A hazing incident at Carleton College involving "extreme alcohol consumption" in connection with a secret club has prompted the private school to suspend 13 students, administrators announced.
A letter sent Friday to students, faculty and staff from Carleton President Steven Poskanzer and another top college official revealed that punishment for the 13 students includes an immediate three-trimester suspension, alcohol education and community service.
"We are greatly troubled by these events" in the early hours of April 28, the letter read. "We are continuing to investigate actions relating to this incident that resulted in harm to college students."
Police also are investigating, according to the college.
The club is not sanctioned by Carleton, a highly regarded liberal arts school of roughly 2,000 students in Northfield that has never had fraternities or sororities.
Poskanzer's letter said that the "event on campus that has severely compromised" the college's fundamental value of mutual respect "involved hazing and extreme alcohol consumption as part of initiation into a secret coed social club."
A school investigation found those responsible violated the student code of conduct that forbids hazing and other actions that threaten the health, well-being, and safety of others.
Also, a news release issued Friday by the school mentioned an alleged sexual assault of a student "following the hazing incident." On Sunday, school spokesman Joe Hargis declined to reveal anything further about the allegation, including how it might be connected to the excessive drinking, other than to say city police are investigating the student's allegation.