Pubdate: 23 Feb 1999 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 1999 Mercury Center Contact: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Author: John Woolfolk FATHER BLAMES ALCOHOL IN UC STUDENT'S DEATH Incidents cast a pall: Freshman's jump onto pool deck the third shock for campus in a month. It was the third shock for the picturesque University of California-Santa Cruz campus in the past month. Freshman Matthew Begbie, 18, tried late Friday to leap from a rooftop into the campus's East Field House pool 30 feet below, but landed a few feet short. Coroner's officials said Monday that the fall broke both of Begbie's ankles and his left leg and bruised his temple. He rolled unconscious into the water and drowned, they said. ``This was a tragic, senseless accident, which apparently resulted from excess use of alcohol,'' Begbie's father, Joe Begbie of Monterey, said in a statement released through the sheriff's office. Sheriff's Deputy Kim Allyn said the family is devastated. Less than two weeks earlier, a 20-year-old student at UC-Santa Cruz's Porter College shot himself in the head with a shotgun, blowing his body off a fourth-floor dorm balcony. And last month, freshman Emma Freeman, 18, was charged with brandishing a pistol in two local armed robberies with her boyfriend, Anthony Cristofani, 23, a senior. A preliminary hearing is scheduled March 26. ``It seems we've had more than our fair share of bad luck,'' university spokeswoman Liz Irwin said. ``In a large community, the odds are that these kinds of incidents will occur. The fact that they haven't in the past is all the more remarkable.'' Jennifer Urbach-Teague, a student who works at the East Field House, a recreational facility, said the recent incidents have cast a gloom over the scenic campus, set among the misty redwoods overlooking the Pacific Ocean. ``It's been weird,'' Urbach-Teague said. ``It's affected people's ability to get things done and concentrate.'' Added Austyn Steelman, 18, a freshman: ``It's creepy.'' According to the sheriff's office, Begbie climbed to the pool house roof sometime after 10 p.m. Friday when it was closed and took a running leap toward the pool. Employees found his body at 9 the next morning at the bottom of the pool. No foul play is suspected in Begbie's death, yet no one has surfaced as a witness to what was seemingly a stunt gone awry, sheriff's officials said. If Begbie's fateful leap was an attempt to impress friends, they haven't come forward to say they saw it. A colorful sign outside Begbie's Oakes College dorm room said, ``We Love You Matt.'' A dorm manager posted himself as a guard outside, turning away reporters. University employees and campus police refused to comment, referring inquiries to the public relations department. Alcohol is not allowed at public events on campus, and ``it's expected that people don't have it on campus,'' Irwin said. But students said liquor flows freely at many campus parties and that they can easily get older students to buy it for them. The death stunned friends and administrators at Monterey High School, where Begbie was regarded as an ace student and a star athlete with a promising future. Begbie was an honor student who played high school football his freshman year and soccer all four years, being named most valuable player on his varsity soccer team, his father said. The elder Begbie described his son as ``a talented artist who loves sports, vintage muscle cars and animals.'' ``We're just devastated,'' Monterey High School Assistant Principal Alicia La Salle said. ``We're just really in shock. Matt was an excellent student. He was a very active student. He was a very nice young man, very well-liked, and respected by all the students and staff.'' - --- MAP posted-by: Mike Gogulski