description:
a SKYSCRAPER ; Page Three brum Discusses Crossing Threshold of Senior Year Family Problems 10 encourage critical thinking on lating to family and home life, I to enable students to share their *s with the group, members of the ie economics department are prc- iting a series of Forums. Discussing The Home in Wartime, It College Girl and Her Home, and le Problem of Juvenile Delinquency, lime Coughlin, Mary Ellen Winblad, I Phyllis Schmidt presented the n Forum, on Oct. 21. Freshmen Raise Curtain at First Monthly Concert light freshmen appeared in the first fcesday Musicale of the year, pre- led by the music department on ; -/. ppening the program, freshman Jean rferran played Rhapsody in C Ma- by the Hungarian pianist and iser, Dohnanyi. thcr freshman, Eunice Dankow- accompanied by freshman Cather- Pendergast, sang a haunting melo- by Coates, entitled I Pitch My ;ly Caravan at Night. Resident Student Plays trice Marty, resident freshman Monroe, Wisconsin, played two :ly divergent compositions, Mo- 's Fantasia in D Minor, and Pier 's Hands, a piano composition by Brazilian composer and cellist, Lobos. Betty Lamberty added an- r Latin touch with the rhythmic gueno from the Spanish Suite by ona. Hating from the modern atmos- :, Margaret Griebel, one of the hman governors, accompanied by .an Margaret Cashman, played i's Air on the G String, prrikingly different was the Mous- jky Rachmaninoff Hopak, a piano iposition which idealizes the nation- Cossack folk dance, retaining its and style as well as its wild furious rhythm and tempo. Marilyn t was the soloist. Gives Vocal Solo freshman voice student Gertrude Ibrink sang the romantic compo- 11, Sweet Songs of Long Ago, Charles, after which Rita Frischc, sixth grade at St. Gertrude's and lied in the violin department at delcin, played Dancla's Fifth Air ll Variations. Suzanne Frische was (accompanist. Jure spectacular Danse Ritucllc Du li of De Falla, with its almost real muldcring and crackling flames and typical Spanish melody, played by ibara Ann Frick, was the closing Ber, Victory Education Is Theme of Forum (Continued from page 1, column 1.) A the correct attitude of men toward bd and toward each other, can ac- mplish this task, but only when edu- ted Catholics succeed in permeating t stream of thought of American peo- with the richness of the Christian tritage and with the beauty of the kristian ideal of tolerance and char- tr. In the concluding paper, Dolores Mnik will consider Education for irmancnt Peace, outlining the Papal linciples for peace set forth by the Sshop's Committee on the Pope's tace Points, under the chairmanship His Excellency, the Most Reverend imuel A. Stritch, D.D., Archbishop I Chicago. The assembly will close with the Indent body singing The Star-Spang- rd Banner. Barbara Ann Frick will ly the organ recessional, by Schuler; w Glee club, directed by Walter Asch- mbrenner, will sing the Ave Maria, by ircadelt, and America, by Bloch, and Bary Frances Padden, organist, will lay a Guilmant reccssionaL members of the Class of 1944 wore caps and gowns for the first time when they attended Mass in Stella Maris Chapel, on Oct. 31, Senior Sunday. Socialists Gather Books for Heroes With its membership drive under way and reception ceremonies planned for Dec. 7, the Sodality, under the leadership of Irene Mikos, prefect, has launched two new projects. The Literature academy will observe Book Week, Nov. 7-13, by sending books and magazines to veterans to army hospitals. Virginia Dimmick, chairman of the academy, is directing the drive. With a goal of 1,000 pamphlets for men in army camps, the Sodality is also sponsoring Penny-a-Pamphlet cir cles, which are open to all students who contribute toward the goal. Musicians, Players Stage Performance AtMuCarmelClub Eleanor Kandratas '43, Jeanne O' Connor, and the College Trio enter tained the Mother's club of Mount Car- mcl high school, on Oct. 29. The Trio, including Dorothy Grill, cellist, Lillian Muza, violinist, and Bar bara Ann Frick, pianist, opened the program with the Ave Maria by Schu bert; Chant Sans Paroles, by Tsch- aikowsky, and March Militaire, by Schubert. Miss O'Connor, a sophomore in the drama department, gave a monologue entitled Homework, after which the Trio played Pasch's At Evening, and Godard's Mignonette. In conclusion, the Trio played Min uet by Haydn, Romance by Sibelius, and a Hungarian Dance, by Brahms. Entertain Loyolans At Residence Hall Hallowe'en Party Jean Spatuzza was general chairman of the party which resident students gave in Philomcna hall on Oct. 29 for Loyola medical and dental students. Mary Kay Semlow and Gloria Dolan were co-chairmen of the refreshment committee for the party; Patricia Gal lagher and Mary Jeanne Johnson took care of the entertainment, and Cyrilla Boyle headed the clean-up committee. Observe Hallowe'en Members of the Home Economics club met a smiling Jack-O'-Lantern at their Hallowe'en party, in the tea-room, on Oct. 25. Gloria Dolan, social chair man, appointed committees for the af fair, which was a mixer for the fresh men and a get-together for the 95 stu dents in the department. Louise Pesut was chairman of the invitation committee; Lois Forman headed ' the program committee, and Janet Herrmann took care of the dec oration committee. Sodality Entertains Corn stalks and pumpkins added at mosphere to the Sodality Hallowe'en party in the gymnasium on Oct. 29. Prefect Irene Mikos, general chair man, was assisted by Leocadia Meloy, Rosemary Roeder, and Margaret Duffy, who headed committees. Therapists Preview Future Positions Under the direction of Miss Ella Fay, occupational therapy director at Cook County hospital, four oc cupational therapy students visited Cook County on Nov. 1 and ob served the various types of thera peutic facilities in operation. Veronica Daly, Roseann Kenne dy, Rita Foehringer, and Helen Wil liams were the students. With the group was Betty Kreuzer '40, art major who is now a teacher of handicraft for convalescents. 89 Seniors Wear Caps and Qowns For Mass Here Double Cast Will Present Fall Play (Continued from page 1, column 5.) while long-suffering Joe Boyd will be impersonated by Betty Howard and LaVergne Schroeder. Barbara Brennan and Mary Jeanne Johnson will take the part of Milton D'Arcy, editor of the local paper. Chloris Freeman and Mary Beecher will play Mrs. Purrington, and Alice Marie Horen and Eleanor Layden will play Mrs. Seaver. Noreen Braum, Marjorie Kroske, and Joan Moore will appear in both per formances as French maid to the Prin cess and playmates of Hazel, respec tive, y. What Qoes On . . . MADEMOISELLE AND VOGUE say, Blazers are the thing, and Mundelein students approve. Own ers of tailored jackets in various shades of blue, brown, green, and gray, with neat white bindings, are Margaret Jean Burke, Ruth Rinderer, Laverne and Jean O'Toole, Mary Barclay, Mary Grace Carney, Lois Hintze, Gloria Do lan, Mary C. Burns, Virginia Boots, Ruth Lichtenwalder, Jeanne Cough lin, Jane Lyons, and junior Mary Cath erine Quinn . . . LISTENERS TO THE IRISH HOUR on WCFL, Oct. 24, heard the announcer dedicate the program to Mundelein and to the Mundelein Sis ters, because of four present and for mer Mundelein students who sing on the hour. The singers are sophomore Patricia Gleason, Marian' Long ex '46, Kathleen O'Donnell ex '45, and Rita Callaghan McNamara ex '44. Sees Religion As Basis for Culture The ultimate basis of culture, accord ing to the Reverend John Wellmuth, S.J., chairman of the Loyola philos ophy department, lecturing here on Oct. 28, is religion rather than philos ophy, and the purpose of culture is to enable men to achieve the end of ex istence. Culture, Father Wellmuth pointed out, may be regarded as the social environment which characterizes a so ciety. It is everything, he continued, that makes up the social inheritance of the people, interchangeable with civiliza tion, but usually regarded as the higher form of it- Marie De Block, president of Mu Nu Sigma, introduced Father Well muth to the Philosophy club, at whose October meeting he was guest lec turer. Wearing caps and gowns for the first time, the 89 members of the Class of 1944 participated in the annual Sen ior Sunday Mass, in Stella Maris Chapel, on the Feast of Christ the King. The Reverend Edward J. Millor, S.J., of Loyola university, read the Mass and gave the Senior Sunday address, pointing out that the academic robes signify, not merely scholastic achieve ment, but that they also mark the wearers as possessors of high princi ples, intellectually, culturally, and re ligiously. The seniors entered and left the Chapel to the organ accompaniment of The Heavens Are Telling the Glory of God, by Haydn. Following the Mass, the seniors and Father Millor were guests of the College at breakfast. Alumnae Choose Treasurer, New Board Members Speaks on Need for Adequate Nutrition Reporting to students in the nutrition class on the American Dietetic Asso ciation Wartime convention, held in Pittsburgh, Oct. 19-22, Sister Pauline, P.H.J.C, pointed out that the current emphasis on nutrition for everyone is the result of the contemporary reali zation that adequate nutrition is im perative for the health of the nation and the prosecution of the war. With Florence O'Callahan '37, Alum nae president, in the chair, the Alum nae Board elected Irene Weber '42 treasurer, at its meeting on Oct. 21. Seventeen new members were elected to the Board at the annual Homecom ing, on Oct. 17, for which Inez Thom as '42 was chairman. The new members include Mary Farmer James '32; Margaret O'Neil '33; Emilie Barron '34; Edith Dorn Moran '35; Gertrude Halfpap '36; Ruth Mary Gorman '37; Ruth Janiscwski '38; and Georgette Thoss '39. Eileen Flannery and Isabel Molloy are new representatives for the Class of 1940; Dorothy Homan and Doro thy Sugrue represent the Class of 1941; Miss Weber is a new representative for the Class of 1942, and Julia Case and Jane Redlin represent the Class of 1943. Miss Case was chairman of the din ner which the Alumnae sponsored on Oct. 27, at the Foods Research Insti tute.
title:
1943-11-05 (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
rights:
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coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College