Greeks’ rates rise LEXINGTON, Ky. (U-WIRE) - ; For social fraternities, parties could i cost more than a vicious hangover. 1 Because of an increasing number of i lawsuits nationwide, insurance companies are cracking down on the greeks by charging higher pre miums for liability insurance. Companies like Lloyd’s of London, which insures the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity at the University of Kentucky, are now looking more closely at past behav iors and problems of the chapters it insures. “For the first time, the fraterni ties are seeing the light,” said Joel Epstein, consulting attorney at the Higher Education Center for Alcohol and Other Drug Prevention. “The companies are saying, ‘You have to learn to man age the risk.’” This risk of injury has not always been well managed, Epstein said. At the University of Idaho in 1993, 18-year-old Alpha Phi social sorority member Regena Coghlan was left paralyzed after falling from a balcony. She had been at two fraternity parties before that fall, one that was titled “50 Ways to Lose Your Liver.” One school, Bowdoin College, in Maine, has proposed that its »reek system be expelled by 2000, and the National Fraternity Conference is trying to get 800 :hapters to go alcohol free by that /ear, Epstein said. The liability insurance covers “a slip, a fall, some type of accident ;hat occurs within the premises of ihe fraternity,” said Tony Hayden, president of the Interfraternity Council and a member of Sigma Nu social fraternity. According to a 1991 risk man agement report from Phi Gamma Delta International, if a fraternity member knowingly violates the law, i.e. serves alcohol to minors, ;tc., and a claim is filed as a result nf an accident, the insurance com pany may not have to pay. Most claims filed against frater nities result from fights or falls from high places, according to the spring 1997 edition of Knightly News, published by Sigma Nu. The lowest number of claims are filed for hazing incidents. Several national fraternities have taken steps toward making their member chapters substance free to avoid skyrocketing premi ums. According to Fraternal Law, a publication from the Manley, Burke, Lipton and Cook law firm, _ fraternities are the sixth riskiest to insure, ranking behind hazardous waste disposal companies and ahead of engineers, doctors and lawyers. In 1987, fraternities and sorori ties formed the Fraternity Insurance Purchasing Group, a nationwide group to which a major ity of Greeks belong, Hayden said. In the first three years the group existed, member fraternities and sororities developed a loss-premi um ratio so high that insurance companies were losing 26 cents for every dollar they paid out for claims, Hayden said. Almost all chapters at UK belong to this insurance group, with the exception of about four or five. For those four or five that don’t, their nationals have institut ed a policy similar to the Purchasing Group’s, Hayden said. Ultimately, chapters may have to do away with alcohol if for no other reason than to keep from going bankrupt, he said. “Either go dry and (pay lower premiums),” Hayden said, “or stay wet and (companies) are going to hike them up so high that only the biggest, richest chapters will be able to afford them.” Saigon festival honors Vietnam Traditional food, drama featured ] By Lindsey Deardorff Staff Reporter Students who want to simulate overseas travel can find Saigon, Vietnam, Saturday in the Nebraska Union. The Centennial Ballroom will be the site of the fourth annual Saigon Enchantment Night sponsored by the Vietnamese Student Association. The evening will be a celebration of the Vietnamese culture. “This is a really big event for us,” said Ngoc Bui, a three-year member of the association. She said about 200 people usually attend the dinner and program, and about 400 students attend the dance at the end of the night The festivities will begin at 5 p.m. with a dinner of traditional food catered by local Vietnamese restaurants. A local Vietnamese dance troupe will perform, followed by a play about a Vietnamese legend and a dance at 7:30 p.m. Saigon Enchantment is only one of i the Vietnamese Student Association’s yearly activities. Members meet once • or twice a month and mainly focus on doing community service. Patrick Trinh, vice president and a four-year member, said the members’ projects include reaching out to new Vietnamese families in the area, help ing senior citizens and visiting high school students to tell them about the opportunities their association offers at the University of Nebraska Lincoln. They also give campus tours to minority students and sponsor cul tural events. Tickets for Saigon Enchantment will be available at the door Saturday night. The cost is $8 with a UNL ID card and $10 without. For information on the event or the association, contact Trinh at 488-3278 or Eileen Vu, Vietnamese Student Association president, through the Student Involvement office. -——^ ■ Shots fired A woman’s apartment was peppered with bullets early Thursday morning, and police spent the day following leads. Police were called to 3909 N. 68th St. by a 32-year-old woman who said she was awakened by gunfire and breaking glass. Officers found that the bullets had broken through the bedroom window, and one penetrated the wall above the bed. The bullet went into the neighboring apart ment, pierced another wall, and landed in an unoccupied bed. Total damage was estimated at $350. Parking fraud A Lincoln Police captain warned Lincoln motorists to beware of people claiming to be police volunteers. Capt. Doug Ahlberg said Thursday that a man claiming to be a Citizens Handicapped Parking Patrol member, a volun teer group for the department, tried to bilk a motorist out of $50 for parking in a handicapped stall. Ahlberg said actual volun teers wear blue vests with the title of the program on the back. These volunteers will also carry a photo identification badge. The actual patrol has been monitoring handicapped parking for more than two years. Unauthorized parking in a handi capped stall carries a $100 fine for the first offense, $200 for the second offense, and $300 for each additional offense within a year.' Editor: Paula Lavigne Question*? Comments? Ask for the Managing Editor: Julie Sobczyk appropriate section editor at (402) 472-2S88 Associate News Editor: Rebecca Stone or e-mall dn@unHnfo.unl.edu. Assistant News Editor: Jeff Randall Assignment Editor: Chad Lorenz Opinion Editor: Jessica Kennedy General Manager: Dan Shatdl Sports Editor: Mike Kluck Publications Board Melissa Myles, A&E Editor: Jim Goodwin Chairwoman: (402) 476-2446 Copy Desk Chief: Nancy Zywiec Professional Adviser: Don Walton, Photo Director: Ryan Soderlin (402)473-7301 Design Director: Joshua Gilhn Advertising Manager: Nick Paitsch, Art Director: Aaron Steckelberg (402) 472-2S89 Online Editor: Maty Ann Muggy Assistant Ad Manager: Daniel Lam Asst Online Editor: Amy Pemberton Classified Ad Manager: Tiffiny Clifton Fax number: (402) 472-1761 World Wide Web: www.unl.edu/DaiivNeb The Daily Nebraskan (USPS144-060) is published by the UNL Publications Board, Nebraska Union 34,1400 R St, Lincoln, NE 685884)448, Monday through Friday duming the academic yean weekly during the summer sessions.The public has access to the Publications Board. 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