description:
SKYSCRAPER Page Three Dads Vote, Tool Elect Year's New Officers Mr. Ralph A. Neff, the new president of the Father's club, has a triple interest Mundelein his three daughters, Vir ginia '49, Marjorie '51, and Senior Lor- ttta. Succeeding Mr. S. E. McCarthy, first president and father of Valerye '52, Mr. M was elected Oct 14. Mr. Frank W.. Brennan, father of Freshman Frances, is the new vice- jjcesident, and Mr. J. E. D. McCarty, ItMr of Junior Anne, is corresponding lecretary. (Mr. B. F. Dawson, father of Junior loan, is financial secretary, and Mr. Jo- eph W. Czarnik, father of Junior Judith, is recording secretary. Mr. Alphonse M. Bruch, father of Senior Audrey and Freshman Leora, is treasurer. Father William P. Murphy, A.M., Pirman of the Religion department, is lerator of the Father's club. IRC Discusses hie of Qermany In Europe Today The Role of Germany in the European Federation is to be discussed by Frank Cavey of Loyola university, at the Oct. 125 meeting of the International Rela- lions club at 4 p.m. in Room 402. Following the lecture, Eileen Smyth will present slides of modern Western Germany. The admission fee for all who would Hie to attend is a can of food, to be sent sea Catholic orphanage in Germany. A monthly newsletter, The World, is being distributed by the IRC to inform its members and to announce future meet- Student Qroups Organize Retreats, Regional Meetings A Marian workshop will be held Sun- jday, Nov. 2, at Loyola university, spon sored by the Mariology commission of KFCCS. Theme will be the Marian or ganizations, which include the Sodality, the Legion of Mary, and the Fatima dubs. The various groups will be explained by the group leaders, and panel discus- jsions will be presented by each organiza tion. This all-day affair was planned at the recent NFCCS Orientation program at which Mary Cay Hannon and Margie Shannon were Mundelein representatives. A week-end retreat was held Oct. 24 to 26 at Childcrly, near Wheeling, spon sored by the NFCCS. Father Norman jWeyand, S.J., acted as the retreat master. JDoiores Sullivan and Betty' Garrity at tended. Plans for the NSA Regional aesembly Jo be held at the .University of Chicago the week-end of Nov. 7 to 9 took shape at regional staff meeting at Mundelein on Oct. 18. The program will be based on a dis cussion of basic policy in the NSA and specific projects for this year. It will m open Friday night and continue until :ns Sunday. Student council members as well as NSA representatives Barbara Baynes, Jfary Nikias, and Florence Clark are at- opl tending. It- sn tc ias tli- :he es: :m ac i re eri athetnaticians hook o Future and Jobs The woes and joys of a Mathematics Jteacher will be reviewed by Marjorie Juinn '52, now teaching at St. Mary's High school, at the next meeting of the Mathematics club. Audrey Zywicki '52 will explain her position in Industrial Mathematics at a later meeting. These and other similar balks will be presented in connection with the club's topic for the year Ca reers in Mathematics. S UD nir The People's Choice . . Lined up outside the polling booths in the lounge last week, students discuss their candidates. Stevenson won by 56 with a 56 per cent vote to Eisenhower's 44 per cent, according to members of the League of Women Voters who sponsored the mock election. (Story on Page 1.) Tuesday Musicales Open Tomorrow Varying in mood from the graceful melodies of Debussy to the sombre strains of Grieg, the program for the first Tuesday Musicale of the year is set for tomorrow at 3 p.m., in Room 703. Vera Eng will play Debussy's Arab esque in E Major, and Sylvia Kominek will interpret the Sonata in F Major by Mozart. Angela Favale will play Valse Bril- liante by Mama-Zucca, and Margaret Topp will present Cecil Burleigh's Winged Wing. Vocalist Marilyn Ziembicki will sing the Haydn number, My Mother Bids Me Bind My Hair, and Nancy Westphal will sing Grieg's Ich Liebe Dich. Final vocalist will be Mary Lou Hirsch, singing In Italy, by Boyd. Rose mary Ernst will be accompanist for the vocal numbers. Chemistry Club Qreets Pledges At Reception Purple corks containing miniature per iodic charts were badges of prospective members of the Chemistry club during Pledge week, Oct. 13-17. Alberta Ziomek, chairman, presided at a Pledge party in Philomena hall, Oct. 17 as a finale for the initiation period. Charades and games with a chemical twist were on the program. All pledges were required to secure sig natures of Faculty members and upper- classmen in the Chemistry club who rep resented the various elements. The aspiring chemists received into the club are Caryl Huck, Noreen Galvin, Irene Hojnacki, Jo Ann Crowley, Diane Malone, Rolene Wilson, Nijole Gulbin- ska, Barbara N'oell, Dolores Wagner, and Sue Kalnicky. SL u crctpinaS Homecomings with their inevitable display of chrysanthemums; football games, accompanied by blaring col lege bands, and the sight of student teachers painfully learning how to make goblins and pumpkins positively assure us that autumn is upon us. Autumn The Season of homecomings St. Joseph's college of Collegeville, Indiana, chose Constance Colletti as Homecoming Queen. Mary Kay Cum mings, Nancy Davidson, Shirley Sny der, and Mary Cay Hannon witnessed the splendor of the occasion. Nancy McHugh, Colette Carey, Mar ion Farrell, and Patricia Hanlon ex perienced an exciting weekend at Cham pagne. Kay Doogan, Joan Jiganti, Constance Butler, Helen Friel, and Eleanor Kretzer also attended the Uni versity of Illinois homecoming. Purdue homecoming attracted Ber nadette Filipski the weekend of Oct. 11. Patricia Quinn enjoyed the Pur due-Illinois game, Oct. 25, while Lor etta Soule cheered Marquette to vic tory. Touring the University of Notre Dame on a football weekend were Lor etta Neff, Mary Frances Kelly, and Rosita Fumo. Looking forward to Elmhurst col lege's homecoming is Mary Fellegi. Autumn -The Season of Weddings Wedding bells chimed for Germaine Rohlfing '50 and Walter Mulvihill, Oct. 11 at St. Gertrude church. Assisting the bride was Junior Mary Lou Rohl fing, maid of honor. More satin and lace was shown at the weddings of Ro salie Congino and Barbara Chalifoux, both ex '53. Nancy Fiske and Anita Sachs were their respective brides maids. Autumn The Season of Dances, Shows, and Plays While Patricia Winkler, Mary Lou Hirsch, and Dorothy Schneider were ushering at the Loyola Drama festival, Donna Fox was out front at the per formances. Mary Beth Hemmer and Regina Dowd were amused by the Fourposter, while Mary Jane Brady, Margie Shan non, Helen O'Toole, Nancy Westphal, and Edwina Kostanski were down the street seeing Guys and Dolls. Yolandi Volini attended the St. Luke's dinner for Loyola medical students, Oct. 18 at the Furniture Mart. Kay Wright is now talking about the Sonja Henie ice show. Autumn the Season for Elections The Eighth Street theater attracted Sybil Lillie, Barbara Williams, Dorothy gt; Hertl, and Joan Bruno, who heard Sen ator Nixon speak to the Young Re publicans. These girls met Clare Hill yard and Marjorie Duffy listening to Senator Nixon at New Trier, Oct. 17. Travel, Tours, Tempt Students, Faculty Travel is the keynote for the Home Economics department this fall. The southland of Springfield, Illinois calls to Home Economics. Faculty, Sister Mary Pierre, B.V.M., Sister Mary Re- nee, B.V.M., Rita Powell, A.M., and Jean Horgan, A.M., who will participate in the Illinois Home Economics associ ation meeting, Nov. 7 and 8. Sister Mary Pierre and Sister Mary Renee, enjoyed Minneapolis Oct. 21-24 while attending the annual convention of the American Dietetic association. A session on The Diet and Health Problems of the Western World and a panel concerning The College, The In ternship, The Individual interested Mun- delein's representatives. Twenty students of the department visited the Wholesale Food Market and the Produce . Terminal Cold Storage company, Oct. 16, to see how foods are handled from the market to the con sumer. The group included Sue Anderson, Janet Balko, Anastasia Gallagher, Joan Gamble, Joan Garrow, Mary Gonwa, Virginia Hayes, Patricia Hill, Marion Kmiecjnski, Carol Kunka, Charlotte Kwasigroch, Nancy Lee, 'Betty Mae Mc Donnell, Jean Munro, Patricia O'Shea, Roselyn Wojtkiewicz, and Kathryn Wright. Sodality Sponsors Marriage Lecture A summation of the marriage discus sions carried on at recent Sodality group meetings will be given by Father Wil liam P. Murphy, chairman of the Re ligion department, at a general meeting tomorrow in Room 405 at 1 p.m. For several weeks, individual groups have considered the qualities to look for in future marriage partners, the charac teristics girls seeking that vocation should develop, and the symbolism and beauty of the liturgy of the wedding ceremony and the Nuptial Mass. Sixth Student Directory Is Off Presses Mundelein's social blue book, the Stu dent Directory, still wet from the presses, is now on sale in the student lounge. Under the direction of the secretary of the senior class, Jeanne Leahy, much of the information was complied during registration week. Securing names, locker numbers, zones, telephone numbers, and other information were Seniors Patricia Hill, Mary Fellegi, Mary Mahoney, Bar bara Baynes, Mary Therese O'Connell, Betty Scotese, Yolanda Volini, Velma Mooney, Dolores Sullivan, and Betty Garrity. Other typists were Juniors Ruth Glea son, Ann Fitzgerald, and Margie Shan non. In charge of sales are Joan Gamble, Yolanda Volini, Mary Mahoney, Ruth Gleason, Sally Maguire, Jane Roach, Norma Galvin, Betty Scotese, Claire Hillyard, Mary Beth Hemmer, Mary Nikias, Virginia Doria, and Mary Gon wa. Election Guidance Found In Poem-Prayer The gravity of this year's elections and the need for guidance is stressed in a poem-prayer, My Election Prayer. Written by Father Francis C. Young, pastor of the Church of St. Juliana, the poem is on the Sodality bulletin board in the student lounge. Conventions Call Faculty North, South Sister Mary Donald, B.V.M., chair man of the Classics department, and Sister Mary St. Irene, chairman of the French department, represented Munde lein at a board meeting of the Chicago Catholic Language Teachers association, at Providence high school, Oct. 18. Sister Mary Rosemarie, B.V.M., and Sister Mary Arma Ruth, of the Music department, attended a Conductor's Workshop, led by Robert Shaw, at Roosevelt college, Oct. 20. Sister Mary St. Ida, B.V.M., director of admissions, represented the College at the national convention of the Associ ation of American Admissions Coun selors, in Des Moines, Oct. 13-15. Qerman Club Members Discuss Benefactor Monsignor John Rothensteiner, late censor liborum of the Archdiocese of St. Louis and largest single benefactor of the College Library, was the center of attention at the Oct. 17 meeting of Die Rothensteiner Gesellschaft Florence Savage, president of the Ger man club which takes its name from the Monsignor, described his life as a church man and a scholar, and listed some of his valuable contributions to the Rothen steiner collection in the library. First donation of Msgr. Rothensteiner to the College Library was a collection of 7500 books given in 1932. After his death in 1936, an additional 12,000 volumes came to the College. Distinguished by a special bookplate on the inside front cover, books in the Roth ensteiner collection include theology, phil osophy, patrology, classics, history, French, Spanish, German, and English poetry and prose, essays, letters, art, travel, and several rare early editions. Teaching Alumnae Will Meet To Exchange Ideas Helpful ideas and material gained through experience will be exchanged at the fall meeting of alumnae who have recently entered the teaching profession. The meeting will be held in the Col lege Social rooms with Loretta Gib bons '52, as chairman. Senior student teachers have been invited to attend. It will be held Tues day, Oct. 28, from 7:30 to 9 p.m.
title:
1952-11-01 (3)
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