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Page Six SKYSCRAPER Our Lady of Peace church will he the scene of the wedding of Therese Serr, June 7, when she becomes the bride of Irving Geyer. Engaged girls who have not yet set wedding dates include Dolores Dona hue, who is engaged to John T. Hayes, a Loyola graduate, and Betty Jane Healy engaged to Stephen C. Karson of De Paul. Shirlee Karrels, engaged to Gerald (iiczcwski, a U. of Michigan grad uate: Mary Jane Lamb, engaged to Robert G. Mortenson, University of Illinois alumnus, and Catherine Lar ney, engaged to Richard J. Hale of De Paul, have not yet set dates. Seniors who are already married in clude Ellen llennelly Cagney. Josephine (iolda Podgorniak, and Lillian Bartella Szymczak. Exchange Tweeds for Satin, 16 Seniors Are Engaged If you ask 16 particular young men to name their favorite song, they will probably tell you that A Girl is Something Special. .Ask the same question of 16 Seniors at Mundelein and you will notice a sparkle not only in their eyes but reflecting from their engage ment ring fingers as well. In June as college graduates they will practice the Commencement march. Later in the year or early next year they will practice a wedding march. Mary Frances Anderson will become the bride of FYank P. Hart of De Paul on Sept. 6 at Our Lady of Mount Car mel church. Senior Eileen Meindl will be maid of honor. No green carpet but a glistening white one will mark the aisle of St. Edward's church, June 14, when Angela Anzalone, Economics major, becomes the bride of Lieut. Harold H. Bendorf. St. Catherine of Siena church will be the scene of the wedding of Rita Daly, August 2. when she exchanges vows with Norbert Sweeney. Planning an August 16 wedding at St. Sabina's church is Barbara Daley, who will become the bride of Thomas Mc- Cuiness. Evelyn Donohoe. engaged to John McSherry, a St. Mary's, Winona, alum nus, will be married on July 12 at Lit tle Flower church. August 9 is the day on which Joy Fanelli will become the bride of Stuart John Riche, a graduate of Xavier uni versity, Cincinnati. Patricia Conlin and Mary Margaret Hogan will be in the wedding party at Resurrection church. At St. Leo's church on Aug. 30 Marion l lleason u ill become the bride of Rob ert E. Sullivan, a Loyola university graduate. An early fall wedding is in the books for Marjorie Keating, who has chosen Oct. 4 as the day on which she will become the bride of John C. Conway, Northwestern university graduate. In the wedding party at Queen of All Saints church will be Mary Therese Kallem and Mary Therese Jordan. A Thanksgiving wedding is the choice of Frances Mclnerney, who will be married to Raymond J. Meyer, grad uate of St. Mary's College, Winona, Minnesota, in St. Leo's church. On Aug. 23 in Queen of All Saints church, Regina McNamara will become the bride of John Patrick Cagney, a Northwestern graduate. In the wed ding party will be Barbara Schevers, Barbara Roberts, and Gloria Bollettini. Campaigns End, Three Classes Elect Officers The electioneering is over, the backs, of the ballots are being used as scrap paper, and three of the incoming classes have named their officers for next year. Betty Garrity, elected president of Faculty to Teach At St. Louis, Iowa Sister Mary Pierre. B.V.M., chairman of the Home Economics department, will exchange campuses this summer and give a course in the Graduate school of St. Louis university. The course will stress aspects of the American Catholic family ami tin- so cial and cultural climate in which it develops, with reference, also, to the relation of the Home I-'coiiomics teacher to Christian life. This is the third successive summer during which Sister Mary Pierre has been on the staff of St. Louis university; she will serve this year on the Advis ory committee. Sister Mary Carmelia. B.V.M. chair man of the Drama department, will con- duet a Speech clinic at Clarke college, continuing the work she began last year at the invitation of F'ather A. A. Halbach, superintendent of the Dubuque archdiocesan school board. The clinic includes the training of elementary school teachers for work in speech correction on the elementary level. the Senior class, will spend her sec ond year on the Council and is a form er commission chairman in NFCCS and an English major. Mary Mahoney. Psychology major, will be vice-president, and History maj or Jeanne Leahy will be secretary. Peg- gv Grandy. Sociology major, will be treasurer. Donna F'ox. English major, will be social chairman: Mary Therese O'Con nor, English major, will be sergeant at arms; Loretta Neff, Art major, and Mary Fellegi, English major, will be SAC representatives. Rosemary Jones will preside over the activities of the incoming Junior class. Her job will be made easier through her experience as vice-president this year. Joan Dawson and Sheila Woods will continue their class service as SAC rep resentatives. New faces around the officers tabic include vice-president Mary Jane Bra dy; secretary Mary Lou Rohlfing; treasurer Joan Horan; social chairman, Mary Ann Garofalo, and sergeant-at- arms. Joan Overholt. The incoming Sophomores will pre pare for their first full-year term o office with Mary Ann Lashmet at..1 helm. Miss Lashmet is just retiring as Freshman SAC representative. Form er class president Patricia O'Brien will join l.eda Pitaro on the Council. Other officers include Patricia Mor- and. vice-president: Anne Penny, sec retary: Dawn MeCormick. treasurer: Phyllis Wockner, social chairman, and Cecelia Moran, sergeant-at-arms. Historians Print Research Paper The French Revolution class dis played its knowledge of various as pects of that period in publishing The Revolutionary Review, May 21. With a foreword by F'ather Michael Dempsey, the 17 page edition contains papers by Virginia Bucol, Joan Bruno, Virginia Doria, Rita Kucera, Margaret Levis, Katherine Murphy, Mary Nikias, Jeanne Leahy, and Donna Merwick. The Ring's The Thing Department Honors Musicians, May 28 Holds Annual Ceremony Of Picture Hanging Sifter Mary John Michael, B. V. M., President of the College, will pr.esent Delta Mu Theta keys to Rosemary Donatelli and Ruth Ryan, honor, grad uates, at a Music department meeting on May 28. y The keys signify membership in the National Catholic Music Honor so ciety, of which Mundelein has a charter chapter. The department will honor all its 1952 Music majors at a combination honor society reception, picture hanging, and musical on Wednesday. Guests of honor will he Blandina Bai too, Miss Donatelli, Marilyn F'gan, Georgia Lambros, Betty Wellner, Cath erine McBride, and Miss Ryan. The pictures will be placed on the wall in the seventh floor corridor. The Musicale will include both vocal and instrumental selections. Freshmen and Sophomore music majors will chant the Gregorian Salve Regina immediately preceedjng the presentation ceremony. Jeanne Regan will play an Etude, Win ter Wind, by Chopin. Constance Gon zalez will select Romance in D Flat by Sibelius as her number. Miss Donatelli, Miss Ryan and Betty Wellner. a Treble Trio, will sing War ner's Ave Maria, Strickland's Mah l.indy Lou and a Czech Folk song, Ifca's Castle. Other vocal selections will include Lullaby by Scott and Through the Years by Youmans which Miss Donatelli will sing. Accompanists for the vocal numbers will he Georgia Lambros and Betty Wellner. Following the program the Seniors will be entertained at a tea. Sc era Alumna, Friends Donate Awards Eight of the awards given on Honors Day are made possible by generous friends of the College, including one alumna and the parents of another alumna. Ann Lally '35, director of Art in the Chicago public schools, donates the Art award, given for the best illustration in the campus literary magazine. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph McCarty, of Kaukauna, Wisconsin, give the Janet McCarty Fieweger Memorial award in memory of their daughter, a member of the Class of 1941. The award is given to a Home Economics major. l-'rank B. Lusk. M.D., Chicago doctor, is donor of the Creative Writing awards, through the Mary Josephine Lusk Memorial Fund. Mrs. Mary Blake Finan. member of the Federation of Alumni of the B.Y.M.'s and 1950 winner of the Mag nificat Medal, is donor of the Mary Blake F;nan award, given to an out- standlng senior. In keeping with the traditional spirit of June, engaged Seniors Joy Fanelli, Betty Jane Healy, Rita Daly, Mary Frances Anderson, Dolores Donahue, Catherine Larney, Mary Jane Lamb, Marion Gleason, Frances Mclnerney, Marjorie Keating, Regina McNamara, Angela Anzalone look forward to their wedding days. Newman Class Marks Cardinal Centennial The members of the Newman class have completed an intensive study of the Idea of a University as a centenary- tribute to the great Cardinal and this much-discussed work. The first lec ture in the Idea of a University series was given in May. 1852. At on.- of the final sessions of the Newman class, the group read aloud The Dream of Gerontius, the part of Gerontius being taken by Helen Keane and Rosemary Lind. Rosemary Harrison and Donna Fox read the roles of the Guardian Angels, and Mary Croghan and Catherine Lof tus read the parts of the Priest and People, Demons and Angelicals. ipinad Memo to all students . . . A few more days and another school .ear will come to an end . . . thoughts of classes are far behind as everyone leaves for summer vacation . . . but there's a secret thrill for sophomores who will return in September as up per classmen . . . the solemnity of caps and gowns awaits the juniors . . . while the freshmen will be big sisters with their own little sisters. The 'hallways will grow quiet as Seniors with their new degrees hid farewell to Mundelein ... to return no longer as students . . . but as Alumnae . . . May Coronation had a special mean ing for Angela Chemazar, who was chosen hy her parish Sodality to crown the statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary at St. Sylvester's church. Far away places arc the concern of many students . . . Virginia Evans, Eileen Tracy, Catherine Larney, and Jane Kelly are making plans for their summer trips to the pride of the Empire state. New Yorij City . . . While Mary.' Francoeur, Barbara Schmitt, Carol Curtis, and Ruie Flook are ready to hitch up their wagons and head West to see if it's true what they sav about California sunshine . . . Florida is the choice of Marianne Hodgman, Marcella Farrell, Celeste McGlynn, and Doris Dooley, who prefer to linger the summer away down south, When Frances Monahan, Betty Fish er, Margaret Gaynor, Patricia Mulroy, Therese Shillaci, and Agnes Reiter decide to travel they do it in a big way ... so off they go to Europe for the summer ... , Spring time is Pr.om time ... and what better time than now to remind you of the Senior Ball at the ChevyB Chase country club ... A beautiful ' night, good music, yourself, and TheB Man. and you'll be talking about it forB' weeks . . . just the way Molly Hogan ' has been talking about Holy Cross' ter- - rific Senior Prom . . . while Barbara Campbell can't forget the Purdue Sen-; ior formal . . . It's a new twist . . . but. Sophomore Mary Reidy was chaperone at the Senior prom of Mount St. Mary on the F'ox high school . . . l.ovola's Sigma Phi Alpha dance saw Marlene Filipski, Virginia Hayes, Mary Lou Gaudreau, Loretta Gibbons, Ruth McHugh, Eleanor Cavanaugh, Anne Heili, Mary Ward, and Janet Parmal- lee. Nancy Garrahy, Gerry Schiavone, Yolanda Volini, and Joan Lamb were among recent theatre goers q . . . while Rosemary Wojak wa te just down the street enjoying The Mo gr is Blue . Carol Damler was one cK the luckv ones to catch the Frank Lane-Billy May one-night-stand at the Civic Opera House . . . Cxi Senior Betsy Seigler, with the conp- eration of her Mother, gave the latest*3* in a series of teas for incoming Fresh-*01 men. May 19. Assisting Miss Seiglet' were Valrrye McCarthy, Marilym Murphy, Helen Naminski, Patricia Winkler, Barbara Roberts, Catherint Madden, and Virginia Bucol. . . . *' special smile and new ring belong t junior Patricia Lamb, recently cngagefls to Robert P. Cameron, student at the 0 Medill School of Journalism. Fr *n the Staff of '52 . . . 5aj 'Farewell to college joys' . . . if te, been a long time . . . hard to tell justor when one thing ended and another beVir gan . . . hut a lot of fu . . . and rathemd bard to leave behind. Three Students Place In Atlantic Contest Three students win places in the Atl-p lantic Poetry contest, according to an;ass nounc.incuts received this month friirctj, Atlantic Monthly. Sophomore Cleo McMahon receive a Top rating for her poem MuseucTn Piece. Senior Theresa Serr receives ,ark Merit rating for her poem. Viva Mc.v R' ico, and Joyce Gutzeil receives a Met tn il rating for her poem entitled Msei Aged Aunt.
title:
1952-05-26 (6)
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
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coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College