J"'' W w u. iitliffi Weather: After a record high on Sunday of 82, today will be partly cloudy with a high of 47. Light northerly winds with a slight chance of showers. Tonight mostly clear with a low of 32 and slightly warmer on Tuesday with a high of 50. March 10, 1986 r- 7 1 N " ' " . .... .' ' - ' f ' ' - 1 r 11 . , Photo illustration: Bowling shoes are making their way from bowling alleys to private residences. Huskers get tournament bid By Bob Asmussen Sports Editor The Nebraska men's basketball team was rewarded Sunday after a difficult season. The Cornhuskers have been invited to the NCAA tournament and will play Western Kentucky in Char lotte, N.C., Friday night. Nebraska is the No. 9 seed in the Southeast regional. It is Nebraska's first ever NCAA bid. If the Huskers defeat the Hilltoppers, Faculty seminars new item Arts & Sciences a la Carte begins This week's Arts & Sciences a la Carte will include a few new things on the menu. Kim Philpot, co-chairwoman of the event, said faculty seminars are an item that the College of Arts and Sciences didn't include in its annual promotional week last year. "We're trying to get both faculty and students involved," said Philpot, a senior French major. Four UNL faculty members will speak on their areas of specialty. They include Wheeler Dixon, art and English profes sor and director of the film production unit, who will speak on jobs in the film industry; Nicole Smith, modern lan gauges professor, who will speak on Native American artifacts on display at Sheldon Arts and Entertainment, page 9 i Lx 11 r it Mark DavisDaily Nebraskan they likely will meet Kentucky in a second-round game in Charlotte on Sunday. Kentucky, the No. 1 seed in the Southeast region, opens with Davidson. "I felt we were in good shape when we left Kansas City," Nebraska coach Moe Iba said. "I knew if they took Mis souri, they'd have to take us, because we hfwe a better record than them." Missouri is the No. 11 seed in the West region and will meet Alabama Birmingham in a game at Ogden, Utah. surviving foreign language require ments; Don Taylor, professor of physics and astronomy, who will speak on Hal ley's comet, and Jerry Bevington, direc tor of the dance program, who will lead a workshop on modern and jazz dance and ballet. Specific times are listed below. Philpot said she hopes 40 to 50 peo ple attend each seminar. The seminars are open to anyone, not just arts and sciences majors. The foreign language seminar prob ably will draw the most people, she said, because all arts and sciences majors must take some foreign lan guage. The seminar could give students tips for meeting those requirements, o auiy University of Nebraska-Lincoln rao Owner vows By Ad Hudler Editorial Page Editor A recurrence of an old college fad at UNL has Earl Madsen in an uproar. The owner of Madsen's Bowling and Billiards Center on N. 48th Street claims UNL students are stealing his new bowling shoes. Lots of them. Once popular in the early 1970s, bowling shoes are making their way into private closets again, he says. Some swipe a pair or two just for the thrill of a theft. Others find them an odd complement to their wardrobes. And some students claim they make the smoothest, slickest dancing shoes in town. Whatever the reason, the thefts cost Madsen some big bucks. He said he lost about $400 in shoes last month. That's about $21 a pair. "It's a fad thing," Madsen.said. "It makes me real upset. We're supposed to be running this place, but they're running it." Madsen appears to be the hardest hit of Lincoln bowling centers, mainly because he caters heavily to the col lege crowd. Yet other Lincoln bowling centers also have somewhat of a problem. "It's certainly a problem that's been with the industry for years and years and years," said Jim Dill of Hollywood The Big Eight Conference sends a record five teams to the NCAA tourna ment. Besides Nebraska and Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma and Iowa State also qualified. Kansas, the No. 1 seed in the Midwest region, will meet North Carolina A&T in an opening-round game. Oklahoma, the No. 4 seed in the East region, will meet Northeastern in its opening round game. See NCAA on 8 T1 . v) irn shoes she said. Taylor's seminar on Halley's comet also should attract many people, she said. "He's quite an expert in his field," Philpot said of Taylor. "A lot of people don't realize we have these people here." Other new items for this year's Arts and Sciences Days include an exhibit of new physics equipment in the Ne braska Union by the Society of Physi cists. People can experiment with the equipment on Tuesday and Thursday. The student meteorology society will set up equipment for experiments on the same days and Monday. . See A & S DAYS on 3 Nebraska swim teams capture Big Eight titles j ;v Xl Sports, page 7 ii 1 in k willing eads to crackdown Bowl, 920 N. 48th St. Dill said his bowl ing center hasn't noticed an increase in shoe thefts, but he remains con cerned and is quick to point out that swiping a pair of the multi-colored leather shoes isn't funny. "They're stealing...it's not a prank," he said, "They're stealing. It's a case of responsibility." Some say shoes ugly Neil Early, manager of Sun Valley Lanes at 321 Apple Creek Road, said he hasn't seen much of a problem because they don't handle as many college stu dents as Madsen. A spokeswoman for the bowling alley in the East Union also said she hasn't seen an increase in shoe thefts. Why anyone would want to steal them is mysterious to her, she said. "Have you seen those shoes? They're ugly," she said. But Madsen wants to get to the bot tom of the problem. He said he wrote down a license plate number of a stu dent who walked out with a pair of shoes one night a couple of weeks ago. Madsen then called UNL Police Chief Gale Gade to ask what legal actions he can take. But since Madsen's business is off campus, UNL police can't d? much. Gade said the only way UNL police can help is if they pick someone up on campus for a different crime, then dis Sex disease on campus, Chlamydia is the fastest growing, least known and most prominent sexually transmitted disease at UNL, said Dr. Gerald Fleischli, medical director for the University Health Center. Fleischli said chlamydia (pro nounced "cla-MID-ee-uh") has in creased significantly in the last five to 10 years. Part of the increase might be due to better tests to detect chlamydia and an increased awareness of the disease, he said. In a recent study by the health center staff, 151 men and women at UNL were tested for chlamydia; 12 percent of the women tested who showed no symptoms had the dis ease, while 19 percent of the women who showed symptoms also had chlamydia. All the men tested had symptoms of chlamydia and 44 per cent had the disease. The Center for Disease Control in Atlanta estimates that only 20 to 30 percent of males with chlamydia show no symptoms. Common symptoms for men are painful urination and a watery dis charge from the penis. But only half of women infected with chlamydia show symptoms, Fleischli said. The symptoms for women are itching and burning in Vol. 85 No. 118 3 on thieves cover they're wearing stolen bowling shoes. "It's a real tough" problem, Gade said. Owner will prosecute Madsen wants to prosecute anyone who is caught stealing bowling shoes in the future. While that's possible, it could be a little tough, said Capt. Douglas Ahl berg of the Lincoln Police Department. Stealing shoes constitutes petty lar ceny, but since students rent the shoes, bowling alley owners would have to prove that students actually intended to steal the shoes. That, Ahlberg said, is hard to prove sometimes. Madsen says he'll have to make some changes at his bowling alley. Most Lin coln bowling alleys don't hold your street shoes or a driver's license while you rent the bowling shoes, but that might change. "It's ridiculous, but we have to cope with this thing," Madsen said. Madsen said 90 percent of his prob lem is that people working in bowling alleys often are too busy to ask people if they have rented shoes to return. When and if Madsen catches his next thief, he says he'll prosecute. He wants to set an example for other peo ple who can't resist the temptation of contributing to the new foot fetish. increases doctor says the genitals, vaginal discharge, dull pelvic pain and bleeding between menstrual periods. s Medical researchers have just recently begun to understand the extent of medical problems chla mydia causes, Fleischli said. In men, researchers have found chla mydia is the leading cause of inflam mation of the urethra, he said, which resembles gonorrhea but is not caused by the gonorrhea bacte rium. If left untreated, Fleischli said, it might lead to sterility. In homosexual males, chlamydia has been attributed to causing anal inflammation and Reiter's Syndrome, a condition much like arthritis, he said. Chlamydia has a more serious effect on women if left untreated, Fleischli said. Chlamydia can block the fallopian tubes with scar tissue, causing infertility. Chlamydia also increases the risk for an embryo developing in the fal lopian tubes instead of the uterus during a woman's pregnancy, Flei schli said. Chlamydia is easily detectable and easily treated, said Fleischli. The test for chlamydia at the health center costs $10.