Daily Hansan Tuesday, Jan. 15, 1957 LAWRENCE, KANSAS 54th Year, No.75 Students: Fill Out Declaration Cards For Cars "All students will be required to fill out a declaration card as to whether they intend to have a car in Lawrence during the enrollment procedure this spring." Chief Joe G. Skillman of the campus police said today. Even if the student does not have a car, or if he filled out a card last semester, he must do it again. Chief Skillman emphasized. "Those that previously registered their car in the fall semester, and whose status has not changed, will only be required to report their 1957 state license number, and any change in address," he explained. Most Display Sticker For convertibles, the sticker should be placed in the lower right hand corner of the front windshield, Chief Skillman said. "The registration sticker should be displayed as soon as the registration procedure is completed, he added. "In the enrollment line all students registering their car for the first time will be issued a registration sticker which must be displayed on the rear window on the left side, directly behind the driver." Register New Cars "Late enrollees who did not have an opportunity to register their car in the enrollment line must do so within 24 hours after bringing a vehicle to the campus." "Students who do not have a parking permit and wish to apply for one may do so at the parking and traffic office immediately after their car has been registered." "Students who declare at the time of enrollment that they do not have a car, but later bring a car to the campus, should come to the traffic office and have it registered within 24 hours." Chief Skillman warned Foreign Students: Register Now "Where were you on January 1st?' is a question all aliens in the U.S. on Jan. 1, 1957, must answer according to the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952. "In order to do this," said Bert Chewning, superintendent of the University post office, "each alien must get form I-53 from any post office in the United States, fill it out, and return it to a post office clerk before Jan. 31, 1957." Failure to do this can result in a fine of $200, a 30-day imprisonment, or both. However, should an alien wilfully or inexcusably fail to fill out a report it may result in deportation. Brodrick Takes Office TOPEKA — (UF) — Democrat Lynn R. Brodrick became state highway director today by virtue of a unanimous vote by the 6-member republican highway commission to accept his appointment by Gov. George Docking. —(Daily Kansan photo) Last Kansan Today; Next Issue Jan. 28 Today's issue of The University Daily Kansan will be the last one of the semester. There will be a 1-page edition on Monday, Jan. 28 containing enrollment information and other news. The first complete edition of The Daily Kansan second semester will be published on Monday, Feb. 4. THE SKATERS' WALTZ—"May I have this dance?" may have been the question asked by the student in the foreground, as he attempted to ice skate on frozen Potter Lake. Actually, he was offering assistance to an unsteady coed in distress. The student seated on the ice seems to be waiting for a "lift" from an unconcerned skater in the background. No Black Crepe At KU Bv BOB LYLE By BOB LYLE (Of The Daily Kansan Staff) No question about it. Loyalties were divided Monday night on the KU campus. It was the old battle of books vs. basketball and the results probably won't be known until after final week. Scanning the pages of a textbook for last minute knowledge is one thing, but the temptation (at least mentally) to help Wilt Chamberlain try for two crucial free throws is another. Nobody was ready to hang out any black crepe paper. They were just stunned a little bit. Talk after the game was calm and there's always Feb. 2 to look forward to when And when it was all over and KU, the nation's No. 1 team had lost 39-37 to Iowa State, every KU student within ear-shot of a radio became an armchair coach. A Little Stunned A check of several points on the campus and in Lawrence following the game found nearly everyone ready with the exact score and a like "Well if it had to happen, I'm glad it happened now. I think it will help us," or "Too bad, but we're still going to win the Big Seven title." the Cyclones have to play in Aller Field House. Women students, many of whose closest contact to the game has been the mumbled jargon of a boy friend about "sinking zones" and "ball control," were tossing around words like "charity toss," "three point situation," and "Gary Thompson," with the familiarity of a full-blown Grantland Rice. One young woman, told by a sorority sister that KU was trailing by five points in the closing minutes, suddenly remembered that she had forgotten all about the game. Leaps From Tub Interest in most organized houses ranged from the avid fans who cheered the Jayhawks on from start to finish to those who dropped their books only long enough to make periodic checks on the score. "Oh my gosh," she shouted, leaped from the bathtub, fortunately with the benefit of a towel, and ran soaking wet to the nearest radio to hear the closing moments. However, most houses and places of student recreation and amusement reported that a silence, punctured by sighs and groans—first of relief and then disappointment—were universal during the last two minutes of play. (Related Story, "Iowa State Cracks Win Streak With 39-37 Upset," Page 8) Dilliard To Give W.A. White Talk Irving Dilliard, editorial page editor of The St. Louis Post-Dispatch, will deliver the eighth annual William Allen White Lecture at the University Feb. 11. Small Audience Likes Piano Team BY DONA SEACAT (Of The Daily Kansan Staff) A modern touch characterized the playing of the Appleton and Field piano team at a performance Monday evening in Hoch Auditorium. A small audience attended the event sponsored by the University Concert Course. The program opened with the overture to "The 29th Cantata" by Bach. The works of the classical composers Schubert, Brahms, Bach and Liszt revealed the technical training of the two performers. The "Duettino Concertante after Mozart" by Busoni, a number comprised of question and answer phrases, displayed the duo's similarity of touch and tone quality. Miss Appleton and Mr. Field performed particularly well on "Scaramouche" by Milhaud, "Jeux de Plein Air" by Tailiffee, "Feria" by Ravel and on compositions by Barrok and Copeland. Perhaps the most interesting selection of Monday's concert was the work by Hungarian-born Bela Bartok. Each of the four pieces from "Mikrokosmos" was transcribed by the composer before he died and presented to the piano duo, who introduced them in Town Hall for the first time in 1950. Another composition which Appleton and Field performed for the first time in its entirety in 1947 was "Billy the Kid" by Copeland also presented in Town Hall. Three encores concluded the program. They were "Sheep May Safely Graze" by Bach, "Jamaican Rumba" by Arthur Benjamin and "Capriccio" By Poulenc. The latter, from "Bal Masque," was performed for the first time in public Monday night. (Related Picture, Page 7) Weather Colder this afternoon and east portion tonight, otherwise partly cloudy east, cloudy west with occasional very light snow extreme west this afternoon and tonight. Wednesday continued cold with partly cloudy sky and chance of light snow extreme northwest. Low tonight zero north to 10 above southeast. High Wednesday 10-15 extreme northeast to 20 southwest. They'll Serve For A Full Semester The new staff members will hold these positions for a full semester for the first time since 1942, when the Kansan Board voted 9-week terms for executives. On Dec. 4 the board amended its constitution to again extend the term to a full semester. Other news executives elected Kent Thomas, Ottawa senior has been elected managing editor of The University Daily Kansan for the spring semester. Jerry Dawson, Cisco, Tex., was elected editorial editor and Dale Bowers, Lyndon, business manager. Both are seniors. Both Miss Fenberg and Lyle will be serving their second term in this position. All are seniors. were John Battin, Hutchinson, Felecia Fenberg, Kansas City, Mo., and Betty Jean Stanford, Admire, and Bob Lyle, Kansas City, Mo., assistant managing editors. Bowers selected Dave Dickey, Kansas City, Mo., for advertising manager; Jim Pontius, Wichita, promotion manager; Harold Metz, Kansas City, Kan., classified advertising manager; John Hedley, Coffeyville, national advertising manager and Conboy Brown, Larned, circulation manager. All are seniors. Brown, St. Marys, and George Anthan, Kansas City, Kan., assistant sports editors. All are juniors. Marillyn Mermis, Hays junior, was named society editor and Pat Swanson. Newton sophomore, assistant society editor. Thomas appointed Jim Baman, North Newton senior, city editor; LeRoy Zimmerman, Dwight, and Nancy Harmon, Wichita, junior, assistant city editors; Hiroshi Shionozaki, Tokyo, Japan, graduate student, telegraph editor; Mary Beth Noyes, Troy, and Delbert Haley, Kingsdown, juniors, assistant telegraph editors. Dawson appointed Daryl Hall. Neodesha, and Jim Tice, Kansas City, Kan., seniors, as associate editors. Malcolm Applegate, Topeka was appointed sports editor, and Dick The St. Louis editor will speak at 3 p.m. in Fraser Theater. At 10 a.m. the board of the William Allen White Foundation will hold its annual meeting and at 12:30 p.m. it will sponsor a luncheon to present an award for journalistic merit, given each year to a Kansas editor in recognition of outstanding professional and community service. At 6:30 p.m. Sigma Delta Chi and Theta Sigma Phi, men's and women's professional fraternities in journalism, will honor Mr. Dilliard at a dinner. He was national president of Sigma Delta Chi in 1940-41. IRVING DILLIARD Mr. Dilliard has been editor of the Post-Dispatch's editorial page since 1949 and has been a leader in the investigatory and crusading type of journalism for which that newspaper has received numerous citations, including several Pulitzer Prizes. With Post-Dispatch Since 1927 He joined the Post-Dispatch staff in 1927 after receiving his bachelor of arts degree from the University of Illinois with Phi Beta Kappa honors. He became an editorial writer in 1930. He attended Harvard University as a Nieman Fellow in 1939. Two books written by Dillard are "The Development of a Free Press in Germany, 1945-46; An Aspect of American Military Government" and "I'm From Missouri", published in 1951. He was editor of two other volumes, "Mr. Justice Brandels, Great American" and "The Spirit of Liberty: Papers and Addresses of Learned Hand." He was president of the board of trustees of the Illinois Library Assn, in 1940-41. Also A Magazine Writer Also A Magazine Writer Mr. Dillard has written for numerous magazines, including Harper's, The Nation, The New Republic, The American Scholar and the Yale Law Review, and has lectured at colleges and universities throughout the United States. During World War II he was an Army officer, serving at Supreme Headquarters of the Allied Expeditionary Force and later in the military government of Bavaria. In 1946 he was advisory editor to Stars and Stripes, military newspaper, in Germany. The William Allen White Foundation board meeting, luncheon and lecture are held each year on the birthday of the late Emporia Gazette editor, Feb. 10. Because that is on a Sunday this year, the events are scheduled for the next day. Rolla A. Clymer, editor of the El Dorado Times, is president of the Foundation.