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Page Four SKYSCfcAPER Winter Week-End Scheduled For Feb* 1-3, at Pistakee The Women's Athletic association is sponsoring a winter sports week-end at Pistakee Bay, Feb. 1, 2, and 3. Under the general chairmanship of Junior Gina Moran, WAA mem bers and their student guests will enjoy skating, skiing, and tobog ganing at one of Illinois' favorite recreation spots. Miss Audrey Sullivan, instructor in Physical Education, will chap- erone the group, which will lodge at the Oak Park Hotel. Leaders Launch New Red Cross Fund Drive Preparing for the Red Cross Fund drive. Miss Rosemary Racine, of the Physical Education department, to gether with Jacqueline Fasules, Fund Drive chairman, and Sybil Lillie, Red Cross chairman, will attend a pre-fund dinner, Jan. 23, at 6:30 in the canteen of chapter headquarters. Fund office representatives will ex plain the chapter's part in fund rais ing. Jan. 9 found Mundelein students skipping over the ice to a ward party at the Great Lakes Naval hospital. In the group were Juniors Anastasia Tsout souris, Sybil Lillie, Florence Savage; Sophomores Jean Hirsch, Rita Frische, and Lucille Hamilton. Freshmen Mary Lou Leiva, JoAn Crowley, Irene Pataki, Rose Marie Pellegrini, Patricia Cassidy, Mary Jane Parkes, Jacquelyn Richter, and Rosa- leen Loftus followed along. Old Timers Plan Party For Netu Resident Students Resident students will gather to wel come both the new semester and new resident students at a card party. Feb. 13, in Philomena Hall. Mary Louise Zahm and Bernadine Loetz will be in charge of the enter tainment, while refreshments will be provided by Carol Hanigan and Vir ginia Tully. Arrangements will be handled by Barbara Mann and Bar bara Heintz. Study Character Of Norwegian Author Students of contemporary drama re cently presented a panel discussion on the life and works of Dramatist Hen- rik Ibsen. Mary Patricia Andersen reviewed The Ghosts; Jeanne Sugrue, Peer Gynt; Dol ores Sullivan, Rosemersholm; Donna Fox, A Doll's House; Mary Fellegi, The Master Builder; Betty Garrity and Mary Therese O'Connor, Hedda Gab ler; and Mary Sramek and Margaret Hanley, The Wild Duck. All participated in a character study of the Norwegian writer, describing in his background Ibsen's emphasis on the conflict between the individual and society. Clubs Cooperate In Parish Program Vital Speakers have turned their many-faceted interests to Home Nurs ing under the direction of the Red Cross. Having completed preparation at Red Cross Headquarters, they will speak in parishes on Home Nursing and its importance. Students participating in this pro gram are Suzanne Doyle, Mary Cath- i erine Davy, Loretta Gibbons, Mary Therese Jordan, Diane Vainowski, Car ol Peters, Norma Jean Hobin, Angela De Florio, Joan Carr, Marilyn Sci- meca, and Evelyn Donohoe. Chairmen Report National Activity Over 40 regional representatives and National Commission chairmen gath ered at the Sherman hotel during the Christmas holidays to report the stat us of NFCCS since the adjournment of the National Congress and to enact necessary legislation. After lengthy discussion, the dele gates decided to accept the 1952 con gress bid from the University of Notre Dame. The week-long session will open on the South Bend campus Sept. 29. All rates will include room and board and will average slightly under 40. including the use of such campus fa cilities as the swimming pool, the post office, an evening dance, and the actual site of the congress in session. Provisions for OSP promotion were approved by the council to include two all-expense tours to Europe for the outstanding campus and regional OSP chairmen. The official organ of NFC CS, however,, was dropped. The Fed- erator, formerly published at Marquette university, has been discontinued sub ject to reconsideration by the congress this summer., The delegates believe that the publication was neither acting as a public relations organ for their student bodies, nor as an inter-com munications medium for Federation per sonnel. The national office will be responsible for publishing a monthly newsletter for all senior and junior delegates. College Commission Strives To Procure Reduced CTA Rates In an attempt to procure reduced rates from the CTA for college students us ing its transportation vehicles in the Chicago area, NSA will sponsor a meet ing at Roosevelt college, Feb. 16. Rep resentatives from approximately 25 colleges will attend. The meeting will form a commission to initiate action. It is hoped that authorities will cooperate. Junior Mary Nikias, a regional of ficer of NSA, recently was the recipi ent of an invitation from the State Department to attend a meeting of UNESCO, Jan. 27 to 30. The con vention will be held in New York and will decide American policy toward UNESCO. m Students Discuss Place In Parish Club, class, and student government leaders on 10 local Catholic college campi met to discuss the place of parish at St. Xavier college, Jan. 20. The Chicago region of NFCCS, spon sor of the event, re-accentuated the theme of the recent National Congress in St. Paul with the main address by Rev. Laurence Lynch. Following the remarks of Robert Ar- zbaecher, Chicago Region president, on the aims and purposes of NFCCS, the meeting broke down into Commission panels. The smaller groups discussed the specific areas of activity open to college graduates in the parish. Sodaiists Attend Mass En Masse Sodaiists from Mundelein and Loy ola joined for Mass and a Communion breakfast on Sunday, Jan. 13. Mass, at 9:30 in the Madonna Delia Strada chapel, was followed by break fast in the tea room at Mundelein. Af ter breakfast the Sodaiists enjoyed a lecture by the Reverend Ralph Galla gher, S.J., guest speaker. Sophomore Places Second In Fencing Rosemary Ernst, sophomore, placed second in the Women's Prep Foil com petition of the Amateur Fencers League of America, held in the gymnasium, Jan. 13. JoAn Crowley, freshman, tied for third place and took fourth place on points. Winner of the meet was Nancy Ut- sonimiya, of the University of Chi cago. Dorothy Yamasahita of the Un iversity of Chicago took third place. Other Mundelein students in the com petition were Rose Mari Pellegrini, Peggy Moran, and Marilyn Scimeca. Frenchwoman Compares American Education With French, English The French club will present French- born Madame Jacqueline Delobel-Brim- mer, former teacher at Wellesley and Bryn Mawr colleges, who will lecture here Feb. 14 at 3 p.m. in the Social room. Her topic will be Comparison of French, English, and American Meth ods of Study and Education. Madame Delobel-Brimmer has taught and stud ied in all three countries. She will also discuss travel in these sections. Music Department Presents Annual Mid-Year Concert Music filled the college auditorium at the Annual Mid-Winter Concert yes terday. The performance consisted of piano and vocal selections. The concert opened with Emily Kloc playing Beethovan's Concerto in C min or, accompanied at the second piano with orchestral parts by Ruth Ryan. Mary Alias followed with Etude Op. 10, No. 12, by Chopin. A vocal selection, presented by Nan cy Westphal, was Elegie by Massenet. Mary Agnes Moran played Etude Op. 10, No. 5, by Chopin followed by Regina Dowd's playing Dedication by Schumann-Liszt. Ginger Walsh sang Ay Gitanos by Eakin, and Georgia Lambros played the Second Concerto in D minor, by Mac- Dowell, accompanied by Rosemary Ernst. The second part of the concert began with Norma Galvin playing Chopin's Polonaise in C minor. Vera Eng played Chopin's Mazurka in B minor and Mimi Pieri followed with a vocal selection, Into the Night, by Edwards. Blandina Bietoo played Toccata by Khachaturian and Florence Nudo sang Pucinni's Mi Chiamano Mimi, from La Boheme. The final selection was Ru- benstein's Concerto Op. 70, No. 4, which was played by Marilyn Egan with Ir ma Voller '49 playing the orchestral parts at the second piano. Mary Agnes Moran and Betty Well ner accompanied the vocalists. Quild Leader Qives Awards at Workshop (Cont. from page 1, col. 4.) The workshop will conclude with the presentation of contest awards by Mr. James E. Bulger, president of the Gabriel Guild. The competition, run in conjunction with the workshop, is designed to encourage interest in and attendance at the session and to of fer high school journalists an oppor tunity to merit recognition for their talents. Professionals Talk Professional journalists, including members of the Chicago Gabriel Guild will judge the contests' five divisions, news articles, features, editorials, hook reviews, and poetry. Barbara Heintz, campus chairman, is assisted by Marion Whelan, Donna Merwick, Irene Johnson, and Arlene Gorgol. Moderators from the College of St. Francis, De Paul university, and Mun delein College will present a picture of the potential range of related courses and college activities which would be advantageous in the professional field. Represent Colleges Editors of The Rosarian, The Xavier- ite, The Procopian News and The Loy ola News will discuss their experi ences with alumni in the fields of re porting, radio script writing, advertis ing and public relations. Alumnae from the College of St. Francis, Rosary college, De- Paul university and Mundelein college will cooperate to provide a true cross- section of the climb from amateur to professional journalism and the effect each has on the other. SAC Speaks Up amending the Constitution or of re-af firming your faith in it in its present form. Be a Sport . . . The National Collegiate Athletic As sociation has proposed a 12-point pro gram emphasizing the need to alleviate the corruption found in college sports today. The National Student Association is taking a poll of student opinion in an effort to determine whether NCAA should adopt this plan. Through your SAC officers' vote, Mundelein college has pledged its support of the suggested program. The New Year dawned on collegians now engrossed in the hectic wonders of semester examinations, will offer consolation next week with the student retreats comforting days of quiet that should be savoured as delicacies. Social consciousness during retreat is imperative. If we think of others when we are inclined to talk, we will have respect for their recollection, re frain from distracting them. If we join our prayers for peace, for our own goals, for each other we will strive as one in an effort to have Christ draw us close to Him self. Best Foot Forward . . . Seniors and juniors from high schools in the city and suburbs will visit (Mun delein, Feb. 12, sit in on classes, watch us in lab and studio and library, glimpse the excitement of college as we live it. Our thought of them that day, our friendliness and courtesy, our sincere interest in them will kindle their in terest in Catholic education, make them eager to follow in our footsteps. Remember the Day ... ' Once in a while the passage of time introduces a need for changes in things that have long been accepted as fitting. If you believe it is time to consider a change in the SAC Constitution or time that you familiarized yourself with that document, contact Mary Frances Anderson, via your class bulletin board, and investigate the possibilities of Juniors Take Test On America Today Today members of the Junior class will meet T. S. Eliot, Lovett, Wilson, and other contemporary figures under the species of the Catholic Views Ex perimental test. The test is calculated to measure the awareness of students of Catholic col leges of current affairs. The multiple choice test of 100 questions is based on the Jesuit-edited America magazine and sponsored by the Catholic Business Education association. Results of these tests will be for warded by the Economics department to the Catholic Business Education as sociation where they will be evalu ated. SL uAcrapinad Vacation is over, but the memory* lingers on . . . and as examinations take first place with their essa/ ques* tions jind trues and falses. thoughts gdl back to the multiple-choices, fill-ins, and iriatchiiigs of the holiday. Vacation time was party time, and hotel ballrooms were busy with mer-l rymakcrs. They danced till dawn ail the St. Joseph's Christinas dance in thel Bismarck, according to Mary Geraty,; Helen Friel, Connie Colletti, Rosemary Graham, Marcella Farrell, and Mari-' anne Hodgman. While Judy Prendergast attended thef Marquette Chicago club's dance. Shir-l ley Snyder, and Loretta Soule took a jaunt to Milwaukee for the Loyola: I Marquette game and the Holly Ball. Seniors Helen Schneider and Rose mary Kelma danced at the St. Igna gt; tius Alumni dance, as did Mary Ther ese O'Connell at the Notre Dame ChP cago club dance. Helen Keane and Rosemary Dona telli helped ring the old year out art the new year in at DePaul's Alphi Delta Gamma New Year's Eve party' As they sang Auld Lang Syne a j Loyola's Pi Alpha Lambda New Year' party. Nancy Karls, Roseanne Leahy ' Ann Fitzgerald, Nancy Gibbons, Peg gy Winslow, Betsy Siegler, Joan Lamb Barbara Brennan, and Barbara Schlad weiler said farewell to '51 and hell to '52. The Theatre bills offered a multiple choice of opportunities to patrons o the arts during the holiday seasoi Melita Lynch and Virginia Clinite en joyed the fine performance of the Bal 1 let Theatre, while Lois Tallet chos the Chicago Symphony at Orchestr Hall. Die Fledermaus, at the Opei house, was the answer for Gloria Man- fredi's entertainment problems. Rosemary Regan not only saw Cle lt; R patra from the wing of the Ziegfiel I theatre in New York, but she ah I lunched with the star, Laurence Oliv: er, after the performance. Patricia Ruffle laughed with the aui ience at The Moon is Blue, while B ty Fisher, Mary Jane Mulvihill, a Dawn McCormick marveled at the fl acting in Darkness at Noon. With one eye on the calendar anJ the other trying to ignore it, some st * dents filled in their vacation with quid trips. Irene Johnson spent her tin s skiing and sight-seeing in VermonSo At the same time Catherine Madden fl Connie Marvin, and Patricia Quinl s lt; vacationed in the Empire state's pridi I and joy, New York City. Not ffl away was Sylvia Devine in Baltimore Santa Claus wore a 10-gallon ha and high spurred boots when Angel Anzalone saw him in Texas. Alsj sunning themselves during the hoi days were Marikay Hall and Jan Purtelle, who visited Mississippi an Florida, respectively. An essay on their vacations woui be a snap for some recent engageelth With new sparkles mirrored in theJFi eyes they returned to school all aglotfw. Seniors Marjorie Keating and Fran ces Mclnerney became engaged to Johi to Conway, graduate of Northwcsten D; Technological Institute, and Ray Meyei co senior at St. Mary's college in Winona respectively. ,. Also engaged to a St. Mary's senior Jack McSherry. is a speech major Eve f lyn Donohoe. Dorothy Francoeur re j ceived a ring from Don Manucciana as did sophomore Dorothy Fellegi fron .. ' Donald Jans. ' g It was an especially merry Christma J? for Phyllis Wolff and Joan Brehmet too. Miss Wolff became engaged tVa' Gene McBride and Miss Brehmer t *Ct Gerald White. der It was really a winter wonderland foq e senior Ellen Hennelly, who became Mr . John Albert Cagney, on Dec. 28 atio' St. Hilary Church. Geraldine Schiaand vone, senior English major, was Wg* the wedding party. ar,d Joanne Sheridan has chosen thjkC month of February for her wedding. SrOJ will wed Patrick Barrett, Notre DamVjjd graduate, Feb. 16 at St. James chur P in Arlington Heights. ' ( I
title:
1952-01-21 (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