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3 Vol. XXX Mundelein College, Chicago 40, Illinois, October 28,1959 Gov. Stratton Joins Celebration Honoring B. V.M. s 125th Year No. 3 Mi 1/ r r and amplifiers arc listed as red tape by these Leadership Day I IV C J chairmen planning ways to smooth the snarled paths of student officers. Chairman Lucile Jautz (seated) takes a count for her co-chairman Mary O'Grady and Ann Zarlenga testing the volume. Faculty, SAC Members Examine Leadership Needs A chance to explore solutions and techniques of solving practical prob lems of leadership will be offered to the student body at the annual lead ership conference to be held here in Room 405 on Sunday, Nov. 15 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. LEADERSHIP DAY will be pre- Alumnae Print News East is east and west is west and the twain will meet every four weeks now that the Alumnae Sodality is printing a monthly news sheet. This bulletin will offer a means of contact between the members of the organized Sodality who do not reside in the city and other alumnae in the Chicago area. It will also help to establish relations between the Mun delein Alumnae group and the sodali ties throughout the country. Last year's Skyscraper editor, Mar guerite Phillips, continues in the same journalistic capacity this year, serving as editor of this Alumnae news sheet. EXAM SCHEDULE NOVEMBER 3 Tuesday TTh Classes 8, 10, 12, 2 NOVEMBER 4 Wednesday MWF Classes 9, 11, 1, 3, NOVEMBER 5 Thursday TTh Classes 9, 11 3 NOVEMBER 6 Friday MWF Classes 8, 10, 12, 2 Tests for the 3 TTh Classes will be given at 1:10 Thursday. Classes meeting on MWF, MWTh, MWThF, MW, WF follow the MWF schedule. Classes meeting on TTh, MTTh, TThF follow the TTh schedule. Classes meeting on MTWTh may decide on which day to have the exam. Classes meeting only one day a week may schedule the exam ac cording to their convenience. All tests are 50 minutes in length, and are given at the regular class time. ceded by a preliminary meeting on Fri day, Nov. 13, at which the red tape functions of leadership will be dis cussed by SAC and Faculty members who deal directly with these topics. Knowing how to make reservations in the tearoom, obtaining money for trips and working the microphone are just a few of the necessary subjects to be explained Friday. The meetings will be held in two shifts at 3 and 4 p.m., and the stu dents will be divided into several groups rotating to various rooms for the talks. Sunday's Leadership Day will be opened with Mass which will be cele brated by Father Clark and followed by brunch in the tearoom. TICKETS, costing approximately 1.50, for the Leadership Conference will be sold two weeks in advance in the student lounge, Nov. 1. Dads Date Daughters For Evening of Music And Gay Excitement It will be Father and Daughter night, Nov. 22, in the Mundelein gym nasium as couples gather for an eve ning of food and musical festivities. The night will begin at 4 p.m. and will last till 8 p.m. The program will include a buffet supper, followed by dancing to the music of Roy Padder- son and his orchestra. The party will be sponsored by the Fathers club under the chairmanship of Mr. Fred Lehman, father of Mary Lou Lehman, sophomore. The purpose of the evening is to give each father a chance to date the second best girl in his life, and each girl a chance to date the first man in her's. Freshmen Elect Officers Judy Hubert won the presidency in Monday's freshman elections. Victors among the other 26 candi dates were: Patty Gilles and Gail Grundmann, SAC representatives; Mickey Coffaro, vice-president; Denise Kenny, secretary; Rosemary Buhr- fiend, treasurer; Rosemary Harring ton, social chairman; and Anne Boeh- mer, sergeant-at-arms. Faculty Recital Offers Modern, Romantic Music The composers of the romantic and modern periods of music will be the theme of the third presentation of the concert-lecture series. The program will consist of a faculty music recital to be presented to the students Nov. 19 at 1 p.m. in the auditorium. Sister Mary Raphaeldis, B.V.M., will play selections by Griffes and Dohnanyl, and Sister Mary Christiane will present selections of Debussy on the piano. Sister Mary Lamberta will per form at the organ the works of Bonnet, Gaul, Lemaigre and i dor. Sister Mary Raphaeldis and Sister Mary Lamberta received Master of Music degrees at the American Con servatory of Music. Sister Christiane holds her M.M. from the Chicago Mu sical College. The final selection will be the third movement of the Beethoven Concerto No. 4 in G major, played by Sister Mary Raphaeldis, and accompanied on a second piano by Sister Mary Chris tiane. Experts Present Views To High School Parents A panel of experts will discuss Your Daughter's Education on Sun day, Nov. 8 at 2:15 p.m. in Mundelein's auditorium. The program is being pre sented for parents of high school stu dents. THE PANELISTS will explore practical questions about attending college, such as, entrance require ments, expenses, various fields of study and the opportunities open to graduates. Patricia O'Donnell Ewers, a mem ber of the English faculty and former Student Council president, will preside as chairman. Sister Mary Ann Ida, president, will open the discussion and intro duce four alumnae. Sister Mary Marina, chairman of the chem istry department, and Lucille Boldt, a grade school teacher, will offer their views on the values of a college education. Two of the alumnae panelists are a mother and a career girl. Mrs. Helen Sauer Brown, mother of eight children ranging from two months old to a freshman high school age, and Marilyn Reynolds Smith, assistant fashion director at Marshall Field Co., will explain their views on the importance of a college education. DR. HOLLACE ROBERTS, newly appointed regional director of the Col lege Entrance Examination Board, will inform parents on reasons for and types of entrance examinations. Dr. Lyman Smith, executive direc tor of Illinois Scholarship commission, will discuss the types and number of scholarships available to qualified stu dents. Donna Malacina, senior, will conclude the panel with the stu dent's view of expenses. At the close of the discussion, re freshments will be served in the tea room for panelists and guests. Parents and speakers may then meet and iron out as many problems as time will permit. HELP HELP Save all your cancelled stamps for the bookstore. GOVERNOR WILLIAM G. STRAT TON of Illinois will be Mundelein's guest on Thursday, Oct. 29. He will address the student assem bly at 1:10 in the college auditorium. Following the lecture the Governor will meet faculty, seniors and student officers at a reception in the college so cial rooms. Members of the Women's Auxiliary Board will be hostesses. The convocation at which the Governor will speak commemo rates for Mundelein the Nov. 1 closing of the 125th anniversary year of the Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary. All members of the student body will attend the assembly and will wear cap and gown. PRELUDE to the convocation will be the singing of Andrew's Ave Maria by the Scholastic choir. Sister Mary Ann Ida, president of the college, will introduce the governor. Governor Stratton is currently com pleting his second term as chief execu tive in Illinois. He has also served two terms as state treasurer and one term as U.S. Representative. DURING the past year he was one of the group of American governors who visited the USSR. Governor Stratton's visit will be his second to Mundelein while serving as Laetare Players Will Present 'The Diary of Anne Frank The Diary of Anne Frank, one of the most talked-about plays of the year will be the first major production for the Laetare Players in 1959-60. It will be performed in the Mundelein au ditorium on Sunday, Nov. 15 at 8:16 p.m. and Monday, Nov. 16 at 7:30 p.m. ANNE FRANK, well known to American audiences as a novel, play and a movie, has won a Pulitzer Prize and the New York Drama Critics Award. The story is of a young Jewish girl who lived in hiding with seven other people. Her diary reveals the life of these Jews who waited in fear of being discovered by the Nazis. Critics agree that it has justly been called one of the most mov ing stories ever told. After a week of close-competition tryouts, the female roles have been cast. Anne Frank will be portrayed by Jeri Boyle on the first night and by Cynthia Cerven on the second. ANNE'S MOTHER, Mrs. Frank, will be played by Mary Penkala and Dorothy Pfrenger. Anne's sister, Mar- got, stars Joan Robinson and Carol Tobey. In the part of Miep, a friend of the Frank family, there will be Marge Banach and Patricia Boland. Mrs. Van Daan, one of those in hiding, is portrayed by Elaine Peterson and Joan Weick. THE MALE LEADS have not yet been cast. Tickets may be purchased in the lounge for 1. Governor Stratton chief officer of state. On Nov. 19,1953 he delivered the address at a formal Thanksgiving convocation in the col lege auditorium. Official closing ceremonies for the Sisters will take place Nov. 1 in Phila- delpnia, with the placing of a me morial plaque in St. Joseph's church, Willings Alley, the site of the found ing of the Congregation. California U Professor Visits College Relative To AAUW Entrance On Nov. 19 and 20, Dr. Rosalind Cassidy, professor of physical educa tion, University of California, will visit here to complete another step in Mundelein's application for member ship in the American Association of University Women. THE SCHOOL'S first inquiry was made in April 1958. This was fol lowed by a formal application in Jan. 1959, and a 50-page report in March. In May the administration received word from the AAUW that Dr. Cas- sidy's visit would be the next step. During her visit, Dr. Cassidy will visit several classes, meet with faculty and students and attend a faculty din ner in her honor Nov. 19. The five standards established by the AAUW for eligibility for membership are based on accredi tation, provisions for basic liberal education, adequate provision for women students, professional op portunities for women and aca demic freedom. The American Association of Uni versity Women was founded in 1882 for the uniting of the alumnae of different institutions for practical edu cational work, for maintenance of high standards of education, and for more effective participation of college women in the process of democracy. THE AAUW has conducted study-ac tion programs in such fields as educa tion, international relations, social and economic issues, status of women and the arts and legislation. It also supports research fellowships for women and gives international grants to bring women of other coun tries to America for study. In 1958 its membership reached 145,000. :' w 6Mlilro6MBalJUIlMwI ?i?: freshman style, would get any sluggish voter to the polls. Waving the flag for their candidates are (left to right) Peggy Labich, Bonita Nowaczyk and Judy Faber. ELECTIONEERING,
title:
1959-10-28 (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
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coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College