description:
mt r gt;r-- wmr- mm EXIV Mundelein College. Chicago 40, Illinois, December 1, 1953 X O. 0 ittle Cookie leads Junior To lew York City The Nutrition class has done it in Audrey Sassetti. Junior in the be Economics department, sub- Hted a cookie recipe recently to Pillsbury company's annual piomvide contest. Last Monday she learned that t has won the College another ior and herself a three-day, all- lense-paid trip to New York. This is the third time the Nutri- : class has been represented in contest and has won. last year Mary Kay Janssen. 'fi a Junior, submitted a cookie pe. won, and journeyed to the aldorf to make up her recipe in It ballroom-turned-laboratory. Mary Frances Anderson Hart '52 in the contest in her Junior year It a cake recipe. Accompanied by her mother, b. Charles Sassetti of Oak Park. Sassetti will fly to New York iDec. 13 to make up her own re- ttin the final round of the con- Easter Vacation Dates Are Changed Easter vacation, originally scheduled for April 9 to 19, will be April 15 to 25, accord ing to an announcement from the Administrative offices. The change is made be cause the National Catholic Educational association will meet in Chicago during Eas ter week, and many Faculty members and students will be attending the sessions. nt; via so th- ret ary ittt 'an. loc, m; an Ivia mor Merits perior Rating I Speech Tourney Melita Lynch captured a Superior ing, highest won by a girl, at Bradley university Debate and tech tournament, Nov. 20, 21. A senior Speech major, Miss tach told the Stephen Vincent bet tale about The Devil and bid Webster. The negative debate team, Faith l y and Mary Agnes Moran, rited a rating of Excellent among ins from 52 colleges represented the tourney. Sister Mary Antonia, B.V.M.. Bderator of debate, served as a ve at the tournament, in which liters discussed the national col- pate forensic topic, Resolved: That t United States Should Adopt a ifcv of Free Trade. Holy Hour Will Mark Opening Of Marian Year Marking the opening of the Mar ian Year, the Sodality will sponsor an all-college Holy Hour at the gen eral assembly,, tomorrow at 1 p.m. Father L. J. Evett, S.J., director of the Sodality, will conduct the Holy Hour and will give a brief dis course on the Dogma of the Imma culate Conception and the Marian Year. Each class will lead in the recita tion of one decade of the Rosary, the Sodality members joining to lead the fifth decade. Singing of the Salve Regina, the Magnificat, and the Litany of Loret ta will occur during the Holy Hour which will conclude with the Act of Consecration to the Virgin Mary. Following a custom kept in all schools, taught by the Sisters of Charity, B.V.M., the Sodaiists in vite students to offer a special pledge of loyalty to Mary on her feast day, Dec. 8. Small white Promise cards will be available, Dec. 7, on a table near the Chapel door, and students who wish to share in the tradition may place their individual promises on Our Lady's altar. Herald Advent With Traditional Wreath Ceremony First Candle on the Advent Wreath will be lighted Thursday by Dorothy Strzechowski, presi dent of the Freshman class. The Advent Wreath cere mony, traditionally a Fresh man class project, will follow the SAC meeting at 1 p.m. in the auditorium. Mary Ann Lynch. Freshman vice-president, will bring from the Chapel the vigil light from which the first candle is to be kindled, and Joan Horan, Sodality prefect, will preside at the ceremony. Fol lowing the candle lighting, the Freshmen will take the wreath to the tea room. During the weeks of Advent, the candles will be lighted each day. one the first week, two the second, and so on until the fourth candle is lighted just before vaca tion. With Rosemary Ernst directing and Emily Kloc playing the or gan, a group of students will sing the Rorate Coeli at the opening of the ceremony. Seniors in the choral group will be Mary Ann Piskosz, Gloria Gad- dini, Mary Alias, and Mary Fran ces Chambliss. Juniors singing will include Joan Lorden, Jeanne Regan, Bernadette Nastali, Sylvia Ko- minek, Vera Eng, and Nan cy Alias. Sophomore singers will be Mary Ellen Casey, Angela Favale, Mary Ann Krzysik, Mary Cecchin, and Eleanor di Maggio. Freshmen in the choral group will be Moonyeen Brown, Patricia Garrett, Joan Kies, Nancy Ostos, Alice Schallmoser, Helen Stoudt. and Elizabeth Vogl. Next Tuesday Is Holyday, Holiday Classes will not meet on Tuesday, Dec. 8, the Feast of the Immaculate Conception and a Holyday of Obligation. P I r T o for children are these dolls contributed by Alumnae and stu- 01 r I 0 dents in the Economics department. Helen Sweeney, Betty Bogie, Regina Rauchas, and other members of Nu Theta Epsilon will deliver the dolls to the Catholic Youth Organization, Dec. 12. Year exhibit which opens tomorrow in the Library Browsing room catches the attention of Sodaiists Bernadette Leigh, Patricia Anderson, and Charlotte Pryan. (Story on page 3.) Annual Cantata Brings Christmas Spirit, Dec* 13 Glee Club, Orchestra, Drama, Art Cooperate The Christmas spirit, symbolized by the stirring Hallalujab Chor us from Handel's Messiah, has in vaded the college halls and will make its formal appearance in two weeks. The Coming of the Prince of Peace, a cantata composed by a Mundelein graduate, Sister Mary Rafael, B.V.M,, will be given by the Glee club and the Orchestra, Sunday evening, Dec. 13. The cantata tells the story of the Nativity from the Old Testament prophecies and the New Testa ment fulfillment. The first tableau portrays the Old Testament prophets envisioning the coming of the Saviour, Arise, O Jerusalem. The Virgin at Prayer ap pears in the second tableau as the Angel Gabriel brings the news of the Coming of Christ. Next the Blessed Mother appears alone in The Magnificat; then the Shepherds are shown on The Plains of Jerusalem, and Angels bring the message of Christ's Birth. The three final tableaux are The Virgin's Lullaby, The Coming of the Magi, and the Madonna and Child revealed during the singing of the Hallelujah chorus from The Messiah, by Handel. In this tableau, the Madonna will hold in her arms, as a figure of the Christ Child, the baby son of an alumna. As a prelude to the cantata, the Orchestra will play familiar Christ mas melodies and the Gloria in Ex- celsis Deo from the Twelfth Mass of Mozart. The Glee club will sing The Shepherd's Story by Dickin son; Christmas Hymns ar ranged by Spricker, Carol of the Bells, by Leontovich, and Lullaby by Caesar Franck. Glee club soloists are Edna Behm. Mary Cecchin, Joyce Knox, Joan Lorden. Mary Ann Piskosz. Sylvia Skelly. and Norma Wojcik. The College Orchestra will ac company the Glee club, both groups being directed by Adalbert Hugue let, with Jeanne Regan. Marianne Krzysik. and Moonyeen Brown as accompanists. The Art department and the Dra ma department are planning the settings and costumes for the sev en tableaux. See Your Friends In Art Exhibit Though only a Junior, Phyllis Wockner is already in the local hall of fame. Her black and white portrait by Art major Vasilia Soutsos will hang with other pictures in the Student Art exhibit on the Eighth floor until Dec. 4. Other pictures include Margaret Yuhas' pensive little boy, chubby and contented. In contrast is the sad- eyed child painted by Senior Joan IIeath. On the lighter side is a drawing of a girl in the rain, reminiscent of the famous salt advertisement fall en apart. Serious hut beautiful is Margaret Ackermann's Gift of Mt. Sinai, a picture of Moses holding the Tablets of the Law. An example of the modern school of painting, its hues are brilliant blues, greens, reds, and yellows. The exhibit is composed chiefly of drawings of people. The use of different media, water colors, ink, and caseins, adds much to the to tal effect. Contributors to the exhibit in clude Miss Heath, Sylvia Grigul, Martha Meyer, Miss Soustos, Doris Kuhlmann, Eugenia Krupowicz, Virginia Casey, Mary- Jo Schrader, Loretta Soule, Janice Mooney, Miss Yuhas, and Miss Ackermann. Public School Counselors Will Be Quests The College will he host to deans and placement counselors of public high schools in the Chicago area at an Open House on Dec. 9, from 1 to 5 p.m. Purpose of the Open House is to acquaint the counselors with the Fac ulty, curriculum, and students of the College, so that they may be better able to inform any of their seniors who are considering a col lege education. After touring the building and visiting classes, the counselors may interview graduates of their schools who are now enrolled at Mundelein. Sister Mary John Michael. B.V.M., President of the College, will address the counselors at 3 p.m., after which they will meet department chairmen. The pro gram will end with an informal cof fee hour.
title:
1953-12-01 (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
type:
Text
language:
English
rights:
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coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College