% japan bugs out on its Chief of staff resigns I I today, breezy and cooler. High * 77. Mainly clear and comfortably V latest trend insect col- Air Force Chief of Staff Ronald Foqleman COOl toni9ht L0, i 55 Mo^y 53 sunny tomorrow with a beautiful lecting announces his early retirement aftemoon Hi - a 2y Chris paw CoLca_>cD dally CollGgicin Vol. 98, No. 27 12 Pages ©1997 Collegian Inc. Jury finds man guilty on one count of rape By KRISTIN WALPOLE Collegian Staff Writer Amin O. Robinson, a former University student, was found guilty yesterday by Centre County President Judge Charles Brown of statutory sexual assault, inde cent assault, corruption of a minor and reckless endangerment of a 14-year-old high school student. However he was found not guilty of indecent assault, corruption of a minor and reckless endangerment in a separate inci dent involving a 15-year-old girl by a jury made up of 10 men and two women. District Attorney Ray Gricar repeatedly Tentative budget agreement made By ALAN FRAM Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON Climaxing months of bargaining and years of partisan warfare, congressional Republicans and Clinton adminis tration officials announced tenta tive agreement yesterday on a plan to balance the budget by 2002 while slashing taxes by about $l4O billion for millions of families, students and investors. The accord put leaders of both parties in position to claim credit for the broadest tax cut since 1981 and, if actually achieved, the first federal budget surplus since 1969. “We have a tentative agreement on a very good balanced-budget plan,” an ebullient Treasury Secre tary Robert Rubin told reporters as he left a final Capitol bargaining session. White House chief of staff Erskine Bowles added: “We could n’t be more pleased with the out come.” Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss., said that pending a review of the legislative language, the Senate would begin debating the spending bill tomorrow and the tax bill perhaps Thursday. House aides said that chamber could approve both measures tomorrow meaning that lawmakers would be able to leave town Friday for their summer recess as scheduled. Asked about the prospects for House passage, House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., said: “I think it will sell itself. It’s a fabu lous agreement.” “The middle class is getting a good break in this deal, and they deserve it,” said Senate Budget Committee Chairman Pete Domeni ci, R-N.M. The only initial discordant reac tion came from some House liber als. Rep. David Obey, D-Wis., bolt ed from a meeting between Democ rats and White House officials, say ing, “I’ve heard all I want to hear.” President Clinton got word of the agreement while playing golf in Las Vegas, said White House spokesman Joe Lockhart. “The president was pleased and is looking forward to a full briefing tomorrow,” Lockhart said. Highlights of the pact included a $5OO tax credit for many children; a $24 billion effort to expand CPA to put forth referendum By MARK PARFITT Collegian Staff Writer State College Borough residents may be faced with a referendum on November’s ballot asking whether they want the East College Heights traffic diverters removed. The referendum is being pur sued by Citizens for Public Access (CPA), a political action group that created its charter and group structure last night. “I’ve been told by (State College Borough) council the majority of the people in the borough are in favor of the diverters and we feel that’s wrong,” CPA president Rick Tetzlaff said. “The way to find out is to put it to the voters.” Although CPA has a week to assemble, collect signatures and file a referendum before the dead line for the November elections, its told jurors Robinson was 20 years old when the incidents occurred in April and July of 1995. The two teens told similar stories stating Robinson gave them drugs that caused them to feel sedated and then took advan tage of them sexually when the drugs took effect. The 14-year-old girl said she was raped by Robinson when she called him to pick her up after running away from home. The girl and Robinson went back to his apartment, 736 E. Foster Ave., and played video games and smoked marijuana, she said. Soon after smoking she began to feel health-care coverage for many of the 10 million uninsured American children; and a gradual 15-cent boost in the 24-cent-per-pack feder al cigarette tax. In the end, although Republicans made many late concessions, many major disputes were resolved with an everyone-wins approach. Under lining this, the five-year, $B5 billion net price tag for tax cuts set by the May balanced-budget agreement grew to about $9l billion. Overall, some taxes were cut by about $l4O billion while others were raised by approximately $5O billion. Three of the most troublesome issues resolved Monday were over details of the children’s tax credit, a children’s health initiative and a dispute over welfare recipients taking subsidized jobs. The GOP acceded to Clinton’s demands for a $24 billion, five-year effort to expand health-care cover age for many of the country’s 10 million uninsured children. That amount was $8 billion beyond what many Republicans preferred, but there was a catch. Clinton agreed to let states have more leeway than he preferred in deciding which ser vices would be provided, such as mental health and dental coverage, though less state control than many Republicans wanted. Republicans dropped their demand that welfare recipients taking subsidized jobs in the public and nonprofit sectors to be exempt ed from minimum wage and other worker protections. They argued that such requirements would make it harder to find such slots and hurt state efforts to trim wel fare rolls. And in a triumph claimed by both sides, there would be a $4OO - tax credit in 1998, rising to $5OO the next year, for children age 16 and under. It would apply to many families who earn as little as $lB,OOO a year and owe little or no income tax, a victory for Clinton. But it would also go to single par ents making as much as $75,000 and couples making $llO,OOO, which Republicans wanted. The package included about $4O billion in education tax breaks, a key Clinton demand to which law makers added their own ideas. It contains the president’s treasured Please see BUDGET, Page 2. "The way to find out is to put it to the voters." Rick Tetzlaff president of Citizens for Public Access members plan to begin working today. “The referendum, in essence, would call for the removal of the diverters and also prevent the bor ough from blocking streets with diverters in the future,” Tetzlaff said. The borough installed the traffic diverters over a year ago in response to College Heights resi dents’ concerns that excessive traf fic was deteriorating their neigh borhood. The diverters prevent "She said ' // me. Brittany Ross friend of the then 14-year-old victim heavy and slumped against the wall where he raped her, the 14-year-old said. After the rape she found her friend, Brittany Ross, at Campus Casino, 320 E. College Ave., and asked her to accompany her back to Robinson’s apartment to retrieve her bag, she said. Herman Goffberg, left, and Alex Bourgerie, center, celebrate after a Penn State track meet in 1941 Goffberg recently paid Bourgerie’s library fine 55 years after it was due. Book fine, friendship returned By JODI HANAUER Collegian Staff Writer Imagine cleaning out your house and finding an overdue library fine, not a few weeks overdue but a few years 55 years to be exact. Most people who would find themselves in this situation would just laugh for a few min utes and then throw the fine out and forget about it. Most people does not include Alex Bourg erie. on diverters motorists from traveling through East College Heights to access Park Avenue and have created an increase of traffic on North Ather ton Street. Many residents outside College Heights have complained the diverters make it inconvenient for them to travel to University loca tions. Ferguson Township’s supervi sors have discussed filing a lawsuit against the borough concerning the diverters. CPA members decided to support the township’s decision to do that, but it also wants to pro ceed with its own plans to remove the traffic barriers. Some CPA members were con cerned that borough residents in other neighborhoods would not vote in favor of the diverter’s removal because the residents feel Please see COUNCIL, Page 2. Tuesday, July 29,1997 he raped Long Overdue Bourgerie hadn’t kept in fre- erie’s 28 cent fine with the $1 quent contact with his friend bill Bourgerie had mailed to pay Herman Goffberg of State Col- the fine. lege, but recently called him to tell the story of how he found the old fine and to ask him to go to Pattee and pay it off for him. Bourgerie told his friend he was dying of throat cancer and he wanted to go out “clean” by paying off all his bills and not leaving any debts. It was a very funny story, Goffberg said, so he agreed to go to the library to pay Bourg A week later she confided in her about the rape. “She said, ‘Remember the day I asked you to come get my stuff?’ ” Ross said. “She said, ‘... he raped me.’ ” The 15-year-old, whose charges failed to convict Robinson, told the court she met Robinson April 5,1995 at Campus Casino. “We made small talk and then he asked me for my number,” the girl said. “I wrote my full name and number on symphony tickets I had in my pocket.” The following day Robinson contacted the girl and they agreed to meet at Block buster Video, 1101 N. Atherton St. He picked her up in a car and he pulled Photo courtesy of Herman Goffberg Goffberg said the employees at the library just laughed when he explained the bill to them and they signed a receipt that the fine had been paid off, although they didn’t actually take the money. Bourgerie discounted rumors that he did this primarily for a joke. “It’s not really a joke. I took it Please see OVERDUE, Page 2. Published independently by students at Penn State around to the side of the building where Robinson offered her marijuana, she said. The girl had recently begun taking Prozac and refused the marijuana, fearful of mixing the two drugs. But Robinson stuck the marijuana in her face and she gave in, the 15-year-old girl said. “I was feeling really scared and vulnera ble and I took one or two hits,” she said. Shortly after the hit she began to feel strange and she couldn’t move and that is when Robinson assaulted her, she said. Robinson, represented by Edward Bla narik Jr., has a scheduled sentencing date of August 18 at Centre County Courthouse in Bellefonte. New heart treatment rejected Government advisors reject a risky new laser treatment for heart angina. By LAURAN NEERGAARD Associated Press Writer GAITHERSBURG, Md. Gov ernment advisers yesterday reject ed a revolutionary approach to treating heart angina a laser that promised to relieve chronic patients’ crippling pain by zapping up to 40 tiny holes into the heart itself. Some patients clearly showed relief from pain, advisers to the Food and Drug Administration said. But the company seeking approval to sell the treatment, PLC Medical Systems, had serious defi ciencies in its study, which could even pose a risk to already-sick patients, the scientists said. “I have a close relative who needs this procedure. There’s noth ing I’d rather do than approve it,” said Dr. Robert Califf of Duke Uni versity. But he called the data sup porting the laser inadequate and troubling, and on a 9-2 vote, his fel low panel members agreed. At issue was a controversial but long-awaited procedure called transmyocardial revascularization (TMR). By blasting tiny one mil limeter holes into the left side of the heart, the procedure theoreti cally Increases blood flow to por tions‘of the muscle that have been severely damaged by advanced heart disease. In the two-hour operation, doc tors slice a 4-inch cut between the ribs to insert the laser, and then blast directly into the heart. The outer layers of the heart heal almost immediately but the beating heart forces these channels to stay open in the interior. The theory is these channels diffuse oxygenated blood into the oxygen-starved tis sue and relieve the crippling chest pain known as angina. About 150,000 Americans have end-stage coronary artery disease, which is almost always accompa nied by angina. In some cases, patients are in such pain they can hardly walk. The laser is intended for those who are not helped by standard medication, including nitroglycerin and other drugs, and who have already exhausted all surgical options such as bypass. Many patients with milder angina do receive relief from medicines. A study of 198 patients found those who got TMR had fewer angi na attacks than control patients who got standard medication. For those followed at least six months after the operation, 65 percent of the TMR patients had significant angina improvement while drugs helped just 10 percent of the con trol patients. Then doctors measured blood flow through the heart. Among TMR patients, 60 percent of those whose angina improved signifi cantly also showed a significant increase in blood diffusion. But complicating that measure ment are suggestions that the holes in the heart do re-close several months after surgery.