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Page four Hold First Qame Of Interclass Basketball Meet Sophomores Defeat Seniors; Next Qame with Freshmen A speedy senior team defeated the sophomores 18-8 in the first game- of the interclass basketball meet, March 11. The teams were led by Rosemary Mc- Farlin, sophomore captain, and Dorothy Case, senior captain. The juniors, captained by Eileen O' Shea, outscored the freshmen 18-12, March 3. Jewel Crosby is captain of the freshmen. Hetty Hoban, manager of the tourna ment, has announced the schedule of future tourney games: sophomores vs. freshmen, March 18; seniors vs. juniors, March 20; seniors vs. freshmen, March 25; juniors vs. sophomores, March 26. Si ijdcrcijjinad Shamrocks, shillelaghs, bits of green ribbon, and what not will be much in evidence today. Also, a stray brogue or two (simulated, naturally) may waft its way along the corridors. All this, of course, is in honor of St. Patrick's Day. Among those 'awearing the green to night at the Del Prado will be Nora Scannell, Marianne Peterson, Ann Car roll, Lorraine Calhoun, Veronica Mar- key, anel Dolores Shannon. Also cele brating with a bit of jigging will be Dorothy Walters at a Knights of Co lumbus Ball, and Doris Ellsworth at De Paul's St. Patrick's day dance. Fully agreeing with the critics who wrote that Claudio Arrou is a master performer arc Helen Kozicki, Gloria Maloney, and Eloise Thomas, who heard his piano concert recently at Or chestra Hall. Mary Ann Warner chose another master performer when she heard Lotte Lehmann, famous leider singer, also at Orchestra Hall. The towering Moor and the crafty Iago fascinated Dorothy Breit, Maria Devlantes, and Rosemary Brei, at a recent Goodman theatre presentation of Othello. Eastertide brings with it each year a wonderful feeling of spiritual re freshment and renewed hope for the world. It also brings things like new hats, bunnies, budding flowers, and Easter vacations. Many of our Mundelcinitcs are tak ing advantage of this last to take what they term, with pitiful looks and gasp ing breath, a much needed rest from the cares of schoohvork. That is the general idea of their various state ments, anyway. Dorothy Gaughan will visit her par ents in Pittsburgh, Penn. Menominee, Mich., and a stay with her sister is the vacation plan of Sylvia Rudman. New York, glamour city of the East, will have Patricia Shine as a holiday guest. Going home ior a visit and bringing two guests with her is Mary Lou Max- field, of Fort Wayne, Ind. Her guests are Dorothy Baker and Celine Surran. And then there arc those who like basking in sunny climes. Helen Jean Rogers and Katherine Governale do, and have chosen Florida as their va cation spot. An Easter Ball at Notre Dame is the prize Easter Egg of Virginia Del Beccaro and Margery Stumpe. Another dance celebrating the coming holiday season will be Loyola's Queenship Ball, sponsored by Phi Mu. Among the good ly number of Mundeleinites who will be represented there will be Katherine Burwitz, Marie Clark, Mary Griffin, Genevieve Engel, Mary Kearin, Jean Ondesco, Rosemary McShane, Virginia Neff, anel Eileen O'Shea. Red Cross Offers Aquatic Scholarship To Underclassmen The Chicago Chapter Red Cross First Aid, Water Safety, and Accident Pre vention service is offering scholarships to the National Aquatic school at Indian Mound reservation, Oconomowoc, Wis- c nsin, held August 20-30, 1947. One underclassman from each of the 16 colleges and universities in the Chicago area will be awarded a Red Cross scholar ship to the Aquatic school. Winning stu dents will be selected by the College Unit advisors, physical education advi sors, and student Red Cross chairmen. Mundelein students interested in apply ing for these scholarships should confer with Claire Johnson and Rita Augustin. SKYSCRAPER Behind the Footlights Team IV Wins Title In Mixed Tourney The basketball mixer title went to Team IV after an 18-15 victory in the fast-paced playoff game with Team I, March 14. Team IV merited its try at the title when it dealt Team II its third defeat of the round-robin tourney, 31-14, on March 6. Bryan Rouse, Jo Ann Logelin, Rosemary Martin, James Graydon, Carol Draper, Margaret Schriver, James Sfl Patricia Herely, and Paul Erbach study their lines for the Drama department's spring production, I Remember scheduled for presentation on April 18 and 20. (Story on Page 1.) Cross Foils with Freshmen Welcome University Fencers School Senior* ...... , ,.. ... To Scholarship Tests Mundelein fencers crossed foils with .Biologist Outlines. - 'Food Technology For Student Scienfc Magazine Reprints Camp Article by Sports Director Miss Eileen Scanian, director of Physi- :al Education, has received a request for permission to reprint an article entitled Program Planning for the Camp Water front, which she wrote last year. The article appeared in the May, 1946, issue of CAMPING MAGAZINE? the official publication of the American Camping association, and drew the at tention of Robert Roberts, member of the association and director of Camp Win- nipec, Roscoe, New York. In his letter to Miss Scanian Mr, Roberts states, I believe that every counselor and water safety instructor should read your article. University of Chicago and Northwest ern teams, March 8, at Chicago. North western won 9-6, and the Chicago team triumphed 9-3. Yvonne Bellamy, Mary Jo Born- hofen, Patricia Bradley, Aphrodite Di acos, and Dolores Wojciechowski par ticipated in the meet. Fencers of the 9 o'clock class emerged victorious in the inter-class meet held March 5, scoring wins in four out of six bouts. Survivors of the playoffs include Miss Bornhofcn, Simone Chapuis, Miss Bel lamy, Patricia Bradley, Tobia Dixlcr, and Miss Wojciechowski. Eight Terrapins Perform Ballet Eight members of the Terrapin club presented a water ballet, The Waltz of the Flowers, at Northwestern university, on March 7. The aquatic cast included Mary Beth Zeiner, Gloria Lancaster, Rita Marie Augustin, Patricia Meany, Mary Lenore Taaffe, Lorraine Calhoun, Martha Lou Edwards, and Jean Irmiter. A ballet will also be given by Mun delein students at a Hobby Show given at Tilden Tech High School, March 19. Neo'QaeVs Diary . . . March 17, 1947 This is the day for people a'wearin' green . . . and the day o' days for them which wears it well, besides. This is the saint-be-praised hour for the completely Irish, the faintly Irish, and even for those who, like me, are Irish by osmosis. The process of indoctrination began officially on March 17 several years ago, when my third-grade classmates forbade me, non-Gaelic as I am, to recite: O, range against the sky, my clouds 1 Seems they didn't like the first word, which began with O and ended with E (and wherever did they pick up their brand of pronunciation?) I didn't know why until much later, when it was whispered that the whole dispute had something to do with some one named William Somebody . . . from the Netherlands, that is. It might have been William Tell, but J didn't think so. I just confused it because my piano solo of the William Tell Overture had an orange cover. And, besides, the Irish didn't invent the apple, did they? It was the sham rock. Ah, me, while I've sung all the folk fables about Paddy McGinty with the best o' em; and memorized Rose of Tralee and My Wild Irish Rose with a vengeance, the osmosis has been im peded many times by my natural limi tations. I lack the innate spirit of Irish tradition. In fifth grade, Willie Rooney wouldn't share his candy bar with me because I innocently called his soft, slurred diction a dialect, not a brogue. And, praise to St. Patrick, I embar rassed my seventh-grade associates fearfully when I confessed that I thought a shillelagh pronounced shil- la-le, of course was a piece of the well-known fine old Irish lace. And why father brought it instead of mother, I could never explain. It wasn't enough that I pictured the Blarney Stone as an oversize emerald, but, also, I had some mighty heretical theories on the reality of the lepre chaun, by the top of Mavourneen I At last, alas, we discovered blood kinship in our mutual love for laugh ter .. . kind of a universal trait and tradition that needs no particular color to set it apart And I am happily assured that now, by tooraloora, I am, like their own be loved Patrick, an adopted child of the Gael. And to any who want to arrange a little reciprocation, my office is always open on St. Casimir's Day. Hostesses Are Members of Art, Drama, Music Classes Freshman art, drama, and music stu dents will be hostesses to high school seniors who, ranking in the upper fourth of their classes and recommended by the Principals, will compete for de partmental scholarships here, on April YZ. Greeting high school seniors who took the liberal arts scholarship ex amination on March 15 were the fresh man officers, Patricia O'Grady, Blanche Smith, Joan Merrick, Mary Jo Born hofcn, Helen Roach, Patricia Padden, and Peggy Perrin. Freshman governors, also ' on the hostess committee, included Patricia O'Dea, Sally Ann Claffy, La Von Froe- lich, Dorothy Burke, Marilyn Carr, Do lores Scheffler, Hazel Sniffer, Helen Jean Rogers, Mary Lou Sheehan, Bet ty Birks, Adrienne Dowd, Josephine Marfise, Rosemary Briel, and Eileen Loftus. Other volunteer hostesses were Do lores Yohanna, Virginia Bauer, Betty Jacobsen, Mary Catherine Burns, Mar ion Pasdiora, Martha Cameron, Pa tricia Finn, Mary Patricia Malloy, Ann Morrissey, Marie Terracina, Normi Boveri, Virginia Del Bec caro, Dolores Muelleman, Louise Coughlin, Patricia Mulkern, Mary Kay Kennedy, Jane Dahlstrom, Melba Pier- otti, Barbara Phee, Joan Cribari, Betty Ann Cartwright, Therese Foley, Lid- wina Barbantini, Marion Madden, Helen Morand, Jacqueline Boyle, Patricia McCarthy, Lauretta Jamel, Olivia Tangrcdy, Pa tricia Rettig, Dolores Krucker, Mary Culhane, Alicemarie Niesen, Lorraine Sullivan, Catherine Clancy, and Evelyn Buess. Papal Encyclicals Aid Economists Discuss, Debate Current Controversies in Classes The Economics classes are using in formation gleaned from outside reading in their study of current topics. Discussion of Planned Public Works, in freshman and upper division classes, were led recently by Louise Coughlin and Phyllis Gross. Patricia May and Concetta Serra rep resented their classes in debates on Public vs. Private Employment Agencies. The cases for and against Socialized Medicine were introduced by Celeste McDonnell, and Gail Morgan and Roseann Kennedy will continue discussion on this topic, on March 26. The Catholic Church's views on Labor as revealed in the Encyclicals were an alysed, on March 14, by Patricia O'Dono- ghue, Carol StuU, Mary Lou Farrow, and chairman Jean Irmiter. Success in industrial resfl pends upon character, aptitude search, attitude toward work, aoP edge, emphasized Leslie R. I Ph.D., in his address on The Pi of Food Technology, to member Chemistry and Home Economical ments, Feb. 28. t Dr. Hedrick, professor of baetl and chairman cf the Biology dej at the Illinois Institute of Ttfi explained that a food technoM one who employs one or morft sciences, such as chemistry, phf* ology, and nutrition, with or w)P aid of chemical or mechanical enf* in producing or improving a food*' The speaker outlined the hi food technology organization I the men and women who pioncs. new branch of chemistry.' Gref. were made in food preservation the war. :s While the profession of f e nology is still in its infancy, I to Dr. Hedrick, the field need with the proper training, in 5 advance the work. UNews a With an injunction from Pi XII that a just and lasting r quires that nations surrendet their sovereignty, the Moscoi ence convened last week. Esf last between four and six wq conference will begin drafting treaty for Austria and wi the thorny prospects fori peace. Secretary of State Gerfe shall will present the Americ-1 posal of a 40-ycar, four-po cl tary alliance to govern Gerntf The Security Council reft. whole question of atomic con to the Atomic Energy commit Russia and the United States i verbally on fundamental disaC proposals. Hopes for an eatt . ment between the United SB 11 j- ,. ,ne Russia on disarmament polic*. shattered. Russia blasted for international the Anient .0. inspection C facilities, an international cont. cy, and facilities for punishis, drs independent of veto actiacC' Security Council. Russia derail. the United States junk ioP of atomic bombs. gt;n Meanwhile, the commission ish conventional weapons s. ably convene this week. tc Great Britain and France If)' signed a 50-ycar military af which they will unite in a cosrtr fense to implement any decistf Security Council in case of r 1 man aggression.
title:
1947-03-17 (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:
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coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College