description:
The campaign will reach its cli max on (let. 24, when the polls are open from 7:45 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. SAC officers will count the bal lots. Watch Lounge, Freshman Locker Room For Big Political Campaign Depressed Democrats and resilient Republicans would do well to invade the lounge, Oct. 20, and gather a few facts on campaigning. The Freshmen election promotion will give them good ideas. ' According to eye-catching posters on the Freshman Bulletin beard, full-time students carrying 15 hours or more are eligible for office. Students wishing to nominate other students get their candidates approved in the office of the Dean of Students between 2 p.m., Tues., Oct. 18, and 5 p m.. Wed. Oct. 19. Each candidate may make a one- minute speech at the Nomination assembly, 1 :10 p.m., Oct. 20 and then the fun begins. Even though each candidate is limited to one poster, those who have survived past Freshman campaigns know the Disneyland character the lounge will present with each of approximately. 30 candidates graphically presenting her platform and promises. To be elected are a president, vice-president, secretary, social chairman, treasurer, sergeant-at- arms. and two SAC representa tives. Virginia Leidinger, SAC presi dent, will conduct both the nom ination Oct. 20 and the installa tion ceremony, Oct. 25. SAC mem bers will stand by to help candi dates prepare effective nomination speeches. Student Directory Has Your Number The Know-it-Owl says Look in the pages of your Student Di rectory. which will be off the press this month. Assisting Ann Carr, chairman, in the work of classifying students and sorting out the correct address, zone, phone, and locker for each, is a committee of Seniors. In the group are Betty Howell, Mary Alice Carberry, Ann Kobal, Lorraine De Hartelo, Ellen Galla gher. Charlene Quinn, and Bar bara Gaul. .' T 7 lt;' Vol. XXVI Mundelein College, Chicago 40, Illinois, Oct. 17, 1955 No. 2 Spooks Will Mix, Maybe Match, At October Dance SAC and NFCCS Sponsor First On-Campus Mixer Witches and goblins, ghosts and ghouls, sprites and spirits will ca vort gaily at the Mixer, Oct. 21, the Broomstick Bounce sponsored by the National Federation of Catholic College Students and the Student Activities Council. Chief spooks for the dance, which opens at 7:30 p.m., in the college gymnasium, are Charlene Quinn and Patricia O'Donnell. Jane Panka, head of the Hostess committee, will bewitch the arrivals, both Mundelein students and men from Loyola and other universities. Marilyn Lindahl, chairman of the Publicity committee, will in form all haunters and haunted about the Mixer haunt, and Shir ley Parilli, chairman of the Decora tion committee, will rally her aides to provide the autumnal atmo sphere. Maureen Foley, chairman, and members of the Rehabilitation com mittee, will wield the broomsticks after the bounce is over. Arts Qroup Opens Program With Study of Moderns Convert Priest Talks On Old, New Testaments Nov* 19, 20 Are Fall Play Dates Nov. 19 and 20 are dates for the first dramatic production of the year, Oscar Wilde's witty play. The Importance of Being Ernest. Tryouts for roles will be held this week in the Drama department. Inaugurating its program on campus the NFCCS Related Arts committee will sponsor a Faculty round table discussion on Trends in Contemporary Arts, Oct. 26, at 7:30 p.m. Participating in the discussion will be Sister Mary Ann Ida, B.V.M., chairman of the Philosophy department, who will discuss the Nature of Art and Beauty, and Sister Mary Raphacldis. of the Music department, will discuss Contemporary Music. Sister Mary Aquin, of the English department, will con sider Modern Poetry, and Sis ter Mary Blanche Marie, of the Art department, Modern Art. Sister Mary Ignatia, of the English department, will be chairman. Debaters Will Meet Team from Notre Dame Representatives of the Fighting Irish will be here on Oct. 27 and it is just possible that they will go away defeated, verbally that is. Debaters from the Univer sity of Notre Dame will en gage in a verbal duel with students in the Debate class on the topic of a guaranteed annual wage. Both teams will be chosen from the beginner debate groups. The encounter will be at 2 p.m., in room 502. (ilflRAI INTFRFST are shared y students who have lived in 8 nations, including the United States. ULUunL in I lulu i o clockwise they are Rita Xavier from Japan; Beatrice Hoang from Vietnam; Clair Fogarty from Ireland; Amelita Lasig from the Philippines; Nguyen Kim-Ahn from Vietnam; Janice Zumwalt from Canada; Diane Mitenbergs from Latvia, and Edwina Bynarowick from Poland. History Department, Clubs Plan Observance of United Nations Tenth Birthday On Oct. 24, 60 nations will celebrate the tenth anni versary of the United Nations, while colleges throughout the country sponsor programs in its observance. At Mundelein, the all-college commemoration of UN Day will be sponsored by the NSA, the International Rela tions club, and the History department. The program will open at 9 a.m., in Room 405 with a panel on the UN in Action. Carol Winsek is chairman, with Barbara Eisher dis cussing the 10 year achievement and Patricia Delsjng presenting the current problems before the UN. At 11 a.m. the entire College will be alerted to pray for peace when Patricia Cannon presents St. Fran cis' prayer for peace over the pub lic address system. During the luncheon hours, musicians will pre sent Music From Around the World. Sylvia Bica. Ellen Gallagher, Mary Shannon, and Melanie Bre undl are planning a program on Culture Through the Dance, to be given at 2 p.m. Lorelei del Castillo. Darlene 1 larmston, Dolores De Paolo, Judy Skwiot. and Betty Flanagan will present dances from Hungary. Mexico. Erance, Russia, and Ire land. Sylvia Dominguez will ac company. To close the day, the IRC will sponsor a United National recep tion and exhibit in the tea room with Ann Kobal in charge. NSA will plan the program and the tea room arrangements. Mary Lou Doherty, Mary Ann Schumann, Maureen Sweeney, Ann Carr, Mary Ellen Casey, Lucille Youngmann, Patricia Doherty, and Dolores Le Compte are planning the meeting. The Arts committee is the first of its kind in the Chi cago Region. Kappa Mu Psi Starts Series Of Monthly Musicals Kappa Mu Psi, campus music or ganization, will present the first in its series of monthly musicals, Oct. 25, at 3:10 p.m., in Room 703. Gene McCarthy will open the pro gram with Chopin's Polonaise, Op. 53, one of the nineteenth century composer's most popular piano se lections. Joan Kies will interpret a Bach number, Prelude and Fugue, No. 10, and Elizabeth Casieri will play Chopin's Valse Brillante, Op. 34, No. 2. Vocal selections will include Lun- gi del Caro Bene, by Secchi, sung by .Marilyn Zanke. Joan Doherty will offer the traditional Green Sleeves. Mary Olson will close the vocal selections with Connais tu Le Pays, by Thomas. Accompanist will be Lenore Walker. President Is Named To Channel 11 Board Sister Mary John Michael, B.V.M., President of the College, is a member of the Advisory board of Station WTTW, Windows To The World, Chicago's Educational tele vision station which began broad casting Sept. 19. Members of the Faculty have at tended the conferences planning the work of WTTW, Channel 11, which will ultimately move to permanent quarters in the Museum of Science and Industry. A Bridge from Old to New from the traditions of the Old Tes tament to the fulfillment of prom ise in the new is the topic of Father John M. Oesterreicher, who will give the assembly lec ture at 1:10 p.m., Oct. 27. A convert from Judaism, the lecturer is an Austrian writer and professor who was in medical college in his native country when he came to believe in Christianity and transferred to a seminary. Shortly after his ordination, he saw in the rise of Hitler and the persecution of the Jews the char acter of his own apostolate. In 1934 he founded Opus Sanc- ti l'auli, a missionary institute which appealed to the Jewish peo ple to see behind the Nazi perse cution a shadow of Christ's call to faith. Forced to flee the Nazis, Father ()esterreicher went to Rome, where he received the blessing of the Holy bather, then to Paris, and finally, a few days before the fall of France, he sailed for New York. He is the author of several books, including Seeds of Hope, sermons given during the Church Unity octave, and Racism, Anti- semitism, and Antichristianism. published in France, and recently reprinted in New York. Besides his convert work, Father Oesterreicher heads the Institute of Judean-Christian Studies at Seton Hall univer sity.
title:
1955-10-17 (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
rights:
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coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College