description:
1 SKYSCRAPER Page Three iew The Review lime out from their typewriters finds staff members of the Review dis- pig contents of the literary quarterly, which will be released this week, are Mary Culhane, Mary Sullivan, Joan Holland, and Jean O'- s; standing, Lois Hassenauer, Virginia Volini. (Story on Page 1.) iters Challenge m and Chicago hitumn Schedule Bber.and December debates arc with three teams from the ities of Chicago and Illinois. elein debaters Patricia Carr ara Lighthall will argue for ative and Mary Frances An- Agnes Reitcr will support Stive position in competition two University of Chicago v. 21. brn. two teams composed of i Warner and La Von Froch- llrmativcs, and Carol Higgins reen Trapp, negatives, will tra- the University of Chicago, Nov. Brfirmativc debaters will meet a from the University of Illinois fty Pier, Dec. 5, while another till remain here to debate a Bom the same school. mess Problems fled by Club Trausch was chairman -of a held in an Economics club Nov. 10, which considered the , Can Small Business Survive? Craddock defended the claim pig business aids competition. Carr reviewed legislation that orations, and Geraldine Con- libed the outlook for small l in the U. S. todav. inae Appear I Radio Music w Show, Nov. 25 I (Continued from p. 1) , and a Song of Victory by Fletcher, sung by Josephine le '47: Mary Kaye Tentinger I Eunice Dankowski '47, assist- William Boyd, tenor, and Joseph bass. king a portrait of Chopin the medium of music, the Last on Nov. 4 included the F Fantasie. played by senior l Trafacanti: the Military lie, interpreted by junior Mary ty; Chopin's Waltz in C Sharp performed by sophomore Ruth and the Nocturne in F Sharp played by senior Annastasia ran. selections included the Maid- feh, sung by Mary Heinz and a Farewell song, sung first in and then in English by Marilyn b'. Program narrator was scn- ama major Mildred DeVic. English Department Benefits from Gift Laurence Olivier's Hamlet and Henry V will come alive again for the members of the English department, thanks to a double gift a portable radio-phonograph and 10 record albums. The Appreciation of Poetry, inter preted by Norman Corwin, and Great Themes in Poetry, read by Basil Rath- bone, will be used in the English liter ature classes. American literature and Debate classes will profit from Our American I leritage, an album of 13 legal docu ments and addresses, read by Wesley Addy. Two volumes of The Voice of Poetry, by Edith Enass and John Giclgud, are composed largely of English and Ameri can masterpieces. The Shakespeare classes will hear selections from Hamlet and Henry V taken directly from the sound tracks of the two movies. Another Shakespeare selection is the complete version of Macbeth with Maurice Evans and Judith Anderson, directed by Lehman Engel. Two albums added for their cultural content are American Folk Songs, a ballad album, and a collection of the Si -auss waltzes. Businessman Speaks To Economics Club Thomas A. Sullivan, president of a management consultant firm, will lec ture on profits, to members of the Eco nomics department, today at 2 p.m., The lecture will emphasize the nature of the business corporation from a Christian economic viewpoint and from a moral viewpoint. Mr. Sullivan has been lecture forum speaker for the Knights of Columbus. the National Catholic Industrial con ference, the Sheil School of Social Science, and the Society for the Ad vancement of Management. Merge with Clarke For Sociology Trips In cooocration with the Sociology department of Clarke college, the Mundelein Sociology department made field trips on Nov. 11 and 12. to the Chicago Parental school; the Chicago State Angel Guardian Orphanage, and to the Cradle hospital. Students from the Psychology de partment joined the party of 30 Mundelein and 20 Clarke sociology majors. Art Club Meets To Discuss True Idea of Beauty Perhaps pretty is as pretty docs, but there's more to beauty than that, say 'Art club members. And thev plan to prove it at their next meeting. The idea of a universal concept of beauty came up at the club's last meet ing, when the artists talked about standards of art and from there en tered into a lively discussion on the idea of beauty. They decided to talk about that subject alone at the next meeting. Dec. 7, at 3 :30 p.m. The agenda for the Nov. 30 meeting, to which all students are invited, deve lops the idea that, to understand the intimate relation of art to religion and life, the artist must integrate Christian principles into his art. He must know the purpose of the item he is making, its use, its function, and its goodness from the point of view of other people. Further, the agenda points out that the artist must appreciate his materials and tools, if he is to get the best out of them, and allow his imagination to elaborate on the work of art, building on relevant images in his mind. Joan Fritchie will lead the discus sion, and Patricia O'Shea will be chairman of the meeting. Faculty Members Attend Meetings Sister Mary Bernarda, B. V. M., Dean, and Sister Mary St. Helen, Registrar, attended an Institute on General Education at the University of Chicago, Nov. 19. Sister Mary St. Helen had previously attended the annual meeting of the Illinois Association of the Collegiate Registrars. Sister Mary Pierre. B.V.M., chair man of the Home Economics depart ment, attended the Illinois Home Eco nomics association convention at the LaSalle hotel, hearing lectures on the topic. Home Economists in Today's World. Rita Powell, A.M., of the Home Eco nomics department, attended the Ameri can Home Economics College Clothing and Textile congress, at the LaSalle, where the discussion was of Evalua tion and New Techniques. Elizabeth Bentley, A.M., of the Poli tical Science department, will lecture before members of the Northwestern University Newman club, Nov. 27, dis cussing the question : Why Communism Appeals to Idealistic Americans. Si9 Senior Home Economists Study Problems of Family Life What are problems of the modern family, and how can the)' be solved? Senior Home Economics majors, in a scries of discussions of Successful Family Living, are trying to define and suggest remedies for some of these problems. Today, at 3 p.m., Mary Hayes, Betty Jacobsen, and Barbara Swigon will consider the problem created when the mother seeks work outside the home. Wednesday at 3 p.m., Anne Grogan, Nancy Keilty, and F.leanor Mc- Lain will consider the problem of Parental Responsibility for F.ducation. On Nov. 28, Mary Rita Barrett, Joan Ehman, and Jane Feller will discuss the problem of Juvenile Delinquency, and Rose Burke and Patri cia Ilassett will discuss the problem of Movies and Children Final discussion, to be held on Nov. 30, will concern Divorce, Birth Control. Housing, and the Aged. Discussing the problem of Divorce will be Lois OTIern and LaVerne Seitz; discussing the problem of Birth Control will be Rosemary McShane and Bette Tholl. Patricia McCabe will talk on the program of Housing, and Marjorie Neff will report on the various problems of the Aged. Orders for Christmas fruitcakes being baked and sold by the members of Alpha Omicron, the home economics club, will be taken until Thurs day, Dec. 1, every day from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m. in the bookstore lounge. Club members have made plans for the annual Christinas party at Holy Family orphanage. The clothing laboratory on the fourth floor is busy costuming 18 dolls to be distributed at the party. This Week Means Qet Acquainted With Freshmen Freshman Meets Freshman at the interclass get-acquainted parties being held this week and in December, ac cording- to Rosemary Palermo, social chairman of the freshman class. Catherine Wright, Section G. Betty Garrity, Section C, and Mary O'Connor. Section D, are co-chairmen of a party to be held in the tearoom tomorrow. At the same time Sections J and F will have a party in the social room. Eileen Hofferman and Joan Bruno are taking care of arrangements. The remaining sections are making preparations for splash parties. Sections E and H will hold their party Dec. 1, under the chairmanship of Mary Schweitzer and Dolores Sullivan. Elizabeth Bliss and Veronica O'Con- ner are making plans for a splash party for Sections B and A, Dec. 6. Sections K and I will take to the water Dec. 13. Co-chairmen of the party are Mary Shelly Young and Jac queline Smith. Chemists to Hear Lecture on Crime Chemistry club members will attend a lecture by Professor Ward V. Evans of Loyola's Chemistry department in Room 606 at 4 p.m., Nov. 30. Subject of the lecture is Forensic Chemistry, or chemistry applied to legal questions, as in crime detection. The Chemistry club heard what the Chicago Fire Department had to say about fire hazards in the Chemistry laboratory when members attended a lecture Nov. 19, given by Lt. James B. Neville, a member of the fire depart ment and brother of senior Betty Ne ville. A special meeting of the club's 19 pledges was held before the lecture. Tri-Regional Group Holds Meeting Here (Continued from p. 1) will be celebrated at 2:30 p.m. Mem bers of the Spanish club will be hos tesses for a social hour following. Members of the Internation Rela tions club, under the supervision of Patricia Grannan, Noreen Trapp, Bar bara Bradford. Josephine Marfisc and Dorothy Smith, are working on prep arations. tne BLACK ROBED seniors in a solemn trek to the altar rail marked another Senior Sunday. With the donning of caps and gowns, the class of 1950 pre pared to advance a tradition instituted 18 years ago by offering Mass together. Because of the new short hair styles, the freshly starched collar became visible again after being hidden for many years. LAURELS TO Freshman Marian Quinn, president of the Chicago Youth Conference, who acted as interviewer for the radio program Youth Speaks, on WAIT at 9:30 a.m. It was Marian's job for three weeks to interview guests in order to obtain personal data and -opinions on subjects pertaining to current affairs. WORTHY CAUSE . . . Seniors Catherine Bigley, Arlete Karls. Gloria Wilson, Mary Grace Sherly, and Peggy Roch pay weekly visits to the Chicago House of Commons. They act as group leaders and supervise the work of un derprivileged children between the ages of five and twelve. ANCHORS AWEIGH . . . Senior Dorothy Tari, a member of the Naval Reserve for five and a half years, at tended her annual Federal inspection at the Randolph Naval Reserve Train ing center recently. FAMOUS LAST WORDS ... A Philosophy professor, after a gruel ing test, said. Those who are finished may pass out. THE PLAYS THE THING . . . Mildred DeVic. senior Drama major, gave dramatic readings for the Have- a-Heart Charities at the College Inn. Nov. 10 . . . Senior drama major Gloria Guilfoyle celebrated her first anniver sary as Penny on the Community Fund program, To Be Continued. The skit is aired over WBBM every Sunday at 1 :15 p.m. BUT WORK, TOO ... The alumnae and senior members of Alpha Psi Omega, National Drama society, will meet Nov. 29, to formulate plans for their February Variety Show. MADEMOISELLE MARTIN . . . While on a tour of midwestern, south ern, and western colleges, Miss Sally Martin, educational advertising man ager of Mademoiselle magazine, talked informally to members of the Press club. Miss Martin arrived at Made moiselle via Emporia, Kansas, where she worked under William Allen White and was a friend of his daughter, Mary, whom he immortalized in a famous editorial. Enthusiastic and dynamic, Miss Martin is an example of the suc cess of resourcefulness. CELEBRITY CORNER . . . Who is the most popular Lady at Munde lein ? A glance at the flower-laden Picta outside the Chapel will answer that question. Hardly a day passes that the marble statue is not gifted with a gardenia, an orchid or a rose. Traditionally, students pay trib ute to the Lady by unpinning cherished corsages and laying them at her shrine. PREVIEW OF THINGS TO COME . . . Many Mundeleinites, including jun ior Voice student Maryanna Griglik. will join the Loyola Choral society in its presentation of the Story of Bethle hem, to be enacted at a Chirstmas pro- , gram, in St. Ignatius auditorium, Dec. 17. HAD YOU NOTICED ... Is the twiee-as-largc-as-usual number of cars in the parking lot this semester indicative of a revolt against elusive train hours and high fares? MUNDELEINITES are busy selling Patna Christmas Seals to benefit Ameri can Jesuits in India. The red, blue, and green seals will brighten your Christ mas packages. ENGAGEES . . . Jeanne Anderson sophomore has just become engaged to David Stodder, graduate of Spring Hill, Alabama, and brother of sopho more Mary Therese Stodder. Fresh man Mary Rubino is delighted over her ring from Lt. Kenneth Schriweck, graduate of Annapolis.
title:
1949-11-21 (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