Universities contend Official says need-based financial aid to student athletes could hurt UNL By Erik Unger Staff Reporter_ A proposal to change the NCAA’s policy of granting.scholarships based on ath letic ability would hurt the University of Ncbraska-Lincoln, officials said. - i he proposal, which would offer assistance to athletes based on their financial need, was designed to save money and distribute financial aid more evenly to men and women and athletes from low-income families. A1 Papik, assistant athletic director inchargc of compliance and administration at UNL, said the NCAA had discussed the proposal before. It is an issue again because of the financial diffi I-— cullies many universities arc facing, he said. Although Papik said UNL had not officially decided whether it would support the proposal, he said he fell revenue-producing sports iri particular wished to keep the existing system of distributing financial aid. “I think student athletes put in extensive time, energy and effort,” he said. “They should be compensated more than just need-based assistance.” Papik said cuts in travel expenses and the cost of equipment,,athletic facilities and re cruiting visits would save money and do less damage to Nebraska’s athletic department by See SCHOLARSHIP on 3 with NCAA proposal Disputes over need-based scholarships plague Big Eight athletic administrators Erik Unger Staff Reporter _ An NCAA proposal to give athletes necd based aid instead of scholarships based on athletic ability has drawn mixed reviews from Big Eight athletic directors. The proposal was designed to save money for universities that were struggling financially, said Bob Frederick, athletic director at the University of Kansas at Lawrence. Frederick said he supported changing the NCAA’s policy as a way to cut costs. Kansas, which has an 8 percent in-state tuition increase, 12 percent out-of-slate tuition increase and a 15 percent increase in housing costs, no longer can afford an expanding ath letic budget, he said. “We need to find a way to cut costs or we won’t stay in business,” Frederick said. Donnie Duncan, athletic director at the Uni versity of Oklahoma, said the university prob ably would support the new proposal because he believed need-based aid should transcend athletics. “I think if a person needs aid on a financial basis, it should be given to them,” he said. “It shouldn't be based on their athletic ability.” But Duncan said he disagreed with the ath letic financial aid system because it was dis See BIG EIGHT on 2 rVn.ll I Staci McKoe/DN Double your pleasure Tatiana Gutsu, right, concentrates on blowing her first bubble gum bubble as teammate Svetlana Boginskaya watches. The two Olympic gymnasts spent Monday night relaxing before their performance at Pershing Auditorium Tuesday in Lincoln. Assault sends man to hospital From Staff Reports _ Three men were assaulted early Tuesday morning on the Uni versity of Ncbraska-Lincoln campus, and one was admitted to Lincoln General Hospital for treat ment. Lincoln Police Sgt. Ann Hccrmann said the assault occurred shortly after 1 a.m. Tuesday at 16th and Vine streets, and apparently stemmed from a verbal exchange among passengers in two cars. According to police reports, two cars—one with three passengers, the otherwithtwo—were northbound on 17th Street when a verbal exchange began. Two men in the second car who have not yet been identified slopped behind the first car, pulled the three men from the other vehicle and as saulted them. Daniel Hoesing, 23, of Elkhorn, was listed in fair condition Tuesday afternoon with facial bruises and cuts.. Stephen Rease, 23, of Omaha and David Willman, 24, of Fresno, Calif., were treated for facial bruises. Opinions clash on proposed amendment issue Government corrupted by seniority, needs major change, advocate says By Jeff Zeleny Staff Reporter_ Seniority hascorrupted politics, and term limits arc the first step to changing the political system, a term limit advocate said. “People know government isn’t working,’’ said Shari Williams, executive director of Americans Back In Charge. “The system makes it so (politicians) can’t get anything done. They arc focusing on re flection, not good ideas,” she said. Initiative 407, the pro posed term limit amendment, would limit U.S. senators to two six-year terms and repre sentatives to four two-year terms. If the measure passed, state legislators would be limited to eight years in office. However, it wouldn’t take effect until the incumbent’s current term expired. Fourteen stales are proposing similar legis lation this year, Williams said. Colorado is the only slate to have passed federal term limits. That bill became law in 1990. Williams said term limit legislation would be introduced in every state next year, and Eredicted that a term limit amendment would c added to the Constitution in four years. Former U.S. Rep. Hal Daub said Americans were tired of seeing congressional gridlocks that produced special sessions. Daub said Nebraskans should pass term limit legislation because politicians lacked dis cipline and needed new motivation. People want to serve without being hovered over by special interest groups, he said. Daub also said seniority was unnecessary in politics. Seniority once was good, he said, but now it x See DAUB on 3 Term limits unnecessary, would hurt Nebraska, state treasurer says By Jeff Zeleny Staff Reporter Limiting politicians’ terms would be harmful to Nebraskans and would not solve political problems, State Trea surer Dawn Rockey said. “Term limits mean less say for Nebraska at the federal level,”she said. “Limiting the terms of our congressional representatives will pul Nebraska at a distinct disadvantage." The proposcdconstitutional amendment will -— .appcarontheNov.3ballotas Initiative 407. If passed, U.S. senators would be limited to two six-year terms and repre sentatives to four two-year terms. State legislators would be ___llimitcd to eight years in of fice if the proposal passed. Rockey said problems existed in politics, but limiting terms wouldn’t solve them. “Campaign spending is out of control, perks arc at an all-time high, and accountability is at an all-time low,” she said. “But terms limits arc not the answer.” If the term limit measure is passed, Rockey said, Nebraskans would lose valuable congres sional representation. “Without the ability to acquire seniority, our representatives in Congress will not have any influence the House and Senate.” She said the last lime a Nebraskan chaired a major Senate committee was 1953. Seniority is the key to earning those positions, she said. A recent Omaha World-Herald poll showed that 71 percent of Nebraskans supported term limitation. Rockey said the poll was accurate, but voters didn’t understand what the proposal meant. “Term limit is a buzz word,” she said. Voters think the Nebraska term limit legis See ROCKEY on 3