description:
Page Four THE SKYSCRAPER Feb. 26,1964 Dean's List (Continued from Page 1) Leonora, S.Sp.S., Marcia Uebbing, Patricia Wadecki, Kathleen Walsh. Freshman names appearing on the Dean's List are: Sharon At- wood, Diane Benkovic, Kathleen Bradley, Elizabeth Braunlin, Mar garet Browne, Andrea Ciccone, Ovita Cihlar, Jeanne Cinikas, Jean Durall, Joann Farrell, Kathleen Ferguson, Francine Fetyko. Listed too are Barbara Gembara, Bernadette Gerlach, Elaine Gier- mak, Juanita Giles, Rita Grill, Kathleen Hager, Mary Kenning, Kathleen Landreth, Mary Lynch, Joanne Marrow, Laura Michelini, Mary Molony, Marjorie Pesaresi, Katherine Pettinger, Rita Quinn, Kathy Smialek, Kathryn Thornton, Jo Ann Ugolini, Nancy Vandenberg, Patrice Ward, Cecilia Wolski and Ann Marie Zei. SI udcrapinad Skyscraper Photo by Bnrbura Danielson ENJOYING A BREAK at the freshman mixer, Feb. 7, are (I. to r.): Bill Larson, Bobbie Bohan, Bill Calkin, Pat Manion and Pat Gregory. Two combos, the Countdowns and the Dynamics provided music for the 800 peo ple who danced in McCormick Lounge and in Lewis Center. Campus News Briefs 'Fast for Freedom' Students at Brandeis University in Massachusetts will abstain from one meal, Feb. 26, to aid families of unemployed Southern Negroes. The money saved by the school dining facilities will be contributed to the needy in the South. The program, known as Fast for Freedom Food, is sponsored jointly by NSA, SNCC and the Northern Student Move ment. Art Award Patricia Lenihan '67 has received a Catholic Fine Arts Society Top Award for her Christmas card de sign Angelic Choir over Nativity. The Barton-Cotton Company will issue the entry commercially next Christmas. St. Patrick's Dinner The St. Patrick's Day Dinner, sponsored by the Women's Auxil iary, will be held March 8 from 3 to 8 p.m. in the Tearoom. Corned beef, chicken and baked ham are included on the menu. Entertainment will College Hosts Mafh Tourney Students from 36 Catholic high schools will participate in Munde lein's annual Mathematics Tourna ment, Saturday, Feb. 29. Tests will be given in three areas, advanced math, geometry and algebra. The problems, which combine modern and traditional concepts of math, have been composed by senior math majors under the chairman ship of Karen Rossing (advanced math), Mary Ann Dumanowski (ge ometry) and Pat Puhr (algebra). Seniors Pauline Hanrahan and Pat Johnson will act as coordinators. The visiting faculty will partici pate in a panel during the test pe riod. The New College Mathe matics Departments will be dis cussed by Sister Mary Philip, O.P., Rosary College, Sister Mary Jus- tina, R.S.M., St. Xavier College and Sister Mary Neal, B.V.M., Munde lein. Each is the chairman of the math department of her respective college. Awards will be given at the tea following the tests. The two schools with the highest cumulative scores will receive plaques. Individuals with the highest scores in the ad vanced division will merit pins; cer tificates will go to winners in the geometry and algebra divisions. be in the Social Room. The guest MC is Jack Hagerty, disc jockey for the Saturday Morning Irish Hour. Mary Pat Bowler '63 will entertain with her 20 Wee Irish Dancers. Music Meeting The intercollegiate music theory meeting with representatives from Mundelein, DePaul, St. Xavier and Rosary will take place at McCor mick Lounge, Feb. 27 at 3:40 p.m. Jo Ann Miks, Kappa Mu Psi presi dent, will welcome the group and introduce a panel composed of a member from each school. The pan elists, Sue Dorner and Joyce Bus- scher, Mundelein; Frances Jarecki, DePaul; Lucille Mykiel, St. Xavier; and Patricia Berklund, Rosary, will discuss 20th century composition techniques. Lusk Judges The judges for the 1964 Joseph ine Lusk Creative Writing Contest have been announced. Dr. Stanley A. Clayes, professor of English at Loyola University and co-author of two textbooks, will judge the short story division of the contest. Entries in the poetry division will be chosen by Dr. Samuel Hazo, poet and dean of the college of liberal arts and sciences at Duquesne Uni versity. Dr. Faith G. Norris, associate professor of English at Oregon State University, will judge the es says. Dr. Norris is co-author of Kim of Korea with Bernard Mala- mud, novelist and short story writer, who was a judge for the Lusk awards last year. The judges for the editorial en tries will be announced at a later date. Inter-Collegiate Concerts The Inter-collegiate Concert, fea turing Rosary College, DePaul Uni versity and Mundelein, will present vocal, organ and chamber ensemble music March 4, 12 and 13. The Xavier University Glee Club and the Mundelein Glee Club and Ensemble also will present a con cert March 14 at Mundelein at 8 p.m. Contest Winner Maureen Morrisroe, '64 has been named the local winner in Time Magazine's 28th annual Current Affairs Contest. Sister Mary Chris topher, B.V.M., also scoi-ed high on the test which was given this year to more than 750,000 students in the United States. Writers Publish Mid-winter magazines are featur ing articles by two of Mundelein's literari. The January issue of Seventeen presents Roses and Meadows and Blushes on Cheeks, by Barbara Mounsey, '65. The short story is a perceptive insight into a teenaged boy's first date. The March issue of Today is fea turing I Shall Make You Love Me, by Sister Mary Anne David, B.V.M. The article which deals with vocations is based on the play Gid eon, and is illustrated by one of Sister Mary Corita's seriaographs. Due to an overabundance of holiday engagements announced last issue, we had a hold-over, and so we communicate them to you hastily now: Ellen Hoversen to Dan Powers of Loyola. Their wedding will be Nov. 7. Eileen McDonaugh to Sean McDonagh (not a misprint, dearies, but a lovely coincidence.) They will be married July 4. Marina Loescher to John J. Dupuis, a graduate of the University of Illinois. They will be married June 20. Chris Gebarow8ki to William Wojcik. Their wedding plans are for April 25. Regina Kizlauskas to Gene Ivanauskas. They ha e not set a definite date. Jeanne Yacullo to Dennis Kazmerski, a senior at Loyola. They have not set any definite date. Also, junior Chris Polniaszek has announced her engagement to John Middendorf, a grad student at Iowa. They have set the fall of '65 as a probable date. We had another letter, recently, from our little old lady friend in Des Moines, la., and she has come up with a startling revelation: My dear, I have made a wonderful new discovery: the Beatles I think that they are ever so fab Watched them on Ed's show, and really thought they even outshone Mr. Sullivan himself My heavens, the last time I was so overcome was when Barry Goldwater spoke at our Golden Agers' meeting. Have snatched up all the fellows' discs at my local dime store, and have been taken to wearing one of those delightful little wigs, mine is fuschia. I also received a lovely scroll from my chapter of the Beatles' Fan Club for embroidering Beatles 7,649 times on a set of matched tea towels. What a groovey clan these little swingers are Almost makes one regret the fact that we don't belong to Great Britain anymore Dearies are discussing: The smoking reports; old now, but it's just as hard to break the habit. Newest theory is that there will have to be a substitute. We think something healthful, like a vitamin substitute, would kill two birds with one stone: We've even thought of a name: VITA WEED . . . the Catholic social conscience: of what does it consist? . . . the newest hairdo for spring, a sort of Buster-Brown-Goes-Beatle bang . . . the last (we promise) mention of grapes or Beatles: What is purple and spawns Beatles? Grape Britain. Ugh. Close-to-Home, Isn't-It -I)ept: Former Congresswoman Marguerite Stitt Church's quote, attributed to Madame Chiang Kai-Shek: They never knew I could be brilliant because I cut classes all the time. I wanted to think . . . you weren't supposed to think at Wellesley. And finally, because Feb. 29 is Saturday, we have composed an al together fitting little verse that expresses our sentiments, and yours too, we hope, on this day of days, this glorious occasion, this golden oppor tunity: The male is such a clever beast, From north to south, and west to east, It's hard to ground him. But though his guard may be increased, With one thing he can't cope, at least: The babes who hound him. To be a fool for man is sin, I haven't too much use for him ... And yet I'm on the look-out He watches, with a wary grin, The dames who try to take him in In order to be took out. For though he's clever, cunning, sly, And from my clutches he will try To be extracted, This year, hell have no alibi. Happy Leap Year I shall cry (And won't retract it ) Pandora Concert Features Baroque Music; Film Presents Japanese 'Macbeth' Orientals Depict Classic Theme K u m o n o s u - J o (Throne of Blood), the Japanese version of Macbeth, will be the Foreign Film Forum's next offering, Tuesday, March 10, at 6:30 p.m. in the Col lege Theater. Winner of the Boston Interna tional Film Festival Award for 1961, the movie was produced and directed by Akira Kurosawa and stars Toshiro Mifune as a power- hungry war lord in 16th century Japan during the Sengoku wars. Throne of Blood is especially in teresting because it provides a view of a different culture's handling of THE SKYSCRAPER Mundelein College 6363 Sheridan Rd., Chicago 26, 111. a familiar theme. One triumph of Japan's film in dustry sound effects as convincing as scenery is particularly notica- ble in the film rustling of silk kimonos, beating of war banners in the wind and pounding of horses' hooves. Time described Kumonosu-Jo as a nerve-shattering spectacle of physical and metaphysical violence, quite the most brilliant and original attempt ever made to put Shake speare in pictures . . . Kurosawa's Macbeth is no reflective and sus ceptible villain; he is a sweat-simple soldier, as physical as his horse. In addition to the scheduled for eign film, The Golden Fish also will be shown. Election Results Returns from the mock election held Feb. 21 indicate Mundelein stu dents favor Sargent Shriver as Democratic vice presidential nomi nee and Barry Goldwater as Repub lican presidential candidate. ChamberGroup Plays Scarlatti The Baroque Chamber Players, next on the Concert-Lecture agenda, will perform in the College Theater at 12:40 p.m., March 3. Jerry Sirucek, who has appeared with the Chicago Symphony Orches tra, will play the oboe. Marie Zorn, an adherent of Wanda Landowska, plays the harpsichord. Murray Grodner, at the double bass, has played under Arturo Toscanini with the NBC Symphony. James Pelle- rite, who will be playing the flute, has performed with the Philadel phia Orchestra. The selections will include Trio Sonata in C Major by Joseph Bo- din De Boismortier; J. B. Loeillet's Sonata in B Minor for Flute and Cello ; Sonata in A Minor for Oboe by George Philipp Telemann; Marais' Rondeau ; D o m e n i c o Scarlatti's harpsichord solo; and Sonata in D and Quartet in B Minor by Telemann.
title:
1964-02-26 (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
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Text
language:
English
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Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College