description:
n J D Vol. XXYTII Mundelein College, Chicago 40, Illinois O bpZ.4 /4 6 7 No. 3 North Shore Girls To Preview College Faculty and North Shore stu dents will present a style show and ;a for senior and junior girls of brth Shore high schools and their .nthers, Nov. 15 at 3:30. The fashion show script, writ ten by Joan Maher. will lie entitled Life in a Skyscraper and will introduce to the college Catholic girls attending public high schools who will not he free to attend open house in February. Co-chairmen of the show will be Betty L. Cremin and Elizabeth Weinrich. Ellen Schoen will pro vide the commentary. Georgianna Baer and Peggy Grange will act as chairmen for the entire event. Invitations will be handled by Rosemary O'Connor. Sharon Roth and Shirley Hoyle. Publicity will be supervised by Kathleen Slattery and Nancy May er, and hostesses will be Carol Maurello and Sharon Roth. Models include Georgiana Baer, Barbara Rick, Jean Salerno, Joan Tressel. Linda Geisler, Clare Chris- tensen, Joanne Murphy and Ruth Gordon. Also modeling will be Mary Ann Piper, Connie Brunell, Sharon O' Shea, Linda San Fillipo, Virginia Stoffey, Coleen O'Brien and Shar on Peterson. Others to model are Loretta Se- gala, Janet Kennedy, Carol Di Car lo, Kathy Coffey, Donna I-ee Shri- ver, Kath) Denisc McCue. t L-oncy. uonna i-ee snri- iv Hughes, Donna Griffin, O'Mallev. and Maureen checking f rrs longer than last year's put chair men Jacquelyn Doyle and Jacque lyn Schwartz in a gay Benefit mood. Laetare Announces Noel Coward Comedy Spirits will come upon you claims the drama department in announcing Blithe Spirit , their first produc tion of the school year. The play, a comedy in three acts by Noel Coward, will be enacted Nov. 24, 25 in the auditorium. Where Do Benefit Dollars Go? '57 Salesmen Would Like To Know Where does the money from the Benefit go? is a question asked by many of the students. The money from the Benefit has always been used for things that are of profit to the student body as a whole, Sister Mary Ann Ida, B.V.M. answered this week. c Students contributed the money from the Benefits of 1955 and 1956 to a fund to be used for the erec tion of a new building. It is hoped that the proposed building will someday stand where Philomena hall stands now. It will hold S.A.C. and club offices, a larger Tea room, a 300 seat theater to he used for lectures and small as semblies, classrooms, and a new- Art department. Student contributions to the uilding Fund from past benefits 'tal 17,000 and contributions nm the Alumnae association total o 17,000. Earlier Benefit contributions made possible such things as the transformation of a locker room into the Phoenix room of today, the purchase of the audio-visual equip ment, the water coaler in the lounge, and many other student comfurts which the budget could not otherwise have permitted. Sister Mary Ann Ida ex pressed her gratitude for the gifts, donations, and contribu tions from the students in ad dition to Benefit proceeds which have been used to pro vide improvements for student use in the College. Sister out lined further plans, and sug gested them as possible uses for contributions which might be received this year. Plans for the improvement of the auditorium are already under way. A new lighting switchboard for the stage has been ordered at a cost of over 10,000. Repairs on the organ costing 5,000 will begin soon. Some other immediate needs in the auditorium are the pur chase of two concert pianos, the installation of kneelers for use during religious services, and the purchase of a new al tar. The altar alcove also is in need of repainting. A new look is being planned for the lounge. Some furniture for the Phoenix room arrived last week. Other objectives are fur nishing the locker rooms at a cost of about 2,000 each and enclosing and modernizing the bookstore. Among the departmental needs that should be met are the reha bilitation of eight of the grand pianos in the music department, and the extension of the facilities of the new language laboratory. St. Joes-Bound, Sports Fans Pack After a quick huddle at Munde lein. 200 girls will have a weekend at St. Joseph's college in Rensalaer, Indiana. Buses, charted by the So cial Arrangements Board will leave Mundelein, Saturday, Nov. 16, at 9 a.m., and will arrive on the campus just before the Puma kick- off. Excess energy can be worked off at the mixer that night. Sunday morning will begin with Mass on campus. The football weekend will end Sunday afternoon at 2:00. The travelers plan to be back in Chicago in time to watch Steve Al len and/or Ed Sullivan, and to catch up on assignments. MILWAUKEE, ? .* located for student teacher, Mary Warzynski, by Bob Watry, Bob Trudeau, and Roy McKillip, sixth- grade students at St. Gertrude's. Opening Night Promises Glamour, Humor, Relaxation, Entertainment An evening of fun will be sparked here Friday, Nov. 8, by the Chi- cagoland premiere of Emlyn Williams, the witty British actor who re putedly entertains as humorously off-stage as he does on-stage. Mr. Williams' performance of A Boy Growing Up will highlight the evening. It will also begin a series of post-theater parties. In Mundelein's social rooms, educational and civic leaders, drama critics, SAC officers, and members of the Mundelein faculty, both lay and religious, will ereet the guest of honor at a buffet. As gay as the pink and red post ers which set the tone for the bene fit publicity will be the after-the- theatcr parties planned by groups of upperclassmen at their homes. The wish has been expressed by underclassmen to follow suit in complementing the holiday, post- examination mood. Although ticket sales were slow to begin reports from the switch board indicate many interesting queries from critics, commentators, and theater-goers who have fol lowed Emlyn Williams' national publicity. Competition among ticket sell ers heightens as opening night ap proaches. Far ahead of their closest competitors half-way through the contest were Patricia Lor- riq;an's group of art students, 58 per cent of their quota com pleted. Another early leader was Marijo Doody's chemistry group with 77 per cent of the girls reporting ticket sales. Musicians, under Lydia Rous seau, and sociologists, lead by Mary Fulgaro also numbered among leaders at the half-way mark. Little Red Book Tells Who's Where What's in a name? The Stu dent Directory, on sale today across from the elevators in the student lounq-e contains not only names but addresses, telephone numbers and birth dates of all Mundelein stu dents. A new feature this year is the list of all the sisters on the facul ty and their respective departments. Names and addresses of lay fa culty and special students, names of the officers of the Fathers club and Women's Auxiliary, plus the college calendar will also appear in the new directory. Senior class secretary, Carol Wincek, was in charge of compil ing the directory. She was assisted by Patricia Cline, Mary Kay Mar tin, Nancy Drewes, Isabelle Ander son, Patricia Kobel, Carolyn Pow ers, Patricia Callahan, and Lillian Kucera. Examination Schedule 1 NOVEMBER 5 Tuesday TTh Classes 8, 10, 12, 2, 4 NOVEMBER 6 Wednesday MWF Classes 9, 11, 1, 3 NOVEMBER 7 Thursday TTh Classes 9, 11, 3 NOVEMBER 8 Friday MWF Classes 8, 10, 12, 2 All tests will be given at the same hour that the class ordinarily meets except for TTh 3 o'clock classes which will meet at 1 o'clock. Classes meeting on MTWTh, or TWThF, or TThF will follow the TTh schedule. Classes meeting on MF or MW only will have their tests on the day regularly scheduled for the MFW tests. All examinations will be 50 min utes in length. Future Teachers - Forty-One Seniors Participate In Student Teaching Program Forty-one seniors are practice public and parochial schools. All education. They will observe and vision of the department of educat Teaching at The Immaculata are Sister Mary de Sales and Joan Ma her in the English department, and teaching this semester in Chicago are liberal arts majors, minoring in teach until Jan. 18 under the super- ion. Patricia Cline and Margaret Ford in mat hematics. Mary Ann Annetti is teaching bookkeeping and Mar garet Dorigan, Latin at St. Scho lastica. At .Amundsen Barbara Sylvester is with the English department. Georgina Krall is teaching history, .Marv Ann Pacella, home economics, and Mary Jane McNally, Latin at Senn. Ann Toland, an English major, is at Sullivan. Mary Ann Kann, teaching Latin, is there also. Ellen Dee is teaching home economics at Steinmetz. Teaching in the primary grades are Jean Dorband at Green, Clare Christensen, Eileen Poterek. and June Chenelle at Hibbard, Virginia Bishop at Boone, Mary Ann Cash- man at Budlong, and Margaret Do nahue at Clinton. Elizabeth Casieri is teaching pri mary- at Field, Margaret Ryan at Gal , Jo Ann Perkovich at Goudy, Sheila O'Halloran at Hayt, Mary Theresa Flanigan at Kilmer, and Marv Kay Smith at Stone. Also in primary are Joanne Mur phy at Swift, Mary Ann Kearney, Deanna Reyes at Trumbull, and Sister Mary Loyola at St. Gertrude. (Continued on Page 3.)
title:
1957-11-04 (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