Shields shuts down Lake State for first tournament crown, Stone named MVP It fd4w atMm . One hundred three years of editorial freedom Students to elect new Ireps to oversee DPS CTeoERs.Gtafad The following students staff and facultv nw By ZACHARY M. RAIMI DAILY STAFF REPORTER With building controversy over the last few years surrounding police actions in the Rodney King and Malice Green beatings, the public has cast a suspicious eye over police actions. And with the added power of deputization of university police forces - provided for in 1990 in Michigan Public Act 120 - members of university commu- nities have similar concerns. However, they may be soothed with the act's provi- *sion for police oversight boards at four- year public universities. As part of Michigan Student Assembly elections tomorrow and Wednesday, stu- dents will elect two representatives to serve a one-year term on the University's Police Oversight Board. The board, also called the Police Over- sight Committee or the Police Grievance Committee, was designed to "receive and address grievances by persons against the public safety officers or the public safety department of the institution." Dean of Students Royster Harper, the board's convener, said the board gives mem- bers of the University community a voice in Department of Public Safety (DPS) affairs. "The legislature was trying to make sure that there was a way-students, faculty and staff could have a voice with these issues," Harper said. "(The bill was) de- signed as a check and balance for students, faculty and staff." Public Act 120 was the result of pres- sure from state universities to have their public safety officers become deputized, said MSA Vice President Brian Kight, who helped create the election code for the Police Oversight Board. Kight, who has followed the bill's pro- gression, said, "In the late 1980s, the Uni- versity didn't have its own police force. It had a contract with the city of Ann Arbor to provide its police protection." Once the bill passed in 1990 there was many pro- tests from the University community. The board consists of two students, two faculty, two staff members and a con- vener - who leads the group. Each term begins July 1, and ends June 30 the follow- ing year. Three students are running - Engineering sophomore Brian Spiegel, MSA President Craig Greenberg and LSA third-year student Jeff Alexander. The run- ner-up will serve as an alternate. Alexander said he is running because See BOARD, Page 2 Staff Martha Cole- Health Service clerk Stephen Jaynes - Washtenaw County Local Building Trades Board Faculty 9 Richard Dougherty - Professor of Library Science N Eric Rabkin - Professor of English Students * Jenny Kim - LSA sophomore * Hunter VanValkenburgh.- LSA senior Convener 8 Royster Haper - Dean of Students ENTERING THE PEARLY GATES U.S. seeks to sanction North Korea for nukes WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States is preparing to seek U.N. trade sanctions against North Korea because of that country's re- calcitrance on nuclear weapons in- spections, Secretary of State Warren Christopher said yesterday. And he predicted China would not block such sanctions despite its re- cent quarrel with the United States over human rights because it is in China's national interest that North Korea not become a nuclear power. Christopher, speaking on CBS' "Face the Nation" also said the gov- ernment would be talking to South Korea about basing Patriot missiles there, and reviving large joint mili- tary exercises that were to have been postponed as a gesture of goodwill to North Korea. He said there were no immediate plans to increase the 37,000 Ameri- can troops in South Korea, but "we'll be looking at that situation day in and day out." "We hear some fairly strong rheto- ric coming out of North Korea, but we have to do what's in our interest. We have to protect our troops," Christo- pher said on CNN's "Late Edition." "We won't be unnecessarily provoca- tive. We don't seek a confrontation. But we want to be ready for one." Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole (R-Kan.) told NBC's "Meet the Press" that "we may also want to beef up our own forces there" in response to what he said was "probably the most seri- ous thing on the radar screen now." House Majority Leader Dick Gephardt of Missouri, appearing on the same show, said, "I think we ought to have aircraft carriers in the region. We might ultimately send more troops to beef up the South Korean side." The International Atomic Energy Agency was to meet today to an- nounce findings on its recent nuclear inspection tour of North Korea, dur- ing which the Koreans barred its agents from looking at facilities sus- pected of housing a nuclear weapons See KOREA, Page 7 JUDITH PERKINS/Daily University students wait in line to be frisked at Crisler Arena before entering the Pearl Jam concert. To the delight of *some, several hundred extra tickets, mainly obstructed view, went on sale yesterday afternoon at the Union. Hockey coach pleads guilty to lesser charge By WILL McCAHILL . DAILY SPORTS WRITER Hockey coach Red Berenson reached an agreement with the Ann Arbor city attorney Friday to plead guilty to a charge of driving while visibly impaired. Drunken driving - a more seri- ous charge - and a charge of urinat- ing in public were dismissed. Berenson also agreed to pay $100 in court costs as part of the agree- ment. The charges are the result of an incident early Wednesday morning in which a police officer parked across the street observed Berenson exiting Banfield's Bar and Grill on Packard Road in Ann Arbor. According to police reports, the officer saw Berenson urinate on the wall of a branch of the Ann Arbor *Public Library adjacent to the bar's parking lot, then get into his car and back it up some 20 feet. The officer then stopped the coach and administered six sobriety tests Strong aftershock shakes California IT'S A SUNSHINEY DAY! Berenson after smelling alcohol on Berenson's breath. Berenson was arrested after he failed several of the tests. Under the driving while visibly impaired charge, Berenson faces a maximum penalty of a $300 fine and 90 days in jail, as well as at least 32 hours of community service. Sentenc- ing is set for April 22. Berenson's arrest seemed to have little effect on his team, as it won the first league tournament title in the University's history yesterday against Lake Superior State, 3-0. LOS ANGELES (AP)-A strong aftershock to the deadly January earth- quake rocked Southern California yesterday, opening up new cracks in a recently repaired freeway and tossing boulders onto a road through Malibu Canyon. No injuries were reported from the magnitude 5.3 quake. One car was apparently struck by a boulder falling onto Malibu Canyon Road in Malibu. The quake also triggered rockslides in the Angeles National Forest. The quake was centered one mile west-northwest of Panorama City in the San Fernando Valley, about six miles east of the epicenter of the mag- nitude-6.7 Northridge earthquake. It struck around 1:20 p.m. and lasted about 30 seconds. Max Benavidez, a seismologist at the California Institute of Technol- ogy, said it was an aftershock of the Jan. 17 earthquake, which killed 61 people and caused millions of dollars of damage. There were no reports of any dam- age or injury yesterday, said city Fire Department spokesperson Jim Wells. Nor were there any immediate reports of power outages. The quake was felt widely in Los Angeles County as well as Orange, Riverside, Ventura and Santa Bar- bara counties. It interrupted a rehearsal for today's Academy Awards at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion down- town. Moments after actor Elijah Wood practiced his introduction for the vi- sual effects Oscar, the auditorium's chandeliers swayed, the seats rocked and huge pieces of scenery rattled over the stage. "Everybody, stay in your seats!" Oscar director Jeff Margolis said over a public address system. Randy Workman, whose Simi Valley home 35 miles north of Los Angeles was badly damaged by the January quake, said it wasn't dam- aged this time. "It was pretty strong, but it was See QUAKE, Page 7 JUDITH PERKINS/Day Students celebrate the first day of spring yesterday by playing outdoors. Diverse crowd searches for* .truth at Hindu conference By JEREMY SHERE FOR THE DAILY The first Conference on Spiritual- ity, organized by the Hindu Students Council (HSC), attracted more than 60 students and scholars from around "If so, what does it mean?" Taking an historical approach, Williams consid- ered the many names assigned to the divine, and wondered how people may form a sense of community while maintaining the specificity of indi- The wait is almost c i"es for ALOTe QUESTIoNS 4ics°over. Polling ste orA Shud h the Michigan Student cn ti h Michigan p o e ,...Mci ar ,' Assembly elections COnstutio adoe Tiea t ble Pro open tomorrow at .s is avail(let th thePrposed 8:05 a.m. and stay B shoule at the Poll roposed open unt h Wednesday student bod there be a student, at 9:45 i Thea the Board of elected by the anonotin egents in at least ' choices students will C ShOUld n aPacity? Sfar ra a ofinIlrnuifo R A ud~herncj+.: USAC to hold benefitconcet By MPATANISHI TAYARI DAILY STAFF REPORTER As the days of summer quickly approach, many students dream of sunshine and achieving the ultimate tan. But while the idea of a nice bronze glow may be enticing, the dangerous