description:
RESERVATIONS for the Marian Congress re ceive a welcome from Mary Pat Dorsey (seated) who has enlisted the aid of panelist, LuciUe Black. Douglas Hyde Vol. XXVIII Mundelein College, Chicago 40, Illinois, March 5, 1958 World-Wide Traveler Stops At Mundelein; Tells Of African Strife Famed ex-communist Douglas Hyde will speak on The Struggle for Africa on March 11 in the college auditorium, Mr. Hyde brings to the platform a wide background of information on world-affairs. He has recently returned from Peru where he wit nessed a near-revolution; sharing a program with Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, he ad dressed 800,000 people in the clos ing rally of the Katholikentag in Cologne. After the Hungarian revolt he took a quick tour of the main centers of Western Europe to check the ef fects on the vari ous Communist parties. Adenauer, he addressed 800,000 people in the closing rally of the Katholikentag in Cologne. After the Hungarian revolt he took a quick tour of the main centers of Western Europe to check the ef fects on the various Communist parties. God's Bandid, a biography of Don Orione by Mr. Hyde, will be published this year. The lecturer will begin an other around the world tour this fall which will include the Philippines, Singapore, and Hong Kong. Born in Bristol and brought up to be a Methodist missionary. Douglas Hyde became interested in Communism while working in the depressed areas of Wales. He joined the British Communist Par ty in 1928 and became one of its most ardent and successful organ izers and propagandists. Going to London in 1940 he joined the staff of the Daily Work er, later becoming its managing editor and one of the dozen most important Party figures in Eng land. He also played an impor tant role in the abrupt changes of the partv line occasioned first by the Nazi-Soviet' pact and later by Hitler's invasion of Russia. After the war Douglas Hyde's faith in Communism was rudely shaken by direc tives from Moscow which told the Daily Worker to cease its policy of cooperation and be gin to attack the Labor Gov ernment and British institu tions. This made the immor ality of Communist tactics be come clear to him. Always a man with a faith, he turned to the Catholic Church in this crisis. His change of heart and sudden leaving of the Party caused a great sensation in Eng land. Bishop Hillinger Celebrates High Mass To Begin NFCCS Student Marian Congress The Congress is an opportunity for Mundelein students, and stu dents from other campuses to demonstrate the Mariology aim to know, love and serve Mary, claims Barbara King, head of the NFCCS Mari ology Commission. Barbara is the general chairman of the Marian Congress which will be held on campus March 9. 200 are expected to attend the Congress representing the nine Catholic colleges in the Chicago area. The Most Rev. Raymond P. Hillinger, Auxiliary Bishop of Chicago, will open the Con gress with the celebration of a High Mass in the college cha pel at 10:30. Luncheon, which is arranged by- Rita Hoffman, will be served in the tearoom after Mass. The program, directed by Elean or Ferraina, will proceed as fol lows: 10:30 Mass, college chapel Luncheon, tearoom Lourdes Panel Musical Tea, tearoom Living Rosary, Benedic tion, chapel The panel members who will give The Lourdes Centennial pan el are the members chosen as the best from all the panels given Feb. 11. The panel will include Roselle Primeau, Lucille Black, Mary Lou Elmslie, Mary Pat Carr, Alyce Dowey, Helen Carroll, Geraldine Sofka, and Sister Mary John Bos- co, with Jean Englehardt as chair man. The musical will be presented by students from De Paul and Mundelein, followed by a tea chair- maned by Marianne Tralewski. The day will close with a Liv ing Rosary and Benediction. Ther ese Zacker is in charge of the Liv ing Rosary arrangements. Recognition will be given to the school in the Chicago area whose Marian activities in the current scholastic year have been judged to be the most effective. Judith Angone is in charge of publicity while Annette Busse will handle posters. Mary Phyllis Ful- garo is chairman of the hostesses while Mary Pat Dorsey will assist Barbara King with general ar rangements. NEA Meet Discusses Satellite Age Education Sister Mary Ann Ida, B.V.M.. President; Sister Mary Donald. B.V.M., Dean of Studies; and Sis ter Mary Haraita, B.V.M.. chair man of the history department, are attending a conference on higher education sponsored by the Na tional Education Association at the Congress hotel. March 2-5. Topic for discussion at the con ference is Higher Education: Strengthening Qualitv in the Sat ellite Age. Program speakers will be David D. Henry, President of the Uni versity of Illinois, and Helen C. White, head of the English depart ment at the University of Wiscon- son. Miss White is well-known to students for her writing of histori cal fiction, which includes Watch in the Night and Not Built with Hands, two of her most popular works. Freshmen and sophomore journalists and would-be edi tors are invited to write stor ies and/or headlines, check copy, proofread or type for the March 17 St. Patrick's Day special edition. Sign up on the bulletin board in room 404 today. Stratosphere Reached In Lecture As Science-Fiction Goes To College Arthur C. Clarke, well known English science-fiction writer and lecturer will sipeak on The Path to the Planets, March 4, in the college auditorium. The noted author has had four books published this year, a collection of humorous science-fiction stories, a factual account of his latest underwater expedition, a novel about whale ranches, and his description of the earth satellite program. Recently Mr. Clarke has been in Ceylon assisting his partner Mike Wilson in the production of the color film, Beneath the Seas of Ceylon. He first became interested in sci ence when, at 10, be avidly collect ed fossils. Soon his interest turned to astronomy, and he built a tele scope from a cardboard tube and a couple of lenses. During this time he saw his first copies of sci ence-fiction magazines and became immcnselv interested in them. At the age of 15. he started writ ing; short pieces for his school mag azine and eventually became its as sistant editor. Soon he was writ ing in earnest for science fiction fan magazines. When World War II broke out, Mr. Clarke left a civil service job to join the Royal Air Force and work on radar. He was in charge of the first blind-landing system. Working on radar further whetted his interest in science, so that at the age of 28, after the war, he en tered Kings College in London and took a degree in physics and mathe matics with honors. After college, he became assist ant editor of Science Abstracts, a No Box-Tops Library Announces Book Shelf Contest If you're caught up in that do- it-yourself craze, the Mundelein College Library has just the thing for you a Book Shelf contest. The contest, which opens today, is part of the National Library Week festivities, taking place from March 16-22. Winners of each of the several categories will receive as prizes a book suggested on their iprize- winning list. 1. Select a room in which you would like to have a book shelf. (Suggested rooms in clude the kitchen, living room, recreation room, bathroom, adult bedroom, children's bed room, nursery, or, perhaps, Dad's secret hideaway, the den.) 2. Choose 10 to 25 books that you would like to have on that shelf. 3. Fill out the entry blank printed on page three or ob tain one in the library. 4. A student may enter a shelf for more than one room, but no more than one entry for the same room from one entrant will be ac cepted. 5. When listing the books, list author, title, and any other necessary information, such as indicating special editions. Mundelein journal which kept him in close contact with all that was going on in the scientific world. However, two years later he realized that his regular job was interfering with what he wanted to do. So he quit and de voted himself to full-time writing. Among his books, which have so far sold over a million copies in a dozen languages, are Childhood's End. Prelude to Space, Expedition to Earth. Interplanetarv Flight, and The Citv and The Stars. Arthur C. Clarke Top O' The Evenin St. Patrick's Dinner Is A Family Affair Green with envy will be all those who fail to attend the Saint Pa trick's day Dinner on Sunday, March 16, from 5:00 to 8:00 p.m. in the college tearoom. The din ner will be sponsored by the Wom en's Auxiliary. The tentative menu includes ham and roast beef, apple pie and salad. Following dinner there will be a musical program given by the fine arts students. The luck o' the Irish will be put to the test when prizes (which in clude a polaroid camera) are cir culated at the dinner. Over 500 guests are expected. General chairmen are Mrs. George Parrilli and Mrs. William Schoen. Mrs. Charles Robner is chairman of the ticket committee; decora tions chairman is Mrs. Ralph Bau er ; and Mrs. T. D. Howell will head the tearoom hostess committee. Sharing duties on the prize com mittee are Mrs. Austin Ayres and Mrs. Edward Codd, while Mrs. L. Raymond Latrimore holds the chairmanship of the tearoom com mittee. Student hostesses are daughters of the women on the executive board of the Women's Auxiliary. They are Jacqueline Doyle, Mary Margaret Rohner, Marilyn Par rilli, Judy Latrimore, Ellen Schoen, Kathleen Burke, Elizabeth Casieri, Roselle Primeau, Nancy Purcell, Mary Kay Marren. Jane Ayres, Marie Prindiville, Nancy Butler, Joanne Murphy and Mar garet Brennan. 6. Any registered student is eligible. 7. An optional statement of 50 words or less explaining the reasons for the choices may also be submitted with the blank. 8. Submit list with the entry blank (one blank for each room entered) at the Library. 9. The contest ends Tues day, March 11, at 7:30 p.m. Judges of the entries are Rev. A. Homer Mattlin, Director of Li braries at Loyola university; Mary Louise Hector Cuneo '45, book re viewer for the Juvenile section of The Critic; and Margaret Mitchell Langdon '40, who like Mrs. Cuneo, was formerly on the Mundelein Review staff. The contest promises opportuni ty for much ingenuity, and a better knowledge of the wide scope of reading material available today.
title:
1958-03-05 (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