Student football tickets sell out after two straight national titles By Chad Lorenz Senior Reporter For the second straight year, some University of Nebraska-Lincoln stu dents who wanted season football tick ets were turned away at the ticket win dow. The 8,400 tickets allocated to stu dents sold out in mid-July, athletic de partment ticket manager Cindy Bell said. Student tickets went on sale April 1. Incoming freshmen received ticket applications with their admissions packets. The allocation for student tickets shrunk to 8,400 in 1991 after student ticket sales took an all-time dive since 1977. Even though enrollment was in creasing, students were buying fewer tickets. In 1994, the ticket office hit bottom, selling only 6,375 students tickets. After winning the first National Championship in 24 years, students rushed to the ticket office in 1995 to jump on the Comhusker bandwagon, causing UNL’s first student ticket short age. The first shortage wasn’t enough to make the athletic department expand the student section for this year, Bell said. The remaining 63,600 seats in Me morial Stadium are sold to faculty and the public, Bell said. Public ticket hold ers can renew their season tickets ev ery year, so the athletic department couldn’t give that seating to students, Bell said. Expanding student seating would require a collective decision by the university, starting with the chancellor, Bell said. Before a move starts, stu dents would need to prove they will keep demanding plenty of tickets, she said. “Before we jump the gun and start throwing people out of their seats, we should see if there’s any trends here,” Bell said. Past records showed that student ticket sales picked up following Nebraska’s National Championship win in 1971. But in 1972, the Huskers won only nine of 12 games, and in 1973, student ticket sales dropped by 1,464. “If we don’t win a National Cham pionship or lose a few games, we might be sitting here at this point next year trying to figure out what to do with the rest of these tickets,” Bell said. In past years when students didn’t buy all 8,400 tickets, the rest were sold to the public, Bell said. Compared to universities in the Big 12, UNL students receive the smallest ticket allotment. And the cost of stu dent tickets, $87.50 for 6 games, is the highest price in the Big 12. Oklahoma State University comes close with an allotment of 8,500 stu dent tickets, but the student population is 18,500. Nebraska’s 8,400 are sold to a student body of 24,300. Stephanie Sharp, a second-year graduate student in urban planning, waited until July to look into her stu dent tickets. “I thought, ‘It’s only mid-summer. I’ll still be able to get them.’” Sharp didn’t try to buy tickets when they were first available during the ticket lottery in April because she couldn’t afford them. She later regret ted her decision. “I was really disappointed because I’ve had football tickets since my fresh man year,” Sharp said. Sharp said the athletic department should have arranged seating so more students could still buy tickets. “I realize they make more money off public tickets, but it’s our school,” she said. “We’re the ones paying to go here. “They’re obviously not accommo EVERY student BODY should BE COVERED. A few days in the hospital could cost you as much as a semester in school. Protect your education with Blue Cross ; and Blue Shield of Nebraska's Student Man. 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(JN|_ Big 12 Student ootball Tickets Nebraska students are in poor shape for football tickets compared to the rest of the Big 12 schools. School Student ticket Allotment capacity Ticket price &V; n " rmw Oklahoma (no limit) 74000 $40 (5 games) 20000 * wm* i Texas Tech 10000 50700 $42.50 (5 games) 24300 Iowa St;'ItKKK)".'* MM''' Missouri 13000 62000 $71 (6 games) 24000 Texas ■ffeftsSt Baylor OkMc Kansas 15 - 23000 75000 Mmism (no limit) 49500 $ 95 (sports pass) . Free (5 games) 50000 mi 12200 (no limit) 51500 $37 (5 games) 25000 Aaron Steckelberg/DN dating students.” Jason Bynum, head of the ASUN student-athletic relations committee, said he and athletic department offi cials discussed the anticipated sell-oul last spring. “They were meeting supply and demand, earlier, but now there’s too much demand,” Bynum said. “I don’t think it’s anyone’s fault.” Athletic department officials told Bynum the student ticket allotment would be expanded if tickets keep sell ing out. No one specified how many seasons would need to sell out before the allotment would be increased, he said. * “As far as expanding seating or get ting more tickets, that might require a lot of discussion,” Bynum said. Students should tell the Association of Students of the University of Ne braska their complaints and concerns, he said. If enough students voice an opin ion through ASUN, they could start a movement equal to the one that saved student football seating from being Please see TICKETS on 15 The most fun you can have in an aley! Here's why: Billiards Screen TV Don't forget to stop by 4 E.J.'s Lounge for your favorite drinks and great food served Hot Off the Grill! 467-3249 lust South of 48th *8; Hol