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Dorms welcome pets

Sophomore Molly Wallace holds Daisy at Stephens College in Columbia, S.C. She calls the beagle mix “the best roommate ever.”
Help students ease into college

KANSAS CITY — Molly Wallace darted across the campus green at Stephens College one day recently to fetch one of her roommates.

Minutes later, she returned, a little out of breath, wearing a smile and trotting behind an 8-month-old, tail-wagging beagle mix.

“Daisy is the best roommate ever,” Wallace said — doesn’t snore, play loud music or hog the bathroom.

A group of potential students touring campus bent down to pet Daisy, who couldn’t resist getting in a few face licks. “It blows my mind how well mannered she is,” said Wallace.

Stephens, a private school for women in Columbia, S.C., has opened its dorms to pets — dogs, cats, birds, lizards, potbelly pigs, even hedgehogs — since 2004. (Sorry, no snakes or spiders.) The pets-in-dorms program started as a way to help students ease into college life by letting them bring a bit of home to campus.

But in just the past two years, some students have started receiving scholarships from Stephens for fostering a homeless dog or cat. About 30 of the 500 students living in the school’s residence halls are in the program.

Basically, students get $3,000 a year to feed, care for and help their four-legged roomies find a permanent home, said Wallace, who in two years has fostered seven or eight dogs.

“I went through five dogs the first semester,” she said. She’d had each about a week before they were adopted or returned to the shelter during the winter or summer break.

About half of Stephens students living in dorms have pets, either their own or foster animals, said Alissa Pei, student life director. “Our pet policy has earned Stephens the reputation as the most pet-friendly campus in the country,” she said.

A 2011 Kaplan survey of 359 college admission officers found about 38 percent of schools permit some pets in dorms. A quarter of them allow reptiles. Only 10 percent allow dogs, and 8 percent cats.

All the foster animals at Stephens come from Columbia Second Chance, a no-kill shelter that pays for all the animals’ food, toys, leashes and litter.

The students scoop poop, get their animals to a veterinarian if they’re sick and take them to Second Chance pet adoption events. Some students even create Facebook pages for their pets to help them get adopted.

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