description:
Page Four SKYSCRAPER. Three Ways . . . IUI4 ... to look at a picture are pointed out by Mary Jo Schrader and Margaret Ackermann. The three-dimensional student exhibit is displayed by the Art department on the eighth floor. (Story on page 1.) Two Ways . . ... to interpret lines for Not in the Books may well be the point student- playwright Anne Llewellyn stresses for Jacqueline Connaughton and Nancy Garrahy, trying out for parts in the musical. (Story on page 1.) One Way Equestriennes Plan Annual Horse Show The familiar commands: Trot your horses Reverse and canter ring out in the Parkway stables as members of Equestriennes practice for the annual Hbrse Show, scheduled for April 27. Joan Krause, winner of the Champion ship cup last year and general chairman of this year's show, invites all riders to register for the 1952 event. Prize winners in last year's show in cluded Ronnawyn Groom, Nancy Fiske, Mary Franceur, Barbara Roberts, Vir ginia Clinite, Anastasia Tsoutsouris, Jean Hirsch, Mary Nikias, and Sybil Lillie. Equestriennes will hold their third breakfast ride of the year, April 4 at 9 a.m., leaving from Parkway stables. Waves Sink Varsity; End Victory Streak The Varsity Basketball team played the Waves at Great Lakes on March 20. Mundelein lost by three points. After the game the Waves showed the stu dents around the premises. Dinner was served after the tour and the evening concluded with the girls as audience at a game played by service men of the base. German Club Sets Passiontide Theme In keeping with Passion Week, the next meeting of Die Rothensteiner Gesell- schaft on April 2, at 3 p.m., will include the playing of Bach's Passion, and the showing of a film of the Passion Play of Obcrammergau. Dorothy Hertl, who visited Europe during the summer of 1950 and saw the actual presentation, will be narrator. As a preface to the meeting, the mem bers and their friends will make the Sta tions of the Cross in the Chapel. Mar garet Ackermann, social chairman of the club, is in charge of arrangements, as sisted by Marilyn Tucker. Red Cross Drive Spurs Students Jacqueline Fasules participated in an assembly at Wells High school as a re presentative of Red Cross college activi ties. The blood donor skit which Lucille Boldt and Patricia McHugh managed for the Red Cross program in March will be given at the annual Red Cross spring conference in April. Sybil Lillie gave a speech at the Chica go School of Optometry recently to help spur its blood drive. Mundelein students collected for the Red Cross fund campaign at the Ice Ca- pades on March 27, 28, and 29. The college fund drive will be extended until April for last minute contributions. ... to Whiting, Indiana, is anticipated by Economics majors Regina Mc Namara, Elizabeth Berres, and Loretta Gallagher, who will tour Standard Oil refineries there. (Story in column 4.) Art Students Work In Three Dimensions (Continued from page 1, col. 2.) the biting wind as you ski down the slopes of vast snow covered mountains, or bask in the heat of the burning Haitian sun. Displays of Japan, the Swiss Alps, the glories of Sun Valley, the charm bf Mackinac its Grand Hotel and quaint Canadian streets and Minne sota, the land of a thousand lakes, arc all displayed to capture the imagina tion. These travelogues in three depths, built in much the same way in which we built cardboard villages as little children, are the work of the Sophomore and Junior Design classes. The works reveal a flair of imagination and a sensitive knowledge of the psychology of color. Also on display are a number of water colors by Carol Seguin, Barbara Baynes, Elayne Smyth, and Florence Savage. Still life and landscapes pre dominate, the landscapes varying from rural to city views. Sylvia Grigul contributes a design for an album of the Rachmaninolf Second Concerto, and Georgia Kotsiakos contributes a design for an Aida album. Bird Watcher Joins Union, Prefers Feathered Nest AFTER FOUR YEARS OF SHELTERED LIVING, INTER- rupted by an occasional stint at bird watching and a semi-monthly perusual of the botanical gardens, things suddenly came to a crisis. The scintillating conversation of my more social-minded classmates convinced me that my failure to Unionize had de finitely scarred my whole-woman ap proach to education. THE CARBONIZED LACK OF CIRCULATION IN THE GRAY AND maroon area was a welcome relief from the fresh seasonal atmosphere beyond the walls of Danneinora. While my friends sped like radio-directed automo- tons to a vacated, centrally located table, I surveyed the field for compan ionship and decided that my friends of fered the only friendly haven of refuge. I waited ... no fireworks, no 10- picce orchestra, no white-coated bus boys . . . only 50 or 60 half-open eyes, a quantity of cooling coffee, and a few at tempts to initiate an interesting conver sation with a minimum of mental strain. THE RESULTING MONOSYL LABIC TRANSCRIPTION WAS momentarily interrupted by a strategic move toward the densely populated re freshment stand, in hopes of scoring a Economics Club Strikes Oil Tours Refinery Economics club members will be guests of the Standard Oil company of Indiana on a tour through the refinery offices, April 4. The company operates the world's largest oil refinery, in Whiting, Indiana. The club will be guests of the Com pany for luncheon, which will be served in the company cafeteria. Mr. J. J. Klucher of Standard Oil is arranging the tour and will conduct the students to the various spots of interest. Mr. Arthur P. Ruffle, production man ager of Stewart-Warner company and father of Freshman Patricia Ruffle, spoke to Economics students, March 20. His topic was the necessity for education in the business world. Members of a freshman Economics class are planning a tour through the Federal Reserve bank on April 4. The committees in charge of arrangements for the visit include Mary Anne Mur phy, Virginia Koeller, Eleanor Galezio, Dolores Bihun, and Rosaleen Loftus. Students of Economics are also giving a series of reports on visits to the Chi cago Board of Trade, the Midwest Stock exchange, and the Merchandise Mart, April 2, 3, and 4, in Room 40S. Marjorie Keating and Bettemae Callan will outline the functions of the markets, and Joan Dawson will discuss the rela tions of the money market today in the control of inflation. Kathleen Doogan, Nancy Lee, and Catherine Larncy will describe the functioning of the Chicago Board of Trade. Alumnae Basketball Game Closes Season The Alumni basketball game on April 2 will mark the final appearance on the court of three players who have proved invaluable components of the Varsity team. Gina Moran, Frances Mclnerney, and Mary Lou Zahm will be playing their last game as Mundelein students when the Varsity team meets the Alumnae in the final competition of the season. Miss Moran intends to enter medical school in the fall, while Miss Zahm plans to teach high school physical edu cation. Miss Mclnerney is to be married in the near future. At the intermission of the Alumnae game, Miss Zahm's sports class from St. Gertrude's Elementary school will exhibit its basketball abilities. counter-attack. Result; one cup of cof- j fee, too hot to carry . . . and the vital conversation continued. THE PARTY PROGRESSED A THE COMMENTS SLACKENED I staccato to the sips of coffee. Finall. the river boat type personality ex hunied a deck of cards. Three may be crowd in love, but for a card game it' a virtual vacuum. There was no othi choice ... we donned our poker fac and commenced passing the queen of spades in a particularly suspenseful game of Hearts. By that time everyone could feel her sportsman's blood pulsating and the glamour of the surroundings was lose in the thrill of the immediate momen THE SHARK ACROSS TABLE, WHOM I HAD PREVIOUS ly analyzed as the shy type, had almo accomplished her shot for the moon wh the air raid signal alerted every availab civil defender. Without a bugle, wit out any pre-arranged signal, the ini prepared to evacuate to classes. My friend never reached the moon, I barely managed to salvage my coat the rush. On the way out I caught blur of the noon crowd synchronizin their watches, and progressing over myriad of paths, each undoubtedly sessed of a sentimental significance. THE FIRST PURPLE-BREASTI BULLFINCH ARRIVED IN CHIC go today and it just about brings birdbook up to date. Anne Llewellyn Picks Golden Rose Senior Drama major, Anne LlewelhK? won the Golden Rose, presented MaroW 23 by the Laetare Flayers for outstandia service to the Drama department. ( The Rose, highest honor a Drama maj i or may receive from the department, 1 ' given annually on Laetare Sunday atl club program attended by alumnae af *' students of the department. Coralyn Kelly received an award I*8 having gained more membership poia than any other Laetare pledge. Twenty p three alumnae guests brought the ton m attendance to 86. ti During the program six students we*ac received into Alpha Psi Omega, m tional Drama honor society. They a* Kay Lamb, Jean Martin, Melita Lyndai Geraldine O'Keefe, Joan Overholt, aj Winifred Owens. 1 tl v Mount Carmel Wins r1 Debate Tournament Mount Carmel high school carried a )v the trophy at the High School Debaci, tournament, March 22, with St. Ignart taking second place. Eighteen hir schools entered the competition. P' Medal winners for the best girl speal*-' ers in the contest were Patricia Evai 1' and Marian Lifka, both of St. Marj M Best boy speakers were Marry McKiT1 of Mount Carmel and Walter Myof01 of Fenwick. , Three teams, Mount Carmel, St. fled natius, and Fenwick, finished wiwil seven wins and one loss each. wu .vh per 41. :ha Do tie i Vital Speakers Discuss Vital Topic: Marriage To discuss What Qualities You Lohe For in Selecting a Marriage ParuW, members of the Vital Speakers w travel to Fournier institute, April 4.ne Joan Carr, Diane Vainowski, Natjja McHugh, and Nancy Garrahy will giu' the feminine view on the question, in I meeting with the students of Fourni R Yvonne Beaumont, Marjorie Freudian gast, Evelyn Donohoe, and Mary Cafill erine Davy will assist. :a. Vital Speakers is a campus organia tion holding membership in the FrJ -msics commission of NFCCS.
title:
1952-04-01 (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
rights:
This image is issued by the Women and Leadership Archives. Use of the image requires written permission from the Director of the Women and Leadership Archives. It may not be sold or redistributed, copied or distributed as a photograph, electronic file, or any other media. The image should not be significantly altered through conventional or electronic means. Images altered beyond standard cropping and resizing require further negotiation with the Director. The user is responsible for all issues of copyright. Please Credit: Women and Leadership Archives, Loyola University Chicago. wlarchives@luc.edu
coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College