fridsy. cpril '0, 1377 dally ncbrssken A II WOO is' At least two UNL students fdt "relieved and happy1 about tlie results of Wednesday's Residence Hall Associa tion (RHA) elections. Residence hall voters elected Omaha sophomore Mike Gibson RHA president. Karen Meisel, also a sophomore from Omaha, was elected vice president Gibson, a journalise mi political science major, said it was "a relief to be done witii campaigning." He has repre sented Harper Residence Hull in RHA since January. Gibson said he would like to ir.cress student aware ness of RHA actions. The current RHA administration has effectively used posters, petitions terl question he said. lacressed iavohfemcnt Increased student involvement and communication be tween the residence halls is another of Gibson's proprities, he said. He said he hopes to aid communication with regular newsletters and meetings with residence hall presi dents. N "The (residence) hills have many problems and solutions in comment that they don't know about," he said. Meisel, a math major who was vice president of Julius (Cather-Pound residence hall complex government), stressed cooperation of the residence halls in solving common problems. "RHA should get involved in campus issues that affect everyone," she said. "It is improtant to take a stand on ? ... things oilier than residence hall issues. We are a bsa majority on campus." See tfc-asJws s wait Meisel said she especially would like residence halls to see themselves as a unit, not as separate complexes. Hall governments should get to kr.c,v each olher, she said. A constitutional amendment also on the election ballot failed to pass, according to election commission Psul Ifcrano. The amendment simplified tppcintinj tr.d election procedures, he said. Voter turnout was down sightly from 1976, Ihrar.o said. About 16 per cent of the residence hall students voted, he said, adding that voter participation was down 63 per cent from last year in the Abcl-Sandcz complex. Other candidates for RHA president were Dottis Farris, Pound Hall, and write-in candidate George Woolsey of Burr Hall. Wendy Buettow of Pound Hill was a candi date for vice president. m i &?m Our bunc&s h th repair of VW vehicles tni tfo tiSSsnj of tarts rJ sraorfes for Vclkssson vehicles. ltnintMtanetlraMctioii tarts ft Aassisecits Tfcss ,6-.aa.HU.-i lJi ffcmtw Kami $"mmtX' DyKtr4c IWfeasI featenefcf An Independent Servlca Center 2433 N. 23 S7S7 Al l-Anmericoo The DsMy Nebraskan for first semester has been award ed an All-American rating by the Associated Collegiate Press (ACP). ACP has evaluated papers nationally since 1931. The Daily Nebraskan was last rated the first semester in 1975 when it received a First Class rating, the second highest awarded. Papers are judged in five categories -coverage and content; writing and editing; editorial leadership and opinion features; physical appearance and visual com munication; and photography, art and use of graphics. To receive an All-American rating, a paper must earn the top amount of points for a First Glass paper and must receive a Mark of Distinction in at least four of the five categories. The DaUy Nebraskan received Marks of Distinction in five categories. . ; In critiquing the paper, the ACP judge wrote, "Excellent, excellent work -very little I would criticize to any extent." The jude did write that the paper needed more human interest stories and more reporting from and about readers. , The DaSy Nebraskan . iiso yes necestly named top college newspaper in a sixt? region by the Society of Professional Journalists, Sigma Delta Chi. i I 1 ? I !'. 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