description:
ajety Pays . ior to Ruth Shmigelsky, left, who turned in to Jeanne Coughlin, right, chair- II of the College Safety Council, the first safety suggestion of the year. Miss Isigelsky, an art student, has made for the Council several posters like the gt; pictured. bnors Foundress In Lecture Before Student Assembly UudiiiR Mother Mary Francis Clarke, indrcss of the Sisters of Charity, V.M., as a valiant woman who or- nitd a teaching community to edu- tt young people according to the mandments, the only system of ig that brings contentment into hu- life, the Reverend James D. llish- gavc the Foundress Day lecture at Oct. 5 assembly. K graduate of Georgetown university, now rector at St. Gall's church, ler Hishen challenged the students exemplify in their daily lives the igc and character which disting- led Mother Clarke Voted the greatest Catholic woman the century in a nationwide poll pducted several years ago by The ten's Work, Mother Clarke founded Sisters of Charity, B.V.M., in Phil- ibhia, in 1833. Safety Council to Present Speakers To acquaint the student body with its aims and objectives, the Safety Council will present two guest speak ers at the assembly on Oct. 12, Edward J. Slczak, Director of First Aid, Water Safety, and Accident Prevention for the Red Cross, and Vivian Weedan, curriculum consultant of the National Safety Council. Following the addresses, Jeanne Coughlin, student director of the local Council, will lead an informal discus sion of Safety Council activities at Mundelein. Participating in the discussion will be chairmen of the Central Safety committees, Dolores Rudnik, Patricia Tubby, Ruth Shmigelsky, Patricia Her bert, Mary C. Tuomey, and Mary Jane Kent. )rchestral Trio Entertains League JA trio from the College Orchestra irided musical entertainment for snbers of the Catholic Women's igue on the club's fiftieth aiinivcr- rji Sept. 25, in the Fine Arts Build- Players were Lillian Muza, violin; ftrothy Grill, cello; and Barbara sn Frick, piano. Freshman Class Has 332 Members S)xat Qoes On list of engaged students is not a novelty in this column, but a list of dents brides is altogether an inno- ion hut wartime brings many in- rations. Senior Mary Jane Maloney Larkin, t year's junior class president, was irricd this summer and has returned receive her degree. unior Shirley Wolfe Payne is mar- id to a Lieutenant, (j.g.), in the Navy, lo is now on active duty in the South icific. Also a member of the junior class is tma Jane Rewstrom Nelson, wife of a Hhwestern medical student in the rmy Reserve. Sophomore Miriam hstein Hamburg registered the day In her marriage to a Northwestern total student, also in the Naval Re tire. Another junior bride is Meta (iris Fleischer, an art student. (Continued from Page 1, col. 1) Jeanne Clark, sister of junior Doro thy; and Peggy Cole, sister of La vinia '42. Grace Foran is the sister of Ellen '43; Genevieve Frercs of Jane ex '44; Dorothy Gburczyk of Loretta '45; Kathryn Ilangstcrtcr of Maurice ex '46; Muriel Hasten of Eula ex '40; Jeanne Holman of Helen '39; Lois Ann Hopkins of Jean '46; Lucille Janda of Florence '44, and Rosemary Kelly of Jane '46. Carole Layden is the sister of sopho more Eleanor; Evelyn Mando of Rosa- lyn ex '46; Margaret McCall of Har riet ex '34; Geraldine McDermott of Patricia ex '45, and Rosemarie Meyer of Margaret ex '40. Jane Michael's sister Mary Julia is a special student; Muriel Millar is the sister of Elizabeth '43; Betty O'Con nor, sister of Catherine ex '38; Jane Ostendorf's sister Rosemarie was grad uated in '42, and Donna Jean Powers is the sister of Rosemary ex '44. Joyce Schmitz is the sister of Phyllis ex '44; Cecilia Shanahan is the sister of Irene '46; and Marianne Small is the sister of Lucille '37. Dorothy Smith is the sister of La- Verne '44; Rita Stalzer of Dorothy ex '39; Rosemary Tierney of Patricia '43; Esther Velis of junior Ann. and Joan Walley of Marie '46. SKYSCRAPER Sees Motivation As Essential for Success in Study Philosophy Professor Urges Concentration, Prayer Urging the students to cultivate the will power necessary for success in study, the Reverend William Magee, S.J. professor of philosophy at Loyola and Mundelein, lectured, following the Mass of the Holy Ghost, on Sept. 25. Citing the statistical record that of all the freshmen who enter college only one out of three remain to be graduated, Father Magee insisted that, all domestic and financial reasons aside, the greatest factor in student mortality results from lack of will power, lack of proper motivation, lack of hard work. Almost everyone. Father continued, has sufficient mental capital to begin with, but not all invest it wisely. For the student in a Catholic college, such wise investment is especially impera tive. Scoring the type of so-called edu cation which trains students in the accomplishments and skills of life, but which leaves them untrained, undis ciplined in the loyalties, the relation ships, the duties, and the responsibili ties of every-day living, Father Magee declared that life is more than a pro fession, more than a career. Club to Consider Bases of Culture The Reverend John Wellmuth, S.J., chairman of the department of philoso phy at Loyola, will preside at the first formal meeting of the Philosophy club, Mu Nu Sigma, on Thursday, Oct. 28, at 1 p.m. in Room 405. All members of the club and stu dents of all philosophy classes are in vited to join the discussion on The Philosophical Bases of Culture. . .. . Page Three Professor of Law Declares Freedom Founded on Faith Cites Parallel Between Lepanto And Rome Today Reminding the students that the Bat tle of Lepanto, won in 1571 by the ar mies of Don Juan of Austria and the prayers and sacrifices of Christian peo ple, marked a victory for Christianity, the Reverend Edward V. Cardinal, C.S.V., of the history department, in a brief address at the assembly yester day, drew a parallel between the men ace of the Turk at that time and the Nazi menace to Rome today. Today, he pointed out, under the shadow of St. Peter's, there is an ene my. Today, while the Holy Father is virtually a prisoner, the Allied Armies are marching on Rome. Let us pray, now, he continued, that victory may be ours, and let us ask Our Lady that this victory may be brought about without harm to the Holy Father and without destruction of any of the priceless and sacred monuments of the Holy City. Six Mortarboards Tucked Away; Six Rings Will Stay Six members of the Class of 1943 were summertime brides, three of them on the same day. One June 5, the Sat urday after Commencement, Jean Bem is was married to Lieutenant Herman Gresik, at St. Ignatius church. The Gresiks are now living in Chickisha, Oklahoma. On the same day, Laura Mahoney be came the bride of Richard Usher, in a ceremony at St. Laurence's church, and Helen F.gan was married in St. Giles church, Oak Park, to Lieutenant Frank Quinn. The Qiiinns are now in Leban on, Missouri. Another summertime bride, Royce McFadyen, was married in St. Ger trude's church to First Lieutenant Don ald Crist, veteran of the Battle of the Solomons, who is now stationed in Texas. Marilouise Kelly was married to Michael Ahern at St.'Clement's church, on July 24, and Gertrude Quinlan be came the bride of Lieutenant Martin King, at St. Giles church, on Sept. 4. Sees Religion As Unifying Principle for Nations Faith is the predicate of freedom, and, without faith, no freedom is at tainable,'' declared Clarence P. Man- ion, Ph.D., professor of law at the University of Notre Dame, in a lecture on Faith and Freedom, at the Sept. 20 assembly. The personnel of the Continental Congress, he continued, declared their faith in God, necessarily, because they believed in freedom, and because free dom must, logically, be anchored to some power outside the material world. Living in an age when the inhabi tants of this country were diversified as to language, religion, race, customs, and habits, the framers of the Consti tution, Dr. Manion observed, sought some principle of unity to draw and hold together the nucleus of a nation. They found that unity in the Christian faith. That principle is, today, according to Dr. Manion, the strongest and the most enduring bond of unity among the American people. We will begin to make new progress as a nation, he continued, when wc unite in the broth erhood of man under the fatherhood of God. Declares War on Seventh Column Glee Club Sings On Nationwide Radio Broadcast The spacious modern studio of Radio Station WBBM was filled with the solemn melodies of 55 blended voices in. the Church of the Air program at High Noon last Sunday. The College Glee club paid tribute to His Holiness, Pope Pius XII, in a half-hour, nationwide program of Latin Hymns in His honor. The hymns Orcmus Pro Pontificc, Ave Maria, Tu Est Pctrus, and Long Live the Pope were sung. The Very Reverend Monsignor Ambrose Burke, president of St. Ambrose college, was the principal speaker. (Continued from page 1, col. 2) director of physical education, and Caroline Madden, M.S., of the chem istry department. Jeanne Coughlin, student director, heads the Central committee, assisted by Dolores Rudnik, secretary; Patri cia Tubby, program chairman; Mary C. Tuomey, publicity chairman; Ruth Shmigelsky, art director; Patricia Herbert, campus organization chair man; Mary Jane Kent, athletic chair man, and Marjorie Schaller and Eloise Thomas, representatives of resident students. Assisting the Council will be repre sentatives of the campus organizations and members of the Safety corporation. Each month the Council will present an award to the student who submits the best safety slogan or practical sug gestion for a safety measure within the College. September's winner is Ruth Shmigelsky, who suggested the il lumination of the low ceiling opposite the drama workshop. We Three . aren't triplets, Peggy, Patricia, and Mary O'Brien say to puzzled friends. Peggy and Patricia, right, are twins and fresh men. Mary, at left, ie a junior.
title:
1943-10-08 (3)
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