4 —The Daily Collegian Friday, Sept. 20, 1985 Local bypass nears completion •*:- •' Construction draws to a close on the Route 322 bypass, scheduled for completion In December. The bypass will re route traftlc around State College and reduce congestion in the borough. LA VIE 1986 proudly announces its FIRST ANNUAL C tfpt CAwPip C®N T 6ST Saturday, September 21, 1985 9 a.m. to 12 noon Curtain Road, In front of IM Building Before the PSU V. East Carolina Game THE BEST PHOTOS SELECTED WILL APPEAR IN LA VIE 'B6 Groups of Students can compete in 3 categories: * Best Penn State Spirit * Funniest * Most Outrageous Don’t miss this chance to be in your yearbook! FOCUSING ON VOU LA VIC 'B6 0210 nr.rizzali UI€€K€ND€R \ / L >' / -k Whole wheat douqh available \ ' ★ Wear your Pizza7T T-Shirt into the store and receive one free / topping on a slice A ~ " ' Pizza II 4freePepsis I uiith any large Pizzoj v;, . el pires 9/22/85 i FIZZaTT 9/22/35 lIZZ2 II “ e coupon par customer | «** a " one coupon per customer - '■**’*! 1 —: / a V 1 | Pwr/TSI il ' ® x P ires 9/22/85 | one coupon per customer i 1 2 free Pepsis uiith any Pizza expires 9/22/85 on® coupon per customer FR€€ DCIIVCRV STARTING RTII RM 234-0182 «*'** '.A,'. , --•V* * Wk Collegian Photo/Scott Wllkereon $2 off any Large 3-item Pizza $1 off any Large Pepperoni Pizza The final section of the State Col lege bypass, under construction since last September, is near completion, Project Manager Louis Gonzalez said. Paving of a lVi-mile bypass section between Route 26 and Oak Hall will begin Oct. 1 and will be completed in late December. The bypass will be known as state Route 322 and the section of the current Route 322 it is replacing including Atherton Street in- State College will be renamed Route 322 Business, Gonza lez said. The bypass, which stretches from Boalsburg to Scotia Road in Patton Township, will re-route traffic around downtown State College, reducing congestion in the borough. “It has been 25 years since the concept of a bypass came about,” said Rebecca Rosser, Pennsylvania Department of Transportation spokeswoman. The entire bypass will be com pleted this summer after a bicycle lane and landscaping are added. The bridge on Branch Road that carries traffic over the bypass is now open to traffic, Gonzalez said, adding that the bridge carrying Elmwood Street traffic over the bypass will be completed .this fall Both Gonzalez and Rosser said the completion of the bypass will depend upon nature’s cooperation. WILSONS LEVI’S DISCO John Cafferty Ticket Give Away While they last FREE JOHN CAFFERTY NAME POSTERS or BUTTONS address PHONE NO. No Purchase Necessary USE OUR EASY LAYAWAY! ±s *- l^S 30 USE OUR EASY LAYAWAY fsf , wl| [ s j 3H,s a P=T —I*l 1* 110 —by Judy Fisher IMIBI (AIII C STOREHOUR§ WILMJN a ™° Sal 9:30-5:30 flowers from 145 S. Allen St. 238-0566 210 CALDER WAY You Meed A Bunch... nations 7 (a bunch of 10) day with NT DAY’S All-U Day unites campuses By LAURA O’BRIEN Collegian Staff Writer About 2,000 more fans will cheer the The society is no longer in existence. Nittany Lion football team this Satur- In addition to the football game, a day when students from the Common- banner contest is planned for the day, wealth campuses visit University Sena said. Each campus will submit Park to participate in All-University an banner with the theme “United We Day. • Stand, Penn State Proud” to be dis- All-U Day is designed to integrate played in Beaver Stadium during the the 19 Commonwealth campuses into game. University Park activities, the All-U The theme is deliberately vague so Day co-chairwoman said. each campus will have to use its “It’s a day of unity when all of Penn imagination to create the best ban- State gets together,” said Gina Marie ner, said Diane Brady, All-U Day co- Sena. chairwoman. During the first quarter of the game, the banners will be judged by administrators on originality, adher ence to the theme and creativity, Brady said. The winning banner will be announced at halftime, and the campus with the winning banner will receive a plaque. Tours of University Park are of fered to anyone calling the Under graduate Student Government office, The Keystone Society, started in Duffnersaid. Although many of the activities offered at last year’s All-U Day will not be held this year, the event will still bring together University stu dents, Sena said. All-U Day is organized each year by the Council of Commonwealth Student Governments, but was origi nated more than 20 years ago by the Keystone Society, said Lynn Duffner, CCSG coordinator. Clinger to speak on refusniks In an effort to learn more about the During his visit to the Soviet Union plight of Soviet Jews, Yachad in January, Clinger scheduled a Friends of Israel is hosting speakers, meeting with refusnik Mikhail Kre including U.S. Rep. William F. Cling- mem but due to a mix-up the two did er, at 7 Sunday night in the HUB not come in contact. F B h rad W Freeman, president of Ya- GeorgeEnteen,associateprofessor chad, said Clinger, R-Pa., was chosen of history, and Isakov Ma, a rf Centre Hardware * J Grills for under $4.00 i J Charcoal I ? Lighter fluid I — Skewers jf Playmate Coolers and Picnic Baskets * Centre Hardware $ j 221 S. Allen St. 237-3456* (behind Schlow Library) * >F Serving Slate College area since 1944 ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ OricwAl --Italian (I!2J pizza & restaurant ONE FREE TOPPING W / ANY {This Week Only! •••••••*••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••* FREE DELIVERY AFTER 5:00 PM 222 W. Beaver (Under Beaver Plaza Apts.) 238-5513 1954, was formed to represent the Commonwealth campuses and to build unity between the campuses. LARGE PIZZA $ ll.OO Special 2 Large Cheese Pizzas + Free 6-Pack of Pepsi Acid rain expert calls for federal action By ANTHONY NEWMAN Collegian Staff Writer The acid rain issue has moved out of the scientific realm, leaving poli ticians and economists to decide whether environmental degradation warrants federal regulation of sulfu rous emissions, an acid rain expert said yesterday. Gene E. Liken, founder of the Insti tute of Ecosystem Studies in Mil lbrook, New York and the father of U.S. acid rain research, said the time has come for legislative action and the Reagan administration is wasting time and money by continuing to survey lakes and streams. Liken said Swedish scientists first recognized that toxic emissions from industrialized England were travel ing hundreds of miles and entering Sweden. The problem of crossing interna tional and state boundaries is what makes the acid rain issue so politi cally complex, Liken said. “The plumes (from utility and fac tory smokestacks) do cross bounda ries,” he said. “If you’re the governor of New York you can regulate emis sions in your own state, but what can you do when another state’s emis sions are entering yours? ’ ’ Liken showed slides of a Canadian smokestack whose plumes were still clearly visible more than 80 kilome ters from the plant well into the United States. Liken said he is frustrated with the popular opinion that the causes of ' DON’T LOSE 1T... KEEP YOUR GOLDEN TAN AT 33% OFF On a 10 session plan now! SCHOLARSHIPS The School of Journalism has scholarships for freshmen planning to major in Journalism and who demonstrate need and ability. Also, a variety of scholarships will be awarded to school majors. Applications for both are available in 216 Carnegie. Deadline for application is October 1. f—- Need 1,000”“’ S Xerox® copies - [ today? ! The King ! can do it! King 740 5. Atherton St., State College, PA 16801 • OFFSET PRINTING • QUICK PRINTING • XEROX: COPIES g pnw BUSCH, BIKE 20 is a twenty mile course throughout the State College area, starting In the HUB parking lot and ending at AK fraternity. The date is Saturday, September 28. /flk> acid rain are still not understood by researchers. “But scientific progress has been great. I only wish politicians would identify the problem as it is and decide how they are going to deal with it,” Liken said. “It isn’t a matter of not knowing whether lakes are being acidified. We’re not wondering whether or not trout populations in these lakes are being killed by acidic precipitation,” he said. "We know. Now we’ve got to ask ourselves whether spending four or five billion dollars to help correct the problem is worth it. Although rain and lakes may be naturally acidic, Liken said the proof that acid rain is caused by sulfurous emissions cannot be disputed. “Some say that acid rain is due to natural acidity, and to a degree that’s true,” he said. “But more than 90 percent of the sulfur in the atmo sphere comes from human activity, and 70 percent of that sulfur comes from the electrical utilities. Those numbers are not argued about.” Liken was co-director at the Hub bard Brook Experimental Forest in New Hampshire, where in the mid -1960s the first formal studies of acid rain effects in the United States were made. He said studies there show a decline in the amount of sulfur enter ing the ecosystem “However, sulfate deposition is still about two times higher than has been shown to cause biological damage,” he said. Printing (814) 238-2536 Pledge Sheets will be available at the HUB rack, Mike's Video, Pedals and M