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SKYSCRAPER Pa e Three Round Town .a ss, there is time, even in the midst nid-scmester tests, to get round n. Maybe not as thorough a tour be taken in the next week as shall laken when the holidays relieve e of the burden, but we can en- Kir to pull ourselves away from * books for a few hours, now and lAccording to scientific laboratory ists, mental stagnation might result om profound concentration of the ind over great lengths of time, ll nd such mental apathy doesn't look ell with the popular crocheted 111 box hats. re you talked into relaxation? If I are, we promise only to sug- t those entertainment circumstances ch will take the minimum of time offer the maximum of pleasure. Sir Philip Gibbs, war corres pondent and author of THE ROSS OF PEACE, will speak on he Spirit of Britain, Nov. 16, be- ore the Charles Carroll Forum at he Palmer House, uid on the next Monday, Carroll ider, foreign editor and director of Chicago Daily News foreign policy, ) lecture on What's the Next Move World Affairs? at the Loyola Com ply Theatre. If you are searching a deeper understanding of world Brs, this pair of lectures by noted Iters should fulfill your needs for ormation. 'omorrow night will see the gala ming of this season's opera at the IC Opera house. The initial perform- :e of the Chicago company will be Verdi opera, A Masked Ball, with ll names as Elizabeth Rethberg, Gi- ,nni Martinelli, and John Charles iomas on the program. Dorothie Littlefield's popular bal- Bt troupe will be seen in the open- night opera. The group is now Scheduled for five weeks of per- ormances during the season. 9n Monday, Nov. 17, Vivian Delia jesa will sing the role of Desdemona the company's presentation of (tk'Un. with Giovanni Martinelli in title role. Helen Jepson, Michael Irtlett, and John Charles Thomas ll sing the three principal roles in Traviata which will he presented tt Friday as the first opera spon- Md by the Board of Education. Dne of the youngest of the success- American conductors, Izler S'olo- j m, will conduct the inaugural con- t of the Illinois WPA Symphony Chestra on Monday evening, Nov. 17, ii the Illinois Music Project com- nces its sixth successive season. upplanting Katherine Cornell and interpretation of G. B. Shaw's The Ctor's Dilemma at the Grand Opera gtuse, will be the Theatre Guild Pro- tion of Eugene O'Neill's comedy, Wilderness, with Harry Carey. This ma is scheduled to open on Nov. 10. Football enthusiasts will be elated loTer the prospect of seeing the su- jtrb Notre Dame eleven when this earn meets Northwestern here in Jvanston a week from tomorrow. o date, the team is undefeated, i and has tied but once with Army 1 ast Saturday. Ian Field Trips For Science Groups Prescribes Justice, Charity for Peace Vice'Chancellor Talks on Senior Sunday The Church is forming a medical pre scription for an ailing world, in which equal parts of justice and charity will combine to make peace, said the Rev erend Edward M. Burke, vice-chancel lor of the Archdiocese, in his sermon to the graduates on Senior Sunday, Oct. 26. Today is the feast of Christ the King, he continued. This feast is significant because it stands for the reign of justice, love, and peace. If we offer justice and love to God, He will give us peace in return. Offering a positive remedy for the strife and insecurity of the present time, Father Burke asserted that the rulers of the world should, through prayerful mediation, ponder over the words of Christ, and that the individual should be just in his treatment of his neighbor in even the smallest things, and be charitable about the reputation of his fellowman. Following the Mass, at which the seniors wore their caps and gowns for the first time, they were guests of the College at breakfast in the tea room. The Abbot Memorial laboratories at irthwestern university and the Chi- p gt; morgue are on the visiting list the biology students, who plan a Hes of tours for the current sem- er. JUter a supper party in the tea-room Nov. 4, members of the Biological Jtion of the Science Forum enjoyed Night of Stars on the eighth-floor bf, examining the moon and various inets through the recently installed di Discuss Pi Kappa Delta Question At Debate Symposium Members of the Debate club are preparing to take part in a panel dis cussion and symposium at North western meeting are Patricia Hofmann, national Pi Kappa Delta question: Re solved: That the government should regulate all labor unions. Students who will attend the North western meeting are Patricia Hofmann, Peggy Schweisthal, Mildred Welch, Jeanne O'Malley, Betty Jane Sockness, Ruth Weisman, Mary Kay Jones, Elsie Kemper, and Rosemary Shanahan. Library Displays New Volumes During Catholic Book Week Sophomore Artists Make Designs, Posters To direct the attention of students to their heritage in Catholic literature and to the best in recent publications, the college library is joining National Cath olic Book Week in stressing Catholic book-consciousness, Nov. 2-9. Displayed in the browsing room are newly released histories by Mme. Chiang- Kai-Shek, China Shall Rise Again; by Carl Van Doren, Secret History of the American Revolution, an account of the conspiracies of Benedict Arnold; by Eugene Lyons, Red Decade, and by William Shirer, a European correspond ent, Berlin Diary. Have New Biographies Biographically-minded readers are di rected to Crusaders in Crinoline, the life of Harriet B. Stowe by Fairilie Wil son; a tale of ranch life by Agnes Cleav- land, No Life for a Lady; Big Family by Bellamy Partridge, and William Han- dy's Father of the Blues. A recent Book-of-the Month, Reveille in Washington by Margaret Leech, is numbered with Philip Gibb's The Amaz ing Summer and Lost Fields by Mi chael Laverty as recommended novels. Carl Glick's Shake Hands With the Dragon, and John Gunther's Inside Lat in America are offered to the travel- conscious, and Carl Crow's Meet the South-Americans, to those anxious for inter-American unity. Represent Titles In conjunction with the idea of modern Catholic novels, Elizabeth Nowak has designed representations of book titles. These are enameled on transparent cellu loid and placed in 14 of the library windows. The posters exemplifying the purpose of Catholic Book Week, to tell Catho lics not what they must not read, but what they would like to read, and the slogan of National Book Week, Forward with Books, are the work of Delores Bujewski. Welcome Club Pledges with Initiation Requirements, Social, Dramatic Programs sscope. The spirit of initiation ran cold in club members' veins on Oct. 28, when pledges were introduced to member ship requirements by inventive upper- class minds. Twenty-eight prospective members of Die Rothensteiner Gescllschaft were formally inducted by the club's 13 ac tive members. Program Includes Play A play entitled Die Toedliches Suche, enacted by Dorothy Meehan, Virginia Arado, Phyllis Burkhart, Rita Erbach, Florence Miller, and Margaret Whelan was a highlight of the program. Members of the Spanish club out lined a project which includes, gener ally, the promotion of friendly rela tions with South American countries, and, specifically, a study and contrast of Argentina and Chile. Observe Hallowe'en Geraldine McGarry, president of Al pha Omicron, presided at the home economics club Hallowe'en party, in the model apartment. Assisting Miss McGarry were Dorothy Green, Janet Farrell, and Barbara Thomson. Elea- nore Kandratas sang. At the Stylus club meeting, conducted by Virginia Coffey, Sherli Wolfe pre sented a vivid sketch of the life and work of the late Aline Kilmer, poet and wife of Joyce Kilmer. Helen Printy, chairman of the Poetry division of the club, conducted an in formal discussion of two student-writ ten verses. At the Les D'Arciennes meeting, Hel en Siemianowski, president, Adele Ross, Mary Stokes, Dorothy Grill, and Pa tricia Cummings entertained prospec tive members with an amusing skit entitled La Malade Gueri. Club rules and brightly colored iden tification bows were given to pledges of the Physical Science section of the Science Forum, who will be on proba tion and responsible to their Big Sis ters until the Christmas party. Choose Chairman At the first meeting of the year, mem bers of the Mathematics section of the Science Forum elected Ruth Tentler to the post of club chairman. With Rita Callaghan as mistress of ceremonies, the freshmen members of the Glee club presented an impromptu Amateur Hour at the Glee club Hol- lowe'en party. On the Information, Please program sponsored by the Commerce club, were Experts Frances Dickenson, Audrey Tobin, Dolores Rudnik, Catherine Cunningham, Ruth Wagner, and Su zanne Shauman. Organists Have Tea Plans for a musical year occupied members and prospective members of the Organ Guild at their first meeting, on Oct. 30, in the model apartment. Over tea and crumpets, pledges became acquainted with the club song, the Guild social activities, and its series of organ concerts. The committee in charge of the Ter rapin pledge party, Oct. 30, included Marie Cassettari, Marcella Garrity, Lil ian Questiaux, Kathleen McNulty, Mary Mauser, Irene Mikos, Dolores Rudnik, Dorothy Meehan, and Ruth Rinderer. What Goes On . TWENTY-EIGHT little worms turned * with a vengeance on a certain Thursday evening when the fresh man resident students, after a week of gentle (?) initiation by their upper- class housemates, retaliated by hiding alarm clocks all over the residence hall, set to ring out impudently every IS minutes from 7:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. In vain did the harassed seniors, jun iors, and sophomores look for the clocks; they were too well cached in hat boxes, beneath dressing tables, et al., to be found in time. * * * JUST to prove that the good writing that men do lives after them, we note with pride that the new collegiate di gest, the Rock, has reprinted the story Wedding Day by Sophomore Edith Bu- kowski, and Coke Date, a short story by Virginia Cheatham '41. Both were published in the Review last year. * * * IT'S Aloha then to Rita Guest, ex '43, who left the States to marry William Phillips at the Catholic Mission church in Honolulu, Ha waii, Nov. 5. Miss Guest flew to California on the Mainliner, there to board a ship, enroute to the Islands. At the Nuptial Mass she wore Alice blue crepe, sequin- trimmed, with a sequin tiara and blue veil to match. After a month at the Royal Hawaiian hotel, the bride and Mr. Phillips, who attend ed the University of Toronto and Johns Hopkins and who is now a government engineer, will be at home at Waikiki Beach. Freshmen Are Quests At Hallowe'en Parties Sophomores Entertain Little Sisters THERE were so many Mundelein girls at the Loyola Harvest hop on Hallowe'en that we stole their names from the Skyscrapings column, and hasten to print them before they are stolen back. Among the 60 (or more) were Helen Fisher, Mary Virginia Murphy, Rita Ann Mulhern, Marcella Garrity, Maryanne Brockhaiis, Virginia Coffey, Peggy Schweisthal, Marion Seltzer, Mary Adele Howard, Rose mary Knockaert, Mary Harrington, Margery Murnighan, Jane Rcdlin, Jane Addison, Julia Case, Phyllis Van Heule, Ruth Rinderer, Bette Condrcn, Irene Weber, Kathleen McNulty, Alice Rose Hartnett, Catherine Griffin, Virginia Walsh, Joan Morris, Audrey Wade, Audrey Tobin, Marian O'Brien, Jeanne O'Malley, Margaret Mary Kane, Cath erine Harrison, Mary Louise Beakey, Jeanne Bemis, Helen Saucr, Jane Brown, Mary Kay Jones, Ann Trave, Marie Keating, Jeanne Horan, Madeleine Courtney, Mary Kay Quinn, Vali Bal- lantinc, Eileen Ryan, Shirley Hopper, Suzanne Shauman, Helen Marie Winter, Marian Long, Mary Ghiloni, Bernice Meyers, Florence Einswcilcr, Rita Bloe- dorn, Mary Lou Pimsncr, Patricia Kear ney. * * * -TRENDS: Gene Brabets' lapel pin * that she made from a cork is in triguing, as are the cantelope seed neck laces worn by Irene Landon . . . The sister act is being prettily played by Jane Freres, Vali Ballantinc, and Phyllis Van Heule, who made blue shawl-scarves, fringed in white, to pro tect their curls from the elements . . . Speaking of heirlooms (as -we were in the last column), Ann Trave is wearing a ring made from an earring belonging to the Empress Carlotta, Maxmillian's ill-fated wife. Freshmen hostesses took over the gymnasium on Oct. 31 for a class party, of which Helen Walz was gen eral chairman. Mary Lou Choate was chairman of the entertainment committee, which in cluded Dorothy Klink, Rita Guinanc, Patricia Stebbins, Kathryn Fox, Audrey Cameron, Nancy Lally, June Redmond, and Sheila Roche. Betty Geary, chairman of the pub licity committee, was assisted by Rita Erbach and Betty Seguin. Earlier in the week, the sophomores entertained the freshmen at a Little Sister party in the gymnasium. Teresa Schmid was general chairman, and the recently organized popular orchestra provided music, including an original march composed by June Murphy. Alumna Describes Career in Fashions From the home economics department to Vogue and Hollywood patterns is an easy step, declared Joan Kaspari '40, in a talk to the members of the textiles class on Nov. 3. Miss Kaspari, who will be married to John Foster, a Chicago Tribune reporter, on Nov. IS, is a demonstrator of Holly wood patterns in department stores in Michigan, Illinois, Iowa, and Indiana. Seven Students Play In Swing Orchestra The new swing orchestra, which made its debut at the Sophomore- Freshman hop on Oct. 30, has sev en versatile members. Dorothy Grill plays the piano; Marian Anthoulis plays the violin; Gene Eorenchan the alto saxophone; Yvonne Pelletier and Jacqueline Ja cobs play, respectively, the first and second trumpets; Betty Ann Youn- ker is at the string bass, and June Murphy beats the drums. Consider America In Post-War World (Continued from page 1, Col. 1) America must be first as a leader of nations, participating in the peace treaties, assisting in the formulation of a world constitution, and giving its strength to a Commonwealth of Nations which it has helped to build. The idea of a world commonwealth which will operate immediately upon in dividual citizens and upon national states alike, and the notion of world citizenship as proposed by Union Now and by the World Citizen Association seem too optimistic. But there can be no doubt that the new Commonwealth must cherish and foster a Christian ideal of world citizen ship is a conception that man is a his discussion of Political Organization in a World Society, this ideal of citizen ship as Dr. Arlinghaus has written in man before he is an American, a Ger man, a Frenchman, or an Italian.' This (the task of reconstruction after the war) is the greatest and most diffi cult task which man has ever had to undertake. Little less than the most piercing realism, the highest moral prin ciples, the keenest statesmanship, and the greatest abundance of charity of which men are capable can suffice for the right doing of this work. Prepare for Fall Play, Nov. 14-16 (Continued from Page 1, Col. S) Judy Judson, a bride, whose long-suffer ing husband wearies of club chatter; Patricia Doane, who insists on efficiency, and Sue Atkinson, a reporter on the city newspaper. On Friday evening, Paulette Lear is Barbara, Jerry Stutz is Judy, Mary Claire Howard is Patricia, and Joan McMahon is Sue. On Sunday, the above roles arc taken by June Wetzel, Ruth Ann McCarthy, Alice Rose Hartnett. and Rosemary Roney, respectively. Members of both casts combine for the matinee.
title:
1941-11-07 (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:
This image is issued by the Women and Leadership Archives. Use of the image requires written permission from the Director of the Women and Leadership Archives. It may not be sold or redistributed, copied or distributed as a photograph, electronic file, or any other media. The image should not be significantly altered through conventional or electronic means. Images altered beyond standard cropping and resizing require further negotiation with the Director. The user is responsible for all issues of copyright. Please Credit: Women and Leadership Archives, Loyola University Chicago. wlarchives@luc.edu
coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College