Here on the Hill---- PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY, JUNE 1, 1941 Special Hill Festivities Commence After Finals Looks like this is going to be one year when it will be a job to get students to go home after finals. The seniors, of course, are waiting around for a nice rainy day to be graduated on. The Chancellor's next weekend visitor is enough to hold male underclassmen on the Hill. Mary Pickford will be the Malott's guest—lucky people! The rest of us will stick around to see how the Seventy-fifth Anniversary celebration and the Coronado Eutrada will pan out. We'll wander around in a daze—gaping at hitching posts, coaches, Indians, cowboys, and beautiful girls in hoop skirts. That is, of course, after we finish the other half of these confounded finals. The old coffee-pot is just about due for a rest now. MILLER HALL . . . house guest Monday and Tuesday was Mary Bolton, Sterling. ENGAGEMENT was announced recently of Pauline Roth to Dane Bales. Bales is a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon They plan to be married this fall. 1234 OREAD guests this week were Mrs. M. J. Hartley, Ottawa; Mrs. Howard Harman, Tongonoxie; Mrs. Jessie Epperty, Lawrence; Mr. and Mrs. John Laker, Ft. Wayne, Ind., and Helen Curtis, Iola. SIGMA PHI EPSILON ... weekend guest is Allan Dougherty, Topeka. ...dum guest Friday was Helen Curtis, Iola. PHI DELTA THETA ... Friday dinner guest was Bud Risdon, Lawrence. SIGMA NU . . . guest Saturday was Miss Nancy Shinn, Topeka. . . . Tuesday guest was Dave Young, Indianapolis. . . . announces the pledging of Hugh McCall, Ulysses, and Tom Schamaun, Dighton. TAU KAPPA EPSILON SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON ... dinner guests last night were Chic Sailes, Jack Reeder, and Ottis James, all alumni of Kansas City, Kan. . . . Friday dinner guests were Teddie Comley, Barbara Benton, and Norma Sloan. . . dinner guests Friday were Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Meeker, St. Joseph, Mo. ALPHA CHI OMEGA MU PHI EPSILON . . honorary music sorority, installed the following new officers Tuesday: president, Lois Worrel; vice-president, Helen Cronemeyer; recording secretary, Eileen Martin; corresponding secretary, Juanita Austill; treasure, June Cochren; chorister, Erna Carl; warden, Olga Carl; chaplain, Minerva Davis; historian, Kitty McGauhey; and alumni secretary, Irene Oliver. The pose couldn't be more appropriate. This is how you'll feel when you come out of that last final. And this is the dress to don. With slimming lines and tricky pockets, it's an outfit to send you into a busy summer with extra enthusiasm. KAPPA ALPHA THETA ... announces the engagement of Becky Lou Tremblay, college sophomore, Lawrence, and James Colt, college junior, Manhattan. ... dinner guests last night were Colonel and Mrs. Kernodle, Kansas City, Mo. . . . alumna guest this week was Betty Mutchnia, Atchison. TEMPLIN HALL . . . dinner guests Friday were Theodore C. Landon, Annie B. Sweet, and Peggy Ann Landon, Topeka; C. C. Stewart and Tony Hill, Lawrence; and Mrs. Lillian Bary, Leavenworth. GAMMA PHI BETA ... had their annual senior dinner Monday night. Sigma Phi Epsilon Initiates Krueger GAMMA PHI BETA COURTLAND, N. Y. (UP) -State troopers are trying to figure out who was who in a collision of two automobiles. The driver of one machine was Donald Fox, 17. His passenger was Donald Fox, 17. Fire Alarm Written Names Duplicated in Crash Karl Krueger, conductor of the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra, will be initiated into Sigma Phi Epsilon at 11 o'clock this morning. Among the prominent members of the fraternity who will be present at the initiation are Judge Earl W. Frost, Grand Marshall of the fraternity, David H. Fisher, district governor, Judge Walter Huxman, and Justice Hugo T. Wedell. DE LUXE CAFE Following the initiation, a banquet will be held in the Kansas room of the Union building. Faculty guests at the banquet will be Dean D. M. Swarthout, Dean Paul B. Lawson, Dean F. J. Moreau, and Prof. Russell L. Wiley. Our 22nd year in serving K.U. Students Mr. Krueger's initiation comes to him as a tribute for his work with the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra. He will leave immediately after the banquet for New York City. Next week he will embark for an extensive tour of South America where he will conduct various orchestras. 711 Mass. St. Summer School Will Have Library Class The University will offer two short courses in library service, designed to meet the requirements of the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools, during the summer session. A course in cataloging and classifying, three hours credit, will be taught by Miss Helen Titsworth, head cataloger. and Miss Laura Neiswanger, classifier. Students desiring to enroll in the course should make application ahead of time, according to C. M. Baker, director of libraries, because the number permitted to enroll will be limited. High school library administration, three hours credit, taught by Miss Lauretta Trickey, reference librarian, is the name of the second course. Both courses are open only to seniors. A new requirement of the Nortl College Campus A Haven For War-Tired Refugees Philadelphia — (UP) — Haverford College has become a haven for 30 men and women of prominence in Europe. Refugees of nations swept by war or ravished by political animosities, these men and women —and one 9-year-old girl—have found new homes at the school. In the group are lawyers, university professors, a sculptor, a German poet widely-known for his translation of American Negro verse, the former headmaster of Vienna's largest high school, and a Spanish customs service official who taught his country's language to British generals at Gibraltar. Most of them have received advanced university degrees. Many were honored by their governments in the days before a "new order" arose. Today 15 of this group live together in one campus home. The others live in the homes of Haverford faculty members. But the entire group has joined in organizing the Co-operative College Workshop Their Americanization is being speeded by the joint efforts of the Friends Service Committee, which arranged for their homes at the college, the Haverford Friends Meeting, and students and instructors at Bryn Mawr and Haverford colleges. The exiles also visit classrooms in nearby schools to "discover" their adopted land further. designed by the exiles to help them serve the community while they are becoming adjusted to their new lives. And while they meet in frequent seminar discussions at Haverford, one of four refugee centers established by the Friends Committee in the United States and Cuba, they scarcely ever discuss the war. "America has given us hope and courage," the refugees explain. "At least we are out in the open air, free of the suffocating smoke of Europe's incessant wars. We enjoy this so much we hardly ever talk about the war among ourselves." To Land Man Put On Thinking-Cap Preferably Red New Orleans, June 1. — (UP) American girls should pray for the right man to come along, a leader of thousands of young women believes. "But they mustn't just sit back and depend on prayer," Miss Dorothy J. Willmann of St. Louis, executive secretary of the central office of the Sodality of Our Lady, said when she came here to speak before a Sodalties convention. "Despite the furore over the modern career woman." Miss Willman observed, "the chief interest of Miss America still lies in the age-old problem of getting her man. "More young women have questioned me on this subject than on any other. I tell them the best way is to pray for one—the right one. But they mustn't just sit back then “It’s important to develop a many-sided mind,” Miss Willmann reminded. “A girl should become in music, in economics. "That last point is vital because young men are worried about that subject just now, and every girl should be familiar with it. "Naturally," she added, "the girl should make the most of her appearance. But I think that is a secondary consideration." Miss Willmann contended that Central association which will go into effect in 1943 requires all librarians in high schools of 400 to 800 students to have at least 8 hours credit in library courses. young people today are "just as fine as they ever were." "They are more nervous, more highly-strung than their elders," she added. "But if any of the present youth are spoiled, it's the fault of the older people. They've made this the machine age, the luxury age—if that's what it is." Miss Willmann said she has discovered that a majority of girls want security more than any other one thing in life. Girls who are gloomy or moody, she advised, should go out and buy a red hat, or a pair of shoes, or see a movie. Weaver's