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Page Four THE SKYSCRAPER March 24,1965 News Briefs on Campus Spanish Fiesta Following the Mexican movie, Macario, April 6, the Spanish Club will present a Pan-American Fiesta until midnight in Lewis Center and McCormick Lounge. There will be entertainment in McCormick Lounge. Tostadas, gal- letos, tacos and soft drinks will be available in Lewis Center. DePaul, Rosary, IIT, North western, Loyola and Roosevelt are among schools invited. Admission is 50 cents. One-Act Play A one-act student production of the television adaptation of Henry James' Turn of the Screw, will be presented Tuesday, March 30. The performance, in McCormick Lounge, 7:30 p.m., will be directed by junior Bonnie Czamecki. The cast will include Verna Chalupnik, Barbara Rivelli, Joan Savage and Richard Powers. Class Day The sophomore class will hold its traditional class day, March 31, 4 p.m. with the theme of Mary Poppins Meets James Bond. A buffet dinner and slides of sopho more events will head the program. Mary Barmes, social chairman, is general chairman for the event. Anndrea Zahorak is entertainment chairman and Madeleine Rossetti is in charge of refreshments. The dinner will cost 1. There is an open invitation to all faculty members. Auxiliary Luncheon Mundelein's Women's Auxiliary will hold a benefit Salad Bar Luncheon and Card Party, April 22. The theme will be April in Paris. A gourmet lunch will be served from 11:15 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the Tearoom; bunco will be played in Lewis Center and cards will be played in McCormick Lounge. There will be door prizes and awards. The affair is open to students as well as Auxiliary mem bers. Admission is 2.50. Reser vations can be arranged with Mrs. Richard Doan, 6341 N. Broadway. Regional Art Fair Mundelein will host the NSA Illinois - Wisconsin Traveling Re gional Art Fair on Gallery Four March 25 to April 1. The fair, co-sponsored by NSA and the art department, provides student art ists with the opportunity to dis play their works at other colleges and universities in the area. Sister Blanche Marie Merits Art Fellowship Sister Blanche Marie, B.V.M., chairman of the art department, has been awarded a fellowship to the Artist's Workshop on the Is land of San Maggiore, Venice, for the summer of 1965. Feature Work Of Sculptor Gallery Eight will feature the work of Austrian-born sculptor, Max Fleisher, a graduate of Northwestern University. The ex hibit will open April 4. Mr. Fleisher is best known for his award-winning bronzes pur chased by collectors throughout the United States, Europe and Japan. Last December his six-figure bronze entitled Exodus was pur chased for permanent display for the Prime Minister's residence in Israel. Among the many galleries which have exhibited Max Fleisher's work are the Chicago Art Institute Art Rental Gallery, the Old Or chard Country Club Theater, the Chicago Arts Festival and the Evanston Art Fair. Mr. Fleisher is currently presi dent of the North Shore Art League of Winnetka. Other contributors to the fair include Marquette University, Uni versity of Wisconsin, University of Illinois, University of Chicago, Roosevelt and Rosary. Foundation Grant Miss Marie Hank, instructor in mathematics, has been awarded a National Science Foundation in- service grant for college teachers at Illinois Institute of Technology for the study of modern algebra. The grant for this semester can be applied toward a graduate degree. Mr. Alphonse Patricelli, also a The eight week fellowship was granted by the Giorgio Cini Foun dation's Center of Culture and Civilization which includes insti tutes of art history, history of so ciety and the state, history of lit erature, music and the theater, and Oriental civilizations. Award by Foundation The same foundation granted Sister a second fellowship to a con current program of advanced stud ies at San Giorgio, Sept. 4-26. Sis ter will participate in the seventh course in international culture sponsored by the Giorgio Cini Foundation. The subject of the course, Sen sibility and Rationality in the 18th Century, will be conducted by the internationally known scholars Etienne Gilson, Rudolph Wittkower and Victor Tapie. The major fo cus of the program will be on a retrospective exhibit at the Ducal palace of the paintings of Fran cesco Guardi, an 18th century Venetian painter. Trip to Europe Sister Blanche Marie plans to leave for Europe May 19. On her way to Italy, Sister will detour through France, England, Bel gium, Germany, Switzerland, Aus tria and Spain to visit art muse ums and architectural landmarks in these countries. THE SKYSCRAPER Mundelein College 6363 Sheridan Rd., Chicago, 111., 60626 math instructor, presently holds a similar grant at IIT. Water Show Six acts from the Terrapin show, Of Many Things, will be presented at the opening of the regional meeting of the Distaff Members of the Women's Insur ance Association. Two performances, March 26, at the Sheraton-Chicago Hotel, will include two solos, a marble and a submarine; a duet, kites; a trio, Peanuts; a quartet, a snake; and a group act, soldiers. St udcrctpinad It appears that almost everyone has recovered from the newly an nounced tuition raise and Revue rehearsal fatigue, including the frighten ing revelation that Time mag was considering suing . . . Legal action would be a rather trying way to put of Mundelein on the map, and be sides, Time should be flattered. Nothing has affected the small contingent of Mundelein polticians who have already developed some ingenious platforms and promises for the forthcoming school elections, including a free second cup of coffee in the Tearoom pledge, and a bar Loyola women from Lewis Center slogan. One can't help feeling sorry for the seniors, but we have to admit that their comp studying has produced some weird side effects. One Northland dear has mysteriously contracted an assortment of exotic maladies. It seems every time our friend opens a book she falls victim to all sorts of horrid pains . . . Consequently, she spends most of her time lying in her room moaning and gasping. We don't know how legitimate her ills may be, but she sure is killing her roommates The SAC drive to collect money to send people to Selma has pro voked some interesting reactions card players have found the collec tion cans make tolerable ashtrays, others have refused to put money in the open-top containers because they think it will disappear . . . We especially find it hard to understand those who have shrugged off the entire crusade because they are fed up with Civil Rights. Overexposure is an understatement in regard to the play on the supposed sex revolution on college campuses. Women's magazines seem to dote on confidential exposes of what campus life is really like, not to mention outstanding literature like Sex and the College Girl, and the motion picture industry's contribution to the cause Get Yourself a College Girl. Even the highly respected newspapers and magazines have carried articles on college life that make the Kinsey Report look sketchy. All this at a time when students across the country are caught up in the vital social issues of the day, often far ahead of their middle-age critics. It's about this time, too, that the annual wave of articles telling all about Easter Week at Fort Lauderdale and Daytona will hit the stands . . . We just can't wait. Margie Socialists Hold Leadership Day The Sodality will sponsor a Leadership Day, Sunday, March 28, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in McCormick Lounge. Upon recommendation of student advisors and freshman and sophomore class officers, a group of about 40 underclassmen with leadership potential received in vitations to the event, which will focus on Interest vs. Apathy. The first briefing of the day will be a slide lecture on poverty, war and world order by Mr. Paul Kope, SJ. Then Mr. Donald Brezine, S.J., will present a taped speech by Doctor Joseph English, chief psy chiatrist for the Peace Corps, on The Profile of the College Stu dent. The last briefing by Mr. Patrick McDunn, S.J., will explore the meaning of leadership and the re action of people to leaders. The participants will form small groups after each lecture to discuss prob lems introduced in the briefing. The day's program includes Mass at noon followed by lunch. z 5s o Q to c 8 rn B * id X u gt; nr S o rfssB* -1 (D lt; MsssssB Q 3 m Q- M c 03 C Q SSSB* Q. IS* 3 (Q On H 3 3 . TJ IssssssV CD 0 O 8 sO 3 * to NO isssssMH Q 8 - ON THE VY TTHPTT And to prove 5t this album IWUlil THE DICK WILLIAMS' KIDS TOVPrp SING FOR BIG PEOPLE. Twelve J-lOxN X great standards sung by kids and A/ A nTPTTT supported by lush strings Y VxA.O J- Hi J airMfl drlvin' brass. It swings It's exciting It's unlike any album you've ever heard. And VT/ TT Vr/ chances are, you'll write us a 1 V U IN u love letter aboimt it A)/ G lt;Ve Myfciuei.-c IV- - ' ? 5? MP I 8 a, 41 k ill There's a world of excitement on ArQO Records Chicago, 111. 60616
title:
1965-03-24 (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
rights:
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coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College