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0 Vol. XXVIII Mundelein College, Chicago 40, Illinois ,h t/, i *t l Christmas Season Opens for Shoppers At Women's Bazaar Be sure to keep Dec. 1 and 2 open, and tell all your friends to do the same. Those are the dates f the Women's Auxiliary Bazaar. eld annually at Mundelein for the gt;enefit of the college. Here is an opportunity to get all your Christmas shopping com pleted early. The bazaar will in clude booths of homemade foods and fancy aprons, as well as a gift bar of hand-made articles. As an added attraction on Sunday, Mr. Anthony Casieri, father of senior Elizabeth Ca sieri, will style new coiffures for the ladies. This year, the students are spon soring a college shop. Jewelry, scarves, gloves, and accessories are only a few of the items to be sold in this section. You can find gifts for little brothers, little sisters, big brothers, and big sisters. For rec ord enthusiasts, there will also be a record exchange booth. On Monday, a snack bar with hot food will open during the lunch hour to students and their friends from the neigh boring campus. The president of the Auxiliary, Mrs. Conrad Kies, has appointed Mrs. Charles Rohner general chairman for the bazaar. Julie Ly man is student chairman for the college shop. Benefits from Women's Auxil iary affairs are used to assist in getting for the students things that the college could not provide with out assistance. To date some of the projects they have cooperated on are the Phoenix Room, the so cial room, Lourdes Hall, audio-vis ual aids, and the new tablet arm chairs purchased this year. SNEAK PREVIEW of the cast of Blithe Spirit occurs a week be fore curtain time. Barbara Gaynor, Mary- thomas Helgeson, Judith Skwiot, Julie Whalen, Dianne Callahan, and Mary Ann Fogarty will alternate in the main roles. New York In Spring-How About You? Personable women who have ideas, imagination, and ability can enter the Mademoiselle College Board Contest. The magazine, searching for new talent from the various fields which interest wom en, gives students from every de- par ftrent a chance to win. Painters, cartoonists, photogra phers and layout artists will find opportunities designed for the art department students. Social sci ence students are needed as con sultants on politics and economics, while the prospective teachers could fill the bill as educational consultants. For those whose interests lie in the home economics labs, sugges tions or criticisms about diets and home-planning would prove val uable to the magazine editors. Not only the individual student, but also Mundelein would be laud ed if a student n'ted a prize on a profile of the college, a professor, a student, or event, since the win ning profiles will be printed. Contest rules are available in the current issues ui the magazines. Winners of the contest, in addition to cash prizes, will be given jobs with Mademoiselle in New York during June of 1958. Inside Purdue Debators Bring Home Awards; Prepare for Bradley Tourney Debating at Purdue university for the week-end of XTov. 1-2 proved to be award time for Maur een Sweeney, senior, and member of the college debate team. Twelve students will participate in the eleventh annual Bradley Speech Tournament. Nov. 22 and 23, at Bradley university in Peor ia. Pi Kappa Delta, national hon or speech society, sponsors the meet. Certificates will be awarded to the outstanding speakers. Students entering the contest are: oratory. Sandra Marek: dis cussion. Barbara Covey, Jacque line Doyle, Kathleen Newman, and Sandra Marek; radio newscasting, Julie Lyman, and Barbara Covey; contest listening. Kathleen New man: after-dinner speaking. Mar guerite Phillips; extempore speak ing. Alice Bourke; and oral inter pretation. Julie Lyman. Participating in the debate are: Maureen Sweeney. Beverly Mc- Guff, Alice Bourke, and Marguer ite Phillips. Vital Speakers held a preview of the speeches, Nov. 14. Miss Sweeney merited a certifi cate award as one of the top ten speakers at the annual Tail Kappa Alpha Mid-Western Regional Speech conference. Eighty stu dents and ten schools participated in the conference. The discussion was on the topic of the year, The Right to Work laws. Miss Sweenev, presently presi dent of Delta Sigma Rho, Nation al Forensics Fraternity, has debat ed for the past three years. Dur ing the time she has participated in approximately 85 debates against representatives of at least 25 schools. She was one of the team of four who copped the debate tro pin- for a perfect score of eight un defeated matches at the University of Illinois Tournament last vear. Cotillion Climaxes Holiday Weekend Mundelein's dancing belles and their beaus will glide to the music of Johnny Palmer at the annual Sophomore Cotillion in the M M Club at the Merchandise Mart. The informal dance will be held on Nov. 29 from 9 p.m. to 12:30, a perfect climax to the Thanksgiv ing festivities. Co-chairmen of the arrangements are Judith Bogan. sophomore pres ident, and Patricia Noonan. social chairman. Rosemary Collins is chairman of the publicity committee, assisted by Margaret Schmidt. Frances Ko- tre. Roberta Dirzius. Virginia Brown, and Roberta Maday. Other publicity committee mem bers are Mary Iladden. Barbara Pierce, Moria Coleman. Marv El len Murray. Mary Jane Hart, Kath leen McDermott. Dorothv Thomas, Kathleen Hotton, Lucille Jautz, Jean Peterson. Patricia Wendt. Marianne Morgan. Maureen Lom- mel, and Doris Wegman. Members of the bid committee are Mary Dankowski, Nancy But ler, Kathleen McDermott, Renee Sluka, and Mary Ann Bilski. Invitation committee members are Donna Malacina, Patricia Riggs, Kathleen Rosentneier, and Joan Wnukowski. Ghostly Occurrences- Specters Enliven Laetare Comedy; Novelist Does Research at Seance Broadway termed Blithe Spirit an improbable farce and Laetare feels its local presentation Nov. 24-25 will create legendary hullabaloo. In Noel Coward's three act comedy, Charles Condomine attempts to learn, for his latest novel, the tricks of communication with the spirit world. Convinced that Madam Arcati is an imposter, he invites her to his home for observation, planning to use her as a character in his book. The seance backfires when Ar cati conjures up Condomine's mis chievous first wife. Elvira, who floats spectrally through the house hold splashing confusion on his second marriage. The novelist can see and hear Elvira, but his sec ond wife. Ruth, can do neither. The daffv medium who con trived Elvira's visit lacks the power to terminate it. Before the curtain falls, another spir it arrives, carefree as a debu tante. But what this spirit is up to, is up to you to see. Curtain time is 8:15 Nov. 24 and 7:30 Nov. 25 in the college theater. Under the direction of Sister Mary Jeanelle. BVM. the double cast for the drama department's first play of the vear includes: Car ol Bannon and Marie Ilickev. who will portray Edith; Marythomas Helgeson and Barbara Gaynor. Ruth : Elda Hernandez and Carol Romanenghi, Mrs. Bradman. Judith Skwiot and Julie Whalen have the role of Madam Arcati, and Dianne Callahan and Mary Ann Fogarty will portray Elvira. Patrick Trotter is Charles Con domine and Paul Bokar will appear as Dr. Bradman. Production staff includes Mary thomas Helgeson and Barbara Gay nor, assistant directors; Mary El len Cahill, stage manager with as sistants Lucille Black, Margie Courncy, Kathleen Fitzpatrick, Symposium to Offer Art for Christians A symposium on art for Christ ians will be presented at Clarke college, Dubuque, Iowa, Nov. 16 and 17. Faculty members attend ing are Sister Mary Janet, Sister Mary Blanche Marie, Sister Mary Grace Esther. Mrs. Edward Matu- la. and Miss Olive Hansen. Art students who will attend are Jane Cordes, Jean Rieck, Diane Szaradowski, and Michaele Lamb. THREE HEADS are better than one, es pecially when selecting invitations for the Sophomore Cotillion. Patri cia Noonan, Judith Bogan, and Rosemary Collins discuss several possibilities. Nancy Itnyre, Laura Mandala and Mary Penkala. Costume manager is Brigid Duf- fv with a costume crew including Cathleen Coffey, Sherry Melfi. Dorothy Pfrenger. and Barbara Porter.' Mary Ann Cashman is properties manager assisted by Arlene Cichon. Kathleen Gottschalk, Dorothy Ken nedy. Roberta Maday. Victoria Moss. Diane Pizza, and Rose Roh- ter. Ticket chairmen are Jeri Boyle and Mary Penkala. Publicity chairman is Ellen Scho'i; assisted by Lynda Rousseau. Students tickets are .50 and adult tickets 1.00. They may be ob tained from any Laetare Player. Jesuit Scholar's Talk To Examine Conflicts In Current Schooling Rev. Neil G. McChiskey. SJ will lecture at Mundelein Nov. 26-27 on Conflicting Philosophies of Cur rent Education. This is the sec ond of the school's concert-lecture series. Father McCluskey is the edu cation editor of the Jesuit weekly, America. He has taught philoso phy and education at Gonzaga uni versity, Spokane, Washington, and at Seattle university. During 1952-54 Father McClus key made a survey of European education. He did research stud ies at the University of Geneva, Switzerland and lectured in a dozen European cities. He also worked with the Armed Forces moral guidance program. He has published articles and booklets on religious sociology, on the philosophy and psychology of education, and on current social and educational topics. While studying at Gonzaga uni versity, he received the BA and MA degrees, at Alma college in California his STL, and at Teach ers college, Columbia university, his PhD. During his two day visit here, Father McCluskey will meet in formally with groups interested in education to discuss the relation between authority and freedom, the Churches' responsibility in population shifts, and the Church's and the public's conscience.
title:
1957-11-18 (1)
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