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Page Four Junior Teams Lead Tuesday, Wednesday Bowling Leagues Splitting pins with six straight wins, Junior Team I remains in the lead of the Tuesday Bowling tournament. Under the captaincy of Beth Good willie, the team, including Ann Carroll, Marianne Peterson, and Mary Cannon, averaged 1472 pins. Miss Cannon scored high game with 160, and Mary Ann Wilczcwska with 156, had the second high single game. Still in first place in the Wednesday Bowling league is Junior Team I, whose total pins are 1501. Team members are Barbara Lund- gren, Catherine McLaughlin, Betty O'Connor, and Dolores Olcchowski. Miss Lundgren leads the league with high game of 167. Marijo Coleman sccored a 156 game, and Miss O'Con nors single high game was 155. SKYSCRAPER Terrapins to Hold Tryouts Tomorrow Tryouts for the Terrapin club will be held in the pool on Thursday at 4 p.m., with Ann Carroll, Dolores Cervenka, Colleen Rettig, Joan Shea, Patricia Morris, and Sue Meyering serving as judges. Following the tryouts on Thursday, the Terrapins will have a theatre party, attending the Ice Follies. Equestriennes Ride In Fall Setting A brisk wind and brightly colored falling leaves greeted Riding club mem bers en their breakfast ride in Lincoln Park after Mass on Nov. 1. Pauline Pappas, assisted by Rosemarie Lloyd, Jeanne Smith, and Patricia Mitchell, made arrangements for the club breakfast. Judge Jarecki Will Lecture on Suffrage Judge Edmund K. Jarecki of the County court will lecture on Suffrage Obligations before members of the col lege unit of the League of Women Vot ers, on Nov. 14, at 3 p.m., in Room 405. A member of the North Side unit of the League, Mrs. C. H. Thomas ad dressed the group on Oct. 30 on the recent report of the National Education association. Home Ecc nomists Study Markets On Field Trip The Home Economics department looked behind the counters and into the mechanics of the wholesale market, on a field trip, Nov. 1. Members of the department who went on the tour included Rita Barr, Lenore Behr, Norine Condon, Dolores Aren- burg, Adelaide Costello, Margaret Har vey, Mary Anne Huber, and Lois Hop kins. Others were Esther Kyros, Ruth Lichtenwalter, Gloria Luxem, Margaret McCormick, Mary Jane McNeal, Joan Mullaney, Margery Potter, Louise Pe- sut, Janet Naylor, Nanette Salisbury, Mary Kay Semlow, Noreen Roche, Rita Winkates, Rosemary Viglione, and Jacqueline Jacobs. Freshmen Sponsor First Coke Dance (Continued from page 1, column 1) Patricia Trudeau is chairman of the Music committee, and Betty Mae Huber and Irma Jean Voller head the Arrange ments committee. In charge of publicity for the event are Mary Case and Doro thy Shaplik. Raise Bowling Scores Interested in the score sheet are bowlers Marjorie Tobin, Mildred Ritchie, Anna Carroll, Donna Marie Hobbs, Rosemary Viglione, and Marijo Coleman, six of the 40 students playing in the college Bowling leagues. Junior Attends Inter Racial, Faith Workshop Mary O'Malley, Sodality secretary at Mundelein and corresponding secretary of Cisca, Chicago-Inter-Student Catholic Action, took part in a workshop on in ter-faith and inter-racial relations at Roosevelt college, on Oct. 27. The Youth Clinic on Civic Unit, spon sored by the Chicago Council Against Racial and Religious Discrimination, was attended by officers and leaders of high school and college groups. Miss O'Malley acted as scribe for the College Workshop panel, at which representatives from colleges through out the midwest area were represented. See Mensing Collection At Adler Planetarium How the Earth Moves, the subject of the planatarium demonstration for October greatly interested a group of mathematics and science students who visited the Adler Astronomical Museum last month. The famed Mensing collection of an tique astronomical and mathematical in struments, displayed in the museum, was also of scientific and artistic interest to the party which included Elvira Ander son, Eleanor Garby, Mary Jane Kline, Florence Moore, Phyllis Willner, Ellen mae Quan, Ruth Casey, Elaine Meyer, and Eleanor Pohl. Stage Crews Cooperate for Fall Production (Continued from page 1, column 4) Cooperating with the cast, directed by Catherine Denny Phelps, M.A., are the production crews, directed by George Petterson, who has done the decor for all three plays. Responsible for the scenery are Paula Barthell, Dolores Duffy, Mary Louise Kelly, Jo Ann Logelin, Mary Louise Oberwise, Gloria Stutzke, Louise Tanner, Diana Coffey, Ellen Frieling, Elaine Johnston, stage crew; and Charleine Beesley, Margaret Benza, Helen Redlin, and Marilyn Winter, property managers. Stage managers Patricia Hereley. Mar ilyn Reynolds, and Martha Wade are assisted by Lois York and Patricia Nea- lin. When the lights go on, Patricia Cloherty, Lucille Burns, Florence Sigler, and Eleanor Popell will be at the switch board. Costume and make-up supervision are the work of Marjorie Campbell, Carmel McKeown, Peggy Carter, Carol Draper, Marion Kelly, and Vivian Kinnas, and ticket sales are being handled by Alice Marie Horen and Anita Schwaba. Alumna, Students Present Programs As November brings wind and frost, so also it brings engagements for stu dents and alumnae members of the Pro gram Bureau. Dorothy Scott, dramatic reader, Mar garet Cashman, pianist, and Lillian Mu za, violinist, will perform this evening for the Irving Park Woman's Club. On Thursday afternoon, Barbara Keenan will discuss Great Catholic Ar tists before members of St Jerome's parish Sanctuary society, and on Fri day afternoon, Betty Kreuzer '41, fac ulty member in the Art department, will lecture on Art and Therapy before mem bers of the North Town Woman's club. Also on Thursday, Eunice Dankowski, voice major, and Catherine Prendergast, pianist, will present a musical program at the Edgewater Beach Hotel, as guests of the North Shore Woman's club. On invitation of the Navy, three Glee club members sang at Mass at the Glen view Naval Air Station, on the Feast of Christ the King, Oct. 28. The singers were Dellamae Laughlin, Josephine Gendielle, and Miss Dankowski. Miss Laughlin was vocal soloist at a reception and tea sponsored on Oct. 28 by the juniors of the Illinois Club for Catholic Women, at which Miss Cash- man and Miss Muza played. Student Named Secretary of Red Cross Unit Group Students Are Guests At Navy Day Observance Junior Janet Sprickman, chairman of the College Unit of the American Na tional Red Cross, was elected secretary of the Advisory Council of College Units at a general meeting last month, and was inaugurated into her new duties at the Council meeting on Nov. 3. Invited by the Navy to its anniver sary celebration were Miss Sprick man, Patricia Herely, Jean and June Murphy, who participated in the Navy Day ceremonies at Great Lakes Naval Training station. Student Teachers Assist Red Cross unit news includes the fol lowing items: November is Junior Red Cross Promotion month. Patricia Tru dcau, freshman, will distribute material to all student teachers interested in pro moting international relations among high school and elementary school stu dents. Kay Lahey, chairman of the Safety Council, is forming a First Aid detach ment of five members who will be on the alert for service in the event of an emergency. The Camp and Hospital committee is asking musicians and speakers to volun teer for Christmas entertainment in mili tary hospitals during December. Barbara Brennan will interview all prospective entertainers, who are asked to meet her before Nov. 15. Plan Christmas Gifts The Camp and Hospital committee also asks that students watch the bulletin boards for announcements about Christ mas gifts for hospitalized veterans. According to the campus unit, the Red Cross office is seeking 50 to 100 volun teers to serve as staff assistants. Artists, speakers, musicians, writers, and typists will be welcome at any time. 40 Economics Students Visit Federal Courts Under the chairmanship of Dolores Corcoran, Gloria Volini, and Elaine Ortell, 40 economics students visited the United States Federal Courts on Nov. 1. In Judge Philip Sullivan's court, the students heard evidence in cases in volving taxation, naturalization, and violation of price ceilings. THE WAR IS OVER 'Joseph' Returns after Service at Pearl Harbor The war is over and Joseph has returned to Mundelein. Even before December, 1941, members of the academic and maintenance staffs volunteered for service, leaving vacancies in one department or another. But when Joseph Ferrante, mainten ance man, left in April, 1943, for Civil Service in Pearl Harbor, every Mun delein student felt his loss. Joseph the window-closer, reports the Skyscraper of April 2, 1943, Joseph the super-floor polisher, the procurer of vital tacks, the handy man with hammer, with flowers, with chairs, with speaker's stand, Joseph the irreplaceable has been called to a war job. His first day on Oahu checked any visions he might have had of an island paradise. He remembers only sugar cane and pineapples and' the half-built defense structures which were soon to transform the beautiful Pacific shoreline into the wall of a mighty and compact little fortress. With 10,000 other men from all over the Americas, Mr. Ferrante registered at the huge camp which was to house them all. They lfved in barracks and ate in mess halls, with a schedule almost like that of the Army, except for one small but important detail. Trained Filipinos handled K.P. During the day, Mr. Ferrante worked with a ship repair crew. Among the 500 ships he helped overhaul were the West Virginia, the Pennsylvania, and the Okla homa, all damaged during the Japanese attack on Dec. 7-. Every so often an air raid alert whined throughout the island, and private citi zens and military and civil personnel were hurried into underground air raid shel ters. Only once did a Japanese plane break past the anti-aircraft fire. The pilot bombed a schoolhousc before he and his ship were finally brought down. Since the cornerstone of the College was laid, records the Skyscraper of April 2, 1943, there has always been a Joseph Ferrante to keep it gleaming. At first, Joseph Jr., helped his father. Then, after the death of the first Mr. Ferrante, Joseph came to the College as houseman. Now war has come to Mun delein, and Joseph has gone to Pearl Harbor. The war ended in August and on Oct. 22, Joseph Ferrante returned to Mundelein. St udcrapmad . . . Take to heart the advice of those who know Sing, dance, see football games, attend the Opera but not this weekl All work and no play may make Jill a dull girl through most of the year but not through the week of the quar terlies. Last week, however, and the week before, relaxation-seekers werti up to remote preparations for this week Consider Geraldine Thorpe, -who found pre-exam solace in a pop con cert given by the Chicago Symphony) orchestra, led by Desire Dcfauw. And heed the wise words of opera-goers Catherine Prendergast, Elvira Bagdoi, Marian Nowak, Lucille Cook, and Mi-i ry Ellen Blouin, who have learned that Manon, La Tosca, Faust, Carmen, and Rigoletto clear the mind of cobwebs and prepare it for rounds with history and mathematics. You can do a remote preparation for literature matching tests at the Empire Room, say Nancy Donnelly, Gloris Ma loney, Patricia Curran, and Geneviere Urbain, or you may want to follow the example of Eddy Jo Noonan and Pa tricia Hollahan, who want to improve their familiarity with English cus toms by going again and again to the Pump Room just to see the waiters serve Flaming Torch dinners. Parties are the best brain sharpen- ers for a stiff test in psychology or are they? On Hallowe'en night, Gerry Fisher attended one at the Gardiner General hospital. Guests at Loyola's Rail dance included Mary Agnes Wil- Hams, Noreen Condon, and Josephu Roche, and at Loyola's Hallowe'en soiree were Miriam Leighton, Mildred Ritchie, and Joanne Roberts. The operetta, The Student Prince, puts these scholars in the acadenifl mood: Marcella Volini, Joyce Evan, Joan Collins, Marion King, Jeanne Don- cette, Jean Koch, Jean Nicholson, Mar- garet Hamilton, Norma Biller, Innil Voir, Jeanette Brandon, and Eileen McSweeney. Really to clear the mind for success with verbs and dates and trends and hypotheses, however, a day in the open air is best. You might drop in at the Sportsmen's Stables rodeo in Morton Grove, as Agnes Gorski did. Or, just for I a change, how about a football game The intricate plays at the Iowa-Notre Dame game are clear to Catherine Wrn, Paula Barthell, Rita Buckley, Dolor* Popiel, Mary Jane Rowantree, Jouj Kawaguchi, and Florence Jankowski If you're lucky, you might be invited for a -weekend at Culver Military acad-l emy, such an invitation being a new feather in Pauline Steffen's cap. After exams, an evening of relaxa tion at the Ice Follies is the suggestion of Eileen Rooney, Mary Kay Semlw Joan Mullaney, and Donna Mooney Library Displays New Volumes (Continued from page 1, column 5) Enrico Caruso, by Dorothy Caruso, and Artist In Iowa, a study of Grand Wood, by Darrell Garwook, are included in the display, as are Mark Tuvin, by Delancey Gerguson, and The Life of P0pe Pas Xlf, by Charles H. Doyle. Heading the list of fiction titles are Behold Our King, by Therese Bauer; North Wind of Love, by Compton Mack-1 enzie: Piccolo, by Helen La Penta; and So Well Remembered, by James Hilton. An old, but beautiful and strong book is Leon Bloy's The Woman Who Wat Poor. Included among the new history hooks are General Marshall's Report; H'eopaul for Peace, by Thomas O'Neill; .-( Kinnj Wind, by Walter White; Story of id Springfield Plan, by Clarence L. Chalto, and True and Untrue and Other Nor it Tales, edited by Sigrid Undset. In the poetry section are Rime, GevtU- men, Please, by Robert Farren; Flower ing Tree, by Caryll Houselander, and Selected Poems by August Derleth. The observance of Book Week opened with a Faculty tea in the library.
title:
1945-11-05 (4)
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
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coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College