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SKYSCRAPER Pafce Three Bride of Fashion Revue Married Nov- 26 The fifth bride of Class '38, Mary Elizabeth Corby, who, incidentally, mo deled the bridal outfit in the Student Activities Council card party fashion revue last spring, was married on Nov 20 to William J. Gorman, Loyola grad uate and son of the late Congressman Gorman and of Mrs. W. J. Gorman. Another bride on Nov. 26 was Mary Frances Sullivan ex '38, daughter of Chief of Detectives and Mrs. John L. Sullivan, who was married to Francis William Hausmann, one-time editor of the Loyola News. Two other Thanksgiving season brides are Helen Ncwhouse ex '34, who was married on Nov. 23 to Anthony M. Gross, and Virginia Hanley ex '39, who was married on Nov. 24 to Henry P. Walsh, Jr. The engagement of Florence Griffin '38 to Raymond O'Kcefe was an nounced recently. Research Necessary, Scientists Declare Vienna Choir Boys Swing, Sing, and Eat Ice Cream By Frances Geary Behind the artistic performance of It looked impossible to tear the 20 Vienna Choir, on Nov. 20, behind bo gt;s away irom the Si'tn but it was how effective a signal for General agreement about the need for research by the teacher of under graduates, but wide divergence as to the amount of research compatible with efficient teaching, marked the discus sion by 35 scientists at the Catliolic Round Table of Science which was held here, Nov. 19. The Reverend Mar tin J. Phee, S.J., head of the biology department at Loyola, acted as chair man. Of the value of even a limited amount of research, Father Phee pointed out that many eminent research scientists have achieved their great work through the synthesis of small pieces of re search done by a number of teachers in a number of undergraduate colleges. The discussion on What Is Life? hinged around the two foremost the ories for explaining the phenomena of life, the Mechanistic theory and the hypothesis of the Vital Principle. The Reverend John F. McCormick, S.J., head of the philosophy daptrcmcnt oi Loyola university, remarked that then- is little difference between the two theories if the Vital Principle is con strued simply as force since life is not force, and since the adherent to the vitalis'.ic theory must admit a strange balance between Matter and Force when Death occurs and must answer the question, What Happens to Force at Death? Concluding the discussion. Father Mc Cormick pointed out that, with science unable to find in the universe an efficient cause for life, it is reasonable to con clude that a Creator cooperates with the forces of nature to produce it. the their exquisite singing and music tech nique, were 20 boys boys having def inite characteristics in common with American boys love of noise, love of sports, and love of ice cream. Comprising a miniature boy's town, the Choir members sang their way into the hearts of their Mundelein audience and afterwards entertained some of them in formally with their accomplishment in gymnastics. Before and after the con cert, the boys took possession of the gymnasium. They made themselves at home, swinging perilously high on the rings, climbing to unexplored heights on the ropes, somersaulting on the horses, and jumping over the net. From end lo end, the gymnasium echoed and re-echoed with unfamiliar noise the excited chatter of 20 boys in German. There was Ralph, who we discov ered, was chief interpreter among the boys. He had been to America four times before so he had become quite a veteran at speaking English. From him we learned that the singers were on their way to Denmark and Norway where they were to be pre sented again in concerts, and from there they would return to Vienna to resume their studies with the 40 other members of the Choir. surprising now enective a ice cream could be. The rings and ropes remained swinging for several minutes but the 20 boys were down in the tea-room in less than several sec onds. Ice-cream, we discovered, is as popular across the ocean as it is here. Sharing ice-cream with the Choir boys were Lazi and Ilansi Medgyesy, small sons of the Hungarian consul, who had come to applaud the singers. The concert, however, had not been concluded with the fourth encore in the auditorium. Grouped on the stairway, the Choir sang in English the Star Spangled Banner in honor of the St. Gertrude's boy choir, which had attended the concert. When the last notes of the anthem had died away and Conductor Gomboz gave the signal, the singers dashed up the stairs for a final five minutes in the gymnasium before, marshalled by the youthful Schwes- ter, they donned their sailor coats and marched away. Appear in Radio, Stage Programs Peter Maurin Talks To Sociology Group Promotion of the brotherly love in troduced by Christianity is the only so lution to modern economic and social problems, according to Peter Maurin. prominent Catholic Worker enthusiast and associate of Dorothy Day, who lec tured on Tuesday to members of the sociology classes. Mr. Maurin advocates personal sacri fice and a return to the principles ot Christian virtue, maintaining that under the present system of capitalistic des potism, money, rather than knowledge or good works, is the standard criterion. Loyola Professor Lectures Dr. Mary F. McCormick, professor of sociology at Loyola School of So cial Service, addressed an audience of sociology students last Monday, on scientific case work. Dr. McCormick defined case work and stressed the distinction between it and neighborliness. The essential dif ference in the two, she told the group, lies in the application of scientific prin ciples and the utilization of organized knowledge on the subject. Socialists Discuss Phases of Justice Sodality members, at a general meet ing yesterday, discussed the Catholic Way of Life, and made plans to send delegates to the first College Cisca Forum of the year, to be held at the College of St. Francis, Joliet, on Dec. 4, and lo the Mis sion Sunday observance, sponsored at Holy Name Cathedral, Dec. 4, by the Society for the Propagation of the Faith. Twenty-one members of the Sodality attended the thirty-fifth general Cisca meeting, at Alvcrnia high school, on Nov. 26, discussing the general topic. Economic Justice for All Classes. Delegates included Clare Anderson, editor of the New World Cisca page, Mary Lou Bell, Virginia Brady, Phyl lis Borelli, Jane Brown, Margaret Mary Brown, Helen Coens, who was recently elected prefect of the St. Ig natius sodality, Dorothy Fitzgerald, Dorothy Homan, Marie Kiobcge, Julia Krawiec, Rosemary Lanahan, Florence Lubasli, Helen Lufen, Isabel Molloy, Joan Morris, Helen Printy, Mary Jane Sheridan, Georgette Thoss, Betty Ves- lal, and Helen Sheahan. Qeorgia Jean Stars In Marionette Shoiv (Continued from Page 1, Col. 5) Kathryn Kospctos is in charge ot printing the tickets. Programs have been designed by Georgene McGowan with Frances Kane, Patricia Ellis, and Marion Dyer providing advertising pos ters. Harriet Ashton is contributing mu sical and sound effects. Others who are helping in the production are Mary Gertrude Maerk, Myrna Lamont, Mary Ellen Kelly, Rosemary Degnan, Ruth Van Hcule, Susan Schmidt, Dorothea Cwik, Mary Burnikel, Joan Morris, Rosalyn Miller, Vcrnette McGinty. Jeanne Kane, Patricia Ellis. Rosemary O'Donnell. Helen Murphy, Helen Mc Guire, Alice Reid, Josephine Stanton and Jane Bernstein. Proceeds of the Marionette show will be used for charity. Five drama students appeared re cently in off-campus theatricals, both on the radio and before local and sub urban audiences. Marie Vonesh presented a program of readings before the Berwyn Welfare association, on Oct. 27, before the Ber wyn Woman's club, on Nov. 2, and be fore a student assembly at Morton Junior college, on Nov. 18. Joan Morris was a member of the cast of the musical comedy Around the Clock, recently staged by St. Jerome's parish players, and Helen Coens gave a group of readings before the St. Ger trude's Mothers' club, on Oct. 20. Lucille O'Connell and Marian Mc Dermott have appeared in radio pro grams, -Miss McDermott singing over WGES, and Miss O'Connell taking a role in WJJD's Down Story-Book Lane program, which stars Jean Spanuth ex '41. Christmas Shop Shows Gifts, Cards Sh I it's a secret, but Santa Claus really doesn't leave all the presents around the tree while every one is sleeping Christmas Eve somebody has to buy some of them. For some good suggestions for gifts, visit the book store lounge and see the complete selection offered by the Gift Shop. You can buy some of your presents there before the Christmas holidays without being jostled about in the loop crowds. You might select a crucifix or statue for the house. Your mother would prob ably appreciate a gold rosary or a Mis sal, and dad would find keen delight in a book. Sisters and girl friends always ap preciate compacts and manicure sets; and neither Brother Bill nor Friend Bob will refuse a tie clip, or, again, a good book. Even the baby won't be overlooked not when you spy the miniature zylo- phone complete with instructions for playing the familiar nursery rhymes. And ii it's cards you're buying the Gift Shop can show you even more than 57 varieties. 193 8 Seniors Study Persons,Plants With Camera Lens Sophomore to Test Advertising Slogans You may know that When it rains, it pours and even that they satisfy but, if you don't recognize the product that the slogan identifies, the advertise ment has lost its point. As a psychological experiment, Vir ginia Cheetham has prepared a ques tionnaire to find out whether radio or visual advertising is more successful, whether you remember that Jack Benny eats Jello in the six delicious flavors, or whether the girl with the big smile inside the magazine cover has the Pep- sodent smile. The test is to be given to the psy chology classes and the results will be announced later. Council to Sponsor Christmas Charities Interest was still life through the eyes of the camera has taken hold of Marie Nack and Lucille Trudeau, though their subjects are fields apart. Miss Nack, senior fine arts major, is interested in trick portraits. With her Jiffy Eastman Kodak, she is taking pictures of all the members of the Art club, and is developing them in her dark room at home. With Irene Waldron, Miss Nack plans to compile the pictures into a book, together with action pictures of the artists on the eighth floor, which she will take later in the year, as a com posite of the year's activities of the work of the Art department. Miss Trudeau, senior chemistry ma jor, is using her experimentation in camera studies as her senior project. Willi a Century camera equipped with a Doppol-Anastigmat-Mcyer Goerlitz lens, a gift to the Chemistry department by Professor George M. Schmeing, Miss Trudeau is picturing the develop ment of Marie Lynch's senior project of the study of soilless growth. The prints, which are 5 x 7 , are devel oped in the dark room in the chemistry laboratory. Realizing the need for organization of the various Christmas charities tra ditional among the clubs and classes, the Student Activities Council will this year be in charge of the collection and distribution of all gifts. No student, in consequence, will be asked to con tribute to more than one project. Each class will work as a unit under the Council, and contributions may be given either to the class projects, which will include the preparation of 20 baskets of food, or to one of the club or departmental projects, all of which will be supervised by the Coun cil. Physicists Learn About Cosmic Rays Rosemary Conley, Helen Holman, Lor etta Klodzinski, Grace Nolan, Virginia Pelletier, and Dorothy Sugrue, students in the modern physics class, attended the annual Chicago meeting of the American Physical society, at the University of Chi cago, Nov. 25 and 26. Recent work in Cosmic Rays, mysteri ous phenomena on which Dr. Arthur H. Compton of Chicago has done extensive research, was the topic at the Friday morning session. Much of the program for the two days concerned atomic structure and the trans mutation of elements by bombarding pen etrating particles. Among the papers read were those en titled The Significance of Sidereal Time Variations of Cosmic Rays, Diurnal Var iations of Cosmic Rays on the Pacific Ocean, Production of Penetrating Cos mic-Ray Particles by Photons, New Evi dence for the Existence of Penetrating Neutral Particles, and On World-Wide Changes in Cosmic-Ray Intensity. (Continued from Page 1, Col. 1) APRIL Chicago Catholics celebrate episcopal anniversary of Cardinal Mundelein . . . Princess Elizabeth of Great Britain celebrates her twelfth birthday . . . stocks drop to new lows . . . Cardinal O'Connell warns that bolshevism is burrowing in in the U. S. . . . Vati can's concordat with the Vienna gov ernment comes lo an end . . . Cath olic organizations in Salzburg and Linz are dissolved . . . U. S. notes twenty- first anniversary of the signing by Woodrow Wilson of the resolution of Congress declaring that a state of war is thrust upon the U. S. by the German government . . . first lady of the Royal Family of Broadway opens in WHITE- OAKS in Manhattan . . . British govern ment refuses to promise aid to Czecho slovakia or any country east of the Rhine in case of aggression . . . Pre mier Leon Blum resigns . . . M. Dala- dier forms new French government . . . Vatican Easter ceremonies close with canonization of three new saints, Fa thers Andrew Bobola, Salvador la Her- ta, and Giovanni Leonardi . . . MAY Official Catliolic directory puts number of Catholics in U. S.. Hawaii, and Alaska in 1938 at 21,451.460 . . . Felix Schlag, Chicago sculptor, designs new Jefferson nickel . . . daylight sav ings time goes into effect . . . Imperial Japanese Government pays U. S., through Secretary of State Cordell Hull, 2,214,007.36 for damage incurred through the Panay and Standard Oil Company tanker disaster . . . George Bernard Shaw founds National Theatre in London . . . biggest Navy appropria tion bill in U. S. peacetime history signed . . . Henry Ford and President Roosevelt confer at While House . . . Vatican formally recognizes the Fran co government in the exchange of en voys . . . French Rightists parade throughout France in Jeanne d'Arc day celebration . . . new immigration laws in Brazil place agrarian immigration on the preferred list . . . Generalissimo Franco orders rc-cstablishment of the Society of Jesus in Spain . . . Russia observes May Day . . . Joseph Stalin reviews the Soviet armed might in Red Square . . . Albania's King Zog I mar ries Countess Geraldine Apponyi of Hungary . . . franc is devaluated . . . Adolph Hitler, Benito Mussolini, and Vittorio Emanuele II meet in Rome . . . Pulitzer Prize for best play is awarded to Thornton Wilder for OUR TOWN and for best novel to John Phillips Marquand for THE LATE GEORGE APLY . . . JUNE John Aspinwall Roosevelt, youngest son of the President, marries Anne Lindsay Clark . . . United States Su preme Court ends one hundred and forty-seventh session . . . Cardinal MacRory blesses a 40-foot statue of St. Patrick in Ulster . . . Premier de Valera confidently continues his cam paign against partition . . . twenty- fourth International Labor Conference opens in Geneva . . . Four Catholic arc killed in Villahermosa, Mexico, when they try to reopen churches ... In Bul garia, King Boris III opens new-elected Parliament, following a four-year dic tatorial regime . . . thirty-fourth Inter national Eucharistic Congress is held in Budapest . . . 120-foot Foucault pen dulum is hung in Mundelein College elevator shaft . . . Dionne quints cele brate fourth birthday . . . Ralph Gul- dahl wins Western Open Golf Cham pionship for third time . . . Colonel Charles Lindbergh collaborates with Dr. Alexis Carrol in the publication of CULTURE OF ORGANS. (To Be Continued) Qlee Club Plans Christmas Concert The Glee club, assisted by the Laetare Players, will present its annual Christ mas Program, Under the Stars, in the college auditorium on Sunday, Dec. 18, at 8:15 p.m.
title:
1938-12-01 (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