WEn atl One hundred three years of editorial freedom 3 'M' players plead no contest to theft ISA sophomore Benoy Chacko prepares for his February debut on "Jeopardy!" for the College Championship. Sophomore to appear on game show By DAVID SHEPARDSON DAILY NEWS EDITOR The three Michigan basketball players charged with stealing beer from a local convenience store each pleaded no contest to one count of second-degree retail fraud in 15th District Court at City Hall. Accompanied by Michigan bas- ketball coach Steve Fisher and wear- ing freshly pressed suits, Ray Jack- son, Jimmy King and Chris Fields silently walked into the sixth-floor courtroom filled with television cam- eras and spectators at 10:45 a.m. yes- terday. The trio admitted responsibil- ity for taking several cases of beer from a local Dairy Mart on Jan. 12. A no contest plea means a defen- dant is not admitting guilt but is stat- ing that he will offer no defense. The person is subject to being judged guilty by the court and punished as if he had pleaded guilty or had been convicted. Staring at their feet for most of the hearing, the three said little and ig- nored the large contingent in the court- room. Fisher's 12-year-old son Marc also attended the hearing. Coach Fisher and the three players rushed out of the courtroom afterward and made no comments. District Court Judge Timothy Connors, in setting a sentencing date, said, "What you did is a crime, and it is also a very stupid thing to do. But you deserve to betreated the same as anyone else." The three will be sentenced Feb. 25 at 10 a.m. Connors outlined the procedures the players would now face to avoid re-appearing in court in two weeks under the "deferred sen- tencing program." If they enter into a probation con- tract, the three would each be re- quired to pay a $200 fine, perform 72 hours of community service and serve six months probation. If all condi- tions of the sentence are met, the offense will be expunged. But Connors said if they did not meet the conditions of the sentence, they would be treated like anyone else. "If you don't complete the sen- tence, you will go to jail," he said. Three other people face shoplift- AP' PHOTO( By NIDHI AGRAWAL FOR THE DAILY Benoy Chacko doesn't want the parting gifts. Next month, the LSA sophomore just might get the chance to win it all when he represents the University in this year's "Jeopardy!" College, Championship. Chacko surprised himself, family and friends after he passed the selec- tive testing procedure and was chosen to participate in the competition. "My sister gave me a call when I came back from class. She was all excited and screaming and everything and I guess we got a telegram saying that I was on 'Jeopardy!,"' Chacko said. Chacko's name was first chosen at random from letters received by the producers of "Jeopardy!" from view- ers interested in participating in the competition. To qualify, Chacko and his family drove to Omaha, Neb. on Nov. 5. There, he passed a 50-ques- tion test in ten minutes with a score of at least 40. "There were probably.60 people taking the test in the same room as me and only five passed. I couldn't be- lieve I was one of them," he said. Those who passed the first test then participated in a mock "Jeop- ardy!" contest to determine each individual's game playing ability. LSA junior Wilson Lee also reached this level of the competition. How- ever, only Chacko was chosen to par- ticipate in the televised tournament. "I was obviously pretty disap- pointed. The selection process seems pretty arbitrary. Last year, I talked to someone who passed the test four times and did not make it into the tournament," Lee said. . Lee added, "Of course, there are no hard feelings. I just wish Benoy the best." Chacko will be flown down to Los Angeles for tapings of the tournament Feb. 26. The two-week competition is Basketball players Chris Fields, Ray Jackson and Jimmy King are sworn in by District Court Judge Timothy Connors at yesterday's hearing. scheduled to air sometime during the first half of May. Hotel accommoda- tions at the Beverly Hills Hilton, food, extra spending money and a $1,000 bonus are guaranteed to each player for participating in the tournament. "It's a nice perk to be getting all of this stuff. It would be even better to win, but we'll see," Chacko said. Chacko has always been interested in trivia competitions, participating in Quiz Bowl in high school and Col- lege Bowl for the University. "I pick up small facts really well, I don't know why. I've always watched 'Jeopardy!' and have been able to get almost all of the questions right," Chacko said. Chacko added, "Being on Jeop- ardy! is really exciting. It's always been kind of a dream." Chacko's acquaintances and friends share his enthusiasm about the tournament. LSA sophomore Jeff Martin, See JEOPARDY, Page 2 ing charges as well. Football player Remy Hamilton, store clerk Allison Chenault -who police said encour- aged the crimes - and her friend, Jaymar Joseph, will be arraigned at later dates, Ann Arbor Police Detec- tive Sgt. Mick Schubring said. "She allegedly called (the ath- letes) and said, 'Stop down sometime and I'll fix you up with what you need,"' Lt. John Atkinson said of Chenault. The trio were suspended from Michigan's victory over Michigan State on Saturday. Against Indiana on Tuesday, King scored 17 points; Jack- son had 13 points and a game-high nine rebounds. Fields was scoreless. Before the three players entered the courtroom, they were arrested, then fingerprinted and photographed. Michigan Football player Damon Jones was also arraigned yesterday for a separate incident on a charge of retail fraud. A pre-trial hearing was scheduled for March 1 at 10 a.m. Topped with the shoplifting charge, Jones' probation could be re- voked and he could receive a new k sentence of up to four years in prison and a $2,000 fine on abomb charge. -The Associated Press contributed to this reportI Unsurprised, students call sentence just By WIWE CLARK FOR THE DALY University students had mixed reactions to yesterday's sentenc- ing of three Michigan athletes. Three Michigan basketball players -Jimmy King, Ray Jack- son and Chris Fields -accused of stealing beer from a local conve- nience store, were sentenced in Michigan's 15th District Court yesterday. Many students said they ex- pected the sentence of 72 hours of community service, a $200 fine and six months' probation because it was the first time that the athletes had been charged in any criminaf activity. "I think that they should serve a little more community time" said LSA junior Derek Dalling. The trio's "no contest" plea See REACTION, Page 2 .S. increases military involvement in Bosnia NEWSDAY WASHINGTON - After months of ignor- ing the war in Bosnia as a regional problem, the United States is again increasing its involve- ment, seeking NATO military action to end the siege of Sarajevo and reviving efforts for a negotiated peace in partnership with Europe, a senior Clinton administration said yesterdey. The first steps in the new U.S. efforts, offi- cials said, come today in Brussels, Belgium, when NATO's policy-making North Atlantic Council meets to consider action that would silence and force the withdrawal of the Serbian guns that have terrorized Sarajevo for nearly two years. As one official explained the strategy to Newsday: "We are pursuing two tracks: One is the tactical or immediate issue on how to deter or deal with Serb artillery attacks against civil- ians in Sarajevo. "We will be looking at proposals on how to respond immediately, with air strikes to such attacks, and how to deal with the continuing threat from those guns." He added, "The other track is how to rein- vigorate the peace process. And here we expect to work more closely with the Europeans, in- cluding the French." That has jarred State Department and other advocates of the Bosnian cause, who fear the United States might join France in seeking to See BOSNIA, Page 2. Bosnian Serbs, facing possible air strikes, agreed to withdraw heavy weaponry from around Sarajevo and put it under U.N. control. A cease-fire was reached in talks between government commanders. sretrenica Saraevo Active frontline Line of internal Mstar conflict : Bosnian Press- & dency (mostly Eu Muslim) Bosnian Serb 0$ Bosnian croat State Sen. Don Koivisto will hold hearings on prices of university texts By RONNIE GLASSBERG DAILY STAFF REPORTER LSA sophomore Angela Coletti spent $250 this term on textbooks for her four classes, and she bought three- quarters of those books used. She is not alone. These sort of costs are not un- usual. However, a state senator be- lieves university book prices are too high and he wants to do something about it. Sen. Don Koivisto(D-Ironwood) is trying to combat the problem, but he said he does not know who is at fault. State senator pursues war on tetook costs, Ulrich's, said the bookstores do not make such high profits. "Basically we work between an 18 to 23-25 percent margin (of profit)," he said. "I don't think that's a really exorbitant profit." When a professor knows that the text will used the next term, students can receive back 50 percent of the book's cost, Rosser said. But Koivisto is not blaming the bookstores yet. The senator said he has called on the hearings because he is trying to discover where the prob- lem lies. "We don't know what type of leg- islation would have to be put in," he said, commenting that the problems may also be in the publishing indus- try. Koivisto said often times publish- Source: United Nations AP And the Oscar noes to ... For the answers. ask our exnert