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,T*., IHE immm i 'olume IX MUNDELEIN COLLEGE, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, OCTOBER 18, 1938 No. 2 Holy Father Urges Catholic Colleges To Guard Liberty Encyclical Course Opens Day Announcement Is Made ' Last Thursday, the metropolitan press announced that His Holiness, Pope Pius XI, in a message to the Catholic Univer sity of America, had called upon Catho lic colleges to guard, through their teach ing, the individual liberties which are be ing assailed by subversive influences throughout the world today. And on last Thursday morning, as if in anticipation of the Holy Father's plea, the College inaugurated the course in Papal Encyclicals, which is being con ducted with the approbation of His Em inence, George Cardinal Mundelein, by two members of the faculty of his Sum mer School of Catholic Action, the Rev erend William Boyd and the Reverend Francis J. Trainor. This is the second occasion on which the College has introduced into the cur riculum courses especially recommended by the Holy Father and by Catholic leaders. In 1934, at the request of the Cardinal, the department of sociology and social work, now one of the largest in the school, was organized. The course in Encyclicals is designed to carry out ihe Holy Father's wishes, bringing to bear upon the most pressing problems oi the day the full force of those principles of justice and charity in which alone they will find their solution. 1200 Delegates Attend Catholic Press Conference Review Editor Conducts Forum on Fiction Stressing faith and reason as the basis of all Catholic journalism, the second. Catholic Educational Press Congress met at Marquette university- high school, Milwaukee, last week-end. Over 1200 delegates representing schools from coast to coast in the United States discussed means of achieving the end of Catholic writing the promulgation of truth among the thousands of people who today are seeking the solution to the problems of existence. I'nder the chairmanship of Dean J. L. O'Sullivau, director of the Catholic School Press association and head of the school of journalism at Marquette university, the program included lee tines by the Reverend Gerald P. Phcl- an, director of the Institute of Med iaeval Studies, Toronto: the Rever end Charles P. Gillis, editor of the (Continued on Page 3, Col. 2) I Dr. Roy J. Deferrari Praises Women's Colleges The Catliolic college for women is the wonder of the educational world, de clared Dr. Roy J. Deferrari, secretary general of the Catholic University of America, in an assembly address on Oct. 4. On the basis of 10 years of practical observation of the Catholic college, Dr. Deferrari contends that the rapid growth and phenomenal success of Catliolic col leges for women in the United States con stitutes a decisive refutation of the theory that three generations of development are necessary before a college can become a distinct influence in the educational world. Papal Dignitaries Are College Quests Two members of the official house hold of Pope Pius XI visited the College on Oct. 14, en route to the National Eucharistic Congress in New Orleans. Monsignor Alberto Arborio-Mella di Sant'Elia, Maestro di Camera di Sua Santita, and Monsignor Er- manno Bonazzi, Pontifical Master of Ceremonies of the Holy See, were accompanied by Monsignor Joseph P. Morrison, rector of Holy Name Cathedral, and the Reverend Thom as F. Friel, director of the Chicago Pilgrimage to New Orleans. Following a tour of the building, Monsignor Mella conferred upon the Faculty the special blessing of His Holiness, Pope Pius XI, and, re marking the importance of the high er education of women, commended the great work being done at Mun delein College. Of all the places I have visited, Monsignor Mella concluded, no where have I felt more joy and con tentment about Catholic education than I have here at Mundelein. Drama Season Opens With One-Act Plays On the evenings of Nov. 13 and 14 the drama department will officially inaugu rate the college drama season presenting three one-act plays. There will also be a matinee performance on Nov. 12. Peace In Our Time, a serious play with an English setting, concerns a cha otic international situation which might be timed: The Present. The Trail ok the Chinese Dragon is a costume production, depicting the conflict between the old order and the new in China today. Contrasting with the serious themes of the other two plays, Everybody's Doing It portrays the humorous complications which arise from a well-meant effort to ward personal beautification. Informal Cotillion, Loyola Tea Dance, Open Social Season The Sophomore Cotillion, which will be held on Oct. 28, and the Loyola-Muu- delein tea dance, scheduled for Oct. 20, hold the current social spotlight. The tea-dance, arranged by the Student Activities Councils oi Loyola and Munde lein, is under the chairmanship of Ger aldine Connell and Roger Slattery. It will be held in the Mundelein gym nasium, from 3 to 5 p. m., with a nine- piece orchestra providing music anil with tea served in the tea-room. The Cotillion, which will be in the new ly decorated Boulevard Room of the Ste vens Hotel, with Gay Claridge's Orches tra providing music, is the first off-cam pus social affair of the year, and the first all-college party sponsored by the Class of 1941. Social Chairman Margaret Byron and Sophomore President Ruth McCormick predict that the Cotillion will be the larg est of its kind in college history, judging from the popularity of bills, which went on sale last week. Jane Rohol, chairman of the Chaperon committee, has announced that the fol lowing sophomores' parents have ac cepted invitations to act as chaperons: Mrs. and Mrs. John Edward McCor mick, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred H. Rohol, and Mr. and Mrs. Harold O'Connor. James O'Donnell Bennett Qives Books to Library James O'Donnell Bennett, star feature writer of the Chicago Daily Tribune, re cently presented a 24-volume Thistle Edi tion of Robert Louis Stevenson's complete W orks to the college library. Bound in brown buckram with gilt edges, the set bears Mr. Bennett's personal bookplate and contains annotations of passages which he found particularly interesting. Plan Cotillion Ruth McCormick, class president, and Margaret Byron, social chairman, meet on the library steps to discuss the Sophomore Cotillion. Hungarian Artists Open Musical Series; Students Appear in Fall Concert Roth Quartet Will Play Here on Oct. 21 Twelve seasons of continuous playing both here and abroad will be completed this winter by the distinguished Roth Quartet, chamber music group, which will open the Musical Series with a concert in the college theatre on Friday, Oct. 21. Particularly renowned as interpreters oi Beethoven, the ensemble will include in its Chicago program this composer's Quartet in F Minor, Op. 25, the Dohnanyi Quartet in D Major, No. 2, and the Quartet in D Major, Op. 76, No. 5, by Haydn. Despite the length of their career and the magnitude of their reputation (Uiey have been compared to the Flonzaleys and the Kneisels by outstanding critics) the mem bers oi the group are comparatively young men. Hungarians by birth, they are now American citizens. This initial concert will be followed by the presentation of the Vienna Choir Boys on Sunday, Nov. 20 and the appear ance of Frank Sheridan, prominent pianist, on Sunday, Feb. 19, to complete the cycle of three concerts which comprise the first Mundelein Musical Series, which has been inaugurated as a supplement to the cul tural life of Mundelein students and Chi- cagoans in general, this season. Catholic Artists Seek Unification In Ideals, Methods Launching a concerted effort to pro mote the appreciation of the vast herit age of Catholic art and o encourage creative expression among talented stu dents, delegates from 70 schools at tended the conferences and the exhibit of the Catholic College Art associa tion, held here last week-end. Particularly striking among the pro fessional exhibits was a seven-foot oil of Pope Pius XI, for which His Holi ness posed at the Vatican. The artist, the Reverend Angelico Koller, S.T.D., S.C.J., of Sacred Heart Monastery, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, also submitted an oil of the Holy Family. Other professional artists whose paintings were on exhibition are the Reverend E. J. Dowling, S.J.; Brother Hilarion, C.S.C.; Sister Augusta, S.C.; Sister M. Cassiana Marie; Sister Mary Carmelyn, B.V.M., Sister Immaculee. S.P., Sister Genevieve, R.S.M., Sister Mary Fleurette, B.V.M., Sister Norbert. R.S.M., Sister Leo. Sister Hilda, Sis ter Helena, O.S.F., Sister Aneta, Sis ter Philomene, Albert Dasehback, (Continued on Page 3, Col. 4) Present Comedy Script On Second Broadcast Psychology To the Fore might be an academic title for the first dramatic sketch of the year, to be presented as the second program on the college's weekly broad cast through Station WCFL. At 1:30p. m. tomorrow. Lucille O'Con nell, Helen Coens, Martha VanDyke, Isa bel Molloy, Marie Vonesh, Loretta Calnan, and Mary Virginia Ullman will appear in a comedy script center ing around a family conspiracy to thwart the romantic illusions of a pa- tential art student. Caecilians Will Give Fall Concert Sunday The first all-student concert, Oct. 23, will appeal to a wide range of preferences, including many of the better-known works of the three main schools of composition. What might be designated as the Classic portion of the program will consist of the third movement of the Mozart Concerto in D minor for the piano, which will be piayed by Ruth Perry, with orchestral IKirts at the second piano performed by Agnes Griffin. From the Romantic period, the Chopin Polonaise, Op. 53, and The Maiden's Wish by the same composer, arranged by Liszt, will be executed by Mary Louise Sayre, senior piano major. Play Saint-Saens Number Virginia Parr, pianist, and Virginia McGuinn, organist, will combine their talents in the Hanke arrangement of Saint-Saens' Le Cygne, and Virginia Cor rigan will interpret Batiste's Offertoire tie St. Cecilc for organ. Walter Flandorf, director of the Glee Club, has made a special arrangement of Lehmcr's Indian Suite which will have its initial presentation on this concert. To gether with Herbert's Lullaby from Na- toma sung by Betty Lou Deppen, Cad- man's From the 'Land of the Sky Blue- Water, sung by Allele Parrish; The Dawn, sung by Violet Faulkner, and MacDowell's Concert Etude Op. 36, played by Jeanne Theis, the choral group constitutes the Modern section. Present Schumann's Dedication Schumann's Dedication will be present ed by Mildred Stelzer, followed by Da vid's Thou Lovely Bird and Saar's In dian Summer, sung by Gertrude Collins and Margaret Jordan, respectively. An additional feature of interest will be the performance of the Lent movement from the Schumann Concerto, Op. 129, which will be contributed by Chestera Xicwinska, senior cello major. Four violin selections will include the Andante from the Wieniawski Concerto, played by Margaret Madden '38; La Capricciosa, by Ries, played by Frances Piskozub: Serenade du Tsi- gane, by Baldez, played by Betty Mc- Caughey, and the Andante from Men delssohn's Concerto, played by Mary Jeanne Mravec. Serves on Committee For Deans' Convention Sister Mary Bernarda, B.V.M., dean, is a member of the publicity committee for the nineteenth annual meeting of the Illi nois Association of Deans of Women, which will convene at Mount Vernon, Il linois, on Oct. 28 and 29. Central theme of the meeting, whose purpose is to discuss and solve mutual problems, is Social Adjustment as a Goal Through Individual Responsibility. Miss Harriet M. Allyn, dean of Mount Holyoke college and president of the Na tional Association of Deans of Women, will be principal speaker at the meeting. Speakers at the Saturday morning panel discussion of the topic Developing Individual Responsibility Through School Activities include Mrs. Lavinia Watkins Hess, dean of women at Millikin unver- sity; Miss Corinne R. Smith, dean of women at Wheaton college; and Miss Louise D. Sharp, dean of women at West ern Illinois State Teachers' college.
title:
1938-10-18 (1)
publisher:
Women and Leadership Archives http://www.luc.edu/wla
creator:
Mundelein College
description:
Student newspaper for Mundelein College
subject:
Newspapers
subject:
Religious communities--Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary
subject:
Students
subject:
Universities and colleges
subject:
Women's education
relation:
Mundelein College Records
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Text
language:
English
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Chicago, Illinois
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Mundelein College