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Page Four SKYSCRAPER Sophomores Lead Tuesday Bowlers Team No. 7 Holds First Place in Mixed League Two undefeated Sophomore Bowling teams are sharing the honor of first place in the Tuesday afternoon bowling league. Sophomore Team I, under the captaincy of Lorraine Niski and includ ing Dolores Popiel, Patricia Daily, and Mary Jane Rowantree, has won 3 games and as yet has not suffered a loss. Dolores Shannon, captain of Sopho more Team II, whose members arc Rosemary Kiley, Anita McCarty, and Eleanor Gaughan, also remains unde feated. High individual game for last Tuesday was scored by Anita McCarty with a 152 total, while Charlotte Powers and Rosemary Kiley placed second with 148 points. High individual series were awarded to Miss McCarty, 399. Patricia Shea scored 373, and Miss Kiley, 371. Team Number VII took first place in the Mundelein-Loyola Thursday evening Bowling league, with a total of 2240 pins, in Loyola's Bowling alleys. William Tilka, captain of the team which includes Catherine McLaughlin, Cathlcen O'Donaghue, and William Ken nedy, leads his team with a 208 high game and a 177 average. Patricia Sly, the highest Mundelein in dividual high score bowler, totaled a 157 game, while Beth Goodwillie followed with a 138 game and average. High games of 184 were scored by Vincent Alesi and Robert Matthies of Loyola. Four Survive Terrapin Try*Outs Terrapin try-outs held March 13 re sulted in forTr new members being admit ted to the swimming club. Mary Lou Hoiss, Mary Ann Mocklcr, Rita Buck ley, and Eleanor Roach successfully ful filled the aquatic requirements and ac cumulated the necessary 1000 points. Old and new Terrapins are now devel oping a water ballet to be given in May. This year the carnival will be built around a Walt Disney theme. Students Appear In Programs Six students, one sophomore, one jun ior, and four seniors participated in various off-campus programs recently. Edelle Boarini, sophomore soprano, starred in the Sacred Concert presented by the Mother's club of the Immaculate Conception parish of Norwood Park. In cluded among her selections were Yon's The Lord's Prayer, Dubois' All Ye People, Millard's Ave Maria, and Pranck's Panis Angelicus. Is full employment the government's responsibility? was the topic for a Round Table discussion between college speakers, senior Patricia Curran and junior Marion King, and two students from the University of Chicago, before a house audience at the Allerton hotel. Margaret Mary O'Leary, senior, re presented the college at College Day at Mercy High school. Speaking for Mundelein at St. lichael's high school career day was Edith Moscardini, senior. Irene Kenney, senior, was one of the judges at the annual St. Thomas Aquinas symposium held this year at Fenwick high school. Economists Discuss Socialized Medicine Economics classes will hear a discus sion of Socialized Medicine, on March 29, when Darleiic Cardott will defend the plan and Henrietta Turczynski will oppose it. Should We Have a System of Public Works was the question considered on March 21, in a debate with Mary Jule Gabler upholding the affirmative and Rosemary Bruck defending the nega tive. Jeanne Skepnek recently led a dis cussion on Economic Inequality, and Adelaide Costello and Imogene Mehan took part in a panel on Cooperatives. Freshmen economics students re cently visited the plant of Swift and Company, and were luncheon guests of Mr. Edward L. Rooney, district sales manager of the firm and father of Fresh man Eileen. Meal-Planners Prepare, Serve Nutritious Foods Budgets and meal planning activities of the Home Economics department in clude the preparation of special occa sion luncheons. Each meal planning class has been divided into families of five or six. Each student will plan and prepare what ever type luncheon she prefers and will entertain her family on a specified date and within a definite in come bracket. Realizing that food problems are vital problems, the Nutrition department has instituted a Student Information Center to be set up in the bookstore lounge, with its aim to enable students to dis cuss food problems, to leave sample menus for analyzation, and to receive advice on food values. Directors of the project are Genevieve Haiinon and Adelaide Costello, assisted by Peggy Cole, Norinne Condon, Mary Ann Hu ber. and Mary Jane McXeal. Touche Senior Wins Fencing League Medal Representing the college, Edith Mos cardini, senior drama major1, placed second in the Amateur Fencing League of America meet, at the University of Chicago on March 10. Miss Moscardini was awarded an en graved silver medal by the Fencing League which includes among its mem bers, Chicago university, Northwestern, llermanson School of Fencing, and Mundelein. Other participants in the round robin tourney were Eleanor Popell, Lucille Valctka, Mary Lou Kelly, Mary Lou Oberwise, Mary Charlene Beesley, Florence Sigler, Carol Draper, and Helen Kedlin. Miss Josephine Lafler is coach of the college team. Catholic University Dramatist Lectures Guest of the Laetare Players at their annual Laetare Sunday program on March 31 will be the Reverend Gil bert V. Hartke, chairman of the Dra ma department at the Catholic Univer sity of America. Director of what a recent issue of Time magazine called the most news worthy and perhaps the most notable of college drama schools, Father Hartke numbers among his students Ruth Shmigelsky '45, art major, who is doing graduate work at the Catholic university on a fellowship awarded for her excellent work in stage design at Mundelein. Alumna Addresses Advertising Class Distinguishing between advertising and publicity, and listing requirements for success in both fields, Jerry Stutz 45 addressed the members of the Ad vertising Copy-writing class on March 21. President of the Student Activities Council and an associate editor of the Skyscraper last year, Miss Stutz is now assistant director of Chicago Fash ion Industries. Both fields, Miss Stutz insisted, arc. in need of young women with sound ethical and philosophical training and with the originality and skill to com pete successfully with clever profession al writers. History Department Presents Forum In a four-fold discussion on March 22, the History department presented a forum on the principles and defects of the Articles of Confederation, the Con stitution of the United States,, the League of Nations, and the United Na tions Organization. Leading the discussions were Gerald ine Campbell, Marilyn McGrath, Celeste Coari, and Celeste Shannon. Informal discussion of the different phases of these subjects followed, with the entire group participating. Betty Jane Craw ford was the group chairman. I.R.C, Spanish Club Sponsor Quiz Match The International Relations club and Las Teresianas sponsored a quiz match at a joint meeting held on March 11. Modeled after a type developed at the University of Notre Dame, the contest considered Argentina under the head ings historical, cultural, economic, and political. Patricia Carroll and Patricia Cassidy were on the IRC team, and on the Tere- siansas team were Marilyn Woodworth and Eileen Hanlon. Ethel Dignan, president of Las Tere sianas, and Jeanne McNulty, president of the IRC, served as co-chairman. Sk Spring and Review Appear This Month (Continued from page 1, column 3.) is the tale of how an unusual Irish Army engineer startled his co-workers with his mad humor. She will tell you all about it in O'Malley At War. Everyone has a secret ambition. Some dream of invading the stratosphere. Miss Kenney wanted to play an oboe. She did. And left it on a streetcar, as she will explain in An Ill-Woodwind. Three short stories to appear in the coming Review include one by Mar ion King, who chooses a newspaper office for her setting. Grace Foran prescribes misunder standing and make-up in her nurse's-aide- and-intern love affair. To marry or not to marry . . . that is the question in the mind of Kathryn Malatesta's heroine. Kllenmac Quan finds fiction material in a sulky race and a golden filly. As usual, reviews play an important role in the college magazine. Among the books discussed are Gay's The Un- speakables, reviewed by Mary Ann Mock lcr ; Saul Alinsky's Reveille for Radicals reviewed by Patricia Holway and Frances Cook's Mrs. Palmer's Honey, reviewed by Margaret Mary Doyle. Gcorgianna McGregor reviews God and the Atom, by Ronald Knox; Patricia Muckian reviews Wartime Mission in Spain; and Collette Clifford reviews Power and Glory, by Grabame Greene. Philip Barry's Joyous Season, starring Ethel Barrymore is reviewed by Marilyn Tamburrino, and Marion King reviews The Late George Apley. Freshmen Greet High School Seniors Fifty-seven members of the freshman class were hostesses to the 368 high school seniors who took liberal arts scholarship examinations here on March 9. Scholarship examinations in Drama will be held on April 6. On the Reception committee were Mary Christie, Rosemary Cleary, Mary Lou Farrow, Catherine Fitzgibbon, Eileen Gibbons, Helen Golenko, Mary Jane Hopkins, Marian Hughes, Elizabeth Keubler, Barbara McGowan, Anne Marie McGrath, Mary Leona Merrick, Marie Murphy, Mary Jane O'Callakhan, Mary Popp, Patricia Roncy, Janet Tyler, and (iloria Volini. Ushers included Elinor Garvey. Jean Haiinaii, Mary Elizabeth McCabe, Lor raine Stajdohar, Mary Wood Stussy, Rita Szacik, and Mary Kay Tentinger. Tea-room hostesses included Merry Angelos, Bemita Barrett, Pauline Bell- andi, Lucille Ennis, Patricia Keenan, Bernadette Krnak, Mary Lyn Merwick, Mary Jo N'ewhart, and Helen O'Connell. Room hostesses were Elvira Anderson, Yvonne Bellamy, Rita Buckley, Patricia Emmerling, Eileen Faust, Mary Jane Frcy, Marina Giovanetti, Beatrice Gold- rick, Ruth Hannan, Mary Lou Oberwise, Lorraine Rosch, Marilyn Townsend, Jean Anne Trapp, Patricia Troy, Hen rietta Turczhnski, and Ruth Ward. Mary Case was general chairman of the hostess group, which also included Jeanne Curry, Mary Christie, and Cyn thia Knight. Hostesses at the Music Scholarship examinations on March 16 included Eileen Faust, Eunice Dankowski, Cath erine Prendergast, Margaret Cashman, Maryann Lynch, Regina Bellucci, Ida Ann Quintilliani, Carmclita Larocco, and Patricia Hayden. Studies Vatican Stamps udcraiunad . Spring millinery had an early debut at the Mu Nu Sigma dinner on March 12. With every color and style repre sented, the occasion was indeed a fash ion rhapsody that was music to thd ears . . . and eyes ... of onlookers. Even His Excellency, Bishop O'Brien, noticing the skyward trend in milady's head-gear, intimated that he knew no why Mundelein was built a skyscraper: At the speakers' table there was dis-j played a variety of bonnets. Patricia Curran wore a coachman's style felt of, light blue, and Eddy Jo Noonan a pouffj of rose net, perched on her brow. Halo ing Nancy Enzweiler's coiffure was al stunning affair of black satin and ruch-j ed tulle, fashioned after an eighteenth' century mob-cap. Presiding at the ticket-table were Rosemary Gormley in an off-thc-facej bonnet of black straw and ribbons, ana Barbara Brennan whose face was enj circled with niched satin in a delici strawberry ice cream shade. On Lucille Janda's brown hair perchq ed a chocolate brown sissy sailor o: fine roped straw, woven in the airy-' light pattern of a screen. Mary Jane Smith's chartreuse pill box was anj choree with a swathe of veiling. Marjorie Kroske caught back heflj black shoulder-length bob with a head band of gold-centered white daisesT Dolores Cervenka crowned her en semble with a brimlcss, modified-storej pipe felt in rich chartreuse. Ice blue satin composed Jeanne O'Toole's heart-shaped half-hat, and was repeated in the shirred and puffed peplum on her black crepe dress. Jane McMurray carried on the blue motif in her inverted bowl of navy milan strawj Mary Frances Padden had a carnival air in pink and black striped satin with a pointed crown. Garden blooms turned many girls into winsome Contrary Marys . . . par ticularly Aileen Ahern, with American beauty roses nestling in green ribbony Margaret McCormick, who accented her topper of red roses with blue veilJ ing, and Irene Kenney whose hat wal unforgettably simple . . . one red rosej one cream rose, perched on her brow Alumnae, too, haven't forgot that thd hat makes the woman, even when the woman makes the hat. Jayne King '45 modeled a spray of powder-blue feath crs over her widow's peak. Mar/ Grace Carney wore one rose and a bumper of deep purple violets jus brushing her forehead. The crown of Jerry Stutz's shiningfc feather cut was encased in a skullcap of red and royal blue knots and loops. Not to be outdone, lower classmen have set their caps for Spring also. Aj quick survey reveals that Katherine Burwitz possesses a bonnet of pinfl violets whose stems point ccilingward Barbara Fallon, too, is in the pink,' with roses of that shade topping beige straw. Jean Halm, still undecided, still vact lating between, ribbons and/or flowcts, wonders if she might borrow Tool Brcneman's Breakfast-in-Hollywood prizewinner to wear in the Easter Patj ade. The creator of that masterpiece, a miniature sink with an it-rcally-worlo water faucet, intended it to be proof that a woman will wear anything on her head. Jeanne Marie Horan, freshman stamp collector, is interested in the col lection of Vatican City Stamps in the library. The collection commemorates the Council of Trent. (Story on Page 1.) Lecture Stresses Elements of Poise Bring out your best and most charm ing self through correct posture, proped make-up. attractive hair style, basic and individual clothing, and the pultiva ticn of a beautiful speaking voice-.. This was the message of a film and lecture presented March 18 by the Pa tricia Stevens Modeling school before J members of the Home Management class. Emphasizing personality, poise, grooming as the three elements charm, the film outlined simple rules for achieving these qualities. and of
title:
1946-03-25 (4)
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