Injury prevention moves online By IevaAugstums Assignment Reporter As long as you haven’t sprained your fingers, the solution to all of your personal injury and fitness prob lems may be only an e-mail message away. Campus Recreation’s Ask-A Trainer service is now online to better serve die university community. “Every individual usually has some concern that they would like addressed,” Chris Oelling, campus rec assistant director for Injury Prevention and Care, said. “We are hoping that Ask-A-Trainer will suc cessfully answer any injury-related questions that people in the campus community may have.” Ask-A-Trainer is a free service that allows students, faculty and staff to e-mail injury-related questions to a certified athletic trainer in the Office of Campus Recreation and receive personal feedback. Oelling said IPC wanted to find another way to promote its services to the campus community, and e-mail is a convenient option for individuals to find out information. To use Ask-A-Trainer, access the Office of Campus Recreation Web page at http://www. uni. edu/crec/, and select the Injury Prevention and Care sight, Oelling said. Once at the IPC home page, individuals should e-mail their injury-related questions to certi fied athletic trainers Chris Oelling or Brad Abell. Abell, campus rec graduate assis tant for IPC, said IPC will respond to questions personally and confiden tially. “Students do not use the Injury Prevention and Care office as much as they should,” Abell said. “Hopefully with today’s technology, people will use Ask-A-Trainer and take advan tage ofthe other services we provide.” The services IPC provides are free to students enrolled at UNL and for campus rec members, Abell said. Oellljngsaid other IPC services include, but ate not limited to: ■ Prevention of athletic injuries. ASSISTANT DIRECTOR for Injury Prevention and Care, Chris Oelling, exam ines graduate student Erin Patton's ankle Tuesday. The trainers are new able to answer questions through the Ask-A-lfrainer program now available one-mail. ■ Recognition and evaluation of injuries. ■ First aid and emergency care. ■ Taping. ■ Stretching techniques. ■ Direct referral to University Heath Center. ■ Massage Therapy. Megan Armbruster, a student trainer for IPC, encourages the cam pus community to stop in for answers to any injury-related questions. “We do serve a lot of students, fac ulty and staff,” Armbruster said. “However, a lot of people who could use our services don’t” i For more information about IPC and services it offers, stop by either room 36 at campus rec or room 29 East Campus Activities Room, or call Chris Oelling or Brad Abell at (402) 472-3467. Engineer: Theory treated unfairly By Josh Funk Senior Reporter UNL alumnus Weldon Vlasak has done what Albert Einstein could n’t: develop a theory of pure field physics. But the scientific community won’t acknowledge his ideas. “I have meaningful answers for some important scientific questions, but no one will listen,” Vlasak said. Vlasak says his theory explains the source of gravitational attraction and challenges some commonly accepted scientific assumptions. An engineer by trade, Vlasak nurtured his interest in theoretical physics by rummaging through California flea markets. There he found chemistry, physics and engineering textbooks for a few pennies, but the knowledge contained in them was priceless to him. When he wasn’t pioneering guid ed missiles for Motorola, Vlasak spent his free time exploring nonlin ear forces and the mysteries of the universe. “I found out that one plus one doesn’t always equal two in the world of physics,” Vlasak said. His curiosity had been aroused. After completing his bachelor’s degree at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln in 1954, Vlasak never stopped learning. He complet ed his masters at the University of Arizona in 1958 and his doctorate at George Washington University in 1970. But the more he learned, the less satisfied Vlasak became with accept ' ....".^ ed scientific explanations of atomic forces. So he applied the electrical equa tions he knew to be correct to the inner workings of the atom. But when his findings did not agree with the textbooks he’d read, Vlasak was forced to develop his own theories on the shape of the atom and attractive forces therein. “I found the forces tend to act like a spring: increasing as you pull on the atom,” Vlasak said. Armed with figures exact to 50 decimal places, Vlasak used a com puter graphics program to develop a model of the atom consistent with his findings. In Vlasak’s model, the proton at the center of the atom rotates around a central point. And when an atom becomes excited it does not expand. Instead, the orbit of the electrons around the proton changes. The 69-year-old engineer’s ideas challenge some the 100-year-old ideas that are the basis for modem science. But where Einstein couldn’t account for atomic forces, Vlasak found a way. After developing his theories Vlasak searched, unsuccessfully, for an examination of his ideas. “You cannot get to the truth with out considering the possibilities,” he said. Whether it means vindication or humiliation, all Vlasak wants is someone to examine his theory. Rejected by scientific journals, denied by publishers and ignored by university professors, he chose to publish his own theory, “The Secret of Gravity and other Mysteries of the Universe,” in the hopes that someone would give it attention. Instead, Vlasak ended up with a closet full of the small, blue, hard bound books and more cold respons es. When the UNL physics depart ment was contacted to evaluate Vlasak’s theory, professors refused to look at it “If his theories are worthwhile he should be able to get them pub lished,” said Thomas Morgan, asso ciate professor of physics and astron omy. The physics department dis counted Vlasak’s theory without cur sory examination and Morgan called it “ridiculous.” As a UNL professor, Morgan said he sees new theories all the time, none of which amount to anything. “These theories need to be pub lished to get consideration,” Morgan said. Unless something is published in a respected scientific journal, pro fessors will not consider it, but sci entific journals do not want to pub lish anything hat is not written by a university professor. “There is a lot of politics involved in getting published in one of those journals ” Vlasak said. Vlasak is currently working with one of his former professors from George Washington University to publish an article and further his research. Vlasak continues to seek consid eration of his ideas and his challenge to the scientific community remains the same: “Prove me wrong!” Thursday, February 5,1998 1 Daily Nebraskan ■ Page 7 “Use your noon hour to RELAX” For more information, cad Sue at 472-7450 Counseling ^Psychological Services • February 5 Visualizing Change 8c A Trip to the Beach • February 12 Ten Second Breathing & Spiritual Centering Tuesdays • February 19 Breath 8c Mindfulness 12:10-12:45 Mediation UHC-Room 43 • February 26 Thoughts Library & __Illumination_ 5 FREE ONLINE HOURS WITH THESE NAVDCUNL PLANS. Lour Usage Plan: 15 hours for $6.50 a month. Median Usage Plan: 40 hours for $10.00 a month. High Usage Plan: 250 hours for $13.50 a month. And whichever you choose, well give you 5 FREE HOURS of hflentil access every month. Additional minutes are $.02. MSIALUBIOtfS FRHkm- ■ Cad 472-5151 (students) 472-3434 (faculty or staff) or stop by 211 Nebraska Hall. * Ybu must be a UNL student, faculty or staff member to qualfy for these (fens. Netscape software is avaitabta in Windows and Madntosb versions. Aliant Communications ■MOM IT EASIER TO CONNUWCATE - Visit our web site: www.aliant.com ■ ■