1$ iLiii TV Li '1 B'K i Weather: Mostly sunnyand warmertoday. Winds light and variable with a high of 37. Clear and cold tonight. Low of 15. Sunny again on Friday with a high of 42. UNL gives old 'carol' fresh, production Diversions, psga 7 Nebraska voters reveal choices for Heisman Sports, page 12 f J I v v (1 (Til (Q i' M T December 5, 1985 University of Nebraska-Lincoln Vol. 85 No. 70 3 ( . ) j if, X 11 0 t 3ark DavisDaily Nebraskan Fifty-five parking permits reported stolen, five recovered; officer says most just lost By LeAnne Lovings Staff Reporter Of the about 1 2,600 parking permits sold this year, 55 have been reported stolen. Five permits have been recovered. Lt. John Burke said he thinks only a small percentage of the permits reported stolen actu ally were stolen. He said he thinks many of the permits were lost or misplaced. The police department follows up on the reports, however. Officers search the parking lots, checking cars to make sure they have a rear window parking sticker. The sticker usually can't be removed from a window, and the permit that hangs on the rear-view mirror isn't valid without the sticker. If officers find a car with a permit but without a sticker, they impound the car. The car owner receives a $40 ticket, but police don't prosecute e :i il.a ior permit men,, f Adequate punishment UNL Police Chief Gail Gade said the Lancaster County Attorney's office chooses not to prose cute permit thefts because it believes the uni versity handles the situation well with the $40 fee. . Sherryl Chamberlain, office supervisor, said the five permits recovered this year were found in students' cars. People whose permits are stolen must make an official report to the police so they can receive a two-week temporary permit. If after two weeks the permit has not been recovered, Burke said, the person must buy a replacement permit for $20. Incentive charge Chamberlain said the police don't know whether the permit was lost or stolen. The $20 charge is an incentive for permit owners to keep their cars locked. "We don't know that they're stolen," she said. "We don't always have evidence that somebody has broken into their car." Burke said the main problem is that students are not security conscious. Many thefts occur because owners leave their cars unlocked or a window open. "We sell the permit to them and the permit becomes their property, just like if we would have sold them a camera or a stereo," he said. "So it is their duty to keep all doors locked," If the permit is recoverd after the owner buys a replacement, Chamberlain said, the owner re ceives a $20 refund from the department. Stores to irsDBn By Ad Hudler Senior Editor Lincoln's American Store meat processing plant will reopen under a new company Jan. 15, bringing about 450 new jobs to Lincoln and extra revenue to the NU system. American Stores donated the plant to the NU Foundation Nov. 4. The plant, on a 20-acre plot at Second and O streets, has been closed since Dec. 2, 1982. It has been appraised at more than $10 million. "The first thing that comes to mind today is that there really is a Santa Claus," NU President Ronald Rcskens said at a Wednesday morning press conference that announced the reopening. Cook Family Foods, Ltd. of Rydal, Penn., will buy equipment in the plant and lease the prop erty for 10 years with an option to buy. The cost of that lease was not disclosed. NU will receive the money from the lease and the plant equipment sold to Cook Foods. William Wenke, president of the NU Founda tion, said the money will be distributed among UNL, UNO and UNMC for various activities. The Foundation will later decide how to spend the money, Wenke said. Cook Foods will pay all property taxes on the lease, Wenke said. Cook Foods will hire about 250 employees when it first opens its doors, said Herbert "Bud" Cook, chairman of the company. About 50 to 75 employees will be added each consecutive year until the plant employs 450 workers. Cook said former American Stores workers will receive no priorities in hiring. At its peak, American Stores employed between 700 and 900 people. Cook Foods processes a specialized line of ham products distributed to supermarkets throughout the country. The company produces about $150 million in ham and ham-related pro ducts annually, Cook said. Cook said he heard about the American Stores plant on a "gossip line" with other businessmen. He said he contacted American Stores, who con tacted the Lincoln Chamber of Commerce and the NU Foundation the organization primarily responsible for reorganizing NU's acquisition of the plant. Cook said he chose Lincoln because the plant "is in excellent condition," and it will open doors for company expansion to the West and Midwest. The company has another plant near Detroit and offices in Pennsylvania. :littlllln:6fiii By Janis Lovitt Staff Reporter Recent outbreak d a relatively unknown sexually transmitted dis ease have brought mere attention to the' disc ase. Many people assume that vene real diseases such as syphilis or gonorrhea are the most threatening in students, said Dr, P.a!ph Ewert, chief cf the medical stiff at the University Health Center, but 30 percent to 50 percent cf genital dis orders seen at the health center are d!s mcsftd as cHmjdia trcchcir,at:s, CI:.r.;i;a is m infection that:: mssUt its victlnalave never heard ; of, Ewert said. Diane Smith, hecJth advocate for the Family Service Open Doer Health Center in Lincoln, said chlamydia symptoms can induds itching and burning for both men and wcrnen. The symptoms may be present early in the day, go away and then come back later, Smith said. Low-grade fevers can occur in the later stages cf the disease, she, said. However, Smith said, about 80 percent of the'- victims have no notic&ble symptoms cf the disease. Ewert said the health center recently included a test for chlamy dia in the routine pelvic exams. Atcut 10 percent t 12 percent cf those examined are diagnosed as chlamydia victims, he said. If left untreated, Smith said, chlamydia can cause a painful infection that crt rcq;::rs hospital izatien and tcizz p :rr:.2ncnt do age to the reproductive organs or She said corr.;!;c:ii:r.r, c:?. occur during pregnancy re:-: V-ir. in tho death ct the baly cr tl.3 ir. ether cr tV L if. The increasing number of chkv mydia cases is not unique to the UNL campus. Paul A. Stoesz, direc tor cf the disease control division cf the state Deportment cf Health, snid 323 esses cf ci'VuIa were reported through November this year, Stoesz said the number increased dramatically from the 37 cases reported from May to November last year, Etoesz sdd he thinks the easier and cheaper exam is only part of the reason why chlamydia cases have increased. Hesaid bethinks greater jtvtrenesa cf the disease and an increase in the disease itself caused ilhs statistics! cis-Xios There is evidence that there are more cf the microorganisms that cause chlamydia present today, Stoesz Sdd lie said he thinks the shift frcm tirth control methods such as con doms to the pill and HID can be blamed for the rapid spread of the microorganisms. Carol Mitchell, communicable . disease coordinator fcr the Lincoln Lancaster County Health Depart ment, said that although most peo ple do not like to use condoms, they are the only sure way of preventing the spread cf chlamydia. Mitchell said it is important that pecpb seek medical attention if they have problems. If they do net get treatment now, Mitchell said, they may find that chlamydia will hurt them in tls future when they wont to hove