EXTRA! UNIVERSITY Daily Kansan 42ND YEAR EXTRA! LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1944 NUMBER 31 Lieutenant Buhl commented, "We all regret to see Lieutenant O'Hara leave, for we feel that his excellent job as executive officer of this activity has been a contributing factor to the success of the naval unit." Lt. T. R. O'Hara, who has been executive and security officer of the Naval Training School for the past two years, is leaving the University Nov. 10, for duty beyond the continental limits, according to Lt. A. H. Buhl, commanding officer. Lt. O'Hara to Leave University Navy Unit The K.U. band will be at the game tomorrow, it was learned today through Professor Wiley's office. Students will be admitted on either their winter session activity books, their receipts for the winter semester, or their series of cards which were given them at the end of the enrollment line Wednesday. Ticket sales for the game are below average, but good weather should bring a crowd for the affair. It will be the next to last home game for the Jayhawks this year. Band Will Play at Game The Clippers from Oatlie have not been impressive so far this season, having been beaten decisively by the Iowa Seahawks while managing to eke out victories over comparatively weak elevens. Last Saturday the navy men were held to a 6-6 tie by the 611th field artillery from Ft. Riley. A consistent star for the Olathe team has been Arnie Langner, 180 pound star fullback. Other above average Clipper backs include Joe Fuste and Walter Herkal. Sam Hunter ... Right end Lee Gregory ... Right tackle Dud Day ... Right guard Wayne Hird ... Center Charles Keller ... Left guard George Newton ... Left tackle Gordon Reynolds ... Left end Jim Weatherby ... Quarterback Charles Moffett ... Right half Dwight Sutherland ... Left half Leroy Robison ... Fullback Jayhawks to Try For 3rd Victory With New Squad The Kansas lineup tomorrow will be almost entirely different from anything seen so far this season. Tackles have been moved to ends, ends to tackles, backs to tackles, quarterbacks to fullbacks, and fullbacks to blocking backs. Coach Henry Shenk has been experimenting all week in hopes of hitting on a winning combination for tomorrow's battle with the Clippers, and he has not hesitated to shift the squad where he has felt it would do the most good. Seahawks Defeated Clippers Probable starting lineup for Kansas. Gunning for their third victory of the 1944 gridiron season, the revamped and untested Kansas Jayhawkers will take the field at 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon in Memorial stadium against the Olathe Naval Air Base Clippers. November 7 Is Deadline For Enrollment Fee Payment Chicago, (INS)—Delegates of 51 nations yesterday began sessions of the international civil aviation conference at Chicago. Preliminary sessions held yesterday consisted chiefly of formal registration of the 700 delegates and today's meeting was the first regular business session at which a postwar blueprint governing air travel and transport will be discussed. Enrollment fees are to be paid at the business office at Frank Strong hall before noon, November 7, the registrar's office reported today. Yesterday was the first day for paying fees. Bandleader for Varsity Jaek Collins whose 10-piece band will play in Hoch auditorium to-morrow night for the first varsity dance of the winter semester. Fifty-one Nations Represented At Civil Aviation Conference Lost Wallet Is Tragedy To Student The opening of college is a thrilling time for any college fraternity. ing time for any college freshman. To Ruth Resiner, 823 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Missouri street, it was a time when she could begin her study of voice in the School of Fine Arts, and she was happy as she went through the line of registration. Her father, H. E. Resiner, an employee of the Lawrence post office, had given her the money for her tuition and other expenses of the semester-$190 in cash. He gave her his worn brown bill fold in which to carry the money, and she noticed his Masonic lodge card in the identification pocket. There was nothing to bar the realization for which she had dreamed ever since she was a high school freshman. Then the blow came. Just as she was about to pay her fees, she discovered the bill fold and its approximate $190 was missing. An advertisement seeks the return of the money which will mean the start of an education. Campus Vote Is Republican By Overwhelming Majority; Polls Busier in Afternoon First Convocation To Be Monday Particularly timely will be Monday's convocation speaker, W.G.W. Woodhead, dean of journalists in China, who will discuss "How War Came to the Far East." Speaking in Hoch auditorium at 10 a.m., he will be the first convocation speaker of the new semester. Recently released from long imprisonment by the Japanese, Woodhead is considered a topmost authority on problems and questions in regard to the Far East and especially China, said Raymond Nichols, executive secretary. The schedule of Monday classes will be: Woodhead has spent 40 years in China and has written three authoritative books about the country's affairs. He was editor of the Peking-Tienstin Times. The British, Belgian, and French governments have decorated him for his public work. Because of his association with emperors, presidents of China, political, social, and industrial leaders of that country, Woodhead has the true picture of the part the Far East has played and will play in this war. 8:30 classes meet ... 8:30- 9:05 9:30 ... 9:05- 9:50 Convocation ... 10:00-10:50 10:30 classes meet ... 10:50-11:35 11:30 ... 11:35-12:20 The University band under the direction of Russell Wiley will play at the convocation. E. F. Beth to Explain Election Tabulation At Open Meeting "Officially, the winning candidate for the presidency will not be known until next January," Professor Beth points out, "because the electoral votes will not be counted until then. Actually, unless the voting is very close, either Mr. Roosevelt or Mr. Dewey will concede the election of the other before midnight next Tuesday. The effort and enterprise of working newspapermen makes such prompt reporting possible. An explanation of how election returns are gathered, tabulated, analyzed, and reported to the nation will be presented at an open meeting at 4:30 p.m., Monday, by Elmer F. Beth, acting chairman of the department of journalism. The talk will be given in room 107 Journalism building. The department is scheduling the talk as a general service to the University and invites anybody interested to attend. Voting in the Forums Board National Politics Poll increased yesterday afternoon, bringing in over 900 votes and giving the Republican party a definite majority in both state and national elections. Two Courses Added For Big Enrollment In English Department Of the votes cast, according to Robert Gibbon, chairman of Forums Board, 349 were for Dewey, 304 were for Roosevelt, 46 for Norman Thomas, and one was cast for Watson, the Prohibition presidential candidate. This gave Dewey 61% of the vote, and Roosevelt 33.8%. Mrs. Helene T. Farrell, assistant instructor in education will teach three more of the added sections. Mrs. Farrell taught last year at University high school. Six new sections of English Composition I and two new sections of English Composition II have been added to the English department classes to accommodate the unexpected large enrollment in these classes, Prof. John W. Ashton, chairman of the *department has announced.* Mrs. John E. Hankins, wife of Professor Hankins of the English department, will teach three of the sections during this semester. Mrs. Hankins formerly taught classes at the University, Professor Ashton said, and had teaching experience after completing her graduate work at Yale, before coming to Lawrence. "Enrollment in English Composition for this semester approaches the number we generally expected in peace time," Professor Ashton said, "and is higher than it has been for civilians for the past few years. Last year, however, we were running more sections for the army alone than are being offered on the whole program this year." Rallying Parties Give Election Send-Off If enjoyment may be judged by noise and merriment, the Republicans, Democrats, and Socialists had a rousing good time at their political rally in Fraser last night. Fainted banners, printed propaganda signs, and a loud speaker system, the latter operated for the benefit of the Democrats, added to the rally's hilarity. The Democratic and Republican speakers, Jack Button and Jack Ramsey, were heckled with boos and cracks and encouraged by cheers, while the Socialist speakers, Sheila Stryker and Sarah Marks, had a quiet but attentive audience. Indiana University's USO celebrated its second anniversary recently with an indoor fair. Bob Gibbon. Forums Board chairman, opened the rally with a short talk and closed it by urging all students to go to the polls and vote. In the balloting for governor and United States senator, the opinion was much more Republican. Andrew F. Schoeppel, Republican, was overwhelmingly relected to the governorship by University students and faculty. The voting for governor was as follows: Schoeppel, 609; Lemon, Democrat, 217; Tamplin, Socialist, 35; and White, Prohibition, 3. Clyde M. Reed was also reelected to the United States Senate. In the polling on the senator, the voting was as follows: Reed, Republican, 516; Thurman Hill, Democrat, 360; Billings, Socialist, 43; and Dubbs, Prohibition, 3. Kansas Not Representative Crowds Come in Afternoon The latest Gallup poll gives Dewey $51\%$ of the nation's vote, and Roosevelt $49\%$, stating at the same time that the race is so close that the figures cannot be relied on absolutely. This makes Kansas, if the vote in this poll is to be taken as representative of the state, considerably more Republican than the nation at large. In a recent survey, Life magazine named Kansas as one of the strongest of the Republican states in the country—one of ten states which will almost surely go Republican in the election next Tuesday. The poll workers in the campus election were busy nearly all yesterday afternoon, and there were times when crowds had to wait at the polling places in order to vote. A great many more of the faculty voted in proportion to their number. Of nearly 300 ballots which were mailed out to the members of the faculty, 153 were returned. The total number of student votes cast was 766. Gibbon stated last night that he was quite satisfied with the way the election was carried out. He said he felt that more students had become interested in national politics through participation in this campaign and election. Thirty-six New V-12's Enroll for Winter Semester Thirty-six new V-12 students have arrived on the campus for the winter semester. Included in the group are 25 new medical students and 11 new V-12 transfers. The medical students will not receive their cadet uniforms until next week. The new V-12's have come from other schools in the Middle West for training at the University,