with the administration, and 
it is usually the new student's first insight into 
the mass of red tape, trivia, and paternalism 
that constitute a university bureaucracy. But 
this year the offensiveness of the Housing 
Office has been particularly noticeable, and 
student discontent is growing.
The Housing Office this year, in the 
absence of Chester Titus, has been directed by 
Ralph Main, and a search for the cause of the 
problem could end right here. Perhaps it is 
mere coincidence that the flames of protest 
have built up and now threaten to explode in 
Mr. Main's first year as Director. But in 
looking at some of the Director of Housing's 
actions during the last six months, it seems 
apparent that Mr. Main has not only fanned 
whatever flames may have already been 
present, but has added fuel to the fire.
The Director of Housing has many 
responsibilities, but the one that brings him in 
contact most directly with the students of the 
University is his responsibility for the welfare 
of the residents of the various dormitories. As 
such he is the overseer of room assignments, 
the counseling program, maintenance of the 
dormitories, and student affairs in the 
dormitories. It is his mismanagement of the 
room assignments and his disregard for the 
Alderman Road Legislative and Judicial 
Council constitution that has particularly 
aroused the anger of dormitory residents.
The situation on McCormick Road, with 
scores of upperclassmen housed in the 
basements of various first-year dorms, is 
admittedly bad. These students were forced to 
sign a contract stating that they would move 
to Alderman Road as space became available; 
and it is only fair that those students who do 
wish to transfer should be moved into double 
rooms occupied by one person. But this is, for 
the most part, not the case. The students 
housed in the McCormick Road basements are 
being split from their roommates as single 
slots on Alderman Road become available. 
They have repeatedly asked Mr. Main to take 
their names off the waiting lists for transfer, 
but it is useless. Instead they are moved to 
Alderman Road, where they don't want to 
live, and their new roommates don't want 
them. The most deplorable thing about this is 
the Housing Office's lack of communication 
and outright disregard for student needs.
And while we're speaking of disregard: Mr. 
Main's denial of the constitutional government 
on Alderman Road is a throwback to an 
earlier University. The experiment with 
dormitory self-regulation on Alderman Road 
had the promising beginnings of a pattern that 
could have set the standard for the entire 
dormitory system. Instead, Mr. Main has 
rendered it meaningless under his authoritarian 
hands.
The Legislative Council has three times 
voted to allow refrigerators in dorms. This is 
not the result of hasty or irresponsible student 
action, but the product of a detailed study 
and long debate. There are hazards involved in 
allowing numerous refrigerators, but there are 
hazards involved in allowing students to 
smoke. After Mr. Main vetoed the proposal 
and the Council's overriding of the veto, the 
Constitution asked for a committee to be 
called by Mr. Main to work out a solution. 
Yet Mr. Main has steadfastly refused to call 
the committee.
By his inflexible policies Mr. Main has 
made the dormitories an unpleasant place to 
live at a time when more and more students, 
men and women, will be living in dormitories. 
Housing Office tractability seems to fluctuate 
with the demand for space in dorms. With the 
dorms filled this year, that tractability has 
seemingly turned into intransigency. Only a 
less rigid and more yielding attitude from the 
Housing Director will prevent dormitory living 
from becoming more distasteful than it 
already is.
|  | The Cavalier daily Wednesday, February 25, 1970 |  | 

