description:
The Stub i azareth College Louisville 3, Ky. D Vol. XXIX Mundelein College, Chicago 40, Illinois, February 17, 1959 pniTflDC ' ' Retreat Bulletin, which will be published daily during Ellen Murray. retreat are (1. to r.) Elaine D'Ambrosio, Barbara Pierce and Mary 3-Day Retreat Begins; Conducted by Jesuit Rev. John J. Beckman, S.J., of Milford, Ohio, will conduct this year's open retreat tomorrow, Feb. 18, through Friday, Feb. 20. Sodality will give a description of retreat doings in a daily publication, the Retreat Revieiv. Editors Mary Ellen Murray, Barbara Pierce, and Elaine D'Ambrosio will be assisted by Sodality reporters in their account of the conferences. Each day of the retreat, which more than 550 students are attending, will begin with a conference at 9:30, followed by 11:00 Mass and Communion, 12:00 lunch, and 1:15 and 2:15 conferences. The final conference each day will end with Benediction. THE LIBRARY is providing spir itual reading books for between con ferences and evening reading. In ad dition to this, members of the Sodality are preparing a reading room here in school for the retreatants. Father Beckman wil hear confes- Annual ClC Meeting sions each day in the chapel. The time r* I I I f KA I ocheduled for rlarch Library Offers Tour, Contest During NCBW The College Library will mark Catholic Book Week Feb. 23 through 27 with special displays and events. Books representing the best in Catholic reading will be exhibited all veek. A new event will be featured ch day. Faculty members will attend an open house in the library Feb. 23 from 3 to 5 p.m. The library will be closed to students from 3 p.m. on. A Book Week contest for students and faculty members will open Feb. 24. Entrants will select the 10 best books geared to a family library from the books displayed. All lists must be sub mitted on Friday, Feb. 27. Separate awards will be made to the best faculty and student entries. Winner will be announced on the Dean's board Mon day, March 2. FEB. 25, A special display will high light contemporary Catholic literature. Open house for students will be held Feb. 26. Small groups may tour the the of confessions will be posted on chapel bulletin board. The Mass on Friday will be a High Mass, sung by scholastics, to mark the close of the retreat. The college division of the Catholic Interracial Council of Chicago will conduct its annual conference on Hu man Relations, March 7-8, in the Sheraton hotel. The National Federa tion of Catholic Students and the Na tional Student association are co-spon soring the meeting. In an effort to make a reality of the conference title, 'From Com placency to Action, experts in the fields of human relations, popula tion changes, housing, community relations and education will direct discussion panels, clinics and workshops. Some of the topics selected for dis cussion are the problems of human re lations, group dynamics, community development, student responsibility and Catholic action. The cost of the weekend is 13 which includes room, board and registration. Reservations must be made before March 2. Forms can be obtained from Sister Mary Ligouri, B.V.M., Room 508. rare book room at half hour intervals during the day except from 11 a.m. to noon. Those wishing to see the rare book room may register in the lounge Feb. 23. Loan to Students Will Help Finance Higher Education In cooperation with the recently en acted National Defense Student Loan Program, Mundelein is initiating a loan fund with the 2,139 contributed by the federal government. According to the plan, Mundelein as a participating college, will contrib ute a sum equal to one-ninth of that given by the federal government. UNDER THE RILES governing the student loan program, a student may borrow in one year a sum not exceed ing 1000, and no more than 5000 during her entire educational career. Since Mundelein's allotment for the first year is small, loans given by the college will be limited to amounts con siderably less than 1000 so that more students may be benefited by the pro gram. ACCORDING to the stipulations of the program, preference must be given to applicants of high scholastic achievement and to those preparing for careers in teaching, science, mathe matics or foreign languages. Repayment may begin one year af ter the borrower ceases to be a full- time student and must be completed within the following 10 years. NO INTEREST may accrue prior to the beginning of the repayment sched ule, and interest thereafter is paid at the rate of 3 per year. The loan is cancelled in the event of death or permanent disability. If the borrower becomes a full-time teacher in a public elementary or secondary school, 10 per cent of the loan may be cancelled for each year of service up to five years. Students interested in participating in this program should contact Sister Mary Frederick Cecile, bursar. Human Relations Club Sponsors Discussion Of City Brotherhood In commemoration of Brotherhood Week, the Human Relations club will sponsor a panel discussion on Human Relations in the City of Chicago at the student assembly, Feb. 24. LEADING THE DISCUSSION will be Mathew Ahmann, field representa tive of the Catholic Interracial Coun cil of Chicago, who will discuss the topic in its broad sense. Another panelist, Father Leo Ma- hon, Assistant Director of the Car dinal's Committee for Spanish Speak ing People, will speak on the Puerto Rican and Mexican in Chicago. A re search specialist for the Chicago Ur ban League, Mrs. Olivia Filerman, will examine the Chicago Negro problem. HOUSING CONDITIONS in Chi cago are the topic of Warren Lehman of the Chicago Commission on Human Relations. Faculty To Hear Evanston Educator K. Richard Johnson, Ph.D., president of the National College of Education, Evanston, will speak at the Feb. 25 faculty meeting, 4:15, Room 306. Following the lecture, a dinner for visiting educators will be served in the college tearoom. Guests at the dinner will be Dr. Johnson, the Board of Examiners, the principals and district superintendents of the 18 schools where Mundelein stu dents are assigned for student teach ing. Husbands and wives of lay mem bers of the faculty will also be guests. Scholarship Increase Noted on Dean's List According to the Dean's List for the first semester of the 1958-59 schol astic year, scholarship and the intel lectual life are becoming increasingly popular on campus. THE LIST BOASTS more than twice as many straight-A students as did the first semester report for 1957-58. Thirty-four more scholars attained a minimum grade point average of 2.5. The 27 straight-A students are: Isabclle Anderson, Sandra Marek, Clare Walsh, Betty Weiss, Camille Zemrowski, Sister Mary Michaelo, B.V.M., Sister Mary St. Albert, B.V.M., Mary Ann Bilski, Audrey Cihlar, Elizabeth Hackett, Janine Katelis, Marcella McCann, Marianne Morgan, Carmelina Napoljtano and Sister Mary St. Julia, B.V.M. Also on the list of those who Darwin's Influence Subject of Series The first in a series of four lectures on the centennial of Charles Darwin's Origin of the Species will be pre sented at 6 p.m. tonight in the audi torium by Rev. Walter J. Ong, S.J. His topic is the impact of the theory of evolution on twentieth century thought. Father Ong, a professor of English at St. Louis university, is noted for his knowledge of both Renaissance and contemporary civilization. Two of his studies of the Renassiance will soon be published by the Harvard University Press. A collector of rare books, Father Ong recently had an opportunity to augment his library during four years of European study on a Guggenheim fellowship. According to the St. Louis university Alum' nae Bulletin, the collection is a popular campus attraction. Many warmly-clad students have been introduced to Renaissance life through Father Ong's library. (The room temperature must be kept cool in order to preserve the 400-year-old volumes.) In the contemporary field, Father Ong has earned a national reputation through his book, Frontiers in American Catholicism. Since his re turn from abroad, he has also been an outspoken critic of American attitudes toward Europe. Writing on the sub ject in America, he said, We need imagination and human sympathy for those unlike us. And above all a hard thing for us Americans we have a great need to understand our selves. merited the highest possible aver age are: Gloria Callaci, Janet De Grazia, Sheila Leahy, Sheila Se- panski, Sister Mary Claude, H.H.S., Sister Mary Frances Xavier, H.H.S., Sister Mary Regina, H.H.S., Judith Krippner, Mary Jule Mur phy, Geraldine Ptacek, Ann Marie Wenthe and Joann Woods. Seniors on the Dean's List are: Joan Ayres, Mary Lou Bartholomew, Te resa Breslin, Barbara Bukowski, Mary Ellen Burg, Ruth Charlton, Barbara Covey, Patricia Cullen, Elizabeth Curylo, Margaret Grange, Virginia Crasser, Patricia Guadagno, Barbara Guderian, Marian Hills, Rita Hoffman, Frances Kaiser, Annamae Kehoe, Ann Kielty, Barbara King, Mary Anne King, Loretta Kinzig, Carol Chodzko. GERALDINE KIRBY. Eileen Mc Avoy, Patricia Niec, Marilynne O'Dea, Marilyn Picchietti, Mary Ann Piper, Rosemary Pordugal, Marie Prindi ville, Mary Rohner, Sharon Roth, Sis ter Mary Louise, S.S.C., Geraldine Sofka, Barbara Summers and Mary Ann Wilczynski. Dean's List Juniors are: Mary Jane Bowler, Mary Louise Brady, Helen Carroll, Bernadine Dendor, Katherine Jackson, Lucile Jautz, Judith Juszak, Marilyn Karsh, Kathleen Kilday, Jac queline Kosturik, Saule Liulevicius, Rosalie Neufeldt, Jean Peterson, Theo dora Pierdos, Carol Romanenghi, Jac- quelyn Rosemwasser, Dorothy Thomas and Wladyslawa Toczycka. Sophomores include Mary Ellen Andries, Shirley Bondiman, Eve lyn Brown, Loretta Cahill, Kath erine Caulfield, Dorothy Ciszewski, Arlene Driscoll, Martha Fingleton, Kathleen Gottschalk, Sylvia Grze- sik, Kathleen Huhmann. Nancy Itnyre, Mary Ann Makowski, Maureen McConville, Anne Miller, Rosalyn Mocchi, Denise O'Malley, Louise Ornas, Barbara Pettit, Sharon Ruppert, Mary Ann Ryan, Charlene Sassetti, Mary Ann Shibovich, Sister Mary Augustine, O.S.B., Sister Rose Mary, H.H.S. and Jacqueline Smith. FRESHMEN ARE Pamela Beckman, Carol Bellamy, Mary Ann Eiler, Ju dith Erhardt, Patricia Fitzgerald, Isa- belle Giachetti, Mary Margaret Grady, Rosemary Graham, Dolores Holmes, Margaret Kanera, Geraldine Knapp, Denise Lenzi, Lois Maday, Vita Milak- nis, Margaret Neuzil. Eileen Raczak, Roseanne Rypczyn- ski, Florence Sheber, Beverly Simons, Patricia Taepke, Nancy Thomas, Kathleen Walsh, Frances Wolosowick, Donnaruth Yates and Dorothy Za- drozny. Seventeen B.V.M. scholastics also merited Dean's List honors. ARTISTIC TOUCHES will appear on the finished product. are added to the Dean's List by Junior Jean Peterson. Her name is one of the 133 that
title:
1959-02-17 (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
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coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College