description:
s oughts of Summer roire Writers in view's Last Issue en L'tinl aw terl .; J E a raj cli .'mil SKYSCRAPER Page Seven luiiu- 17 of the Review will close litlian article on the young novelist, til Sullivan, called Bay-weep, U.S. Jliry Alice Sullivan's essay on bent modern converts, My Glory My Riches; and a sketch of a small lslei policeman in Jiggers, The Cop, by Aker. Bnch flavor is added to this summer's ni the quarterly by Patricia Hol- Jilcet Me In The Bois, and Ruth r'. Victimc de Sa Charite. Un- adrcntures in the publishing field recounted in Jasper, Minly, and Collettc Clifford's sketch. Alp editor Grace Foran leads off the section with Eddie's Girl. A com- Iroblcm in modern living is illus- 11 I by Klleinnae Quan in Summer ds. anil Lois Kay Willard uses serv- le til's letters as the core of her story, ki Interlude. ise ''(111: u rile: lt: r i a Mu lle( t erj ttioii editor Kathryn Malatesta con- ,jen In Dame Awhile, and Rosemary mgir, whose first Review story was pted in Today, completes the narra- i nth Sammy. lie suiimier elegance of Ruth Casey's 1 and the piquancy of the American t are balanced by Miss Fi ran and I King's last editorials. ' unnu-r reading suggestions are of- M by reviewers Patricia Emiuerling, I Glynn. Lois I lassenauer, Mary C. dun, Muriel Millar, and Helen Jean ft Evelyn King reports on a cur- flay attraction. Cyrano de Bergerac. dge usic Major Qives kaduate Recital loria Maloney, senior piano major, iled by Patricia Wescott, organist, 1,1 I her graduate recital on May IS. iss Maloney's first group included the elude in I Flat Major and the Fugue K Minor from Bach's Well-Tempered jkhord, and the Toccata in (' Major, by Bach. Papillitis, which closed pou i, demonstrated Schumann's bk' interplay nf metre and rhytlmi. Uiss Wescott's first selecti n, the ionic in A Minor, was a favorite by m Kranck, though one of the more hit if his organ coni gt;ositions. Mi's Maloney followed with a Chopin nop: the lialladc in F, a musical por- Balntthe Russian invasion of Poland; t Aeolian Etude; and the Polonaise in Flat, a form in which Chopin idealized l Polish folk dance. liiss Wescott's second organ group bteil of the Scherzo from idor's Ruth Symphony, the impressionistic Irdic Reverie by Hokanson, and the lata from the Fifth Symphony by iidiir. Miss Maloney's final number was the IHaiit Spanish Rhapsody, the only one B Liszt's c.iiiipnsitii ns written in the Biii.li idiom. The orchestral pan ic played by Patricia Wescott at the Ian, and Patricia Runkle at the second 1' Us encores, Miss Maloney played the Ifaltz in A Flat by Chopin and Miss 'd Ifestcott played I'raeludium by Jame- ll. l/Unat (joed Jn 'The Way to a Man's Heart'. PITTING the paper to bed for the last time brings a lump to the throat and a few reflective thoughts to the mind . . . which are best forgot for the sea of nostalgia they bring. Martyrs all. the senior staff members wouldn't trade one minute of all the working- hours on the paper fcr the same amount of hours they could have spent at home getting some much needed sleep or doing assignments.* 'T'ODAY marks Mundelein's Sixteenth Annual Honors day and congrat ulations are in order to all students mer iting awards. A student record, tilled with activities and school service, plus the all-important 2.5 average, is enc of which to be proud. nENIOR Edna Mae Holm, who re- '* ' eently won second place in a radio pr gram. Starring Young Wisconsin, will appear on Wisconsin station WTMJ June 3, at 7:30, D.S.T. Miss Holm won a 500 cash music scholarship. / vXE of the Card Party awards, a V radio, went to Miss Betty Rixer, who promises to tune into Miss Holm's broadcast, besides attending to the day -time serials. Miss Rixer's failure to catch evening programs is prob ably due to the fact that she wouldn't be a possible applicant for a school like Mundelein until nearly 1965. IV* E KIT ING roses at her recital on May 11 was not enough for sen ior Beth Goodwillie she was feted later that evening at the Mayfair Room of the Blackstone, where the master of cere monies introduced her as a Mundelein senior who had just made her musical debut, and invited her to play for the guests. OENCILING cirles and squares is not the Last of senior math major Lucille Stasenka's talents, because she also tries her hand at drawing notes and cleffs. to great success. Miss Stasenka wrote the Easter Mass presented at Li urdes church this year, and also claims credit for the one presented there two years ago. In her spare time she di rects the choir of 35 voices . . . what did you say your major is, Lucille? To the delight of Junior and Senior luncheon guests, Loyola sent a singing orchid to the seniors, via Brian Buckley, Ed Murphy, and Ed Ryan. Melodious notes of Happy Gradua tion to You and Will Ye No' Come Back Again? filled the dining room, as upperclassmen smiled their approval. Latest engagement news coming in just on the paper's deadline involves senior Patricia McCann and Loyola student Donald Warbritton. O PARKLINGEST Junior eyes belong '-' to Marcella Loe, who recently became engaged to Fred Inden, student at Loyola. (The opinions expressed in this col umn belong solely to the writer.--The Stall.) Clean-Up Week Diary In the spring this young girl's fancy lightly and firmly turns from thoughts of housecleaning. You can repeat that in the winter, in the fall, and in the summer, too, for that matter. However, mother always taught me never to depart from anywhere with out first tidying up after myself. Un fortunately, at this point, I plan de parture from college. Nearest things, first, of course. Mustn't tire myself out. Let's see; I am, at present, in close proximity to my coat pockets, which is only natural because I am wearing the coat. It is a lovely coat, brown gabardine, that mother financed 'way back in my soph omore year. Left pocket: A small coin-size tear in the lining. (Oh, the stitch in time that might have saved hew much ) A li brary slip: Please call for Young Man of Caracas, by Thomas Ybarra. The stub of a red-lead pencil, point neatly fractured. Four street car trans fers Kedzie avenue, Irving Park road, Clark street, Broadway. Right pocket: A Roosevelt dime. A Jefferson nickel. A silver penny. (Reg ular numismatist, I am ... to coin a phrase.) Another library slip, per sonally inscribed by a librarian: Do you or do you not want Young Man of Caracas by Thomas Ybarra? A note from the Dean: Please sec me in my office before 2:00 p.m. (Did 1? Hmmiiim.) A rubber band, three shape less paper clips. And oh, no not the bid to the sophomore cotillion Next in order is my home away from In me. locker 504, jtinglc-atcd with two babushkas, one whose green fringe faded un-Duzlike into the white cotton. A spotty flowered smock, still scented fragrantly with formaldehyde . . . and ouch with a wood-handled probe still in the pocket. Three bathing caps, one white, one blue, one shower-curtain clear. None i f them mine. And look, won't mother be happy my black galoshes. Three America magazines, four Skyscrapers, one Review (Spring, 1946). I see three sheets of Mundelein sta tionery, one of them scribbled: Dear Gro . (Now, who would that have been? Grccer?) I sec the insurance company blotter that I could never find. Of the myriad sheets and scraps of blank and annotated paper, the most fas cinating is a shorthand version of some body's United Nations Institute speech. Imagine that . . . shorthand. Didn't even know I knew how. Now for the ring-kept sections, at least 75 per cent of which are dangling by one ring. Inky class notes with doodle b rders. Black-penciled pages smeared into oblivion. Behind the hastily-outlined rules for golf, tenuis, basketball, and volleyball, and dipped to a cardboard separator, is an old friend: You are on the library- blacklist. Please return Young Man of . . . You finish it. I have to leave. Have to go to the library. HONORS PAY IMPRESSIONS .. may well be through the Alpha Omicron recipe book in production this sum mer. Above, Mary Jane Frey and Mary Lou Hafner, chairman, welcome two prize-winning recipes from Betty Ruth Claus. One, White Moon Cake, won a 1940 Indiana Grand Championship; Miss Claus' Parker House rolls won first place at the 1944 Indiana State Fair. Spanish Students Hear Inter-American Speech Mutual understanding among the peo- ples of the Americas was discussed by Manoel Serpa of the University of Notre Dame, before Spanish students on May lo. Alter delivering the speech in Spanish Mr. Serpa, an exchange student from Peru, summarized it in English. Campus Voters Unit Interviews Students For Current Opinions Poll Asks Employment, Labor, Loan Questions In the student opinion gt;oll conducted by the Campus Unit nf the League of Women Voters on May 1 and 2, a total of 372 students 95 seniors. 84 juniors, 112 sophomores, and 81 freshmen were interviewed. To the first question: Should the Fair Employment Practice Commission he continued ? 69 per cent voted yes, 9 per cent no, and 22 per cent no opinion. The second question: Do you favor the proposed loan to Greece? received 71 per cent yes, 19 per cent no. and 10 per cent no opinion. On the third question: Do you favor the pn posed loan to Turkey? 40 per cent agreed. 34 per cent disagreed, and 20 per cent expressed no opinion. Do you consider the present labor leg islation fair and just? the fourth ques tion, received 20 per cent yes, 47 gt;cr cent no, and 33 per cent no opinion. The total number of news sections of pa K-rs read was 598. Dorothy Gaughan, Fiances Cashman. Donna Mi oney, Joan Kawaguchi, Flor ence Moore. Donna Jean Powers. Mar ion Gucci, Rosemary Petty, and Rose ann Kennedy conducted the poll. This Is Mundelein . . . The turn of spring . . . the last minute brush of snow in May . . . ecstatic memories of candle lighting ... the last tea dance over . . . the campus wheel dressed to greet each season . . . Racing the deadline with a story . . . the festive water carnival . . . the long look back to fall ... the fleeting months between . . . Junior-Senior antics . . . the Follies . . . UN week ... re citals . . . the windswept flourish of proms and balls ... ice forma tions of yesterday . . . basketball games The Seniors Victorious . . . comps ... the Philosophy club banquet . . . speech and writ ing contests ... art displays . . . Is it the gray stone building . . . the friends ... the Faculty . . . atmosphere ... the Chapel . . . cold morning bus rides . . . Blanche Schwepper? . . . no . . . not any one for a portion of this happiness lives within each stu dent . . . and This Is Mundelein. IRC Joins Collegiate Council of the UN After an explanation of the Collegiate Council of the United Nations, by Duke Miller of Northwestern university, the IRC recently voted to join the council, which keeps members informed of UN activities and contacts speakers for col lege groups. Membership in the Collegiate Council will entitle the IRC lo send delegates to the United Nations Institute to be held in New York in June. UNews . . . At week's end. the Palestine session of the General Assembly had estab lished an 11-nation inquiry comiiiissien to investigate the Palestine issue. The assembly voted down the Russ'an pica that the Big Five be represented on the commission, confining membership lo 11 small neutrals. Legislation approving the mom-ntoUs Truman Doc'rine passed the Senate and House last week, and was s.-nt to the White House for presidential sig nature. The program provides 400 mil lion dollars for economic and limited military aid to Greece and Turkey in their battle against Communism. Communism was attacked on several other fronts last week. Brazil outlawed the Communist party. France's Social ist Premier ousted the Communists from his coalition cabinet after the O mmunist Party joined forces with workers trying to break the Govern ment's hold the line policy. In addi tion, the American government is pro ceeding with its campaign to rid the government of Communist elements. The World Bank has made its first loan 250 million dollars to France, which had applied for 500 millions. The loan, for 30 years at 3 lt;4 per rent interest, will help in reconstructing France's war-torn industrv.
title:
1947-05-22 (7)
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