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Page Four, THE SKYSCRAPER, April 23, 1956 Dancers, Fencers, Tumblers Take Spotlight In Sports Show, Sunday, April 29 Hours of careful synchronization of muscles and mu sic will pay off in rhythm and grace at the first annual Sports show, Gym Gems, scheduled for Sunday, April 29, at 7:30 p.m., in the gymnasium. More than 200 students will perform in ballet, tap dancing, apparatus, tinikiling, Indian club drills, modern dance, tumbling, rhythmical exercises, and baton twirling, under the direction of Miss Audrey Sullivan, Miss Patricia Pugh, and Mrs. Harold Lewis, instructors in sports, modern dance, and fencing, and of five student directors. The program will open with the Ballet group doing a lively dance under the direction of I orelei del Castillo. There will be red and white but no blue when the Baton Twirling group makes its entrance. Fifteen freshmen will march to a star for mation to begin their number. Directors Diane Sebuck and Lor etta Scheffner will perform their double baton routine as the sec ond highlight of the act. Then, as the gymnasium is darkened, Margaret Printen and Jean Her- beck will march their lighted baton number. The twirling sticks will glow in the dark. Thirty-eight students will dance to the rhythmic beat of bamboo poles. Sophomore Carmen del Cas tillo is the director of this arrange ment. Lynne Sheeran will accom pany at the piano. Darlene Harmston is director of the tapdancers, and Miss Pugh will direct the modern dance group. Speech Classes Focus On World Situation Spring is here along with its fev er, but the Speech classes are busy discussing world problems. In the panels on April 26, Micfi- aella Burton, chairman, and Bar bara Dee Bradley will discuss The Role of Modern Woman and Com munism. Scheduled for April 24 are pan els on Communications Arts, led by Barbara Guderian, and on Edu cational Problems, led by Therese Pasquinelli. Maxine Dombrowski and Marie Coyle led discussions April 19 on Communism and on Bigotry and Racism. The 8 and 9 o'clock classes were off to a good start April 12 with panels on Catholic Action and Mod ern Art. Chairmen were Annette Lubker and Joyce Kuhlmann. Physics Club Will Tour Laboratories The Quanta club of the Physics department is sponsoring a con ducted tour of the laboratories of the University of Chicago's Basic Institutes of Research at 5630 Ellis avenue, May 3, at 2 o'clock. Buses will leave the College at 1 o'clock. Anyone interested is invited to take the tour, which will last two hours. Especially invited are stu dents of Biology. Chemistry, and Physics, as it is keyed to their level. The tour will include visits to the Accelerator building, Low Tempera ture Work, Quartz-Fiber Drawing and Fine Measurement Work, Dr. Novick's Work with Bacteria Col onies and, the Analytical Chemistry laboratory. A series of bouts will be pre sented by fencers and officials chosen by the students from the Fencing classes. The officials for the bouts are Anne Malloy, Barbara Jo Summers, Margaret Donahue, Sheila Kelly, Kathleen Ketterick, Gene McCar thy, Mary Ellen Cahill, Donna Grauer, and Sandra Ivan. Other officials are Julie Whalen, Kathleen Keegan, Adele Theleen, Ann Bucb, Marguerite Phillips, and Barbara Zindra. The fencers are Diana Miten- hergs, Lydia Rousseau, Dorothy Petratz, Jo Lu Zimmerman. The announcer is K. Lynn Sharkey and the pianist is Mary Ann Stone. Committees for the exhibition in clude the Program committee, Pa tricia Kehl and Mary Ann Stone; the Backstage crew, Margaret Cook, Joan Duszynski, Patricia Crimes, Kathleen lgoe, June Jan kowski. Katherine Lombardi, and Grace O'Conner; the Ticket com mittee, Donna Gullen and Joan Kehl. Mr. George Petterson is in charge of the lighting; Miss Kehl is de signing the program cover, and Donna Gullen is handling the pub licity. Volleyball Team Wins Two Qames The undefeated Volleyball team came home again, April 15, with victories. It scored 15-3 against Barat college, 15-2 against Loyola .coeds at an exhibition tournament in the Loyola gymnasium. Members of the team are Mary Ann Stone, Lois Wood, Mary Bar tholomew, Isabelle Anderson, Vi vian Larson, Patricia Raczynski, Rosemary Esposito, Yvonne Or- mins, Elizabeth Ciolino, Diana Se buck, and Laura Zebleckis. P fl R T*i *v H fl W stars include Fencers Diana Mitenbergs and Lydia R urunio onun ami Mary Ann Cashman and approximately 200 other ousseau, Dancers Judie Skwiot students. Mathematician Wins Assembly To Numbers Urging students to view math ematics as both an intellectual and a practical good, Maurice L. Har- tung, professor of Education at the University of Chicago, gave the an nual Science Forum lecture, April 19, and persuaded the student as sembly to think mathematically at least for a few minutes. An authority both on Mathema tics and on Education, Dr. Hartung has been director of a consultant service in mathematics, chairman of the committee on the Function of Mathematics in General Educa tion, and a member of the Joint Commission of the National Coun cil and Mathematics Association. The REPs Report . . . Spring Brings Projects, Father-Daughter Dinner Waning class sessions and calendar jottings mark the busiest period of the Mundelein year. Amid the maze of Senior projects, term papers, oral reports, and supplemen tary reading there is still time for associations which create an atmosphere of genuine learning. Atmosphere involves both self activity and group activity. You and your Dads will share an activity on Wednes day, May 9, when the Father-Daughter Dinner once more serves to combine home and school life. Music provided by George Marshall again will make the crowd close in spirit and give Dad the opportunity to try the new steps he's been TViewing. For several weeks our annual student project has been in operation. We are appreciative of the effort and the sacrifice you demonstrated. This spirit we consider more important than the successful financial aspect of the drive. To each student who participated in some way in the campaign, the SAC expresses its warmest Thank You. One of the vital elements in any university or college is the affinity one possesses to a group. At Mundelein classes serve this purpose. On a special day Class Day that unique spirit is evident. The sense of belonging makes for happy memories. Players Present Quality Street (Continued from Page 1, Col. 1.) meets some of their pupils Wil liam, John Schoen, and Arthur, Paul K. Skwiot. Phoebe, caught up by the excite ment of the moment, invents a flir tatious young niece, Liwy, and usurps the throne of Charlotte, one of the town belles, played by Judy Skwiot. Assistant to the Director Sherry Milroy and the technical directors attend to the complications behind the scenes. Stage Managers Ellen Schoen and Dolores De Paoli will work with their crew, Julie Whalen, Dorothy Potratz, Sandra Ivan, Diana Sebuck, and Janice Haertel to build the sets. Costuming will be bandied by Dianne Callahan, Barbara Gaynor, Miss Lind, Mary Ellen Cahill, and Alice Nevins under the super vision of Lucille Youngmann and Miss Helgeson. Props obtained by Anita Nara- jowski, Nancy Schrieber, Diane McDermott and Mary Shearin will be managed by Miss Skwiot and Dolores Rittenberg. Tickets will go on sale May 1 un der the direction of Nancy Schrieb er and Marcia Kelley. Publicity is being conducted by Miss Schoen. IRC Discusses Success, Failure, And Conventions Success and failure will be the topic of discussion at the Interna tional Relations club meeting, April 18, at 4 p.m. in Room 507. Members will review activities of the Jackson, Illinois, and Madison, Wisconsin, conventions. Ann Kobal, president, and Lu cille Kohler will discuss the IRC national meetings which they at tended in Philadelphia and Wash ington, D.C. Seniors Share Class Memories, April 18 Sharing their last Class day, April 18. the Seniors joined in prayers, memories, and laughter, in the Phoenix room and at dinner. Co-chairmen for the day were Joanne Keehan and Agnes McAu liffe. Audrey Mezlo and Elly Assim headed the Dinner committee, with Leora Bruch making Financial ar rangements. Barbara Gaul, Marilyn Lindahl, Laverne Esenther, Marion Ken nedy, Lillian Petitte, and Ellen Gallagher headed the other Class dav committees. French Classes Give Scenes From Moliere (Continued from Page 1, Col. 3.) The play, six scenes of which will be given, concerns two foolish young women who reject their suitors, and are tricked by a servant. - Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme, which follows, tells of Jourdain, a man whose vanity compels him to strive to be a gentleman. Barbara Jindra, Therese Pasquinelli, Nora Ann Materer, Miss Azzarrello, and Shirley Hoyle are cast in this pre sentation, along with Mary Olson, Cynthia Swanson, Alyce Dowey, and Ann Molloy. A farce, Le Medecin Malgre Lui, is third on the program. It will star Nancy Mammoser, Dorothy Considine, Mary Elizabeth Kelly, Marianne Farrell, and Rosemary Esposito. Miss Esposito will then give the famous monologue of So- sie from the first act of the play, Amphitryon. Miss Hartigan, Miss Budicin, Miss Sullivan. Miss Kelly, and San dra Marek will interpret Le Malade Imaginaire, the last play directed by Moliere who acted in it the part of the Invalid. Students in the Elementary class es will close the program with the singing of La Marseillaise, Au Clair de la Lune in French, and the Star Spangled Banner.
title:
1956-04-23 (4)
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