description:
c Seniors Learn The ABCs of Teaching Thirty-one seniors are doing student teaching this semester, through the courtesy of 13 public and two Catholic schools. Majoring in liberal arts subjects, and minoring in Edu cation, these students will teach until Jan. 18, under the supervision of the Education department. Marilynn Ryan is teaching Eng lish at Amundsen. Joan Conroy is teaching Mathematics at Amund sen and Jane and Joan Panka are teaching Mathematics at Sullivan and Senn, respectively. Moonyeen Brown is teaching lusic at The Immaculata, and Joan Kies teaches Music at St. Ignatius parochial school. Melanie Breundl McAllister is teaching History at Senn. Teaching in the primary grades are Therese Radecki at Chappell. (ienevieve Teutsch at Hibbard, Ju dith Hoffman Falasz at Boone. Georgiann Porasinski at Budlong. and Joan Havlik at Clinton. Toni Cassaretto and Peg gy Kearin teach primary at Field, Arlyne Sykes at Goudy, Rita Bialecke and Margaret Coughlin at Kilmer, Mary Alice Rankin at Stone, Violet Martino at Swift, Maureen Cel- la and Joan Smith at Trum bull. Teaching intermediate grades are Shiela Coleman at Chappell, Shir ley Parrilli and Patricia Byers at Hibbard. Maripat Day at Boone, Therese Indelli at Clinton, Mary ann Burke at Kilmer, Noreen Gib bons at Stone, Valerie Luback at Swift, and Maryvivian Cunnea and Patricia O'Brien at Trumbull. Recollection Day Will Be Oct. 26 Father William T. Clark, of the Religion department, will conduct the Recollection day, Oct. 26. Holy Mass at 9:30 a.m. in the college theatre will be fol lowed by a short conference. Students may receive Holy Communion during Mass. Successive conferences will be at 11:00 a.m., 12:45 p.m., and 2:00 p.m. Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament will follow. Organists for the day will be Senior Moonyeen Brown, Sophomores Charlene Hincks and Annette Lubker, and Freshman Genevieve Baldwin. Three Alumnae Win Scholarships Three alumnae have recently re ceived scholarships for graduate study. Joan Sramek '55 who won the Golden Rose for service to Laetare players during her senior year, has a scholarship to the Yale University Drama department graduate school, where she will work for a Master's degree. Marilyn Lindahl '56, Psychology major, has a Catholic Charities scholarship for graduate work at LoyDla university, where she has registered for a Master's degree. Mary kutkowski '56, Chemistry major, has a teaching assistantship at the University of Illinois, where she will work for a Master of Sci ence degree. THE .rillfif I4HER -' vrrrrv.f '---' -c lubs, Class Note UN Tenth Anniversary Observing the tenth anniversary of the United Nations organization, the International Relations dub and the Today's World class will consider the structure and work of the UN. in classes and meetings, Oct. 23-25. The club will present a film on the UN, on Oct. 24 at 3 p.m., in Room 607, and will join in a dis cussion led by Mary Jane Long following the presentation. The Today's World class will study the UN at 10 a.m., on Tues day and Thursday, Oct. 22 and 25. Members will describe the Charter, the six organs, and the prospects for the future. D A U I W P ot Gold for Christmas Bazaar booth are co-chairman T AU MRU Carole Bauer and Ann Toland. The SAC is sponsoring the candy booth, asking college-wide support. SAC Sponsors Bazaar Booth Under the leadership of the Stu dent Activities Council, students will sponsor several booths at the Christmas bazaar, a benefit to be given by the Women's auxiliary, ()ct. 28 and 29. Carol Bauer and Ann Toland are co-chairmen of the Pot of Gold booth, where a piece of candy may contain a lucky number. In charge of a record booth is Diane Sherwood, while Clare Christensen and Eileen Joyce are co-chairmen of a noon-time coke- dance and Charleston contest. Mrs. Conrad Kies is general chair man, with Mrs. Charles Rohner and Mrs. Walter Fiedler as co- chairmen. Vol. XXVII Mundelein College, Chicago 40, llinois, October 15, 1956 No. 2 QrcrAQpU on an antimalarial l L0Cnnun intermediate ab sorbs Senior Chemistry major Jo anne Szukalla. The project is fi nanced by a grant from the Illinois Academy of Science. Chemist Merits Second Grant For Antimalarial Work Sister Mary Marina, B.V.M., of the Chemistry department, has re ceived a research grant from the American Association for the Ad vancement of Science, Illinois Academy, to further her study of The Synthesis of -1-7 Dichlorb- quinoline, an antimalarial inter mediate. This is the second grant Sister has received through the Illinois Academy. In 1951 Sister received the first grant for a study made imperative by wartime shortages of qui nine, a remedy for malaria. With Mundelein Chemistry stu dents whose .research she super vises, she is seeking a new synthe sis of 4-7 Dichloroquinoline, which is an intermediate in preparation for four amino quinolines now used as quinine substitutes. The work is a branch of chemical therapy. In the past five years, eight stu dents have worked on the project, and, after graduation, have done research in industrial chemistry or in graduate school. During the 1956-57 academic year, Joanne Szukalla. is assisting in the re search. In May, 1955, Sister Mary Marina reported to the region al meeting of the Academy on the progress of her research. Campus Talent Appears on TV Two Faculty members and one student will appear on TV screens this month in programs broadcast through WTTW, the Chicago Edu cational television station. Marjorie Morgan, A.M., of the Speech department is presenting, Oct. 16, 23, and 30, at 10:30 p.m., the opening trilogy in her year long series. Discovering Poetry. Martin Maloney, Ph.D., of the Journalism department, is givng 13 programs on Semantics, Thursdays, from 7:30 to 8 p.m. Beatrice Hoang will represent Cambodia and Laos, Indochinese countries, at the United Nations program on WTTW, Oct. 25, at 7:30 p.m. Miss Hoang carried the flags of these countries in the Orchestra hall United Nations Festival, Sept. 16, wearing her native costume. A Vietnamese, Miss Hoang is unable to represent her country be cause it is not yet a member of the United Nations. At Amphitheatre . . . Drama Director Writes, Directs IS CCW Pageant Sister Mary Jeanelle, B.V.M., director of Drama, has been ap pointed by His Eminence, Samuel Cardinal Stritch, to write and di rect a pageant for the National Council of Catholic Women, which will hold its biennial convention in Chicago, Nov. 7-10. Presented in the Interna tional Ampitheatre at the opening session of the con vention, the pageant will in clude tableaux, a speech choir, a chorus, and a dance group. Sister Mary Jeanelle, who is a member of the committee which plans the Catholic programs on the WTTW Time for Religion ser ies, wrote and directed a program on religious vocations, presented June 20. Based on a Today magazine ar ticle entitled But Why Me, God, written by Sister Mary Yolanda, B.V.M., a Mundelein graduate of the Class of 1948, the play was done in flashbacks, with the hero ine, a young sister, narrating her remembrances of her senior year in college. In the cast were Mary Nicholson Schager '34, Carole Hoemeier '52, Geraldine O'Keeke '54, Joan Over- hi.lt '54. Judy Skwiot, junior, Jo seph Walsh, and Eugene Metoyne. Faculty Member Flies To Brazil Nina Sokoloff, A. M.. of the Spanish department, departed on ()ct. 6 cm the new International Brazilian airline for a two-week tour of Brazil as a representative of the Pan-American Council of Chicago and as guest of the airline. Miss Sokoloff, publicity director of the Pan-American Council, joined with representatives of the Pan-American Union in Washing ton, D. C, as well as with rep resentatives from all over the United States in touring the coun try and meeting the people. The purpose of the visit is to promote good will and better rela tions between the United States and Brazil. Polling Begins Oct* 22 For Freshman Elections The Democrats and the Republicans can retreat to the sidelines on Oct. 1 8 at 2 p.m. when the Freshmen open their campaigns for class officers. Each nominee will be limited to one poster. Even so, traffic in the Freshman lounge will be as hazardous as traf fic in the Stockyards area last August, unless the Class of 1960 is less flamboyant than its predecessors. Nominations are scheduled for Oct. 1 8 at 1 p.m., with Patricia O'Donnell, Student Activities Council president, conducting the nomination meeting. Freshmen will go to the polls in the Lounge on Oct. 22, and the new officers will be announced Oct. 23 and in stalled Oct. 24.
title:
1956-10-15 (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