description:
Pay,o Four SKYSCRAPER Skyscrapings Thanksgiving with a capital T leaves memories of dining and dancing, foot lights and festival jaunts, and, finally football. DINING AND DANCING Guest of honor at the Notre I lame Cotillion, Marianne Donahoe was es corted by N. D.'s Sophomore president . . . Queen of the Loyola Alpha Delia Thanksgiving Eve Formal was Jane Lyons . . . Also enjoying the festive gayely of this party were Marion O'Brien, Peggy Eby, Kay Liston, Alice Dowling, Celia Kilgariff . .. The Purdue Military Ball gave Mary Celeste Shan non an evening to be remembered . . . It was a Stevens main-ball-room sor ority dance for Linda Harrigan last Saturday . . . Seen at the Pump Room- Mary Stokes ... Edgewater was a holi day favorite for Lorraine Yaeger, Lydia Beachcr, Lizbeth Phinney, and Marian Stoffel... Mary Moreschi heard Johnn Gilbert of Sophomore Cotillion reknown at the Boulevard Room . . . We saw Katherine Anselmo at the Northwestern Formal at the Drake . . . At the Reach. Ellen Clare Dougherty, Marian Bar rett, anil Antoinette Foley . . . Ruth Rell was at the Medina Country club . . . And it was a Turkey Frat on Thanksgiving night for Dorothy Riew er .. . St. Mel's Homecoming gave Dorothy Grill and Audrey Tobin a gay evening . . . Two Mundclcinitcs were at the St. Gertrude's Harvest dance. Marjory Brest, and Patricia Hofmann. It was a Rockford week-end for Gomel Ann McMahon with formal dances at Hotels Faust and Nelson. FOOTLIGHTS AND FESTIVAL JAUNTS Grace Mary Nolan and Mary Kather- yn Herold were seen at the opera re cently ... It was La Traviata . . . Lois Patrich is still talking about Meet the People . . . Home to Detroit. Michi gan over Thanksgiving were Jeanne Moehlig and Anne Fedewa . . . Eleanor Ducey enjoyed the holiday with the family in Pittsficld, Illinois . . . The Opera Ballet charmed Catherine Miller and Rita Ann Mulhern ... It was II Trovatore for Aldona Saklos . . . Hav ing a more serious moment were Phyl lis Van Heule, Jean Patnoe, Beatrice Johnson, Audrey Wade, Mary Barclay, Marilyn Jones, Margery Rowbottom, and Colletta Stanton who attended the General Meeting i Cisca al Loyola . . . At the Sociological Convention were Betty Hickey and Jeanne McGinnis. FOOTBALL With a season drawing to a close, the games increase in their excitement . . . For Jeanne Coughlin at the Michigan- N. U. turnout . . . For Maude Shufli towski at the Army-Navy game . . . For Janet Farrell, Mary Margaret Sheehy, Margaret Byron, and Marion Schmidt at the Notre Dame-North western sur prise . . . Taking professional football in their stride and cheering for the Bears were Vivian Hackett, Rita Cal- laghan, and Jane Gavin . . . Regina Moran saw the De Paul-St. Leo Catho lic championship game . . . Week-ends lately have been: down to Illinois, Dor othy McCarthy; to Purdue. Virginia Cheathan; to Notre Dame, Vali Bal- lantine and Grace Mulley. Is Ail This LABOUR of LOVE to Be LOST? Not When... Answers to South Of the Border Quiz (Questions on Page Two) 1. Uruguay. 2. Treaty of Utrecht under Louis XIV. 3. South America. North America was named much later, and was given the name of America simply because there- Were no competing names. 4. Gringo. 5. The Christ of tlie Andes, a bronze Statue of more than twice life size, which stands on the borderline of the two countries. 1940 (Continued from Page 1, Col. 1 The lilt of the lute in the hands of the King of Navarre, Loretta Calnan, so pleases the Princess of France, Lucille O'Conn'll, and her lady-in-waiting (left), Alice Rose Hartnett. Kay Rheiner uses her air-brush ef fectively on this vivid, eye-appealing poster. The drummer girl, Marion Stoffel, and the cornetist, Yvonne Pelletier, look blithe and eager while waiting for the Orchestra to assemble for the play. Ruth Schmigelski (left) and Edith Bukowski pictured in the drama workshop, have helped design, paint, and as semble the scenery which surrounds tonight's players in the Shakespearean drama. and Gulliver's Travels, while Professor Walter Pitkin is philosophically optim istic about the loss of his 100,000 yacht, a ten-year-old dream, bound for the Caribbean, sinking without insur ance. FEBRUARY The Nazi shadow lengthens over Europe as the Balkan Entente, Tur key. Yugoslavia. Greece, and Rumania ON THE hold annual meet- INTERNATIONAL ing at Belgrade SCREEN ... In Lhassa a four-and-one-half year old chubby, button-eyed boy is crowned fourteenth Dalai Lama . . . April 14 is proclaims Pan-American Day by President Roose velt . . . I he Supreme Court celebrates its onc- hundred-nfticth birthday quietly . . AT HOME Samuel Eliot Morrison, Harvard professor, debunks debunker- if Columbus, who was a good seaman, says the professor after a 10.000 mile cruise over the route Columbus trail c led on lii gt; return voyage. The University of Nebraska Ma WITH THE morial stadium shrinks WEATHER four inches with the extreme cold . . . seating capacity re duced by 29. MARCH Six months of World War TI . . . Finns I sign peace treaty with Moscow . . . Said Foreign Minister Vaino Tanner: We could not win the war alone ... Said Russian Pravda: The Soviet I Union stands unshaken as a guardian of peace and as a buttress of hope for toilers . . . Said President Roosevelt REVERBERATIONS It cannot lie a INTERNATIONAL lasting peace if I the fruit of it is oppression. Dint and Hitler meet in mountain village oi Brenner pass for parley . . . Pietro Mascagni. 76. conducts his Cavalleria Rttsticana at Royal Opera House in Rome on fiftieth anniversary of it, lir.i production. The state of Michigan grows, be- comes biggest state cast of Mi.-i-i'i- pi by inclusion of water within its 1 NATIONAL boundaries . . . The Neil DOMESTIC Deal celebrates its v- LOCAL entli anniversary . . . Ein- stein is 61 . . . Poet Edwin Markliara. of The Man With the Hoe. dies al I 87 . . . Monsignor Fulton J. Sheen cele brates tenth anniversary on air ... The I Most Reverend Francis Joseph Spell- man of New York receives the Pallium. APRIL Germany invades Denmark . . . Free Democratic Denmark ceases to exist. IN A FEAR . . . Norway orders full STRICKEN mobilization as Nazi EUROPE bombers fly overhead and Oslo surrenders . . . Britain goes to aid of Norway . . . Paul Reynaud's cabinet takes the place of Eduard Daladierj in France , . . The Netherlands shot nervousness, and the French say *IB has started. Sumner Welles confers with Noose- , velt and Cordell Hull after a -ll-dai mission in Europe, divulges nothiM definite . . . Roosevelt bans all ports for United States shipping and traveling except Spain and Portugal on the i- lantic and a few neutral ports in the Mediterranean . . . Mrs. Roosevelt IN AN AMERICA signs a five-yea AT PEACE contract for M Day . . . and the Supreme Court ha gt; its 1940 picture taken by Harris and Ewing, as usual . . . Wendell Willkie appears in the news as a self-styled political hybrid as primary result' indicate the U.S. is going rapidly G.O.P. . . . Census takers record troubles . . Mrs. l-'clith Graham Mayo, mother oi eight children, is chosen American Moilier of 1940 . . . Abraham Abe Piclcw cables Stalin proposal of peace . . Psychologists at Columbia find youth is not as carefree as oldsters would believe . . . while psychologist at N'ortli- western discovers that the average col- I lege student has at least ' 'a nodding ae- ciuaintance with four times as many word- as Shakespeare used.
title:
1940-11-29 (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