Written by 4:41 pm News • 79 Comments

Trouble on the Coast: Rave night increased CC and CGA tension

Illustration by Emily Bernstein

Last Saturday, September 18 around 11:45PM, a group of five unsuspecting freshmen were sitting outside of the back entrance of Larrabee House, enjoying the cool night air, when the evening suddenly took an alarming turn. A clearly inebriated member of the Coast Guard wandered, shirtless and bleeding profusely from his right temple, out of a nearby path.

Rijul Ray ’14 and the bleeding student locked eyes for a moment, and suddenly the student began storming towards the group with little warning. Ray did not stick around to see what happened next: he bolted out of there, another freshman in tow. This decision proved to be a wise one.

The drunken young man lurched toward the group and began speaking with only mild intelligibility. “They want me to go to the woods!” he yelled, grabbing Michael Murchison ’14. Afterward, he took a swing at Alex Onik ’14, who narrowly dodged it and was left unharmed. As Ray contacted campus security, a crowd began to gather around the spectacle, causing Murchison and another student, Nels Christenson ’14, to remove themselves from the scene. They entered the back door of Larrabee in an attempt to seek haven in their basement room.

There was only one problem: the Coast Guard student had followed them in.

“I felt raw fear, man,” Ray said following the event. “I’ve never felt fear the way I did that night.”

Chris King ’13 arrived with a few friends just as things seemed to be going even further downhill. He quickly made his way to Larrabee’s basement and helped restrain the student, who had attempted to corner Christenson in the hallway of his dorm.

The student was banging on one of the doors, making violent threats, when King got a hold of him and managed to sit him down.

Duncan Spaulding ‘12 was visiting a friend upstairs, when a few students came running into the room.  “They said there was a kid trying to kill someone in the basement and they needed help,” he said.  “We ran down and Chris started talking to the kid and asking him to calm down. The guy’s entire face was red with blood.”

“I just grabbed him, and I held him there once everyone ran away,” said King. “He was trying to break into the room they were in, and I just calmed him down a bit until Campus Safety came. I have no idea what made me do it. I saw him throw a punch, so I grabbed him because I didn’t want him to really injure somebody.”

Spaulding called Campus Safety at 12:03 AM, and they arrived quickly from three different entrances.  Once they arrived, the student began trying to explain the details of the night to the officers and King.

“He said that he got kicked out of a room by a couple of girls, and four Conn guys came and beat the hell out of him,” said King. “He was really hammered when he was telling the story. But if I were to guess, I’d say the girls kicked him out, and the guys thought he was giving them a hard time so they beat him up.”

When the ruckus finally subsided, the student was removed by Campus Safety.  The only remaining sign that anything had happened was the bloodstained handprint on Christenson’s shirt from where he had been grabbed.

Anyone who has ventured out of his or her dorm on a Thursday or Saturday has no doubt noticed the distinctive blue and white uniform of many a Coast Guard student.

“I would rather Coasties didn’t touch me when I’m inebriated – or sober, for that matter,” said sophomore Zoë Lieb, in regards to their fairly consistent presence at campus parties. She’s hardly alone; the student from Saturday’s incident was on campus primarily to seek out girls.

Alternately, jabs, sneers and, as this incident proves, physical violence, are used against Coast Guard members upon their every visit. That Saturday, Conn students were heard yelling comments to the uniformed like “My tax dollars are paying for your education,” and “At least we’ve got real girls.”

The Coast Guard visitors generally aren’t considered very dangerous and they will probably continue to be treated with the same terse civility they always have. But on a campus where the honor code asks us to treat others with integrity, for who is the coast less clear?

Additional reporting by Lilah Raptopoulos

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