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SKYSCRAPER Page Three issionary Visits lipboard Friends ather David Micbeck of Hokkido, to, called at Mundelein recently to the two students from Japan, Ag- Masako Yui, and Catherine Tcra- i. Father met the girls aboard ship In they came to the United States. I native of Germany, Father Mie- p lias been a missoiiary in Japan for tars. lie is now enjoying a one year in the United States, through the Irtesy of the Catholic Red Cross kcrs in Japan whom he served as ain. Honor Our Lady of Fatima I udcrapinad iith November's coining, autumn ly closes the doors of nature's ler landscape. Goblins and witches :r in the month of turkeys, pump- , corn stalks, and maybe a snow e or two. Animals are scurrying to Iter quarters, and Mundelein stil ls, captured in the whirl of grand- id excitement, hurry to football les, homecomings, and dances. I0MKCOMING QUEEN, Joan inner presided over festivities at St. ly's college, Winona. Also attending dance were Mary Louise Hirsh I Nancy McHugh. pnstance Colletti, Anne Erkenswick, Garrow, Mary Kay Hannon, and itte Ranee will travel to Indiana for Joseph's annual alumni reunion, ma also welcomed Marcella Far- who attended Notre Dame's homc- ing game and dances eluded in the list of out of town hirers are Marvel Proper and Pa- ia Reilly, who will take part in the In Carroll university reunion at Oo tid. JOWA CORN STALKS GREETED (trude O'Malley when she arrived St. Ambrose college for a weekend football and dancing. Betsy Siegler t enjoyed the same harvest scene she traveled to Iowa State col- omecomings in their own state Poned Joan Kares and Mary Ther- Jordan to Northwestern, and Fran- iMonohan southward to the Uinvcr- of Illinois. EOTB ALL FEVER HAS IN- TED Claire Healy who vill see uette play Holy Cross in Milwau- Other grandstand rooters include Jgy Liston, Joan Lamb, Barbara Bghnessy, and Virginia Clinite who t to Notre Dame for the Michigan te game. INGS ON THEIR FINGERS an- nce the engagements of junior Mary Lorme to Anthony Greco, Jr., and Emore Norma Galvin to Claude rick. INTF.D FONDANT CANDY was tded on a marble slab by senior Ser- i Traficanti at an Alpha Omicron onstration of candy making. LITTERING ICE AND SPARK- IG COSTUMES attracted Angela ara. Pepper Perkins, Martha John- l, and Barbara Wallace to the Ice lies. Texas Lil Darlin' was enjoyed Patricia McHugh. osemary Rouse and Paula Long nded the Charles Laugh ton lecture I Ihe Loyola Community theater. Also the audience were Jeannine Camp- f, Anne Llewellyn, Jane Nix, Caro- Kilkenny, Kay Murphy, and Mary le Lamb. AD TNMATE OF THE ASYLUM I impersonated by Melita Lynch, recently starred in the musical tic ly, Dracula, written by John Spa- Ira of Loyola university. The play I produced at Lowell Theater in li Park. Jean Martin, Joan Bolger, I Patricia Reese are also members the dramatic group, Genesians. Jtona Arnoldi, Peggy Barrett, Peg- Butler, Betty Guilfoyle, and Carol ilgins attended the NFCCS journal- i workshop at St. Joseph's college, legeville, Ind. IANCING AT NOTRE DAME will Joan Hoiss, Marie Moran, Frances lonnell, Mary Jane Henneman, and Mundelein and Loyola students gather for devotions to the Blessed Virgin. Prayers are said daily at noon on the Loyola campus where stu dents gather around a Wayside Shrine. Quanta Club Organizes for Year The first meeting of the Quanta, Mundelein's Physics club, was held Oct. 23. Tentative plans for the year include tours of Northwestern University's Technological building, the Physics department of the Univer sity of Illinois Navy Pier, Yerkes Ob servatory, and the American Televi sion school. The high spot of the year will be an all-school photography con test sponsored by the club. Students interested in Physics from the scientist's or the layman's point of view may take part in club activities. Arrangements are under the direction of Peggy Egan, Mary Ann Klose, Joan Schreiber, senior Science Forum dele gate, and Joan Latz, junior Science Forum delegate. Red Cross Officers Tour Chicago Chapter, Great Lakes Hospital Red CroSs officers of the Mundelein unit and chairmen of the operating committees will tour Chicago Chapter headquarters, Nov. 1. Members of the entertainment and instruction committee will meet, Nov. 8, to organize a group of specialized entertainers to visit veterans and at tend ward parties at Great Lakes. In cluded in the unit will be groups of Christmas carolers. Dolores Nowikowski heads the com mittee, assisted by Frances Fazio. Chose Yule Qift For Qerman Family The choice of the Christmas gift from the German club, Die Rothenstein er Gesellschaft, to the Deifel family in Germany will be discussed at the No vember meeting. The family, including four children, was adopted by the club while Mr. Dei fel was still a Russian prisoner. Free now, Mr, Deifel works in southern Germany. His wages, however, are in adequate for six people. On the agenda of the November meet ing will be a discussion on the club's constitution. Dorothy Hertl, vice-president, will tell of her summer in Germany. Miss Hertl traveled through Paris but spent most of her time in the Bavarian For est area. Pictures of German scenes will be posted on the club bulletin board. (Continued from Column 1) JoeAnne Cummings at the Sophomore Cotillion. Fall Frolic guests at the Loyola Un ion house were Mary Louise Cochran, Marilyn Tangney, Audrey Bruck, Mary Ellyn Bondi, Mary Rose Allen, Nancy Gibbons, and Mary Therese O'Connell. Also present were Claire Hillyard, Marian Quinn, Joanne Phillips, Patri cia Kelly, Mary Ann Burke, and Joan Baer. Barbara Mann, Catherine Pardi, Hel en Stewart, Marianne Hodgeman, and Marion Kennedy attended the Loyola Alumni dance. Mary Frances Anderson will be en tertained at the Alpha Beta Gamma fraternity dance at De Paul university. November means more than football to Mundelein girls. It is the month of the Poor Souls, and there is always time, even in the busiest day, to say a silent prayer. Sociologists Visit Dixon Hospital Dixon State Hospital for the feeble minded at Dixon, 111., will be the scene of the next Sociology club tour, Nov. 1. The hospital, 100 miles from Chicago, now cares for some 5,000 patients. The club members will view the grounds and compare the hospital to other Catholic institutions they have visited in the past. Seniors Talk At High School College Days On Nov. 2, senior Carol Calabrese will represent Mundelein at Lake View High school's College Day program. Sheilya Neary will participate in the Wells High school program on Nov. 3. During the month of October the following seniors visited at public high schools: Joan Cahill, Highland Park; Joan Holland, Sullivan; Paula Long, Roosevelt; and Jeanne Kielbasa, Stein- nietz. Name Librarian Illinois State Unit Chairman Sister Mary Aurelius, B.V.M., li brarian, was installed as unit chairman at the annual meeting of the Illinois Unit of the Catholic Library associa tion, Oct. 28. One of Sister's new duties as unit chairman includes arranging and con ducting the national meeting of the association which will be held in Chi cago, March 26. Theme of the one day assembly held Saturday at St. Joseph's school, Wil mette, was The Holy Year Impetus to Christian Reading. At the general ses sion in the morning, the unit heard an address by the Honorable Edward J. Barrett, Illinois Secretary of State and State Librarian, on The Librarian and Citizenship. i Glacier Priest Reviews Russo- U.S. Boundary The Reverend Bernard J. Hubbard, S.J., the Glacier Priest, presented an optimistic report on the United States- Russian Boundary problem to a gen eral assembly, Oct. 26. Alaska's vastness is its own pro tection, stated Father Hubbard, noted for his lectures, scientific explorations, and affiliation with the Western De fense Command. The United States will never be conquered by marching feet. It can only be defeated through internal cor ruption, commented the Glacier Priest. Faculty Members Attend U. of I. Science Conference Sister M. Cecelia, B.V.M., chairman of the Biology department, and Sister Mary Martinette, B.V.M., chairman of the Chemistry department, attended a conference on Prcmedical and Med ical education at the Chicago Illini Union of the University of Illinois, Oct. 13 and 14. The conference, sponsored by the Uni versity of Illinois College of Medicine, included such topics as the Fields of Medicine and the Qualifications of Phy sicians, Problems of Premcdical Educa tion, and Admission Policies and Pro cedures of the University of Illinois College of Medicine . Who's Who . . . ALPHA OMICRON : Serafina Trafi canti, president; Geraldine Tyrrell, vice-president; Bernadine Loetz, secre tary; Betty Bradley, treasurer; Betsy Siegler, social chairman. ART CLUB Joan Blakeslee, pres ident; Angela Battaglia, vice-president; Mary Ann Peters, secretary; Pelayia Limbos, treasurer; Bottega Master, Rosemary Kramer, Helen Schneider, social chairmen. BIOLOGY CLUB: Frances Fazio, president; Dolores Nowikowski, vice- president; Mary Frances Welsh, secre tary; Marilyn Tucker, treasurer; Lu cille Winkler, social chairman. CHEMISTRY CLUB: Carol Cala brese, president; Grace Greeley, secre tary : Alberta Ziomek, treasurer. DEBATE CLUB: Norene Trapp, president: Agnes Rciter, secretary; Barbara Baynes, treasurer; Mary Ann Schweitzer, historian. ECONOMICS CLUB: Kay O'Mal ley, president; Carol Higgins. vice- president; Margaret Hanlcy, secretary; Loretta Heenan, treasurer; Gabriclle Pembroke, social chairman; Barbara Schevers, pledge chairman. ENGLISH ROUND TABLE: Nan cy Brown, president; Katusha Didenko, Hostess; Marilyn Tucker, Clerk; Gerry Schiavone, scribe; Mary C. Leahy, page. FRENCH CLUB: Madeline D' Hooge, president; Dorcella Spengler, treasurer; Therese Schillaci, social chairman. GERMAN CLUB: Joan Ackermann, president: Dorothy Hertl, vice-pres ident ; Mary Frances Welsh, secretary; Florence Savage, treasurer. INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB: Dorothy Spratt, president; Mary Jane Mulvihill, vice-president; Donna Merwick, treasurer. INTERRACIAL JUSTICE CLUB: Evelyn Craig, president; Carol Curtis, secretary; Betty Cartwright, treasur er; Josephine Curtis and Nina Boyle, social chairmen. LAETARE PLAYERS: Elaine An tonucci, president; Carole Hohmeier, vice-president; Margaret Shaughnessy, treasurer: Anne Llewellyn, social chair man ; Marjorie Prendergast, recording secretary: Mary McNally, social sec retary. Autumn Leaves With Cold Shoulder Fall does not tip toe on a dry leaf, It blusters in, leaving a path of de struction and flu behind it. It teases us. Hardly have the thick tweeds been de-moth-balled and the cottons locked away when autumn kicks its heels and sends us a warm spell. The air, deliciously thick with the smell of burning leaves and damp earth, is enough to send the hardiest one reeling toward the sea- zvall in belated spring-fever. But autumn is an impostor. It promises excitement through witch es and goblins and Indian ghosts. And cloaks its evil deeds in red and gold. It lies. It is only diverting us while win ter sneaks up cautiously. Then, while we make merry with pumpkins and toasted marsh mallows, a frosty fing er breaks the illusion and the gayest of seasons freezes to death. Students Discuss Four Point Plan To determine how far President Tru man's Four Point'Program can be ef fective in Asia today, the Economics classes held two panel discussions. Asia Through the Eyes of Asia, un der the chairmanship of Vivian Spitali, was the first panel, Oct. 11. Speakers were Jane Weagent, Helen Sweeney, and Mary Breen. Barbara James chairman the second panel, Understanding Korea, Oct. 18, assisted by Sheila McCabe, Betty Rat- tay, and Mary Ann McCaffrey. Art Group Initiates 'Old Master' Pledges An eye-catching witch and multi colored balloons heralded the initiation of freshmen at the annual Art club Hallowe'en party, Oct. 26. Garbed in smocks and berets, the pledges dressed as pictures of the old masters, and concluded the festivities with a pumpkin cutting contest. Barbara James was chairman of the second panel, Understanding Korea, Oct. 18, assisted by Sheila McCabe, Betty Rattay, and Mary Ann McCaffrey. (Continued from Column 4) LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS: Patricia Bowen, president; Elaine Man- tas, vice-president; Joan Kwiatkowski, secretary-treasurer. MATHEMATICS CLUB: Gladys O'Brien, president; Peggy Liston, sec retary; Mary Mahoney, treasurer; Mary Louise Zahm, social chairman. PHILOSOPHY CLUB: Annamarie Doogan, president; Elaine Mantas, vice-president; Katusha Didenko, sec retary; Nancy Beach, treasurer; Laura Bergamin, social chairman. PHYSICS CLUB : Peggy Egan, pres ident; Joan Schreiber, vice-president; Mary Ann Klose, secretary-treasurer. PRESS CLUB : Sheilya Neary, pres ident; Maribeth Carey, vice-president; Peggy Barrett, secretary-treasurer; Joan Kares, social chairman. SCIENCE FORUM: Frances Fazio, president; Wilma Lehmann and Jean Ott, biology delegates; Carol Calabrese, Louise Pierotti and Joan Corder, chem istry delegates: Gladys O'Brien, Mari anne Moore and Audrey Zywicki, math ematics delegates; Peggy Egan, Joan Schreiber, and Joan Latz, physics dele gates. SOCIOLOGY CLUB : Judy McNulty, president; Marianna Hagerty, vice- president ; Jean Kielbasa, social chair man; Pepper Perkins, senior treasurer; Rose Anne Leahy, junior treasurer. STYLUS CLUB: Mary Alma Sulli van, president; Jeanne Pennie, vice- president ; Eileen Cody, secretary-treas urer; Jane Kenealy, pledge and social chairman. WAA: Louise Pierotti, president; Joan Corder, secretary: Grace Greeley, treasurer; Judy McNulty, social chair man.
title:
1950-11-01 (3)
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