description:
lodern Portias Pose I Dolores Wojciechowski, stage manager, Madeline Roche and Rosemary hompson study sixteenth century Venetian furniture, plan authentic sets for Shakespearean play. lot Path of Eclipse Tl * v Surahs * SL : . rS *v. .-.r Vol. XX MUNDELEIN COLLEGE, CHICAGO 40, ILLINOIS, NOVEMBER 7, 1949 No. 3 Curtain Rises On Merchant of Venice, Nov* 17 Auditorium Assumes Air of Qlobe Theater The auditorium will resemble the famous Sixteenth Century Globe Theatre, Nov. 17 and 18, when the Dra ma department presents William Shake speare's Merchant of Venice. Donna Radtke and Pasque D'Ales sandro will alternate as Portia; Mar garet Shaughnessy and Jeannine St. Bernard will play Ncrissa. and Jessica will be portrayed by Simonc Chapuis and Francine Blaszynski. Loyolans will take the male roles, with John Ryan as Antonio, Frank Ape) as Bassanio, and Philip Wieland as Shylock. Robert Ermantinger wil' play Salarino: John Madden, Grati- ano; Robert Hultquist, Salanio; Carl Rolfsen, Balthasox; George Samels, Lor enzo; Robert Larsen, Launcelot; Robert Van Lysebettens, Arragon; and James Oakey, Tubal. Patricia Bradley is assistant to the Director. Technical director George F. Petersen, will be assisted by stage man agers Dolores Wojciechowski and Pat ricia Hooper. Joan Bolger, Joan Hackett. Marilyn Hycnar, Shirley Krieter, Joan Mallon, Marjorie Prciidergast, Patricia Nicol, and Rosemary Rapp will work on the stage crew. Lighting effects will be under the supervision ol Marie Marnan and Elaine Antonucci, assisted by Anne Murphy. Beta Kovac, and Mary Mc- Nally. ' Rosemary Thompson and Madeleine Roche head the Properties crew, with Charlotte Kwasigroch. Catherine Ther ese Murphy, and Patricia Reese. Mary Anastos. Catherine Anne Mur phy. Barbara Prohaska, Stavroula Thomas, and Mary Young will work with chairmen Joan Bridgman and Anne Llewellyn on costumes. Gloria Guilfoyle is in charge of make up and Mildred De Vic will be house manager. Hazel Shiffer and Florence Granet will manage the box office, and Mari lyn Brown and Patricia Bradley hav? charge of promotion. I Science Forum officers, Helen Marie Murphy, Peggy Egan, Betty Byrne, fl Frances Fazio, chart path of an eclipse, in anticipation of the annual For- I lecture, scheduled for Nov. 20. (Story in Column 5.) President Cites Advantages of NSA Membership A contribution toward the establish ment of a new world order of peace security, and freedom is, in the opin ion of Sister Mary Josephine, B.V.M., President of the College,, one of the benefits to be derived from the inter national activities of the National Stu dent association. in a report by Gordon Klopf, chair man of the NSA advisory council, on the results of an evaluation study of college administrators' viewpoints on the association, Sister Mary Josephine is also quoted in her commendation of the ways and means used by the national staff in presenting its pro gram. In accord with the opinion of many other educators. Sister Mary Josephine regrets the apathy and disinterest ap parent in many student groups. List Mid'Semester Examinations Monday. Wednesday, and Friday 9, 11. 12, and 3 o'clock classes have mid- semester examinations today. Tuesday and Thursday 9, 11, and 2 o'clock classes have examinations to morrow. Monday, Wednesday, and Friday 10. 1, and 2 o'clock classes have examina tions Wednesday. Tuesday and Thursday 10, 12, and 3 o'clock classes have tests Thursday. All one hour classes have examina tions on the day such classes meet. Science classes have tests on the day the lectures occur. Examinations are SO minutes in length. Regular classes are held at hours during which tests are not given. Music Students Blend Old, New In Fall Concert A mixture of the old and the new in music will open the thirteenth an nual Fall Concert, to be given by the Music department, Nov. 10, at 1 p.m. The Glee club, under the direction of Adalbert Huguelet, will open the program with three numbers, Madri gal by Miller, Ave Maria by Warner, and Spanish Procession by Gaul. An- geline Mazza will accompany. Wilma Lcliinanii wil play the Little Fugue in G Minor, an organ solo by Bach: and Patricia Dec, at the piano, will interpret Liszt's Rhapsody No. 6. Miss Mazza and Mary Mahoney will play a duo-piano arrangement of Chopin's Rondo in C Minor. Vocal soloists will include Mary Ro man, who will sing La Giromctta by Sibella. with modern harmony by Deems Taylor. La Verne Galiano will sing Tell Me, O Blue Skies, by Gianinni. Marianna Griglik will sing Voi Lo Sapete, by Mascagni. Eileen Kennedy, violinist, accom panied by Dorothy Dresden at the piano, will offer Romance from the Second Concert by Wieniawski. Other accompanists will include Georgia Lambros, Mary Mahoney, and Ellen Schmidt. Krishna Nehru to Talk on New India Krishna Nehru, younger sister of the prime minister of India, Jawaharlal Nehru, and of the Indian ambassador to the United States, Mme. Pandit, will lecture on Life in New India, at the assembly, Nov. 17. In 1920. when she was only 13 years old. the Nchrus after much deliberation decided to join Gandhi's movement of peaceful non-cooperation. In 1925, when her father became president of the Swaraj party, she attended assembly meetings and met the man whom she ultimately married. Later, she traveled in Europe, attend ed the Intcniational Summer School in Geneva, and returned to India to be come joint secretary to the Youth League. In 1933 she became the bride of Raja Ilutlisecsing. who is assistant editor of a Bombay newspaper, and she has since written three books, With No Re grets. Shadows on the Wall, and Story of Gandiji. The Huthseesings have two sons. Science Forum Lecture Will Trace Eclipse Georgetown Astronomer Talks Here, Nov. 20 The audience at the annual Science Forum lecture, Nov. 20, at 8:15 p.m., will travel via lecture and color pic ture.-- from Washington, D.C., to Mani la and then north to Korea, Japan, and the Aleutians, following the eclipse path across the Pacific. Guide-conductor of the travel-lecture will be the Reverend Francis J. Heydcn, S.J., who, in 1948, accompanied a scien tific expedition sponsored by the Na tional Geographic society in cooperation with the Departments of State and Commerce and the National Military Establishment. A graduate of Harvard university, Father Heyden is now director of the observatory at Georgetown university. He recently presented his travel lec ture, entitled Eclipse Across the Paci fic, at Constitution hall. Science Forum members arc makinr preparations under the direction of Mclba Pierotti, general chairman. Committees are under the co-chair manship of Faculty members and stu dents. Dolores Bresingham is chairman of the Reception committee; Dol ores Nowikowski heads the Publi city committee; Jewel Crosby is in charge of Invitations; Eileen Parker is chairman of the Programs and Ushers committee; and Helen Marie Murphy will manage Stage pre parations. Magnificat Medal Goes to Chicagoan Clarke Alumna Will Receive Award, Nov. 29 M rs. Mary Blake Finan, Chicagoan who has been fighting juvenile delin quency for three decades and who has been a constructive force in Catholic organizations both nationally and in ternationally, will be the third recipient of the Magnificat Medal, to be con ferred at a formal convocation here on Nov. 29. Established in November 1947 to honor an alumna of a Catholic college who has enriched Christian social liv ing by the character of her own life and by her contribution to society, the Medal recognizes and promotes dis tinguished achievement among Catholic . women. A case worker in the Chicago Crimi nal court for 32 years, Mrs. Finan realized the urgent need for zealous workers for crime prevention as well as for crime correction. Initially, she supplemented her pro fessional work with volunteer service in her parish and at St. Mary's Day nursery and settlement house. Later she served as executive secretary of the Catholic Social center. At present, she is field representative of the Maril lac Social center. A graduate of Clarke college, Du buque, Iowa, Mrs. Finan, whose hus band and child died within a few years of her marriage, holds a Master's de gree from Loyola university and an honorary degree from Clarke. (Continued on Page 4, Col. 2.)
title:
1949-11-07 (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