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COOLEY LK. RD./WILLIAMS LK. RD.
855-0480
W
hen Lori Galin and
Tracey Proghov-
nick heard they
won the lottery,
they were ecstatic.
These Michigan State
University students didn't get
any money. Instead they won
a once in a lifetime opportuni-
ty to attend the last of three
presidential debates, held at
MSU Wharton Center on
Monday.
Ms. Galin and Ms. Proghov-
nick couldn't believe they
were among 230 students
picked from a computer lot-
tery with over 7,000 students
listed.
"I was in shock when I
found out I had actually won,
I could not believe it, I was
almost crying," Ms. Proghov-
nick said. "I was not going to
enter the lottery because I did
not really think I had a
chance of winning."
Ms. Galin, who was equal-
ly shocked, only put her name
in because she was standing
next to the box where
students could enter.
Disbelief did not turn to
reality for Ms. Galin and Ms.
Proghovnick, both from
Southfield, until they were
actually inside the Wharton
Center.
"This whole thing really hit
me as I was walking in to
Wharton because I knew I
was walking with just tons of
important people. Seeing all
the cameras, I just got the
chills," Ms. Galin said.
"When I went through the
metal detectors, I knew that
this was for real and soon I
would be in a room with
Bush, Clinton and Perot. I
was in awe throughout the
whole debate."
Ms. Proghovnick said her
experience was "like a
dream."
"It does not hit you until
you are there and the Secret
Service are everywhere but
you just seem to blend in. I
was in the same room with all
the candidates, the governor,
the media and other impor-
tant people."
Both Ms. Proghovnick and
Ms. Galin said they would not
trade this experience for
anything.
"We expected the Secret
Service to conduct personal
interviews before we went in,
but all they did was look in
my purse and we walked
through a metal detector,"
Ms. Proghovnick added.
Ms. Galin expected to hear
the candidates debate their
views on Israel, but they
never did.
Student Melissa Schwartz
saw the debate from another
perspective. She spent the day
working for CBS as a runner,
which including waiting for
President Bush's plane to ar-
rive and picking up video-
tapes for the network.
"It was the most exciting
event I have ever experienc-
ed," Ms. Schwartz said. "Be-
ing able to be a part of history
from a behind the scenes
perspective was just in-
describable. I felt like I was in
Disneyland." CI
Israel Invites
Full U.N. Role
United Nations (JTA) —
Israel has invited the United,
Nations to play a full role in
the multilateral talks on
Middle East regional issues,
and the world body has glad-
ly accepted.
The subject came up at a
meeting here between
Israeli Foreign Minister
Shimon Peres and U.N. Sec-
retary - General Boutros-
Ghali.
Until now, the United
Nations has participated in
the multilateral talks only
as an observer. But Mr.
Peres told Mr. Boutros-
Ghali, an Egyptian, that
Israel's new Labor govern-
ment would accept the
United Nations as a full par-
ticipant in the talks, which
the foreign minister
oversees for Israel.
During the meeting, Mr.
Boutros-Ghali promised to
work toward having anti-
Israel resolutions still offi-
cially on the books of the
U.N. General Assembly
removed, such as the one
that condemned the Israeli
bombing of Iraq's Osirak
nuclear reactor in 1981.
The secretary-general also
offered his support for
Israel's quest to join the
Western European and
Others regional bloc at the
United Nations. Member-