description:
THE SKYSCRAPER, Dec. 1, 1955, Page Three Sk u5crapinas . With a Song in My Heart I bring Good News. Bids from the St. Joseph college Chicago club dance are Among the Souvenirs of Jane Panka, Sheila Coleman, Nan cy Slattery, Maribeth Naughton, and Joan Maher. Have You Heard that Patricia Byers, Sue Bartlett, and Mary Buckley were at the Pi Alpha party? Constance Teipe took a Sentimental Journey to John Car roll's homecoming. Among Karlene Oeser's Mem ories is Western Michigan college's gala weekend. Dancing in the Dark was Frances Houlihan at IIT's In tegral Ball. The Alpha Delt formal gave Grace Shea, Rose Hurley, Zoe Van Hazmburg, Ann Kirsch, Kath leen McRaith, Mary Patricia Colby, and Carolyn White Moments to Remember. Ann Codd and Marilyn Lindahl Accentuated the Positive at Loyola Law school's Thanksgiving party. Back Home in Indiana, Patri cia Kilday, Marilynn Ryan, Jane Doyle, Judy Skwiot, Marietta Di Fily, Sharon Roth, Delores Ritten- burg, Martha Masterson, Mary- thomas Helgeson, and Patricia Levins watched Notre Dame play Indiana. They Kept the Home Fires Burning and Notre Dame soon came home to play Iowa. Jean Purcell, Clare Christiansen, Joyce Kuhlmann, and Joan Barrett were there. Other weekend visitors at Notre Dame were Arlene Douglas, June Wesol, Esther Colombani, and Marie Kobielus. Ann Marie Fitzgerald, Maripat Day, Sharon Milroy, Maureen Con- nerty, Patricia Purney, Sharon Lynn, and Barbara Annetti danced All Night Long at a Notre Dame Chicago club dance. Elizabeth Weinrich spent Thanksgiving weekend in Ohio. Cheering for Holy Cross at the Marquette game were Ann Marie Toland and Mary Vivian Cunnea, Holy Cross lost and they were Broken Hearted. That Same Old Saturday Night was changed for Mary Anderson when she attended Marmion's Alumni Dinner dance. Always is the promise of Shir- leen Baggerly, engaged to Don Kummer; of Mary Jane Long, engaged to Fred Bucher; of Vivian Carroll, engaged to David Hock, Judy Hoffman, engaged to Jack Falasz, of Carol Czacnecki, en gaged to Tom Pranka, and of Judy Ryan, who became the bride of Raymond Beacom at a Nuptial High Mass in St. Ferdinand's church on Thanksgiving Day. His Eminence, Samuel Cardinal Stritch officiated at the ceremony. Phi Alpha Lambda received guests Ellen Schoen, Cynthia Swanson, Virginia Durkin, Marilou McCambridge, and Mary Colby when This Old House threw a party. Before the Lyric Theatre season closes, Carole Ann Bauer and Moonyeen Brown will attend five more operas, including The Mask ed Ball, The Elixir of Love, and Love of Three Kings. Rita Capri- ni saw the Merry Widow. Look For Trouble To Find Its Way To Club Meetings MATERIALISM Having fabric troubles? Can you tell a dacron from a nylon blouse? Are you conscious of a complex as far as fabrics are concerned? Fear no more, for your days of embarrassment are over. No more will you have to say, I don't know, when asked of what material your blouse is made. Alpha Omicron, Home Econom ics ciub, is inviting all students to a lecture and demonstration on the care of synthetic fabrics. The lecture will be given by a representative of the Montsano cor poration on Wednesday at 3 p.m. in Room 405. FINANCIAL PANIC Members of the Mathematics club have read the financial pages of the daily papers with new un derstanding since their meeting on Nov. 22. On that day, Junior Patricia Can non described the workings of the stock market and the record of those workings as reflected in the business sections of the metropoli tan press. WAGE WAR A debate on the Guaranteed An nual Wage absorbed attention of members at a recent meeting of the Economics club. Participants were Sheila Kelly and Marian Hills, who took the af firmative, and Dolores LeCompte and Alice Holies, who defended the negative. Musicians Scale Staff to Find Concert Notes Honoring St. Cecilia, patroness of music, the Music department will present the annual Cecilian Fall concert, at the 1:10 p.m. as sembly Thursday. Instrumentalists include Joan Kies, who will present Presto from Concerto Opus 25 by Mendels sohn, with Lenore Walker playing orchestral parts at the second pi ano. Liszt's famous Gnomenreigen is the selection Gene McCarthy will play, and Debussey's Le Puerto del Vino is Mary Sklavounos' number. Elizabeth Casieri will play Zam- bra from Danses Gitanes, by Tur- ina. Moonyeen Brown at the or- an and Carole Bauer at the piano will play the Intermezzo and Scherzo from Clokey's Symphonic Piece. Joyce Driscoll. violinist, will play Meditation from the opera Thais by Massenet. Madonna Toney will sing Victor Herbert's rhythmic Romany Life. Accompanists for the singers will be Anamae Kehoe. and Miss McCarthy. The Glee club, directed by Mr. Adalbert Huguelet, will offer Rock of My Soul by De Vaux, Echo is a Lady Fair by Weber, and the Old English folk song, Blow the Wind Southerly. Soloist will be Mary Cecchin and Miss Sklavounos, with Joan Doherty, Marilyn Zanker, and Miss- Toney singiirg the obbligato. Advent Wreath Lights Way to Joyous Season First candle of the Advent Wreath will be lighted tomorrow by Eileen McEvoy, president of the Freshman class. The Advent Wreath cere mony, traditionally a Fresh man class project, will follow the SAC meeting at 1:10 p.m. in the auditorium. Marilyn O'Dea, Freshman vice- president, will bring from the Chapel the vigil light from which the first candle is to be kindled. Helen Walsh, Sodality prefect, will preside at the ceremony. Following the candle lighting, the Freshmen will form a Guard of Honor and take the wreath to the tea room. Mary Patricia Dorsey is general chairman. During the weeks of Advent, the candles will be lighted each day, one the first week, two the second, and so on until the fourth candle is lighted just before vacation. In the chorus will be Sylvia Dominguez, junior; and soph omores Elizabeth Casieri, Suzanne McBride, Mary Sklavounos, Joan Doherty, Marilyn Zanke, and Gene McCarthy. Freshmen in the chorus will in clude Mary Ellen Burg, Mary Anne Stepps, Joanne Gilmore, Anamae Kehoe, Joyce Driscoll, and Patri cia Coakley. Students on the Arrange ments committee are Sharon Roth, Nancy Prible, Judith Nelson, Nancy Mayer, and Constance Teipe. Program committee members are Loretta Kinzig, Judy Bjorkhmd, Mary Jane Tausk, Barbara King, Rosemary Pordugal, Dorothy Sou- ligny, and Margaret Kelly. Arranging the Guard of Honor will be Diane Scifres, Alice Jasio- nowski, Ellen Jablinskey, Marilyn Picchietti, and Mary Giblin. Moon yeen Brown will play organ accom paniments. RFFTUflliFM QPflDfQ in b un lt;l volumes, a recent gift to the DLLinUVtll OUUItLO Music department, hold attention of Eleanor Di Maggio, Joan Kies, and Lenore Walker. (Story on Page 1.) Faculty Members Attend Conventions, Lecture at Colleges, Discuss Laws Sister Mary Raphaeldis, B.V.M., and Sister Mary Lamberta, of the Music department, attended the convention of the National Asso ciation of Schools of Music, Nov, 25 and 26. in St. Louis. Role of the Liberal Arts in Pre- at St. Xavier, Kansas, venting Maladjustment, Mary's Dec. 9. college, The NASM sets standards for music schools throughout the United States and for the award ing of music scholarships. Emmi Szorenyi, Ph.D., of the Psychology department, will pre sent a convocation lecture on The NFCCS Quotes Columbus: Sail On European Tour The rates range from 695 for the 47 day tour to 975 for the 70 day Grand Tour of Europe. Students and college alumni be tween the ages of 17 and 25 years are eligible for enrollment on an NFCCS tour. Since the initiation of the NFCCS Travel Program in 1950, more than 3700 students have benefited from the service. * * * Travel rates include all essen tial expenses from the point of de parture to the point of return. This includes the services of an exper ienced English-speaking guide and an American priest-chaplain. Mundelein students who parti- pated in the 1955 European Trav el Program are Ellen Gallagher, Ann Codd, Jeanne Flood, and Bar bara Pierce. a Your fondest dreams of visiting far-off lands can come true this year for a nominal rate. The Washington headquarters of NFCCS announced its Seventh Annual Student Travel Program recently. * * * Four tour itineraries, which in clude travel through Ireland, England, Holland, Germany, Switzerland, Austria, Yugoslavia, Italy, Monaco, Spain, and Portu gal, are offered in the 1956 sum mer travel program. Library Rivals Wild Frontier Davy Crockett and Wild Bill Hickok ride the range again, not in pursuit of the James boys but to help student teachers bring American history to their young charges. The latest project on the second floor of the library is an enlarged textbook collection for student teachers, designed to familiarize them with current materials. Such notable characters as Dan iel Boone, Kit Carson, Chief Black Hawk, and John Paul Jones help the seniors to make history mean ingful to children in elementary school. Books for Grades One to Eight, covering such fields as reading, language arts, arithmetic, social studies, science, and religion, rep resent at least 26 publishers. New editions of high school texts also have been added to the Textbook collection. On the following day. Dr. Szorenyi will present a second lec ture, to graduate students and Eng lish majors, on Dante's Message to the Twentieth Century. Sister Mary Liguori, chairman of the Sociology department, and Sister Mary Eloise, of the Eco nomics department, attended a meeting at Northwestern universi ty, Nov. 9. Discussion at the meeting was of the amended Illinois Civil Practice Act and the revised Illi nois Supreme Court Rules, both to become effective Jan. 1, 1956. Sister Mary Gertrudine, Regis trar, and Sister Mary Ignatio, of the Biology department, attended a meeting of the Chicago Confer ence of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers, at the Illinois Institute of Technology, Nov. 18. * * * Sister Mary Antonia, moderator of the Debate club, and Sister Mary Adelbert, of the Biology de partment, attended the ninth annual Speech Tournament at Bradley university, Peoria, Nov. 18 and 19. Sister Mary Antonia served as judge for some of the events. What Was Box Office Greeks? Panel Will Tell To It's all Greek to me, is a com mon student lament, but the Greek History class members say it and mean it. What the ancient Greeks did in their free moments concerns 20 students who will present discus sions, beginning on Dec. 5, on life and leisure among the Athenians. Valeria Luback is chairman of the panel on Antigone and the Greek Theatre, discussed by Mary Jane Long, Elizabeth Schwenk, and Mary Dempsey. Patricia Carroll, chairman, and Barbara Fisher, Mary Beth Grace, and Ellen Gallagher will judge the Trial of Socrates. Melanie Breundl, chairman, will consider a famous Greek historian's work, with her panel on Thucy- dides. On the panel are Barbara Strandberg and Mary Therese Beg- ley. Ann Kobal, Madonna Toney, and Joan Gallis will describe the Greek Dinner and Symposium. Shifting to Troy, Marilyn Schultz, Mary Bufe, Marilynn Ryan, and Helen Mally will talk on Euripides: Trojan Women. Sylvia Bica, chairman, Mary Shannon, and Nona Conlan will ex amine Periclean Democracy, as sessing it advantages and weak nesses in Old Athens.
title:
1955-12-01 (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
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Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College