|  
               
            Web 
              Exclusives: Inky 
              Dinky Do 
              a PAW web exclusive column by Hugh O'Bleary (paw@princeton.edu) 
             
             February 
              21, 2001: 
              A Mod Squad for the Street 
              Undercover cops penetrate the eating clubs: fact or fiction 
            By Hugh O'Bleary 
            We can all agree that 
              there's nothing funny about over-indulgence in alcohol - well, except 
              for Dudley Moore in Arthur, or John Belushi in Animal 
              House, or W.C. Fields in just about anything, or that scene 
              in Lucky Jim when he has that toenail trouble after a few 
              too many toots, or that time my uncle Mike mooned the Shriners' 
              float, or ... Er, that is to say, at least, that there's nothing 
              funny about the news of the latest alcohol-related incident on campus, 
              a Bicker binge that sent 15 people to the hospital or infirmary. 
              I mean, I was so shocked when I read about it that I nearly spit 
              my beer all over the train. Ha, ha! See, there's another example 
              of drinking not being funny. 
            What is funny, however, 
              is the notion reported in some local newspapers that Princeton Borough 
              police are threatening to use undercover agents to crack down on 
              underage drinking at eating clubs. I can just picture some 42-year-old 
              local cop, dressed in a brand new Princeton sweatshirt and Tiger 
              cap lurking around Ivy or Terrace pretending to read a chemistry 
              textbook while eyeing any imbibers for signs that they're well, 
              not yet half his age. Hey, dude, what's your major? 
            The Bicker episode drew 
              the usual tsk-tsking and concerned discussion among the old guard 
              on the Dinky. (And a few fond reminiscences of Bickers past from 
              some of the old, old guard, but that's another story.) Still, I 
              found myself thinking about the undercover angle. I decided to go 
              high-concept. I broke out the cell phone. (For a couple of years, 
              I had resisted joining the cellular hordes, but New Jersey Transit's 
              reliability record being what it is lately, I finally gave in, if 
              only to be able to call my wife from the train to tell her to get 
              the old shaker ready.) I put a call in to my friend Scott on The 
              Coast. Sure, it was only 4:30 A.M. Hollywood time, but I knew Scott 
              would already be in the office, talking foreign rights with London 
              while riding the elliptical trainer and story-boarding his latest 
              film or cable project. 
            After the second ring, 
              Scott's voice came over the phone. "Talk to me." 
            I gave him the pitch: 
              "It's Mod Squad meets Good Will Hunting!" 
            There was silence from 
              The Coast. I plunged on. "Three hot young kids - a girl, two 
              guys. They're in trouble with the law. Maybe the girl's a runaway-turned-hooker; 
              one of the guys is from the projects, he's on the lam from gangbangers 
              who offed his brother; the other guy's the son of a Mafia kingpin 
              who just got whacked. He's got nowhere to go. None of them do. The 
              cops take them in and give them one last chance: They've got to 
              go undercover as students to bust an underage keg ring at - get 
              this - Princeton University. Call it, Undercover Tigers!" 
            I took a quick breath. 
              "Only the president of the university knows they're not real 
              students. "They're kind of like legacies, right?" he says. 
              The kids think they can handle it, but they get sucked into college 
              life. One of the guys becomes a star athlete and, between classes, 
              studying and practice, can't find the time to spy on his clubmates. 
              The young woman gets the lead in the spring musical and is away 
              at rehearsals every night. The other guy gets bogged down with his 
              junior paper and obsessed with getting grad school recommendations. 
              It all comes to a head at houseparties. There's a chase down Prospect 
              Street, a shootout, explosions, the eating clubs are leveled. The 
              heroes bust the drinking ring - and all graduate cum laude." 
            I waited in silence. 
             "It's boffo, O'Bleary," 
              said Scott. "But you're too late. Matt and Ben pitched it to 
              Miramax already. They got DeNiro to play the president." 
            I think maybe I need 
              a drink. 
            You can reach Inky Dinky 
              Do at "Hugh O'Bleary" 
                
             
               
             |