description:
Pake Four SKYSCRAPER W.A.A. Announces Point System, Activity Plans In response to an increasing number of queries, the Women's Athletic Asso ciation presents an outline of its activi ties and point system. With the enjoyment and improve ment of all students interested in sports and swimming as its objective, it spon sors and gives membership points for the Junior and Senior Terrapin clubs, for the inter-class swimming meet held in March, for the bowling and ping- pong tournaments during the winter, for the tennis and golf tournaments run off in May, and for the Horseback Riding club. Special activities of the W.A.A. this year include the Breakfast rides, spon sored by the Riding club for holidays, the next to be on Dec. 8, and ski-ing parties, plans for which will be announced later. At the close of the year, all members and pledges attend an annual banquet, the high point of which is the conferring of awards. White, crew-necked W.A.A. sweaters will be given for the first time this year to students who have earned 500 activity points. Major letters will be awarded to stu dents earning 750 points, and minor let ters to those who accumulate 250 points. Seniors only are eligible for the highest W.A.A. award, the Gold Seal, given for 1500 points. In addition lo the general awards, spe cial pins are giveii to members of the championship basketball and swimming teams, and to members who are individual champions in bowling, ping-pong, bad minton, tennis, and golf. For additional information, students are advised to see Miss Eileen Scanlon, director of athletics; Betty Whelan, W.A.A. point chairman; and the W.A.A. officers: Annamarie Berk, president; Marion Gilbert, vice-president; and Peg gy Smith, secretary-treasurer. Bowling Contest Opens Next Week Experts in bowling arc trcking to the Loyola Bowling alleys, Sheridan Road and Loyola avenue, getting in form for the first all-college tournament, which will open next Monday, Dec. 5. Winners in the five games, which are open to all students, will carry away with them small gold bowling balls. Jane Bernstein is in charge of the tournament. Meanwhile, in the gymnasium at home, ping-pong fans are running up scores to ward a championship in the all-college Ping-Pong tournament which took its rise in the increasingly popular Hobby Hour over which Betty Vestal presides each day from 11 till 1 p.m. Games may be played either in singles or in doubles, the only requirement being that they be played before a referee. Plan Fencing Meets With bowlers setting the pace in the Loyola Bowling alleys, Cyrano de Bergerac is the model for fencers in the college gymnasium. Mr. Lee Mitchell, of the drama depart ment, who conducts the class in fencing, has announced that a fencing tournament and a series of meets have been sched uled. A meet with Wright Junior college will be held after Christmas, and meets with Wilson Junior college and with the Edgewater Fencing team will be sched uled later. Do Research on Senior Projects (Continued from Page 1, Col. 2) Utilizing a summer's experience as apprentice technician in the laboratory at Mercy Hospital. Miss Fitzgerald. spoke to the biological academy of the Science Forum yesterday. Taking as her subject A Day in the Hospital Laboratory, Miss Fitzgerald outlined the working routine of the laboratory and mentioned some of the special tests done, demonstrating a few of the simpler tests. PRACTICE BOWLINQ FOR ALL-COLLEQE CONTEST Ready for the bowling contest which opens next Monday are Helen Cashion, Eleanor Landon, Jane Bernstein, Dorothy Kaufman, Catherine Miller, Gene Brabets, Virginia Bradke, Virginia Arada, Ruth Donoghue, Mary Jane Sher idan, and Mary Louise Sylvester, pictured at the Loyola Bowling Alleys. OPEN DEBATE SEASON Has N.D. Autographs Peter Conway, Georgette Thoss, Roberta Scheid, and Edward Marciniak opened the Debate season, on Nov. 21, arguing the Pump-Priming question. Loyola upheld the affirmative. A Mundelein affirmative team will meet the University of Detroit today at 4, De Paul university on Dec. 6, Niagara university on Dec. 14, and Marquette university on Dec. 15. MAKE MARIONETTES FOR FRENCH SHOW The football that Notre Dame used in the Carnegie Tech game auto graphed by all the N. D. players is Lucille O'Connell's favorite souvenir. Not Charlie McCarthy, but French speaking marionettes absorb the attention of May Farmer Virginia Arada, Rita Valenzano, and Catherine Rheiner, who are making the dolls for the French marionette show to be presented in the Little Theatre on Dec. 13 and 14. ' Skyscrapings By LaVonne Hayes Most of us must have been on the good side of the wish-bone to have so many wishes come true ... A Beta Sigma Phi dance and a Country club dance answered double to the double requests of Harriet Ashton and Mar jorie Fessler . . . Jane Fahey and Ag nes Keeley ex '39 talked things over last week-end in Milwaukee . . . For Mary Muc'Iman it was the Leo Alumni Formal at Bal Tabarin . . . The Kos- petos sisters, Angela and Katherine were right at home in Danville, III, . . . Alice Rose Hartnctt went formal in Gary ... St. Louis-Washington game was a football item for Mary Alice Bur meister . . . Rose Ostendorf interrupted her Peoria homecoming to take in a Monogram dance at Decatur . . . Helen and Mildred Murphy were at home in Wisconsin . . . Tea dancing was on the program for Marjorie Gallahue and Mary Elizabeth McGuire in Wauke- gan . . . There was a formal note in the Aurora homecoming for Mary Mei- ster and Sue Ruddy ... It was turkey in Alpena, Michigan, for Marguerite Des Champs . . . By way of family col legiate reunions . . . Jill Caldwell vis ited her twin brother Jack in Vellow Springs. Ohio, and Peggy Tobin met her brother in Ames, Iowa . . . When the subject is opera Peggy Schweisthal mentions Barber of Seville . . .Paging through Jaync Zidek's date book we see something about an Illinois week-end . . . The Mikado was a must for Evelyn Templcman and Rosemary Baesslcr ... In their spare time Sally Davis and Genie Harper saw On Bor rowed Time . . . Apologies for over- light to Margaret McGarry and Gerry Stanmeyer who were present at Ozzie Nelson's opening at the Drake . . . Vir ginia Caudel shares a true apprecia tion for Jane McGinnis' solo in Around the Clock . . . Standing next- to-last in the spelldown was Irma Ril ling . . . Ruth Mae Amann, Georgette Thoss plus orchid, Lucille O'Connell, Loretta Calnan, and Frances Walz were one step ahead of the sellout sign for George M. Cohan's I'd Rather Be Right . . . Jeanne Theis, Margaret By ron and Geraldine Ferstal were among the hundred others of you who sported mums at the Notre Dame-Northwestern game . . . Joan Smith's sorority spelled welcome to Kathleen Johnston and Al berta Savage at a recent social event . . . Dancing again for Patricia Mc Donough meant the Tower Town . . . Marie King Alpha Delted at the De Paul Dance . . . Chestera Newinska and Marion Weiler answer present to Northwestern club dances . . . Expert equestriennes at the International Am- pitheatre Horse Show were Mary Eliz abeth and Frances McGuire and Pat ricia Lawlor . . . Freshmen are every where, including the Sigma Delta Phi dance at the Shawnee Coun try club and Betty Sontag, Anne Marie O'Rourke and Catherine Coleman speak for themselves ... A fraternity dance at Purdue made Marion Dyer's holiday... Mary Jane Greening adds the Empire Room to her superior list . . . Ellen Cooney, Helen Delaney, and Betty Burke tripled to the Drake . . . With Kay Lynch as Queen, and Kay O'Mal- ley as maid of honor, and Agnes Grif- fen, Margaret Finnegan, Peggy Meade, and Jane Dunbar in attendance, Mun delein helped rule the court at the Loyola Alpha Delta Gamma formal . . . Speaking of hotels, note the Drake for Janice Johnston, Marjorie Stanley, and Mary Jane Luken . . . the Stevens is always good for Jean Fraser, Margaret Lennehan, and Rosemary Degnan . . . The ice carnival for Mary Margaret O'Flaherty, Alice D'Arcy, and Betty Whelan ... A Northwestern frater nity party was a triple success for Helen Russell and Eileen and Mildred Mahoney . . . Thought of a triple cut was the happy thought that brought Annamarie Berk back from Louisville, with a picture of Mundelein students from the Louisville Courier-Journal . . . We'll be seeing you.
title:
1938-12-01 (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