POLICE REPORT Beginning midnight Wednes day, Feb. 20 3:01 p.m. — Man complained of back pain, Behlen Physics Lab, transported to Lincoln General Hospital, 2300 S. 16th St. 4:06 p.m. — Hit-and-run acci dent, 41 st Street and East Cam pus Loop, $300. 9:28 p.m. — Man felt dizzy, Abel Residence Hall, refused transport. i Condoms lack use among students By Trish Spencer Staff Reporter The message that AIDS kills may not be reaching University of Nc braska-Lincoln students, according to 1990 state health reports. Reports from 26 HIV/AIDS test ing sites in Nebraska showed that only 14 percent of the people who visited them in 1990 used condoms regularly. Although 88,000 condoms have been sold by the University Health Center in the past three years, only 11 percent of the 53 students tested by the University Health Center in 1990 said they always use condoms cor rectly. The majority of college and high school students do not use condoms, said Shannon Fiene, community health educator. Twenty-eight percent of the stu dents said they never used condoms and 38 percent reported that they sometimes use condoms, according to state health reports. Fiene said she thinks most young people do not use condoms because they do not think about dying. Yearly events like National Con dom Week, which ended Thursday, are meant to encourage people to talk about condoms and use them, Fiene said. The University Health Center Student Advisory Board sold con doms and distributed tree informa tion about sexually transmitted dis eases and abstinence at a booth in the Nebraska Union on Feb. 14. Terri Turner, the board’s adviser, said response to the booth was good. Students who teach contraceptive education classes at the health center and living facilities on campus also have received a positive response, Turner said. Students, along with nurses from the health center, teach the proper way to use contraceptives such as condoms. Fiene said that although the booth and classes have made people more aware, they are not changing their behavior, which alarms her. While Nebraska is ranked low nationally in the number of STD and HIV cases per capita, she said, the rate of HIV case numbers is increas ing by 37 percent in rural and small town areas compared to only 5 per cent in metropolitan areas. Fiene credited the decrease in metropolitan areas to people’s knowl edge of victims of the disease and the increased use of prevention methods. Condoms pilfered from health center By Heather Heinisch Staff Reporter Condom thieves are taking advan tage of a fishbowl dispenser at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln Health Center Pharmacy, the chief pharma cist said. Over the last three years, more than 88,000 condoms have been taken out of the honor-system fishbowl, but James Oehm said the health center # would be doing well if it was paid for half of those taken. There seems to be no good way to dispense the condoms, he said, be cause they aren’t counted when they are put out, which is about twice a day. Oehm said the pharmacy is not trying to make money off the sales but does want to break even. If people do not pay 10 cents for each condom they take, he said, prices will have to be raised or the condoms will be put behind the counter and dispensed individually. The glass fishbowl was set out in the first place to eliminate the embar rassment of having to ask for con doms, he said. Sales have increased over the past three years from about 500 a week to about 700 to 800 a week, he said. Oehm attributed the increase to the popularity of the prophylactic and the concern about AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases. Also, since the word has gotten out that the condoms cost only 10 cents, sales have increased, he said. The customers are evenly divided between men and women, he said, but women are starting to edge out the men. Oehm said he could only speculate on why sales to women are increas ing. Women may be more respon sible and aware of STDs, he said, bul they also buy a lot for party decora tions and rubber trees. Break time is when people stock up on condoms, he said, and more are sold on Thursdays and Fridays than the rest of the week. Bob Marley's Talkin' Blues On SALE at Twisters ^ ITSlWWiSl! Cassettes Jp^.77— TAIEIN7 BLIlif -CDs $9.77— The first Marley album in years, Talkin' Blues is comprised of y i J 11 eleven songs: seven recorded in lUS Legend cind 3.11 closed session for a KSAN (San Francisco) radio broadcast in other Marley titles October 1973, four rarities again •' taken from the mid-seventies, including the never released OdlC "Am-A-Do" and spoken word interview material from a CaSSCttCS CD'S September 1975 JBC radio broadcast. Bumin'.$4.97 Catch a Fire.$4.97 Confrontation.$4.97 Exodus.$4.97 Kaya.$4.97 Legend. $5.77 Live.$4.77 Natty Dread. $4.77 Rastaman Vibration .. $4.77 Rebel Music.$4.77 Survival.$4.77 Uprising. $4.77 All titles on sale are Buy it-Try it Guaranteed Prices effective through 2-28-91 Condoms sold at UNL Health Center Past three years: 88,000 Per year: 29,333 Per week: 638 Per day: 116 Per hour: 12.8 Every five minutes: j Source: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Health Center Amie DeFrain/Daily Nebraskan i Abortion Continued from Page 1 “fetus” avoids the real situation, Mills said. Mills explained she used a false name when she had an abortion 10 years ago. “The language changing from ‘unborn human life’ to read ‘fetus’ is doing what I did — removing our selves from the situation. Abortion is murder," Mills said. Donna Swihart of Lincoln said abortion is not the solution to un wanted pregnancies. Swihart said she became pregnant when she was raped at the age of 15. She decided not to have an abortion. “Aboruon is not the only alterna tive. ... Rape is not a hopeless situ ation. It’s hurtful, violent and offen sive, but not hopeless,” she said. But Kristin Williams, a freshman general studies major at the Univer sity of Nebraska-Lincoln and a member of UNL Students for Choice, said that if the bill didn’t pass she may lose her right to privacy. “I must question the validity of my so-called bright future when again and again I come up against a society whose laws try to dictate what I must do with my body,” Williams said. Legislators also heard testimonies from opponents of LR15CA. The resolution would offer voters the choice between two con st itutional amendments. One would state that no law would interfere with a woman’s choice to have an abortion up to three months into the pregnancy and the other would outlaw any planned ter mination of pregnancy. The two proposed constitutional amendments would be voted on in November, 1992, if the resolution is passed. McKeever Kister CHANGE party promises oy tmiiy HosenDaum Senior Editor Citing the need for equality, credi bility and results in student govern ment, the CHANGE party announced its candidacy for the Association of Students of the University of Nebraska on Thursday at Broyhill Plaza. “We’ve seen ASUN this past year,’’ presidential candidate Matt McKeever said. “They haven’t been the most energetic group, for lack of a better word. “We want to see change in ASUN,” he said. Lynn Kister, CHANGE’S first vice presidential candidate, said the party is unique because its members are diverse, something that’s needed on ASUN. CHANGE members aiso are ac tive on campus and would make needed improvements in ASUN, she said. Kister said she has been involved with Early Warning! and McKeever has experience in the Residence Hall Association. umii ana linckui pauy members can’t offer as much as CHANGE party members can, she said. “I don’t think they have a lot to offer,” Kister said. ‘‘We’re doing things right now.” McKeever said the party would seek equality on the NU Board of Regents by pushing for a voting stu dent regent. He said ASUN has dropped the issue this past year. In addition, the party would pur sue credibility for ASUN by restruc turing the constitution, he said. The senate would be reapportioned by living units and minority status, in addition to the present col lege-based system of apportionment, CHANGE’S plat form states. The party also hopes to create leadership and diversity programs for all students and student organizations, McKeever said. The leadership classes would pro mote ‘‘student leaders rather than student politicians,” also improving ASUN’s credibility, he said.