PAGE FOUR Editorial Opinion Louis H. Bell Louis H Bell left Stale College on Wednesday to check -.aie, reae'ion to the first book published by the Umveioity Press, of which he was executive director and a foundei. He died suddenly early Thursday evening m Lew York City, apparently of a heart attack. It is not surprising that Mr. Bell should have suc cumbed while attending to University business, for he spent most of his 52 years in serving Penn State. Tins service began before he was graduated from the Umveisity in 1929, when he was editor of The Daily Collegian and a leader in student activities. It continued when he became instructor in journalism m 1934 and during his 15 years as director of Public Infor mation and University editor. These last two jobs are among the most important in the University, but also are filled with pressure and among the most wearing. And they took their toll, for Mi Bell was forced to take an 8-month lest in 1949 fol lowing a severe heait attack and had to resign from these positions last July 1 because of his health. Dining his 15 years as director of Public Information, Mi Bell made countless friends throughout the state. And Ins friends weie also the friends of Penn State, for he winked ceaselessly to promote the University. He was made an honorary member of the Pennsyl vania Society of Newspaper Editors and of Sigma Delta Chi, men’s professional journalism society. He was cited fur outstanding achievement by the American College Public Relations Association in 1953. Through his many newspaper contacts, Mr. Bell helped tmd jobs for University graduates who aspired to journalism. He took a vital interest in campus publica tions and was a petsonal fiiend to hundreds of alumni and students. Penn State is a much better University because of Blinders in Little Rock The Little Rock Private School Corp. plans to open classes on Monday m what was formerly the University of Arkansas graduate center. Dr. Thomas Raney, president of the corporation, has been quoted as saying the entire block on which the building is located will be off limits to newsmen on Monday. Not only is the corporation’s plans a flagrant attempt to violate the spirit of the law, as interpreted by the U.S. Supieme Court, its attempt to bar newsmen from the area and thus keep the American people from knowing exactly what is going on represents a contradiction of one of the basic principles of our society. When the people are denied the right to know, they are denied the right to judge intelligently, for no valid interpretation can be made without knowledge. A Student-Operated Newspaper iaily (EnUrgian Successor co Hie Free Lance, est ISS7 Published luoirtay through Saturday morning daring the University f«tt The Daily I otlegian la * iludenl-operated newspaper Entered as «teond«claaa mat Ur Jaly 4 1911 st the State Follege Pa Post Office andei the act of March S 1179. Mali Snharnptinr Priret 13 00 per semester - 11.99 par rear ROBERT FRANKLIN Editor City Fdllor. David Fineman: Managing Editor, Richard Drayne; Sports Editor, L»o Prato. Associate Sports Editor, Matt Mathews; Personnel and Public Relations Director. Patricia Evans; Copy Editor, Lynn Ward: Assistant Copy Editor. Dick Ftsher; Photography Editor Robert Thompson Credit Mgr.. Janice Smith; Local Ad Mgr.. Ts*n Suckey; Asst. Local Ad Mgr., Robert Picrone. National Ad Mgr. Betsy Rrackbill: Promotion Mgr.. Kitty Bur ger!; Personnel Mgr., Mickey Nash; Classified Ad Mgr., Rae Waters; Co (lrcniaMnn Mgrs., Mary Anne First and Murray Simon: Research and Rerords Mgr., Mary Uerbem; Office Secretary. Myla Johnson. STAFF THIS ISSFF: NiuUt Editor. 1 i‘uuu> Covdoro. Copy Fdnoi, Bohbj Lcom*; V*uv* J'litm, Stnd> l *tdv\»*, Assistants. Su-ov Linkroum, Judi Wharton, Katie Hoiq '1 I’m Mm an, Dck Hutchins, Charlotte* Flack, Tom Eniilet. Kona N.ilhur.son, M’tij Vnn Wosur and Edith Heck. -pEA R H a iE Y°u ? THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA FRANK VOJTASEK Business Manager §(o)HAT T I need) IS SO/AE / ermomyi j WITH LINES j Dulles to Ask For Reduction In Island Forces By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst Secretary of State John Foster Dulles will ask Chiang Kai-shek next week to make a peaceful gesture by thinning out his mili taiv forces on the off-shore is land-, He will get a very polite but very firm question as a replv. It will be approximately: “What are you doing to get the Reds to reduce theii two-year build-up, 10 times as large as ours, on the mainland opposite Quemoy and, more importantly, opposite Tai wan (Formosa! 7 ” Then the two allies, whose relations have become strained since the Washington adminis tration has expressed public doubt about the prospects for a Nationalist reconauest of the mainland, will have to start searching for a compromise gesture. Washington has made it fairly obvious that it would like to give the Reds some sort of face-saving payment, short of appeasement, for stopping the Quemoy bom bardment But since the Dulles influence in Poimng is something less than powerful, he doesn’t stand much chance of getting something from the Reds to save Chiang's face, ton Not to mention the fact that Chiang has a fundamental point on his side In the free world's relations with Red China, the Nationalist forces represent what a "fleet in beina" once mean to one for eign office in trying to impress another. The imnortance of this idea, and the danger of reducing the threat, has been forcefully dem onstrated recently by the Ameri can fleet in Formosa Strait. Gazette TODAY Association for Childhood Educa tors, 9 a.m., 214 HUB Club Hubanna, 9 p m., HUB ball- room John Gielgud reading, B'3o p m., Schwab Auditorium Soccer, versus Colgate, 1:30 p.m., Beaver Field Student movies, 8 p.m , HUB As sembly Room TOMORROW AIM Judicial Board. 2 p.m., 213 HUB Alpha Lambda Delta tea, 2:30 p m., Simmons Lounge Cabinet Committee on Parents Association. 7 p.m., 212 HUB Campus party, steering commit tee, 2 pm., 213 HUB Campus parly meeting. 7 p m., 110 Electrical Engineering Chess Club, 130 pm., HUB card- room Delphi, 1 p.m., 203 HUB Entre Nous, 2 p.m., 217 HUB "Integration in the North" con ference, 8 p.m., 121 Sparks Inter-Varsity Christian Fellow ship, 145 p.m. 212 HUB Newman Club, 7pm, 214 HUB Student movies, 6:30 p.m., HUB Assembly Room ' MONDAY AFC, 7-30 pm, HUB Assembly Hall Alpha Phi Omega, 8 p.m., 214 HUB Christian Fellowship, 12:45 p.m., 218 HUB Dancing Class, 6:30 p.m., HUB ballroom Dr. Lorentz Eldjarn talk, 4 p.m., 210 Armsby Engineering Mechanics Seminar, 4:15 p.m., 203 Engineering A Faculty Luncheon Club, 12 noon, dining room A, HUB Junior Prom Queen Committee, 7 p.m., 218 HUB State College Color Slide Club, 7:30 p.tn., Mineral Science Aud. Vesper Services. 4:15 pm. Helen Eakin Eisenhower Chapel Little Man on Campus by Dick Bibict "I hear he's datin' a real 'beast.' " ■— top of the mall Coffee Break— A Social Pattern The coffee break: The coffee break is indisputably an American institution. We don’t mean that it is peculiar to America. The Tibetans no doubt have their coffee breaks, but the coffee break is an institution of America The sociologists probably would say the coffee break is among our group variables. That is to say that the manner in which people celebrate cof fee breaks varies among the peoples making up our hetero geneous society li's not very revealing to re ly on the authority of a diction ary to fully explain a coffee break. According to the dictionary, a breakdown of the words mak i n g up , the term coffee and break mean: HHHH Coffee: a drink made *■ by in f u s i o n or decoction .JW from the roasted and ground or pounded seeds of coffea ara- HHBfIHHH bica. Break: a for- miss ward cible disruption or separation of parts or a gap. However, this somewhat cold, analytical approach to something as firmly entrench ed in the American mind as the coffee break leaves much to be desired. We can approach the coffee break from the student’s point of view (particularly appropri ate in our present situation). The student naturally as sumes all coffee breaks last 50 minutes—allowing the remain ing 10 minutes of the hour to get to class. But many of us may be disillusioned when we step into business and indus try to find that before we reach management positions, the coffee break will last about 15 minutes—just time enough to put 10 cents into a vending machine for a soggy paper cup filled with what we assume to be coffee. The student also sees the SATURDAY. OCTOBER 18, 1958 TIP I by lynn ward coffee break as a mid-morning or mid-afternoon (for late ris ers) chance to wake up from lecture -grogginess. The hours of 9 and 10 a.m. are probably the most popu lar for the coffee break, since one may have toast or dough nuts in place of, or as a sup plement to, breakfast. After the first cup of coffee, participants are generally wide awake enough to launch into a conversation There are no established' topics for the con versation so it may assume any proportion. If the conversation gets interesting enough, stu dents have been known to cut classes so they won’t have to leave the amiable little group. Rationalization for this gen 'erally sounds something like this. “I probably got more out of that stimulating conversa tion than I would have out of the class I cut.” Research Center Given New Name The Soil Conservation Re search Center on the Univer sity farms has been renamed the Soil Research Center. The new name is more de scriptive of the use of the fa cilities, University officials said. Although a limited amount of research conducted at the center is concerned with soil and water losses, the principal activities deal with irrigation research, soil physics, soil con ditioning and deep tillage.' Prom Queen Applicants To Register by Monday Applications for Junior Prom Queen will be available at the Hetzel Union desk until 1 p.m, Monday. Any junior woman may ap ply and self-nominations will be accepted. A picture of the contestant must bo enclosed with the nomination. Alum Gives Scholarship James P. Armel, alumnus from Wilkinsburg, has willed $5OOO to establish a scholarship at the University. Armel received his bachelor of science degree from the Uni versity ia 1909.