USEC Continued from page 5. USEC and Undergraduate Student Government vice president, said in creased graduate representation m »T ** 3 Valid °P tion for USEC. I feel that if a substantiated re quest can be made, then it is a possi bility,” Miller said. Frank Arlinghaus, chairman of gs»as Judiciary Committee, said, USEC has to define what represen tation means. Also, I think it needs to view itself as what it was originally set up for it needs to review its original purpose.” Miller said USEC is presently ex amining its purpose at the Universi ty- We’re looking at how we can best effect change, how we can most effec tively start changing things,” Miller said. In the process, USEC will look at the best format for its membership to accomplish USEC’s goals. Jones said USEC was originally created to represent the entire stu dent commmunity, without focusing specifically on graduates or under graduates. She said USEC’s purpose is twofold: to advise the president on Five hostages Atlanta prison By JOSEPH B. FRAZIER Associated Press Writer ATLANTA Rioting Cubans freed two ailing hostages at the Atlanta penitentiary yesterday and five oth ers reportedly escaped, while Cuban prisoners holding captives in Louisia na were confronted by a SWAT team with fire hoses. Late yesterday night, a car whisked a small group of people from the east side of the U.S. Penitentiary in Atlanta to an entrance controlled No one A car heading South on Atherton Steet veered off the roadway just past the West Hamilton Avenue intersection and struck two traffic signs and a parked car early yesterday morning, State College Bureau of Police said. The driver, Sharon L. Runyon, of Carlisle, said she fell asleep at the wheel and did not wake up until the car, a 1976 Pontiac Sunbird, hit the traffic signs. She sustained minor injuries. State College Police said. Runyon traveled 198 feet off the road before striking the traffic signs. No damage estimate was available. Hulf9nTcftf7!Kfl LOST <J a KEN?)-GRAY •• Pacfic FOUND: UMBRELLA AT Logan TRIGGER, I CAN’T wait to go LASER PRINTING RFSIIMFR gloves in Psi'upsilon to “dentil n °°"' saddle mLVandmv sou rsnn ™ pfl^^r l^" 8 d °" e 3 ' K 0 BE ON TV! Many needed for Friday night. Please contact Rick cniiMn mon a : : come to the K7K rLrh tk &b ' b4 ° 4 commercials. Children too. Cast- at 867-5116. FOUND 11/20 A pair of gold c °™ to the KZK ranch. The ing info—(l) 805-687-6000 ext TV -- frame bifocal glasses in black ndm 9 the P ast ,w ° years has *' TV LOST: THETA CHI Friday night, case. Found in 101 Chambers been great! I hope we'll be able ! Grey jacket with "NO" button. ID building. Claim in 110 Chambers ,0 take alot more long rides CHILD CARE. TAKING a year in pocket. Accidentally given to R |ri , artiß 'Ou-.-h u ,.„ together Love always. Your cow off? Be a nanny! Positions on the brother’s friend. Call 862-2100 Ladies Watch near McAllis- gj r | East Coast and Florida. All fami- ter Building. Call 865-1736. = lies screened. The Phila Nanny ' Network (215)546-3002. FEDERAL STATE & CIVIL service jc> bs $ 14, 877 to $63 148/year. PLAID SCARF BETWEEN HUB MARTY, SORRY I didn't make the M,DNIGHT MOTION DJ'S. The . N r« h r 9! . Ca JL J ° b , Lme :- 518 - “ F ° u " d " o,lces , are P ub ' t?l b , 0 °H S, 0 ( r e, on 11/19 - Ca 1186- taitgate! Maybe we can get to- 'argest dance record collect,on 459-3611 ext. FIBD for info. 24 lished for three days at no 5125 to identify. gether after our 8 o clocks and avai lable professional sound hours charge. This policy does not ap- have B-fast. (You have my hat s y sten T power light show. ply to found” notices for “PSU” and scarf!) Remember where I Call 237-3306 or 237-4164 ii S ’ I, j live? Kathleen ke y y°on k ?t y MCDONALDS MUSCLE-MAN PAY ANTHONY AND Asso a rnMPi ctc TVDikii-> j please deliver the item to Police WOULD enjoy a private showing. ciat ? s :, , s still have dates processing service S^Tun'"“"T* , Th f e AN h ENTERPRISING JOURNEY Personas ™ dependable. Competitive rates. Department of University Safety with S.T. on November 29th is —— : spring parties weddinas and Campus delivery Debbie 359- has established a system to very interesting with many ideas! formal^ P 2 9S ’ • 3068 quickly identify and notify the If clever, you'll find the sun PENN STATE VOLLEYBALL: t e o Xp ! r " - — _ person who lost the “PSU” kev. through the stars. Call me Looked great at Rhode Island! ci , IO e '® n ' AFFORDABLE TYPING/ SPE- ~ ■ Keep winning at LSU. See you at « ve recor d collections in the CIALTY features; free pick up/ BLACK AND WHITE sweet-tern- r ASEIE - EVEN THOUGH I’m in the NCAA's. 2 fans in the stands. ? e ? tre Re 9 ion make us wort* delivery if needed; one dav serv- nereri rat near ah=„ c.—. __ San Diego soon to be Guam, you looking into. 237-RAYA ice. Call 238-7757 11/22 Ca l torial 567 ncen " are s,iM ,he one 9 r Cass p SU SUBSHOP HOW we do miss „ 10 claim 867-3950 or qrove i_ ove Mike M thee. Mike M., San Diego; Stan ALL TYPING GUARANTEED! 867-2843. § : : : H.. D C.: Jeff S., Pa.; Danny B Lancaster: Rich M.. N Y TVPING Rush service available. Grad FOUND: BROWN PLAID scarf on ruDlc school approved. On campus, top of section SA at football CHR S ' SUNDAY 11/22, Farside Bonnie 466-7857 after 5:30 pm. game. Call Pam 862-2572. and P ®. U Book store. Like to see STAN H. MIKE Ex-4th Ewing. I A PROFESSIONAL AND fast town next Reply admit it I have a weak B-Ball word processing and typing serv- FOUND: CALCULATOR EAST - game and I can t groove Walt ice. Experience with theses. Call Human Developement Learning CHRISTINE: STAGE DOOR Deli s “Love"■ 234-8691. Center. Call 863-4393 most voluptuous waitress, this is TO MY APPLE: You put the twin- FOUND CUTE BLACK and white w P ulf!T al ., yoU waitin 9 k| e in my eyes and the smile on cat/kitten, well fed, misses his H 3 happy Thanksgiving my face. You are the best part of family! Leave message 867-3950 » no we see you next week my life. Happy Anniversary! Anonymous. Yours forever, Annie. FLYING FINGERS TYPING Serv ice. Professional word proc essing business since 1979. Rush service. Full time staff. Mon-Fri. 8-5, Sat. 10-5. One block FOUND: LADIES GOLD bracelet ruTuionvuui u , from campus. 119 S Fraser 237- in lot across from Creamery. Call wait fm'ano^J 0 " 9 WOMEN'S FOOTBALL 2905. Dana at 862-1251 to identify in- J“V r 0 p a ' another moose captain: Amy, you are the cutest FREE PICK lIP/ m-th scription. —• ° _____ linebacker and sexiest wide re your typing reports etc? ll FOUND MONEY ,N Chambers ST2S; speedy service: cal, 238- breezeway. Cal, 867-3938 to iden- Thant 'you —_ _ y amt ' twenty-one months-they have one ,an - UNIVERSITY SECRETARY QUIT p nMKlri . DAID . been the greatest! You re a real to type from home! Thesis, re- 9 lasses on sweetie for putting up with me I r2S-2 e m PaPerS ' eC, CalU °- to'^ n se s o h a eV call Pam 86 n 2-2572 '°ve you!! Krisserly. LOST GOLD NUGGET NECKLACE with three diamonds lost on Saturday, 11/21, Extreme sentimental va lue. Subtantial reward offered. Call Melissa collect: (301)874- 5711. LOST BOOKBAG LAST Thursday night at IM football field. Reward ■867-3839. RESUMES Laser Printing As Low as $ 7. 50 Do it ’yourself and Save! Tree instruction available! GRAPHICS 101 237-4244 300 S. Pugh Sc Foster issues concerning the student com munity and to be a forum for commu nication among student groups. “At the moment, I don't think USEC is accomplishing either of those goals,” Jones said. Thirteen different organizations are represented on USEC, including USG, GSA. Black Caucus and the Council of Commonwealth Campus Student Governments. Student Trust ee Christina Henke is also a member of USEC. Ken Martin, GSA secretary, said USEC has become “more of a legis lative or policy-making board for students or student organizations in general. It’s supposed to be an advi sory board to (the University presi dent), and a forum for student leaders to get together and discuss common concerns.” As for increased graduate rep resentation, Martin said, “It has been said occasionally, since my experi ence in GSA, that graduate students are being underrepresented. We’ve never really had a full-blown dis cussion, but it’s something I hear from time to time in various places.” by authorities, and a short time later two-way radio transmissions on a frequency used by prison officials reported that five hostages had es caped. Prison officials, who have made few appearances to speak to report ers, were not available to comment on the development. Meanwhile, authorities in Atlanta said they were removing all the American inmates and transferring them to other prisons. injured in car wreck COLLCGIAN CIfISSIFICD ADS FOUND FOUND SMALL SINGLE key in HEY GOOFUS! HAPPY 22nd KNITTING WORKSHOPS the field by Beaver Stadium next "You've given me the best of hnttnnhrtiac H to soccpr fipirt rail ftfc'T 40A1 1 4 .1 • , * l OI buttonholes, cables and between 8 5 you. now I want the rest of y0u..."- more Classes: All levels. 237- between 00. I love you! -The other goof. 0327 escape captors by Dave Howland I FOUND A pair of gloves outside h ™^* S^ oß H ,he sm'les soarks Pall Roth oro moo brighten my days. Your toTdentify B " 862 089 appreciative lab partner. PERSONALS Americans give special thanks By The Associated Press As families across the nation gather for Thanksgiving, some Americans say they have special reasons to be grateful: freedom for a former hostage, amnesty for a 98-year-old illegal alien and $46 million for the winners of North America’s largest lottery jackpot. For some, Thursday’s holiday has become a celebration of survival, of defying odds. For others, it is about life’s unexpected joys. “First of all I’m thankful for my health, because you go through things like this and there’s no guarantee that you don’t develop an ulcer,” Muriel Siebert, who owns a discount brokerage house in New York, said of the October stock market crash. “I’m thankful that I have a very good staff that was able to hold the hands of a lot of investors.” “We re thankful we don’t have to work any more,” said Linda Despot, 37, a former bookkeeper from Hollidaysburg, Pa., and co-winner of $46 million in the Oct. 14 Pennsylvania lottery. “We re thankful that we SERVICES “We have seen the splendor of our natural resources spread across the tables of the world, and we have seen the splendor of freedom coursing with new vigor through the channels of history," President Reagan said in his 1987 Thanksgiving Day proclamation. “The cause for which we give thanks, for which so many of our citizens through the years have given their lives, has endured 200 years.” “I thank the Lord for all the blessings he has given me in all aspects of my life,” said Clara Escopedo de Martinez, at 98 the oldest undocumented alien to receive amnesty under the new immigration law "We receive blessings without deserving them." “I am very thankful for my freedom," said David Jacobsen, 56, of Huntington Beach, Calif., who was a hostage in Lebanon for 17 months. “I consider myself a lucky man to be able to have spent six months with my father before he died at age 93 ... because I got home in time for the birth of my two wonderful grandsons ... (and) to have been able to devote the past year to lobbying on behalf of my friends who remain hostages.” RESUME WRITING TO marketing strategies professional special ties that make a big difference in your job search. Aitken Asso ciates, 237-4508. PARTIES »■»> r Vr f bniAßWood bARqAiN boNANZA! Spßmq Semester Or 12 MoitHi Leases AvAiUbU •Wall to Wall Carpeting • Heat • Fully Equiped Kitchen • Balcony • Lots of closets 0% 787 Stratford Dr. (814) 238-7134 d!n« Collenian Classified Information da.iy VsUllcy Idl I Mail-In Form • Policy Ads must be prepaid Changes cannot be made after the first insertion Cash refunds will only be given for ads cancelled by 1 p m. the day before the first insertion Only credit vouchers will be given after this time. ' The Daily Collegian will only be responsible for one day s incorrect insertion Please come to room 126 Carnegie Building immediately if there is an error in your ad Coll ®9' an "''l not knowingly cause to be printed or published any notice or advertisement relating to employment or membership indicating any preference, limitation, specification or descrimination basec? upon race, color, sexual orientation religious creed, ancestry, age. sex. national orgin or non-iob related handicap or disability. ' • Prepaid Order Form Ads Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when reouestpd We must receive the ad the morning before publication. No PERSONAL ads accepted by mail • Deadlines classified 1 p.m. one business day before publication cancellation 1 p.m. one business day before publication renewal no later than t p.m the last day the ad is to appear m the paper Classified Mail Order Form Name Address (phone number published only if included below) Please print your ad one word per box AL L CDS must BE RRERAIS AM MUS Date ad bet Total days in paper Amount paid Classification NUMBER OF DAYS »OF WORDS : DAY 1 2.35 4.30 5.80 6.95 8.10 16-20 300 5.30 7.15 8.65 10.15 3.65 6.30 8.50 10.35 12.20 26.-30 j 4.30 7.30 9.85 12.05 14.25 31-35 4.95 8.30 11.20 13.75 apartments attention audio automotive for rent for sale The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Nov. 25, 1987 ; DAY 2 DAY 2 Classifications found (free) help wanted houses lost parties rides/riders Presidential poll yields crazy results By KIM I. MILLS Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON. D C. - Spy mag azine. in its first political poll, found that Jesse Jackson is the "craziest" presidential candidate. Pat Rob ertson is the "funniest," and Vice President George Bush would win if pitted against Johnny Carson. The poll by the New York-based humor magazine was a combination of the legitimate and the absurd. Would Lou Harris ever ask how much the ideal presidential candidate should weigh? Spy would: 181 pounds was the preferred median weight, and 36 per cent of respondents wanted him be tween 170 and 190 pounds. Furthermore. Spy found the ideal candidate should also be male, be tween 50 and 64 years old and a little over 6 feet tall. There was something schizophren ic about a serious news conference bv Spy the same magazine that sent a reporter undercover in falsies to write a piece called "Busty Like Me." Still, the news conference at the National Press Club was full. Some reporters appeared familiar with the 15-month-old magazine that regularly twits the New York Post , Dailv News gossip columnist Liz Smith and The New York Times. One reporter, however, confessed to a colleague that he thought Spy was a trade magazine for intelligence agents. Some 70 percent of Spy's 50,- 000 circulation is in New York, with a mere 6 percent trickling south to Washington. The poll also tackled the burning question of entertainers as political candidates. If President Reagan's transition is an inspiration to others, who else in Hollywood has a shot at being elected to high office? Twenty-two percent voted for Charlton Heston, followed by Paul Newman (16 percent). Bill Cosby (15 percent), John Forsyth (11 percent). Jane Fonda (9 percent), Johnny Car son (6 percent) and Mary Tyler Moore (1 percent). Phillips conceded that not including Carmel, Calif.. Mayor Clint Eastwood in the question was an oversight, and theorized that MTM fared so poorly because “everybodv still thinks of her as Dick Van Dyke's ditzy wife." Phone # FOLLOW SO:.. EG'AN LSJC' Make checks payable to: Collegian Inc. 126 Carnegie Building Dept. C University Park. PA 16802 AL;O r *!'V.A rooms roommates sublet typing wanted wanted to rent
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers