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SKYSGRA-PER Pa e Three Round Town ir it 11 if d n y n ps d e e n 1- Today is Friday and another school eek is done. If this thought is distasteful to you, i-fcmagine ) we have an excellent pres- -. iption for making Monday mornings , ime whizzing along. If a week-end cms too long for you. make it short by '' jffing that sweater and those comfort- ile shoes and colorful sox, by doli ng your week-end best, and by seeing hicago. For an interesting complement to your udies or your interest in world affairs, tend the Charles Carroll Forum lec- MS. Since the first lecture coincides ith Parent-Daughter Day, plan to hear e second, given by Sister Mary Made ra, C.S.C, on Nov. 2. Loyola Theatre Opens ii you are a student of the drama or you enjoy watching the conflicts of hers under the stage lights, you should joy the program of the Loyola Com- e unity Theatre for the 1941-42 season. i, ich favorites as Carroll's Shadow and bstaxce and William Saroyan's My earts in the Highlands, are on the 11 of future presentations opening itti a lecture by His Excellency, the ost Reverend Samuel A. Stritch, Arch- ihop of Chicago, entitled Christian Cul- re Under Strain. Turning to the legitimate stage we see e Franken's comedy Claudia. In is light-hearted play, Phillis Thaxter tes the part of the lovable but irre- insible heroine. for something new ami different, see irld famous operas and bear the ices of such singers as Helen Jepson, hn Charles Thomas. Jeannette Mac- inald, Kzio I'inza. Giovanni Martinel- Laurencc Tibbett. i.ilv Pons, Rosa nselle, Richard Crook and many others ,11 at popular prices. Hear Puppet Opera r 'hesc are the attractions of the sea- g i's novelty the Victor Puppet Opera ies. Tonight, you can bear Tibbett Bruna Castagna in Bizet's CarMEN. ic music comes via RCA Victor rec- is and the acting by means of huinan- i manipulated puppets. Gounod's Faust, rdi's ll. Thovatoke and La Traviata *d Mascagni's Cavalleria Rusticana a few of the operas in the repertoire C this unique innovation in the field of d ra. .overs of good music will have many portunities to hear their favorites this son. Orchestra Hall will be the nc of the concerts of the Woman's nphony Orchestra of Chicago and its ductor, Izler Solomon. Guest solo- on Oct. 22 will be the popular and ntcd pianist, Alec Tcmplcton. The Twilight Chamber Music Series, tented In- the Fine Arts String fcrtet, will open its season on Nov. 2 at ierton Hall. Brahms and Rach- inoff are two composers whose works be interpreted by the Russian Trio Tuesday evening, Oct. 21. The trio he presentation of the Chicago stjmber Music Society and the eve- lst of music will be at the Goodman atre. Don't Miss Eternal Gift br a devotional evening of educa- gt;l Ll enjoyment which no Catholic '-Id miss, see The Ktkrkal Gift. S, s full-length motion picture of the e ' Sacrifice of the Mass is produced I he Servite fathers: the narrator is Right Reverend Monsignor Fulton hecn. It will be shown at the IC jacla Theatre next Thursday. 'n gt;vcrs of the silver skates will be re inn forward to Wednesday night and Hi opening of the Tec Follies of 1942, ing Bess Ehrhardt and Roy Ship- Another Don't Miss is the rush ntation of the Ballet Russe rush ise they are scheduled for only veiling performances from Oct. 20 This ever popular company. on the merit of its past pcr- nces, should be excellent. lember, see Chicago and you will prised with the rapidity with which ends pass if you're not amazed y at their fleeting quality. ii College Women Have High Privilege, Responsibility: Monsignor Hillenbrand College women are a distinct min ority in society, declared the Very Rev erend Monsignor Frederick Hillenbrand. in a sermon following the Mass of the Holy Ghost on Sept. 26. They have, therefore, a distinct op portunity to continue their studies and a distinct responsibility to use their time to the best advantage. What will the world be like, the Monsignor questioned, at the end of our century ? Will it be a collectivized world? Will the Catholic Church be loved, respected, honored or will it lead an air-raid-shelter existence? Whatever the answer to these ques tions, Monsignor Hillenbrand pointed out, the Church will endure, but its mem bers must be fortified today for the con flict of tomorrow. Wanted: By Vogue Magazine Writers And Photographers See Senior Bulletin Board For Contest Details Would you like to be on the staff of a popular fashion magazine? The editors of VOGUE are offering positions on their staff to the winners of the seventh an- natil I'rix de Paris and the second an nual Photographic contest. The Prix de Paris contest is open to talented senior college women who are interested in fashion reporting or feature writing. Seven prizes and 20 hon orable mentions will be given to the win ners. The contest consists of four quizzes. Entrants who receive passing marks on the quizzes are eligible to submit an ar ticle from which the final winners will be chosen. Are you a candid camera fiend ? Do you look in every nook and cranny for a good shot ? Then take notice The Vogue Photographic contest offers the winners a permanent position on the Vogue staff. Further information about both con tests may be found on the S.A.C. bul letin board in the student lounge. Recalling the hope of the late Pope Pius NI that, whatever the crisis of the century may bring, Catholics may be prepared, intellectually and spiritually, to meet it, Monsignor Hillenbrand counsel ed the students to prepare to face the great changes that challenge their gen eration. Prepare intellectually, he said, to an swer the fallacious arguments of a world that is intellectually confused. Combat Error As students in a Catholic college, he IKiiiited out, you arc in a position to discover and combat the mass of error current in the world. The Catholic philosophy which you are being taught is a philosophy of common sense. Study it, therefore, and develop intellectual habits that you may help others to find their way out of the mental chaos of our time. Prepare spiritually. he continued, deepening your religious convictions and steadily advancing in holiness through the frequent use of the sacraments. Cultivate Humility Increase in yourselves the virtue of humility a virtue which, far from re sembling an inferiority complex, is a virtue of the strong, enabling them to realize and regulate their relationship to God and their dependence upon Him. As leaders, the Monsignor con cluded, trained intellectually and spirit ually, you may hope to prepare the world for the terrific and devastating changes your generation will see. Monsignor Hillenbrand, former rector of St. Mary-of-the-Lake college, Rome, is now pastor of St. Mary's church in Kvanston. Tells Problems, Procedures of Poets in Action Poets, too. have their problems, Theo dore Maynard, Litt.D., pointed out in his lecture on The Poet's Workshop, pre sented on Oct. 7 for members of Writer's Inc. and their guests. Poetry, Dr. Maynard declared, in volves the sharing with others of feel ings and experiences which the poet re ceives through a source other than words. It is, he continued, the quintes- cence of life. It is a distillation, drop by drop: but it cannot be manufactured. Contrary to popular opinion, poetry, in Dr. Maynard's definition, is not descrip tion ; consequently, it is extremely dif ficult for a poet to write, on assignment, a poem about a landscape which elicits from him no special response. Contrasting Poe's Raven with Kubla Khan, Dr. Maynard noted that the first, having been written according to a pre arranged design, lacks the spark of lyric beauty which has immortalized Cole ridge's poem. In the course of the lecture. Dr. May nard read several poems illustrating the different periods of his style; notable among these was Vindication for Poets, which will appear in his next book. Distinguished as a poet and as an his torian, Dr. Maynard is the author of more than a score of books, most recent of which are Queen Elizabeth, and The Story ok American Catholicism. Artist, Class of '40, Wins Scholarship Sallie Davis '40, who received her Master of Arts degree in art at the University of Iowa this summer, has been awarded a board and tuition schol arship to Iowa to study for a Master of Fine Arts degree. Other Mundelein graduates who took Master's degrees this summer include Dorothy Hollahan '40, Betty Shanahan, '40, Genie Harper '39, Loretta Klodzin- ski '39, Isabel Molloy '40, and Concetta Alonzi '38. Honor Mother Clarke At Foundress Program Music, Dramatic Students Present Pageant Commemorating the one hundred and eighth anniversary of the founding of the Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary by Mother Mary Francis Clarke, and the eleventh anniversary of the founding of Mundelein College, drama and music students presented the Found ress Day program at the general assem bly on Oct. 2. President of the Laetare Players Alice Rose Hartnett opened the program with the reading of a sonnet, The Valiant Woman, a tribute to Mother Clarke writ ten by Mary Agnes Tynan Schroeder '35 and published in the 1934 edition of Quest. Senior drama majors Marianne Ach- ten, Mary Celeste Shannon, Mary Louise .Shannon, Doris Ruddy, and Junior Grace Mannebach took part in the dramatic- scenes. Narrators were Royce McFadyen and Jeanne Horan. Maude Shuflitowski and Eleanor Kandratas, voice students, sang solos, with the choral ensemble. Rosalie Wiora and Angela Voller were the or ganists. Members of the crew who presided backstage were Perle Braun, Audrey Cameron, Mary Ellen Gallagher, Joan McMabon, Mary Catherine Toomey, and June Wetzel. Luncheon Concerts Come to Tea-Room The tea-room will turn concert hall for 15 minute intervals here after during the 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. luncheon hour. Music will be broadcast from the studios on the seventh floor, and will consist in recordings of pro grams given by the various college musical organizations over NBC and WGN. The introductory broadcast will be given during the Parent-Daughter day tea next Sunday between 3 and 5 p.m. Senior-Freshman Tea, Club Parties Fill Social Hours All-College Birthday Party Climaxes S.A.C. Week 1941 Graduates Are Elected to Alumnae Board Janet McCarty and Patricia Holland from the Gass of 1941 were elected to the Alumnae Board at the annual Home- coining on Oct. S. Katherine Brennan O'Neil '34 was un animously re-elected president, and Vir ginia Woods Callahan '35 was unanim ously elected vice-president. Margaret Mary Mitchell '40 is cor responding secretary: Genevieve Mc- Clevey '33 is recording secretary, and Margaret Mary Murray '38 is treasurer. Board members from the Class of '32 are Helen O'Gara Con ley and Josephine McGurn; from Class of '33, Doris Har nett Regan and Mary Helen Boyle, and from Class of '34, Justine Feelcy and Elizabeth Sacevicius. Virginia Meagher and Jane Molloy represent '35; Julia Hagerty and Mary Marnell ',56; Mary Gciger and Florence O'Callahan '37: Joanne Dimmick and Ruth Janiszewski '38. Loretta Klodzinski and Florence Nar- cli are representatives from '39, and Bet ty Vestal and Annamarie Berk repre sent '40. In a sermon at the Homecoming Mass in Stella Maris Chapel, the Reverend Martin I. Carrabine, SJ. moderator of Cisca, pointed out the model of life furn ished by the Blessed Virgin Mary, and counseled the Alumnae to find peace, as she did. by putting first things first. Members of the Class of 1945 were guests of the seniors at the annual Senior-Freshman tea on Oct. 1. After a formal reception in the social room, tea was served in the tea-room. Members of the reception committee were Jane Brown, Dorothy Hein, Ruth O'llearn, Dorothy Schneider, Dorothy McCarthy, Irene Weber, Virginia Arado, Rita Valenzano, Helen Cashion, and Kay Warner. Other committee members were Col- lette Bergeron, Lavinia Cole. Betty Con- dren, Rosemary I.anahan. Margery Lin- nehan, Geraldine McGarry, Leona Mikos. Joan Morris, Mary Virginia Murphy. Barbara Ohab, Adele Ross, Marianne Vi- tek, and Ann Wilkins. An all-college birthday party in the tea-room was the grandc finale of Get Acquainted Week, sponsored by the Stu dent Activities Council. Twelve tables, decorated to represent the 12 months of the year, attracted the students according to their own birth days and December's daughters had luncheon together at a table reminiscent of Santa Claus, while April's daughters sat beneath a pink Parasol, proof against April showers. First club social affair of the year was the Cecilians' picnic at the Japanese Tea Gardens in Garfield Park on Sept. 27. Assisting with arrangements for the pic nic were Albina Gherardi, Angela Vol ler, Louise Szkodzinski, Marianne Don- ahoe, Shirley Hopper. Eileen Ryan. Jeanne Horan, Linda llarrigan, Mary Jane Poffenbarger. and Mary O'Brien. N'ew and old members of the Home Economics club met at an informal re ception in the model apartment on Oct. 2. Janet Farrell, social chairman, was hostess. Betty Troost was chairman of the reception committee, with Eleanor Kandratus, Mildred Kuratko, Mary Louise Kelly, and Jane Addison assist ing. Margaret Zwicker presided at the tea table. Will You Choose Marriage, Teaching, Another Career? So Choose These Qraduates What will you be doing after gradu ation? Maybe. . . . you'll be securing some thing old, something new, something bor rowed, and something blue, as did many alumnae members this summer and early fall. Alice Guest '41 was the first bride of her class when she became the wife of Samuel Marotta, brother of Mary Marotta. Second bride was Dorothy Adams, who was married to Ensign John Gibbons and who lives in Maine. St. Ignatius church was the setting for Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Geimar's wed ding. Mrs. Geimar is the former Ger trude Sweeney '40. Another Loyola- .Mundelein Wedding was that of Dorothy Fitzgerald '39 and John Bowman, with Senior Alyce Pankau. the bride's cousin, a bridesmaid. Two brides from the Class of 1938 were Rosemary Walsh, who is now Mrs. Charles Monahaii. and Jane Spalding who is Mrs. Wally Beck. Class of '36 brides include Ruth Quirk, now Mrs. Charles Monahaii. and Marion Home, who is Mrs. Martin Kuehlman. From the Class of '35. Virginia Woods and Mabel Powell arc brides. Miss Woods is now Mrs. John Callahan, and Miss Powell is Mrs. J. William Mur phy. Virginia Gaertner '39 was married in June to Robert ISroderick, Annette Specht '39 is now Mrs. Thomas Geary, and Virginia Pclletier '39, sister of Sophomore Yvonne is now Mrs. Thomas Barton. Or. . . . maybe you'll choose Munde lein's second most popular career teaching. History major, Bernice Joergcr, is on the faculty at a La Grange high school; Catherine Miller is teaching bi ology at an Elmhurst high school; the commerce students at Notre Dame high school are being taught by P'thel Finan; home economics is being taught by Peg gy I larrigan at Holy Child high school, Waukegan. Or . . . .you might be a business woman. Eileen Mahoney, economics major, is at the Burroughs Adding Machine com pany: Virginia Caudle, at the Lake Shore Trust and Savings Bank, and Evelyn Templeman is at the Catholic Order of Foresters. Would you like social work? Helen Jane Dessero and Betty Boynton are workers for the Catholic Charities. How about journalism? Former Sky scraper editor, Marie Von Driska, is a reporter and feature writer on a south side newspaper; Muriel Moll, last year's feature editor, is working for the Myers publications, and Janice Johnson is writ ing advertising copy. Perhaps you'll continue with you edu cation . . . Dorothy Homan is at St. Louis university, studying bacteri ology and Joanna Xenos is research as sistant to a chemist at the University of Chicago.
title:
1941-10-10 (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