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SKYSCRAPER Page Three isy with Card Party Business re Marilyn Garlock, Jeanette Traynick, Naureen Reynolds, and Mary Jean Wolfe, secretarial students who are assist- with preparations for 'the Card Party and Fashion Revue, to be held in the Grand Ballroom of the Stevens Hotel April 27. llle. Comes To Mundelein J Avid readers of MADEMOI- ILLE had a chance to look behind I scenes and see what the people produce the ideas on those ay pages are like, when Miss Long, midwest editor of MA- JlMOISELLE, and Miss Phyllis Schwalbe, College Board Edi- m, visited Mundelein on March 2, li part of their midwest college I Both Miss Long and Miss awalbe observed that the war u created a greater demand for Id school and career clothes. HE., they pointed out, is further- tbis attitude by presenting clothes t are practical as well as pretty. iitor, Novelist, Poet, Scenarist, To Judge Contest iKhor and producer John Farrow, a commander in the Navy, will tk the essays in the Creative Writing test, according to an announcement Ike English department, which spon- the contest. niton Kilmer, son of the famous rid War I poet, Joyce, and of Aline ler, also a recognized poet, will C the poems submitted to the Po- division of the contest. Mr. Kilmer joetry editor of the Washington (D. ; POST. Ion Lane, managing editor of the iago Daily News, will judge the brials, and Robert C. Brodcrick, fic- icditor of the Bruce Publishing com- r, will be judge of the entries in the temporary Criticism division, writer of fiction himself, the Rev- Leo Ward, C.S.C., professor of Itjish at the University of Notre Dame, I judge the short stories. I entries must be submitted in Room on or before April 11. phomores Invite Freshmen to Fair Come to the County Fair is the itation extended to the freshmen by i sophomores for their Saint Pat h's Day party, this afternooon in gymnasium, from 3 to S. There I be games, fortunes, caricatures, I even the famous Blarney stone, insure a good time for everyone. What Qoes On ... IV ffANY of us have taken economics, * and, doubtless, many of us have visited the Federal Reserve Bank, but few of us have reviewed our knowledge of the Federal Reserve for a member, an executive at that, of the System I On the Illinois Central last Friday, en route to school from the far south side, Freshman Donna Dallager was studying for an economics test, and was being coached by Sophomore Jean Ryan. When they came to the defects and disadvantages of the System, which Miss Dallager recited, a kindly-looking man standing near the two students could restrain his interest and his amuse ment no longer. As manager of the Federal Reserve, he told them, he was interested in their outline of the System and in their recital of its defects. He invited them to visit the dank, offered to give them any information they needed, and left them, wishing Freshman Donna good luck in the test. THE hairdresser's cry of Down with * the pompadour has been taken lit erally by many Mundelein students, as new flat-on-top hairdo's testify. Sport ing the new trend and thus changing many an appearance are: Rita Erbach, Maureen Mcaley, Margaret Jean Burke, Patricia Kelly, Audrey Tobin, Larraine Knaub, Beatrice Johnson, Patricia Fin negan, Janet Herrmann, Frances Kelly, Katherine Georgouses, Jane Lyons, Mary Muldowney, Marion O'Brien, Rita Anderson, Chloris Freeman, Celia Kilgariff, Dorothy Cullen, Irene Ken ney, Betty Jayne Lang. Ruth Lichten- walter, Bernadette McSweeney, E3dy Jo Noonan, Jeanne O'Toole. Joan Pierik and Marie Nordby. Romance Conies To Roundtable A spirit of romance was in the air at the English Roundtable meeting, March 9. Jane Kowalski, chairman, introduced Irene Foster, who discussed the scientific origin of leap year, after which Mary Catherine Tuomey traced the historical aspects of Feb. 29. Entering the realm of literature, Mary Davy read excerpts from The Merchant of Venice, and Mary Grace Carney discussed Queen Victoria's pro posal to Prince Albert. American romance was represented by Jayne King's recital of parts of The Courtship Of Miles Standish and Charlotte Smith's acount of Pocahontas and John Smith. The meeting closed with Mary Burns' report on the suitors for the hand of the present Princess Elizabeth of England. Secretaries Open Business Office Believing that experience is the best teacher, students in the secretarial de partment have established a business office for the handling of correspon dence for the S.A.C. Card Party and Fashion Revue, to be held April 27. Marilyn Garlock, general chairman, is assisted by Naureen Reynolds and Leona Brandt in the mailing depart ment, and Jeanette Traynick in the accounting department. Assisting1 the chairmen are Kay Fre da, Mae Hughes, Doris Kapke, Betty Jayne Lang, Lois Leghorn, Eileen Ro gers, Jacquelyn Schroeder, Irene Shan ahan, Patricia Sheeren, Eloisc Thomas, and Mary Jean Wolfe. Mimeographing letters, duplicating re ceipts, and typing envelopes are some of the duties performed by the secre tarial students. Former Debate Coach Is Now Navy Officer A pioneer Faculty member of the College, William H. Conley, M.B.A., formerly debate coach here and also, formerly, dean of Wright Junior col lege, has been commissioned a lieu tenant in the Navy, and is now at Princeton university taking an in doctrination course. Mr. Conley gave up his work at Mundelein and at Wright to serve with the Office of Price Administra tion, and subsequently, from June, 1942, until Feb., 1944, he was director of publications for the Naval Air Technical Training center, at Navy Pier. 1943 Dietitians Join U.S. Army Lecture for Home Economics Students Students in the home economics de partment heard success stories on March 8 from two graduates of Feb ruary, 1943, Sally Cahill and Jane Champion, both of whom have com pleted their dietetics internships and are members of the American Dietetic asso ciation. Miss Cahill, who completed her in ternship at the University of Maryland Hospital in Baltimore, has received a second lieutenant's commission in the Medical Corps. Miss Champion, who took her intern ship at Cook County Hospital, has also received her appointment as an Army dietitian. In their talks to the students, these Alumnae stressed the need for nutri tionists, in peacetime as well as in war time, and mentioned the value of every course required of the undergraduates in the department of home economics. Sees St. Thomas In Quest of Two Types of Truth Oils, Carvings Are in Exhibit (Continued from page 1, column 5) Constance Mary Rowe, Thomas Der rick, Mary Finnegan, David Jones, Hope Hawthorne. Norman Kamps, Sister Adele, Sister Mary Fluerette, B.V.M., Sister Helena, O-S.F., Alfonso Ossorio, and Denis Tegetmeier. All the artists exhibited are inspired by Catholic philosophy and strive for gooodness and truth in art. Their aim is to return to simplicity and honesty, and to counteract the prevailing error in art by creating works which appeal to the intellect rather than to the senses. 452 High School Seniors Come for Scholarship Tests Escorting 452 high school student? through the buildings and answering in numerable 64 questions were SO fresh men on the past two Saturdays, when scholarship examinations were given for seniors in high school. Preceding the liberal arts examinations, given to 368 seniors on March 4, five members of the Alumnae association presented a forum on Careeers for Col lege Women. Hostesses for the drama and music scholarship contests on March 11 were Suzanne FVischc, Rosemary Tierney, Bcrniccc Bielawa, Margaret Cashman, Mary Agnes Williams, Virginia Lee, Noreen Braum, Patricia Hereley, Rose mary Comfort, Rosemary Lloyd, and Patricia Czarnecki. Resident student hostesses on March 4 included Joan Klene, Suzanne Sauter, Marianne Schmidt, Maureen Mealey, and Donna Mooney- Escorting the liberal arts contestants were Lois Sweeney, Marianne Peter son, Virginia Grimes, Helen Finn, Olga Lubezny, Rosemarie Meyer, Gloria Ma loney, Dolores Cervenka, Adelaide Cos tcllo, Rita Stalzer, Peggy Cole, Grace Foran, Virginia Rogers, Betty Ward. Also among the hostesses were Pat ricia Finnegan, Lorraine Murley, Pat ricia Branigan, Marion Cuicci, Dorothy Fahrenbach, Mary Alice Courtney, Beth Goodwillie, Mary Cannon, Muriel Millar, Dorothy Klcmedt, Patricia Ry an, Josephine Cuneo, Dorothy Case, Lorraine Gross, Joan Shea, Dorothy Breit, Mildred Gethncr, and Patricia Schultz. Play Bach at March Concert An all-Bach program, including pre ludes, fantasies, a concerto, and fugues, delighted listeners at the Musicale, on March 16. Lorraine Heffernan played the two part Invention in B, No. 14, and Rose mary Viglione and Lillian Loguidice played Sicilienne, by Bach-Maier. Jean Macferran played Preambule, after which Barbara Ann Frick and Margaret Cashman interpreted Myra Hess' two-piano arrangement of Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring. Mary Lou Gulick contributed the Fantasie in C Minor, and Beth Goodwil lie and Suzanne Firsche played a two- piano selection, Sheep May Safely Graze. Gloria Maloney played Prelude, No. 2, and Gloria Bennett's selection was Fugue, No. 2. Marilyn Mott played Partitia in C Minor, and Muriel Mein ken closed the program with the third movement of the Italian Concerto. Defining philosophy as the intellec tual search for truth, and sanctity as the search for Almighty God, the Rev erend Desmond A. Schmal, S.J., proved in his lecture, March 9, on St. Thomas, Philosopher and Saint, that the great thirteenth-century Dominican dedicated his life to this two-fold quest. The great task of St. Thomas, Father Schmal pointed out, was to purge Aris totelian philosophy from the dross laid over it by the Arabian philosophers, Averroes and Avicenna, whose errone ous interpretations of Aristotle were widely influential in the thirteenth cen tury. Stresses Simplicity Father Schmal, professor of philoso phy at St. Mary-of-the-Lake seminary and a distinguished linguist and theologian, insisted that St. Thomas achieved his great intellectual work and attained sanctity by the complete sim plicity of his life. A student, a scholar, a philosopher whose heart was completely drawn to God, St. Thomas. Father Schmal ob served, was a man of true simplicity, who, with singleness of purpose, lived, both exteriorly and interiorly, with one aim in view to approach ever nearer to the Fcnt of Goodness. Citing the Summa Contra Gentilt Books Two, Chapters Two, Three, and Four as evidence of the philosophical and religious tone of St. Thomas' life, Father Schmal noted that St. Thomas insists that the study of creatures leads man to see errors in his views about God. Notes View of Error St. Thomas knew, Father Schmal said, that error, and therefore false philosophy about creatures, leads men's minds away from God, an evil which the great philosopher saw as the depth of degradation, both intellectually and morally. His search for philosophical truth, therefore, Father Schmal concluded, led St. Thomas to a greater knowledge of God, and helped to make possible the high degree of sanctity which he com bined with his intellectual genius. Enact Comedy at French Club Meet Members of the French club will pre sent the comedy Rosalie at their meet ing of March 23. Esther Velis will portray the naive Rosalie; Eleanor Arends plays the im petuous Monsieur Bol, and Eugenia Gregory will be the frivolous Madame Bol. The meeting will conclude with the singing of the La Marseillaise. What Do You Know of Safety? Have you formed safe habits? Put-THAT-Away-Wcck is to remind you that even if you manage not to trip over your own feet, someone else might trip over them. 1. Arq your books left in the middle of the aisle? Yes No 2. Do you leave objects on stair ways ? Yes No 3. Do you keep your locker door closed? Yes No 4. Do you put cafeteria chairs back under the table? Yes No.... 5. Do you return trays to tray ta bles? Yes No 6. Do you return milk bottles to the proper places? Yes No 7. Do you encourage your small brothers and sisters to put away toys, games, etc.? Yes No
title:
1944-03-17 (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
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coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College