description:
The second Saturday of spring March fe-u'ill find the Blue Network saluting lundekin College students, especially Ds( who participated in Bake-a-Cake- or-a-Soldier Day. Tin salute will be given on the Pills- ury lluur program, starring the Kings esters and Walter Patterson. Tickets for ie broadcast, which will be given in the ie network studios at the Merchandise But, may be secured from the Dean. Debate with Dayton University Monday Honolulu will come to Mundelein on onday, in the person of Anthony Rodri- p, from Hawaii, who forms one half oi Dayton university's debate team. Hush Hoffman, himself a native Day man, will join Mr. Rodrigues in up- lulling the affirmative of the national ilercollcgiate debate topic, Resolved: hat the Federal Government Should Regulate by Law All Labor Unions in eUnited States. Debating for Mundelein be F.lsie Cramer and Ruth Weisman. Voir XII MUNDELEIN COLLEGE, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 1942 No. 10 ophomores Take Tests Next Week There will be no classes for sopho- Bores on Monday and Tuesday. March Band 24 there will be comprehensive baminations instead. They will be iten in the auditorium. The General Culture test is scheduled for 9-12 a.m., on Monday, with the Con- enporary Affairs test coming on from to 2 40 p.m. On Tuesday, the English test will be iven at 9 a.m., the Vocational Interest St from 12 to 1 p.m., and the Mun- elein Inventory from 2-3:15 p.m. JFormer Students Enter Community Five alumnae members and former stu- Jdents were professed as Sisters of Char ily of the Blessed Virgin Mary at Mount barmel, Dubuque, Iowa, yesterday and t former students were received. Those professed were Frances Geary 39. Sister Mary Michail: Marian Gilbert '39, Sister Mary Kathlcena: Ignes Griffin '39. Sister Mary Ignatia: Dorothy Crowley ex '41, Sister Mary Joan Francis; Margaret Halloran ex M2, Sister Mary Maura. Those received ire Coletta Stanton ex '44, Sister Mary- It. Denis; and Marie O'Malley ex '44. Bwer Mary Martinice. faculty Member Writes Article ScienceMagazine Carries Study of Fungi study oi fungi of the Genus Tre- jnelleilendron, by Sister Mary Cecilia. B.V.M.. head of the biology department. appears iii the January issue of the r Fui(AN Midland Naturalist. To decide where the species distinc- ions occur in the genus, Sister Mary Ce- ilia examined 140 collections of fungi m her observation formed a key o the eight species. Seventeen photographs of fungi, taken eafcy Sister Mary Cecilia, and six drawings ri llustratc the article. Wanted: Cover Design For Party Program Announce Annual Creative Art Contest i i al o As a chocolate sundae needs to be n op n-d with luscious whipped cream, so Pi he Card Party program needs something eiv added. Artistically inclined students are invited lo make the addition, in the form of L over designs, to be submitted to the Stu- ib tnt Activities Council, in Room 404. Another opportunity for art students is the Creative Art contest, sponsored by gt;' ie College, award for which will he an- ounccd at Commencement. Eligible to be entered in the contest are III illustrations which have appeared in he Review or the Skyscraper this vear. Rally Round S.A.C. Flag - - - It's Card Party Time Again Announce Committees for Benefit at Stevens One Month from Today Enlisting the cooperation of the entire student body to make the annual benefit card party and fashion revue a success, the Student Activities Council has an nounced the various class committees. The scene of the party is the Grand Ballroom of the Stevens Hotel, and the date is April 20. Jane Brown, president of the S.A.C. is general chairman. Rita Valenzano and Rosemary Knockaert, chairmen of the fashion revue, have announced that Rus seks will again sponsor the revue. Mem bers of the bridal party, climax of the event, will be elected by the senior class, and the models will be chosen from the senior and junior classes. Kathleen Warner and I lelen Sauer are co-chairmen of the advertisement commit tee. As assistants, they have appointed Barbara Ohab, Virginia Arado, Rose mary I.aiialian, Royce McFadyen, Joan Leach, Julia Case, Patricia Bledsoe, Pa tricia Crumley, Dorothy Grill, Jean Pat noe, Dorothy Median, Adelaide Sitas, Helen Walz, Muriel Kadison, Jean Spa tuzza, Kathryn Fox, Margaret Durkin, Maura Roche, Betty Geary, and Patricia Tubby. The ticket committee is directed by Helen Cashion and Mary Catherine Quinn. The class chairmen are Mary Jane Garvey, Margery Linnehan, Bette Condrcn, Eleanor Kandratas, Jean Kauf inann, Geraldine Hoffman, Margaret Jean Burke, I lelen Eichstaedt, Mary Jane Ma loney, Lorraine Saigh, Kathleen McNul ty, Rosemary Viglione, Dorothy Klink, Blossom Afremow. Mary Barbara Gale, Charlene Guldin, Rita Ann Kennedy, Bonnie Mae Diebold, and Ruth Wagner. Dorothy Hein and Catherine Cunning ham lead the patron committee, aided by- Jane Champion, Maude Shuflitowski, Pa tricia Tierney, Laura Mahoney, Anne Goode, Dorothy Behm, Mary Kay Jones, (Continued on Page 4, Col. 5) Summer Time Is Study Time for Three Year A.B.'s Music Scores for March, At Hands of Orchestra, Organists At Loyola -- Singers Join in Concert . . . say Marianne Donahoe, Albina Gherardi (front), and Marian Anthoulis, violinists in the College Orchestra, which will present its annual concert tonight Mundelein Is on the Map And Vice Versa Art Freshmen Paint Chart of War for Hall Wall No longer will geography and history students and all the rest of us, for that matter have to struggle to remember the constantly shifting territorial allignments all over the warring world. Shortly after Easter, a large threc-by- five-foot map of the world, on which freshman art students arc now working, will be suspended on the wall just outside the tea-room. Ruthe Bransfield, Dorothy Clarke, Mary Jane Harvey, and Meta Shifris have drawn the map and painted it in oils, which can easily be painted over to in dicate changes in boundaries. Fach week, members of the freshman history classes will tabulate all territorial changes and report these to the four ar tists, who will retouch the map accord ingly. In order to accelerate the prepara tion of college graduates to assist in the nation's Victory drive, the Reg istrar has announced that it will be possible for Mundelein freshmen reg istering this summer to complete their college studies in three years, instead of the customary four. This curricular adjustment is ac companied, of course, by conditions. The students involved must main tain a B average, and must attend four summer school sessions. Thus, a freshman registering in June, 1942, may be graduated in August, 1945. At the Organ 'Classical Moments of Music The Orchestra and Choral club will pre sent a joint Spring Concert at the Loyola Community Theatre on Monday evening. March 23. Adalbert Huguelet is the di rector of the Choral club, and the Or chestra, under the baton of Joseph J. Grill, will repeat the selections played here on March 20. The Choral club will open the program with the Jubilate Deo of Singenbcrger, followed by Hageman's Christ Went Up Into the Hills, with a soprano solo by Maude Shuflitowski. and with Louise Szkodzinski at the piano. Albina Gherardi will play a violin obbli- gato for the third selection, The Seraphic Song by Rubinstein-Gaincs. Johann Strauss' Voices of Spring will be a solo sung by soprano Eleanor Kan dratas. Grieg's To Spring, arranged by Lester, will be sung by the Choral club. Soprano Shirley Hopper will sing Ben edict's The Wren, with a flute obbligato by Suzanne Hager. The final Choral club selection will be Glorious America, by Clark, with Yvonne Pelletier playing the cornet obbligato. Melodious moments in various moods will be offered by members of the Organ Guild at their concert on March 24 in the auditorium. Bonnie Mae Diebold will play Weinke's Reverie, and Barbara Ann Frick will play- Musical Snuffbox, by the Russian com poser, Lidow. Next. Bonnie Turner will play the graceful rhythms of Saint-Saen's The Swan, and Sketch by the American com poser, Gordon Balch Nevin. Beverly Craggs will play two selections. La Cinquaintaine by Gabriel Marie and Theme froni Symphonic Pathetique. by Tschaikowsky. Jane Claire Brown will play Irish Airs, and Angela Voller, junior organ major, will play the emotionally stirring Bolero, by the French composer, Ravel. Rosalie Wiora will close the program with two selections, Fantasia and Fugue in A Minor, by Bach, and Variations de Concert, by Ronnct, French composer of organ music who is now making an Amer ican tour. Remember-'Deadline For Writing Contest Submit Manuscripts in Room 506 Sharpen your pencils and circle April 15 on your calendar the deadline for the Creative Writing contest and submit manuscripts in Room 506. Judging the short stories submitted will be Professor John T. Frederick, author, editor, radio artist, and professor of Eng lish at Northwestern university. The Reverend Joseph F. Thorning, pro fessor at Mt. St. Mary Seminary, Mary land, will judge the essays, and John S. Kennedy, editor of the diocesan news paper of Hartford, Connecticut, and con tributor to the Sign magazine, will de cide upon the best editorials submitted. Conteni K gt;rary criticism will be judged by Miss Eileen O'Haycr, assistant editor of Extension magazine, and poetry will be evaluated by the Reverend Harold C. Gardiner, S.J., literary editor of Amer ica. Music Will Be In the Air At Concert Tonight College Orchestra, Led by Joseph Grill, Presents Program At 8:15 Vou may travel on wings of song to London, to Hungary, and back lo Amer ica, when the College Orchestra, with Joseph I. Grill conducting, presents its twelfth annual Spring Concert this eve ning at 8:15. The Orchestra will open the program with the allegro con fuoco movement of Dvorak's Symphony in F minor, or, as it is more familiarly known, the sym phony From the New World. Since its first performance here in the United States, this symphony has become dear to the hearts of countless Americans because of its melodic and peculiarly American themes. Calling London Three movements from Eric Coates' delightful London Suite are on the pro gram. These movements are descrip tive of the tradition-laden corners of Old London Covcnt Garden. Westmin ster, and Knightsbridge which Mr. Coates has so charmingly portrayed in music. , With the assistance of the Orchestra, vonne Pelletier's cornet will carry you from London to Hungary, for Vincent Bach's Hungarian Melodies. George Eduard Goltermann, noted German cellist of the last century, has composed several concertos for cello and orchestra. Cellist Dorothy Grill will play the first movement of his Concerto in A Minor. Play Schubert Opera Following this Concerto, the Orches tra will play the overture to Franz Schubert's opera, Rosamunde, which re ceived its first performance in 1823. The Rosary, the ever-popular song by Ethelbert Nevin, is the selection of con tralto June Murphy. Miss Murphy will be accompanied by the Orchestra. From the prolific works of the great Beethoven, master composer of symph onies and concertos. Marion Anthoulis has selected as a violin solo the Romanza in F. Faust Contributes Waltz Charles Gounod's reputation as an op eratic composer was established in 1859 with the premiere presentation of the op era Faust. As its fourth selection of the evening, the Orchestra will play the Waltz from the Ballet Music of this opera. Mr. Grill has made a special arrange ment of Carl Bohm's The Rain, which will be played by the Orchestra following the Ballet Music. Play Liebestraum Franz Liszt, of Hungarian Rhapsody fame, is represented on the program by bis haunting Liebestraum. which will he played in solo by guest harpist Florence Lambert. The Orchestra will close the program and return you to America with the Amer ican Fantasie. a group of selections from the works of Victor Herbert. Announce Vacation Holy Week Tradition After classes on Thursday. March 26. the College will close for the Easter va cation, and will reopen on Tuesday. April 7. Traditionally. Mundelein students form a Holy Thursday Guard of Honor, sign ing for adoration turns on the Sodality- list and taking adoration in their own parish churches.
title:
1942-03-20 (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