description:
Page Four SKYSCRAPER College Chalks Up Another Victory In Bowling Match The College Bowlers won a three- line bowling match, on March 22, from the Barat college team, totaling 3557 pins to the latter's 3467. Mary Lou Walters won match high game, rolling 199. Elaine Feiereisel placed second with 187. Bowling for Mundelein were Miss Walters, Miss Feiereisel, Gerry Weber, Margaret Kane, Gerry Hoffman, Lor etta Williams, Jayne King, Irene Mi kos, Mary Jane Dukes, and Virginia Boots. Scores: Totals Mundelein 1222 1225 1210 3557 Barat 1144 1177 1146 3467 Athletic Points Aren't Rationed Start Your Work Noti gt; for May Awards If you aspire to an athletic award Do not wait to have your W.A.A. points recorded Points earned prior to Jan. 1, 1943, will be governed by the old system. Points earned since that time, will be ruled by the New 1943 Revised System. See the W.A.A. board for the point system. Class Athletic awards will be made at the W.A.A. Banquet in May. Class Awards Freshman minor letter 250 pts. .Sophomore sweater 500 pts. Junior major letter 750 pts. Senior gold medeal 1000 pts. Set Up Bona Fide Business Office For Card Party Commerce Group Organizes Committees Under Six Chairmen Spring Days Mean Contest Deadlines Skyscrapings .., Shuttlecocks Fly For Tournament Swimming Carnival To Be Ultra-Modern Badminton shuttlecocks commenced a consistent flight across the nets as the Badminton Doubles tournament opened on March 24. Competing are Josephine and Mau reen Roche; Dorothy Neybert and Lu ella Hildebrand; Mary Jane Kent and Florence Miller; Charlotte Robertson and Marian Fischer; Patricia Curran and Jeanne Doucette. These players, with Miss Hildebrand as captain, will form the newly organ ized College Badminton team, which will shortly meet the University of Chicago team. Exceptional music by the masters, colorful settings in an ultra-modern motif, and equally modernistic cos tumes will characterize the Annual Terrapin Water Carnival a fantasy in water ballet in which all members of the Terrapin organization will partici pate. Virginia Walsh, Terrapin president, has announced May 10, 11, and 12 as the dates of the Carnival. Transformation of part of the Com merce department into a bona fide office has been made to take care of correspondence for the S.A.C. Card Party. The class has elected Suzanne Shauman to act as general manager. Her assistants are Betty Clifford, mail ing department; Eileen Maher, pro duction; Suzanne Hager, records; Mary O'Brien, supplies; and Catherine Cun- ingham, contact manager. Helping the department heads arc Rita Bloedorn, Jane Carey, Margaret Mary Durkin. Mary Jean Gramse, Frances Hart, Rosemary Josephson. Muriel Kadison, Josephine La Mantia. Kathleen O'Donnell, Mary Ellen O'Farrell, Isabel Ohab, Sheila Roche, Rctty Spies, Patricia Stebbins, Dolores Urbain, Ruth Wagner, Dorothy Welch, and Jeanne Wogan. Cutting stencils, mimeographing form letters for advertisements, addressing, mailing, and typing scripts for the Fol lies arc some of the tasks the commerce students are doing in connection with the Card Party. Riflery Club Holds Town House Dinner The Town House is to be the scene of a dinner given by the Riflery club on April 7. Chief Otis Calloway, coach, Miss Eileen Scanlan, college athletic director, and club members will be guests. Student guests will include Pauline Pappas, Patricia Connell, Lorraine Mathieu, Lenore Bebr, Dorothy Schaar, Virginia Boots, Mary Margaret Flynn, Angela and Elaine Krieter, Ellen Pa tricia Ehle, Dolores Hartigan, Patricia Gallagher, Helen Kospetos, Marian Stoffel, Mary Martha Cooper, Patricia Curran, Margaret Creagh, Barbara Kaumanns, and Joan LaMontagne. Spirit of Norway Survives Blackout In spite of the technical and mental blackout in their country, the spirit of the people of Norway is hard as rock, declared Else Margrcthe Roed, Norwegian author, teacher, and work ing member of the underground press of Norway, in a lecture to history students on March 26, Sponsored by the Chicago Board of Education, Miss Roed is lecturing in the Chicago schools on the stand which Norwegian teachers have taken against the indoctrination-of-youth methods of the Nazi invaders. If a country shall live, some of its citizens must be willing to die, in sisted the lecturer, who believes that the Nazis would not now control Ger many if the teachers there had been more stubborn, and had been convinced of the value of their liberty. Stresses Value of Guidance in Talk To Future Teachers Vocational guidance is an extremely important part of the educational sys tem, stated Florence O'Callaban '37, assistant director of the Personnel Institute, in an informal lecture to the senior education classes, on March 26. Systematic guidance in schools is new, Miss O'Callaban explained, and it began because educators became alert to people rather than to processes. Miss O'Callahan pointed out that the primary concern of social and vocation al guidance is not with the curriculum, with the enrollment, nor with good dis cipline, but with the individual child, who is no longer considered just a member of a system, but who is looked upon as a distinct person preparing to take his place in society. Miss O'Callahan is president of the Mundelein Alumnae association. Party Pulse Beats Announce Dates for Artists And Authors Today, April 5, April 7, and April 14 are. respectively, deadlines for the Mundelein Creative Writing and Art contest; the Tablet Magazine contest; the Treasury Department Drama con test, and the Kappa Gamma Pi Short Storj contest. Judging the Mundelein contest in the various divisions will be the Rev erend John E. Riordan. S.J., retreat master this year, essays; the Reverend Thomas Butler Feeney, S. J., verse; Richard Sullivan, short stories; Thomas Barry, of the Chicago Sun. editorials; J. J. Keilly. author of Men and Books. reviews, and Florence Lloyd Hobman, national regional chapters director, the American Artists Professional League, art. Requires Research The Tablet Magazine contest re quires no original composition, but will give three cash prizes to students who submit the 10 most appropriate quotations (each 70 words or less) from any Encyclical, or Moto Proprio, seeming to support the opinions ex pressed in an article by Paul Hunter published in the Jan. 6-9 issue of the magazine. Copies of the article arc on the bulletin boards in Room 506 and Room 305. The U. S. Treasury Department is sponsoring a nation-wide contest for dramatic scripts on War Savings, which will run 10 to 30 minutes of playing time. The scripts should have the emotonal and dramatic elements of a play, but should also contain motivation for investment in War Honds. Submit Scripts in 506 Scripts should be submitted in Room 506 by April 7, and the best one will be forwarded to Mrs. Henry Morgen- thau, Jr., in Washington. Details of the contest arc on the English bulle tin board in the student lounge. For the best short story submitted by a college or university undergradu ate, the Toledo Chapter of Kappa Gamma Pi, honorary society in Catho lic colleges for women, will award a 25 prize. The (leadline is April 14. Details ..:' the contest are on llu- Re view bulletin board in the student lounge. Red Cross Shortens Course for Students Addressing the freshman assembly on March 26, Alice Sexton, representa tive of the Red Cross Nurses Aides, described a new short course which the Red Cross will offer to college students this summer, beginning in June and continuing for four weeks. The regular Nurses Aide course, which will run simultaneously, takes seven weeks. Registration for cither course may be made at Red Cross head quarters. Aides on day service work 12 hours a week, for the duration, Miss Sexton said, and those on night service work 6 hours, either in one or two-night shifts. Initiate Drive to Aid Red Cross Fund . . . quicken in this office where sophomores Catherine Cunningham, Suzanne Shauman, Eileen Maher, and Betty Clifford take charge of the business of making patrons conscious of the S.A.C. Card Party and Russeks fashion revue and of proceeds that go to War Bonds. (Continued from page 1, column 4) Foran, Genevieve Loacker, Marie Keat ing, Dorothy McDuffie, and Rita Kennedy. Assisting in enrolling the students are Rosemary Roeder, Jean Patnoe, Edith Bukowski, Irene Foster, Sue Gibbons, Nathalie Letcher. Sylvia Ow czarek, and LaVcrnc Kruse. Distributing the badges of merit are Elizabeth Grady, Denise Rigoulet, Ce celia Olszowka, Jeanne Coughlin, Mary Kay OLeary, Mary Jane Smith, and Mary Ann Connell. As the advent of spring makes feel like doffing our topcoats and i ing our cares to the March wi we turn our thoughts to light e: tainment . . . The golden voice of Nelson will long be remembered by Jeai Traynick, Marie Flannery, Janet I bring, Eileen Rogers, Rosemary Td Helen Nicholson, Lucy Burtschi, El Thomas . . . Kathryn Reilly cnio the opera . . . Carmen was on musical bill of fare for June Li Ursula Walsh, and Marie Bet . the Junior Opera Guild tea members of the Metropolitan comp provided diversion for Bonnie Diebold . . . The Glacier Priest, Fij Hubbard, bad Mary Kay Quinn, ;. leine Courtney, and Jean Patnoe i bound . . . Mary Ann Connell, 111 Frances Padden, Margaret Greene, tricia Morris, Lois Hintze, E Guest, and Dorothy Cullen atte the colorful Icecapadcs . . . The graciousness of China's lady. Madame Chiang Kai-Shek, I pletely won the hearts of Chicagi including Patricia Gould, Patricia and Suzanne Shauman, who sa at the Chicago Stadium . . . Margaret McKeough spent a end at the University of Iowa real . . . Mary-Jeanne Johnson visited Julia Woodford at the latter's hoa Elkhart, Indiana ... At a dinner) given by Loyola Pi Alpb md were Margaret O'Connor, Maryl I man and Marie Nordby . , . ftj Walsh had fun at Western Mid college, at Kalamazoo . . . At I Dame's Sophomore Cotillion Marion Barrett, Jeanne O'Toole, McMurray, and Doris Conway... tertaining at the Catholic Helen Wencel, Harriet O'Brien, mary Josephson, and Mary Jean I did their bit for the soldiers ...1 bara Kaumanns was present ataif Midshipman's dance . . . Celebrating furloughs or saving bye to the many servicemen vhl leaving this month, collegians I their evenings dining at many ular hotels ... At the EdgJ Beach were Joan Harrigan, gt;la:J Mary Sieja, Marie Muleronek, 1 Jean Wolfe, Betty Jayne UtjM Murray, Patricia Herbert, Marie I ter . . . the Walnut Room cfl Bismarck still interests Alice Horen, Viola Brennan, Naundas M Lenore Brockhaus, Eileen Wolfe, Walz, Audrey Anderson, and I Alice Nevins . . , Ruth RindereJ verne OToole, Marcella Garrity, 1 mary Byrnes, Mary Jane HarveJ Audrey McDonnell like the I hawk . . . Larraine Knaub prefJ Palmer House for good food arl tertainment . . . the smooth Room also attracts Eileen Sul Patricia Sly, Margaret Harvejl Clare Wallace . . . The llamingl dinners at the Panther Room I Hotel Sherman rate high in the ions of Margaret Siemon and I Carpalab . , . Wheels of S.A.C.I Begin to WI (Continued from page 1, columl Hornof, Alyce Jean Kiley, JcanW Dorothy Cullen. Edith MoscardiJ Margaret Greene. Chairman of the Door commiJ Frances Smith, and assisting I Dorothy Meehen. Working witkl are seniors Rae Haefel. F.lizabetiB lar, Phyllis Zielinski; juniors Weber and Lorraine Saigh: sophi Catherine Cunningham, Betty . Mary Louise Hector, Sue Obcrlin Beth Huston, and Marian Freshmen members are Theis, Mary Germaine Duffy, gan, Constance Cross, Betty Mary-Jeanne Johnson, Mary . nell, Patricia Fuller, and Mary Kaindl. Bfl
title:
1943-04-02 (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
rights:
This image is issued by the Women and Leadership Archives. Use of the image requires written permission from the Director of the Women and Leadership Archives. It may not be sold or redistributed, copied or distributed as a photograph, electronic file, or any other media. The image should not be significantly altered through conventional or electronic means. Images altered beyond standard cropping and resizing require further negotiation with the Director. The user is responsible for all issues of copyright. Please Credit: Women and Leadership Archives, Loyola University Chicago. wlarchives@luc.edu
coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College