description:
... T-y*V ..... W * Joan Kies practices her own arrangement of a num ber for the Orchestra-Glee club concert, April 7. MARIMBIST Orchestra, Glee Club Present Spring Concert, Freshmen Bring Guests Highlights of the Orchestra and Glee club Spring concert will in clude Haydn's Symphony XV (La Reinc) and an abridged concert version of the Opera Martha, in troduced in Vienna in 1847 and a perennial favorite ever since. It is one of the few operas which translates to the English well without distoring the mu sical thought. Mr. Adalbert Huguelet will con duct both the vocal and orchestral groups on Sunday, April 7, at 3:15 p.m., in the college theatre. Orchestra selections include John Henry, by Aaron Copeland, a mod ern orchestral portrait based on an early American work song, and Pavane, by Ravel. Another is Straussiana, an ar rangement by Eric Korngold of a Strauss polka, mazurka, and waltz. Joan Kies, senior Music major and marimba soloist, will play with the Orchestra her arrangement of the popular Czardes, a Hungarian dance by Monti. Glee club numbers will include The Heavens Are Telling, from Haydn's Creation, with orchestra: Babylon, by Clokely: Sweet Little feus Boy, by Mac Gimsey; - Franck's Ye Fields of Light, and a Fred Waring arrangement of an old folk tune, Comin' Through the Rye. Glee club soloists will be Patricia Coakley, Joan Doher ty, Mary Anne Stepps, and Marilyn Zanke. Guest soloists will he Ronald Holgate and Jack Willis, both of whom have appeared in a number of opera performances given by the Northwestern University Opera Workshop. Notes for the program will be written by Moonyeen Brown and Suzanne McBride. Vol. XXVI Mundelein College, Chicago 40, Illinois, March 18, 1957 No. 10 Here Is Midsemester Examination Program MONDAY. MARCH IS 'l a.m.. all .MWF 9 o'clock classes 11 a.m.. all MWF 11 o'clock classes 1:10 p.m.. all MWF 1:10 p.m. classes .3:10 p.m., all MWF 3:10 p.m. classes TUESDAY, MARCH 19 10 a.m., all TTh 10 o'clock classes 12:10 p.m., all TTh 12:10 p.m. classes 2:10 p.m., all TTh 2:10 p.m. classes WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20 8 a.m., all MWF a o'clock classes 10 a.m.. all MWF 10 o'clock classes 12:10 p.m., all MWF 12:10 p.m. classes 2:10 p.m., all MWF 2:10 p.m. classes THURSDAY. MARCH 21 9 a.m., all TTh 9 o'clock classes 11 a.m., all TTh 11 o'clock classes 1 :10 p.m., all TTh 3:10 p.m. classes Co-operating with the Music de partment on April 7 will be mem bers of the Freshmen class, who are sponsoring their annual Opera Ma tinee tea with the Sophomores as their guests. To thank the Sophomores for the kindness they have shown to the Class of 1960, Freshmen officers and governors have planned a recep tion and tea. Each Sophomore will receive a personal invitation to the concert and to the reception and tea. She will meet her Freshman hostess in the Brown room, accompany her to the concert, and be her guest in the tea room after the program. March 29 Will Be Final Day Of Recollection Father William T. Clark, of the Religion department, will conduct the Recollection day, March 29. Holy Mass at 9:30 a.m. in the college theatre will be fol lowed by a short conference. Students may receive Holy Communion during Mass. Successive conferences will be at 11:00 a.m., 12:45 p.m., and 2:00 p.m. Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament will follow. Organists for the day will be Marilyn Zanke, Gerryann Foley, and Charlene Hincks. Twice A Queen Is Freshman Who Led St. Patrick's Day Parade On State Street Judith Bogan Mathematicians Use Slide Rule In Contest Some people play golf on greens, some play tennis on courts, and some compute products on the slide rule. Rarely, however, do the slide rulers engage in contests. Thanks to the training of Ann Norton, junior, in mathematics and to her experience as a computer at the Argonne laboratories, she quali fies as coach of a group of Slide Rule teams, who will compete in a contest, April 2. Sponsored by the Mathematics department, the contest will involve teams of two students each working 20 problems, and doing the time- consuming multiplication and divi sion in split seconds on slide rules. For the first 10 problems, one student will be computer and one recorder. They will change roles for the second set of ten problems. Top scorers in the contest will re ceive prizes. Maribeth Naughton and Rita Caprini find their first stories in newly bound copies of campus paper, Volumes XXII through XXVI. SKYSCRAPER CO-EDITORS Dr. Ward Evans Will Lecture On The Atomic Age Ward G. Evans, Ph.D., of the Loyola university Chemistry de partment, will address the Chem istry club, March 25, on The Atom ic Age. A member of the three-man ex amining board for Dr. Robert Op- penheimer, atomic scientist tried as a security risk, Dr. Evans cast the one vote in favor of Dr. Oppen- heimer's acquital. Freshman Judith Bogan repeated an earlier performance in a royal role when she presided as Queen of the St. Patrick's Dav parade, March 16. Chosen from 124 finalists, she led the parade from Wacker Drive to St. Patrick's church, where His Eminence. Samuel Cardinal Stritch, gave the Benediction. Mayor Richard J. Daly was hon orary chairman of the parade, which is sponsored by the St. Pat rick's Day Parade association, headed by Mr. William J. Halligan. Preceding the parade, Miss Bo gan appeared on several radio and television programs. During her senior year at St. Mary's high school, Miss Bogan was elected State Street Star Queen and lighted the Christmas decora tions on State street marking the official opening of the holiday shopping season. The Star Queen is selected from high school seniors who excel in personality, scholarship, and ex tra-curricular activities. She was editor of the St. Mary's Herald. Requirements for the St. Pat rick's Day queenship are that the contestant be between 16 and 21 years old, single, and of Irish an cestry. A resident student, Miss Bogan is a member of the Glee club and one of the Freshman governors. Religion Editor Qrants Interview, Lectures, March. 28 Mr. Stanley Pieza, religion editor of the Chicago American and fa ther of Joanne, a sophomore, will talk on his audiences with Pope Pius XII in two sessions here, March 28. Mr. Pieza will be inter viewed by students in News Reporting, at 9:15 a.m., in Room 303. At 10 a.m., he will talk to History classes in Room 405. Launched on a career as a police reporter, Mr. Pieza was surprised one day when the city editor as signed him to cover the Chicago visit of Eugenio Cardinal Pacelli, then Papal Secretary of State. Ten years later, in Rome, His Eminence, Samuel Cardinal Stritch. introduced Mr. Pieza to the former papal secretary, now Pope Pius XII. On Nov. 9, 1956, Mr. Pieza had his twelfth interview with the Holy Father. During that trip abroad, he visited Hun gary and, with other reporters, was driven out by Russian tanks. His Anniversary Story on Pius XII appeared in the Chicago American on March 1. A copy of it is posted on the Writers, Inc. bulletin board in the lounge.
title:
1957-03-18 (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
type:
Text
language:
English
rights:
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coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College