6 ^safliuiai p ij aApnujany * sa H! UJta IP-*J 9Ai|DUjaj|y • sai)iuja|Djj aAyouiairv APO: Serving the Community by Yvonne Degrow r m or most student groups, raising $25,000 would be quite a challenge. But for Alpha Phi Omega it’s all in a weekend’s work. With 125 active members and 170 pledges this semester, APO sometimes has trouble finding projects that are big enough, says Staci Cook, vice president of membership. APO, a co-educational service fraternity, intends to raise the $25,000 for the Muscular Distrophy Association at its dance-a-thon this Friday at the Aggieland Inn. “My personal goal is to raise $250,” says Cook, a senior finance major from Dallas. A A As if raising $25,000 in 12 hours (7 p.m. to 7 a.m.) isn’t enough, APO has so many other projects going it’s hard to keep track. Just a few of its projects make an impressive list. • APO plans and runs one of the largest blood drives in the nation each semester with the help of Omega Phi Alpha, its sister sorority, and Student Government. A&M students donate more blood to Wadley Blood Drive than any other group in Texas and consistently rank among the top three in the United States. • It provides manpower for Special Olympics of Brazos County. Cook says APO will need support from the student body for the April 24-25 event. “We’ll need coaches and trainers for the kids,” she says. • APO works on at least one major project each weekend, such as painting a community service building or cleaning a park. • It is working to form a Boy Scout troop at the Bryan boys’ club. “We are founded on the Boy Scout principles and we do a lot of things with the boy scouts,” Cook says. APO was formed in 1925 by a group of Eagle Scouts who wanted a college equivalent of Boy Scouts. photo by Tom Ownbey APO member Ken Pecus, a senior electrical engineering major, watches the A&M vs. University of Southern Mississippi game with members of the Bryan Boys Club.