description:
...-v-;/ ..... rrrv*-.** * XXI Mundelein College, Chicago 40, Illinois, November 1, 1950 No. 3 jactice Perfect jliene Meyer and Virginia Carr Actice for the Fall Orchestra fleert, Nov. 5. I rchestra Presents ipular Concert iriety and spice will spread a ban- at a Popular Concert of the Cath- Wonion's orchestra, Sunday, Nov. I 8:15 p.m. in the auditorium, he orchestra, under the direction of Joseph J. Grill, will also present ipecial matinee for religious, and le and high school students, Satur- , Nov. 4, at 2:30 p.m. arch of the Toys from Victor Her- 8 Babes in Toyland will be sil- itted against Symphony Militaire Minor (No. 11) by Hadyn. special arrangement of Chop-Sticks i a reading by Dorothy Gallagher be contrasted with the introduc- of Act III of Wagner's Lohen- lie gayness of Strauss and the diness of Bach will be represented the Artist's Life by Strauss, and p's Prelude and Fugue in G Minor 16). Die Prelude is the sixth of eight Organ Preludes and Fugues ar id by Lucien Calliet. Syncopated Clock, a descriptive ler by Leroy Anderson, will take lace beside a double string eiuai'tet b Beethovan's String Quartet 4) in C Minor. Continued on Page 4, Col. 3) 'Ian Cotillion al- I The Sophomore class has ready undertaken the planning f if the annual Cotillion, to be held f Thanksgiving evening, Nov. 23,/ j in the Red Lacquer room of the j Palmer House. ,. The music will be under the liirection of Del Renee. Mar- J on Quoin, Sophomore class pres- I ident, is general chairman of j he dance. Lists have been posted j pn the class bulletin board for imittee volunteers. Laetare Players Announce Cast For Velvet Qlove Actors, Crew Are In Daily Rehearsal The Laetare Players' first major pro duction of the season will be The Vel vet Glove, presented Nov. 17, 18, 19 at 8:15 p.m., in the college theatre. I A Christopher First Prize winner, The Velvet Glove was originally produced in New York in 1949. Playwright Rose mary Casey has portrayed, with sym pathetic humor, the finesse of a Mother Superior dealing with an ecclesiasti cal authority. The Velvet Glove cast includes Joan Bridgman and Margaret Prendergast as Mother Hildebrand, Mary Patricia Anderson and Mary Sramek as Sister Monica, Jeannine Campbell and Patricia Reese as Mary Renshaw, Mary Mc Nally and Patricia Hooper as Sister Athanatius, and Shirley Krieter and Patricia Nichol as Sister Lucy. Loyola university provides actors James Barrett as Mr. Barton, Phillip Wieland as Professor Pearson, Thomas Brennan as Bishop Gregory, Robert Larson as Father Benton, and Robert Ermatiiigcr as Monsignor Burke. George Petterson will supervise the technical work with the assistance of stage managers Catherine Murphy and Barbara Prohaska. Rosemary Rapp, Joan Overholt, Jean Martin, Diana Shannon, Geraldine O'Keefe, Patricia Winkler, Melita Lynch, and Patricia Reilly are members of the stage crew. The lighting crew will be managed by Anne Llewellyn, assisted by Mary Neel and Winifred Owens. Chairmen of properties is Barbara Schmidt, as sisted by Monica Brodbcck, Jean Breh- ner, and Joan Devine. (Continued on Page 4, Col. 3) Intercollegians Open Panel Series The student councils of Mundelein and Loyola will initiate a series of panels, Nov. 2, at Mundelein. The first panel will deal with the American college student and his ob ligation to the parish. The topic is in keeping with the Holy Father's re quest that the hub of Catholic activity- should return to the parish. There will be two panels held simul taneously on the same subject. Pat Begg of Loyola guides the meeting in room 607, assisted by Nancy Nolan, Anne McCarthy, Thomas Simmons and Wil liam Faley. Peggy Butler will be chairman of the panel in room 405, assisted by Bar bara Moran, Nancy Bcnniac, Edward Brufke and Charles Walker. Emily Claims Parents Are So Embarrassing The college Alumnae association will sponsor a lecture by Emily Kimbrough, author and satirist, who will tell why Parents Are So Embarrassing, Nov. 8, at 8 p.m. in the auditorium. Proceeds from the performance will benefit the scholarship fund. Students are invited to come and to bring mother. Mary Margaret Mitchell Langdon '40 and Dorothy Sugrue '41 are co-chairmen of the event. Committee members include Helen Cashion Hawckeottc '42, Mary Ann An derson '46, Corinne Otto Oberwise '48, Virginia Neff '49, Frances Sapllino '41, Dolores Muelleiiian '50, and Marjorie Carlos Burgy '41. Holy Hour To Commemorate Proclamation of Assumption Chairman of M.usic Department Writes Hymn in Honor of Dogma Announcement Almost simultaneously with the proclamation of the Dogma of the Assumption, to be made in Rome, Mundelein students will participate in a Holy Hour, at 1 p.m., tomorrow, giving thanks for the definition of the Dogma and praying for peace. Father William P. Murphy, chairman of the Religion department, will conduct the Holy Hour, which is sponsored by the Sodality, and will address the assembled students. Assumpta Est Maria, a hymn in honor of the proclamation of the Dogma, will be sung by the Clee club. Sister Mary Rafael, B.V.M., chairman of the Music department, is the composer. Supplementing the all-college chorus which will sing On This Day, O Beautiful Mother, the Glee club will sing Kodaly's Ave Maria, with Annastasia McGowan '50 playing the organ accompaniments. The Dogma of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, to be proclaimed by Pope Piu.s XII tomorrow is the crowning event of the Holy Year of 1950, and will come at the conclusion of a Marion congress in Rome. The ceremony for the announcement of the Dogma will be held in front of St. Peter's basilica in St. Peter's Square, with the papal throne erected before the principal entrance to the basilica. From this throne, the Holy Father will read the bull ex cathedra, proclaiming the Assumption as a Dogma. In a colorful and solemn, yet simple and brief ceremony, Cardinal Marchetti Selvagranni will approach the throne and make the formal request to the Pope. In reply, Pius XII will invite all present to pray and join in singing Veni Creator. The holy Father will then ascend the throne and read the proclamation. Mundelein Meets Notre Dame For Opening Debate At the first principal debate of the year, Notre Dame will present opposi tion to Mundelein's team. Patricia Carr, and Mary Therese Jordan will present the affirmative case and Carol Higgins and Noreen Trapp, the nega tive, Nov. 7, on the national debate topic, Resolved; That the Non-Com- niuiiistic Nations Should Form a New International Organization. November also brings the opening of the City League debates. Ten leading colleges and universities in the Chi cago area will begin Friday night prac tice debates during the next week. Noreen Trapp, president, and 22 other debaters have organized weekly dis cussion groups, which meet with the Loyola Debate club oil Mondays and Thursdays for the voicing of pros and cons of the national discussion topic: What should be the responsibility of the Federal Government For the Wel fare of the People of the United States. Speaker Discusses European Survival Arnold Lunn, skilled debater, author and lecturer will consider the prob lem, Will Europe Survive?, Nov. 2, at 1 p.m. in the auditorium. Mr. Lunn, a convert to the Catholic faith, has just completed a round-the- world flight, during which he spoke to Catholics in India and Australia. No Spooks Invited To Hallowe'en Mixer While witches and goblins bound a- cross the moon-lit sky, and children masquerade with anxious shouts of trick or treat. students from Mun delein college and Loyola university will meet tomorrow at 8:30 p.m., for the first all-college mixer. , The orchestra dance, to be held in the newly erected Victory lounge, is under the direction of Mary Therese Jordan, and William McGrath of Loy ola university. Assistants are Gina Moran, Kathryn Brisch, John Calla, John Madden, and Don Parker. Review Assumption Art Press Club Hosts Tom Ward, AP Writer Mr. Thomas Ward of the Associated Press will be the guest of the Press club, Thursday, Nov. 2, at 4 p.m. in room 405. Mr. Ward will discuss the problems which will confront the students when they begin working on commercial pa pers. At the completion of his talk, the group will join in discussion. Mr. Ward is the son of Arch Ward, sports editor of the Chicago Tribune. Freshmen Name Class Officers Week-Long Campaign Ends in Election Vigorous election campaigns during the past weeks climaxed with the choice of eight freshman class officers, repre senting high schools in all parts of the city. The balloting named Mary Breen, president, Sheila Woods, vice-pres ident, Rosemary Jones, secretary, Ann Fitzgerald, treasurer, Constance St. Clair, sergeant-at-arms, Joan Dawson, social chairman, and Beatrice Hector and Mary Agnes Moran, SAC repre sentatives. Miss Breen, a graduate of St. Schol astica high school, was senior class president there. Miss Breen ri a mem ber of the college WAA. In the presidential race Miss Breen polled 443 votes in a preferential bal lot Miss Woods received 498 votes for the vice-president's position. Miss Jones' 194 votes gave her a victory over other nominees for the office of fresh man class secretary. Miss Fitzgerald assumes the treasur er's post with a total of 492 votes. Miss Dawson was chosen social chairman with 423 votes. The sergeant-at-arms is Miss St. Clair by acclamation. Members of the freshman class manned the polls. Of approximately 243 elegiblc freshman voters, 239 visited the polls, Oct. 20. Four of the newly elected representa tives vacated their offices as freshman governors to accept the new posts. Elec tion to fill these vacancies were held Oct. 24. Diane Cochran replaces Miss Breen; Dolores Volini Replaces Miss Woods; Winifred Owens replaces Miss Moran, and Melita Lynch will replace Miss Jones. Jean Kennedy, Sodality prefect, Betty Byrne, and Rosemarie Keane in vestigate artistic tributes to the newly proclaimed doctrine of the Assumption. NFCCS Sponsors Leadership Forums All campus leaders, members of col lege organizations, and moderators are invited to the NFCCS Leadership Pro gram at St. Xavier college, Nov 5. A one-day Institute for Inter-racial Action was conducted Oct. 21, at Friendship House. Father Daniel Cantwell instructed the students on the development of new techniques for or ganizing inter-racial student programs.
title:
1950-11-01 (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