9—The Daily Collegian Tuesday, April 19, 1987 Nittany Divers plunge into scuba life By JULIE SMITH Collegian Staff Writer During his first dive, in Florida, Brian Houser ran into a sand shark. "I was hanging upside down and saw two eyes and jaws. I couldn't believe it was real," said Houser (junior-general arts and sciences). While members of the Penn State Nittany Divers scuba club may never come head to head with a sand shark in Pennsylvania, they do enjoy a variety of diving activities. The club provides students and non-students alike with the opportunity to explore the underwa ter.world while polishing their diving skills. Members dive locally at such places as the Susquehanna River, Blue Hole Quarry and the Bellefonte Ridge Quarry. They also make use of area farm ponds and the McCoy Natatorium .on campus. Divers also go on trips sponsored by the organi zation, said Ann Sullivan, the club's president. "Right now we're getting ready for our June trip to Florida. This includes eight days of camping, a reef dive, twilight dive and several other activ ities," she said. police log • A pair of glasses with a case, a $92, were reported missing Sunday cassette and $lO in cash, worth $llB from a car owned by Carimanti Land total, were reported missing Sunday scaping of Glenside, while the car by Robert Bowen, 308 Atherton, Uni- was parked in the Garner Street versity police Services said. Parking Lot, the State College Bu reau of Police Services said. • The rear window was broken on a car owned by Novachem Corp. of • Unknown persons damaged a High Point, N.C., while the car was USA Today vending machine Sunday parked at the Nittany Lion Inn Sun- in the 100 block of South Pugh Street, day, University police said. State College police said. • Two magnetic door signs, worth —by Mike Lenio More power to boot THE 300 S. PUGH STREET. 810N-THURS 10.13, LF‘GrAI., STATE COLLEGE, PA 16801 LINK STUDY -A - THON 'B7 IMPROVE YOUR GRADES WHILE HELPING OTHERS! • - coSince we all have to study sometime for finals, why not will ! sign up for the Golden Key prizes! National Honor Society Study-A - Thon to benefit the Second Mile? April 27th 6 p.m. -11 p.m. in HUB Sign up April 14, 15, 16 in HUB basement r*********************************************** * Caribbean Students Association * * presents * * "Sugar Cane Alley" * * * * Movie Directed By * * * Euzhan Paley * * * Based On Joseph Zobers * * * La Rue Cases Negres * * * Wednesday April 15, 1987 * * * at * * Paul Robeson Cultural Center * * * * 7:30 PM 44* Admission Free * * f*********************************************** PI KAPP • FIKO • PI KAPP • FIKO • PI KAPP • mos • PI KAPP • IMO • PI KAPP • 0 -a The Brothers Of Pi Kappa Phi Would Like To Congratulate a a, < BUSTER GRAHAM v, V a. a < On Being Appointed IFC Community Relations Chairman 0103 PI KAPP • FIK(1)-• PI KAPP • FIKO • PI KAPP • 111(0 • PI KAPP • FIKt• • PI KAPP e i ASHTON TATE BASE 111 PWS e datarnanagentent standard. COMPUTER STORE During their dives, members explore shipw recks, search for artifacts, catch lobsters and play underwater hockey. Popular local dive spots are quarries in Tyrone, where an abundance of jellyfish and the sub merged remains of wrecked cars add spice to the dive. One club member. Diane Kraus (graduate-ce ramic science), has had some unusual experiences with sea animals. "Dolphins and seals come right up to you and want to play, because you look like them with all your gear on," she said. "It's scary when a seal swims straight towards you and stops a couple of inches from your face." Besides organizing the trips, the club has 20 sets of equipment that any active member can borrow for a $5 fee. It also has a library in the natatorium which contains newspaper and magazine clippings on everything from dive sites in Pennsylvania to local dive shops offering discounts to club members. Sullivan (graduate-art education), who is serv ing her second term as president, said "the most important part of diving is knowing your limits. That's where most people make their mistakes." collegian notes • Free University will hold a class • The Undergraduate Student on "Eckankar, the Ancient Science of Government Senate will meet at 6:30 Soul Travel," at 7:30 tonight in 230 tonight in 225 HUB. Sackett. e Circle K will meet at 7 tonight in e The Student Union Board will 323-24 HUB meet at 7 tonight in 307 HUB • The Penn State Flyfishing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in 3A White Building. -iing Rllll - 151111 MEI I,llPfil IMINE - 11111111111114 - 11111 , ~ ..,, ~. , ‘ ._.,,,: le l 4, I 1 ' 1 . . , sr e - , 1 . ......#-.. ) , , s , ve 4t -f‘ I La — g -PeOperovii----(t E ' ry ' - '' TiiesdaiOnlY OPEN: 1I am - 234.3000 • • • For, Free D - Your phone eily 3 4 - .4P_ltits L z __ Daily OM* not vend *rah any Other coupon Expires Teep*t APIII 14 1987 I n . - - "to r,the '"'"" r 111" MMMMMMMMM 11111111111=1 MN MMMMMMM ME WM 4 1 1 Mill 811111111= 11E1 aims itlin 111 RETURN TO THE ISLANDS TROPICAL HAPPY HOURS 5-7 FROZEN TEMPTATIONS IN A MUG st2s Featuring: Margaritas (Strawberry & Original) Pina Coladas Strawberry Daiquiris TACOS 500 (Build Your Own) 5.7 AFTER DARK: You are greeted with a free lei and reggae SPECIALS: BLUE HAWAIIANS '1.25 til 12am SNOWCRAB LEGS '3.95 2 am surf can sm6:76EL Enter on Calder Way or College Ave across from Old Main, Kraus and Sullivan agree that divers should never dive alone and that to be , safe, they should always be thinking and have lots of practice. Although the majority of the divers have scuba certification, Sullivan said it is not a requirement to join the club. "Some of our members are skin divers. All this means is that they are not scuba certified." Each semester the club offers a class called "Try Scuba" for anyone interested in becoming. certified. For those who have thought about getting in volved in scuba but are not sure what it entails, the Nittany Divers sponsor Underwater Weekends, where divers and nondivers can experience scuba first-hand for.sB. Sullivan said scuba diving is not as expensive as most people think. Scuba certification runs about $lBO, which must be paid only once. Anyone interested in learning more about the Nittany Divers can attend one of the weekly meetings held at 7:30 each Thursday night in 201 McCoy Natatorium. Diving activities will continue throughout the summer. • The College Republicans will meet at 7:30 tonight in 309 Willard. • Penn State Writers Club will meet at 8 tonight in 319 Boucke, Y .7) .-v > -io -io Research fund adds to senior gift choices By CATHY ACKERMAN Collegian Staff Writer Graduating seniors who want to ars' fund were sent to seniors, donate their general deposits to a Sperry said the fund is not meant good cause now have an alterna- to compete against the Senior tive. Class Gift Council. Besides the traditional senior Class gift council Chairman class gift, students can also give to Rich Pirotta said he believes the a new undergraduate research scholars' fund is fine but that the fund set up by the University entrance is more of a class gift. Scholars Program. Pirotta said the council decided Meanwhile, the organizers of the to raise its goal because costs for traditional senior gift this year the project were higher than were dedicated to building a new cam- expected and the council wanted pus entranceway have an- to add things to the design to nounced that they are expanding enhance the entrance, to be built their goal from $15,000 to $20,000 at the intersection of College Ave because of their initial success. nue and Shortlidge Road. Scholars program Coordinator Construction on the project, des- Max King said money from the ignated "College Avenue Gates scholars' fund will help students 'B7" is scheduled to start after doing research for their senior July 30 if funds can be raised. ' honors thesis. The idea for the fund came up To make more seniors aware of shortly after spring break, said the project, the council will be at Mary Sperry (senior-foreign serv- the Zero Year Reunion on May Ito ice/economics/Russian), one of bring the seniors up to date on how the fund's founders. the project is coming along. Distribution of the money is Flyers will also be posted scheduled to start next fall and throughout campus and the coun will be based on a proposal meth- cil will have tables in the HUB anism, where students must de- next week, Pirotta said. scribe what they would do with the He said a survey of students money and why they can't get it chose the entrance from a list of anywhere else, she said. choices including the Pattee Li- The total amount will be based brary fund and a garden near the on how much the faculty, staff and University Creamery. I MU Mil INN NMI NMI 1111111111111111 MI in OM MB NIB MO 11111111•1111•51111 Mil INNII Mil MI IRE 11111 lIIM NM V I , LUNCH FOR 2 I Sinall 1-item Pizza and 2 Pepsi's ofor '6.00 1 I I it I I I PhDl ,PIZZAi ProduCing the Finest Professional Theatre Pennsylvania Centre Stage 1987 Season students are willing to contribute, King said. Although letters about the schol- Your address ........ .;;:: ... . :::::::::::::::::::::::: 4 Sry-,,,,..„..: ::::::::::::::::::::::: :: ::: il..,Movvs ::::::::::::::::: ;pecial.ii,:::"! :::::: ; :::::: ::::: c.uate Price b: :::::: pi' 15 ::::::: efore :;; a son ri . : i_...2.:........... ::::; :::::::::::::: .................... Fast ;' •:•:•:•: .......................' •••• ......................... • • • ' ................................. ................................. ihlitO ii;SIL;I .................. ....... : yozrfi ................ .. •i .. ••:. . .. •• .../. ... . . .. • i . ... . ... . .. •. ... A, .... • „...u.r,..: .....:1. . „. ..... :2A. . . ... . 1. .. 1. .. !. i #. .. 4 . f . ... f.l . :4..f. d .gh.,.i... t . . L .. g .. . : .. .... ,r .. .. /. ... i .. ... e .. • .. C .. ..... • ....... i .•..•.f.. .! .•.r. . ... . ....i.......:.t . —... 7 . . ...y.........:..... ... si ngle 1icket ........ .. . -.1r..:. :4... 1 . ..... :i 5. " . .... T .. 6 ..i.-..T.......i..:... .. . . ...i.i.............i............E...:.... .. . .....:.:..............i........ .. ...i ..... .. . .....:i..... ... . ... . mli: A tribute Open House: He Put Beauty There Sometimes the voice is too small and the heart too full. State College and I have lost one of our best friends, Lou Bell Every man has •• own, but Lou, until he died last week, had a code which transcend ed that of most men. He had a wonderful love for his fellow man, an intense loyalty to 'Penn State and it role in the lives of youth, and an unselfish feeling for the welfare of his communi ty . . . which is rare and cherish ed by those tvho benefited from counsel anti goad wik. There are bid few good men in our lives, too few people who are sensitive to the needs of man kind, to the unspoken wish for hand on the shoulder, to the right word at the right time, to a sym pathetic concern at an unfortu nate moment. Lou Bell had'the unique ability to discern these moments in men . . and there are hundreds of persons who have passed through Penn State and many others who have lived in this town— who remember Lou for one of those moments, for his extreme kindness and his unsolicited help. He never thought of a "return favor." • I am sad, because a man like ' Lou walks alone. He walked a mong men with ,humility and with thoughts of others, while most of us walk with our own concentric thoughts and our petty ailments. Where, among us, are men like Lou who make us "feel good" when they enter our lives. Where are the men, among us, whom we can trust, whom we may call friend? I grieve not only for my loss but for the loss to mankind of a person who wished so little for himself but so much for his Uni versity, his friends, and his fami ly. I grieve because a man like Lou comes into one's life but once in a lifetime . . . when, in con trast, he needs a man like Lou every day of his life. • Everyone of us wants to be a needed friend to another, but how many of us will give so much of himself to be thoughtful, kind, unrewarded, humorous and pain staking. But I will look.• I will look a bout me and try to see the world in the friendly and charming.per-- spective that he saw in it. I will try to see in my defeats and er rors the composts of human frail ty, and I will try to learn that here—and now—there is so much to life, so much to holding life, that I am endowded with a beau tiful heritage and a chance to share it. I will look beyond the harsh clangs of day-to-day conflicts and . try to understand the loneliness of man and his search for love and recognition in his own way and in his own time. That .is the tolerant way' Lou looked at life, and he saw beauty and purpose . . . because he put it there. —Ross Collegian is proud to honor the memory of Lou Bell. Fondly remembered as "Mr. Penn State" by friends and alumni, Bell gave Collegian his talent, his time, his energy and above all his compassion to student journalists. Bell, who served as Collegian editor in 1929, became a professor of journalism in 1934. In 1943 Bell began a 15-year term as director of the department of public information. He was instrumental in organizing the Penn State Press, and served as its executive director. Former Collegian staff members plan to pay tribute to Bell at a special dinner in his honor during Collegian's 100th Anniversary Reunion Weekend. Current Collegian staff members will acknowledge Bell's contribution to Collegian with a donation to the Lou Bell Scholarship Fund. , . Louis H. Bell 1906 - .1958 Banner Calls Bell "Mr. Penn State" Franklin Banner, professor emeritus, retired head of the journalism depalltment, wrote from his retirement home in La Jolla, California: "If any graduate of the Uni versity could be rightly called Mr. Penn State, Lou was that man. The value of his work as ambassador of good will for the entire University is so great that it will be difficult to excel. He was unquestionably one of the most capable jour nalism graduates of the past thirty years." The Daily Collegian Tuesday, April 14, 1 Open House: Happily, All Is Not Lost (Editor's Note: The Lehmann are vacationing. Today's guest columnist is James H. Coogan of Puddintown.) . . • Surprisingly, I can't recall th. exact moment or the exact cir cumstances under which I firs /net Lou Bell, But it had to be on campus since he was a year ahead of me in college, and. we both aspired to the editorship of The Collegian. Even though our paths crossed earlier, our close relationship be gan to develop when he was a junior and I was a sophomore. In those days, a junior board of six ,battled it out for the editorship. Freshmen and sophomores watch -ed from the sidelines. However, as sophomoreg, we looked to jun iors for direction and• guidance. Lou Bell gave me both. Thereafter. I lost track of him for a few years but we exchanged an occasional letter and he pre vailed on me in the early '4os to switch my allegiance to the cam pus. I am glad I did. I profited immensely from my association with him. Throughout this association I marvelled at his uncanny ability to make people laugh and talk and he merry. No problem ever loomed so large that Lou could not take leave long enough to tell a story. Those stories were more than humorous. Some'of them pointed up a moral. Others managed to delineate character. He told end less stories about people he knew and they were invariably warm and human. His innate kindliness never deserted him. Lou Bell is a gentle man. He dislikes controversy and is upset by differences of opinion. His gen erosity. of course, is legendary. His friends for years have chided him about his "open door" polio•. No person ever is unwelcome at the Bell home. He also is sensitive. This sen sitivity stems from many factors, but none more important than his all-consuming desire to under stand and to befriend people. He frankly abhors the idea that any body should think less than well of him. These, then, are the personal attributes he brought to his job and to the University of which he is so inordinately proud. These. plus a sound perspective an d undisputed talent, have brought him the acclaim of friends, associates. and profes sional peers. No man ever ques tioned Lou Bell's ability, Happily, all is not lost. Even though he no longer will be in timately concerned with Univers ity-wide public relations, his ex perience and counsel will be available and those youngsters who draw nn it in the classroom may count themselves fortunate. Dedication is an abused word today• But I,nu Bell has it in abundance. And he has given of it freely over the years. —Jim Coogan