Daily hansan 50th Year, No. 72 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Tuesday, Jan. 13, 1953 Band Concert To Present Varied Program The annual winter concert of the KU band will feature a varied selection of solos and instrumental ensembles at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Hoch auditorium. One highlight of the program will be an accordion solo by Zora Belle Robertson, fine arts freshman. Also featured on the program will be a baritone horn solo by DeRoy Rogge, fine arts freshman. The program will be one of the best of the season and one of the most varied, according to Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra and director of the band. A trumpet trio composed of Doryse Evans Jr., fine arts senior; Robert Reaster, fine arts freshman, and Victor Weber, engineering sophomore, will also play on the program. The program will include: "Le Caprice De Nanette" from "Petite Fille de Paris"; "The Impressio Overture" from "Mozart"; "Royal Fireworks Music" from "Handel"; "The Lost Waltz" from "Massenet"; "The Boyer Cogph, Trio for Trumpet" JUNE "Band of America" La Ville "Queen of United States" Ventre "I Italian in Algiers Cverture" Rossini "Blue Bells of Scotland, Air and Variations" Pryor "Daughters of Texas" Sousa "Stripes Stripes" Sousa "Finlandia Poem" Sibellus "Music for a Festival, Finale" Jacobs 40 Bodies Found In Plane Wreckage Logan, Utah —(U.P.)— A ground party wallowed through hip-deep snow today toward bodies of 39 men and a woman who were killed Wednesday when their C-46 transport smashed into a Wasatch mountain cliff along the Utah-Idaho border. The dead included 37 GIs from states along the Southeast Atlantic seaboard who had survived tours of duty in Korea and were flying home for discharge. With them was a crew of three, including a stewardess. The Army had chartered the plane from Associated Air Transport company, San Antonio, Tex. The Civil Air Patrol major who first spotted the wreckage described it as a "heap of garbage." A pair of Air Force para-medics who dropped near the wreckage of the twin-engine Curtis Commando reported by radio that death apparently was instant for all those aboard in the crash. Fire left only a tail section jutting out from a cliff as a recognizable aircraft part. Weather The April-in-January temperatures which Kansas has had are due to tumble, weather forecasters said Pilot Lawrence Crawford of San Antonio had radioed at 3:58 a.m. Wednesday, three hours after leaving Seattle, Wash., that he was on course, flying southeast at 13,000 feet. The plane was heading northwest 180 degrees off course, when it struck at an altitude of 8,600 feet. today. A cold front reached northeastern Nebraska early today and moved slowly toward Kansas. Colder weather and cloudy skies will come to Kansas, but no great precipitation was expected to break the moisture COLD OF FAIR shortage of January. Some of yesterday's readings broke Jan. 12 maximum records. All of Kansas except the northeast# had above freezing weather last night. Parking Applications Now Being Accepted Second semester parking applications will be accepted starting today, Joseph Skillman, chief of campus police, reported today. Students wishing to renew first semester parking permits must go to the traffic office and sign an application card. After an application has been approved by the parking committee, it will be sent to window No. 4 at the business office where students may pick it up. All students owing unpaid parking fines are urged to pay them immediately to avoid delay during registration. Dennis E. Henderson, college junior, was unanimously elected president of FACTSparty last night. Jane Snyder, engineering freshman, was elected secretary over Joan Sargeant, college freshman. FACTSElects Party Officials During the meeting FACTS voted to go on record in favor of Henderson's bill. It establishes a state legislative committee to act as a liaison group between the student body and the state legislature. FACTS announced that seven of its 13 political planks have been acted upon. They have begun action upon the eighth: establishing a sub-post office in the Student Union building. A committee was appointed to confer with Union Director Frank Burge. They are Marc Hurt, college sophomore, chairman; Miss Snyder, and Lou Ann Smee, college junior. FACTS reported that since Pachacamac had done nothing about establishing a central purchasing center in the Union, it was going to undertake the project. Appointed to that committee were Wilbur Gants, college freshman, chairman; Bob Laughlin, engineering sophomore, and Miss Sargeant. John Dougherty, college sophomore, was appointed chairman of the activities committee. Dr. Max Moody, graduate who finished his Ph. D. examinations Jan. 10, will leave for Atlanta, Ga., where he will be attached to the Communicable-Disease center as an assistant scientist. Shirley Thompson, education senior, reported on revision of FACTS constitution and bylaws. She also summarized a letter from Rutgers university seeking abolishment of discriminatory clauses in campus organizations. Chet Lewis, former president, pointed out that FACTS has grown into a political organization of 300 members in the last three years. Lewis was one of the charter members of FACTS. Dr. Moody has been working on tularemia on a project sponsored by the Office of Naval Research.' It is directed by Cora M. Downs, professor of bacteriology. Graduate to Study Diseases At Georgia Medical Center Kansas State Historical Society Topcka, Ks. Ike, Lieutenants Resume Plans For GOP Rule New York—(U.P.)-President-elect Eisenhower, his cabinet, and administrative high command resumed their two-day pre-inaugural conference today to map plans for launching the new administration. His press secretary, James Hagerty, indicated the Republican high command would keep the conference going at a fast pace throughout most of the day. The President-elect held today's meeting in the same private rooms in the Commodore hotel where yesterday he met with his full cabinet for the first time. Mr. Eisenhower arrived for a premeeting planning session at 8:15 a.m., earlier than his usual arrival hour, and remained working by himself until joining the cabinet at 9:34 a.m. The meeting started two minutes later. Reports had been provided by Joseph M. Dodge, the next director of the budget. The President-elect entered the chambers followed by Vice President-elect Richard M. Nixon. With only one week remaining before his inauguration as the 34th President, Mr. Eisenhower set up an agenda for speedy executive action the instant the Republicans move into office. He spent almost five hours yesterday with 22 members of his high command. Newsmen received only a bare statement on what was discussed at the secret meeting. Gov. Douglas McKay of Oregon, who will be Secretary of the Interior, came away well satisfied with the meeting. "It was a discussion of the future duties of the administration—foreign and domestic, if you want to add that," Mr. Hagerty said. Teacher evaluation sheets will be passed out by instructors to students in their classes starting today. "The President-elect outlined for us the real topics or problems, if you want to call them that, ahead of our administration," he said. "Then he threw the meeting open for discussion." Evaluation slips were first distributed by the campus affairs group three years ago. They were accepted favorably at that time, so the All Student Council appointed a committee of five to carry out the project this year. Evaluation Sheets To Appear Today Purpose of the evaluation sheet is to help the instructor improve his teaching technique. The sheets are returned to the teacher after final grades are out. No one sees them but him, and he doesn't until after that date. Committee members are Grace Endacott, fine arts senior; Betty Knupp, college sophomore; Margaret Latimer, college sophomore; Kenneth Merrill, business senior; and Bryan Wilson, engineering senior. But there was an atmosphere of quiet sadness, too, when he left the governor's mansion at Springfield, Ill., where he had spent four contented years. The smiling Stevenson yesterday formally relinquished his duties as governor to Republican Gov. William G. Stratton. Stevenson had said many times he did not want the Democratic presidential nomination, but only another term as governor—a job he relished. Chicago — (U.P.)— Adilai E. Stevenson, who relieved the great strain of a fatiguing, months-long presidential campaign with joking good humor, stepped out of public life with a quip and a smile. The defeated presidential candidate spent the night with friends and planned to go to his Libertyville, Ill., country home today to "unpack." RAYMOND STUHL He said he would leave "next Monday or Tuesday" for a vacation in the British West Indies. Not far off, too, is a "purely personal" tour of the Far East. "My last four years have been crowded and fruitful years," Stevenson said. "I leave with the feeling I have done my best in the enormous assignment with which you have honored me. Adlai Leaves Public Life With a Quip When he escorted Stratton to the inauguration, Stratton commented that he had two daughters and Stevenson had three sons and said "my family ran to girls and your 'family ran to boys.' "If I have in any measure fulfilled your confidence, I will be richly rewarded." "Well, we're both unbalanced," Stevenson answered. Assistant Dean to Conference Dr. Arthur W. Davidson, assistant dean of the Graduate school, will attend a meeting of regional counselors of the Army office of Ordnance Research in Durham, N.C. Jan. 15-16. Dr. Davidson, a distinguished research chemist, is counselor for this district. Professor to Solo At Concert Tonight Assistant Dean to Conference Raymond Stuhl, associate professor of cello, will be soloist in the Little Symphony orchestra concert at 8 tonight in Strong auditorium. FACTS Plans to Organize Greeks FACTS party today announced that it is making a move to organize fraternity and sorority people who, though sympathetic with FACTS policies, come from houses which do not support the party. Georgia O'Daniel, college sophomore of Alpha Chi Omega, is chairman of the sorority of the "Greeks for FACTS" committee. Dave Treadway, college senior of Acacia, and John Dougherty, college sophomore of Phi Gamma Delta, are co-chairmen representing fraternities. "Through closer organization and activities of Greek FACTS members," Treadway said, "we hope to further the breakdown of the Greek-Independent split at the political level." He added that plans are being made for future meetings of the entire group. "The immediate aim of the committee is to remind members of sororities and fraternities that they now have a choice of party affiliation," Treadway said, referring to a bill recently passed by the All Student Council which provides for party registration as part of class enrollment procedure. He will be heard in "Caprice" and "Elegy," two pieces for violin-cello solo and chamber orchestra by Frederick Delius. The British impressionist, Mr. Delius, became blind and almost paralyzed in 1924. For the last 10 years of his life he was forced to rely on the services of his secretary, a gifted composer from Yorkshire named Erie Fenby. Mr. Delius's highly poetic, sensitive style was far removed from the composition techniques of his contemporaries. He not only failed to understand them but on occasion bitterly assailed them. There will be no admission charged. Other works on the program will be Overture to "The Escape from the Harem," Mozart; "The Fifth Symphony," Schubert; "Introduction and Allegro," Berezowsky, and "Overture to an Italian Comedy," Arthur Benjamin. Morse Ousted From Committee Washington — (U.F.)— Senate Republicans moved today to oust rebel Sen. Wayne L. Morse from two choice committee spots and the Oregon independent promptly charged them with "punitive" and "terroristic" measures. A Senate GOP caucus refused to assign Morse to legislative committees. But it left two vacancies available to him on relatively minor committees—public works and District of Columbia. The effect of the action was to bump Morse from his seats on the important armed services and labor committees. Morse, who resigned from the Republican party during the presidential campaign, took the senate floor as soon as Republicans and Democrats submitted their committee nominations. He charged the GOP with using "punitive measures." He called the move "a terroristic device . . . to compel compliance and insure subordination." Future meetings and speakers are: Jan. 20, "The Nature and Treatment of Mental Illness," Dr. Adams; Jan. 27, "The Child," Dr. Laybourne; Feb. 3, "Conditions that Promote Mental Health," Dr. Escudero. Dr. Milton Kirkpatrick, director of the Greater Kansas City Mental Health foundation, will speak at 7:30 tonight at Liberty Memorial High school on "A Program of Mental Health." The program, designed to acquaint the public with problems of mental health, is being sponsored by University Extension, the School of Medicine, the Bert Nash Mental Health clinic, Lawrence Adult Education, Douglas County Medical society, and Douglas County Board of Health. The lecture is the second in a weekly series of lectures, "Mental Health in Your Life." Mental Talk Set Tonight Today's Daily Kansan Starts New Column Campus Events This Week, a new column, makes its first appearance in today's issue of the Daily Kansan. @ This column will list campus plays, concerts, recitals, basketball games, and other events of general interest which are taking place during the week. The new column is not intended to replace the Official Bulletin and it will not be open to organizations and clubs for listing their social events. ---