description:
Page Four THE SKYSCRAPER February 17, 1958 Varsity Opposes Waves Schedules Wacs Here It's Varsity basketball season again, and newly elected captain Jean Keifer and co-captain Belle Anderson have hopes for a suc cessful year. After dropping the season open er to the WAVES at Great Lakes, Feb. 6, Mundelein squeezed out National College of Education (33-27) and University of Chicago (32-29). Games still to be played are: Feb. 16 WAVES Here Feb. 18 WACS Ft. Sheridan Feb. 26 WACS Here Faculty Members Discuss Teaching Problems, Program Sister Mary Cecilia, B. V. M., addressed the biology division of the Milwaukee Archdiocesean Sci ence Teachers Association at Pope Pius XI high school in Milwaukee on Feb. 15. The topic of the talk was the Place of the Fungi in the Biology Program. Sister Mary Donald, B.V.M. Dean of Studies, will attend the Illinois Classical Conference in Ur- bana, Feb. 20-22. Teaching of the classics and problems of teaching will be discussed at this 20th meet ing of the organization. Mundelein student counselors will attend an all day Counselors' Institute Sunday, March 2, as part of their in-service program. Young Republicans Choose Officers, Plan Conferences Plans to make Mundelein Col lege the 16th College in the Illi nois College Federation of Young Republicans were discussed at the first meeting of the campus Young Republicans, Feb. 7. The group, in their first step towards permanent organization, elected temporary officers: Fran ces Houlihan, chairman ; Patricia Wurster, secretary, and Judy Witt, publicity chairman. A constitu tion committee was also formed. Tentative plans were made for future speakers, and for confer ences in which Mundelein will par ticipate with the other Young Re publican organizations. Junior Awarded Medal At Joliet Speech Fest Julie Lyman, junior speech ma jor, was awarded the second place medal for oral interpretation at the Speech Fest, sponsored by the Col lege of St. Francis, Joliet, Feb. 9. Miss Lyman's selection was Frank O'Connor's The First Confession. Sophomore Arlene Gregory and Freshman Mary Eileen Clark also represented Mundelein at the Fest, which included competition from other NFCCS schools such as Barat, De Paul, Loyola, and Loras of Dubuque. Review Boasts Re-Organization A new hum and buzz of efficiency can be heard in Room 506, head quarters of the Mundelein Review. Re-organization of the magazine staff is the cause of all the activity. An Editorial Board, headed by moderator Sister Mary Irma, and com posed of managing editor Sandra Marek, assistant editor Claudette Ruffino, and five departmental editors, will co-ordinate the contributions of five departmental staffs. These staffs and their depart mental editors are : poetry, Patricia Flood; essay and articles. Lucile Jautz; short story, Marilyn Dur- kin; feature, Kathleen Kilday. and reviews, Mary Ellen Kirby. Students who are interested in Review work will find forms post ed on the Writers' Inc. bulletin board, on which to indicate their preferences for departments and meeting dates. For greater convenience, the Stylus club will meet at 4:00, the first Tuesday of each month, to discuss books, hear outside speakers, and plan fu ture meetings. The club, which meets in 506, welcomes all students. Versatile Students Cook, Act, Ride Advanced riders of the Equestri ennes have taken, like Explorer, to leaving earth the hard way, on horseback. Among the horsewomen who are now jumping the hurdles are Diane Arrigo. Bonnie Whelehan, and Laura Rybski. * * * I'hi Theta Nu sponsored a talk- on Foods in Your Future given by Dr. George W. Kurtz of the Quar termasters Container Institute on Feb. 6. A play directing assignment will become entertainment when junior drama majors, Mary Ellen Cahill and Julie Whalen stage a one-act play in the Little Theatre. March 6 at 4 :00 p.m. Four freshman drama majors and a junior minoring in drama will appear in the student directed play The Chalk fiarden by Enid Ragnold. They are: Kathleen Gottschalk. Cathleen Coffey, Dor othy Pfrenger, Julie Lyman. * * * Kappa Mu Psi will sponsor a bake sale tomorrow to raise money for their piano fund. The purpose of the fund is to replace the pianos in the auditorium. Cake will be sold for 10 a piece. * * * Patricia Cline, Margaret Ford, and Ann Norton, senior mathe matics majors, attended a meet ing of the Women's Mathematics Club of Chicaeo and vicinity, at which Dr. H. T. Davis, professor of mathematics and chairman of the mathematics department of Northwestern university spoke on the dual subjects: Can Mathemat ical Teaching be Modernized? and How the History of Mathematics Suggests the Answer. One of the highlights of the February musicale sponsored by Kappa Mu Psi was a voice solo by Marilyn Zanke of Grug's Sol- vcig's Song. Also given in the program were piano selections by Judy Schubcrins;. Audrey Cihlar, Mary Ellen Bur lt; gt; Loretta Cahill, Mary Sklavounos, Sister Mary Teresina. Sister Mary Maura, and Sister Mary Michaelo. SI ifdcrapinad Musical Guild Head Speaks In LaGrange Mrs. Marjorie Morgan, of the speech department, will offer the program, Springboard into Poetry, to 500 elementary and high school teachers at Lyons Township high school in La Grange, today. Mrs. Morgan, who also teaches at De Paul, has, for the past four years, been president of the Musical Guild of Chi cago. She is also head of the musie section of the University of Chi cago Settlement League, a post she has held for two years, along with active membership in several other music and speech organizations. In the fall of 1956, she un dertook a one woman show on Channel 11. For an entire 32 week season she read poetry and discussed poets on her half-hour show. Mrs. Morgan has given folk song recitals recently on the West Coast. She is anticipating a series of folk song recitals in New F.ngland next year, and is hoping to make re cordings of poetry for children. WHO'S NEWS (or Whatever Happened to that Semester Vacation?) Dolores Deasy, Dorothy Krauss, Mary Lou Bartholomew and Shei la O'Halloran were jubilant when they returned with no broken bones to show for their January skiing trips in Michigan and Colorado . . . Father Clark has promised to take the 1 rightest student in his MW 11:00 Scripture class to Lake Geneva at the end of the semester . . . Joan Wright spent the vacation in Detroit . . . Mary Anne Shibovich, a 1( gt;57 post-deb acted as a flower girl to one of this year's come-outers at the Valentine Day Red and White Debutante Ball held at the Con rad Hilton . . . Helen Bartu was informally initiated into the Riding Club when she fell off her horse, saddle et al. during her first ride this month. (Hurt? . . . Just her pride) . . . Eugenia Mickevicius, senior chemistry major, has been accepted by the University of Illinois Medi cal School, after completing undergraduate studies in three years, rath' , . than the usual four. ) FAIR LADIES: Mary Therese Lenihan, Mary Lou Bartholomew, Joanne Gilmore, Jane Daley, Ruth French and Barbara Guderian joined the My Fair Lady fan club over the vacation. WHO'S TWO: Eileen Dunne is engaged to Michael Westberg . . . It's Mary Ellen Andries and Michael Stuermer . . . Diane Horn received Robert Alheid's ring . . . Professor John Mohrbacher chose Mary Anne Pacella lor his teacher's pet . . . and Magdaline Montbriand is engaged to John Jaswiec. SEEN: Barbara King chasing an escaped frog around the biology supply room with a broom . . . Marianne Stauffer, Caroline Schroeder and Marianne McCue trudging through the snow in last week's zero weather with tennis raquets under their arms . . . Mary Jane Penney receiving stares as she saunters through the coridors in her navy blue chemise . . . Chairman Frances Houlihan beaming over the fact that her Young Republicans had their first meeting five days after the Ad ministration launched the Jupiter C . . . Hostess Renee Sluka downing coffee with frat men at Mundelein's Sophomore Tea Dance yesterday. SOCIAL WHIRL . . . Marilyn Parrilli and Denise Heffernan are just back from Notre Dame and its annual Mardi Gras Dance . . . Elizabeth Casieri and Maureen Sweeney were at the Engineer's Ball, also at Notre Dame . . . Mary Ann Walczak went to the Marquette Evans club dance at the M M Club. ALUMNAE REPORT ... The second-floor Alumnae office faith fully grinds out letters of congratulations to grads with new babies. But there were red faces last month when Ah'c; Rose Hartnett '42 returned one such note of felicitation with this comment written at the bottom: Our baby Jane will be five in May. Some delay in the mail?? Sophomore Class Day Sure to be True Blue The Sophomore class will unite for their annual class day, Feb. 18. The day will begin with 8:00 Mass said by Father William T. Clark, of the religion department, at Ma donna Delia Strata chapel. At 4:00 in the auditorium, there will be a program following the truth or consequences theme. After the show, the class will recite the rosary together in the College chapel. A buffet dinner will be served in the tea room. Diane Sarti, chair man, promises enough roast beef and ham for all. Year Tuition Offered AATSP Contest Victor Mundelein is offering a one-year tuition scholarship to winners of a national high school Spanish con test. The American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portu guese is sponsoring the contest. Mundelein is doing this in coopera tion with the Chicago Area Chap ter of AATSP, which is promoting international good will and high scholarship through the study of foreign languages. Vacation And Learn On Scenic Campuses, England, Continent You can study in England or Austria while you vacation this summer. The Institute of Interna tional Education is offering full and partial scholarships to Oxford and other British universities for six-week courses in Flizabethan drama, European Inheritance, and many other courses. If you go with out a scholarship, the cost is about 230. In Austria you can study at the University of Vienna or the Austro-America Society of Vienna. Cost: 220 and 180 respectively. A limited num ber of scholarships are offered. If you are in sophomore year or higher, write to the Institute at 116 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111 for applications for admission or schol arship. Further information may be obtained from Sister Mary Don ald. Dean of Studies. Tyrolean Terpsichord Livens Club Meeting Austrian folk dances will be demonstrated by Dr. Hildegarde Fssler, of the German department, at the Feb. 17 meeting of the Ger man club, in Room 301. at 4:00 p.m. Dressed in full costume, Dr. Fssler will dance with her partner Evelyn Duthorn. an elementar German student, to the accompani ment of accordionist, Virginia Rakocinski. A brief explanation of the na ture and origin of the dances will also be given. Freshman Ping-Pong Champ Undefeated In Five Matches Rosc-marie Schneider, freshman, reiqris as ping-pong queen at Mun delein. Of the twenty-one others participating; in the all-school tour nament. Rosemarie remained un defeated in her five matches. The tournament began Nov. 27 and was concluded Feb. 4 with Sophomore Lucile Jautz bowing to Rosemarie at scores of 21-13 and 21-17. gt;
title:
1958-02-17 (4)
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
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coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College