Wild Card Gamble good to go. See Page 13 ®lre BatUt attr Mnl www.unc.edu/dth Doherty Shifts Into Overdrive at UNC By T. Nolan Hayes Sports Editor Matt Doherty used to drive a Ford Taurus when he went on recruiting trips. Now he drives a BMW. The change in cars is just one of many Doherty has experienced since becoming the men’s basketball head coach at North Carolina on July 11. He has new players, new secretaries and new fans to please. But one thing that hasn’t changed for Doherty is his work ethic, which earned him praise as a player at UNC and helped him gain recognition as one of the hottest young coach es in the country last year at Notre Dame. “Right now I’m going to work every day just like I did at Notre Dame,” Doherty told a group of reporters at the Smith Center on Wednesday morning. “I just have a nicer car and a bigger office.” The new car and desk have been easy adjustments for Doherty, but coaching the Tar Heels will be more difficult He has had to get BOG Members: Webster Made Right Decision Board of Governors member John Sanders says the scandal surrounding Webster's recent resignation might hurt a push to win a vote for the board's sole student member. By Kathleen Hunter State & National Editor Some UNC-system leaders say the next UNC Association of Student Governments president will have to work espe cially hard to regain credibility with the Board of Governors. On Tuesday, ASG President Cliff Webster announced his intention to step down Sept. 7, making him the association’s second president to resign amid scandal in two years. Webster’s decision came just days after reports surfaced that he was arrested June 30 on two counts of larceny, and almost a year after Nick Mirisis resigned as ASG president because he plagiarized a paper at UNC-Charlotte. Webster, an East Carolina University graduate student, was charged for stealing two benches from the ECU campus. UNC-system President Molly Broad said Webster’s resig nation did not at all cloud her view of the ASG president, who also holds the lone student seat on the Board of Governors. “I think this is an extraordinary coincidence to have two student leaders resign back-to-back,” Broad said. “I can’t imagine this has ever happened before in the history of the University.” But BOG member John Sanders said he feared the two con secutive resignations might damage future ASG presidents’ credibility with and influence over some board members and legislators. He urged ASG members to carefully select a replacement whose character could withstand scrutiny. Such a person could successfully instill a positive percep tion of the ASG president in board members, Sanders said. “I don’t think it’s a long-term handicap with the board,” he said. But Sanders said the scandals might also hinder the ongo ing push to persuade members of the N.C. General Assembly to award a vote to the student member of the BOG. Opponents df the idea would likely use recent events to fuel their arguments as to why the student BOG member should remain voteless, Sanders said. “It does not make a strong case for giving student members a vote as well as a voice,” he said. Sanders said Webster’s choice to resign was the right one. “I think he made the right decision and the respectable See BOG, Page 2 Calif. Proposal Could Set New Trend in Aid By Lucas Fenske Assistant State & National Editor The California state legislature is try ing to open up the world of higher edu cation to children from low-income fam ilies through a $1.2 billion financial aid package. California’s Student Financial Aid Bill, which is being debated in the state Senate, rejects a decade-old financial aid trend emphasizing merit scholarships for students and tax breaks for their parents, a system that predominantly benefits the over the fact that he left behind a team he loved at Notre Dame. The Tar Heels must adjust to the idea of not having either Dean Smith or Bill Guthridge on the bench for the first time since 1961. “I’m getting settled in more and more each day, but it’s been a very difficult transition,” Doherty said. “A lot of people have to put things aside. You have to create separation. You have to mourn your losses. I’m mourning the loss of my team at Notre Dame, and the secretaries here are mourning the loss of their staff. “There’s a lot of that going on, but I think each day the healing process gets better.” Doherty said Guthridge and Smith have offered their advice whenever he wants it. But the man who has perhaps been the greatest help to him in changing jobs for the second time in two years is Roy Williams. Doherty worked as an assistant under Williams for 10 years at Kansas, and Williams gave Doherty a sheet of notes when Doherty left to take the head job at Notre Dame before last season. The piece of paper recommended Bid Day Brings Sorority Smiles DTH/LAURAGIOVANELLI Rain Fails to Dampen Spirits of New Pledges By Elizabeth Breyer Assistant University Editor Songs and screams of joy echoed through the air from Rosemary Street to Hamilton Hall as hundreds of UNC women received their bids to Panhellenic sororities Wednesday night. Bid Day marked the end of formal rush, a 10-day process during which rushees experience the Greek system at UNC and select the chapter they want to pledge. “I’m really excited for the girls to get their bids so I can talk to them,” said Allyson Lippert, a sophomore member of Kappa Delta sorority. “Everyone’s not a stereotypical rushee, and it’ll be so cool to sit down and talk and get past the surface stuff.” Bid Day is the culmination of four rounds of visits and parties, and the excitement that had been building up throughout the process was visible as rushees joined their new sisters. “I don’t know what to say - I’m so excited, and this process is just wild,” said sophomore Kate Pearson, who received a bid to Sigma Sigma Sigma sorority. Pearson had barely finished her sentence when she broke into song with her new sorority, clapping and jumping up and down. The evening began with an assembly in Hill Hall auditorium. Before the doors were opened, girls clustered outside in the light rain, chatting nervously and checking their watches. Many had final questions for their rushee counselors, also known as middle class. Some analysts say this bill could mark the first step toward reversing this trend across the nation. The plan mirrors an N.C. initiative that also provides aid based on need rather than merit. But the California plan dwarfs North Carolina’s, which is only slated to receive $32 million. The California bill, beginning in the 2001-02 school year, would supply near ly one-third of the state’s high school graduates with funds to attend a state university or community college. I could never love anyone as I love my sisters. Nuclear Reaction CP&L fields questions about the safety of Shearon Harris. See Page 3 Serving the students and the University community since 1893 17 things for Doherty to do to help make his transition as smooth as possible. Doherty held onto the paper in his planner and pulled it back out upon arriving in Chapel Hill. At the top of the list was a sug gestion that he meet with his new players as quickly as possible. Doherty did that. “Any time there’s a major coaching change, players start thinking, ‘l’m going to transfer, I’m going to do this, I’m going to do that,”’ Doherty said. “That’s normal, so I did n’t react to any of that stuff. “I just came in, and to me it was important to sit down and talk to them with my jacket off. I think that let them know to relax, that I’m not going to be a dictator, and that I’m not going to tell them how to feel right now.” But he will tell them how hard they must work. Doherty and his staff have already set an example by logging incredible hours since their arrival. They have regularly been working two shifts per day. Their basic plan has been to get to work early in the morning, leave in the evening to spend time with their families and California Senate officials say the bill has broad support from both sides of the aisle, as well as the governor, and is expected to pass. Abbie Blackman, press secretary for Sen. Deborah Ortiz, D-Sacramento, who is an author of the bill, said it was drafted to help children from poor fam ilies attend college. “Our state is cur rently going through a highly prosper ous period,” Blackman said. “This bill will help extend that prosperity to peo ple of all backgrounds.” In the past, students qualifying for a then go back to the office late at night. Doherty executed that game plan to per fection Tuesday. After a full day of work, he broke out of the office to go out to eat with his family at Outback Steakhouse. The Dohertys then headed over to Dick’s Sporting Goods, where Doherty bought his son some soccer shoes and shinguards. Doherty was back at the office by 9 p.m. “When you’re chasing your passion, you do that,” he said. Doherty has spent much of his time in the office burning up the phone lines. He has been calling his share of recruits, of course, but he recently had a conversation with the most famous Tar Heel of them all: Michael jordan. Doherty askedjordan, his UNC teammate for three seasons, to come back for Midnight Madness at the Smith Center this year. Jordan declined, but he did say that he wanted Doherty to have his radio show at his restau rant, 23. The restaurant will provide Doherty with See DOHERTY, Page 2 DTH/JEFF POULAND Rushees run down Frankiin Street from Hill Hall after receiving their sorority bids Wednesday. Kindi Shinn (above left) and Tilghman Carroll wait in anticipation for this year's crop of Kappa Delta rushees to arrive at the sorority's house on East Franklin Street. rho chis. The counselors are assigned about 15 women to guide throughout rush without revealing their own sorority affiliations. “Excited is really the best word for how we’re all feeling,” said Katie Brennan, a junior from Charlotte and a rho chi. “I can’t wait for them to get their bids - all these girls are going to great houses.” When the doors opened, the rushees poured into the auditorium for roll call and to watch short skits. The 44 groups of girls each did their best to add to the feverish pitch of noise in the hall, screaming and shrieking as they were called. Once the on-stage activities were finished, each rushee eagerly ripped open the envelope with her bid and raced to her new sorority. See RUSH, Page 2 Cal Grant were listed according to their grade point average. Funds were dis tributed until money ran out. Blackman said the amount students would receive under the new program depends on their financial situation and the type of school they attend. A student from a low-income family with a “C” average would receive enough money to attend a community college. A student with a “B” average or higher would recieve further funds to cover the higher costs of attending a state school or up to $9,700 for a private mm I J 8 ■ v Wm fcf i mfl ■; wsFSm f is DTH FILE PHOTO Tar Heel basketball coach Matt Doherty and his coaching staff have been working two shifts per day. school. Shirley Ort, UNC’s assistant vice chancellor for scholarships and student aid, said administrators and legislators in North Carolina largely view low tuition as the best form of financial aid. “North Carolina has traditionally taken a different approach to funding higher education than California,” Ort said. “We tend to rely on low tuition.” Despite the University’s low tuition, Ort said UNC has always been com See AID, Page 2 Guess What? Today: Storms, 80 Friday: Storms, 83 Saturday: Storms, 85 Thursday, August 31, 2000 Students To Move Courtside Altered seating assignments will be announced today at a 2 p.m. press conference with top athletics officials. By Karey Wutkowski Assistant University Editor Students’ rallying cry for seats closer to the floor during UNC men’s home basketball games has finally been answered. Director of Athletics Dick Baddour will introduce the rev ised student seating system at 2 p.m. today at a press confer ence on the Smith Center floor. The conference will be open to the public. “A lot of people counted us out and thought we couldn’t do it,” said Carolina Athletic Association President Tee Pruitt, who helped initiate the project last year in hopes of bringing more energy to the game floor. Pruitt said he worked with Baddour and Educational Foundation Executive Vice President John Cherry this sum mer to complete Carolina Athletic Association President Tee Pruitt is pleased with the new seating at the Smith Center. the seating revision. He said the final plan is a compromise by everyone. “We never had cross words or difficult times," Baddour said. “We had plenty of obstacles, but we worked though them.” Students will now have access to lower-level seats formerly reserved for Smith Center donors, who agreed to be moved to comparable seating in anoth er area, Pruitt said. Pruitt also said he originally pro posed bringing in stand-only risers to replace the first 10 row's of seats behind the basket on the UNC side and the first 10 rows in comer of the lower level stu dent section. But the plans were hin dered by fire safety concerns and archi tectural limitations. “There w r ere a lot of facility issues,” he said. Pruitt said most of the changes will be ready for UNC’s first regular-season home game on Nov. 10 but said other changes can’t be completed right away. The push to add more student seat ing near the floor gained strength early last year after the Jan. 27 home game See SEATING, Page 2