YOU WORK WE The UNL Department of Housing has great summer employment opportunities! •Earn from $5 to $7.25 per hour! •Positions available for Renovation and Custodial projects. •Guaranteed 40 hours per week, with overtime opportunities. •Flexible Schedules. •Experience in painting, carpentry, electrical, and/or plumbing helpful. Great opportunity to experience a variety of building renovations^ Apply in person to your residence hall e maintenance office or 1100 Seaton Hall for an interview appointment. —WMWW^^WI^——^————— Eclipse party wins in RHA election oy June ouDczyK Staff Reporter After receiving 54 percent of the vote, the Eclipse party won the RHA presidential election Tuesday night. The Beetles party received 38 percent of the vote, and the re maining 8 percent went to write-in ouAcfiSiAn. candidates. RHA Elections Philip Cilliers, who was elected for the presidency, said he was excited about winning. “I’m ecstatic,” Cilliers said. “We 1 worked hard and we won.” Cilliers said he and his running i mate, Eric Vander Woude, wanted to : begin anew in RHA by making it a more visible organization at UNL. i “We want to promote the resi-1 dence halls more,” he said. “Tradi- ’ tionally, RHA doesn’t have that big 1 of an involvement, and we want to get more people involved.” Eclipse also will work to change some residence hall policies, Cilliers ; said. Changing the open-flame policy was the most important priority, he said. “We will meet with Housing to work to change the open-flame policy to satisfy both students and the ad ministration,” Cilliers said. Creating more outdoor basketball courts, making additional meal plans and creating a debit card system for the snack bars are other ideas on the “Traditionally, RHA doesn't have that big of an involvement, and we want to get more people involved." ■ PHILIP CILLIERS RHA president Eclipse platform, he said. Jeremy Vetter, presidential candi iate for the Beetles, said he wasn’t surprised by his party’s loss. “I wasn’t sure at all how it would :ome out,” Vetter said. “I expected it o go either way because we had no vay of knowing how the residents vould vote.” Vetter said he was disappointed vith the loss, but now he would have nore time to be involved in other ictivities on campus. Chad Pekron ran as Vetter’s vice ^residential candidate. Pekron and Zander Woude ran on the same ticket in the March 8 A SUN elections. Though the opposing party won, Vetter said he had hope for the future [)f RHA. “Cilliers is the most experienced person in the organization,” Vetter said. “Both him and Eric are ener getic and have potential.” Whichever direction you decide to when you buy or lease a new 1994, 1995 take, we can help you get there in style, or 1996 Ford or Mercury car, minivan or with a brand new Ford or Mercury. _ light truck. So graduate to a great deal. If you're a graduating senior, or a graduate student, See your Ford or Lincoln-Mercury dealer or you can get $400 Cash Back or a Special A PR** call 1-800-321-1536 for details. § LINCOLN Mercury 0 •Special Annual Percentage Rate alternative not available on leases, Customer Option Plan or Red Carpel Option Plan. "To be eligible, you must graduate with a bachelor's degree, or be enrolled m graduate school, between 1/1/93 and 9/30/95. You must purchase or tease your new vehicle between 10/1/94 and 9^95. Some vehicle eligibility restrictlonsappty. Students Continued from Page 1 County Election Commissioner. She said 3D normally had the low est turnout of any precinct in a city election. “I can’t really blame students,” Hansen said. “They aren’t going to be interested in local issues, espe cially if they aren’t going to be mak ing their homes here.” Hansen said she predicted a 15 percent turnout for Tuesday’s elec tion. After 3 p.m. returns, she said, Lincoln was on course for a 14 per cent turnout, or about 15,000 voters. Ballot issues included an unop posed race for mayor, two Lincoln school board primaries, a primary for airport authority, two city charter issues, a school bond issue and a city council primary where both candi dates will advance to the general election regardless of the vote. Robert Sittig, a UNL political sci ence professor, said students were normally apathetic about voting, but because Tuesday’s elections were not of much interest to students, their voting would prob ably be extremely low. “There’s a shameful lack of con tests,” Sittig said. He said if there were a large num ber of well-financed candidates, there might be more interest in the city and among students. com wens, di, ana uoemann,4y, voted by absentee ballot Monday. Gross didn’t vote; he said he had a flat tire. “The issues don’t impact students,” Gross said. That first voter at precinct 3D Tuesday wasn’t a student. And as the day crept along, precinct 3D didn’t see another voter until just after 1 p.m., and he, also, wasn’t a student. Wells passed the time reading a book on cub scouts, Goemann wrote letters and Gross studied for his his tory of economic thought class. Around 3:30 p.m., they got one — a student. Anne Hjersman, a junior journalism major who lives in Neihardt Hall. Hjersman said it was appalling that no other student living on cam pus voted in the election. “I knew our age group was ill represented in elections, but I didn’t realize it was that bad,” she said. Hjersman voted because she was covering the election results for The Lincoln Star. “I thought it would be cheap of me to do a story on the primary turnout and to have not turned out myself,” Hjersman said.