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SKYSCRAPER Page Seven MM u5crapina . . . They're Nimble with a Thimble . day sunshine, no matter how seldom jS reaches our planet, is a harbinger of nmer's lazy loveliness . . . and, once , Je-r the s gt;ell of its light and warmth, vocative plans for getting away roi it all stir in a winter-wrapped niJoat lt; to Bermuda and kayaks to N'yack ,rjy be dream journeys that only crooners k of, but many a pleasant substitute , been found by Mundeleinites. If we uld do a little vicarious traveling with m, this is how we might plan our itin- :rs (affter packing our bags, we will join ing jricn Kartheiser in the line for a rvation to McHenry, Illinois. After w days there, let's drop in on Grace irst and Patricia Lorigan at Slocum , ?ke. Our stay there will be short, Grace plans to investigate the nu. ,ol is of the California Chamber of nmerce before midsummer. A visit. with Matilda Luketin, Lucille ..Ida, and Margaret Cashman at Pis- foi Bay will provide the perfect end Illinois jaunt. UIO In to Wisconsin where we can meet er ry Lou Thurber in Belgium, Mary jn(.ughan in Wilmot, Merry Angelos r(j The Dells, and Patricia Lee in Eagle ,njer. Wherever the sun hums best JNorthern Wisconsin will be Mar- :et Mary Brufke . . . and we can ike a date for Visitor's Sunday ' jh Counselor Helen Browne at Druce a1e Camp. For the more rugged of us, llo,re is Silver Spur Ranch, where we I corral Patricia Redding. Kcxt step Minnesota Joan Pilleck I b( happy to greet us at Bass Wood. if there is time, we might cross nearby Canadian border . . . this ie just to visit the Canadians. Travel-weary yet? Or can we tempt i to return to Chicago and begin second of our series of imaginative riie first step on this journey takes to St. L. uis, Missouri, the spot tre Marian Taylor says, Meet me se:n Topeka, Kansas, our guide will gt;aj Margaret McGreal . . . and the Hipoint of our sightseeing will he a ar of the Winters General hospital, ..ere Margaret's sister studies psy- tl..a,r-v- lat/he miles arc long from Kansas to ag,lifomia . . . but our dream train onf take us to the land of sunshine fQja second. Near San Francisco we iy locate Dolores Toniatti, and we're e- to find the Tubekis sisters at tlicir lie on Laguna Beach. If luck is with we'll probably run into the no- u Iris Rosemary Tarsitano, Margaret :rstCormick, and Jo Ann McCarty u have selected California to he the xaK of their cross-countrv drive. ddj unl 'ow, Greeley can relax, for we've , one West and loved it Lest the st feel neglected, however, let's hur- ra back to Chicago, repack our hags, ' u do an about-face. no. Lfter a few days with Janet Naylor thiNorthern Michigan and with Rose- t , ry Kelly in Toledo, we will have re- f0iered enough energy to amble down ire( sidewalks of New York with Joan lIuntello and Beverly Geller. Then, we iviJ exchange the excitement of the city the peace of the seashore and a salt-water swimming lessons from ce Archer at Oceanside, New Jersey. Id while we're so far into the shoul- *ei of America, we might sail over New Brunswick, Canada, to com- anfe notes with Phyllis Graham. . . . we're home ain Have we caught you napping? it that we blame vou . . . for, sure- ter- of such stuff as this do we weave ess .iV'ake up, wake up ar mtiful dreams. And, if you, like By, must content yourself with home- .oiling this season, console yourself 111 these words . . . jgJihould you care to visit the. writer .(J this column, come June, July or . :gust, simply consult the Chicago jephone Directory. Two of the home economics students who will model ensembles of their own design and creation at a special Fashion Exhibit today are Peggy Flaherty, in a satin-lined rose wool suit and Olive Bjornson in a tailored tweed. Other students in the clothing and clothing design classes created new- ensembles or rejuvenated old dresses and suits. Mundelein Chapter To Be Represented At Red Cross Dinner Committee Plans Picnic And Installation Tea The annual Chicago Red Cross dinner at the Stevens Hotel on June 4 will be attended by Mundelein's Red Cross chairman, Janet Sprickman, and another member of the school's operating com mittee. Special recommendations will be given to organizations and schools most active in Red Cross work during the past year. An installation tea will be held in the tea-room May 29 to honor newly elected officers of next year's Red Cross operat ing committee. Chicago Red Cross guests from the downtown branch, including Margot Atkin, Frcderica Beinert, Marion Williams. Elizabeth Walsmith, Mrs. John Andrews King, and Mrs. Estelle Blatt. will he present. Throughout the year, the Red Cross committee has had the help and coopera tion of almost every department in the school. The International Relations club and the History, Drama, Art, Mu sic, Journalism, Economics, and Physi cal Education departments have contrib uted time and effort to make Mundelein's Red Cross College group one of the finest in the country. The unit plans a picnic (tine 5 to complete the year's activities. At the College Day Convocation on May 10. Miss Sprickman announced that Claire Johnson, freshman, is win ner of the Red Cross First Aid Schol arship and that Rita Augustine is win ner of the Aquatic Scholarship. Appoint Editors of College Publications The English and English-journalism departments announced last week the appointment of co-editors for the pub lications for 19-16-47. Grace Foran and Marian King, both English majors, will succeed Irene Ken ney and Geraldine Thorpe as co-editors- in-chief of 77tc Ret iew. Florence Jankowski and Colleen Ret tig, both English-j. urnalism majors, will succeed Eleanor Arends and Lois Hintze as co-editors-in-chief of The Skyscraper. Senior Interprets Life of American Poet Aline Kilmer, American poet and essayist, will be brought to life on the college stage, on May 24, in the person of Jeanne O'Connor, senior drama major, who will present an original monologue entitled Blue Valentine. Joyful and sorrowful episodes from the life of this convert, the wife of Jiyce Kilmer, furnish interesting ma terial for Miss O'Connor's recital. In gathering information. Miss O'Connor received a letter from Mrs. Kilmer's daughter, Sister Michael, O.S.B.. who is the subject of Mrs. Kilmer's poem, Experience. Sister Michael gave Miss O'Connor many in teresting facts about her mother's life. Another letter was received from Kenton, the Kilmers' eldest son, who is now vice-president of the Poetry So ciety of America and poetry editor of the Washington (D.C.) Post. Miss O'Connor has chosen the years from 1913 to 1918 as the period for her characterization of Mrs. Kilmer, since in these years Joyce Kilmer rose to fame as a poet and enlisted in the Army for World War I. Among Mrs. Kilmer's many books are Candles That Ruin, and The King's Daughter. Mary Frances Padden, senior, will play organ accompani ment during the recital. Pianist Wins Symphony Audition (Continued from Page 1, column 3) he a concert pianist and later this summer, she will apply f r a fellowship at the Julliard School of Music in New- York. Mundelein, Loyola Qreet Ciscans Here Over 900 representatives from five ci lieges and approximately 35 high schools in the Chicago area converged upon the Mundelein auditorium May 11 for the fifty-fifth General Meeting of CISCA. Chicago-Iiiter-Student-Catholic- Action organization. Mundelein was co- l.ostess with Loyola for the annual Cisca May-Crowning, held just outside Dum- bacb hall oil the Loyola campus, at which retiring-president Jack Kern and Sodality prefect Maureen Roche officiated. Speakers for the day's discussion, Making Mary Modern, were Mary Ann Anderson of Mundelein, Patrick Beggs of St. Ignatius, and Sheila John Daly of Rosary. The Reverend Martin I. Carra bine S.J.. is moderator for the group. Student Body Honors May Queen with Hymns, Coronation Of Thee I Sing will be the all-college tribute to Our Lady. Queen of the May, at the annual Sodality-sponsored May Coronation ceremony on May 23. Maureen Roche, prefect of the So dality, wearing a white gown and a flower-wreathed veil, will place the crown on the statute of the Blessed Virgin. A trio will sing O Domina Mea by Sis ter Mary Editha, B.V.M. The Court of Honor will include the Sodality officers, Mary Kay O'Leary, vice-prefect; Mary O'Malley, secretary; Dorothy Walters, treasurer; Martha Wade, social chairman: and Adelaide Costello, committee chairman. Other attendants will be Peggy Cole. Geraldine Campbell, Ruth Reynolds, Josephine Roche, Lucille Janda, Jean Halm, Francine Lamb, and Marion Wahl. Four flower girls, daughters of Mun delein alumna, will include Mary Kath erine O'Neill, daughter of Katherine Brennan O'Neill '34; Mary Ann Leonard, daughter of Mary Ann Walsh Leonard '35; Gerianne Agnew, daughter of Ade laide Brost Agnew '34: and Mary Ann Coghlan, daughter of Marion Delahtmty Coghlan '34. The seniors, wearing caps and gowns, will come in procession to the shrine and place their flowers at the feet of the statue. After the coronation, the Rev erend L. V. Britt, S.J., moderator of the Loyola University Sodality, will give a sermon and celebrate Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament. 124 Merit Schol Departmental Scholastic and departmental honors were awarded to 124 students at the an- i.ual Honors Convocation, on May 16. College Honors, awarded to students in the sophomore, junior, and senior classes who are in the upper five per cent of the class, were awarded to 12 seniors. 9 juniors, and 13 sophomores. Seniors who merited College Honors arc Mary Ann Anderson, Patricia Cas- sidy, Audrey Dietz, Nancy Enzweiler, Josephine Gcndicllce, Irene Kenney, Pat ricia Marmitt, Muriel Meinken, Mary Frances Padden, Louise Pesut, Eleanor Pohl, and Joan Templeman. Receiving College Honors in the junior class were Edelle Boarini, Ursula Brod beck, Margaret Conahan, Ethel Dignan, Patricia Holway, Florence Jankowski, Marion King. Rita Stalzer, and Mary- Alice Sullivan. Sophomore College Honors were awarded to Adele Baiocchi, Ruth Casey. Dolores Corcoran, Tobia Dixler, Dorothy Gaffney, Frances Maher, Barbara Mason, Regina Milligan, Loretta Monahan, Syl via Rudman, Rosemary Templeman, Lucille Valatka, and Marcella Volini. Senior Class Honors were merited by Mary Beecher. Catherine Anne Brennan, Patricia Carroll, Elinor Forrestal, Mary Genevievc I human, Alice Marie Horen, Margaret McCormick, Eddy Jo Noonan, Jeanne O'Connor, Dorothy Rudman, Grace Schaar, and Geraldine Thorpe. Members of the junior class who re ceived Class Honors were Connie Brillis, Grace Foran, Jean Maclerran, Joanne Mertensotto, Suzanne Meyer ing. Marianne Peterson, Diana Satkus, Mary Ann Shaw, and Eloise Thomas. Meriting Class Honors in the sopho more class were Rita Augustin, Jeanne Becker, Geraldine Campbell, Mary Lou Doyle. Cecilia Godsel, Laura Hilgers, Joan Kemper, Rosemary Kiley, JoAnn Logelin, Jerianne Mangold, Ramona Marino. JoAnn McCarty, Ethel Mc Guire, Ann O'Reilly, Ellenmae Quan, Marilyn Taniburrino, Mary Jean Ward, and Betty Young. Meriting Class Honors in the freshman class were Yvonne Bellamy, Marjorie Boyd. Rosemary Bruok. Mildred Buch- holz, Dolores Cahill, Phyllis Corrigan, astic, onors Patricia Dannehy, Harriet Diacos, Pat ricia Donoboe, Patricia Emmerling, Barbara llommer, Jean Jahrke. Arleen Johnson, Patricia Kiely, Bcrnadette Krnak, Rosemarie Lcgenza, Mary Lcona Merrick, Mary Lyn Merwick, Mary Jo Ncwhart, Mary Popp, Helen Redlin, and Peggy Roach. Mary Therese Ryan, Joyce Saxon, Dor othy Schmugge, Dorothy Shaplik, Jac queline Shay, Florence Smith, Lorraine Stajdohar, Mary Kayc Tentinger, Jean Anne Trapp, Jeanic Tubekis, Gloria Volini, and Genevieve Wydra. The Kappa Gamma Pi Key was award ed to Mary Ann Anderson, E-leanor Arends, Sheila Finney, Lois Hintze, Pat ricia Hollahan, Irene Kenney, Francine Lamb. Jeanne McNulty, Mary Francis Padden, Louise Pcsut, Josephine Roche, Maureen Roche, and Geraldine Thorpe. Mary Gcrmainc Duffy merited the award in Chemistry; Mary Beecher, Alice Marie Horen, and Jeanne O'Con nor in Drama; Elinor Forrestal, Eliza beth Grady, and Joan Templeman in Economics. Departmental awards in English and in English-Journalism went to Mary Ann Anderson, Patricia Curran, Irene Ken ney. Dorothy Rudman, and Geraldine Thorpe. Mary Ann Anderson, Eleanor Arends. Patricia Curran. Lois Hintze. and Patri cia Hollahan merited awards for work on Skyscraper: Irene Kenney and Dor othy Rudman. for work on the Review; and Geraldine Thorpe for work on Quest and The Review. Home Economics awards were merited by Genevieve llannan and Margaret McCormick. and the History award by- Rosalie Brunk. Catherine Ann Brennan. Eleanor Pohl. and Jennie Spad.ifora merited the Mathematics award. Josephine Gendiellec. Muriel Meinken, and Lilian Muza received awards for Music: Jeanne Becker and Dorothy McCambridge, for Secretarial Science. Mary Ann Anderson, Patricia Curran, Irene Kenney. and Jeanne McNulty re ceived awards for Debate; Dellamae Laughlin for work in Glee Club; Mary K. Donley, Lillian Muza, and Eleanor Pohl for work in the Orchestra. Dorothy Rudman received the Red Cross Award.
title:
1946-05-22 (7)
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