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Student wounds official, shoots himself at small college in St. Louis

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While announcing the opening of its $3 million downtown campus, the school said it was adding bachelor’s degrees in several fields, including business administration, interior design and fashion merchandising. According to 2011 federal education data, it had an enrollment of 195 students, 90 percent of them women. It had seven full-time and 13 part-time faculty members, and a few administrators.

School president Cynthia Musterman could not be reached for comment.

About 40 or 50 students were present when Tuesday’s shooting started, officials said.

Angae Lowery, of Collinsville, said she drove to the school after receiving a text message from her daughter, Britnee Jones, a Stevens student. “The text said, ‘Someone’s shooting. Please help me,’” Lowery said. “I didn’t know what to do. I was so scared.”

As officers secured the building, Lowery stood in tears near the police tape.

Britanee Jones said she was in a fashion merchandising class with instructor Beth Schlegel and nine other students. “I heard a gunshot and got up,” said Jones, 24, also of Collinsville. “We were going to run out of the class, but (Schlegel) wouldn’t let us leave. She stood in front of the door and told us all to be quiet and get under our desk or go into a corner. Then she turned out the lights. Then some of us called 911 to tell police what was going on.”

She said, “I was just wondering if he was going to come into the room and shoot us.”

Jones said she heard another gunshot “about a minute, maybe two” after the first,” she said. “It wasn’t back-to-back.” Then police led them out.

Jameelah Tatum, 27, of St. Louis, has attended interior design classes at Stevens for about four years. She was across the street at a boutique she owns, House of Glam, when she saw a Stevens employee run out of the front door and prevent two young women from entering. “And then I saw police car after police car start pulling up,” Tatum said.

“Greg was the financial aid person, and he helped people out with their loans and things,” Tatum said. “I don’t know what the problem was, but Greg was always a real nice guy. He never showed any bad disposition, ever, to me.”

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