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SKYSCRAPER Page Three former Students Received, professed at Mount Carmel ,e 5vc former Mundelein students were . Messed in the Congregation of the y ters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin * try, and eight others were received o the Congregation in a ceremony at Dubuque, on Agncsita, B.V.M.: Sister Mary Albert- ina, B. V. M., who was June Seerey ex '34, and Anne Lillie, ex '46, now Sister Mary Chionia, B.V.M. Former students who were received are Kathryn Fox '45 who was given the name Sister Mary Alice Marie, B.V.M.; Mary Catherine Rose ex '37, who re- .-, gt;) Elizabeth, B.V.M.; Sister Mary . , , ; nor Marie, B.V.M., who was Bev- * the namc S,s,er Mary Sharo ' B.V.M.; Carol Diamond ex '43, now id ar . he Motherhouse. Irch 19. :s- at faking their first Vows were the pier Ruth Tentier '43, now Sister r t Craggs ex '44; Margaret Mag ician ex '45. who is now Sister Mary ittend Sessions )f Science Qroup t Representing the Chemistry depart- at t, Sister Mary Martinette, B.V.M., j. krtment chairman, and Sister Mary ie irgueiitc Christine, B.V.M., attended ions of the American Association for y 1 Advancement of Science, held rc- alfly ' St. Louis. *t imong the events they attended were ' n discussion of Chemotherapy; a forum the National Association of Science flchcrs on the Observation of Science ie idling in Colleges and Secondary e tools: a lecture by Professor A. J. ie rlson of the University of Chicago, Sister Mary Claudia, B;V.M.; Peggy 1 lylanel ex '47, who received the name Sister Mary William Edward, B.V.M. Also received were Jeanne LeMaire ex '47, now called Sister Mary Char- maine, B.V.M.; Betty Kelly ex '47, who receivetl the namc Sister Mary Michael- ita, B.V.M.; Margaret Ready ex '48, now Sister Mary St. Winifred, B.V.M., and Anna Marie Van de Voorde ex '48, who received the name Sister Mary St. Etienne, B.V.M. Women Voters Study Primary Candidates For the benefit of the 35 Mundelein students who will cast their first votes in the primaries tomorrow, Jeanne jHident of the A.A.A.S., on Science in O'Toole led a discussion on voting, S-mSchool Curriculum, and the Catholic before members of the campus unit of ie mid Tabic of Science luncheon at the ' (Louis university medical school. y : ells Sodality of Jisit to Lourdes lister Mary Richard, B.V.M.. of the wish department, addressed the So- lity officers recently, describing a grimage she hail made to the shrine of I Blessed Virgin at Lourdes, France. nice. Berry Kennedy of Loyola anel Ruth z Jmolds of Mundelein led a discussion LlTlic Participation of Students in Real e Iholic Living, at a joint meeting of the yola and Mundelein Sodalities, on Bch 28. y iwenty-seven members of the College idality attended the first meeting of the - m College Council of Cisca on March ) I at St. Francis Xavier college. the League of Women Voters, last Wednesday. At the March 20 meeting of the League of Women Voters, Mary Frances Padden reported on the National Edu cational association's scrutiny of Chi cago's school system, held on March 18 and 19 in the city's council chamber. In a discussion following Miss Pad- den's report. League members agreed that it is by effective legislation that needed reforms arc produced. keshmen Create lusical Contrasts It Class Concert I ahe Glee club, under the direction of lalbe-rt Huguelet, opened the Fresh- In Concert on March 20. The singers' ft number was an old English mad- i al, My Bonnie Lass, by the British nposer Thomas Morlcy. In contrast this light, gay air, they offered Dc- j isy's dreamlike Clair de tune. Edwarel MacDowell, beloved American isician, composed Jaqucline Shay's Idition, Novellette, Opus 46. Joanne pian played Scott's Lotus Land. Opus 1 Number 1. Mary Kaye Tentingcr id a tribute to Morning in her song by ng. Regina Bellucci's contribution to the gram was a violin solo. Concerto, b. 23, First Movement, by Viotti. tte Mae Huber's organ solo was a key composition called Canyon Walls. Louise Borrows sang Serenata by Tos- ; The ever popular Chopin was rcpre- ted in the concert by what he once imed his loveliest melody. Etude in j played by Irma Voller. Hary Wood Stussy interpreted Bach's , ntasia Cromatica. A voice, a flute, and fiano blended in the I.icbling Pravura nations. Dorothea Brodbeck sang, ry Lalonde played the flute, with tss Voller at the piano. Boloists on the program were accom- nicel by Joan Duris, Lois Zorn, Helen tticki, and Miss Voller. Qive Forum On Holy Mass in Sophomore Qroup Margaret Mary Campbell, Mary Margaret Doyle, Ruth Casey, Dorothy Gaffney, and Patricia Muckian took part in a forum on the Sacrifice of the Mass. in one of the Moral Guidance classes recently. Developing Miss Campbell's theme of appreciation of the Mass through in creased knowledge of what the Mass is, Miss Doyle explained the nature and purpose of the Mass. Miss Casey and Miss Gaffney outlined the pattern of the liturgy. That we must live the Mass to derive its greatest bene- fifits was the point stresscel by Miss Muckian in summing up the message e gt;f the forum. Present Follies at Assembly Thursday (Continued from page 1, column 1) dents sophomores, juniors, and seniors at any rate think, in spring, of the S.A. C. Follies, gayest and most informal of all-college assemblies. Scheduled for Thursday, April 11, at 1 p.m., the S.A.C. Follies constitute the last big event in the drive to promote the benefit Card Party and Fashion Re vue, which will he held on April 26 in the grand ballroom of the Stevens, under the chairmanship of S.A.C. presi dent Sheila Finney. The S.A.C. members will take the stage, but not in the usual solemn row. Instead, they will star in a suspense- filled dramatic vehicle, written by seniors Nancy Enzweiler, Jane McMurray, Ger aldine Thorpe, and Margaret Mary Sieja. Students having their quotas in by Thursday will have reserved scats in the center section usually occupied by the Class of 1946. Red Cross Unit Sends Members to Council Meeting Nine members of the campus unit of the American National Red Cross at tended the spring Council meeting of all the Red Cross college units in Chicago- land, at Northwestern on April 6. Officers of the campus unit who at tended included Janet Sprickman. Mary Agnes O'Grady, Lucille Cook, Patricia Trudeau. Jane Forrestal, Patricia Here- ley, Elaine Jenkins. Barbara Brennan. and Mary Em Harrigan. Miss Sprickman lead a discussion on Camp and Hospital work, in which Miss Marigold Mattson. Miss Helen Clark, field directors; Mrs. Horton, headquarters, and three other college unit representatives participated. Films taken at Barat college on safety measures anel Red Cross activities fol- lowed the Panel, and Miss Margaret Hargrove and Miss Elizabeth Hunter, National and Midwestern College Unit directors respectively, chief speakers, talked briefly to the group on future programs and improved methods in Unit operation. Eye-Witness Tells Of Consistory Describes 19-Hour Air Journey The Holy Father possesses no atom bomb, no secret weapon but he is se cure in the way to peace because he possesses faith and truth, the only real means to world understanding, de clared Stanley Pieza, religious editor of the Chicago Herald-American, in a Sodality-sponsored address here on April 2. A member of Cardinal Stritch's party on the trip to Rome for the consistory, Mr. Pieza, who had a private audience with the Pope while at the Vatican, told of the party reciting the rosary together while crossing the Atlantic, described the view of St. Peter's dome from the air, and recalled the music of the silver trumpets from the Hall of Benediction. Thirty thousand people were present for the elevation ceremony, Mr. Pieza noted, adding that Cardinal Stritch was the eighth candidate to receive the Car dinal's red hat, in the thrce-hour-long ceremony on Feb. 21. What Ljoe On . . . Y/ES, it is Spring, you can always tell The students begin to take walks along the lake front during free periods; very few babushkas are seen; jackets instead of coats are in evidence; light colors replace winter colors, and flowers and ribbons adorn the hair. l EEPIN'G in the mood of Spring is * Patricia Troy, freshman, who, with the straw she weaves in the Art depart ment, makes colorful and eye-catching hats to match her Easter clothes. DRINGIXG the number of engaged girls on campus up to 31 is Muriel Glabman, junior, who received her ring from Sidney Goldstone, a junior at the Illinois Medical school. 7IRGINIA Dimmick '44 on the college I- library staff, will he married to Clifford Grant, formerly of the Xavy, on May 4 at St. Mary's Church in Evanston. Her attendants will be Dorothy Dimmick, junior and sister of the bride-to-be and their niece Ann, 5, who will be flower girl. A bit of humor overheard in the hall: **Said one freshman to another. What kind of questions were in the test? Dis cussion or objectionable? Assist with Benefit Las Teresianas Weld Cordial Relationships Emphasis has been placed, during re cent years, on fostering more cordial and better informed relations between South America and North America. Las Teresianas will further this work on April 10, when it presents a panel discussion on prominent statesmen from South America and prominent North Americans interested in Latin America. Participants in the discussion will be Maria Dcvlantes, Julie Sitt, Mary Louise l.auer, Dolores Hughes, Rosemary Hills man, and Mary O'Malley. Secretarial students who are assisting the Student Activities Council with Card Party business mail numerous letters in the interests of all com mittees. Pictured are Jeanne Becker, Helen Kirk, and Dorothy Fellows. Relate Red Cross To Basic Needs Relating the Red Cross to the seven basic needs of man was the theme of a panel discussion given March 25 in a Principles of Education class. Participating in the discussion were Janet Sprickman, Patricia Hereley, Barbara Brennan, and Mary Agnes O'Grady, who correlated Red Cross work with health, companionship, religion, civics, social security, education, and leisure. Miss Margot Atkins from the Chicago Service Council Red Cross chapter at tended the discussion. Secretarial Group Plans Programs A varied spring program, with lectures and demonstrations on the agenda, is planned by the Secretarial department for April and May. A practical demonstration on April 6, of telephone manners coupled with a description of the specialized equipment needed to operate the dial telephones in terested students in the department. On May 3, Laurine Kinney, chief clerk of the Chicago Rock Island and Pacific Railway company, will discuss the importance of Personality in Busi ness. Aspirant C. P. A.'s will learn today cf Outstanding Women in Accountancy from Grace Schwartz Keats, former na tional president of The American Women's Society of Certified Public Accountants. A second generation C. P. A., Mrs. Keats is a partner in George W. Schwartz and Daughter. Stressing quick and accurate dictation transcription, Catherine O. Bracher. member of Gregg Publishing company's education department and author of sev eral secretarial science texts, conducted a demonstration class which illustrated the necessity of creating a mailable letter in a short space of time. Senior Wins Qolden Rose At Laetare Sunday Event Mary Beecher, senior drama major, received the Golden Rose awarel for dis tinguished service to the Drama depart ment, at the annual Laetare Sunday pro gram sponsored by the l.aetare Players on March 31. Jo Ann Logelin received an award for accumulating the most points gained by a Laetare pledge, and Harriet Diacos re ceived an award for the most points gained by an associate Laetare pledge. Twenty-four members were received in the Players, 10 students were ad mitted to associate membership, and seven seniors were admitted as candi dates to the Drama Alumnae honor so ciety, Sigma Rho Upsilon. Following the awards ceremony, Charleine Beesley. Mary Margaret Biehle, Florence Sigler, Miss Logelin, and Rose Marie Ahern starred in a one- act play, directed by juniors Patricia Czarnecki and Dolores Toniatti, under the supervision of Catherine Denny Phelps. After a club tea, for which Jeanne O'Connor, Laetare president, and Edith Moscardini, social chairman, were hos tesses, the Players heard an address by the Reverend Gilbert V. Hartke, O.P., director of the Drama department at the Catholic University of America. Following the address, Father Hartke celebrated Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament. Roseann Kennedy, Marilyn Reynolds, Hlaine Frieling, Olive Smith, Mary Alice Dunn, Veronica Daly, Patricia Hereley. Margaret Benza, and Martha Wade, members of the committee under the chairmanship of Anita Schwaba and Eleanor layden, decorateel the tearoom. Decoration of the Little Theatre was done by Marion Kelly. Mildred Stanek, Dorothy Scott, Jean Schubert, and Rose mary Martin, members of the commit tee, chairmen for which were Margaret Schriver and Lucille Bums. Refreshments were handled by a special committee under Alice Marie Horen and Margaret O'Leary, co-chair man. The members e gt;f the committee were Joyce Archer. Dolores Toniatti, Therese Faupel, Barbara Brennan, Mar ion Wahl, Sheila Spira, Patricia Conley, Virginia Perry, Patricia Broderick, An- namay Byrne and Genevieve O'Connor.
title:
1946-04-08 (3)
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