PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1948 Arnold Eidus Opens Concerts Student activity tickets will admit students to this series. Other concerts will be by the Cincinnati Symphony orchestra. Gladys Swarthout, Gold and Fizzdale two-piano team, "Barber of Seville," and the Monte Carlo Ballet Russe. Arnold Eidus, violinist, will open the 46th season of the University Concert course at 8 p.m. Monday, Oct. 25, with a recital in Hoch auditorium. Geese Head South Early This Fall Get out your flannels, winter is almost here—if geese going South this early is any indication. Other appearances include recitals at the Hollywood bowl and with Chicago's Grant park concerts in 1947. Mr. Eidus gave his second Carnegie hall recital Oct. 15. This will be his first appearance in the series. He made his first orchestra appearance in New York City at the age of 12, and made his first concert tour two years later. Four Kansas students, Bob Reeche, Jim Seamen, Jack Crawford, and George Ablah, were in a party that bagged two geese Wednesday on the Kaw river four miles below the bridge. In 1946, he gave his first Carnegie hall recital and won the Jacques Thibaud International contest in Paris. The prize included a tour of 38 European engagements, 50,000 francs, and a violin. Dean Smith To Installation Of Emporia College Head George B. Smith, dean of the School of Education, will go to Emporia tomorrow where he will represent the University at the inauguration of the Rev. Paul B. McCleave, new president of the College of Emporia. Swarthout Will Direct KC Choir D. M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts, will direct a massed chorus of 1,000 voices from 60 Kansas City churches on Sunday afternoon, Oct. 31, in the Municipal auditorium. The inter-denominational meeting is a Reformation Day service. Bishop G. Bromley Oxnam will be the principal speaker. The choir will sing "The Heaven's Are Declaring" by Beethevon, and "Hallelujah Chorus" from Handel's "Messiah." Rehearsals are being held at Grand Avenue temple in Kansas City, Mo. ASC Awards Scholarship Albert Poland, graduate student from Italy, has been awarded the $500 A.S.C. foreign student scholarship. Roland is working on his master's degree in English and plans to take his doctorate here before returning to Europe. He is American correspondent for several foreign newspapers and has written book reviews for "Books Abroad," published by the University of Oklahoma press. Sue Webster, Austin H. Turney, and William A. Conboy, members of the A.S.C. foreign student scholarship committee, made the selection. The adviser for the committee was Donald Alderson, assistant deans of men. Fencing Club Elects Fall Semester Officers Officers of the fencing club for the fall semester were elected Tuesday in Robinson gymnasium. They are Norman Ellis, president; Bill Schwarz, vice-president; Pat Perkins, secretary, and Betty Bull, treasurer. Fencing drills began in the gymnasium Tuesday evening. A fencing team will be organized soon. Music Used As Medical Aid "Music is a universal language. It expresses emotions which are understood by man regardless of his nationality or spoken language," Dr. E. Thayer Gaston, professor of music education, said Wednesday at the meeting of the coffee and forums committee of the Union. Doctors and nurses have found that musical therapy is useful in helping patients recover from illnesses, he said. Music opens a way to reality for the psychotherapy and physiotherapy cases. "In treating patients, functional music is used to bring about more or less well defined aims. The therapist does not play beautiful music for the patient. "Functional music can be divided into two classes, sedative music and stimulative music," he said. Stimulative music is staccato notes played in a definite rhythm. Melody is not used because it has an inhibiting influence. The tone of the music is often bass like the toms of the savages. Modern dance music is in this class because it stimulates an individual to action, Dr. Gaston said. Sedative music is legato and soft There are no decisive or incisive beats. The piano is a poor instrument for sedative music because it is a percussion instrument. The church organ is the best sedative instrument, he said. Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism, will speak to business men and women in the Topeka High school tonight. Elmer Beth Will Speak To Topeka Business Group This lecture will be on advertising and public relations. This is the first in a series of five lectures which will be presented in Topeka during a short course in adult education. Professor Beth has taught similar classes in various cities in Kansas NROTC Instructors Speak To Schools Capt. William R. Terrell, commander of the University Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps, will talk to the students of Liberty Memorial High school on Navy day, Wednesday, Oct. 27. "A moving picture entitled, "The Liberal Education," will also be shown. Comdr J. C. McGoughran, executive officer of the unit will address the Beloit Rotary and Lions clubs, and the students of the senior high school on Monday and Tuesday, Oct. 25 and 26. He will show the same film that Captain Terrell will show at the Lawrence school. University High school will present "We Shook the Family Tree," a three-act comedy, Nov. 18-19, in the Little theater of Green hall. UHS To Give 3-Act Play This will be the first time in the school's history that the stage players have come from all the classes of the school. Formerly only seniors took part. The play, which concerns a girl who is tired of being a wallflower, is based on a book by Miss Hildegarde Dolson. The cast will be Hildegarde, Pat Daniel; Mr. Dolson, Carl Sneeeges; Mrs. Dolson, Etta Louise Eads; Sally susana Jonghon; Bob C. J. Elliott; Jimmy, Bruce Perdue; Paige, Nancy Edwards; Ellie-May, Norma Hall; Jill, Ethel May Houk; Freddie Whermer, Lee Barlow; Mr. Shermer, Joe Dunham; and Mrs. Shermer, Margaret Latimer. Bock Campaigans From Bed One member of the Kansas legislature is having to campaign from a hospital bed. Robert L. Bock, Democratic representative from Macksville, has been in Watkins Memorial hospital for a week with glandular fever. Czech Student To Speak To Women Dagmar Horna, graduate student from Prague, Czechoslovakia, will speak Friday afternoon at the state meeting of the Kansas Federation of Women's clubs in Pittsburg. Miss Horna will describe Prague university, where she was an undergraduate student. Miss Horna is attending K.U. on a scholarship provided by the Kansas Federation. Expert Radio Service Beaman's Radio 1200 N.Y. Phone 140 WWW.WWW.WWW. NU-VOGUE Beauty Salon For that Week-end Date .. Call 458 Chic-Short hair Stylings . . $1.00 Manicures . . $1.00 Permanents . . $6.00 up 2nd Floor Professional Bldg 927½ Mass. BASKETBALL! K. U. VARSITY VS. K. U. FRESHMEN Friday, Oct. 22 Hoch Auditorium 9:15 p.m. (Immediately following rally at stadium) ADMISSION 50c