10 Friday, September 24, 1999 Concerns or comments about our coverage? Contact the ombudsman at budmaHounc.edu or call 6QS-2790. Scott Hicks EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR Katie Abel UNIVERSITY EDITOR Jacob McConnico CITY EDITOR Board Editorials Lame Excuses For years, the old tale about the hare and the tortoise has taught us that “slow and steady” wins the race. Apparently, somebody at the Office of Scholarships and Financial Aid misinterpret ed the story as teaching that “slow, lazy and completely irresponsible” wins the race. This fall, some students who had received financial aid packages were left without refund checks to cover the costs of textbooks, off-campus rent, transportation and food. “I applied for an emergency loan, but they wouldn’t give me the loan because I was get ting a refund check,” said Jennifer Painter, a freshman who said she was lucky to get her books. “I went to the cashier’s office and they didn’t know who I was.” Shirley Ort, director of the student aid office, said delays in distributing the checks were the result of office renovations, elec tronic filing system problems and short staffing. By the way, the office handles SIOO million in scholarship money every year. Shirley, we students really do feel bad for you -but not half as bad as we do for those kids who had to start class without textbooks. Office renovations? What kind of excuse is that? Unless the financial aid office work ers were the ones on the eight-foot ladders installing air-conditioning ducts and hanging Injecting Some Debate It should never be said that the little guy doesn’t count. With the brouhaha surrounding the exe cution of Harvey Lee Green scheduled for today, more attention has been paid to sum mertime moratoriums on executions passed by the municipalities of Chapel Hill, Carrboro and Durham. Only two other such resolutions have been passed nationwide. This move by local leaders has drawn the spodight to the continuing debate over the death penalty in North Carolina. From a protest on the steps of the Franklin Street Post Office to class discussions on cam pus, students and local residents have been forced to examine their stance on this heated issue. Even though these Triangle lawmakers do not have the authority to enact such a man date, the moratorium is intended to send a clear signal to the big dogs in the N.C. General Assembly who make the decisions regarding capital punishment. Though their collective voice represents only a small part of North Carolina, their stance is important. The resolutions suppos edly reflect the opinion of thousands of North Carolinians. Want to Blow Off Some Steam? Write a guest column for The Daily Tar Heel. Guest columns typically appear every Monday on the op-ed page. Submissions should be about 800 words in length. Bring typed copies to the DTH office in Suite 104 of the Student Union or e-mail them to dth@unc.edu. Include your name, class, hometown and e-mail address at which you can be reached, for more information, call Editorial Page Editor Scott Hicks at 962-0245. Q.I • ’dck. Barometer Candidate Found After weeks without a peep, GOP presidential candidate Elizabeth Dole has resurfaced. Unfortunately, H it was to push a sketchy idea that would make it easier to search high school students' lockers. Popularity Plus Anew policy from the Carolina Athletic Association means it'll take more than popularity or group * clout to become the next Mr. or Mrs. UNC. Tar Heel Quotables “(ECU students) are going to come back for class in a week and see their town underwa ter. It’s going to be morally devastating.” Association of Student Governments President Jeff Nieman On Hurricane Floyd’s aftermath in Greenville. If it’s that bad for students, think what it must be like for the natives. “My older son thinks Ignacio’s doctor is Patch Adams.” Denise Perez Albert Perez Albert's 7-year-old son, Ignacio, is currently being treated for leukemia at UNC Hospitals. Maybe Robin Williams is sneaking around incognito. Rob Nelson EDITOR Office Hours Friday 3 p.m. ■ 4 p.m. Matthew B. Dees STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR Brian Murphy SPORTS EDITOR T. Nolan Hayes SPORTSATURDAY EDITOR wallpaper, there is absolutely no reason why they could not get their work done. Having the workplace redone is certainly an incon venience to the employees. It is not, howev er, a valid excuse for falling so far behind. Electronic filing system problems? That one isn’t going to cut it either. Find the prob lem, fix the problem The student aid office uses its computers for basic filing, not launch ing shuttles out of Cape Canaveral. There is no way it should take the same amount of time to work out a minor filing problem as it does to pass a kidney stone. In terms of lameness, Ort’s short-staffing excuse takes the cake. So she lost a couple of employees over the summer. Heaven forbid that Ort or her employees pick up the slack and do more normal. Ort has said that during the next six months the office would fill the empty staff positions, reorganize the office to increase efficiency and conduct a student satisfaction survey. The results ought to be interesting. Anytime unexpected setbacks arise, some decrease in productivity is understandable. But office renovations, computer glitches and the loss of a few employees do not justi fy the degree to which the Office of Scholarships and Financial Aid has failed in its $ 100-million obligation to the students. Not all cities are moratorium opponents, however. Aberdeen passed a resolution that weighed in favor of the death penalty. But if a large percentage of local govern ments took a stand on this issue, state law makers would have a better idea of how the state felt about capital punishment. The road to change has to have its begin ning somewhere. Perhaps the resolutions passed by these three localities is that first step toward a statewide change in policy; then again, perhaps not. Either way, it has sparked meaningful dis cussion within these towns and across North Carolina. And any attention that gets drawn to such a controversial issue is beneficial. It gets the public talking, debating amongst each other and thinking about a topic that is far from cut and dry. Regardless of your personal opinion on the death penalty, the local resolutions show that ordinary citizens can work with local leaders to be proactive in the debate over state policy. When the little guys voice their opinions, they force us to think about and defend our position on moral issues. And soul-searching never killed anyone. Sweatshop Blues Frank Gifford was on Capitol Hill on Wednesday to defend wife and talk-show hostess Kathie Lee from questions about sweatshop conditions in her cloth ing line. Unlike Nike, at least her stuff is cheap. Park This ... The town of Carrboro is auctioning off a fire truck. Imagine trying to get a hardship permit for a pumper Bi>- —and where do you keep the dalmation? “I’m terribly concerned that the first class to move in would like the new dorms so much that they would never move out.” Associate Vice Chancellor for Student Services Dean Bresciani On the new residence halls proposed for South Campus. There's nothing like sharing a bathroom with 12 people that makes one want to stay in residence halls forever. “‘Just Say No’ is a ridiculous strategy.” Orange-Chatham District Attorney Carl Fox Duh, Carl. Did anyone ever believe that Nancy Reagan could come up with a successful anti-drug campaign? Editorial (Tlif SatUj dar Uni Established 1893 • 106 Years of Editorial Freedom www.unc.edu/dth Leigh Davis FEATURES EDITOR Erin Wynia * ARTS St ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR Carolyn Haynes COPY DESK EDITOR jy||L