Service fraternity receiving charter ay jonn t-mwioor Staff Reporter Alpha Phi Omega National Ser vice Fraternity is receiving its char ter today from the fraternity’s na tional office. The University of Nebraska Lincoln’s Alpha Sigma chapter has been petitioning for the charter for three semesters. “It’s ... an accomplishment to get it done finally,” said Lowell Schlenker, section chair and founder of the UNL chapter. Schlenker said to get the char ter the chapter had to fulfill re quirements given by the national office. These included a certain number of service projects to the campus, the community and the nation. Alpha Phi Omega, founded in 1925, has more than 300 chap ters nationwide. Last semester, the chapter com pleted three major projects, as well as several smaller ones: • Members helped the Red Cross in September with a project to help move elderly people into a special nursing home. • Another project involved help ing with a yard sale to raise funds for a UNL child care center in October. • Recently, an elderly woman needed anew furnace forherhome, but the furnace company refused to install it until her basement was cleaned. The fraternity cleaned her basement, which had accumulated a lifetime of possessions. Members are planning to kick off a recruiting drive in two weeks, and hope to add 20 members to their 50 person roster. They will hold informational meetings and make posters to attract interest. Schlenker encouraged students to check out the fraternity. “We’re really an active group, and we’re always looking for people who want to get involved with the community and the cam pus,” he said. GRILL BAR I Tonight 50C Miller Draws $1 Pints on Miller, Lite and Icehouse. IhE.HAymiARkET 826 P Street (402) 477-2171 S I l I)L\ I Ac C II)L\ I In M ss Ksl RAM l Enrollment Dates l*9#95-2*9*95 If you are not covered by your parent's medical insurance, there is a student insurace program available to you. Enrollment for US resident students is open with the first day of the spring semester, and continues for thirty days. In surance is mandatory for interna tional students. If you do not show proof of private coverage, you will be billed on your tuition statement for the UNL student insurance. The coverage starts 1*9»95 and goes through the summer until §•1095. -- - - For complete information, bro chures are available at the Univer sity Health Center, the International Student Affairs Office, or by mail. We also have a 24-hour informa tion line at 472-7437. Merchandise Continued from Page 1 hoped,” he said. Cornell said store officials had started planning and ordering ship ments in September in hopes that NU would end die season in the top spot. Store officials continued ordering the merchandise through December, he said, with the condition that if the Huskers lost, die orders would be void. With the win, Cornell isall smiles. ‘‘Our opinion is (business) will be really strong the first two weeks, then it goes to excellent ... then good,” Cornell said. Shelley Lee, co-owner of The Pro Image, said the same held true at Gateway Mall. Sales have been con stant, and with students back in town, no letdown is in sight, she said. Any dollar estimate on how much has been sold isn’t possible, she said, because the cash register has yet to stop ringing. Once the registers are silent, NU will go home with 12 percent of the gross wholesale cost of every prod uct sold, Bahl said. But with success comes problems. Given the money involved, boot legging is common and widespread, Bahl said. The athletic department updates its list of manufacturers li censed to sell NU goods daily, he said. It does its best to check retailers just as often. But with goods being sold in every possible location, even out of motel rooms, those checks become difficult. Bahl said unlicensed products had been seized from Scottsbluff to Omaha. A batch was confiscated in Miami shortly before the Hurricanes kicked off, he said. Bahl said past years paled when compared to die attention Nebraska was receiving now — or even two months prior to the championship Orange Bowl. Even officials with Collegiate Li censing Company, which handles the initial stages of any request, said they believed Nebraska would break sales records and set a few of its own, Bahl said. Comparisons have been drawn to Arkansas winning the National Bas ketball Championship last year, Bahl said. “That state went crazy,” he said. “And this one is, too.” Test Continued from Page 1 answers, which they presented to ETS. Mack said Kaplan suggested improving security procedures and increasing the question pool. Mack said that when Kaplan first brought the problem to ETS, the service complimented them on find ing the flaw. However, she said, when ETS fell into bad publicity it ‘ shot the messenger. ETS filed a lawsuit against Kaplan citing violation of copyright laws, breach of contract, fraud and the federal electronic communication privacy act. According to an ETS release, Kaplan “unlawfully obtained ques tions” from the GRE tests. The re lease states that all GRE computer ized test takers sign an agreement to maintain the confidentiality of all questions. Kaplan revealed the questions only to ETS administrators, Mack said, and not to its students. “They used the lawsuit to make it look like Kaplan created the prob lem,” she said. “If you have a flawed test, it’s the fault of your own.” Kaplan was concerned about the cheating because it wanted to assure security for its students. Mack said. ETS spokesman Kevin Gonzalez declined to comment on the company’s actions. NIGHT SERVIC A /«' "t\: Vf x- • City Campus East Caim (Lvman Halil \ fBurr-Feddel ,, > ■' . ?r * 7*15 ; ?:55 | 8:15 7 ‘^'8:35 8:55 v>; 9:15* 7 9:35 9:55 MON.-THUR. ONLY Free Night Service Between East and City Campus now ►* . Monday - Thursday 6:15 p.m.-10:35 p.m. 1-800-C0LLECT UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA - LINCOLN INTRAMURAL SPORTS: MEN’S & WOMEN’S BASKETBALL WOMEN’S & CO-REC VOLLEYBALL MEN’S, WOMEN’S & CO-REC BROOMBALL SIGN UP DEADLINE: JANUARY 11 JANUARY 11 JANUARY 11 PLAY BEGINS: JANUARY 17 I JANUARY 17 JANUARY 17 Sign up at 55 Campus Recreation Center or 32 E. Campus Activities Building. For more information call 472-3467. J - 1-800-C0LLECT Save The People You Call Up to 44%.* _ ... .