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Page Eight THE SKYSCRAPER May 31,1967 News Briefs MSC Appointments: By a vote of 19 to 2, MSC appointed Mary Louise Lyden, sophomore, as NSA (National Student Association) chairman and Martha Ellet, freshman, as CCB (Club Coordination Board) chairman. Because no one ran for these offices in the all-school MSC election this month, the congress was able to use the recently passed blue ballot amendment and by a two-thirds majority vote appoint the chairmen from those students who were formally nomi nated. Art Tribute: The Chicago Artists Guild and the Chicago Art Directors Club will honor senior fine arts major, Pat Lenihan, at a dinner June 19 at Pioneer Court, 401 N. Michigan. The event will pay special tribute to college seniors in the Chicago area for their accomplish ments in publications and advertising. The prize-winning works of Pat and the other students are on display at Apollo Savings and Loan, 430 N. Michigan, until June 3. Creative Mass: At a creative Mass, 4:30 this afternoon, May 31, at the Religious Education Center, Mundelein art students will display their talents in art, music and literature. In a true Christian spirit, the girls combined efforts to compose the music and liturgy. Individually they constructed and decorated banners for the procession from the Skyscraper to the Religious Education Center prior to Mass. At the celebration the artists will present their works with the bread and wine during the Offertory. All are invited to view and participate. Cultural Affairs: The Cultural Affairs Committee will sponsor a per formance of Stop the World, I Want to Get off, in conjunction with Loyola University, Oct. 22 as the first in their series of pro grams for the 1967-68 school year. The student rate will be 1.50 per performance and 3.50 for all three. Silver Competition: Reed Barton Silversmiths of Taunton, Mass., an nounced that Connie Killoren has been awarded one of the 100 starter set prizes for her entry in the silver firm's 1967 Silver Opinion competition. She will receive approximately 50 in sterling, fine china and crystal. Liturgy Committee: By a vote of seven to five, the Mundelein Student Congress May 23, passed a resolution to form a Liturgy Commit tee. In presenting the proposal, Lynn Appelt, co-chairman of the present ad hoc Liturgy Committee, stated that the committee would function in service to the college community by providing daily liturgy in conjunction with a student chaplain and by planning spe cial liturgical celebrations. The committee will be composed of seven faculty members and eight students. One student will be elected to have a voting seat on congress. A constitutional amendment to provide for the liturgy representative on congress will have to be passed by more than one half of the student body in an all-school election. Attention: June-August, 1967 Teacher Education Graduates January, 1968 Teacher Education Graduates NATIONAL TEACHER EXAMINATIONS CHICAGO PUBLIC SCHOOLS will use the scores as part of their 1967-68 CERTIFICATE EXAMINATIONS FOR Elementary Teachers Grades K-3 Elementary Teachers Grades 3-8 The examinations will be administered on July 1 and Oct. 7. Applicants for teaching positions in the CHICAGO PUBLIC ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS should. 1. Register with Educational Testing Service, Prince ton, New Jersey, to take the common examination and the appropriate teaching area examination 2. Indicate on the N.T.E. registration form that scores should be submitted to the CHICAGO BOARD OF EXAMINERS 3. Write to the CHICAGO BOARD OF EXAMINERS for Chicago application (Ex-5), specific course re quirements and other details 228 N. LaSalle St., Chicago, 111. 60601 Room 624 Details may also be obtained in the TEACHER PLACEMENT OFFICE THE SKYSCRAPER Mundelein College 6363 Sheridan Rd., Chicago, 111. 60626 Si udcrapinad No More Candor, No More Comps, No More Midnight Seawall Romps Dept.: Graduation means more than progressing from a term system that leaves little room for mistakes to existence proper, which leaves even less, or the yearly ad vancement of all levels in the jar when they skim off the cream. It means vivid sensory impressions of the host institution. Since, as all Mass-media types know, strictly visual imagery is not what memo ries are made of, we have compiled an inventory of olfactory sensa tions screened and distilled from the various floors of our main, and only, building of consequence. Sixth: sixth floor is obviously uppermost in the nasal membranes, with its ever-shifting variety of smells ranging from intra-African Jungle rot to early Victorian Vet- terinary hospital. Fourth floor exudes the essence of a tradition: chicken soup. And that administrative hub, second floor, is inexplicably redolent with stale tobacco smoke. In brief, what ever columnistic commonplaces we have to offer on graduation can be better expressed in form letters from Lyndon B. Johnson. And now that you've been primed with all this Concrete Inspiration, Sen iors . . . Get out there and con tribute to the Gross National Prod uct Lazarus Laughs Bureau: Our posh counterpart, Barat College, so long complacently nestled in its idyllic Pastoral Seat, Lake Forest, is contemplating a move to Where the Action Is, namely, as you may be slow to gather, Chicago. A few urbane, disenchanted Munde lein metropolitans, who have been Where the Action Is and back, would do well to inform our er rant sisters, more or less poetically, that Seclusion does not necessarily a Cloisture make, nor Strategic Location, Exposure. (Although their proposed relocation, Hyde Park, may prove more felicitous than our sedate institution. Presumptuous note upon the por tals of the philosophy office: Ap proaches to God, be back at two. Puny Mortals Do you think God will brook your Long Lunch Hour? Is not courting Heaven a full-time operation? Latest Administrative Datum: Reports from the upper strata in dicate that the DCP office is doing quite a lucrative business, with the dark implication that regular stu dent programs are not grossing so heavily. How to counteract this imbalance? Urge regular students to drop out, and return 25 years later, with expanded intellects and lower overheads. More Games Girls Play Dept. Stop the Course, I Want To Opt Out is a refinement of the age-old ploy of Copping Out in the nick of the mid-term, and one of the many variants of Beat the System. It consists of digging up all manner of obscure exotic expedients for staid, unenticing Basic Studies. The really accomplished eclectic can wangle Judo instead of Golf and Shuffleboard, Creative Writing instead of Communications II, and a Psychology or Sociology major in lieu of Math II or Humanities II. Registration Day Capers: subdi vided thusly; the Beatle Mob Ma neuver . . . this sudden press of gibbering, frenzied applicants is designed to intimidate the Monitor of the class lists into overlooking the mass deviation from the Sin gle Straight Line. AND . . . As sorted Song and Dance routines, including The Closed-Out Lament and the Claustrophobic Jitters Tar- antelle. Quasi-editorial Comments Divi sion: It seems highly unlikely that any modern poet of integrity would consent to succeed the late John Masefield as poet laureate of England. The office, like Mase- field's romantic narrative style, is now an anachronism, to be refused, a la J. P. Sartre and the Nobel Prize, because it implies subsidiza tion of creativity. But it is hardly necessary to institutionalize one poet to compose on commission and enthuse on demand, considering the existing host of nameless official poets, who with all the florid folk- siness but none of the redeeming earnestness of Edgar A. Guest, keep the world in Greeting cards. Farewell to Mundeleinites, who, on their annual summer expedi tions into Experience, go abroad for broadening, make inroads on Expo '67, and temporarily menace the Labor Force. Unemployed but Compensated, Tully SUMMER JOBS FOR STUDENTS Applications now being accepted for summer jobs with major corpora tion. Students 18 yrs. of age over wanted to learn marketing, sales promotion, brand identification techniques during summer period. High level executive management training courses given to qualified appli cants. Salary 105 per wk. for first 3 wks. 130 per wk. plus bonuses starting 4th week. SCHOLARSHIPS win one of 15 1,000 scholarships HIGH PAY earn at least 1,500 for the summer student make 3,000 and more. TRAVEL Work anywhere in U.S. or Canada. Qualified students may work overseas. r SEE EUROPE Win all expense paid holi day in Europe for an entire week. Best Positions Going Fast Call Today for Appointment 9:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. CHICAGO LOOP NO. ILL Mr. Anderson . . . A.C. 312 782-4362 CHICAGO LOOP SO. ILL Mr. Vass A.C. 312 346-6108 GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., IND r. Schmitt A.C. 616 459-5079 MILWAUKEE, WIS., IOWA Mr. Bergman A.C. 414 276-4119 We have offices located in most cities however please contact our district offices listed above for an appointment.
title:
1967-05-31 (8)
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