When 20-year-old Chris Young came back to his Baker Hall dormitory room after showering Tuesday morning, he received a shocking firsthand taste of his intended degree program.The criminology major found a man in his room, searching through his wallet with his Spanish textbook tucked under one arm. “It took me a second to realize something was wrong,” said Young, a sophomore from Burton, OH. “You only have nightmares about this kind of stuff.”The suspect was identified as 27-year-old Gregory Jerome Browder, according to OSU Police Chief Ron Michalec. After entering several different unlocked rooms, and waking the students sleeping inside, Browder allegedly managed to enter Young’s fourth floor room. Young was showering while his roommate, sophomore Mitch Prusinski, was sleeping. “My roommate didn’t wake up till I came in, saw the guy, and asked him ‘What the f*** are you doing in here?’ ” Young said.According to Young, he and Prusinski attempted to restrain Browder, but Browder broke away and fled down the main stairwell. Young and a third-floor resident, who had also been awoken by Browder, chased him down to the first floor of the building, where Browder tried to hide in one of the study rooms. Several residents and custodial staff members witnessed the pursuit, and with their help, Browder was subdued and Ohio State Police were called, Young said. “We didn’t try to hurt him in any way, although he was fighting us the entire time,” Young said. Browder is being held at Franklin County Jail on charges of felony burglary, aggravated burglary and robbery and will be arraigned today.According to Michalec, Browder has a substantial criminal record and is known to have several aliases. He is suspected of commiting, but has not been charged with, four other burglaries in Baker Hall within the last four days in which the same principle items (textbooks, calculators, wallets, backpacks, jewery, and compact discs) have been stolen. “This guy has been around consistently for the past several weeks,” said Michalec. “We’ll attempt to track them (the stolen property) down if at all possible.” Residence hall staff members are urging students to use Tuesday’s incident as a reminder of the importance of locking their doors at all times and reporting anyone suspicious in the dormitories.”I live in a small, little country town where you know the whole neighborhood,” Young said. “That’s the scary thing about living out here, where a guy can come off the street and ruin things for you.”