April 1990 • Volume 3 Circulation • 1,425.000 SATURDAY CLASSES — PAGE 16 THE NEW FAB FOUR — PAGE 10 THE NATIONAL COLLEGE NEWSPAPER Alcohol treatment "God, grant me the courage to change the things I can.” Recovering alcohol abusers can get help at Alcoholics Anonymous Page 2 OPINIONS Primal scream An Indiana U. columnist suggests banning a group of people who make life intolerable— the rule followers. Page <5 LIFE AND ART Student television The student host of Duke U.’s sports interview show wants to tell viewers what it's like to suffer a groin pull. Page 8 SPECIAL REPORT Gay rights U examines an emerging minority group and how college administrators are responding to their concerns. Page 14 You snooze, you lose U. of Virginia students offer tips on staying awake during boring and not so-bonng classes Page 18 More than 200 students involved in drop/add computer fraud case By Beth Kinnane ■ T he Daily Beacon U. of Tennessee Nineteen students have been suspend ed from the U. of Tennessee, and 111 oth ers are on probation after the Office of Student Conduct determined they were involved in a computer-aided registra tion fraud case that was uncovered this semester. In all. 224 students were investigated after university administrators discov ered a group of students had obtained access to a password that allowed them to enter the drop add computer system. The password was obtained from someone who was authorized to enter the system as part of their job, according to Vice Chancellor Phi! Scheurer Students then used the password to add classes that might be full to then schedules, or to drop classes after the deadline “Obviously, students were shopping for classes that would ordinarily be dosed to them." Scheurer said. "In the opposite instance, those who used it to drop classes were doing it, we re told, to avoid the university drop deadline with out penalty" UT students who drop classes after the deadline run do so only with the per mission of their adviser and the dean of their college and will have a W on r their records, indicating that they withdrew from the class Drops done before the deadline do not appear on their records Scheurcr said the tampering incident began when a small number of student s acquired the password to the university’s computer system and circulated it dut See FRAUD, page 2 ! Computer ABUSE MARSnAU RAMSEY, THf DAK Y BEACON U Of TENNESSEE Student convicted of spreading virus By Bob Pavlik ■ The Daily Orange Syracuse U. A computer virus that caused an estimated $12 million in damages was traced to Cornell graduate stu dent Robert Morris, who was convict ed in January of computer fraud and See CONVICTED, page 12 Survey: Political activism to increase in the ’90s By Chris Siegler and Steve Stayrock ■ The Daily Nexus U. ot Calilornia. Santa Barbara Today's college students show greater social concern, par ticulariy on environmental issues, than students did in much : of the 70s and ’80s, and tomorrow 's students will he even more involved, according to a recent survey that involved 403 schools. The study, conducted annually for 24 years by the Higher Education Research Institute at V. of California, Los Angeles, and the American Council on Education, questioned more than 200,000 freshmen. The latest statistics show increased direct student involvement in demonstrations, along with greater concern for the environment The survey indicates a distinct tendency toward greater stu dent activism in the future, said Robin Bailey, an assistant t Survev Director Alexander W Astin ol' UCLA’s Graduate School of Lducation. Forty-four percent of students interviewed said influencm;’ “social values’’ was important to them, while 26 percent wen involved in environmental cleanup programs. In areas of activism, 36.7 percent said they participated u: demonstrations in the year before they entered college, : higher proportion than those who reported being active in the late 1960s. Sophomore publishes book illustrating children’s struggle By Liz Skinner ■ The GW Hatchet George Washington U. 'My people have a custom.'’ she begins. “When a friend goes away, we give them a bracelet made of string for them to remember us by." She displays a stnng bracelet to the camera “Thisisforyou.... remember me " “The String Bracelet: Reflections of and bv the Young People of Southeast Asia" is George Washington U student Kyle Farmbrys way of remembering this little Southeast Asian girl and oth ers who lived through brutal repression in their countries and subsequently came to America with hopes of building new lives. The book contains graphic descrip tions of the teiTor these children faced growing up in Cambodia. Laos and Vietnam In one composition, a child describes people being beaten to death with sticks and bamboo because the sol diers didn’t want to waste bullets. Farmbry, a GW sophomore, began for See STRUGGLE, page 4