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guiseppewv
12-06-2005, 01:57 PM
WATERVILLE -- Deputy Police Chief Joseph Massey said he will send undercover police officers to the Colby College campus to stem the surge of underage drinking after another alleged weekend of college boozing.

Massey said five Colby women, three of them members of the college's lacrosse team, were arrested and several others were issued summonses after parties Friday night and Saturday night. He said the numbers of hospital visits, arrests and summonses for illegal possession of alcohol by minors this school year has forced his hand.

"I will do some undercover operations on campus," Massey said Monday. "I think the level of underage drinking we're seeing since the beginning of the year warrants some undercover details."

Massey said plainclothes police officers will walk the Mayflower Hill campus and will sit in parked cars, watching the comings and goings of students at Colby. He said the officers also will try to blend in at house parties off campus where Colby students live and entertain.

"I'm going to get officers that blend in," he said. "I am concerned about the fact that someone is going to get hurt while intoxicated or overdose on alcohol. It hasn't gotten any better as the year has progressed."

Massey said a police visit to a off-campus residence at 16 Winter St. early Sunday morning resulted in the five arrests.

Those arrested included Elizabeth Kelsea Neville, 21, a senior from Duxbury, Mass; Tracy Anne Kolakowski, 21, a senior from Darien, Conn.; and Leah Farrell Weisberg, 21, a senior from Falmouth. All three women are on the Colby lacrosse team; Weisberg is a team captain.

Also arrested were Kathryn Jane Roberts, 21, a senior from Chatham, N.J., and Ashley Brooke Lamb, 21, a senior from Menlo Park, Calif.

All five women are charged with furnishing a place for minors to consume alcohol.

Massey said police were called to Winter Street initially for a loud-noise complaint. He said that when officers saw people jumping out of windows at the house, it triggered suspicion.

"They saw students jumping out side windows -- there were in fact three more students identified as underage; five were summonsed for illegal possession of alcohol by a minor," he said. "All five women who rented the apartment were physically arrested."

Massey said the weekend began with parties Friday night, one of them at The Heights, a Colby dormitory. The police call came in initially as an assault on a security guard, he said.

A guard apparently was pushed, but not injured, and no charges were brought.

Massey said a party was in progress at The Heights in a student activity center. When police arrived, Massey said, they found students outside the hall who were "stumbling" around, apparently intoxicated.

Officers went to the bar area of the party and found two adult students in charge of the alcohol, according to Massey.

Colby spokesman Stephen Collins said there was some confusion inside The Heights because other, unsanctioned parties apparently were being held at the same time as a senior/junior prom.

He said Colby officials do not mind the added police attention, even if it means sending in plain-clothes officers, but he stressed that some parties are for students over 21 and are legal.

"That's perfectly within the right of the police," Collins said of the added visits on campus. "We understand that the laws of the state of Maine and the city of Waterville apply on campus."

Collins said the party at The Heights was a legal, school-sanctioned event with Colby Director of Student Activities Kelly Wharton on duty that night. He said the party was not an open bar and the two hosts were checking identification.

He said the underage students who were summonsed were from the other parties.

"The junior/senior prom was all above-board and by the book," he said.

Massey said it is the drinkers who don't go by the book that he wants to get tough on this year.

"This weekend comes on the heels of 10 other students summonsed for alcohol violations in the last two weeks," he said. "Add this to the 35 students that we have summonsed or arrested since the beginning of school and you can see we've had 60 students who have been arrested or summonsed -- that's 60 that we know about."

He said those numbers indicate that it is not just one group of substance abusers on campus, but appears to be a bigger problem, campus-wide.

"I think it really shows the significance that alcohol has on college campuses," Massey said.

Doug Harlow -- 861-9244

[email protected]


http://morningsentinel.mainetoday.com/news/local/2211534.shtml

Seriously, is this really necessary?

Grimm
12-06-2005, 03:20 PM
Yes. Until college students learn to be responsible for their actions we are gonn have to treat them like children.

zippyjuan
12-06-2005, 04:00 PM
They seem to drink a LOT more today than they did 20 years ago and all college campuses are struggling with the problem.

KIISQueen
12-06-2005, 04:22 PM
Well it's about time they do something. These Kids today get of hand. Alot them do'nt even know how to handle it!!!

Memo
12-06-2005, 04:49 PM
They seem to drink a LOT more today than they did 20 years ago and all college campuses are struggling with the problem.

That's the key word right there.

ialsohaveadream
12-06-2005, 08:34 PM
They seem to drink a LOT more today than they did 20 years ago and all college campuses are struggling with the problem.
They also seem to drive a lot less when they're drinking. And Memo nailed it...it only seems that way when you're removed from the memory by a few years and have some more of that "age and wisdom" stuff the kids lack.

Well it's about time they do something. These Kids today get of hand. Alot them do'nt even know how to handle it!!!
Nice post...are you handling yours? :P

nickel
12-06-2005, 08:40 PM
blame Belushi. he started it. :P

http://homepages.wmich.edu/~t3thoma1/animal%20house.jpg

Thesifer
12-06-2005, 09:26 PM
Yes. Until college students learn to be responsible for their actions we are gonn have to treat them like children.


Treating people like children really does teach them too. In the Navy they do that at almost every turn all the way up to 30 year old men. It works so well that the Adults end up acting like children because they are treated like them.

clutchy
12-06-2005, 10:10 PM
Yes. Until college students learn to be responsible for their actions we are gonn have to treat them like children.

I'm amazed at how often i agree w/ you and baffled by our political divide...

eSDee
12-06-2005, 10:17 PM
I wouldn't be surprised if alcoholism was at an all time high.

Jeffbx
12-07-2005, 06:35 AM
I don't think it's any better or worse than it was at least 10 years ago... they did this at Michigan State when my wife was a student there back in the early 90s. A 'blind pig' is what they called it - when a cop went into a party undercover to nail whoever was collecting money, serving alcohol, or on the lease for the house/apartment.

guiseppewv
12-07-2005, 07:07 AM
I know at WVU there is waaaaay less partying now than there was 10-15 years ago.

gear02
12-07-2005, 07:26 AM
Enforcement does not work at college campuses because there are more places to get alcohol than the police and find and shut down. Besides, alcohol is a part of our society and until the consumption of alcohol drops in the general public, it's still going to be a problem at college campuses.

Enforcement will simply drive drinkers underground, afraid to come out. They will still drink, but if something bad happens they will be more afraid to call for help and people will die from alcohol poisoning. In such an environment, you should be very open and allow people to drink. You don't encourage and you make all attempts to discourage drinking, but once it happens you don't act like a police state. A university needs to create an environment where people are willing and free to call for help when someone is in trouble.

Besides, we all know how well police states work.

Cubsfan
12-07-2005, 07:40 AM
I suppose a lot of parties will now be invitation from the host only or something like that. Or maybe someone has to vouch for everyone who gets in.

nickel
12-07-2005, 08:01 AM
I know at WVU there is waaaaay less partying now than there was 10-15 years ago.
because there are more crack downs and more penalties for getting caught now versus then.

zippyjuan
12-07-2005, 01:01 PM
There are also more reports of alcohol poisoning than there used to be and that is one reason that I think kids are consuming more alcohol. Also the choice of alcohol has moved from beer to more of the hard stuff. Three people have died in the last four years in Colorado and none happend when I went there.

psycho-
12-07-2005, 01:04 PM
I wouldn't be surprised if alcoholism was at an all time high.


Actually, under-30 (age) alcoholism IS at an all time high in the US. There is a particularly notable trend towards binge drinking and related deaths.

Apperantly it's even more pronounced in the UK.

cadetevon
12-07-2005, 01:34 PM
Seriously... this thread has made me want a drink. 'Lil Jack, one ice cube, thankyouverymuch. *maybe* a diet cola back.

Grimm
12-07-2005, 05:31 PM
Seriously... this thread has made me want a drink. 'Lil Jack, one ice cube, thankyouverymuch. *maybe* a diet cola back.
Ice, in whiskey?!?! That's just wrong. :nono:

gwilks98
12-07-2005, 08:04 PM
If they want to reduce underage drinking on campuses, lower the tuition a bit. I don't know about yall, but I know the semester bill was my reason to drink.

AlpineJay
12-07-2005, 08:06 PM
Even at my school where the drinking is somewhat subdued (well, not really recently), stuff like this happens:

http://www.tuftsdaily.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2005/12/07/439687bb5bd98


Published December 07, 2005
Junior expelled, faces city charges


The student who allegedly assaulted a campus police officer last month has been expelled from the University.

Junior Ciaran O'Donovan, 21, will be allowed to finish his courses this semester, but he is not allowed on campus for any other purpose. His expulsion goes into effect when finals period ends.

O'Donovan was involved in a fight with junior Tim Churella in the early morning of Wednesday, Nov. 23 in a house at 185 College Avenue. The fight spilled into the street, and Tufts University Police Department Officers Cheri Burton and Eric Morales and several Somerville officers responded to the scene.

O'Donovan ran across the street next to the blue light emergency phone on Lower Campus Road. Burton attempted to detain O'Donovan, but O'Donovan allegedly struck Burton, knocked her to the ground, pulled out her hair and shouted racial epithets at her. Burton is African-American.

When the other officers who responded intervened, O'Donovan allegedly shouted other racial and homophobic epithets and spat in an officer's face.

O'Donovan was first taken to the hospital and then detained by the Somerville Police Department.

According to O'Donovan's lawyer, Michael Schneider, O'Donovan is awaiting charges on disorderly conduct, assault and battery on a police officer and resisting arrest. He is due in Somerville court Jan. 23.

O'Donovan was previously arrested, along with junior Nathan Cleveland, by Somerville police Sept. 25 for walking on Curtis Avenue with open beer cans.

The city charges and additional ones of public intoxication, noise violation and acts of intolerance were used by the University to pursue expulsion.

O'Donovan received the official expulsion letter from the Dean of Students Office Monday, Dec. 5.

According to the School of Arts, Sciences and Engineering Student Judicial Process, parties involved in a disciplinary decision have ten days to appeal the ruling to the Committee on Student Life.

"We definitely intend to appeal it," Schneider said. Schneider will represent O'Donovan both in Somerville and at the University.

Appeals can be brought on two grounds: denial of fair process and new evidence. Schneider said the appeal would describe O'Donovan's character and what he called a "fuller development of the facts." Schneider would not elaborate on the specifics of the appeal.

"I am not shirking any responsibility," O'Donovan said. "I did what I did. I have nothing but regret."

O'Donovan said alcohol contributed to, but was not the sole cause of, the incident. He said his blood alcohol content was measured at .327. The legal limit for operating a vehicle in Massachusetts is .08.

"I do believe that had some effect on my mental state," he said.

Churella is not facing any disciplinary or legal action from the University or Somerville.

O'Donovan and Churella were members of this semester's men's cross country team. Team members said no formal discussion had taken place about the incident or O'Donovan's expulsion.

The team members were also supportive of O'Donovan. "I still see Ciaran as a friend," senior co-captain Matt Lacey said. "I just hope he can grow and move on and it doesn't essentially end his life."

Lacey said the topic may be discussed at a team meeting within the next few weeks.

Though he was present when police arrived, Churella stayed in front of the house and did not see the incident between O'Donovan and Burton. "We knew Ciaran, he's a good kid," Churella said. "None of our impressions change because of one night."

O'Donovan admitted his role in the incident but said his actions were out of anger and not hatred for any racial or ethnic group. "I can't apologize enough to anyone I may have offended," he said.

This kid is absolutely ridiculous and this isn't an isolated incident by people. Last year during the Naked Quad Run, a kid punched out a police officer and the year before that, a kid punched another police officer during the 2004 World Series celebration. I think this is actually the first instance when a student got expelled for assaulting a police officer and rightfully so.

There are those of us who drink more or less responsibly, and then people like Ciaran. Overall something has to be done - "boys will be boys" really is a tired old excuse for stuff like this happening. Personally I'm glad to see this kid leave campus because no matter what his excuse is, what he did is heinous and not solely explainable by drunkenness.

zippyjuan
12-07-2005, 10:46 PM
Mr O"Donovan is keeping up the image of the Irish as drinkers. In Colorado they were burning sofas for entertainment which led to the occasional riot and the subsequent banning of sofas from front yards and porches.