description:
Musicians Honor Mozart In Spring Concert; List Program By Freshmen , T The Music department will in clude a salute to Mozart on his bi centennial at the annual Cecillian concert in the College theatre, Sun day, April 8, at 3:30 p.m. Mary Sklavounos will play Mozart's double concerto in E flat with Elizabeth Casieri playing orchestral parts at the second piano. Gene McCarthy will play Rach maninoff's famous Concerto No. 2 in C minor, with Mary Ellen Burg at the second piano. Kathleen Ket- terick will offer another Rachman inoff work, his expressive Polichi- nelle. Miss Casieri and Joan Kies will play numbers by Brahms, Intermez zo Op. 118, No. 2, and Rhapsody Op. 79. No. 2, respectively. ; Other pianists will include Ana mae Kehoe playing Polka from L'Aee d'Or by Shostakovich; Sly- via Dominquez with Poulenc's First Movement from Suite for Piano, and Carole Bauer interpreting Cir cus and Sacro Monte, both by Tu- rina. Vocalists participating in this mu sical will include Yvonne Da- mien singing Chacun Le Sait from the opera La Fille Du Regiment by Donnizetti. Madonna Toney will sing Donnizetti's Regnava Nel Si- lenzio from Lucia di Lammer- moor, and Mary Olson will interpret Una Voce Poco Fa from The Barber of Seville. Joan Doherty will sing Puccini's 0 Mio Babbino Caro from Gianni Schicchi. and Marilyn Zanke will sing Dell'Aqua's The Swallows. Ac companying the vocalists will be Miss Bauer, Miss Casieri, and Miss Sklavounos. Moonyeen Brown will perform at the organ the Toccata and Fugue in D Minor by Bach, and Suzanne McBride will play Beethoven's Ro mance in F on the violin. Miss Kehoe will accompany. Freshman talent will blossom out amidst April showers at 1:10 p.m., on April 12 at the Freshman con cert. Singers welcoming springtime will be Mary Ann Stepps sing ing the Musetta Waltz Song by Puccini; Patricia Coakley singing Carmena by Wilson, and Cecilia Mei singing II Bacio by Arditi. Joanne Gilmore, Sally Ann Lipinski, and Mona Cahill will accompany. The singing strings of Joyce Dris- coll's violin will offer Drdla's Sou- venicr as an addition to the after noon's entertainment. Mary Ellen Burg will accompany. At the organ Lynn Sharkey will play Clouds by Ciega, Diane Szara- dowski will play Massanet's Ange- lus, and Jean Lindsay will play Bourree and Musette by Chenoweth. Artists at the piano will include Janet Russ playing Golliwogg's Cake-Walk by Debussy, Miss Burg performing Liszt's Rhapsody, No. 6, and Anamae Kehoe playing Polka from L'Age d'Or by Shostakovich. Easter Recess Opens Friday, March 23 The Easter recess begins on Fri day, March 23, and continues (through Monday, April 2. Classes will meet on Tuesday, April 3. According to the Student Hand book, an absence from the last class in any subject before a recess or from the first class after a re cess is counted as a triple absence. * L* N * J 1 y ** * ** . v. lt; -' Vol. XXVI Mundelein College, Chicago 40, Illinois, March 19, 1956 No. 10 Turn Your Talents Into Cash Others rYre Doing It If you have both cash and confi dence in the future you will be in terested in some of the ways you can invest a little idle money and receive something valuable in re turn. The SAC-sponsored Expansion drive, whose deadline is April 13, has set students in action. Methods of fund raising are ingenious. Bargains include gleaming shoe- shines by Rosemary Esposito. Ann Faso is decorating Easter eggs that look like people. Geraldine Burke is making lilies land irises of plastic. Artists Alvena Schell and Susan Chopek will paint your portrait. Marilou McCambridge, Ann Coe, and Lynne Sheeran are cutting and styling hair, to raise money. Alice Bourke is painting and selling little figurines and salt and pepper shak ers. Michaella Burton is giving mani cures, and Adele Keane is analyz ing hand writing. (Continued on Page 4, Col. 1.) French Movie Presents Tale Of Adventure Abdullah locked in a castle pris on, had but one thought in mind to save his beloved donkey, Bim. Late at night, Messaoud, son of the ruler of the small oriental is land, saw robbers come and carry Bim off. Quickly he freed Abdullah from his prison and, together with several other children, they cast out to sea to save Bim. The exciting sea chase and the happy-ever-afterwards ending of the charming story by the modern French poet, Jacques Prevert, will be brought to the screen by the French department, April 3, at 9, X 11, The story of Le Petit Ane, a favorite with French children, was previewed for the American public in Coronet magazine in January. The entire student body is invited to the showings of the film. PARAP YP.HmnRY is the topic of a recording Psychology maj- rnnnrniunuLuai ors MarilynLindahlt Caroi Zoitek, and Dor othy Mehalek are playing in preparation for a colloquium tomorrow. Psychology Colloquium Will Consider Exceptional io, ii, i,and 2 p.m.( in Room a?: Mental Experiences Recent publicity given to the story of Bridey Murphy has raised many questions about the nature of exceptional mental ex perience. Administrators Join Other College Heads In Panels, Faculty Lecture, Write Sister Mary John Michael, B.V.M., President of the College, will serve with a panel of college presidents in a dis cussion at the annual convention of the National Catholic Educational association, in St. Louis, Easter week. At the North Central association convention at the Palmer House, April 9, Sister will preside at one session of the President's Workshop, sponsored by the North Central Association committee on Liberal Arts education. Senior and Junior Psychology majors will consider some of these questions in a colloquium on Para psychology, Tuesday, March 20, from 2 to 4 p.m., in the Residence hall. Parapsychology is the study of cxtranormal phenomena, including mental telepathy and clairvoyance. Current questions about it in clude the following. Is extrasen sory perception or response to an external event not presented to any known sense a fact? Marilyn Lindahl is chairman of the colloquium. Dorothy Mehalek and Carol Jean Zoitek are leaders of the discussion which will be initiated by a recorded lecture on Parapsychology by Gardner Mur phy. Ph.D., director of Psycholog ical Research at the Menninger Foundation, Topeka, Kansas. Sister Mary Donald, Dean of Studies, will take part in a panel discussion at the North Central's Workshop for Academic Deans. Topic of the panel, April 10, will be Providing for the Intellectual Stim ulation of Students. Sister Mary Irma, moderator of The Review, is represented by three poems in the Second Ameri ca Book of Verse, edited by James Edward Tobin with a Foreword by Father Harold C. Gardiner, S.J., literary editor of America. Titles of Sister's poems, all of which appeared first in America, are Song About Si- car, The Youth of a Girl, and English lb. Sister Mary Benedict, chairman of the departments of Education and Psychology, will be chairman of a panel discussion, Meeting the Needs of the Gifted Students, at the Illinois Congress of Classroom Teachers, at Northern Illinois State college, De Kalb, April 14. Sister Mary Ann Ida, chair man of the Philosophy depart ment, will present a paper on Freedom and Human Nature in Spinoza's Philosophy, at the national convention of the American Catholic Philosophi cal association, in Cincinnati, April 4. A short summary of the paper appeared in the January issue of New Scholasticism, and the entire paper will be published in the An nual Proceedings of the associa tion. Sister is a member of the As sociation's Executive council. (Continued on Page 3, Col. 4) You Think You Have Dog's Life? Ask Marcus Marcus, a rough coated collie, visited a Speech class recently. He, too, is working for a degree. Annette Lubker brought her dog to school to assist with her demonstration talk. Marcus proved that he could heel, sit, stay, down stay, and retrieve. Miss Lubker pointed out that dogs may be candidates for the de grees of CD, companion dog; CDX, companion dog excellent; and UD, utility dog. To be eligible for a degree, a dog must pass a comprehensive exam ination in exercises which include scent discrimination. Marcus is a CDX. Sodality Plans Program On Holy Week Liturgy Sodalists will be re-educated to llic Holy Week liturgy during a panel discussion. March 21, in Room 405 at 4:10 p.m. Janet Kennedy, chairman, Mari lvn Zanke, Maureen Sweeney, Mary Jule Greeley, and Valerie Luback will discuss the restored ' )rdo of Ilolv Week, so that stu dents may take a devout and per sonal part in this year's renewed Lenten services. The solemn procession of the nalms, evening Masses on Holy Thursday, distribution of Holy Communion during afternoon li turgical celebrations on Good Fri day, are important points in the restored liturgical rite. 55 Seniors Are Doing Student Teaching Fifty-five seniors are doing stu dent teaching this semester, under direction of the Education depart ment and through the courtesy of public and parochial school. Seventeen seniors are teach ing in two public and two Catholic high schools. Thir ty-eight are teaching in nine public and two elementary schools. At Amundsen High school Anna Manos teaches Bookkeeping; Di ane Barrett teaches Mathematics, and Joan Gallis teaches History. At St. Dominic High school, Jean Sieja teaches Biology, Elea nor Di Maggio teaches Music, and Loretta Lind, Mary Shearin, and Lucille Youngmann teach Drama. At The Immaculata High school, Beverly Battiste, Vivian Carroll, loan Debrecht, and Marilyn Fla herty teach Mathematics. Jeanne lood teaches English, Mary El len Schumann teaches History, and Patricia Stella teaches Shorthand and Typing. Teaching in Boone Elementary school are Frances Brennan, Sarah Rotto, Marie Sims, Mary Buckley, Mary Hartigan, Lillian Hartke, Barbara Mannix, and Elizabeth Nash. Anne Davidson and Helen Mal- ly teach at Budlong, and Sally Fitzgerald and Kathleen Walsdorf teach at Hibbard. At Kilmer are Kathleen Cronin, Nancy Grace, Ann Kobal, Joan Budicin, and Jane Doyle. At Pierce are Noreen Nutley, Denise Stanton, Doris Stryck, and Barbara June. Joan Mitchell and Barbara Quinn teach at Peterson, and Dorothy Lehman and Patricia Sullivan teach at Stone. Teaching at Swift are Helen Murphy, Rita O'Brien, Jane Pow ers, and Anne Jurkash. At Trum- bell are Anne Marie Fitzgerald. Patricia Gavin, Barbara Fischer, and Lillian Petitte. Teaching at St. Gertrude Ele mentary school are Mary Bufe and Ida Flando. At Our Lady of Lourdes Elementary school are Mary Ellen Casey, Mary Cecchin, and Gertrude Hale.
title:
1956-03-19 (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