sponsibility for the party. For large parties, three undercov- er students and two uniformed campus-police officers file re- ports on whether food and non- alcoholic beverages are pro- vided, ID's are checked and drunk students are ejected, among other things. Fines, paid to the university's general fund, can be $200 or more. More than 10 parties have reported- ly been monitored, but so far no charges have been levied. Cases are to be tried by residen- tial colleges or proctors. Monitors are selected by the masters of their colleges and student presidents, who say there has been no problem re- cruiting. Anonymity is meant to allow the students to file re- ports without peer pressure, according to the administra- tion. But the secrecy also means that those fined won't know who their accusers are. "Under the guise of anonymity, the monitors will have the power to abuse their positions," says freshman Emily Asher. "This has the power to turn from a witch hunt for deviant college organizations to a witch hunt for student monitors." MICHAEL RAPHAEL in Houston Front Court to Front Office Jimmy the Greek take note: at North Carolina State, project STRENGTH (Start Today to Recruit, Educate, Nurture, Graduate, Train and Hire) is being organized to prepare minority athletes to excel off the playing field. "I felt it was important that the uni- versity be a leader in providing real opportunities for minor- ities in athletic administra- tion," says State's athletic di- rector, Jim Valvano, who is starting the yearlong intern- ship program for recent gradu- ates. "If I were a kid and never saw an administrator who was black, I might feel that there DAVI BRADSHAW Start your engines: Tennessee racers in stadium parking lot was no real opportunity." Only one of the 16 football and basketball head coaches in the Atlantic Coast Conference is black, according to an ACC survey, and only three blacks hold any of the 52 positions at or above assistant athletic direc- tor. One is Ray Martin, an NCSU assistant basketball coach and assistant athletic di- rector who is organizing STRENGTH. The program is to start with two former basket- ball players (Valvano is also head basketball coach), who will learn a variety of manage- ment duties, and then expand to athletes in all sports at State. "I hope that at the end of the training period other universi- ties looking to hire will call us," says Martin. STRENGTH should make the transition from front court to front office much smoother. JOSEPH GALARNEAUin Raleigh Paging Pagans at Grinnell Those who equate pagan worship with broomsticks and eye-of-newt stew need not bother joining Pagan Coven, a recognized student organization at Grinnell Col- lege that takes its beliefs- "goddess worship, nature ven- eration and praising the creators for the miracles of the world," according to co- founder Glen Brown-very seriously. Since its founding last September, the 30-mem- ber group has conducted five rituals, including sacrificing a pumpkin on the soccer field at Halloween. "We were trying to draw down the energy from the full moon," says cofounder Heather-Jeanne Pyle. Brown and Pyle, both fresh- men, deny that their coven is a joke-or worse. "People tend to see pagan worship and think of devil worship. They're not the same at all." Sophomore Jim Caccamo, a nonmember, finds the group's beliefs shal- low. "You don't have to deal with the inside questions about yourself," he says. Even so, many students have expressed curiosity. There may be, re- ports Brown, "a lot of pagans coming out of the walls." UT's Peewee Grand Prix M aria Liston used to have trouble changing a tire on her Volks- wagen Rabbit. Now, Maria, a University of Tennessee grad- uate student, drives like a veri- table Mario, as in Andretti, putting her mettle to the pedal three times a quarter as one of 26 members of UT's sports-car club. For its races, the univer- sity-sponsored club turns the Neyland Stadium parking lot into a mini-Grand Prix course. Monaco it isn't; racers chal- lenge only the clock as they go one at a time through the winding course. And you can leave your pit crew at home, because these aren't Formula 1 cars. Says senior history ma- jor Jonathan Reynolds: "You've got everyone from a guy driving a Corvette to some- one in Mom's Granada." After testing themselves on the parking-lot course, some drivers go on to regional rac- ing events sponsored by the Sports Car Club of America. Others are happy just to get their noses out of books and under hoods. "When we aren't racing or working on cars, we're sitting around talking about them," says Reynolds. BRUCE EMOND in Grinnell I PHILIP NEW MAN in Knoxville DAN EHL Spirits move them: Grinnell paganists celebrate winter ritual NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS 19 MAY 1988