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New budget to increases Communists garbage fee face challenge By JENNIFER COHEN and DAVEHOWLAND Collegian Staff Writers in E. Germany For the second year in a row Centre County garbage handling fees have By J. WILLIAMS by percent, CAROL leaped morethan 60 which Associated Press Writer means a higher curbside collection cost University residents. for State College Borough BERLIN AnEast Germanpolitical The Centre County Solid Waste groupsaid yesterday it would make the Authority approved a new budget last first direct challenge toCommunist rule Germans night that raises garbage processing by asking Parliament this week end Township to fees atthe authority’s College the party’s 40-year-old monopoly on Transfer Station from $42.50 to $68.50 power, and predicted an easy victory. surprised per ton. Communist officials spurned West Borough officials estimated earlier Germany’s offer ofan economicbailout. By JAMES T. WOODS could translate into more that a hike They said they prefer their own course Collegian Staff Writer than a 35 percent increase inmunicipal to collection for homeowners. recovery and hinted at reforms to rates encourage free-enteiprise investment. It was nightfall last Thursday when “Our rates have been low and we Bild, a mass-circulation West Ger- University student Heike Moers first knew wewere infor this,” State College man newspaper, reported Wednesday learned of the opening of East Ger- Ruth Lavin Borough Councilwoman that Chancellor Helmut Kohl would many’s borders. said. tried warn people that “We to meet with party chiefEgonKrenz after She was walking down College Ave- there would be amuch greater cost in a CommunistParty congress Dec. 15- nue after a long day of studying atthe the future. We know it’s goingto beover 17 that is expected to make major librarywhen she ran into a friend who $200.” changes in the EastGerman leadership. gave her the news. President Gary Borough Council In West Berlin, hundreds gathered at As she finally graspedthe situation, Wiser agreed. “We’ve predicted all the enormous Brandenburg Gate, hop- Moers (senior-finance), anative West alongthat the cost would increase,” he ing the East Germans would break German, felt tears of joyrunning down said. through the Berlin Wall in front of the her face. Assistant Borough Manager Ronald 200-year-old “symbol of unity.” A West During thepast week, manystudents Davis said Tuesday that under a pro- German television network said up to with West German backgrounds have borough posed increase, annual collec- 7,000 East German refugees were expressed surprise as the dominant tion rates would jumpfrom $l5O to $207 expected to return to their homeland. reaction to the eventsin East Germany. for homeowners andfrom $Bl to $lO5 for TheEast German constitution’s guar- “I’m still in shock,” she said. “My apartment owners. He could not be antee ofa “leading role” for the Com- first reaction wasover-excitement, then reached last night. munist Party will be challenged at I had to ask if (myfriend) was kidding The boroughcollects residential trash Friday’s sitting ofthe increasingly inde- he told me he wouldn’t kid about with itsown trucks and delivers itto the pendent-minded Parliament, said something like that.” authority’s transfer station located on Manfred Gerlach, headof the Liberal Moerssaid she sees the opening ofthe Road. Transfer Democratic Party. borders asa positive event. The authority then transports that It was unclear whethera vote on the “The major exodus that is going on garbage and other waste, collected constitutional change would come the shows justhow bad it mustbe (in East from the Centre Region, to the same day. Germany),” she said. “The event is Pleasesee BUDGET, Page 10. “I figure it will pass with a large absolutely spectacular, it’s the greatest majority,” Gerlach told West Ger- thingthat ever happened,in my eyes.” many’s ARD radio network. His party, This event is evidencethat the ideolo- once closely allied with the Commu- gies of the Eastern Bloc governments DER limits nists, has been atthe forefront of calls are not what the people of these coun- for change in East Germany. tries want, shesaid. The new speaker of Parliament,non- Angie Mueller (junior-American confound Communist Guenther Maleuda, on studies) had a similar reaction to the event. CollegianPhoto/Kyle Burkhart Tuesday urged aconstitutional change trash haulers to allow a true multiparty government. Mueller, a West German exchange The East German constitution spec- student, was visiting her German friend By JENNIFER COHEN Hitting the books ifies that constitutional changes must in Mississippiwhen she first heard news the and and DAVE HOWLAND Two students study infront ofthe hallowed halls of Old Main. William Groff (junior-pre-med), in foreground, be approved a majority of the lawmak- of the event. Collegian Staff Writers Jeff Bourbon (senior-accounting) were caught reading yesterday. ers in the 500-memberParliament, or “I had tears in my eyes when I first People’s Chamber. Please see STUDENTS, Page 10. Philipsburg and Port Matilda trash haulers said they mustrace tothe gates of the Moshannon Valley Landfill this morning. Some arewaiting therewith yesterday’s trash. University should meet campaign goal today The state’s Department of Environ- mental Resources ordered the Centre County Solid WasteAuthority to enforce By SHARON L. LYNCH Collegian Staff Writer established limits on the daily amount Trustees to do business here this weekend garbage haulers can dump in the of University meet announced the campaign’s completion chardson will the board profits should repay the investment in landfill. The should its reportto about $3OO million six-year private fund- at a State College businesswomen’s the possibility of instituting the fee to a few years and eventuallycontribute yesterday, the limit, about 54 Until raising goal tomorrow, marking the banquet. pay for expandedcomputer networks toUniversity academic programs, said tons, had notbeen notenforced, saidthe success of one of the nation’s most Assistant treasurersDavid Branigan in the library, student labs and admin- GarySchultz, assistant vice president authority’s ExecutiveDirector Donald and Raymond Nargi both said they istrative offices. for operations andservices, in arecent now haulers race ambitious capital campaigns in higher Bachman. But must education. believed the University has achieved Thetrustees are scheduledto approve briefing about the facility. toget garbage to the landfill before their An announcement would coincide the $3OO million goal. about 30 months’ planning for the By theyear 2000 the park is estimated it closes. “They want to to employ about 3,000 people and said that overthe past few with the University Board of Trustees probably don’t formal- research park, which is slated for Bachman that until the board ground-breaking in 1991. encompass 1.5 million square feet of as 75 a day meeting here today and tomorrow ize meeting,” Bra- months as much tons has wherethe board will also consider plans nigan added. StudentTrustee Christina Henke said space. Phase I will include a conference been dumpedat Moshannon Valley. He for a proposed research park. Approvalfor a $6O million firstphase the park plans may become a point of center, research and developmentlab, said DERWilliamsport Regional Direc- Officials plan a news conference of the proposed research park and contentionamong board members who technology center and a privately Dick Bittle told him ina phone con- tor regarding the Campaign for Penn State updates on minority enrollment will voiced concerns about itpreviously. owned and financed hotel. versation Monday afternoon the at tomorrow afternoonon the steps also the trustees’ agenda. Students “I may have a reservation or two,” Ken Martin, Graduate Student Asso- $lOO 1:30 top authority could be assessed for of Old Main. AJthough officials are also may beone closer topaying an she said, but addedshe generally sup- ciation president, also noted controver- garbage dumpedover the step every ton of remaining quiet on the announcement, annual mandatorycomputer fee. ports the plan. “Ithinkthe overall feel- sy surrounding the planned research limit. spokesman Roger Williams said last Administrators have discussed the ing is it’sa goodinvestment and itwill park. can’t sit here atthe landfill and “We week the University would probably potential fee since July, comparing it to pay back the University in time.” “There are trustees who have been take a 100-per-tonkick from now until meet its mark this week. a $llOUniversity of Pittsburgh charge Penn Statewill pay $42 million forthe against the research park... I would November,” Bachman said last night His statementscame after University implementedthisyear. Executive Vice first development stage, funding the be surprised if thereweren’t some that Pleasesee HAULERS, Page 10. President Bryce Jordan mistakenly President and Provost William C. Ri- first buildings by floating a bond. Park still had their doubts,” he said. William C. Richardson University'sresearch boom causes space crunch in labs WEATHER . By JONATHAN BASSETT has doubledits research in technology, American universities needed “major Newton said, for every action Collegian Science Writer and this requires instrumentation,” renovation” and 23 percent required there is an equal and opposite Hosier said. “For example, we are “less comprehensivework.” reaction.... Warm this morning While University research expands currently studying the aging process Just 24 percent of the 114 million