University of Virginia Library

Student Elections Begin Today;
Council, Judiciary Seats Open

By CHRIS KOHAN

Student Council and
Judiciary Committee elections
will be held today and
Thursday for the College of
Arts and Sciences and the
Schools of Engineering, Law
and Medicine.

Sixteen candidates from the
College are running for five
Council seats. They include
second-year men Arnold
Albert, Danny arkin, and
John Buckley. First-year man
Paul Freeman, third-year man
Dave Horan, second-year man
David Kennedy, third-year man
Paul Nelson, and second-year
student Kathy Nunneley are
also running.

College Competition

Other candidates include
first-year man David Ramia,
third-year man Rod Singleton,
second-year man Albert "Bo"
Smith, third-year man Greg St.
Ours, second-year man Scott
Tollefsen, third-year man Rob
Topping, second-year man
Mark Vorder Bruegge and
first-year student Judy Wagner.

Candidates from the College
for the three vacant seats on
the Judiciary Committee are
third-year man John Doswell,
second-year man Bert Ellis,
third-year man Brad Face,
third-year man Peter Glubiak,
third-year man Tim Pfister and
third-year man Norvell Rose,
Jr.

Engineering Candidates

Candidates for the Council
from the School of Engineering
are third-year man James Curry
and second-year man Gary
Pavis. They are contesting one
vacant seat.

Candidates for two seats on
the Judiciary Committee from
the Engineering School are
second-year men Tom Gorsuch
and Bill Hughes, and third-year
men Doug Kelly and Steve
Rice.

From the Law School,
Timothy Davis is running
unopposed for Council, and
Tom Ross from the Law
School is running unopposed
for the Judiciary seat.

Also on the ballot are two
referendum questions. They
are: "...that the name of
Student Council's O&P
(Organizations and
Publications) Committee be
changed to the Appropriations
Committee" and "...that
Student Council shall be
prohibited from disbursing
funds collected from
mandatory student fees to any
organization or publication
which takes a stand on political
issues or which undertakes to
effect political change."

The polls will be open from
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday