Nebraska wrestlers Paul Donahoe and Kenny Jordan deserved the
                        dismissals the Athletic Department handed them after the two appeared
                        naked and separately in photographs and performed sexual acts on
                        themselves in videos on a pornography Web site.
 However, they warranted the boot from the NU wrestling program not
                        solely because of the online incident, which the NCAA has not yet
                        deemed as a violation of its rules, but rather because of that incident
                        coupled with a prior infringement of NCAA rules.
 The Nebraska Athletic Department upheld policy and followed NCAA rules
                        - as they should have - but we disapprove of the manner in which
                        information was released to the public, particularly for concerned
                        wrestling fans.
 As details surfaced - very slowly - after the Aug. 12 dismissals, the
                        public learned from NU's Athletic Director Tom Osborne that Donahoe and
                        Jordan first became ineligible to participate on the wrestling squad in
                        March after the duo violated an extra-benefits rule, which states
                        athletes cannot accept benefits or gifts from university employees or
                        boosters.
In that incident, the UNL Athletic Department appealed to the NCAA to
                        have the wrestlers reinstated, Osborne told The Associated Press. The
                        wrestlers were suspended one match.
 By not providing the public with all relevant information at the onset
                        of the dismissals, the Athletic Department has made it easy for the
                        Husker community to question the department's integrity. The public has
                        been left to view the wrestlers' dismissals as a possible infringement
                        of First Amendment rights of the athletes' freedom of speech and
                        expression.