description:
I in Tune . . the Cecilian Concert are members of the College Trio, Lillian Muza, violinist; iibara Ann Frick, pianist; Dorothy Grill, 'cellist. (Story in Col. 4). oles Apart. vv THE; ..... gt; '*nm.. . E4HI *---.. :. .-4 : . J' :: : ' U .?' : :l.-.-: .. - .....,:K..11 w, ... . .. Vol. XIV MUNDEL -:iN COLLEGE, CHICAGO, OCT. 22, 1943 No. 2 Et the homes of Sheila Finney, left, and Eileen Rogers, center, from Texas, and It home of Adelaide Costello, right, from Newfoundland. (Story on Page 3). Back The Attack . . . DramatistsRehearse For Three-Act Comedy The curtain will rise at 8:15 p.m. on Friday and Saturday, Nov. 19 and 21, for the annual fall production of the drama department, announced this year as a three-act comedy entitled Once There Was a Princess. Juliet Wilbor Tompkins' play, listed in the French catalogue of plays for the year, is laid in Milltertown, U.S.A., where the friendly inhabitants forget world news for a while and prepare a gala welcome for a Millertown girl who married a foreign prince and became a legend in the village. Faculty Members, Qraduates, Merit Service Honors Lieutenant Lee Mitchell, former fenc ing instructor at Mundelein, received his bars in June at Fort Belvoir, Vir ginia. Aviation Cadet George F. Peterson, who would ordinarily be making plans for the fall play, is busy at advanced training school in Hondo, Texas. He received his Gunnery Wings on Sept. 25. First Lieutenant Robert J. Niess, who left the Spanish department for the service just a year ago, is now- teaching Spanish in the department of modern languages at the U. S. Mili tary Academy at West Point. Lieuten ant Niess spent six months at Ran dolph Field, where he was adjutant of the Ground School. Lieutenant Margaret Troy '39 is with the U. S. Army Nursing Corps in Af rica, and Lieutenant Ailccn Farrell '39, dietitian in the Army, is in Eng land. First Lieutenant Marjorie Chapman '40 was promoted in July from execu tive officer of the WAC headquarters company at Fort Devans, Massachus etts, to commanding officer of the WAC medical detachment at the sta tion hospital there. A biology major, Lieutenant Chapman was formerly a laboratory technician at Grant Hos pital. Five Bond Buyers Speed First Jeep SAC Members Take Turns At Booth I the motto of Mary Louise Gulick, Edith Moscardini, and Mary Barclay, who, lith Helen Sauer and Gloria Rassenfoss, are top War Bond buyers this month. Leading the student body in the pur chase of War Stamps and Bonds for the first Mundelein jeep of the year are Mary Eleanor Barclay, Mary Lou ise Gulick, Edith Moscardini, Gloria Rassenfoss, and Helen Sauer, who top the list of student purchasers. Eleven members of the Student Ac tivities Council, under the chairman ship of Dorothy Meehan and Margery Rowbottom, are on duty in the Bond booth in the student lounge each day. Mary Frances Padden, Patricia Crumley, and Jerry Stutz are on duty in the booth on Mondays, and Miss Stutz and Miss Rowbottom are there on Tuesdays. Irene O'Flaherty, Ruth Rinderer, Miss Crumley and Miss Meehan arc in the booth on Wednesdays; Sheila Fin ney and Miss Rowbottom take turns oil Thursdays, and Rosemary Tarsitano, Jean Casey, and Charlotte Smith are there on Fridays. Cecilians Bring Music to Concert Stage on Oct, 24 Present Fall Festival Here In Honor of St. Cecilia The Cecilians, college musical organ ization, will pay homage to their pa troness, St. Cecilia, when they present a program of classical, romantic, and modern music in her honor on Sunday. Oct. 24, at 3 p.m. A composition from the distant past, though written long after the time of St. Cecilia, is the sixteenth-century motet, Ave Maria, by Arcadelt, which will be sung by the Glee club, directed by Walter Aschenbrenner. Motets and their secular counter parts, madrigals, were popular through out Europe in the fifteenth and six teenth centuries. Directly honoring St. Cecilia will be the tribute read by Patricia Kelly, of the drama department, with a vocal en semble as an invisible choir. Play Beethoven Largo The College Orchestra, directed by Joseph J. Grill, will open the program with Largo, hy Beethoven. Let All My Life Be Music will be the theme of the College Glee club as it sings this composition by Spross. In a patriotic spirit will be the Glee club's next selection, the stirring America, Glorious Land, by Peery. The Chopin Scherzo in B Flat Minor, piano solo by Mary Louise Gulick, is an intense and impassioned composition, incongruously titled scherzo, or little jest. When Chopin composed this number, Poland was .being partitioned, and, un able to aid his country in its disaster, he may have written this selection in a sardonic mood, titling lightly a dra matic composition, as the enemy took lightly the destruction of bis homeland. Adds Whimsical Note Adding a whimsical touch will be the spritely Mazurka Opus 19, Number 1, of Wieniawsky, a violin solo played by Bernice Bielawa. (iloria Rassenfoss will present a vocal solo, Les Filles de Cadiz, by Dclibes. The formality of the classical period will be crystallized in the Minuet from the Military Symphony of Haydn, to be played by the College Trio. Also from the repertoire of the Trio, which includes Lillian Muza, violinist; Dorothy Grill, violinccllist, and Bar bara Ann Frick, pianist, will be Sibel ius' dreamlike Romance and an invig orating Hungarian Dance by Brahms. (Continued on page 4, column 4) New Debate Coach To Hold Tuesday, Thursday Meetings Members and prospective members of the Debate club have triple opportunity to receive instruction in argumentation from Eleanor Brittain, A.M., new de bate coach, who conducts classes in de bate at 2 and 3 p.m., on Tuesdays and holds optional meetings on Thursday at 2 p.m. A former instructor at the Univer sity of Iowa, Miss Brittain, who is working toward her doctorate at North western, is preparing the debaters for a question dealing with the establish ment of a world police force. 13 Seniors Turn Teachers Pro-Tern Do Student Teaching in City Schools Next fall they will be in charge of classrooms all their own, but this year, in addition to their regular classes, 13 seniors are devoting several hours a week to student teaching and observ ing in the city's high schools. At Mundelein Cathedral high school, Dorothy Schaar is teaching art, Marga ret Jean Burke and Grace O'Connor are teaching English, and Ruth Anne McCarthy and Larraine Knaub are teaching speech. Patricia Crumley has a class in bota ny at the Convent of the Sacred Heart. Adele Bujewski and Ruth Rinderer arc teaching English at St. Gertrude's school, where Mary Stokes presides over a French class, Rosemary Viglione teaches music, and Patricia Kelly teaches speech. Miss Viglione also has a music class at St. Ignatius'. In the home economics department, Patricia Herbert teaches at New Trier high school, and Jeanne Coughlin teaches at Barat college. Don Caps and Qowns For Senior Sunday In keeping with a College tradition, the seniors will wear their caps and gowns for the first time when the Mass of Christ the King is celebrated in Stella Maris Chapel on Oct. 31, Senior Sunday. The Reverend William J. Millor, S.J., of Loyola university, will read the Mass and give the Senior Sunday ad dress. The college choir will sing two hymns composed by Sister Mary Raf ael, B.V.M., chairman of the music de partment, one of which is in honor of Christ the King, and two hymns by the late Sister Mary Editha, B.V.M. Following the Mass and sermon, the seniors and Father Millor will be guests of the College at breakfast in the tea room. Middies Drop Anchor On Mundelein Campus 125 Couples Will Dance Here Tomorrow Helen Sauer, president of the Stu dent Activities Council and general chairman of the Mundelein-Ahbott Hall tea-dance scheduled for tomorrow from 2:30 to 5 p.m.. and Margery Rowbottom, president of the senior class, will head the reception committee which will welcome 125 midshipmen guests. Members of the reception committee are Ruth Rinderer, Dolores Rudnik, Marcella Garrity, Patricia Flynn, Mary Catherine Quinn, Jerry Stutz, and Mary Frances Padden. Other committee members are Doro thy Meehan and Patricia Crumley, in charge of tickets; Charlotte Smith, Jean Casey, and Irene O'Flaherty, in charge of checking, and Rosemary Tar sitano, Sheila Finney, and Patricia Hol lahan, in charge of music. Students in the home economics de partment have voluteercd to take care of refreshments at all the tea-dances this year.
title:
1943-10-22 (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