description:
Seek Complete Student Support pom Card Party headquarters in ly-garhe(l Room 202, the Student kivities Council, through General irnian Marianne Peterson, issues a nnuiniquc: Advances all along the B, toward Patron, Advertisement, and Iket quotas, with enthusiastic sup- frt from all students. The goal is the annual benefit Card rty and Fashion Revue, which will held in the Grand Ballroom of the Bvcns Hotel, on April 25. Secretarial students arc contributing Er time and typing and are mailing iters to friends of the College. Also preparation are stationery supplies tin bulletins. The Secretarial depart- lent viill issue- the tallies tabulating fl y receipts. prt students are submitting entries Kthc annual contest, sponsored by the It department, to choose a cover de ign for the Party program. Workers from all departments have Dhintcercd their free time for service I Card Party headquarters. fhree Faculty Members erit Distinction Sister Mary Irma, B.V.M., e gt;f the English department, has been invited 9 serve on the advisory board for a few collection of readings for fresh- Ian English classes in Catholic col- tges. To be published by Harcourt, Brace, End Company early in 1948, the collec- lon is being edited by Francis X. Con- jelly, Ph.D., of Fordham university. pistcr Mary Martinette, B.V.M., Ibairraan of the Chemistry department, ectured on The Catholic Woman in the tb field of Science, at a Vocation Day Ingram at the College of St. Fran- in :is, Joliet, on March 11. Sister Mary Liguori, B.V.M., head K the Sociology department, participat ion a panel on human relations con tacted by the Illinois Council for the in Social Studies, on March IS. j lt; Loyola, Mundelein ei biologists Will Conduct Symposium A series of student papers on bio- Ijl ogical topics will be presented by both gj .oyola and Mundelein in a joint sym- ,n. losium April 11 at 7 p.m. The sym- ij losium will include laboratory dem- uli instrations. jyj i Participants include Hal Foss, Pa rt ricia Bluett, James Wong, Lester Jathan, and Richard Wallyn, and Bca- ricc Berteau, Joan Hughes, Marcella , Mini, and Rita Stalzer will represent lundclein. ,th itc Aetare Players , ward Qolden Rose ii' Barbara Brennan received the Gold- ' n Rose at the annual Laetare Sunday i gt; elebration yesterday. The award is iven for service to the club. The Reverend Robert Johnston, S.J., hairman of the Drama department, at it. Louis university, was guest speaker. ' Marjorie Kroske, Laetare president, dmitted the following students as letnbcrs: Eileen Brucker, Helene Ko- icke, Joan Tunk, Mary Jo Bornhofen, Patricia Bradley, Geraldine Cham- lain, Simone Chapuis, Pasqua D'Ales- iandro, Mildred DeVic, Gloria Guil- Oyle, Dawn Kelley, Mary McCarthy. Alice Marie Niescn, Patricia Pease, lonnie Pritchett, Donna Radtke, Pa- ' ricia Reynolds, Florric St. Viile, Do- ires Wojciechowski, Mary Patricia P alloy, Madelene Roche, and Hazel ihiffer, who acknowledged the recep- ion on behalf of the new members, f Seniors admitted to Sigma Rho Up- lilon include Joyce Archer, Barbara Jrennan, Patricia Broderick, Annamay (Continued on page 3, column 2) ed 'Twould Be Folly To Miss SAC Follies What would you do if you knew that the atomic bemb were to be unleashed upon you at your student assembly on April 10? Would you cower and run in the face of such majestic and scientific power? Or would you reserve a front seat, will ing to pay any price in order to see the revelation of the greatest secret of the age? Well, that's exactly the way the Stu dent Activities Council feels about its stupendous repetition of the colossal tradition linked to card party time the SAC Follies I And those are exactly the questions they ask of you their theatrical tar gets I Atomic experts at work on the plans for the April 10 denouement are Professor Florence Jankowski and Doctor Marion King, seniors in the science of startling scripts. Ingredients for the bomb although we're not supposed to tell are songs, dances, funny-talk, and original cos tumes, chained irrevocably to a fas cinating plot. The crew planning to bring the mis sile and the roof down around your unsuspecting heads are the staid and serious SAC members, who don thes- pian robes for a one-night stand bound to Out-Ziegfeld Ziegfeld. When you gather in the auditorium on April 10 you do it at your own risk. We can do nothing more for you. ... -y-y V.,...... I /..-.-.ft N : Vol. XVII MUNDELEIN COLLEGE, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, MARCH 17, 1947 No. 10 Play Concert Solos Margaret Cashman Margaret Griebel America and the Old World Wins Speech Contest... Contrast ill the AllllUal Orchestra Concert, March 23 The College Orchestra will present its seventeenth annual concert, on Sunday, March 23, at 3:15 p.m., under the direction of Joseph J. Grill.i The concert will open with Bach's Prelude and Fugue in G Minor, arranged by Lucien Cailliet. The finale, taken from Ferde Grofe's Mississippi Suite, will add a modern American note to the program of old romantic composers. This year, the program will unite on the concert stage the music of two great masters, Mendelssohn and Schumann, who were personal friends and often presented concerts together. Violin soloist Margaret Griebel will play the last movement from the Concerto in E Minor for Violin and Orchestra, by Mendelssohn. Although this is Mendelssohn's only violin Concerto, it is still one of his most popular compositions, probably because of its ease and playable- ness. Another soloist, pianist Margaret Cashman, will play the first move ment from Schumann's Piano Concerto in A Minor, which was performed by Mendelssohn in 1845. Both soloists wiH be accompanied by the Or-' chestra. Before the intermission, the Orchestra will play the Procession of the Holy Grail, from Wagner's Parsifal, which previous Lenten con certs have made a tradition. The conception of Parsifal was derived by Wagner from poems and legends about the Knights of the Grail which have come down through the centuries. Beethoven's trio in B Flat Major will be interpreted by Elinor Kokesch, violinist, Dorothy Gallagher, cellist, and Jean Macferran, pianist. Junior drama major and debater, Virginia Perry took first place in the after-dinner speaking contest at Indiana State, on March 1. Are Women Smarter* Than Men? Debaters Say No to Notre Dame Transposing the old adage about something old, something new, into the field of forensics, the college debaters will journey to the University of Notre Dame in April to defend the negative of the question : Resolved: That wom en are smarter than men. Notre Dame will defend the women against the combined opposition of Marion King and Rita Stalzer. Vacation Opens The College will close for the Easter holidays on Thursday, March 27, at 5 p.m., and will reopen on Tuesday, April 8. In accordance with a Sodality project, students will cooperate to keep a guard of honor at adoration throughout Holy Thursday. By signing a list on the Sodality bulletin board, the students may indicate the time which they wish to spend in adoration in their par ish churches, on Holy Thursday. Educators Hold Nutrition, Health Forum, March 22 High School Home Economists Are Guests A meeting of home economics teach ers, nutrition chairmen, and health su pervisors in Catholic high schools will be held here on Saturday, March 22, under the sponsorship of the Home Economics department. Headlining a program of disting uished speakers in the field of nu trition will be Dr. Isaac Schour, pro fessor and head of the department of Histology at the University of Illinois School of Medicine. Dr. Schour, who studied health con ditions in Italy, will show slides illus trating his discussion topic, Nutrition and Dental Health. Other speakers include Dr. Margaret Hessler Brooks of the University of Chicago, chairman of the Chicago Nutrition association, who will discuss Nutrition Education through the Chi cago Nutrition Association, and Mar garet Pallstad, nutrition consultant from the Tuberculosis Institution of Chicago and Cook county, who will point out the advantages of Nutrition Education through Schools. Frederica L. Beinert, director of nu trition service of the American Red Cross, will serve as discussion leader. Student hostesses will include Mary Jane McNeal, Dolores Arenburg, Doro thy Fahrenbach, Nanette Salisbury, Elizabeth Sullivan, and Patricia Anne Daily. Freshmen Turn Scribes Annually, come spring, the reg ular members of the THE SKY SCRAPER staff abandon their pen cils and paste jars and leave Room 305 to the freshmen, who take over as editors and publishers. This year, the staff has designat ed the issue of April 22 as the Freshman Edition, and today its members vacate their offices. All freshmen interested in writ ing for the Freshman SKYCRAP- ER should attend one of the four staff meetings scheduled for this week today at 3 and 4, tomorrow . at 3 and 4 in 305. . Alumnae Qive Hints On Homemaking How to manage home and husband will be the theme of the marriage for um which five alumnae will hold for seniors and engaged students tomor row at 1 o'clock in Room 405. Joan Morris Agar '42, chairman of the forum, will give hints on managing budgets and making housework easier in her talk, Shortcuts to Comfort. Joan Kaspari Foster '40 will tell of workable solutions to the Doubling Up Problem during the housing shortage. Keeping Your Home Happy, title of Doris Ruddy Welch's talk, will entail keeping husband and children happy, as well as the housewife herself. Mrs. Welch was graduated in 1942. Former president of the SAC, and now the mother of two children, Helen Sauer Brown '44 will discuss Bringing Up Babies. Pre-Cana and Cana conferences, fast gaining in importance, will be dis cussed by Caroline Holland Mallon '36. In April, Dramatists Will Give 'I Remember Mama' John Van Druten's comedy, I REMEMBER MAMA, will be the initial spring production of the Drama department. An adaptation of Kathryn Forbes' book, MAMA'S BANK AC COUNT, the play will be presented on April 18 and 20 in the college theatre, with Loyola university students starring in male roles. Recently released to the amateur stage, the production had success ful runs on Broadway and in Chicago, with Mady Christians playing the lead. The play consists of short sketches revealing the life of the Han- sens, a Norwegian family recently come to America. The roles will be portrayed by a double cast with Dolores Toniatti, and Virginia Perry as Katrin; Veronica Walsh and Carol Draper as Mama; Rosemary Ahern and Mary Lou Kelly as Dagmar; Annamay Byrne and Margaret Schriver as Christine; Patricia Czarnecki and Jo Ann Logelin as Aunt Trina. Charleine Beesley and Patricia Hereley as Aunt Sigrid; Rosemary Martin and Dolores Duffy as Aunt Jenny; Florence Sigler as Jessie; Diana Coffey as the Nurse; Margaret Benza as Madeline; Genevieve O'Connor as Dorothy, and Louise Tanner as Miss Moorehead, complete the feminine roles. Male roles will be played by Byron Ross as Papa; Eugene Hart- rich as Uncle Chris; Paul Erbach as Nels.
title:
1947-03-17 (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