Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday. Oct. 22, 1954 Piano Professor To Give Faculty Concert Monday Miss Marian Jersild, assistant professor of piano, will give the second concert of the Faculty Recital series at 8 p.m. Monday in Strong auditorium. Miss Jersild has returned to the University after a year of study and giving concerts in New York. While in New York, she won the annual instrumental award of the prize was a joint recital appearance in Town Hall with the vocal award winner. Miss Jersiald has won the Phil- truth prize and the Chicago Young Artist's scholarship while study- ing in Chicago. She will open her recital with a group of compositions by early composers, Couperin, Loeillet, Lully, and Schubert. Her program will include "Sonata in E Flat Major, Opus 7," by Beethoven; "Second Piano Sonata," by Hindemuth; the suite, "Poems of the Sea," by Ernest Bloch, and a group of works by Chopin. For three consecutive summers she was a scholarship student of Carl Freeberg in his master classes in Kansas City, Mo. Her Bachelor and Master of Music degrees are from the Chicago Musical college where she was a student of Rudoph Ganz. State Water Drillers Set Meeting Plans About 100 well drillers and others interested in water supplies are expected to attend the seventh annual meeting of the Kansas Water Well Drillers association Oct. 29 and 30 at Emporia, according to Dr. J. M. Jewett, State Geological survey geologist and service secretary of the KWWDA. Program features of the meeting will include discussions on submergible pumps; bit hardening; acidizing; behavior of water in gravel, sand, and other rocks; and the status of the drillers' organization. Five geologists, representing the State Geological survey and department of geology, will attend the sixty-seventh annual meeting of he Geological Society of America Nov. 1-3, at Los Angeles, Calif. StateGeologiststo National Meeting They are Dr. Frank C. Foley, director of the State Geological survey; Dr. Raymond C. Moore, professor of geology; Dr. M. L. Thompson, chairman of the department of geology; Dr. H.T.U. Smith, associate professor of geology, and Dr. Walter Youngquist, geology department faculty member. The State Geological survey will exhibit a geological map of Kansas at the meeting. The map shows the mineral resources, a geologic column of minerals, and a chart presenting trends in mineral production in the state. Dr. Smith will give an illustrated talk on "Holian Sands on Desert Mountains" at the meeting. Use Kansan Classified Ads. AWS House Ups Visit Hours In North, Corbin The AWS House voted yesterday to extend men's calling hours in North College and Corbin hall. The petition will now go to the senate for final approval. The petition, presented by Betty Burke, AWS representative from North College, requested that men's calling hours be extended to closing hours on Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday, with the stipulation that quiet hours be strictly observed at those times. Men visitors would be restricted to the living rooms of both North College and Corbin. The petition specified a trial period, if the rule is passed, to begin at mid-semester and continue until the end of the semester at which time grade averages for the semester would be compared to see if there were any appreciable difference. KuKus to Go To K-State The KuKus, men's pep club, heard a talk by Wayne Replogle, assistant football coach, and discussed plans for the club to go to the Kansas State game last night. Mr. Replogle stressed the importance of pep clubs and praised the University pep organizations for their support of the team so far this year. James B. Miller, KuKu president, announced that bus rides would be available to Manhattan for the Kansas State game, Saturday, Oct. 30. "This is the game we're really out to win," Miller said. "We hope to see a large representation of Kansas fans." He also mentioned that about 10 KuKu members are planning to attend the Southern Methodist game tomorrow and take along the air horn "Jayhawk Call." Skit Explains AWS Rules to Freshmen The Associated Women students presented a rules and regulations skit to freshmen women Wednesday night at North College. The skit explained AWS social rules to the women in humorous form. Betty Lu Gard, AWS president, gave a brief talk on the purpose of AWS and its function in the life of university women. Alberta Johnson, chairman of the steering committee for the intercollegiate AWS convention to be held here next spring, spoke briefly about proposed plans to house convention representatives in the freshman dorms. Use Kansan Classified Ads. Career Hour A new show on KDGU, your campus radio station, sponsored by Chance-Vought Aircraft, Inc., and North American Aviation. A show featuring the best in "pops" and semi-classical music of today, and news about your opportunities in aviation in the future. 9:00 p.m. Monday thru Friday on Around the World Reds Admit Damage To Men, Installations Bv UNITED PRESS Communist China admitted today that Chiang Kai-Shek's bombers and warships had inflicted heavy damage on Red installations and personnel on the mainland. In a propaganda broadcast from Peiping, the Communists said Chiang had sent 523 waves of bombers over the mainland between Sept. 1 and Oct. 10. The Reds said Nationalist warships had lobbed more than 1,200 shells into coastal areas of Amoy, Haiteng, and Tsinkiang. Nationalist planes dropped 900 bombs, fired more than 48 mortar shells and rockets, and carried out 200 strafing missions over coastal villages, killing 31 persons, wounding 131, and destroying 94 buildings. Nationalist forces went into action against the Communists more than one month ago when the Reds began shelling the Nationalist-held island of Quemoy, only a few miles off the China mainland. The Red broadcast said U.S. warships of the Seventh fleet "openly protected" Chiang's ships during the attack. The attack on Quemoy was construed as a Communist preparation for an eventual invasion of Formosa, Chiang's greatest bastion across the Formosa strait. other international developments Paris: Refusal by the French cabinet to approve signing of West German rearmament papers until the Saar dispute is resolved threatened to wreck attempts of the West to bring the Germans into the North Atlantic Treaty organizations. If the dispute is settled, the documents bringing Germany into the Geologists Plan To Attend Parley Five KU geologists will attend the 67th annual meeting of the Geological Society of America Nov. 1-3 in Los Angeles. Representing the State Geological survey and the department of geology will be Dr. Frank C. Foley, director of the survey; Dr. Raymond Moore and Dr. Walter Young, quasi-ministers of geology; M. L. Thompson, chairman of geology, and Dr. H. T. U. Smith, associate professor of geology. The survey will sponsor an exhibit featuring a geologic map of Kansas, a chart presenting trends in mineral production, and publications of the survey. More than 200 talks and discussions will be given. Western camp as a full member will be signed tomorrow. London: Britain's top air research expert, Sir Arnold Hall, told a court of inquiry into the crash of a Comet jet airplane there was no known physical test that would warn in advance of "metal fatigue" which has caused the fuselages of three planes to collapse in flight. Moscow: Sen. Margaret Chase Smith of Maine arrived in Moscow on a brief visit. Mrs. Smith, who is paying her own way, hopes to interview Georgi Malenkov and Foreign Minister Vyacheslav M. Molotov. KU Dames Is An Old Club There is an organization especially for married women. The KU Dames, comprised of wives of students and married women students, is a social group which was started on the campus in 1910. The idea for such an organization spread and today the KU Dames are just one chapter of the National Association of University Dames. The group sponsors interest groups in art and crafts, bridge, and child study. Speakers are invited to address the group at their meetings which are held on the second Monday of each month. All student wives are eligible for membership. Take Note BACHELORS Your lost buttons are replaced and small tears repaired with our free bachelor service. And if your clothes neer altering, we can do that too. Bachelor Laundry & Dry Cleaners 1111 Mass.