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Show in Houle reelected SUSC Student Body President academic schools. Freshmen Fresh-men senators are elected each fall quarter. New senior senators are Cedar City students Dennis Mitchell, a zoology major, and Shelly Benson, a business education major. Mitchell is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Mitchell; B enson is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. Kenneth Benson. Ben-son. Junior senators are Brad Myers, the son of Dr. and Mrs. Kent E. Myers, Cedar City, and Cara Thorup, Riverton. Myers is a biology major. Thorup is a com-municatons com-municatons major and is just finishing a one-year term as a senator for the school of arts and letters. Sophomore senators are James Reese, Cedar City, and Mary Bristol, Riverside, CA. Reese is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Elden Reese Cedar City. Bristol was elected a freshman senator when school began fall quarter. Elected to represent students in the school of arts and letters are Phil Her- mansen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Scott Hermansen, Parowan and Robin Murdock, a freshman fresh-man from Delta. Hermansen is a sophomore majoring in art; Murdock is majoring in theater arts. ,. School of business and technology senators are Annette Chilinski, a sophomore from West Jordan, and Lisa Frei, a freshman from Las Vegas. Both are majoring in business administration. Elementary education majors Caroly Hales, Vernal, and Cheryl Anderson, An-derson, Henderson, Nevada, are newly elected senators for the school of education. Hales is a sophomore; Anderson is a junior. Elected to represent students majoring in school of science areas are E. J. Corry, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Corry, Cedar City, and Randy Morris, a junior from Ridgecrest, CA. Corry is a junior at SUSC, majroing in zoology and premed. Morris is a mathematics major. Students at Southern Utah State College have elected Eric Houle, Dugway, to an unprecedented second term. , In elections held Wed. at SUSC, Houle defeated-for a second time-presidnetial hopeful Kerry. Rose, a business adminsitration major from Henrieville. Houle, newly elected vice president Pat Csarny, Muskegon, Michigan; attorney at-torney general Robert Cox, McGill, Nev., and 14 ASSUSC senators will take office spring quarter and will work in their elected capacities until the end of winter quarter next year. Several appointed officers will be selected in the near future to round out the ASSUSC executive committee, com-mittee, Houle said. The SUSC student body president is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Martin Houle, Dugway. Along with his two terms as ASSUSC president, Houle served as the 1976 student body president at Dugway High School. He is a. senior communications major at SUSC. "There were 675 votes cast in the election, representing a third of the student body," elections chairman Debbie Eric Houle Hermansen said. Along with the election of officers, SUSC students approved three amendments to the ASSUSC constitution, Hermansen said. The first clarifies the responsibilities of the attorney general, the second allows more flexibility in the election of senators to represent SUSC's academic schools, and the third sets specific dates when officers must take office. Male and female senators for the sophomore, junior and senior classes were elected Wednesdaay along with two senators to represent each of the four |