I f tti News: 76-DAILY Advertising: 764-0554 One hundred seven years of editorialfreedom Tuesday October 14, 1997 roof i 4=43sm Fisher: Don't call me dishonest Ex- coach maintains innocence By Heather Kamins Daily Staff Reporter After months of silence, former Michigan men's basketball coach Steve Fisher defended his reputation and expressed dis- pleasure about the manner in which he was fired. Fisher's supporters and all 12 members of the basketball team stood and applauded as he entered the press conference at the Sheraton Inn on South State Street yesterday. Fisher donned a blue and yellow tie and proclaimed himself a "Michigan man" "I've always been a team player" Fisher said. "I always thought I've got nothing that needs defending and when the truth comes out, it's going to be fine" Last week, the findings of a seven-month investigation of the program were released to the public in the form of a 280- page report. The investigation, conducted by a private law firm hired by the University, revealed no major violations, but still uncovered items that concerned University officials. Just six days before basketball practice was scheduled to begin, Athletic Director Tom Goss announced Saturday that Fisher had been fired. Michigan guard Travis Conlan said Fisher's dismissal will be extremely difficult for the team to overcome. "It crushes everything,' Conlan said. "It's my senior year. We had a successful year to look forward to until this hap- pened. We lost the father figure of our family' Fisher said the University did not handle the situation cor- rectly. Fisher said he has kept silent during the investigation under the recommendation of the University and was promised to receive a copy of the report before it was released to the media and the public. "I was asked by our administration, for the benefit of the University of Michigan, to allow one voice to speak for the Athletic Department," Fisher said. "President (Lee) Bollinger said I would get a copy of the report and would get a chance to review the report before the public." Fisher, who was vacationing in Florida at the time of the report's release Thursday, said Bollinger broke his promise, and said that he was not given ample time to return from his vacation before the report was released. See FISHER, Page 2 Contact the Daily: We are interested in your opinions about this article and the recent events surrounding Michigan men's basketball program. Please e-mail basketball.letters@umich.edu before Thursday at 4 p.m. with your input. Letters may be published, either in part or in whole, in The Michigan Daily. Fisher responds "I always thought I've got nothing that needs defending and when the truth comes out, it's going to be fine." Former Michigan basketball coach Steve Fisher Goss explains "We don't make changes in coaches very often at Michigan, It's not my plan to make changes in coaches very often." - Athletic Director Tom Goss Players react "1 feel bad for everybody that is Involved ... we feel sold out by it all." - Michigan guard Tras Conlan "It will be bard for us to induct a- new guy, in and respect him the way adead coach is supposed to be respected." - Michigan center and co-captain Robert Traylor r MARGARET MYERS/Daily At the Sheraton Inn in Ann Arbor yesterday Steve Fisher held his own press conference yesterday, which was attended by many of the Michigan men's basketball players. Fisher gave his own version of events leading to his being fired on Friday. Regents react w B janet Adamy Staff Reporter Members of the University Board of Regents reacted to the firing of former Michigan men's basketball coach Steve Fisher with mixed feelings of sadness and approval. "I think it's sad because Steve Fisher is an awfully nice ;guy," said Regent Philip Power (D-Ann Arbor). "But I think at the end of the day, it was the right thing to do.: Regent Shirley McFee (R-Battle Creek) said t although she personally likes fisher, she Wednesday 5 p.m. Fisher -Scalls his secretary, who = y says nothing's unusual. terda Fisher mapped put the days 5.-10 p.m. Fish before hdwas goes out to dint fired. agrees with Athletic Director Tom Goss' deci- sion to fire Fisher, who has been under scruti- ny since allegations of NCAA violations sur- faced last winter. "It is my belief that if after all the things (Goss) had to consider, he thought that was what he had to do, then 1 support that,' McFee said. While most of the regents approved of Goss' decision to fire Fisher last Friday, two regents have publicly expressed dissatisfaction with' the way the Uniyersity handled the situation. Regent Daniel Homing (R-Grand Haven), a personal friend of Fisher, said both he and the for- mer coach were under the impression that they would both receive a copy of the report before it was released to the public, but that didn't happen. "Steve Fisher never got a chance to react to the report before news media outlets started calling him a liar and a cheat," Horning said. "I just think that with the way the whole thing came together so quickly, that as a University, we did not deal with it well." Although Regent Andrea Fisher Newman See REGENTS, Page 7 to 12 a.m. Thursday Report is Walter flown by plane to get Fisher in Florida. umber. 10 p.m. Fisher returns to find 7-8 messages on his answering machine. 10:30 p.m. t Fisher calls Harrison tof Bollinger's n 10:30 p.m. Goss calls Fisher to discuss, release of the report. 12 a.m. Fisher calls Bollinger to ask why he won't see the report before. it's released to the public. may war winters By Dan Stillman Daily Staff Reporter Seventy degrees and sunny - in the mid- dle of Deceiber? This winter could be unusually warm in Michigan thanks to what forecasters are call- ing the strongest El Nino of the century. But then again, maybe not. The last "El Nino of the Century" occurred, ironically, just 15 years ago. And if 0at winter of 1982-83 is any indication, the nited States is in for a wild ride. While Ann Arbor reached high tempera- tures upwards of 60 degrees nine times that December, intense rainstorms ravaged California and flooding devastated the Gulf Coast states. El Nino was credited with $2 blion worth of storm-related damage troughout the United States that winter. A pioneer in El Niio prediction studies, Jim tbrien said Ann Arbor may experience condi- ns similar to those of 1982-83 this winter. "For Michigan, we're talking about a drier winter," said Obrien, professor of meteorolo- gy and oceanography at Florida State University. "Once you get into the late winter, we're really talking about a warmer winter." El Nino is a weather phenomenon that occurs once every two to six years in the waters off the coast of Peru and varies in How El Nino works El Nino is the presence of warmer than usual ocean temperatur es along and on both sides of the equator from South America to the central par t of the Pacific. This results in unusual weather patter ns around the world, not only in Nor th and South America but as far away as Africa, Australia and Antarctica. In a normal year r Inan El Nino year Students counterfeit 'M' split-season tickets South Amenca .c K ; ;;< _ El Nino and the United States Forecasts produced in early October based on Center for Ocean-Land-Atmospher e models. Temperature outlook Rain outlook Fahrenheit degrees above average for Inches of rain above and below average for JanuaryMarch 1998: January-March 1998: 2 4 2 2 , ° iNear normal By Rick Freeman Daily Staff Reporter Many first-year students who received split- season football tickets probably expect to spend half of Michigan's football Saturdays glumly hud- dled around a TV, watching their fellow students at the game less than a mile away. But not all first-year students stayed home when the Wolverines took on the Fighting Irish last month. Several first-year students who received split- season tickets found a way to make credible forg- eries of tickets to the Michigan-Notre Dame game. The Michigan Athletic Ticket Office gives split- season ticket holders the full set of game tickets, marking "VOID" on half of the tickets in the pack- age. Some students replaced "VOID," which is printed where the section, row and seat assign- ments would be, with fake seating information. Two first-year students, who did not want their full names used, said they made counterfeit tickets. Engineering first-year student Sarah and her friend, a varsity athlete at the University, said they didn't come up with the idea themselves. But they used counterfeit tickets to slip into the Notre Dame-Michigan home game Sept. 27. "It was just kind of an idea that's been floating around," said the varsity athlete, who is also an LSA first-year student. "I don't know exactly where the idea originated" After trying to find last-minute tickets, Sarah and the athlete said they finally decided to forge the tickets. The pair said a quick application of nail polish remover with a cotton swab completely erased the word "VOID," and they used a pencil to write fake seating information. The next obstacle was getting past the person taking tickets at the gate. Robert Chaddock, director of Michigan football game day operations, said the ticket office relies on ticket-takers to catch fraudulent tickets. "In a training session prior to the first contest, See TICKETS, Page 7 ,j iA -(f'r 2 .. ") A; Near normal r- °.. Alaska: Near normal ~r Alaska: N U Hawaii: Near normal JHawaii: - Source: Center for ocean-lanAtmospher e Sties; Dooley Seaweather Analysis; Al resea O/S. Hohmann tion near the coast that led to poor fishing This cha near Christmas time. warm wate As it turns out, that change in circulation to drift east affects weather across the world, coast of So The key to global weather patterns is the tion of war location of warm waters, over which precipi- form, whic tation forms. During an El Nino, the trade weather pa Near normal 1to -5 nge in winds allows a large mass of er, normally located near Australia, along the Equator all the way to the uth America. This shift in the loca- m water changes where rain clouds h alters the jet streams that dictate iterns across the world. I u :X -V