TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1942 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE School of Business To Grant Degrees Twenty-four students have been recommended for the degree of bachelor of science in business by the School of Business faculty. These graduates who will be listed with those receiving degrees at the commencement, May 17 are; Curtis Alloway, John Franklin Baumgartner, Robert F. Bolinger, Walter Philip Buck, Gerald Clausing, Roy Edwards, Denzel Gibbons, George Grist, Richard L. Keck, John Kenneth Kline, William T. Kopp, Richard Learmonth, Robert Little, Edward Love. Dean Mitchelson, C. R. Mong, Jr., John Paul Peters, Howard Rankin, Rae Andrew Riggs, Philip N. Robertson, Floyd E. Rosenquist, John Fred Stubeck, Conrad Lovejoy Voelker, and Milton Eugene Wallace. Quotable Quotes —Associated Collegiate Press "Personalities that are so tangled they cannot get along with themselves or anyone else are very likely to wind up as politicians and reformers. They don't have to be neurotic to get in such positions, but it certainly helps." Herman Goldhammer, professor of sociology at Stanford university, bases his statement on a survey of thousands of individuals and 3,000 social clubs, fraternal orders, trade unions, political clubs, women's clubs, business men's associations and similar groups, and of the personality of their members and officers. Re-Creation Program To Feature Cello Music Cello music will be the main feature on the Noon-tide Meditation program at 1 o'clock tomorrow afternoon. David Draper, college sophomore, will play the cello, and will be accompanied at the piano by Janice Warders, fine arts sophomore. The twenty minute program will consist of "Londonderry Air." "D歌 Song" by Brahms, "Largo" by Handel, "Hymn to Joy" arranged from Beethoven, and others. STRONG TEAMS---meanwhile, Kansas coaches expressed their pleasure at the upsurge of football interest on the Campus. The mentors were confident that the Kansas squad, with its newly acquired running attack and spirit, will give a good account of itself in the remaining three games. (continued from page four) undefeated Medic Kids tackling the Phi Delt's who have a 500 average for two games, the runner-up Sigma Chi squad meeting the cellardwelling Pi Kappa Alpha's, and twice-tied ATO trying to get on the win side by meeting the Phi Gam's who have won one and lost one. Six man teams meeting today were undefeated Battenfeld Hall and Alpha Chi Sigma, the Ramblers and the Jayhawk Co-op team, and Kappa Eta Kappa and the Bulldogs. Verlyn Norris Joins Air Force As Psychologist Verlyn Norris, laboratory assistant in the department of psychology, has enlisted in the Army Air Force and is now stationed at Hanover field. Fresno, Calif. He is a member of the psychology staff under Lt. Evan Stevens who was a student at the University last spring before he joined the Air Force. ... BUY WAR STAMPS ... PSGL Freshmen Meet To Elect President, MSC Member Tonight Freshman members of PSGL men's political party, will meet at 7:30 tonight in the men's lounge of the Memorial Union building to elect the president of the freshman class and a member of the Men's Student Council. The nominating committee of the freshman organization will submit three candidates for each office. They are: for president, George Shapley, Ray Thayer, and Joe Stockard; for MSC representative, Phil Hill, Leonard Diehl, and Bob Ready. Additional nominations will be made from the floor. The election of these two officers within the party is one of the provisions of the Emergency Act for the Temporary suspension of Elections passed by the Men's Student Council last spring. Thrills and Dangers Of Convoy Traveling DO you're bickering because there's precious little fuel for your oil burner and even less for your car? Have you stopped to think what it is costing in human lives to bring you oil and what the men who men our convoys are doing at sea, the dangers they are pursuing every minute they are out in those mine-and submarine-invested waters? An eye-witness view of one-man's harrowing experiences on a Coast Guard Cutter escorting a convoy is told with hair-raising vividness by Correspondent George Durno in the October issue of Cosmonational magazine. All war movements are closely guarded secrets. Mr. Duron's assignment was a blind one. He was rushed to a dock front where a flotilla of Coast Guard cutters were waiting. Tankers and freighters were tied up alongside a British trawler. All the cutters headed out to anchorage. The convoy started out of port, cargo vessels in single file. They were hardly out of port forty-five minutes when a violent explosion rocked the ocean. A big collier in their convey of merchants had hit a Nazi mine. Clouds of smoke and geysering water surrounded the merchantmen. Orders came, signals flew and like a flash subchasers paced toward the sinking ship. Then came a second explosion. The ship capsized. Slowly the collier sank. Men in life jackets were bobbing for the oily waters. Forty-four survivors were dragged to safety, three were missing. The rescued were swiftly put on a shorebound patrol boat. Does walking and driving in almost-pitch-dark streets at night annoy you? Are you impatient because you are inconvenienced? If you were out in mid-ocean, you'd find the blackout even more eerie and uncomfortable. When a lighted match can be seen for several miles at sea and put the lives of thousands of men in danger, heaven help the man who tries to light a cigarette. He'll get a good round cursing from his skimmates. Bad as it is, it isn't all grim. Amid the tossing and turning of the Cutter, John Newman, first-class cook, turned out a chicken dinner with all the trimmings—in a galley big enough to put in your vest-pocket. JAYHAWKS EARN---meanwhile, Kansas coaches expressed their pleasure at the upsurge of football interest on the Campus. The mentors were confident that the Kansas squad, with its newly acquired running attack and spirit, will give a good account of itself in the remaining three games. (continued from page four) Bears have already shown plenty of backfield punch. Citzenry Talks Said one correspondent of the game: "On the Hill or downtown, wherever the citizenry has assembled, talk has centered on the unexpected and splendid showing the Jayhawkers made against a Nebraska team that was rated three touchdowns better than Kansas. And not one group has broken up without thrilling to the possibilities that the Jayhawks had of really beating the Cornhuskers for the first time in 46 years on Kansas terrain." Continued the scribe: "Thus has the buzzing run about a game that saw a newborn Kansas team play well and hard and better than its followers had expected." Snake Blood for Transfusions LAWRENCE, KAN., Oct. ... Dr. Glenn C. Bond, assistant professor of bacteriology, Kansas University, has successfully typed the blood groupings of 100 human beings with extracts of snakes blood. This extract is the serum, the fluid remaining after red cells are extracted. His work shows that snake and human blood contain virtually identical substances. The snake serum worked as readily for typing as human serum. The serpents were rattlers, bull, king, black and water snakes. Freshman Women To Vote Thursday For Class Officers Biologists believe that blood groupings are products of evolution. Unable to trace directly the origins of man's immunizing substances, they are looking among lower animals for enlightenment of antibody mechanisms. In these blood groupings, both human and reptile, are some of the sources of immunity to disease. The various groupings produce antibodies which enable living things to escape infections, or to throw them off after an infection gets a foothold in the tissues. In three other members of the reptile family, namely alligators, turtles and lizards, Dr. Bone has found evidence of immunizing factors in the blood, similar to the human substances. To date the red cells of the serpents have not produced typing substances identical with human. The freshman election of class vice-president and secretary for W. S. G. A. council will be held from 3 to 11 a. m. and from 3 to 5 p. m. Thursday in the basement of Frank Strong hall, Marge Rader, WSGA president said today. A tea for the purpose of introducing the students to the candidates will take place Wednesday from 3:30 to 5 p.m. in the men's lounge of the Memorial Union building. All candidates will be present. The five girls seeking the vicepresidency are Sara Jane Myers, Mary Morrill, Jean Kaufmann, Patty Sloan, and Helen Todd. Candidates for secretary are Peggy Blackburn and Sue Schwartz. Class Volleyball Schedule For Week Announced Miss Rader added, "It will be the first time in years that women will go to the polls to elect representatives who are not backed by combines." Class volleyball competition will continue Thursday night when the Freshmen women's team will meet the junior class squad at Robinson gym. At that time the sophomore women will meet the senior team. The Rev. Fredrick G. Hickey and Prof. J. J. Hanley, both of the chemistry department of Providence College, are manufacturing "sniff sets," containing poison gas samples, as an aid to civilian defense. On Tuesday, Nov. 10, the juniors and the seniors will clash, and the sophomores will battle the freshmen. Control of infectious diseases by stimulating production of antibodies promises to be one of the great advances of medicine. The search among the lower animals is promising. Some of the antibody producers have been found in bacteria. They are well known in higher animals like livestock and monkeys. Dr. Bond is the first biologist to bring in the snakes. An Extensive Wardrobe Is Not Necessary for the Well-Dressed Man or Woman. A Small Wardrobe Properly Cared for Is Better Than a Large One Neglected. Phone 75 NewYork Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPEARANCE E. W. Young Ed Young Ping Pong Entries Deadline Thursday All students wishing to participate in the intramural ping pong tournament are urged to make their entries up at the Memorial Union building by Thursday, Bob Hodgson, Union intramurals chairman announced today. All entries must be in by Thursday, the deadline. So far about 45 entries have been made, and the great majority of these are men. Although there have been no games played yet, some will be scheduled soon. Hodgson hopes to make arrangements so the winner of the men's division and the winner of the women's division can play the respective champions of other universities. George J. Scott Wins Naval Commission No. 6 — Geogge Scott Winns George J. Scott won his Navy wings and was commissioned an Ensign in the Naval Reserve this week following completion of the prescribed flight training course at the Naval Air Station, Pensacola, Florida. Prior to entering the Naval service, Ensign Scott was enrolled at the University for three years, and played varsity track and baseball. He began preliminary training in January at the Naval Reserve Aviation base in Kansas City, completing his course early in March. Ensign Scott will go on active duty at one of the Navy's air operational training centers before being assigned to a combat zone. With An Authentic SCOTTISH BACKGROUND! McGregor Plaid Shirts $6.50 Others $2.25 up When a house with an old Scottish background like McGregor makes a plaid shirt, you can be sure it's right in every respect! All wool, part wool and cotton, all in authentic tartan Clan Plaids. Take your choice! 1. 如图所示,梯形ABCD中,AD = 2BC,AE = CE。