1£*Ela tit! News: 76-DAILY Display Ads: 7640554 Classified Ads: 764-0557 One hundred seven years ofeditoridafreedom Thursday September 17, 1998 ,.. .. ,.. ,a d,< '' ..u . n. w. .. .',X...X ..;;r. a, s a i rv' ,e, , .. ,:-.,, k\ ;^ * "p .Y. ^;a"; n tr f r G ............ . '; :.: r si :. '2 ''r"..# y,;,~ "' .~'+7N ,.? K35r x;<. ..:r. z. ' .. @ r.r "l s.?.:."s~a Fs 9 Fxr 5 a: .v >rx .u;:.v : } P Vd' s ~Gs ;'r i;a J ' , .. .. .;, nse ,. >,, rt~ .,., d r: Ea'u^m : wN. .,. ^n:,a, d .,_ ;.s. ,.r k ,b. .%d> ° r ,s sts' .ao ' yn "s Clinton inS1sts he has morals $0 lead Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - Rejecting resig- nation, President Clinton yesterday argued that he still has the moral authority and popular support neces- sary to lead the nation. In his first news conference since independent counsel Kenneth Starr ent to Congress his case for the presi- Went's impeachment, Clinton declared that he and the American people want to put the sordid business of his rela- tionship with Monica Lewinsky in the past. "I'm determined to lead this country and to focus on the issues that are before us," Clinton said. The president's remarks were part ofa determined effort by the White House to change the subject. But developments on Capitol Hill threatened to thwart the Stempt, as Congress prepared to release Clinton's videotaped testimony and large portions of the grand jury tran- scripts, which explain in even more graphic detail than the Starr report the sexual relationship between the presi- dent and former White House intern. The news conference -like most of his public appearances in recent weeks -wasstae-mnagd. t pu th prsi-AP PHOTO - was stage-managed to put the presi- President Clinton and Hillary Rodham Clinton walk out of the White House for an arrival ceremony for President Vaclev Havel See CLINTON, Page 5A of the Czech Republic on the south grounds of the White House yesterday. LSA student dies In fend's home DPS head announces retireml~ent After 19 years, 63- year-old Leo Heatley plans to retire in March By Nikita Easley Daily Staff Reporter After heading the University's Department of Public Safety for 13 years, Leo Heatley announced yes- terday he will retire at the end of March. "The time is right," the 63-year-old Heatley said yesterday. "it is time to move on to another chapter in my life. "It's been won- derful to work with Leo," said Henry Baier, interim associate vice president for busi- ness operations. Brian Mackie, prosecuting attor- Heatley ney for Washtenaw County, said "It's bad that he is leaving. He is a young, healthy guy and a real gentleman," In 1979, Heatley became the associ- ate director of DPS. One of his goals, Heatley said, was to "establish a profes- sional police department." During his 19 years with the DPS, Heatley transformed the campus securi- ty force to a full-fledged campus police department. In 1990, the University Board of Regents voted to deputize the department, giving DPS the authority to make arrests and carry weapons. "It took a long time for DPS to become a law enforcement agency' Heatley said. in 1991, DPS placed its first fully trained police officers on the streets of Ann Arbor. "We have become one of the best campus law enforcement agencies in the United States," Heatley said. "Our officers our trained just as good or bet- ter as other agencies" Baier agreed. saying "Leo has developed a very professional staff." During his tenure, Heatley has also secured a closer relationship with the Ann Arbor Police Department. "There are many issues that effect both departments," said Carl Ent, AAPD chief of police. "Leo is always easy to work with." Along with establishing DPS as a law enforcement agency, Heatley changed the rules in 1986 to allow University stu- dents to be employed as DPS security personnel during campus events. "It's a great program for a college campus,'" Heatley said. "Students get a chance te learn the business and some even go on to full-time employment to a law enforcement agency." Other accomplishments include establishing the Campus Oriented Policing program. COP is a "partner- ship between people in the community and law enforcement agencies, Heatley said. The program allows Ann Arbor residents to actively participate in making their community safer. Before coming to the University, See HEATLEY, Page 2A By Jennifer Yachnin Daily Staff Reporter LSA sophomore Christopher Giacherio died in Ann Arbor on Tuesday morning in the home of a friend, *nn Arbor Police Department officials said yesterday. The cause of Giacherio's death has not yet been determined, said AAPD Lieutenant Jim Tieman. "He was with some friends, found in an unre- sponsive state, sometime mid-morning," Tieman said. Tieman said AAPD officers interviewed the indi- viduals who were the last to be with Giacherio before he died. Yesterday the medical examiner began con- "ducting an autopsy, including toxicology tests, to etermine the cause of death. After the friends found Giacherio, they called 911. AAPD officers and Huron Valley Ambulance med- ical personnel arrived and checked Giacherio for signs of life, Tieman said. Tieman said autopsy results could have been fin- ished as early as yesterday afternoon, but have not yet been disclosed. Silence came over the courtyard of East Quad res- idence hall at midnight last night as more than 100 people attended a candle light vigil for Giacherio. Members of the Zeta Psi fraternity, of which he was a member, and other friends stood in a circle while holding candles and hugging each other. Occasionally a friend would step into the circle to share memories of him. Friends of Giacherio's said -early yesterday evening they did not know how Giacherio died, but a written statement from Zeta Psi's alumni associ- ation implied substance abuse was a factor in the death. "We offer our deepest condolences to his family. We do not believe that this incident had any connection with our chapter, other than the fact that Chris was a member. We certainly do not condone substance abuse, and our fraternity regularly holds educational seminars on risk management. Since the police inves- tigation is underway, it would be inappropriate to com- ment further at this time," the alumni association statement said. Family and friends said they remember Giacherio as both intelligent and personable. "Chris was a very creative person," said Giacherio's mother, Rose Giacherio. "He loved to have deep conversations about world issues and he loved to draw." Rose Giacherio added that her son cared deeply about his friends. Giacherio's father, Don Giacherio, said his son was someone "who liked to discuss and argue. "We would like Chris to be remembered in happy times, as an intelligent individual and intellectual," said Don Giacherio, the director of academic pro- grams for the pathology department. Monica Vasquez, who lived with Giacherio in East Quad during the '97-'98 academic year, said she remembers Giacherio as a warm and humorous per- son. "He could make me laugh in 2.2 seconds, said Vasquez, an RC sophomore. Last winter, Vasquez drove with Giacherio and his roommate to the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif. She said "it was one of the most amazing experiences of my life. See STUDENT, Page 9A JIockey I Season price hits near $160 By Erin Holmes Daily Staff Reporter With their first official game still ree weeks away, the Michigan hockey team has already started setting records. This year, student season tickets in Yost Ice Arena are selling for nearly $160 - the highest price ever for icer season tickets. Bruce Madej, director of media rela- tions for the Athletic Department, said the reason for the increased price - up more than $60 from last year - is the Athletic Department's discovery that e University had been charging stu- nts much less than colleges with comparable hockey programs charge for season tickets. "Basically, we took a look at prices at other places and we're well below them," Madej said. Todd Milewski, a hockey writer for The Daily Cardinal at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said the University's new price does coincide Oith the price Wisconsin students paid last year for tickets - approximately $10 a game. "This year, we lowered the price to $6, but that is because we're moving somewhere new and want to draw inter- est," Milewski said. Madej said that although the new icket prices hit all-time high }"94" f '98 '97 1 d$5 ....,, . a %" Si'V -I 1)98: 'V~S' DANA LINNANE/Daily Students work on computers at Angell Hall. The University, along with other institutions, faces the challenge of updating its computer programs for 2000. Year 2000 coptr problems affect 'U' season ticket holders are too fond of the maize and blue to refuse to pay the steep price. "Yost Ice Arena is one of the most exciting venues for any event," Madej said. "The crowd is great ... people realize it can be a part of a night of excitement:' Unofficial numbers yesterday indi- cated that 1,600 students had requested student tickets, said Marty Bodnar, director of ticket operations. He said final numbers will not be known until the end of the week, after student sign- up ends tomorrow. When the department started taking ticket orders Monday, some students said they didn't mind digging a little deeper in their pockets to come up with the extra cash. "I'm friends with other hockey fans here and we love it," Engineering grad- uate student Matt Crites said. "I'm sad- dened that it will be so expensive this year, but it's worth it." Despite the increase, Crites said he hasn't heard of anyone who refuses to buy tickets because of their cost. "I'm surprised at the price" Crites said. "I can't believe it's so significant S0 60 10 80 90 100 110 4"0 130 140 150 Tss d Pss-imOs--Db - - --- - -- --- - - VICKY LASKY/Oai~y FILE PHOTO Fans cheer on last year's National Championship Michigan hockey team at Yost Ice Arena. Season ticket prices have risen to nearly $160 this year. Club, the Dekers, said Michigan Hockey promises a rewarding season this winter, no matter what price stu- dents have to pay. "When I attended the Dekers picnic on Sunday, every player expressed their own high expectations for the year," Korby said. "I can't help but feel the same after talking with them and seeing them doing a stairs work- out in (Michigan) Stadium on Tuesday. They just look more pumped up this year." But some students said the lure of the defending champions taking the By Adam Zuwerink Daily Staff Reporter When clocks strike 12 a.m. on Jan. 1,2000, the world will collectively hold its breath in hopes that our technology- dependent society does not fall apart. At the University, there's ample potential for problems. VCRs refus- ing to record the Rose Bowl, traffic lights magically shutting off and loans suddenly being past due are just a few of them. The potential problems to the world's ever-expanding reliance on computer-run items began nearly 35 years ago when computer program- mers, in an attempt to save precious computer memory, decided to code the four-digit year portion of a date as only two digits. To many computer systems around the world, we are currently liv- ognize the year '00 as 1900, not 2000, causing a person's age to suddenly become represented by a negative number. While the idea might appeal to some, it will also mean a stoppage in pay checks and benefits due to the person's seeming non-existence. These and various other year 2000 problems have become known as the Y2K bug, and currently are being solved by recoding a comput- er's program to include a four-digit year. But this recoding is a costly and time-consuming process. The exact figure of how much the University has spent to recode computers is hard to determine because reprogramming began in the early 1980s and occurs in many dif- ferent divisions of the University, said Jos6-Marie Griffith, University chief information officer. I I