Here is the full article on Ninemsn.
http://news.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=650362
One of Melbourne's most prestigious schools has kicked out its entire Year 12 class on the eve of exams after a wild muck-up day.
Xavier College took the extraordinary step of suspending up to 250 students from their final three days of term following an unruly ball game and reports of drunken behaviour.
Students playing "jockball", a contact game that resembles rugby, led to a 17-year-old boy sustaining serious injuries.
Conflicting reports claim the student suffered either a broken collarbone or multiple leg fractures.
He was taken to the Epworth Hospital by ambulance.
Nine News reported that the injured boy is the same child who featured in the notorious wheelie-bin bullying video that was posted on the internet last year.
The blurry clip, recorded on a mobile phone, showed a boy wearing a Xavier blazer seemingly forced into a bin which was kicked and knocked over by a gang of cheering students.
While the school controversially claimed the video was merely "a group of friends who were role-playing", five boys were suspended over the incident.
The suspended students have been told they must contact their teachers via email with any pre-exam questions and will be permitted to meet them during the Swotvac week.
There were also claims that several Xavier students were "blind drunk" and terrorised the school's neighbours in the affluent suburb of Kew.
A nearby resident said he phoned the school at about 3pm after a group of apparently drunken boys drinking from wine casks were "urinating all over the neighbours' houses",
The Age reports.
"Unfortunately during lunchtime today a large number of Year 12 students exhibited unacceptable behaviour and as a consequence the decision was taken to cancel classes this afternoon, tomorrow and Wednesday," Xavier's director of development, Graham Sharp, said in a statement.
"The decision was taken in the best interest of students at all levels."
The Catholic boys school, which charges over $30,000 a year for a boarding student, was also criticised last year for not alerting police to a Year 11 student who was expelled for dealing marijuana.
Damn, there goes the days of muck-up days.