1 1 I O O COMING SOON OOO Senior Information Day Saturday November 9 9A.M. 1:00 P,M. Briefing for tour guides will be held at 8:00 A.M. in the Union Harvest Room. If you're interested in being a guide call 435-7014 for details. Sponsored by UNL Builders Appearing Nightly Bijou Revue (formally (Tlidnfght Cowboys) Jim Mark Bob Joe Thru November 9th, Nov. 25 - Jan .11th 7 weeks of the finest ontemporaryRock Music Appearing for 2 weeks only the Johnny Rae Gomez Revue November 1 123 Rendezvous Lounge 4515 N. 56th 464-0264 X3- . , , "v -V I A. t t A . A GOP on top in state races UOIL Read! A Vffll wm mm sm aan sBs mm mm mm mm i . . EK9L ECQ mm asd &m mm mm wm tea lEg . I 1 i ma mm mm mm mm ma wm tern wm mi Ifoull never know how much good xucatioo uMtudoit. If you can spare tven a few hours a week, ymi can help people. Call the Voluntary Awt'ort Center in your town. Or write: " VJunteerr Washington. DC 2001 3. A Democratic landslide it wasn't. By the time final election totals were tabulated Tuesday Republicans had garnered four of the five major state offices and held onto Nebraska's three congressional seats. The lone concession to Democrats was the governorship, as J. James Exon won a second term, allying 59 per cent of the votes. Republican Richard Marvel and independent petition candidate Ernest Chambers finished with 35 per cent and six per cent, respectively. Chambers and Marvel, both state senators, wiil return to their seats in the Unicameral. ' However, a new face in the gover nor's office will be Gerald Whelan, Exon's choice for lieutenant governor. The attorney from Hastings will fill the seat vacated by Frank Marsh, lieutenant governor since 1971. Marsh Tuesday was elected Nebraska state treasurer, far out-distancing opponent Kurt Rasmussen of Omaha. In other races, Republicans scored two convincing victories in the 1st and 2nd congressional districts, but are holding their breaths in a neck-to-neck 3rd District contest. Hess Dyas, not polling as many votes as he hoped for in Lancaster County, conceded late Tuesday night after partial returns gave Rep. Charles Thone a 53-47 per cent edge among 1st District voters. Dyas emerged with only a 311 vote margin over Thone out of more than 23,000 votes cast in Lancaster County, final reports show. With 715 of 730 precincts reporting, Dyas had 69,420 votes to Thone's 77 493. In the 2nd District, incumbent John McCollister defeated Democrat Dan. Lvnch in an eletion which was expected to be close, but that was never m aouui hroughout night. McCollister received 71 077 votes to Lynch's 58,211 in he 2nd District, which includes umana Although Mrs. Haven Smith of Chapell appears to have won the 3rd District election by less than 1,000 votes her Democratic challenger, Wayne Ziebarth of Wilcox, has already called for a recount if he is officially declared loser. With 98 per cent of the vote counted, Smith, 62, leads Ziebarth, 53, by 996 votes; Smith receiving 77,434 to Zie barth's 76,488. Votes from fourteen of, the 836 precincts remain to be counted, and more than 5,000 absentee and disabled voter ballots must be opened. If Smith retains her lead, she will become the first woman in Nebraska history to be elected to Congress. In other state elections, voters chose incumbent Allen Beermann as secretary of state over Democrat Catherine Dahlquist. The vote was 252,801 to" 150,830. Paul Douglas defeated former gover nor Frank Morrison in his bid for the attorney general's post by 198,337 to 148,481. This race was picked to be the closest in the state among Democrats and Republicans. The NU Board of Regents seats up for election "went to Robert Simmons, Jr., in the sixth district and incumbent Robert Raun in the seventh district. The student regent amendment, which would place students in a nonvoting capacity on the Board of Regents, is being defeated 190,123 to 187,315 with 2,063 of 2,077 precincts reporting. But 6,000 to 7,000 absentee ballots still must be counted. Fasting students contribute toAUF By Lisa Brown UNL residence hall students raised about $1 ,400 tor the All University Fund (AUF) by fasting Oct. 30. About 2,500 students living in 1 1 residence halls skipped their evening meal so the Housing Office couldfidon0ia5kti3t8for each meal to the fund, iBaebiRhillipAUifi president said Tuesday. Love LHall donated $100 to the fund without fasting. Phillips said AUF was established to protect the student from constantly being approached for contributions to charities. Student organizations and housing units raise money through various activities for AUF, which then distributes the money equally between three specific charities and an emergency fund. The charities to receive donations were decided earlier this year by a student vote.. 1 ,300 students of 7,000 who received ballots voted to have three-fourths of the total AUF money for 1974-75 be divided equally between Easter Seals, the American Kidney Fund and the Beatrice State Home. Prizes will be presented to the winning living units after all money has been collected. AUF has designated that the award be given to either the living unit giving the most money or the one giving the most money per student, Jane Kugler, AUF member said. The three award catepories established for the contests are sororities, fraternities and residence halls and cooperatives. - Phillips said the goal for this year's fall campaign, which ran from Oct. 1-31 is $9,000, the amount raised by the students in last year's fall campaign. The faculty raised $2,000 in Its fall campaign in 1973. The emergency fund is designed to take care of urgent events occurring during the year which need charity funds. Last year money from the emergency was given to the Honduras Relief Fund. FRIDAY NITE LATE SHOW (A - - - CO I $1.00 f FRIDAY AT T ADMISSION f , A 1 :30 p.m. 1 (Jjsf.flf) p o o o o o q TTOim MUMWHIinMitr"" " i .n Mir .ii.i i iiuMMaHMUKiM a, iiimiii CO Q j0 T3 & Thousands of Topics $2.75 per page Send for your up-to-date, 160 page, mail order catalog. Enclose $1.00 to cover postage (delivery time is 1 to 2 clays). RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC. 11941 WIISHIRE BLVD., SUITE 2 LOS AKKEIES, CALIF. 90025 (213) 477-8474 or 477-5493 Our research m(r!tl it w)d for research itam; cniy. page 6 daily nebraskan thursday, november7, 1974 t - , -aA.. J'