WEATHER Tuesday, high 50-55, NW winds 15-30 mph. Tuesday night, fair and cooler with lows in 30s. Wednesday, sunny with highs in mid to upper 50s. Thursday through Saturday, cooler with chance of rain or snow Thursday, a dry and slowly warming trend Friday and Saturday. INDEX News.2 Editorial.4 Sports.6 Classified.6 i H April 4, 1989__University of Nebraska-Lincoln Vol. 88 No. 130 ■Nebraska Legislature advances drug bill By Jerry Guenther and Natalie Weinstein Staff Reporters The Nebraska Legislature gave second-round approval Mon day to a bill that some sena tors called ‘‘a step in the right direc tion” in solving statewide crack and cocaine problems. State senators voted 27-10 in favor of LB592, a bill placing mandatory three- and five-year prison sentences on crack and cocaine dealers. Sen. Chris Abboud of Omaha, a co-sponsor of the bill, said the bill is worth passing even though it does not solve Nebraska’s drug problems. LB592 will send a message to drug dealers that “Nebraska is not open for the business of the sale of cocaine and crack,’’ he said. Sens. Ernie Chambers of Omaha and Loran Schmit of Bellwood, who both opposed the bill in first-round debate two weeks ago, continued their efforts to delay action on the bill. Chambers made an unsuccessful motion to indefinitely postpone the bill. Later, Schmit made an unsuc cessful motion to delay debate on the bill until April 17. Chambers says LB592 does noth ing because judges already have dis cretion when deciding the length of prison terms. In previous debate Chambers called LB592 a “polili cian’s bill.” He said some senator* endorse the bill to make them look like drug fighters. ‘Pass the bill*wash your hands, and feel good. And you haven’t done anything.’ —Chambers “Pass the bill, wash your hand* and feel good,” Chambers said Monday. “And you haven’t done anything.” In his closing remarks to indefi nitely postpone the bill, Chambers accused the senators of being cow ards. “I know it will take more political stomach than the body has to kill this bill,” he said. Schmit also said the bill is ineffec tive but politically appealing. If the bill gets final approval, he said, sena tors will be able to tell their constitu ents “we got tough on drugs.” “Hell, we did nothing, folks,” Schmit said. Schmit said he wanted to delay debate on the bill to give senators more time to consider other alterna tives. Sen. Scott Moore of Stromsburg, a co-sponsor of the bill, said he agrees with Chambers that sometimes sena tors do “oversell” bills. But passing the drug bill would not make drug problems any worse, he said. By not passing the bill, Moore said, it would be as though “we arc throwing up our arms” and saying the problem is so big that it cannot be solved. Other senators agreed that the bill would not solve the problem entirely but was still worthy of becoming law. Sen. Carol McBride Pirsch of Omaha said senators need to pass the LB592 because an all-encompassing drug bill could not pass anyway. See DRUGSon 3 Connio Sheehan/Daily Nebraskan Bar hopping Kelly Cox, a redshirt with the Nebraska track and field team, works on her high jumping form Monday at Ed Weir Stadium. Fraternities are dropping little sisters By Jana Pedersen Staff Reporter Problems with liability, pres sure from national chapters and increased costs have caused many national fraternities to drop their little sister programs. At the University of Nebraska Lincoln, the trend to cut little sister programs is slower but still growing, said Jayne Wade Anderson, director of greek affairs. Halfof UNL’s 28 fraternities have little sister programs. Several have dropped the programs in the past few' years. Kevin Yost, Intcrfratemity Coun cil president, said pressure from na tional fraternities is the biggest rea son programs arc being cut. The national chapter of Alpha Tau Omega has recently passed a resolu tion denouncing little sister programs as “second class membership for women.” By the ATO resolution’s defini tion, Anderson said, little sister pro grams could cause problems with the way fraternities are recognized at UNL. Fraternities are the only UNL organizations recognized as men only groups, she said. Counting little sisters as “second class” fraternity members creates inconsistency in fraternity recogni tion, Anderson said. See SISTERS on 3 Sports overemphasized, restrictions needed, poll says ' By Eric Pfanner Staff Reporter According to a national poll conducted by Media General and The Associated Press, amajority of Americans favor tight ening restrictions on student athletes at lop sports colleges. Two-thirds of the 1,108 poll re spondents said the schools overem phasize sports and neglect academic standards for athletes. A Tightening standards is ‘‘a good thing,” said Ellen Baird, University of Ncbraska-Lincoln associate vice chancellor for academic affairs. ‘‘If you don’t have good stan dards, you are failing the athlete,” she said. Baird said people opposed to tightening NCAA standards argue that college athletics provide a way out of poverty for athletes. But the percentage of college athletes who go on from college to play profession'll sports is “tiny,” she said. Therefore, she said, ‘‘The way to gel people into the system (to have a productive life) is a quality education ~ and athletes are as deserving as others.” Responses to the poll were divided into several groups. Seventy-seven percent of those 65 and older, 61 percent of those between 18 and 29 and 52 percent of black respondents said the schools overemphasize sports, the AP reported. But Baird said the poll results deal with the public’s perceptions, not facts, and therefore may not give an accurate picture of the emphasis on sports at universities. Baird said she doesn’t think sports are emphasized at the expense of academics at UNL. “I don’t think UNL overempha sizes sports,” she said, ‘ ‘but there is a tremendous premium on sports in the Lincoln area.” Since the media in the Lincoln area focus on UNL sports, it may appear that UNL sports are overem phasized, she said. But it is important to ‘‘distinguish Nee says standards unrealistic in Prop. 42 By Eric Pfanner Staff Reporter Responding to the results of a recent media poll, UNL basketball coach Danny Nee said he is against the NCAA’s Proposition 42 because the rule bases decisions regarding an ath lete’s eligibility on unrealistic standards. More than eight in 10 respon dents to an Associated Press/Me dia General poll favored Proposi tion 42, which stiffens current scholarship eligibility require ments for student athletes. Nee said that under Proposition 42 colleges would use different criteria when rewarding athletic scholarships than they do when admitting student non-athletes to a university. Under Proposition 42, student athletes must meet the academic standards in the present rule, Proposition 48, to be eligible for athletic scholarships. The results of the survey are not surprising, Nee said, since most people do not understand the facts regarding Propositions 42 and 48. Standardized tests and high school grades should not be the most important determining fac tors in judging an athlete’s aca demic ability. Nee said. Nee said that once given a chance in college, some students who did poorly in high school show improvement. He cited two UNL athletes admitted under Proposition 48 who currently have grade point averages of 3.4 and 2.7. Under Proposition 42, student athletes who do not achieve scores of 700 on the Scholastic Aptitude Test or 15 on the American Col lege Test and do not have a 2.0 grade point average in 11 high school core courses would be de nied athletic scholarships. Proposition 48 requires that athletes meet only part of the same academic standards to receive scholarships. Partial qualifiers must sit out their freshman season, and arc eligible for only three years of play. the university from the larger com munity,” she said. Baird said die university admini stration promotes UNL ‘‘as a whole.” “Sports are important, but in per spective,” she said. Half of the people surveyed in the poll said they think professors com monly give athletes higher grades See POLL on 3