It Itll One hundred eleven years of editorialdfreedom ti NEWS: 76-DAILY CLASSIFIED: 764-0557 wwwmichigandaly. com Monday January 7, 2002; Vvf A@rbr = aI001Ih Mci,, l SALT LAKE 2002 Olympic Torch in IN WITH THE NEW YEAR White steps n as search presses on By Elizabeth Kassab Daily Staff Reporter A2 today Inside: Map of the route. Page 7A. By Kylene Kiang Daily Staff Reporter The spirit of the Olympic Games will come to Ann Arbor today as local residents are set to participate in the Olympic Torch Relay, helping carry the flame to next month's Winter Games in Salt Lake City. Spectators are welcome to watch runners carrying the torch at all points of the route, including. designated gathering areas outside Michigan Sta- dium, at the corner of Stadium and South Main, at 10:02 a.m. and Rampy Chevrolet, at the corner of Jackson and Wagner, at 10:50 a.m., where there will be a brief celebration and lighting of a small ceremonial cauldron. Ann Arbor Mayor John Hieftje, Michigan Athletic Director Bill Martin, the Michigan Marching Band and other guest speakers will be in attendance at the ceremony. Ten Ann Arbor residents, including University Regent David Brandon, will carry the flame through the city today as it begins at 9:20 a.m. on Washtenaw Avenue near Arborland Mall and continues on Stadium, Main, Huron and Jackson. They are. just a fraction of the 11,500 total torchbearers chosen from more than 210,000 nominations nationwide. Torchbearers were nomi- nated by family, friends and colleagues who wrote short essays describing how each nominee embodied the Olympic spirit by inspiring others. Parishioners of St. John's Episcopal Church in Howell said exactly that of See TORCH, Page 7A * Interim University President B. Joseph White spent his first official day in office cheering for the Wolverines from the stands at the Florida Citrus Bowl. He then returned to Ann Arbor the next day only to stand in line at the Secre- tary of State's office for 90 minutes to replace his lost dri- ver's license. White's third day as the University's chief executive started off in the Fleming Administration Build- ing - where he immediately got to work. "The very first thing we did was to bring the entire presidential staff together and we had a get-acquainted breakfast in the conference room," White said, adding that he has been meeting with University administra- tors and preparing for upcoming White events, such as the January regents meeting, the first one White will preside over. As for the painful humiliation the football team suffered at the hands of Tennessee, "Even though the outcome was disappointing, it was clear that we were playing a national champion caliber team in Tennessee, so I was very proud of our team," White said. University President Lee Bollinger moved out of his office in Fleming last month to make way for former Busi- ness School Dean White to take the reins of the institution. The University Board of Regents, now aided by the recent- ly-formed presidential search advisory committee, is beginning its search for Bollinger's permanent successor, who it hopes to name by this spring. The advisory committee is scheduled to convene for the first time today and will sit down with the regents before the next regents meeting. No candidates have been named, said Rackham Dean Earl Lewis, who chairs the committee. Lewis has pledged to make the search quick and efficient See WHITE, Page 7A DAVID KATZ/Daily University President Lee Bollinger (upper right) shakes hands with a graduate following the winter commencement ceremony in Crisler Arena. It was the last public appearance on campus for Bollinger, who stepped down last month and will become Columbia University's chief executive in July. Inside: The Board of Regents approves a two-day study break every fall, starting this October. Page 3. Bollinger era officially over By Rachel Green Daily Staff Reporter Noting that "December is a season of farewells," University President Lee Bollinger made his final public appear- ance on campus at last month's winter commencement ceremony. In his state- ment to the approximately 2,000 gradu- ates in Crisler Arena, he proved to students that he knew as much about the social scene as education and politics, as he listed some of the places in Ann Arbor that he felt students would miss most. Bollinger, who said a few days prior to graduation that he had yet to write his speech, made students laugh as he out- lined what he believed to be a typical week's schedule for seniors. "I think it's Mitch's on Tuesday, Rick's on Wednesday, Scorekeepers on Thursday, Touchdown's on Friday and every night is Good Time Charley's before you go out," Bollinger said. Many students found Bollinger's remarks very insightful. "It was great that he knew so much about our nightlife here and what we do See BOLLINGER, Page 7A Cheering in the new year Local Muslim man may be deported for visa violations Islamic charity co-founded by Rabih Haddad is suspected of funding terrorist groups By Jacquelyn Nixon Daily Staff Reporter In response to the continued detainment of an Ann Arbor Muslim leader after his arrest last month by the Immigration and Natural- ization Service, community members will gather tonight at the Ann Arbor City Council' meeting to encourage council members to push for his release. Rabih Haddad, co-founder of the Global Relief Foundation, an Islamic charity, was arrested Dec. 14 and is being held without bond at the Monroe County jail. He could face deportation for having an expired visa. "There's a human side to this that gets bull-. dozed," Islamic Center Board of Trustees Tariq Colvin said. "He was arrested in front of his kids ... just before one of the most important festivals in the Muslim year, at the end of Ramadan. He spent that time in jail.... Imagine taking someone's dad before Christ- mas and New Year's." Federal agents raided the group's headquar- ters in Illinois the same day Haddad was detained. The organization materialized on a White House terrorism watch list two years ago as one of two U.S.-based charities with possible connections to terrorism. "The suspicion is that money from GRF had been funneled to terrorist organizations" Colvin said. "But the U.N. gives aid that sometimes is given to other countries. Some of that aid can and will go to other (unautho- rized) organizations. I don't think it's fair to levy that standard against GRF or any smaller organization." At closed bond hearings on Dec. 19 and Jan. 2, a federal immigration judge denied Haddad bond indefinitely. An appeal has been scheduled for Thursday. Haddad's attorney, Ashraf Nubani, said his client came to the United States in 1998 from Lebanon on a tourist visa and had applied for permanent resident status through labor certi- See HADDAD, Page 7A DAVID tKAZ/Daily Michigan cheerleader Rob Bobeda parties on New Year's Eve with the rest of his squad at the Rosen Centre hotel in Orlando, Fla., the night before the Wolverines took on Tennessee in the Citrus Bowl. s Confident Wolvennes take early Big Ten lead Pilot, 15, supported bin Laden, attacks By Joe Smith Daily Sports Editor When University students came back from their holiday breaks, they had a surprise wait- ing for them: A first-place men's basketball team. After an inauspicious 4-5 start to its non- conference slate, the Wolverines have cranked out two straight wins against Penn State and Purdue to open the Big Ten season. They now sit atop the conference standings with a 2-0 record for the first time since 1997-98 - the year of Michigan's last NCAA Tournament appearance. While only two games into the conference season, the wins were enough to pique the interest of students on campus, even those who had given up on the team a while ago. "It's early, but it's a start," said Casey Gib- son, a graduate student who stopped attend- ing games four years ago. "It's interesting to see if they could get back to where they were seven or eight years ago. I think they were bound to come back, but not this quick." honors with is even more shocking. The consensus preseason top three teams - Iowa, Illinois and Michigan State - were all upset yesterday by lower-tier teams. This enabled three teams with few presea- son accolades - Ohio State, Indiana and Michigan - to find themselves undefeated in Big Ten plays "Yeah it's a great feeling," junior Gavin Groninger said about the unusual thought of being in first place. "We have the taste of victory, we feel it now and we don't want to stop winning." A Michigan basketball team with a win- ning attitude? It doesn't seem possible after the past few seasons, in which the Wolverines suffered four of their most embarrassing losses in school history, culminating in the firing of Brian Ellerbe after a 10th place fin- ish last year in the Big Ten and a 10-18 record overall. Two league wins against lower tier teams are no reason to get overly excited. But for a program that has seen its fair shares of black eyes over the past few years and a team this TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - The 15-year- old who crashed a small plane into a skyscraper wrote a note expressing sympathy for Osama bin Laden and support for the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, police said yesterday. The short, handwritten suicide note found in Charles Bishop's pocket said he acted alone, Tampa Police Chief Bennie Holder said. The high school freshman had no apparent terrorist ties, Holder said. "Bishop can best be described as a young man who had very few friends and was very much a loner," Holder said. "From his actions we can assume he was a very troubled young man." Bishop crashed the Cessna 172R into the 42-story Bank of America building after taking off without authorization and ignoring signals to land from a Coast Guard helicopter that pursued the plane. Bishop was the only fatality. Holder said there is no indication Bishop specifically targeted the build- ing or "had any intention of harming The handwritten suicide note found in Charles Bishop's pocket said he acted alone. Investigators yesterday interviewed the boy's family and said they would search his personal computer for evi- dence. Bishop, of Palm Harbor, was told to check the plane's equipment before the start of a flying lesson Saturday, police said. He took off without waiting for an instructor who was supposed to accom- pany him. A Coast Guard helicopter crew motioned for the boy to land but couldn't get a response, and a pair of military jets scrambled to intercept the small plane arrived after the crash. . b DANNY MOLOSHOK/Daily Michigan center Chris Young and guard Leon Jones have led the Wolverines to a 2-0 start in Big Ten play. Coverage of the I