description:
s Thousands Cheer The Student Activities ouncil and the Freshmen n fected officers for the coming year at . tcent meetings, and other classes will ; old elections this week. a Marianne Peterson, junior art ma- Jlr, was elected president of the Stu- int Activities Council for the academ- Jyear 1946-47. Retina Bess, junior English-journal- m major, was elected vice-president; lary Margaret Doyle, sophomore Iii as elected treasurer. Ministry major, was elected secretary, K nil Mary Leona Merrick, freshman, a' President of her class in sophomore rind junior year, Miss Peterson was a L'll id representative on the Council during her freshman year. Miss Bess was a class representative in freshman year; treasurer of the Coun cil in sophomore year, and secretary e?f the Council this year. Miss Doyle, one of the class govern ors in her freshman year, has served as a sophomore representative on the Coun- cil this year. Miss Merrick was elected in October to represent the freshmen on the S.A.C. The freshmen elected Gloria Volini class president for next year, and Marian Hughes and Patricia O'Dono- (Continued on page 4, column 3) Qreen Pastures and Ceramics, Representing The Work of College Artists, Will Be on exhibition during the summer at the Illinois State Museum in the Centennial building in Springfield. The Art department recently received a request from Thorne Deuel, Museum director, for four pieces of student work to be exhibited. Two oil paints and two ceramic pieces have been selected. The two oils are by Ursula Brodbeck and Patricia Klise, both junior art ma jors and both submitting rural land scapes. The other selections are a jar done in green slip-painted terracotta clay, by senior art major Mary Jane Smith, and a clown, done in ceramic sculpture and colored slip-painting, by junior art major Marianne Peterson. Waltz Time - gt; He? i'y*' ' mm jrredn man J 55ue gfol. XVI MUNDELEIN COLLEGE, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, MAY 6, 1946 No. 11 Completing arrangements for the Senior Prom which will be held 17 is Margaret Mary Sieja, senior 17, is Margaret Mary Sieja, senior social chairman. A Design for Living Will Be discussed at the general Cisca meeting, for which Loyola and Mundelein will be hosts on Saturday, May 11. Jack Kern, Cisca president, will lead the morning discussion, which will open at 10 a.m. in the Mundelein auditorium. Highlight of the afternoon session will be a May Coronation ceremony on Loy ola's campus, with Mr. Kern presiding. gt;k Hie Shining Hour or Four Chemistry Majors Occurred ai When They Participated - In the Collegiate ssion of the Illinois State Academy ) Science at Bloomington on May 3. Lila Rojesky chose chemistry in a ology course as her topic. Mary Jtherine Gorman and Mary Lou Thur- V collaborated on the separation of le ions of vanadium, molybdenum, janiiim, and tungsten. Qualitative tits for arsenic were presented by ladeline Carbonaro. Q,These subjects were worked out as jjnior chemistry projects. Miss Ro- Qiky. who is interested in both chem- Jry and physiology, endeavored to Jow the relation between them. The iparation of the ions of vanadium, molybdenum, uranium, and tungsten (js presented problems for some time. Jiss Gorman and Miss Thurber studied le problem and offered their solution. lie qualitative test for arsenic has Jen a stumbling block to the freshmen Jemistry students tor a long time ft; so Madeline Carbonaro attempted I simplify this procedure. Blossom Time Due Night at 8:30 Lois Hintze and Eleanor Arends, the Skyscraper's co-editors-in-chief, use some of their leisure time to admire the magnolia blossoms on the Loyola campus. Editorial duties for this issue of the Skyscraper are in the capable hands of the freshman staff. ; Edith Moscardini, drama major, presented her senior recital, Em- r Music in the Air Will Come from the Auditorium On Friday, May 10, When, Guest of the National Broadcasting Company, the Glee club This is the second successive year in will give a series of selections on the which the Mundelein Glee club has been Hymns of All Churches Program. invited to participate in the anniversary Heard in Chicago through station broadcast. Before last year's program, WLS at 9:30 a.m., the selections will be N.B.C. wired the stage so that the music broadcast nationally, in observance of may be broadcast direct from the audi- the twelfth anniversary of the Hymns of torium. All Churches program. (Continued on page 3, column 2) Midsummer Day's Dream Will Be the 1946 summer session at Mundelein, which opens on June 25 and closes with final examinations on August 30. During the first period, 8:30 to 10:20 a.m., Mondays through Friday, courses will be offered in The United States and the United Nations; Calculus I, Music Literature, Piano, Speech, Organ, Em bryology, Harmony 2, Short Story, and Debate. During the second period each day, 10:25 to 11:50, courses will be offered (Continued on page 3, column 2) Once in a Lifetime Comes A Senior Ball This year it will be held in the Grand Ballroom of the Continental hotel on Friday, May 17, the dimout permitting. Chairman of the dance is Margaret Mary Sieja, senior social chairman, who is assisted by Mary Frances Padden, senior class president, and Patricia Shuell, vice-president. Mickey Prindl and his orchestra will provide the music. Margaret Green, class secretary, is in charge of invitations to the chaperoncs. Head of the Publicity committee is Mary Jane Smith, and Margaret Mary Kaindl, senior class treas urer, will supervise the selling of bids, which will be open to the seniors until May 8. All the remaining bids may be pur chased by underclassmen from May 10 to 12. Alice Sit-by-the-Fire, Three-Act Play By James M. Barrie, Is The Production Which The Drama Department (Picture on Page 3) will present on Sunday and Monday evenings, May 19 and 20. Scenery from Ethel Barrymore's Chi cago production of The Joyous Season will be used in the drama involving the difficulty of recapturing the tangled threads of home life after a journey. Alice, who has never really grown up, returns from India with her husband, a Colonel, after spending several years there and finds that she must change the whole pattern of her life. The plot revolves around her attempts to know her children, who, in her ab sence, have come to think of their nurse as their mother. The production is double-cast, with Margaret O'Leary and Barbara Bren nan appearing in the title role on May 19 and 20, respectively. Jean Hanson and Dorothy Scott will play Amy, the daughter. Included in the cast are Anita Schwaba and Mar tha Wade alternating as Ginevre, Mar garet Benza as Fanny, Patricia Conley as the nurse, and Anna May Byrne as Richardson. Students from Loyola university taking part in the production will be Jack Mc Grath as Cosmo, the son; Frank I-eyhane (Continued on page 4, column 2) That Others May Live Is the Title Of the Symposium Which the Home Economics Department Will Qive on May 14, in Room 405. Every year the students of the Home Economics department prepare a panel discussion in the form of a sympo-iuiii on some topic of vital imi gt;ortance to the home and to consumer food. Members of the Chicago Dietetic asso ciation and of Home Economics Women in Business, and teachers from the Chi cago area will be guests of the depart ment for the program. This year's subject will be a compre hensive study of diet conditions in the Far East and Continental Europe. Louise Pesut will act as chairman of the dis cussion. Speakers will be Margaret McCormick. Fsther Kyros, Peggy Cole, and Jane McMurray. The recent findings of Pro fessor Ansel Keys of the University of Minnesota will be used as basis for this study of how to feed the starving people of the world. Nutritionists and dieticians who have worked on the problem believe that the United States can, with adequate plan ning, feed these needy peoples without impairing the American diet. Students wishing more information on the topic are invited to attend the symposium on the evening of May 14.
title:
1946-05-06 (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