PAGE TWO Navy V-12 News The debunking of scuttlebutt last week seems to have set more wild rumors afloat. In answer to these. rumors we have the follow ing information released by Com mander Wisner himself. The corn plement of the unit next semester will be about 300 men, and to ?handle this number the officer staff ],ere will be increased probably to ,tight or ten men. Since NROTC units are customarily commanded captains USN rather than re serve. officers, we can expect a flew skipper sometime this fall, a - professor of naval science and tac tics. Ordnance and Planning In keeping with these changes is the fact that a new ROTC -build ing is being planned, a building combining the army and navy units and more strictly integrating - the military -training facilities on campus. Meanwhile the sailors will A.e using the Armory at least part time next fall. Ordnance has been ordered, varying in size from colt automatics to ewe-inch dual pur pose guns. The navy boys really have something to look forward to. From the Bridge Lt. Jones, who has spent the That ten days at the Philadelphia gg'aval Hospital, is under observe tfon for possible stomach ulcers. . . . Ina far happier vein we hear that Lieutenant Lawler took the fatal step last Saturday and is now Married to "the prettiest girl in the world," as he phrases it. A!fter a - weekend honeymoon his Phila delphia bride and he are making their home here in State College. Visitors . Visiting over the weekend were Les Szepesi, Red Welch, and Max lJannum. . . . Les, now a second class yeoman, is heading for Shoe maker, California, where he will 11 - Tabu:ll3ly be assigned to a ship. . Red, now a fire'controlman second class, hopefully anticipates advanced fire-control school. . . Max is off for pre-flight at 10hapel Hill where he, Archie Craft, Willie Powell, Dana Belser, and Ben ,A:delstein will swell the Cloud .usters' football squad and at the same time advance toward their DIN Charles E. Mark ro Lecture Today ;Dr. Charles E. Martz, a mem !) ler of the Junior Town Meeting League, will lecture in 201 .Zool ogy at 11 a.m. today. His sub ject has not been announced. Dr. Martz is on leave of ab sence from the Western Reserve University, where he is head of the - history department, in order to senre on the Junior Town Meet ing League in Columbus:O. He is the editor of "Our Times," a weekly newspaper for senior high school, is the president , of the ColuMbia Touch Club, and is ,chair man of the Columbus Foreign Policy Association. A Phi Beta Kappa and a Sigma Xi member, Dr. Martz received Iris B.A. and M.A. from Yale Uni versity and did his graduate work at Yale, Harvard, and the Univer sity of Pennsylvania. From 1919 to 19212 he was head of the history department of Westchester State Teachers College. In 1922 he took his 'present position with Western Reserve University. 10 Students Win Places On Ag School Dean's Lis! Twenty students in the School of Agriculture made an average of • 2.5 or better during the spring semester announced Dean Stev enson W. Fletcher. They are: • Seniors: Charles Lundmark Elystone, Shirley Pearl Boscov, IVlarcella H. B. Chervenak, Julius Pabricant, Nancy Claire Geisse, Maurice Ernst Lehman, Lois Ba hler MOCool and Solomon Segal. Juniors: Isabel Laura Myers and William Thomas Wiest. Sophomores: Mary Eldrid An derson, Carolyn Yvonne Graham, 3). (Elizabeth Nix and Mary Louise Waygood. Freshmen: Mary Jane Gately, Catherine Craig Raup, Vernon Telford Smith, Sara Estella Ste vens and Bertha Frany Wood ring. " Two-year agriculture: Freder ick W. Ernst. 14en Get 24,502 Degrees Of the 30, 586 degrees awarded by the College since 11855, 24)502 'have gone to male 'students. Un til the present war men grad uates traditionally outnumbered Air Corps commissions. Spotlight Trainee Veteran of the Week is Johnny Livingston of Barracks 39, a for mer civilian college student who finished his third semester at Penn State before he left for the Navy. Johnny has served more than 29 months now, 20 of them as a sec ond class boatswain's mate aboard a minesweeper in the Pacific. His ship was the first Allied craft in the Marshall-Islands, entering the Kwajalein Atoll at Roi-lNamur. At the Eniwetok Atoll invasion John ny found that the small ships run their share of danger, too. As the sweeper entered the . lagoon there, a mine exploded, tarrying off all the minesweeping gear and rough ing up the crew pretty badly. Now after taking a refresher course at Princeton, Johnny, a Pittsburgh 'boy, is back on 'campus, this time with a different end in view. Customs Violations Draw Sentences From. Judge Healey Judge Judd Healy and the sev en associate justices of Tribunal handed down the following de crees to the ten most erring freshmen of the week. Jules Steinberg•will continue to wear a sandwich sign and water the willow tree on the mall, be- cause he failed to button to it and showed a lack of knowledge of the campus. • C. C. Truver and Dick D'Ard enne will rise bright and early on Sunday morning to clean the de bris and aftermath of Saturday evening from the malls and sen ior walk. F. E. Selbst, a second of fender, will clean the first floor lounge of Old Main, after he was found guilty of dating, K. G. Budinger - who appeared before Tribunal without a frosh bible, was sentenced to carry his bible in a large suitcase and carry a, sandwich sign advertising the new Players show. Jim Veign who forgot his customs on Satur day night will also help with the advance publicity for the new show. Because he was found guilty of shirking custom, Herald Fah ringer will carry about campus, a ibOard painted to resemble a match. VI. Liebmann, who 'appeared before Thbunal last week, was found guilty again and received an extended sentence for another week. After a short quiz on the Col lege songs and campus traditions it was decided that A. Gugoff should carry a sandwich sign with the message, "I'm a Brain Child," as a final ironic touch. Alex , Osinrak failed to prove that he had a knowledge of the campus buildings and traditions and as a consequence he will hand out copies of the constitution to freshmen as he wears a sign reminding all frosh to read the student constitution. The following were acquitted: J. E. Fair, E. F. Askew, W. D. Rice, and William Zelenka. Frank Evans was exempted from cus toms after proving that he went through customs at Lehigh. All freshmen men will meet on the steps of Old Main at 1 p. m. on Monday. It is important that everyone be there. Violators must report to the Main Gate daily at 1 p. m. Mon day through Thursday. 'THE COT Book Review 'flunky-Johnny' Dr. "Eddie" J. Nichols' new novel, "flunky Johnny," is a fast moving, tough story of a young Slovak-American in love. Dr. (Nichols is a professor of English Composition at the College. Johnny, the main character, is a product of the mill town of Gary, plus four years at the University of Chicago. He lives in two Worlds; never quite able to escape from the ways •of 'Hunkydom to the world of books • and coeds. Shall he rest' content with his Slo vak girl-friend,' Mary Korba, or can he rise to equality with the tart coolness of coed Jean How land? • Three things bother Johnny and constitute the plot of the novel. 'He's crazy about girls. He has an inferiority complex about "white" persons whom he meets at. the uni versity. And he's just a little con cerned about a job after graduat ing into the depression of 1030. Along with this case of adoles cent:jitters, the reader encounters an even more interesting variety of secondary characters. Johnny's father,. still completely enveloped in the language and ways of his homeland; sister Emma beset by husband-trouble and family inter ference; and brother Mike, a ris ing gangster—these provide the meat of the (book. There are glimpses of gangster life around Chicago, a few superficial campus scenes, and good bits of baseball games and dances in Gary,. If there are any "gentle readers" left after 20 years of Ernest Hem ingway, it may be• necessary to warn them that these characters are not such as you'd like to enter tain in your parlor. Dr. Nichols writes of • the region of Farrell's "Studs Lonegan" in the style of John O'Hara. Much of the 246 pages consists of conversation faithfully and frankly handled. Many brief de scriptive touches get a smile of recognition' from 'the reader—the way people sit sideways in big chairs with their legs over the chair's arms, the kick of an auto when the starter catches, the way people handle cigarettes and liquor. Technically this novel is a great improvement oyer the author's first tale, "Danger! Look Out." That one "had an oil refinery as its hero" and enjoyed'only a lim ited sale since oil refineries, how ever well-built, still seem to lack sex appeal. The current novel, though less ambitious, is less clut tered with technical descriptions. Dr. Nichols' literary career be gan with an article on a poem of Lowell in "American Magazine" back in 1932. Then came several articles on jazz in magazines and a sketch of 'Bix Beiderbecke in a book on jazzmen. His doctoral dis sertation in the department of English literature was a historical dictionary of baseball terms, com piled with the assistance of such prominent sports figures as Bill Brandt and Honus Wagner. I With this novel Dr. Nichols sheds completely the dullness and didacticism of scholarship. His baseball lore and his knowledge of jazz appear usefully but • unobtru sively. [He makes his debut as a competent novelist whose charac ters achieve a natural and memor- able existence. W. L. WERNER Professor of English Literature Ddctorate .degrees have repre sented about one-seventh of the 30,586 degrees awarded iby the College since its founding in 1855. Calendar TODAY Frosh Frolic, Armory, 7:30-10 p.m. Summer .Session Lecture, Dr. Charles E. Martz, Junior Town ;meeting of the. Air, 201 Zoology, 11 a.m. TOMORROW . Summer Session, "iliallzapop pin" and "Fun Night," Recreation Rail, 9 p.m. Summer Skip, Armory, 8:20 to 12 p.m. SUNDAY Chapel, Dr. Flory, Professor of nglish, Washington and «Jeffer- Son, Schwab Auditorium, 1 , 1 a.m. Summer Session Supper Hike, Mountain Lodge. At-Home Tea, Hillcrest House, 3 to 4:30 p.m. Newman Club initiation, Phi Kappa house, 2, p.m. • Nittany Freshman rally, 405 Old Main, 4:30 p.m. MONDAY IWIA meeting, 401 Old Main, 7 . • • :Engineer meeting, Armory, 7 p.m. Collegian Advertising Candi dates, 8 Carnegie Hall, 7 p.m. TUESDAY "China and Central American Relations," Dora Ewa Kang, 121 Sparks, 8 p.m. First Semester Collegian candi dates, 8 Carnegie, 7 p.m. Second Semester Collegian can didates, reporters, sports assis tants, 8 Carnegie, 7:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY Common Sense meeting, 10 Sparks, 6:45 p.m. Newman Club Discussion Club, Rectory, Lady of Victory Church, 7 p.m. Red Cross meeting, 1.211 Sparks, 7:30 p.m. Home Economics Lecture, Prof. Ina Padgett, 110 Home Economics, 3:30 p.m. ' THURSDAY IMIA meeting, 401 Old Main, 7 p.m. ASTP's Play Trick On Barracks Leader The Barracks 4 leader is still trying to find the AS'TE's who re cently caused the "explosions" in the barracks. Practical jokers discovered in the chemistry laboratory a com pound called nitrogen tri-iodide which is perfectly harmless when slightly damn or wet. But when the powder becomes dry, even a touch as light is a feather will cause it to explode. Imagine the confusion it caused when it was placed on the doors and floors right before the barracks' leader made his rounds. Summer Showin • • AMERICAN • ARTISTS' • GROUP CHRISTMAS CAR S -AT KEELER'S FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1945 Chapel Dr. Flory Speaks "Earth As It Is In Heaven" will be the subject of Dr. Claude R. Flory's sermon at chapel ser vices in Schwab Auditorium at 1i a. m. Sunday. Dr. Flory is a member of the Department of En glish Language and Literature at Washington and Jefferson Coll ege, Washington, Pa. A native of Nokesville, Va., he received his B. A. at Juniata College, his M. A. and Ph.D. at the University of Pennsylvania, and has studied at Oxford University, England. In 1939 Dr. Flory visited many European countries. He has been professor of English Literature at Washington and Jefferson College since the fall of 1939. , Dr. Flory is a member of the College English Association, the Modern Language Association, Tau Kappa Alpha, and the Ro tary Club. He is the author of , "Economic Criticism in American Fiction" and is a contributor to professional bulletins and to the Rotarian. - Veterans' Staff Plans August Conferences Three conferences for staff members of the Veterans Admin istration from. western Pennsyl vania and five surrounding areas will be held at the College during August, it was announced today by .Hugh G. Pyle, supervisor of informal instruction at the Col lege. The meetings, designed to train Veterans Administration person nel in the methods and techniques of counseling veterans, Will be conducted by specialists from the Administration in cooperation with the College's department of education and psychology. Two of the conferences will be 11-day sessions and each will be attended by approximately 50 vo cational advisers, vocational ap praisers, training officers, and vo cational advisement supervisors. These will be held from August 2 to 14 and August 16 to 28. The third session will, be a two day meeting, August 29 and 30, and will be attended by approxi mately 25 regional office man ; agers. Staff members will be present from the following areas: 'western Pennsylvania. Virginia, West Vir ginia-, Maryland, Delaware, and the District of Columbia. Ar rangements are being made through the College extension services.