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Win Ribbons, Place in Exhibit For Art Designs A group of art students received gold jbbon honors for a series of process sheets at the Catholic Art association meeting in Milwaukee. Oct. 11. 12. At the same meeting, Sister Mary Janet, B.V.M., head of the art depart- nent, was re-elected treasurer of the as- lociation. The process illustrates the steps tn making a linoleum block. In keeping with the theme of the convention. Lit urgical Art in Everyday Life, the designs were religious in motif. The various liturgical designs were planned relative to the memorable clays in the Liturgical year, and could be used on greeting and announcement cards. Called outstanding work by the judges at the convention, the process sheets are now included in a traveling exhibit. Students who submitted the prize-win ning designs are Rita Valenzano, Jane Trahey, Anita Caparros. Dorothy Schol- zen, Florence McDonnell, Elizabeth No wak, and Margery Happ. Mark Fiftieth Anniversary of Loyola Jesuit Honoring the Reverend John F. Mc- JCormick, S.J., head of the department of to philosophy at Loyola university, Mu Xu 0 Sigma, the Philosophy club, will present a Golden Jubilee program on N'ov. 6, commemorating the 50 years of his mem bership in the Society. Speaker of the occasion will be the everend Leo R. Ward, C.S.C., of the Diversity of Xotre Dame, who will be trcxluced by the Reverend Joseph A. cLaiighlin, S.J., professor of philos- y at Loyola and at Mundelein. Father Ward, who is chairman of the rtment of philosophy in the gradu- ite school at Xotrc Dame, has studied at ixforcl and Louvain and has published a .mber of books on social philosophy, lucling The Philosophy of Value, ai.iks ami Reality, God in ax Irish hen. and Holding Up The Hills the Biography ok a Neichhoorhooii. William Joyce. Loyola arts senior, will n the program with a tribute to Fa- ier McCormick, who is moderator of lie Loyola philosophy group, the Bel- larmine club. The Choral ensemble, directed by Adalbert Huguelet. will sing the lubilato Deo. and Barbara Ohab will read the Eighty-Third Psalm. Conclud ing the program, Margery Linnehan will resent a Mu Xu Sigma Souvenir to atlicr McCormick. ,ci ic ct i Freshmen Elect Suzanne Shauman Class President Suzanne Shauman, elected president f the freshman class yesterday, will reside today at a meeting for the clee- ion of freshman representatives on the Student Activities Council. Miss Shau- an is a graduate of the Immaculata igh School. Two council members will be elected from the following group of nominees : .enore Brockhaus, St. Scholastica; lary Catherine Tuomey. Providence: argaret Pinto, Cathedral, Sioux City: atricia Tubby. Xew Trier; Rosemary iiockacrt, Immaculata ; Bernadette Mc- weeney. Immaculata; Betty McCam- ridge, Amundsen; Mary McLaughlin, nn; Catherine Cunningham. Winter- let, Iowa; and Mary Lou Choate. Scnn. Other officers who will be elected ext week will be chosen from the fol lowing nominees or from among the anclidates not elected to other offices, erry Stutz, St. Scholastica. has been ominated for vice-president. Xom- hated for secretary are Dorothy link. Trinity: Audrey McDonnell, iillivan; Joan McMahon, Mount St. fary on the Fox. Nominated for treasurer arc Mary oughlin. Trinity; Rita Erbach. Im- aculata: Mary Burns. St. Xavier; fary Jane Kent, Mundelein Cathedral. (Continued on Page 3, Col. 2) THE SfcC- Volume XII MUNDELEIN COLLEGE, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, OCTOBER 24, 1941 No. 2 Leads Cotillion Would You Like 100,000? Stars In Fall Play Do Plot Involves Quite A Remarkable Person Marcella Garrity, social chairman of the sophomore class, heads committees planning the Sophomore Cotillion, to be held at the Lake Shore club on Nov. 7. Social Affairs Hold Spotlight Oct. 28, Nov. 7 Schedule Loyola Tea Dance, Sophomore Cotillion There is a two-some on the social cal endar for the immediate future the Lo yola Mundelein tea-dance, and the Soph omore Cotillion. Not springtime but swingtime will be here on Tuesday. Oct. 28, when the tea- dance, sponsored by the Student Activities Councils of both schools, goes on in the Mundelein gymnasium. Xot one but a score of orchestras will be represented, guaranteeing continuous music between 3 and 5 p.m. Freshmen, sophomores, juniors, and seniors from both colleges are invited. A favorite bandsman. Gay Claridge, will provide music for the Cotillion on Nov. 7, according to Patricia Cummings, chairman of the Orchestra committee, and her assistants, Audrey Anderson, (Continued on Page 3, Col. 2) Seniors Don Caps And Qowns, Oct. 26 Wearing caps and gowns for the first time, the Class of 1942 will observe Sen ior Sunday, on Oct. 26, attending Mass in Stella Maris Chapel and bearing a sermon by the Reverend Edward M. Burke, vice-chancellor of the Archdiocese. When the chance to get a donation of 100,000 falls into the efficient, well- manicured hands of a woman's club, the members will, of course, stop at nothing, to get that money. This interesting situation, and all the complications involved therewith, may be seen in the sparkling version of Quite a Remarkable Person, stream lined for 1941 presentation by Senior Joan Morris. It will be enacted by the drama department Nov. 14. IS, and 16. Has Double Cast Playing the title role in the play, which is completely double cast, will be Mary Celeste Shannon and Royce McFadyen. Mary Louise Shannon and Jeanne Horan will portray Mrs. Alonzo Clinton, the astute founder of the organization. Mrs. Lotta Carrington, the president of the Penthouse club, will be enacted by Mary- anne Achten and Doris Ruddy. Paulette Lear and June Wetzel will take the part of Barbara Delaney, a debu tante who is in love with Mrs. Carring- ton's son, Tom. Mrs. Humphrey Boling- brook. the dowager who owns millions, will be played by Grace Manncbach and Patricia Kelley. Are Club Members Other members of the club who help or hinder the project are Patricia Doane, played by Alice Rose Hnrtnett and Mary- Clare Howard; Judy Judson, a bride, played by Ruth McCarthy and Jerry Stutz; the artistic Mrs. Clark, imper sonated by Larraine Knaub and Ann Trave. and Sue Atkinson, played by Rosemary Roney and Joan McMahon. Ella, the matron of the Penthouse club, will l gt;e played by Audrey Cam eron and Helen Winter; the elevator girl by Genevieve Faust and Irene Foster, and Henrietta, the maid, by Audrey Ewry and Mary Ellen Gallagher. It's All Greek to You? Well, the Mediaevalists Will Like Translating It Workshop Director Visits College Today Russell M. Cooper. Ph.D.. of Cornell college, director of the North Central association committee on the improve ment of the curriculum, instruction, and counselling of prospective teach ers, will visit the College today and meet the various faculty chairmen studying the problem of improved teacher training. As one of the 28 liberal arts colleges cooperating in the study, Mundelein was represented at the Workshop which Dr. Cooper conducted at the L'niversity of Minnesota last summer. The Mediaevalists, a new club organized by the classical language de partment, owes its evolution, in part, to a new and valuable set of books recently acquired by the College from a bookstore in Mexico, Mignc's Patrolooia Latina. The complete title of the set translated from Latin is Complete Course in Pat- rology (Writings of the Fathers), or, Library Universal, Entire, Uniform. Convenient and Economical, of all Holy Fathers, Doctors, and Writers of the Church who Flourished From The Apos tolic Age To The Time of Innocent the III. There are writings and letters of over 100 scholars appearing in the 217 volumes of the book. Some of the Fathers of the early centuries whose works appear in the volumes arc St. Augustine, St. Isa- dore, St. Gregory. St. Jerome, St. An- selm. and St. Hildegarde. Among the others represented are Alcuin, Charle magne, Innocent III. Tertullian. Gregory of Tuurs. and Peter Lombard. These works had been printed many different times and in various editions before Jacques-Paul Migne, priest and journalist of the Middle Ages, gathered them all together, organized and published them into this most meritorious work. The volumes are filled with source ma terial in all fields of thought: science, music, philosophy, history, psychology, and ethics. Members of the Mediaeval club will assist students in other departments in discovering source material and in trans lating it for them. Work of this sort has already begun, and, in collaboration with the study of Milton's Paradise Lost, the Mediaevalists are translating the sixth book of the I lexaemeron, on The Crea tion of Man. written in 989 A.D., by St. Ambrose. Earnest scholars of the club include G. Michael Scbmeing, Ph.D.. of the chemistry department. Shirley Zilligen, Helen Eichstaedt, Helen Sauer, Beatrice Johnson. Mildred Welch, Geneva Free man, Eileen Murphy, Henrietta Green- blatt. Mary Wolfe, Martha Lukaszewski, Mary Major, Virginia Finan. Bernadette .lone-. For a valuable and more informative research paper, find a friendly Me- diaevalist. who will be ready and will ing to delve back into the writings of the Middle Ages for the source ma terial of the earliest scholars. Discuss America Of Future During Peace Conference College Delegations To C.A.I.P. Meet Here, Nov. 1 Cite Catholic Obligations America's Peace Aims and America in the Post-War World will be the general topics for discussion for the Mid-West Unit of the Catholic Association for In ternational Peace, which will meet here on Nov. 1. William Prendergast, A.M., faculty member in the department of history, will be general chairman for the meeting, which will be opened with Holy Mass. celebrated for peace by the Reverend Syl vester Luby, of Loras college, Dubuque. Following the lecture on America's Peace Aims, at 10 a.m., the faculty and student delegates from Chicagoland col leges and universities will conduct five round tables. Discuss Aid to Britain American Opportunities will be the topic of a group from St. Xavier's, Chi cago, and St. Francis, Joliet, led by Dr. Weberg of St. Francis, which will emphasize especially the status of the United States in the present war; the problem of aid to Britain and to Russia: and the economic, geographic, and poli tical importance of the present conflict. Delegates from Clarke college, Du buque, and Loras, led by Father Luby. will discuss the Special Obligation oi Catholics Toward the Xew World Or der. Also a topic for round table dis cussion will be reconstruction and the recognition of human and natural rights. The Reverend William C. F. Cunning ham, C.S.C., of the University of Notre Dame, will lead the delegates from Notre Dame, St. Mary's. Rosary, and Barat in a round table on inter-Ameri can relations as a contributing factor in world reconstruction. Consider Latin America The group will consider the present condition and temper of the Latin Amer ican countries, means of promoting their better relations with the U.S.: the specific means which Catholics generally, and Catholic students in particular, may use to promote better world relations, and the place of the Americas in the world community. Final discussion topic for the round tables will be the responsibility of Amer ica as a member of the world community. Following luncheon, which will be served at the Sovereign Hotel, the gen eral session will be on the Place of America in the Post-War World. Charjes O'Donnell, Ph.D.. oi De Paul university, will be the speaker. Benediction of the Most Blessed Sac rament will be given by Father Cunning ham. Blows Out 20 Candles And Sells First Story October 8. 1941, was a red-letter day for Senior Joan Morris, not only because she celebrated her twentieth birthday, but also because she learned that clay that the Chicago Daily News had accepted for publication a short story which she had written. Miss Morris, an English-journalism major and co-editor-in-chief of Tin: Skyscraper, submitted her story to Mr. John Patrick I .ally, fiction editor of thc N'Kws and father of Freshman Nancy.
title:
1941-10-24 (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
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Text
language:
English
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Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College