description:
'Go Secular' Vol. XXXVI Mundelein College, Chicago Honors Assembly Cites Scholarship Holders; Recaps Graduate Activity, Salutes Jubilarians Sociologist Urges Religious Reform by Diane Sargol The secularization of the world is a reality, a fact which the church must conform to, said Harvey Cox, Oct. 21, as he addressed a student-faculty audience at Garrett Theological Seminary of Northwestern The annual fall Honors Convocation will be held today in the College Theater at 2 p.m. Included in the program are awards to honor students, citation of scholarship winners, silver jubilee awards and information on the activities of last year's graduates. After a processional by the seniors and faculty in full academic dress, students who have attained a 2.5 grade point average during the two semesters of last year will receive honor ribbons on stage from Sister Mary Ann Ida, B.V.M., college president. Sister Mary Ignatia, B.V.M., academic dean, will read the names. Cite Winners Upperclassmen who have received Mundelein Liberal Arts or Fine Arts renewals or Upper Division scholar ships will be cited. Illinois State scholarship winners will not be named this year be cause of the great number, but the names will be posted. All freshman scholarship winners will be named, including holders of Illinois State, Mundelein Liberal Arts or Fine Arts Scholarships. Many students have merited both. Alumnae scholarship winners Ellen Cullen and Elaine Grandt will be commended. Also cited will be the eight fresh men who graduated first in their high school class, Judith Becker, Kathleen Gallo, Alice Kelley, Kath leen Kelley, Barbara Mosley, Theresa Schwab, Georgina Valero and Patricia Wallace. Honor Jubilarians The convocation will salute Na tional Merit winners Maureen J. Devine, Susan Hopp and Mary Woods; Chicago Youth Week win ner Coralee Jekielek; Catholic Sci ence Foundation scholarship win ner Mariann Kenney; and winner of the Chicago Drama Festival Award, Mary Woods. Awards will be presented to three silver jubiliarians, graduates of 1940, who were elected for this honor by their classmates. The award is a recognition of accom- Experts Teach Alumnae At Annual College Day The annual Back to College Day, sponsored by the Mundelein College Alumnae Association, will be held Nov. 7. The day will give all Mun delein alumnae (and their hus bands) an opportunity to return to college for an afternoon consist ing of specially designed classes pertinent to their state in life and the world situation. At noon, alumnae will have their choice of attending one of two classes: Dilemmas of Our Day, conducted by Rabbi Herman Schall- man of the Emanuel Congregation, will consist of an examination of 20th century issues in relation to the 20th century man. Mrs. John Byrne, counselor of Mundelein Col lege's Division of Continuing Edu cation, will explain the College's Degree Completion Program in the session, Another Chance. Three lectures are planned for 1 p.m.: Soviet Literature after the Thaw, offered by Sister Mary Georgia, B.V.M., acting chairman of the Russian department, who will present the new changes in the trends of Soviet literature, includ ing the work of Mikhail Sholokhov, winner of the Nobel Prize for Lit erature. Sister Mary Kenneth, B.V.M., director of the Computer Sciences Center at Clarke College, will speak on The Many Worlds of the Computer. Finally, Those Parent-Teacher Conferences will explore in depth the problems and opportunities that arise from PTA meetings. Alumnae will discuss these issues with Martin O'Mallery, psychologist from the Glenview School System. At 2 p.m. there also will be an option of three lectures: James Baldwin: A Moral and Artistic Di lemma, will be conducted by Diane Sherwood Smith '58, an English in structor at the University of Illi nois, Chicago Circle Campus. She will discuss Baldwin's Another Country and The Fire Next Time with emphasis on their artistic and moral values. Sister Mary Anne David, B.V.M., acting chairman of the theology de partment, will speak on The Church and the Individual Con science, inquiring into Vatican IPs stand on religious liberty. Lastly, Latin America: Overlooked As pects of the Alliance for Progress will provide a close insight to La tin America's destitution, its prob lems in adjusting to multilateral cooperation and its hope for a hemispheric cooperation through which it will rise in greatness. This session will be led by Sister Mary Crescentia, B.V.M., chairman of Mundelein's history department. Following the lectures, Sister Mary Ann Ida, B.V.M., president, will address the alumnae on The Challenge of the Sixties: Women and Education. After Sister's ad dress, the alumnae are invited to attend the Homecoming Tea, to be held in Lewis Center at 4 p.m. Approximately 350 to 500 alum nae and their husbands are ex pected to attend the Sunday Home coming. Reservations are 3 per person or per married couple, and may be obtained through the Mun delein College Alumnae Office. lishments in the areas of the pro fessional life, the apostolate and the family life of the whole class. Dr. Norbert Hruby, college vice- president, will present the awards to Georgene McGowan Krauser, for family life, to Megs Mitchell Lang- don, chairman of the alumnae de velopment drive, for the apostolate, and to Elizabeth Kreuser Matula, instructor in the art department, for professional life. Attend Tea Following the presentation of awards, Sister Mary Ignatia will cite some of last year's graduates, reporting where they are are study ing, what they are doing, and how they have fared after leaving Mun delein. Sister Mary Ann Ida's address to the convocation regarding the academic year will conclude the program, followed by the senior and faculty recessional. All honors students, scholarship winners and their mothers are in vited to attend the Honors Tea in McCormick Lounge at 3 p.m. Achieve 2.5 Average Honor ribbons for students with a 2.5 average last year will be pre sented to seniors Mary Baker, Elizabeth Busalacchi, Joanne Cata- lano, Susan Dorner, Jacqueline Goosens, Joan Haas, Marlene Hecko, Barbara Kaiser, Halina Konopacka, Marianne Krier, Eliza beth Lusk, Barbara Maguire, Mar garet Molloy, Arlene Mootz, Bar bara Mundt, Sheila O'Shea, Patri cia Pellicore, Susan Petronella, Pa tricia Quinn, Christine Rydel, No reen Stoeck, Mary Lynn Szwaya, Marcia Uebbing, Patricia Wadecki, Kathleen Walsh, Mary Wasilewski, Patricia Webb, Margaret Witwer, Sister Mary Colette, C.S.S.F., Sis ter Mary Kevin, C.S.S.F., and Sis ter Mary Rosamond, C.S.S.F. Juniors who will be awarded hon ors are: Sharon Atwood, Andrea Ciccone, Ovita Cihlar, Patricia Dil lon, Francine Fetyko, Patricia Finn, Barbara Gembara, Mary Ann Griffin, Rita Grill, Patricia Mal colm, Laura Michelini, Nancy O'- Neil, Nancy Podraza, Mary Ann Rice, Katherine Thornton, Mari- lynne Tivener, Nancy Vandenberg, Janice Von Holdt, Mary Ellen Wenthe and Kathleen White. Sophomores receiving honor rib bons are: Ksenia Atanowsky, Anne Boylan, Victoria Conlon, Anne Cunningham, Mary Jane Delisi, Ei leen Glennon, Kathleen Hannan, Jennifer Joyce, Katherine Kobos, Marsha Kowalczyk, Diane Lally, Elaine Mazzone, Karen Meier, Mary MittI, Regina Mullen, Carol Mur ray, Michele Novak, Sandra Pan- ken, Sandra Ragsdale, Kathleen Ri ley, Kathleen Roberts, Jeanne Scheuerell, Kathleen Shea, Bonnie Strabley, Lucille Valentino, Ilona Walerczyk, Barbara Walsh, Audrey Warms and Patricia Woods. Upperclassmen who have merited new Liberal Arts scholarships are seniors Diane Capitani, Barbara Maguire, Mary Vandemore and Tina Stretch; juniors Janet Bina, Joann Farrell, Patricia Malcolm and Kathleen Ward; and sopho mores Marina Barreda, Marjorie Conroy, Mary Pat Garrity, Mar sha Kowalczyk, Charlotte Mallon, Mary McMorrow, Dolores Pajak, Margaret Sieben and Ilona Wal erczyk. Also honored will be seniors Pat ricia Pellicore and Marcia Uebbing who received NFS summer grants for undergraduate study in mathe matics, at U. of I. and IIT. University. Author of The Secular City, sociologist-theologian Cox concerned himself with the education of young people for their mission in the secu lar city. Emphasizing the effects of massive social reforms on the religious life of a society, Cox said he believes seminaries may be a major barrier to renewal. To further explain this idea, Cox spoke of four areas of ferment occurring in modern society: among preachers, laity, students and university professors. He spoke of the ferment of preachers toward institutes concerned with the study of the church in community or ganizations. Cox suggested that seminarians specialize in a field other than theology, such as political science or sociology, so qualified theologians will be able to take their places in all fields of society, thus insuring a tighter bond between the laity and clergy. Referring to unrest among laity, Cox said, The laity is no longer willing to be second class citizens of the church. Religious men to day are confronted with an edu cated and hungry laity, the most liberal of whom slip away from the church. He pointed out that one of the functions of theology is to illuminate the issues laity face in the secular world. Theology, then, must wean itself from rigidly organized religion, so the lay man may find recognition of his secular problems in the theological framework. Students, too, are agitated, as (Continued on Page 5) International Film Festival Holds Screening Of Religious, Cartoon Competition at College Mundelein College will participate in a first this month, the first annual Chicago International Film Festival. As one of the centers selected for screening the domestic and foreign films competing for cash prizes totaling 10,000 and various non monetary awards, the College will have a showing of the films in the Religious and Cartoon Competition Nov. 7 from 3-5 p.m. Representatives of the Religious category include works such as Parable, the controversial film pre sented at the Protestant Council Pavilion of the New York World's Fair in which Christ is portrayed alle- gorically as a clown; The Happy City, the story of a priest whose diverse talents and ambition brought about a remarkable change at the Pime Leprosy Colony in Burma; and an entry submitted from Bang kok, Thailand, The Wheel of the Law, dealing with the ancient beliefs of the Buddhist faith. Hold Lecture In the Cartoon division, a film from Bulgaria entitled The Daisy will be projected, also a Canadian entry / Know an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly, and Claude, produced by the Department of Film Pro ductions of U.C.L.A. will be shown. Later Sunday evening, producer-director Stanly Kramer will hold an informal lecture and discussion on the film media for the audience from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. followed by the projection of one of the entries in the Festival. Mr. Kramer, who has produced, among others, On the Beach, Judgment at Nuremberg and It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, will speak on Film as Enter tainment, using film clips from many of his produc tions to accompany his lecture. Sell Tickets The Documentary Film Competition will be held in the Mundelein College Theater Nov. 8. Among the entries to be shown at 7 p.m. are The People Vs. Paul Crump, the film of convicted murderer Paul Crump sentenced to die in the electric chair; and an Irish film Yeats Country depicting the countryside of the poet William Butler Yeats. Others in the Documentary Competition are The Directors, which deals with international film direc tors, and the warm story of an old man forced to leave his life-long home, Legault's Place. Ticket prices are 2.50 and student rates are available on campus at 2 per person or 1.75 per per son in groups of ten. Among the other categories of the festival are: Industrial, Educational, Experimental Art, TV Com mercials and Short Subjects Competition. Further information concerning these divisions and the cen ters at which they will be shown can be obtained from the Chicago International Film Festival, Inc., 162 E. Ohio St., (312) 642-3111. Miss Susan Graefe, assistant to the academic dean and advisor to the freshman class, is co-ordinator for Mundelein's participation in the project. On Nov. 4, 8:30 p.m., Channel 11 (WTTW-TV) will show a one-hour special devoted to the Chicago International Film Festival.
title:
1965-11-03 (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:
This image is issued by the Women and Leadership Archives. Use of the image requires written permission from the Director of the Women and Leadership Archives. It may not be sold or redistributed, copied or distributed as a photograph, electronic file, or any other media. The image should not be significantly altered through conventional or electronic means. Images altered beyond standard cropping and resizing require further negotiation with the Director. The user is responsible for all issues of copyright. Please Credit: Women and Leadership Archives, Loyola University Chicago. wlarchives@luc.edu
coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College