"Controversial author and scholar  Charles Murray and a Middlebury College professor were attacked by an angry mob  Thursday night as they left a campus building following an attempt at a  lecture.
                Professor  Allison Stanger's neck was injured when someone pulled her hair as she tried to  shield Murray from 20 to 30 violent agitators who attacked the pair outside the  McCullough Student Center at Vermont’s traditionally liberal Middlebury College.
                According  to Bill Burger, vice president of communications at the college, the crowd was  made up of students and 'outside agitators,' some of whom wore masks  as they screamed at Murray. He described their behavior outside as  "incredibly violent and said that 'it was a very, very dangerous  situation.'
                Charles  Murray is a political scientist and author who is best known for his 1994 book, The Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class Structure in  American Life, co-written  with Richard Herrnstein. The New York Times bestseller is controversial for  linking social inequality to genetics. The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC)  labels Murray a white nationalist on its website.
                Via Vermont's 'Independent Voice' Seven Days:
                
                  'The demonstrators were trying to  block Mr. Murray and Professor Stanger's way out of the building and to the  car,' Burger said. 'It became a pushing and shoving match, with the  officers trying to protect those two people from demonstrators — and it became  violent.'
                  'This was an incredibly violent  confrontation,' added Burger, who described the crowd a 'mob.'
                  On Friday afternoon, Middlebury College  president Laurie Patton sent a statement to all students, faculty and staff  describing how 'deeply disappointed' she was by the incident.
                  'I know that many students,  faculty, and staff who were in attendance or waiting outside to participate  were upset by the events, and the lost opportunity for those in our community  who wanted to listen to and engage with Mr. Murray,' she wrote, later  adding: 'I extend my sincerest apologies to everyone who came in good  faith to participate in a serious discussion, and particularly to Mr. Murray  and Prof. Stanger for the way they were treated during the event and,  especially, afterward.'                    
                  
                  Murray had been invited and scheduled to speak at Wilson Hall earlier in the  day. But a jeering and booing crowd of students turned their backs on him and  shouted down his attempts to speak. After about 25 minutes, administrators  resorted to plan B: moving Murray to a private room and streaming the video of  his speech online.
                
                Seven Days added:
                
                  Students continued to make a ruckus as  Murray spoke from the private room with occasional questions from Stanger, a  professor of international politics and economics.
                  About half an hour after the event  ended, Burger said, the two, accompanied by a college administrator and two  public safety officers, tried to leave the building via a back entrance and  hurry to a car. 
                   
                  
                    "'Members of  the campus public safety department who were unarmed 'put themselves in  harm's way to permit this car to leave,' Burger said. 'It was a very,  very dangerous situation.' Officers from the Middlebury Police Department finally arrived on the scene,  but it's not known if any arrests were made."
                  
                   
                
                At this point, the disruptive  'protest' escalated as agitators surrounded various entrances,  swarming the fleeing Murray and Stanger as they exited.                  
                              
                'Professor Allison Stanger was assaulted and her neck  was injured when someone pulled her hair as she tried to shield Murray from the  20 or 30 people who attacked the duo outside the McCullough Student  Center,' said Burger.
                The mob  followed the pair out to their car and once they were inside, began jumping on  the hood and banging on the windows, according to Burger.
                The driver tried to inch out of the  parking space but the angry crowd surrounded the vehicle and tried to keep it  from leaving.
                Burger said someone threw a stop sign  attached to a heavy cement base in front of the car. It finally got free of the  crowd and then left campus.
                Members of  the campus public safety department who were unarmed 'put themselves in  harm's way to permit this car to leave,' Burger said. 'It was a very,  very dangerous situation.' 
                Officers from the Middlebury Police Department finally arrived on the scene,  but it's not known if any arrests were made.
                The school  is looking into arrests and other disciplinary actions for 'what were  clearly violations of our policy,' Burger said. Administrators are also  reviewing video and pictures from the protest/riot to discover who was  involved.
'It's  fair to say this is consuming a lot of our time,' he said.
                Professor  Stanger was rushed to the emergency room for treatment of her injury and now  wears a neck brace, according to Burger. Murray was not injured.
                 
                "Propaganda being used to 'Gin up attacks' against social  undesirables, aka 'Deplorables,' is also nothing new . . . "
                 
                Burger  said, 'We were prepared for the disruption of the event, which  is why we prepared the backup plan for the live stream.' He added,  'We were caught by surprise by the violent acts as Mr. Murray and  Professor Stanger left the building.'
                  The  Middlebury riot comes approximately one month after a violent riot at the  University of California, Berkeley, forced a planned lecture by right-wing  provocateur Milo Yiannopoulos to be canceled.
                Alex Prolman, who helped organize the  protest against Murray's lecture, said he is not a student but a  'concerned community member.' He helped write news releases and  described his role as connecting students with members of the press for  coverage of the event.
                'There was a plan from the  students that had emerged to prevent Murray from speaking, and I think they  were largely successful in that,' said Prolman, who attended the lecture.
                Reached by phone Friday morning,  Prolman, a Burlington resident, said he was headed to the Middlebury campus for  a student meeting about next steps. He declined to say much about what happened  outside the building.
                'I'm still a little hesitant to  comment on this at this point,' he told Seven Days.
                Poleman is an organizer from "Rising Tide Vermont," a  radical environmental group based in Burlington, Vt.
                According  to Christina Hoff Sommers, resident scholar at the American  Enterprise Institute, the SPLC also helped incite the hatred that led to the  violence at Middlebury College. It wouldn't be the first time their efforts to  brand people they don't like with hateful labels has led to violence. Propaganda being used to 'Gin up attacks' against social  undesirables, aka 'Deplorables,' is also nothing new, as Ace of Spades sagely  noted."