LOCAILISTATI The Michigan Daily - Thursday, April 6, 1995 - 3 Police fire on UCLA hoops revelers " LOS ANGELES - After the UCLA Bruins clinched the NCAA men's basketball championship Mon- day night, Los Angeles police used rubber bullets and batons to restore order when a raucous celebration by thousands of fans turned into a bottle- throwing melee. Fifteen people were arrested and two were injured. "People were just throwing bottles into crowds and one guy turned around and got it right in the face and without a doubt lost all of his teeth," police Cmdr. Tim McBride told The Associ- ated Press. The other injury was to a police officer who suffered broken ribs, authorities said. Officers fired 20 rounds of rubber and bean-bag bullets to disperse what they said was a relatively small number of the 4,000 revelers who turned violent after the win - their first NCAA bas- ketball championship in 20 years. Police said the trouble began when the crowd moved through Westwood Village throwing rocks and bottles and overturning a radio station's van. At least 200 officers marched into the street to confront the crowd. Some revelers were angry with the action, like UCLA junior Mat- o hew Zujovich, who said he was shot by a policeman's pellet gun as he tried to push the crowd back. "The shot knocked me on my face. It hurts like hell," he said. Ontario residents to get tuition break at UP school 0 SAULT STE. MARIE - The board of Lake Superior State Univer- sity announced this week that it will give Michigan tuition status to all Ontario residents. It is also boosting tuition rates 3.4 percent and room and board charges 2.5 percent. The rates and regulations were approved recently by LSSU regents. Current policy grants the status only for northern Ontario residents. The step is being taken to offset a sharp drop in enrollment of Canadian students at Lake Superior State and to strengthen the university's position as a "bi-national" institution, the state- rhient said. Students rally against Congress, for environment WASHINGTON - More than 100 college students from 40 states rallied Monday on Capitol Hill against congressional efforts to weaken a host of U.S. environmental laws. Campus Green Vote, a nonparti- san student organization organized the Earth Day Campus Summit in Washington, urged students to lobby 0 Congress in conjunction with the 25th anniversary of Earth Day on April 22. "It is our generation that will bear the burden of the anti-environment actions of the new Congress," one student told The Associated Press. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Jennifer Harvey with wire reports Regents object to guidelines in bill on closed pres. search STEPHANIE GRACE LIM/Daily LSA senior Jim Wise shops for art in the Michigan Union yesterday. Women raise health iss esindiscussi V~sis no ns Some board members claim conditions would violate constitution By Ronnie Glassberg Daily Staff Reporter Despite a vote by the state Senate last week to allow closed searches for university presidents - a move sup- ported by members of the University Board of Regents - several regents expressed concerns with the bill's guidelines. "I can't imagine a less-desirable outcome," said Regent Rebecca McGowan (D-Ann Arbor). "This bill removes from the regents legislatively their most important responsibility and that is the selection of the presi- dent. That is their constitutional duty." The bills, which will come before the state House in the next few weeks, would exclude presidential searches from the state's open meetings and freedom of information laws. The Senate bill would allow closed searches under the condition that the search committee is comprised of at least one student, one administrator, one member of the governing board and one representative of the public; that the number of members of the governing board on the committee is less than a quorum; that the names of the three final candidates must be made public 30 days before final se- lection; and that final deliberations must be public. "I don't know what this solution is an answer to. I really don't," McGowan said. "I can't imagine how they came up with it." In the past, university boards have avoided the open meetings law by appointing subcommittees to pick a president. But a Sept. 28, 1993 deci- sion by the Michigan Supreme Court said that practice violated the law. The decision came in a lawsuit filed by The Ann Arbor News and the Detroit Free Press against the University's Board of Regents in the 1988 search that culminated in the selection of James J. Duderstadt as president. Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Ar- bor) said the change does not solve the problems the universities face. "In the form passed by the Senate, it makes the issue more complicated," he said. Baker, who was involved in the selection of the past two University presidents, said the bill's guidelines overly restrict the Board of Regents. "In 1850, the people of the state of Michigan called a constitutional con- vention because the University was being ruined by politicians. It set the University apart as a 'constitutional corporation,"' Baker said. "It said that the University regents will elect the president." Regent Andrea Fischer Newman (R-Ann Arbor) expressed similar con- cerns. "I think the one that passed the Senate is, in my judgment, not ac- ceptable," Newman said. "The rea- son I don't like it is the Legislature has directed who will sit on the selec- tion committee for a new president. I'd rather go back to being within the confines of the Open Meetings Act." Baker said those who apply for university presidencies are well es- tablished in their careers. "They put themselves at risk when they look for a position elsewhere," he-said. Newman also said a fully open search could be detrimental for the candidates. But, she said, "I do think the media and the public should have a fair opportunity to review the final- ists." By Lisa Poris Daily Staff Reporter Fifty people, nearly all women, convened yesterday afternoon in the Michigan League to deliberate women's health issues. They participated in eight roundtable discussions as a part of "A Day Dedicated to Women's Health." The day's events began at noon in the Rackham Auditorium with a "Town Meeting" with University President James D. Duderstadt on the University's Agenda for Women, and concluded with Barbara Tarbuck's theatrical interpretation of Germaine Greer's book "The Change" at Rackham Assembly Hall. Originally, the annual Michigan Initiative for Women's Health's Symposium was the only event planned for yesterday. However, Melinda Forthofer, a coordinator on the symposium planning commit- tee, said, "It kind of snowballed as we went along." The day grew from the traditional lecture into several forums in which many people's views on a variety of issues were heard.MIWH, the Women's Studies Program, the Theater Depart- ment and the Commision for Women contributed to the day's slate. The most interactive exchange of ideas occurred during the eight roundtable sessions, at which partici- pants could voice their worries, opin- ions and personal experiences. Many of these tables held two separate ses- sions. A well-informed facilitator at each table led discussion of a different women's health issue. Topics included "Conflict between Work and Fam- ily," "Sexuality in Families," "Vio- lence in the Family," "Childbearing Choices and Challenges," and "Teen Pregnancy." Many of the participants' concerns and goals came out during these dis- cussions. The need for flexibility was one of the recurring ideas: flexibility in the work place, in health care and in societal opinions about child care. Sponsors increased publicity for the event through posters, e-mail messages and written communica- tions informing the University com- munity of the events. Forthofer said she thought the in- creased publicity would serve to in- crease awareness about these issues. "People will see this really big event on women's issues and see that this is really important," she said. Ann Stephenson, a graduate stu- dent at Eastern Michigan University, found the event beneficial. "It showed the common goals that all of the women that were here share. It gave strength to some of these goals," she said. STEPHANIE GRACE LIM/Daily Fountain pen An LSA first-year student sketches the fountain in front of Burton Bell Tower for her architecture class, I., Truck overturns; load burns DETROIT (AP) -- A gasoline tanker truck exploded when it over- turned on an interstate ramp yester- day and spilled burning fuel into Detroit's sewer system. Police said the driver died. No one else was injured. The accident happened about 1 p.m. as the tanker was on a ramp from eastbound 1-94 to northbound I-75 in Detroit, state police said. The driver jumped out but was unable to run from the flames, said State Police Trooper Dana McKee. She identified the driver late last night as Kevin Morgan of Romulus. Morgan, a trucker for Petro Chemi- cal Transport Inc., in Carrollton, Texas, was driving from Taylor to Troy. carrying about 8,500 gallons of gasoline, McKee said. About two-thirds of the load ei- ther burned or spilled onto the ramp, he said. McKee said the truck appeared to have burst into flames after it rolled over. Morgan's body was found about 10 feet from the truck. An autopsy was planned for today. "Just fragments of the vehicle re- mained," State Police Sgt. Diane Oppenheim said. The railings on the ramp were completely melted, she said. The burning fuel leaked into the city sewer system, causing several manhole covers to pop off in explo- sions, police said. A nearby nursing home and the Eighty Golightly Elementary School were evacuated because of gas fumes spewing in several buildings, said Detroit Fire Commissioner Harold Watkins. The students were sent to the De- troit Public Library, the Museum of African American History and the Schools Center Building until parents could pick them up. Corrections Devon Bodoh's name was misspelled in yesterday's Daily. Also, Bodoh is a Business School representative on the Michigan Student Assembly. MSA condemned Andrew Wright for compromising the integrity of the assembly. This was incorrectly reported in yesterday's Daily. * What's happening in Ann Arbor today IT'S GOOD TO BE HOME FOR PASSOVER. The Passover seder is a time to be together with family. If you can't get back home, you have family here that would love to have you join them as we celebrate our festival of freedom. Just call Hillel (769-0500) by Monday, April 10 and you will be matched with a famil in the community for a seder on April 14 and/or 15. Andof you're going home for the seder and want to GRouP MEETINGS U Bible Study and Fellowship, spon- sored by ICM, 763-1664, Baits 11, Coman Lounge, 6-8 p.m. 0 Eye of the Spiral, informal meeting, 747-6930, Guild House Campus Ministry, 802 Monroe, 8 p.m. 0 intervarsity Christian Fellowship, 764-5702, Dana Building, Room 1040, 7 p.m. I Queer Unity Project, 763-4186, Michigan Union, 10 p.m. a Students Against the Code, plan- ning meeting to protest the code, 764-5682, Michigan Union, Tap Room. 7 n.m. On America," Lana Pollack, spon- sored by Honors Program, West Quad, Wedge Room, 7 p.m. J "Conflict in Chiapas," sponsored by Latin American Solidarity Com- mittee, Michigan Union, Crofoot Room, 8 p.m. 1 "Not Guilty: The Artscape Lives On," the 1995 Harlow Whittemore Lecture, sponsored by School of Natural Resources and Environ- ment, Rackham Amphitheatre, 7 p.m. J "On the Ground at Kaundinyapura: Fieldwork in Central India," brown bag lecture, sponsored by Museum Stucchi's, 8 p.m. STUDENT SERVICES Q 76-GUIDE, 764-8433, peer coun- seling phone line, 7 p.m.-8 a.m. Q ECB Peer Tutorial, Angell Hall Com- puting Site, 747-4526, 7-11 p.m., Mary Markley, 7-10 p.m. Q Campus Information Center,,Michi- gan Union, 763-INFO; events info 76-EVENT or UM*Events on GOpherBLUE Q North Campus Information Center, North Campus Commons, 763- NCIC, 7:30 a.m.-5:50 p.m. Q Northwalk, 763-WALK, Bursley Hall, I