description:
- v XV- .- ' rt-.iii'll-Hi ilUnl THIE Volume X MUNDELEIN COLLEGE, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, OCTOBER 5, 1939 No. 1 500 Delegates to Attend C.S.RA. Meet Saturday Memorial Mass for Cardinal Will Open Program of Lectures, Forums With the Reverend Daniel A. Lord, J, editor of The Queen's Work and Eribor of more than a score of books DJ pamphlets, as general chairman, the legional Conference of the Catholic Bool Press Association will meet here Salurday, Oct. 7, with over 500 high .il and college -ludriii- from l hicago- rd in attendance. Planned last spring by a group of uderators of Catholic school public-a ims in Chicago, the Conference, which for its centralizing theme the quo- rion, The Truth Shall Make Yor ta, is designed to acquaint student inrnalists with the nature and influence (Propaganda and to enable them to srd against its frequently subversive (wice. Reads Requiem Mass Registration, at 8:15 a. m., will be fol- *ed by a Requiem High Mass for Es Eminence. George Cardinal Miiu- dein. celebrated by the Reverend J. cent Kelly, S.J.. assistant dean of College of Arts and Sciences at lyola university, who will pay tribute the Cardinal's interest in the Catho- B Press. Sounding the keynote of the meeting. It Reverend James A. Magner. instruc- ratQuiglcy Preparatory Seminary, di- Ktor of the Charles Carroll Forum, Blwriter for Commonweal and Amer- k will talk on What and Why is lopaganda? The Reverend Edward V. Dailey. edi- Itrial writer of The New World, will on Mouthpieces of Propaganda: tadio. Theatre. Forum, etc.. and Karin falsh, Sunday editor of the Chicago Times, will lecture on Obstacles to the hsentation of Unbiased News. Journalists Lecture John Patrick Lally, fiction editor of re Chicago Daily News, will talk on technique of Propaganda in Fiction and the Magazines, and Rita Fitzpatrick, loth metropolitan editor of the Chicago bOAY Tribune, will talk on Organ isms Which Study Propaganda. Father Lord will close the program nth a lecture on Propaganda and gal Responsibility, and Father Magner iJl celebrate Benediction of the Most lessed Sacrament at the close of the inference. J. L. O'Sullivan, Dean of the Mar- tic University College of Journalism . director of the Catholic School Press Issociation, will conduct a Round Table fcussion for faculty advisers. The Reverend Walter D. Van Rooy, P, of Fenwick high school, will con- (Continued on Page 3. Col. 1) IP Publications, Student Merit C.S.P.A. Awards For the eighth consecutive year, All- Itaholic Honors have been awarded to College Review and The Sky- japer, in a national survey and rating test sponsored by the Catholic School less Association, and for the seventh :utivc year, a student has won one the writing contests. Virginia Cheatham, junior and staff iber of The Review, merited the feort-story award for the narrative en- led The Madonna Smiled, which ap- aied in the spring issue of The Re- last year. Faculty, Students Mourn Loss of Loved Chancellor, George Cardinal Mundelein His Eminence, George Cardinal Mundelein, late Chancellor of the College, is pictured here after he conferred degree upon his niece, Miss Rita Eppig, at the Charter Class Commencement in 1934. The former Miss Eppig is now Mrs. James Francis Kearney. 260 Freshmen Are From Five Nations; Three Continents Rep'esenting 73 schools on three continents, the Class of 1943. number ing 265, has broken all records numer ically and geographically. As the crow flies. the distances from Montevideo, the capital of Uruguay, and from Vienna are almost equal, but the title of Chief-Traveler goes to Joe Torchi of South America because of the necessary curves in her route. Elizabeth Schachtner from Vienna is a close second-place winner in the dis tance race, with Varia Adams, of Paris, France, showing. Elena and Rosa Prado Vertiz from Mexico City deserve honorable mention for a cross-continent jaunt to Mundelein. Of special interest, too, in the fresh man class is Marjorie Moy, American- born Chinese girl, who is the first stu dent of Chinese descent to register at the College. (Continued on Page 4, Col. 3) President Gives Welcome Address At Convocation Faculty Member Wins History Prize Sister Mary Augustina, B.V.M., head of the history department, merited the Dunning Award, conferred last June by the Columbia University, New York, for the best dissertation on American history published under the auspices of the University history department be tween July, 1935, and June, 1938. A study of the religious attitude of the American Colonists before, during, and after the Revolutionary War, the thesis is entitled American' Opinion of Roman- Catholicism in the Eigh teenth Century. Sister Mary Augus tina is chairman of the Division of Humanistic Sciences. Registration Sets Record; 10 New Members Join Faculty Sister Mary Justitia. B.V.M.. who has returned to the College as Presi dent, addressed the student body at the first Convocation of the year, on Sept. 19. pledging Faculty support for all stu dent activities and extending cordial wishes for the success of all students during the coming year. Sister Mary Consuela, B.V.M., who has held the Presidency of the College since 1936. retired in August because of ill health. To accommodate the increasingly large student body, which numbers 536 this year, 10 professors have joined the Faculty. Sister Mary Basiline, B.V.M., and Sister Mary Carmelyn, B.V.M., who were on leave of absence for study last year, have returned to the philoso phy and art departments, and Sister Mary Polycarp, B.V.M.. who was on the staff of Mount Carmel college, has returned to the English department. Sister Mary Philippa, B.V.M., has joined the English department, Sister (Continued on Page 3, Col. 5) Honor Cardinal at Convocation Today Plans for the Foundress Day program have been altered because of the death of His Eminence, the late George Cardi nal Mundelein. In substitution for the radio play, Isabel Molloy will read the address which the Cardinal gave at the Dedication of the College, and Patricia O'Toole and Marjory Thomas will pre sent a sketch from the Cardinal's career. Form Guard of Honor for Funeral Cortege, Lay Wreath Mundelein College, saddened by the loss of Chicago's late prelate, placed the first wreath and spiritual bouquet beside his casket at 5:15 p. in.. Tues day in the Cathedral of the Holy Name. Betty Vestal, co-editor of the Sky scraper, put the wreath, a large circle lt; gt;i boxwood with crimson streamers, In- fore the casket, with Clare Anderson, co- editor, and Annette Specht. Review edi tor, in attendance. The three, in caps and gowns, knelt in front of the casket as guard of honor until 6 :00 p. m. Wednesday morning, S.A.C. officers, class presidents, and the Sodality prefect attended the memorial Mass at the Ca thedral, representing the College. In a memorial program at 10:30 Tues day night, the Glee club presented a group of songs on a nationwide hookup over WMAQ. Bishop Bernard J. Sheil of Chicago, Archbishop John Mitty of San Francisco, Attorney-General Frank Murphy, Governor Henry Horner, Sen ator Scott Lucas, and Mayor Kelly spoke on the program. Students will form a guard of honor as the funeral cortege passes the College tomorrow at 2 p. m. They will form ranks on both sides of Sheridan Road from the library to the main building as the procession progresses from the Ca thedral to St. Mary-of-the-I.akc seminary at Mundelein, Illinois, where the inter ment will occur. New Legion Head Is College Quest; Qrants Interview Father of Freshman Resident Student Voices Veteian's Peace Stand Raymond J. Kelly, newly elected na tional commander of the American Legion, paid the College a pre-election visit last week to grant the Sky scraper an exclusive interview and to greet his freshman daughter, Winifred, a student here. Energetic and commanding, yet pos sessing the geniality that chuckles at a good joke, Mr. Kelly was firm in his statement of American non-aggression. For the past two years the Legion has passed unanimous resolutions against the entrance of the United States into a foreign war, he stated, and the task of the World War's alumni is to keep America out of the present European conflict. The commander spoke of the disor ganization which prevailed during the last war. in which he enlisted as a pri vate and retired from service after the war with a second lieutenant's commis sion. Mr. Kelly attended the University of Notre Dame and was graduated from the University of Detroit. He is at present corporation counsel of the city of Detroit, and has already begun plans with other Legion officials to main tain complete neutrality through con gressional legislation and control of pro-war propaganda. When asked his opinion of Munde lein, the commander smiled. I sent my daughter here, didn't I? he answered. Attend Requiem Mass for Chicago's Archbishop Tomorrow Tomorrow, as world-wide mourning marks the funeral of His Eminence, George Cardinal Mundelein, who died suddenly on Oct. 2, the Faculty and students of the College which bears his name will assemble lor a Requiem Mass, celebrated by the Reverend James J. Mahoncy, S.J.. professor of philosophy, for the Chancellor, whose name and influence have been of vast sig nificance in the brief history of Munde lein College. At the request of His Eminence, who had long desired that a Catholic day col lege for women be established in Chica go, the Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary undertook the task, erecting a 15 story edifice in which to train their students for able and intelligent Catholic leadership. On All Saints Day. 1929, just a de cade ago. the first earth was turned for the college building, and less than a year later Mundelein College Opened its doors to 250 charter students. Erected Stations One of the Cardinal's first official visits occurred in Ihe autumn of 1930 when he erected the Stations of the Cross in Stella Maris Chapel. When he went to Rome in the spring of 1931 to officiate at the dedication of the new College of Propaganda, made pos sible through his efforts, the prelate carried with him a volume of pictures of the building. Describing it to His Holiness, the late Pope Pius XI, the Cardinal said, this college is not only one of the largest Catholic colleges for women in the world, but it reaches closer to heaven than any other college of which I know. On June 3. 1931. His Eminence pre sided at the Dedication ceremony, ask ing God's blessing that the College might send forth valiant and success ful women for God and for the Coun try, for the Church and for Chris tianity. When the first class .was graduated at the 1932 Commencement, the Car dinal presided, and in 1934, at the graduation of the Charter Class, In- con fcrrcd degrees upon the 88 can didates, including his niece. Mrs. James Francis Kearney, the former Miss Rita Eppig. Received Carolers The traditional Christmas serenade of the Glee club began at the Cardinal's home in 1932. Delighted with the sing ing, Cardinal Mundelein requested the hymn which had been his favorite since childhood, Ihr Kinderlein Kommet, and, since that Christmas Eve. the song has closed each annual serenade at the archiepiscopal residence. On successive Christmasscs he gave to the college priceless pieces from his own personal autograph and book collec tion, including an almost complete set of autographed documents of the Sign ers of the Declaration of Independence, signatures of famous men, including Charles Carroll of Carrollton, Roger B. Taney, Henry W. Longfellow, Ed- vard Grieg, and others. Last Christmas Eve, he gave to the College a letter which he had received from His Holiness, Pope Pius XII. when, as Cardinal Pacelli, he wrote to Chicago's Cardinal. (Continued on Page 3. Col. 1)
title:
1939-10-05 (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
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Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College