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Advisory Committee Sparks Second Phase of Analysis by Barbara Brzezinski and Mary Jo Murray Vol. XXXIII NEWLY ELECTED SAC OFFICERS discuss plans for the coming year. Seated (1. to r.) Ann Foxen, Judy Ewing, Eileen Teasdale, Sheila Prindiville, Connie Pearson, Michele Moran; standing, Michele Hogan and Ann Crow ley. They will be inducted on Honors Day. Skyscraper Photo: Rae Paul Students Choose '63-64 Officers For SAC Posts Following a week of speeches and campaigning, eight students won election as officers on the executive board of the Student Activities Council for the year 1963-64. A total of 725 votes were cast in the election. Assuming the position of presi dent of SAC, Sheila Prindiville will supervise all council activities for the new school year. Sheila, a his tory major, is an SAC representa tive and represented Mundelein last year at the Fourth Air Force Academy Assembly for college stu dents. Connie Pearson and Michele Moran were chosen first and second vice president. As secretary, Michele Hogan will take charge of council correspond ence, while treasurer Judy Ewing asumes responsibility for all finan cial affairs. All SAC social activities will fall under the jurisdiction of the new social chairman, Ann Crowley. Geraldine McGuire was chosen NSA representative. Ann Foxen will represent Mun delein as the senior delegate to NFCCS. Although she does not have an official position on the SAC board, Eileen Teasdale was selected junior delegate to NFCCS. Skyrocketing to new heights, Phase Two of Munde lein's Institutional Analysis received intellectual depth and invigoration last Sunday dur ing the Advisory Board's sec ond visit. Meeting with faculty and administration in the relaxed atmosphere of Robert R. Mc Cormick Lounge, Dr. Bernice Brown Cronkhite, emeritus dean and vice president of Radcliffe College, Dr. George Shuster, vice president of Notre Dame, Reverend Joseph Sittler, Lutheran theologian at the University of Chicago, and Professor Marston Morse, professor of mathematics from the Institute for Ad vanced Study in Princeton ex pressed their candid views on Mundelein as value oriented, as a women's college and as a liberal arts institution. The Reverend William J. Dunne, S.J., was unable to attend this session. Assuming the role of the J Mundelein College, Chicago 26, 111., April 10, 1963 Plan Prom, Luncheon Mundelein students can plan a social whirl with both the Junior- Senior Prom and the Junior-Senior Luncheon set for May. The juniors and seniors, sponsors of the annual prom, May 4 at the Tarn O'Shanter Country Club, have extended an invitation to everyone to attend. They have chosen With You, as the dance theme. Frank York's band, currently ap pearing at the Sahara Inn Motel, will provide music in the main ball room from 9 p.m. to midnight. His combo will play in the Terrace Room. A senior dinner party at 6:30 p.m. in the main ballroom precedes the formal dance. Announce Menu The menu includes: fresh fruit cocktail, prime rib, potatoes pari- sienne, beans almondene, Caesar salad and rainbow sherbert. Cardinal To Officiate At Dedication Ceremony Dedication of Coffey Hall, Robert R. McCormick Lounge and Frank J. Lewis Center will take place April 26, at 2 p.m. His Ex cellency, the Most Reverend Albert Cardinal Meyer, Archbishop of Chicago, will offi ciate. The Cardinal will bless the new dormitory named for the founder and first p r e s i - dent of the Col lege, Sister Mary Justitia Coffey, B.V.M. Cardinal Meyer Sister founded Immaculata High School in 1921, where she served as principal for six years. She was appointed provincial supervisor of the Community in 1927. Two years later she resigned from this office, and was appointed to supervise the 15-story construction of Munde lein College. In 1930, the College Sister Mary Justitia Sister died here Nov. Bids for seniors are 13.50 and 5 for underclassmen. They went on sale April 8. Since the seniors' dates are asked to wear tuxedos, the seniors will receive with their bids a special discount card for tuxedo rental. General chairmen for the prom are Nancy Johnson and Marianne Wagner. Chairmen for the various com- Seaborg To Talk At Graduation Glenn T. Seaborg, chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, has been named speaker for this year's commencement, June 5. Before his appointment to his job on March 1, 1961 by President John F. Kennedy, Mr. Seaborg was Chancellor of the University of California, Berkeley. In 1951 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in chemistry. He is also the co-discoverer of the ele ment, plutonium, the first of a number of transuranium elements. Mr. Seaborg and his colleagues are responsible for the identifica tion of more than 100 isotopes of elements. mittees include: Peggy Labich, senior, and Barbara Jacobs, junior, publicity; Connie Pearson, junior, promotion; Barbara Kroth, senior, and Mary Ellen Brennan, junior, bids; Mary Eileen Devereux, Car- lotta Letizio, seniors, and Roselle Delisi, junior, arangements. The annual Junior-Senior Lunch eon will be held at the Saddle and Cycle Club, Foster Ave. and Sheri dan Rd., May 1 at 1 p.m. The seniors who attended the luncheon last year will receive in vitations, according to Nancy Johnson, junior social chairman and head of the luncheon com mittee. Other junior committee chairmen include: Connie Pearson and Judy Daly, entertainment; Pauline Han- rahan, finances; Jean Lyon, invita tions; Sue Schevers, program; and Anne Marie Valenziano, transpor tation. Juniors Treat The price of the luncheon is 6.75 for juniors and 3.38 for seniors who did not attend last year. The menu includes: English beef broth, breast of chicken with gour met sauce, parisienne potatoes, peas francaissee, tossed salad with wine and vinegar dressing. opened with as president. 5, 1947. After the ceremony at Coffey Hall, Cardinal Meyer will unveil the plaques in McCormick Lounge and Lewis Center. The main social room at Coffey Hall commemorates Colonel Robert R. McCormick whose foundation contributed 75,000 for the lake side lounge. The student center is named for Frank J. Lewis whose foundation donated 60,000 for the recreation area. Benediction in the auditorium will follow the dedication and Car dinal Meyer will address the stu dent body. The Cardinal will then attend a reception at which the students will be hostesses. MUTUAL ADMIRATION radiates from Mrs. Crowley, 1963 Magnificat Medal recipient, and two of her three Mundelein daughters, Claudette Austin and Gladys Paul, as she poses with Sister Mary Ann Ida, B.V.M., president, at the reception honoring the medalist. Her third Mundelein girl is her own daughter, Sister Mary Patrick, O.S.B. Skyscraper Photo: Mickey Deutsch devil's advocate, Dr. Norbert Hruby, vice president of Mundelein, posed the first question, What are the advantages and disadvantages of a value-oriented college? Reflecting the chacteristic diver sity and ingenuity of the entire group, Mrs. Cronkhite immediately questioned the question by point ing out that all colleges are value- oriented since they seek truth. Discussing the role of the Catho lic college, Dr. Sittler emphasized that The Catholic college is the Church teaching. This Catholic in stitution must see nothing new as startling; rather, it must look for possibility in new thinking. It should not shop around, he as serted, but rather dig deep into its own principles. At this point, Professor Morse contributed that Moral perfection alone will not make a good Catho lic college; other values are needed. Catholics are doomed to mediocrity if they do not realize other intel lectual values. Dr. Shuster added that Catholic education must have something of its own to say in the world. The college community must shape man for the time in which he lives. The students realize the changing wor. ; the university must meet this challenge, he stressed. Defend Women's Colleges Lining up the pros and cons of coed versus segregated education, the Board revealed a diversity of opinion. Substantiating the advan tages of the latter, Mrs. Cronkhite pointed out that the main reason for a women's college is so they can run their own show. A woman should have a chance to fulfill her self without having to compete in the male world. Although Dr. Shuster admitted that the chances for marriage are better in a coed institution, he noted that academic achievement is higher when women study alone. Nearing the end, Dr. Hruby asked In what sense may it be claimed that our liberal arts cur riculum liberates the mind? Evoking equal interest from Board members and faculty, the question received numerous com ments. The importance of depth concentration in a subject area ver sus superficial generalizations in in terdisciplinary pursuits was em phasized by the faculty. Such a system puts more responsibility on the student to coordinate the vari ous disciplines, they stressed. Redeem Self On the other hand, many ques tioned the ability of the student to arrive at this total awareness on her own. Dr. Sittler summarized that through the liberation of the mind, the student is given the tools to re deem herself. Thus, education is not the cause of redemption but a means to it. Advisory Board members famil iarize themselves with students in the classroom Monday morning and met informally with Student Coun cil members and Skyscraper editors at McCormick Lounge in the after-
title:
1963-04-10 (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
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coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College