The Michigan Dc Alcohol policy raises Iri Tomorrow marks the two-week an- niversary of the University of Notre Dame administration's decision to drastically tighten its alcohol policy. The new policy touched off a series of student protests against both the alcohol policy and the lack of student input in administrative decisions. About 2,500 of the school's 10,000 students spontaneously rallied against the policy when it was announced. The protest lately became more organized. under the leadership of Rob Bertino, president of the student body. Although the administration is stan- ding by the alcohol policy, which limits COLLEGES the number of people allowed in a dorm room and prohibits alcohol parties in dorm lounges unless everyone present is over 21, the administration is now reviewing the amount of student input in policy decisions. - Notre Dame Observer Harvard women protest harrassment More than 100 Harvard students marched last week from Memorial Church through Harvard Square in the fourth annual "Take Back the Night" march to protest sexual harassment. The march was led by the Radcliffe Union of Students (RUS). The emphasis of this year's march was to include sexual harassment both on the streets and at the university. A study conducted by Associate Dean of the Faculty Sidney Verba indicated that one out of every five Radcliffe students will be harassed by an authority figure before she graduates. The marchers carried candles and shouted as they marched through Har- vard square stopping in front of several undergraduate men's clubs. The demonstrators specifically stop- ped in front of the Pi Eta Speakers Club to protest a recent club newsletter which referred to women as "slob- bering bovines." RUS wants the Harvard ad- ministration to follow through on Ver- ba's proposal to create a central office for education about sexual harassment. "We're not just here to take back the night this time," said Christina Spaulding, former RUS president. "Sexual coersion is everywhere and what we're here for tonight is to take back our lives from sexism." - The Harvard Crimson Md. club loses recognition over hazing incident The University of Maryland has withdrawn its recognition of an honorary society of fraternity leaders over a hazing incident that ended with a 21-year-old being taken to a hospital. Judicial Programs Director Gary Pavela made the ruling Wednesday against the Gate and Key society based on findings of a student judicial board inquiry. The board found the society guilty of "recklessly causing physical harm" to Carlos Restrepo, who was hospitalized for four days on April 10 with internal bleeding after he tore his esophagus while chugging a pitcher of beer. Pavela said he considered the san- ctions light but that they should serve as a warning to other groups. The students board also ruled that Restrepo's consent to take part in the beer chugging did not relieve the society of any blame. Society officals say they will appeal the board's findings and Pavela's decision. - Associated Press Illinois State grave robbers confess Following their attorney's advice, two Illinois State University students have admitted to planting a human forearm on University grounds. The confession came after several people contacted the police and implicated the two in the grave robbing incident. Police turned the students over to the Student Judicial Office, which is keeping their identities confidential. The students will not be prosecuted by police because they turned themselves in and because there is probably not enough evidence, Police Lt. Don Knapp said. The maximum penalty is expulsion from the school, according to the Student Judicial Office. If prosecuted in court, the students would have faced up to one year in prison and a $1,000 fine. - The Daily Vidette Princetonians search for girls Two Princeton students have set out to find where the girls are. Sophomores Seth Rachlin and George Vanhoomissen have visited more than 50 women's colleges on the East Coast in six-weeks to write a book on finding college women. They have traveled over 8,000 miles by car and a few thousand more in the air. The pair said they came up with the idea for the book, which they hope to publish later this year, after spending too many Saturday nights alone and discovering the story of a Princeton un- dergrad in the '60s who wrote about roadtripping. Although they would not pick a favorite, the roadtrippers cited Smith and Wellesley as good destinations for those in search of girls. As for Prin- ceton women, Rachlin says they don't have to worry. He likes to think his work is "supplementing Princeton women, not replacing them." - The Daily Princetonian Mass. denies housing refund to students The University of Massachusetts at Amherst denied a housing fee refund to residents of a women's dormitory who were repeatedly forced to evacuate their dorm last fall during a series of small fires. The dormitory was the scene of at least 16 fires set in trash barrels, atop desks, and on bulletin boards. 150 of the 177 dorm residents signed a petition which requested a return of the $621 housing fee. An administration committee recommended a refund of $71 for the in- convenience to the students. But the vice-chancellor for student affairs rejected the proposal, saying that he did not find the residents' rationale convincing. - The Chronicle o01 Higher Education Illinois students begin toilet paper drive A campaign to collect toilet paper for students at Southern Illinois University is on a roll. The university's annual toilet paper crunch came to a head April 26, when junior Chris Neesley wrote the student newspaper urging school officials to "reconsider their decision to cut off our toilet paper supply." Steve Kirk, a spokesman for the university, said it has a policy of giving each student only five free rolls. So Thursday, Burt's Sandwich Shop came to the youths' aid by offering a free roll of paper to anyone who buys a breakfast and presents a student iden- tification card. Meanwhile, in a nearby town, millionaire Waymon Presley added an old-fashioned touch to the toilet paper feud. Presley said he would have a pickup truck parked near Carbondale's University Mall on Saturday to collect alternatives to paper for the students - catalogues and corn cobs. "We used to have those catalogues and corn cobs in the country where I lived, so I know they'll work," he said. - Associated Press Harvard bear abducted A group of subversives calling them- selves the Cantabrigian Hibernative Army pulled off the "bearnapping" of the century at Harvard, last month when they abducted a stuffed grizzly from his graduate school dormitory. The bear's owner, graduate biology student Gary Rosenberg, said he retur- ned from a skiing vacation in Montreal to find Rubenstein, the stuffed bear, gone. A note in the bear's place said it was being "treated well" and that Rosenberg should "wait for further in- structions." Since the abduction, Rosenberg has received two ransom notes and a recor- ded telephone message demanding 200 "clams" for the bear. Rosenberg said he was instructed to leave the money in a book on the shelf of a campus library. Instead of depositing the money, Rosenberg left a note demanding more proof that the bear was safe. Rosenberg has received photographs of the bear blindfolded and one showing Ruben- stein gagged and with a plastic bag over his head. Rosenberg said the bear was a regular at his review sessions. As istated by one of his students, "meeting the bear has been one of the greatest. educational experiences of my Harvard career." - The Harvard Crimson ily - Sunday, May 6, 1984 - Page 7 sh ire Penn State prescribes poetry for doctors HERSHEY, Pa. - Saying doctors need poetry as well as science, a medical school has published a student literary magazine as part of an unusual humanities program. "Wild Onions," a 44-page collection of photographs, poetry and prose, is the only medical school literary publication in the country, according to Pen- nsylvania State University's College of Medicine. The school, part of the Hershey Medical Center, has a full-fledged humanities department, one of only three among the country's 115 medical schools. Students must take two humanities courses before they can graduate. - Associated Press S.C. prof commits suicide A former faculty member at the University of South Carolina at Colum- bia committed suicide in the university president's office last week after his demand that he be reinstated was not met. Prof. Philip Zeltner, despite being voted teacher of the year by students in 1978, was denied tenure two years ago after beinga faculty member since 1974 in the philosophy department. Zeltner took a student hostage and barricaded himself in the president's office. He was armed with two. han- dguns. University President James Holder- man, who was elsewhere at the time of the incident, convinced Zeltner by phone to release the student unharmed. Later a team of state troopers en- tered the building and found Zeltner dead of an apparently self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head. - The Chronicle of Higher Education Complied by Daily staff writers Holly Broesamle, Marla Gold, Rachel Ham, and Eric Mattson. *% - BISCAYNE COLLEGE SCHOOL OF LAW ORI Miami, Florida Biscayne, a new law school, is accepting applica- tions for its first class to begin in August 1984. The only Catholic law school in the Southeast, Bis- cayne is ideally located in suburban Miami on a 140 acre campus. The School will offer a three- year, full-time program, with small classes, modern computerized research facilities, and the oppor- tunity for specialized study in a variety of areas, in- cluding international law. The Biscayne College School of Law intends to seek ABA provisional approval as quickly as possi- ble, which will be after the first year of teaching. For information write or call: Office of Admissions, Biscayne College School of.Law, Dept.6, 16400 NW 32 Ave., Miami, FL 30054. (305) 621-1856. Biscayne is an equal opportunity institution.