receive it. Of those 40, eight were not in school. Five of the eight said they would return to school next semester, if they received aid. How many other students applied for aid and because they did not receive it not return to UNL is not known, Ritchie said, but a study is planned to determine this. Next year, Ritchie said he expects more students will be eligible for aid through the new Basic Opportunity Grant (BOG) program. This year the program was limited to freshmen with a maximum grant of $600 a student. The new program will be open to any student and will probably replace the Supplemental Education Opportunity Grant (SEOG), which helped low-income I I ' ..' l ' .) .! students. In the BOG program, a student's eligibility is determined by how much a student's parents can aid the student. The student then receives a voucher for the amount of federal aid. This means that more students will be eligible, but that a student under BOG will probably receive less money than under SEOG, Ritchie said. Many middle-income families are finding it difficult to send their children to college, Badersaid. The middle income student can't qualify for a grant as easily as a low-income student, and his parents may have difficulty getting a bank loan. What is left in the college is the high and low income students, Bader said. Bader said that while he fears it is possible that these students are being priced out of college through financial aid cutbacks and rising costs, he still believes a college education is the best investment available. "An educated man is still needed and still desired," he said. Bader said another concern is that if enrollment goes down as it has, University funding may decrease through cuts in programs and a loss of professors. "It's degrading the quality when you have to use substitutes (in programs), and you have to fight like the deveil to keep good professors. The danger is if we lose the good professors (when there is a cutback in funding new programs), you end up with mediocrity," he said. mm-wmmm mm .iwrmiinmin.im.ii. m, i ; I -) 7 ""'.V: 7.5!) 177.50 f f SSI. .Mi S5I.su ! Tuition and He lncre;ie for Residents Sitwe 1948 ' ' ' -iJ-t-' 1 s ? 1 1 .Ji 8.nmimwiiiiniiii m i ' m mmn m ti rri-f--T ' - ,.,, .,