Page 3 250 Pass English Proficiency Exam Carol Schatzel, college junior, and Delois Shade, education junior, have been awarded honorable mention for the best writing in the English proficiency examination passed by 250 on March 15. Students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences who passed the English Proficiency examination are: freshman; Jack Collins; sophomores: Jean Basham, John Axline, Lester George Bixler, Mildred Clark, Hugh Adair Cox, Victor William Davis, Sylvia Dyck, Billy Elam Eloise Feuerborn, John Lukeert, Ruth Mirick, Sally Wayne Morrison, Audrey Roberts, Elaine Stunkel, and Harry White. Juniors: Jane Armstrong, Wutliam Arnold, Vonna Dianne Barnhill, Shannon Bennett, Robert H. Braden, Eleanor Burton, James Connelly, Ann Carmichael, Edward Cresswell, Henry Curry, Patricia Cusie, Dale Darnell, Betty Ann Davis, Patricia Ann Davis, James Cox Detter, Mark Devine, John C. Dods, William Doyle, Gerald Dunn, Donald Easter Endacott, Gordon Allen Evy, William Farrar, Kenneth Fendorf, John Fields, Terry Fiske, Kenneth Fligg, Leo Franz, Tom Hall, Karl H. Hanson, David Hardy, Margaret Harms, Lawrence Albert Hedstrom. Mary Hill, Raymond Hogue, Kenneth Halladay, Herbert Horowitz, George Hotz, Nancy Jamison, Wilbur Janzen, Robert Kasper, Donald Kay, Ann Marie Leavitt, Paul Lyda, Martin Lyle, Michael Maturo, Lois McArdle, John McCall, Ted McCoy, Kathleen McKee, Dorothy Mitchell, Larry Dee Mosby, Albert Mulliken, Joan Mitchell, Ruby Nash, James Edgar Nichols, Julia Oliver, Lloyd Pine, Thomas Richmond. Richard Ross, Carol Schatzel Chandler Schaefer, Stanley Shane, Margaret Shulenberger, Phyllis Snyder, Lynn Stewart, Byron Springer, Doris Stites, Robert Talley, Ann Terflinger, William M. Thompson, Ann Wallace, LeRoy Watkins, Fern Watts, Jerry Whetstone, Mary Wiebe, Edward Wilson, Phyllis Wood, and John Yulich. Seniors; Victor Anderson, Donald Belden, Pendleton Camp, John Crowley, John Dougherty, William Doyle, Albert Dunean, Benjamin Franklin Farney, Richard Hadley, Phillip Hanni, George Helmstader, Ronald Holmes, John Jiminez, Thomas Edward Johnston, R. E. Johnstone, Douglas Krys, Bryson Kitchen, Arnold Kottwitz, Jean Letter, Lorene Kottwitz, Forrest Lottman, Alex Mburney, Robert Gene McDonald, Michael McKee, Lloyd McKenney, Patricia Mitchell, Jack Milton Mohler. Kaye Don Moran, Richard Morgan, Grant Morrell, Nelson Perkins, Louis Petrie, Thomas Pratt, Don Rawson, Waunita Rench, Patricia Schulte, James Sharpnack, Richard Shaw, Martha Taylor, Hugo Teufel, Robert Travis, Robert Warder, Jay Dee Whiteford, Claude Wright, Kenneth Yunker, Theoron Fursley, Kenneth Beck, first year law, and Kenith Howard, second year law. Students in the School of Journalism passing the examination are, juniors: Jim Cameron, Audrey Holmes, Margot Baker, Leonard Jurden, Leo Hack, Letty Lemon, Taylor Rhodes, William Slamin, and La Verte Yates; seniors: Jean Susanne Berry, and Mary Eetz, Janet Dearduff. Students in the School of Education who passed the examination are sophomores: Barbara Goering. Sue Harper, Marilyn Kipp, Arlene Lutz, Elizabeth Moran, Edith Sorter, Janice Stone, Richard Thornton, and Charlia Von Guten. Juniors: Donald Augst, Melba Austin, Barbara Bateman, Joan Bennett, Carol Burchfield, Keith Carter, Signe Click, Fred Coombs, Babette Cooper, Alice Lynn Cox, Diana Cruse, Robert Damkroger, John Dodd. Curtis Dolllins, Janet Dougherty, Patricia Duncan, Donald Edwards. Marjorie Englund, Rita Estes, Mary Eversull, Gene Fotopolos, Dorothy Gerber, Marlene Gray, Lyle Hales, Jack Hamgim, Robert Hantla, Eddie Harsch, June Hereford, Elizabeth Hindley, Robert Hubbard, Edwinna Jones, Helen Kite, Dean LeRoy Kopper, Carol Logan, Janice Meisner, Nancy Moore, Wilma Morton, William Percid, Judith Perry, Tot Patricia Powers, Sandra Puliver, Patsy Raines. Wednesday, April 14. 1954 University Daily Kansan Seniors: Sue Anschutz, William Blair, Edwin Gould. Morris Albert Kay, Orville Poppe, Dorothy'Shoup, Ellen Shirley Skinner, Billy Donald Todd, John Towner, and La Verne Wilson. Dorothy Schumaker, Delois Shade, Janice Skauer, Betty Jean Smith, Dorothy Ann Smith, Fred Tarry, Elizabeth Teas, Jane Underwood, Marie Wellman, Patsy Wiley, and William Woody. Students in the School of Fine Arts who passed the English proficiency examination are: sophomore, Roger Haig Johnson; juniors: Eleanor Bell, Susanne Brown, Barbara Elam, Louisa Ellen Hall, Wilma Clarie Hudsonpillar, Kathryn Ann Magers, Jo Ann Quistgard, Norma Lee Stranathan, and Sara Buchannan. Seniors: John Barley, Lynn Burton, Harriet King, Mary Gayle Loveless, Francis Gwinn McClenahan, Jerry Carlos Moore, James Sellards, and Sara Buchannan. Nursing students in the School of Medicine who passed the examination are: juniors, Bonnie Lou Metz, Mary Ruth Purcell, and Mary Taggart; Kathleen Kelly, special student, also passed. Ellsworth to Attend Meeting Miss Maud Ellsworth, associate professor of education, will attend a section meeting of the National Art Education association in Grand Rapids April 12-16. Miss Ellsworth will be discussion group leader on what the art teacher should do to help the architect plan a school building. She will be a member of a panel discussing the problems in training art teachers. Some tree crops are harvested about every 100 years. 'Hawks' 19-Hit Attack Defeats Arkansas 13-4 Backed by 19 hits by his teammates, Loren Martin, a madeover catcher, struck out 14 men here yesterday as the Kansas Jayhawkers overwhelmed Arkansas, 13-4 to sweep the series. Martin, a sophomore righthander, gave up nine hits and six bases-on-balls. He was in trouble only once, in the fifth, when he gave up three singles and two runs. His mates played errorless ball behind him. Forrest Hoglund, third baseman, led the Kansas attack with four hits in six at-bats. Bill Pulliam collected three hits, and John Trombold, Bill Heitholt, Don Aungst, and Martin each chipped in with two safeties each. The victory pushed KU's record to 5-1, four of the victories over Arkansas. Kansas opens its Big Seven season today against Kansas State on the local diamond. Game time is 3 p.m. Trombold, slugging first sacker, smashed his second homer of the series in the seventh inning with a man aboard. Both Hoglund and Martin banged doubles, to round out KU's extra base hits. All of Kansas' 19 hits were charged to Charles Bogan who went the distance. The Razorbacks committed five errors behind Bogan—11 of the runs against Bogan were earned. Had it not been for being hit so soundly, Bogan would have pitched a good game. He gave up only two walks and struck out nine. Kansas combined four singles, two walks, and three errors for five runs in the initial inning, and duplicated that fete in the seventh via three singles. Martin's double, and Trombold's homerun. Johnson to Address Teachers Dr. Charles E. Johnson, professor of education, will be the principal speaker at a dinner meeting of Burlingame elementary and secondary public school teachers tomorrow. The topic of his speech will be "Problems and Trends in Public Education." Send the Daily Kansan Home! Official Bulletin TODAY Pre-nursing club, 4 p.m., room 8. Fitness nurse, 5 a.m., room 8. health nurse health nurse to Topeka will speak Hometown Correspondents meeting, 5 p.m., 305 Student Union. Short meeting. Speaker, Robert Vosper, director of libraries. History club. 7 p.m. Pine room, Mem- sorium. 10 a.m. The United States and the Near East." UVO: 7:30 p.m. Jayhawk room. All visitors invited for signing of spring in situ internum palace. Chinese Student club, 7:30 p.m., Oread room. Student Union Radio Players and candidates. Trouys of "Last Word." 7 p.m. today and tomorrow. Green hall. Contact Russell Wigglesworth, KDGU. If unable to report. Record Dance, 8 to 11 p.m. Trail room, Entertainment, 9 to 11 p.m. Kent Munster, 10 a.m. TOMORROW AWS House meeting, 4 p.m., Student Union. Der deutsche Verein musical program by Harriet King and Dale Moore, 5 p.m. basement of Art Museum, not in 502 Fraser. Kuoku club. 7:15 p.m. Pine room. Studebaker Building for initiation for initiation. All must be pressed. University Women's Club. 8 p.m. Guests of Mrs. Franklin D. Murphy at her home. Miss Kinnane will speak: "The Speaking Voice." Jayhawk Brotherhood, 8:30 p.m., room 205. Memorial Union, Short meeting. 305. Memorial Union. Short message. Le Cercle français se 're unita a sept septem et demme dans la saite 113 Strong. Programma: " I Indochine" par Michel Lambece. AGI meeting. 7:15. Activities Lounge, Union. Psychology club. 7:30 p.m. 9. Strong drama with interpretation by Mies Wieland. $45. KU Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m. 300 KU Christian Norbie will speak on "God—and Calvary." SUNDAY All-student sunrise service, 8 a.m. Campanile hit Music by KU choralist, 6 p.m. Services HOLY WEEK The Lawrence Ministerial Alliance Invites all students and faculty to attend the Union Services being held each evening (through Friday) at the First Presbyterian Church at 8:00 p.m. The Holy Week speaker was chosen with the students in mind. He is Dr. Glenn Olds, chaplain at the University of Denver. He has something to say to students! Don't miss him! Three-hour Good Friday service, 12:00 to 3:00 p.m. at the Trinity Episcopal Church.