description:
Page Four oKYSCRAPER 7 Teams Contest In Tournament Basketball Mixer In Its Third Week With Seven Teams Play in the Mixer Basketball tourna ment is now entering it- third wee' of competition. Teams 1 an J IV, with two games won an I none lost, ac Icarng the field. In the opening week of play. Team I defeated Team II, 15-12: Team 11 lost to Team IV. 22-9: and Team VI sored over Team V. 11-8. Games are played Tues lay. We nes- day. and Thursday afternoons at 4 p.m. Team memberships are as follows: Team 1 : Mafyhelen Dietrich. Joan Blakesley, Margaret Bulter, Helen Bar tholomew. Joyce Holliday. Sheila II rye. Mary Nolan, Helen Roach, and Nancy Wackner. Team II: Dor thy Dresden. Barbara Fenton, Ruth Greene, Jean Halm Nan- 9y Hotton. Carol Jackwerth, Eileen 0'- Slv.a. Marie Quintan, and Irene Repa. Team III: Frances Fazio. Betty Ho- baii. Eileen Kennedy. Rosemarie I.egcn- /:,, Patricia Meany. Joan Moran. Char lotte O'Brien. Jeanne Smith, and Mary Sullivan. Team IV: Nona Arnoldi. Mary Case. Doris Grove. Joan McGulre, Anne 0'- Reilly, Mary O'Reilly. Lucille Pier tti. Ann Repner. an Jean'Wendell. Team V Retty Bucol, Katlicrine Bur- witz. 'FrancM Endovina, Dorothy Gaughan; Judy MoN'tilty. Dolores Muel- leman. Patricia O'Callahan, Jean Sigui er, and (Jerry Tyrrell. Team VI: Joaj Anderson, Patricia Carr, Jewel Crosby. Harriet Diacos. Genevieve Engel, Patricia Gavagan, Rosemary Murphy. Kathleen Smyth. and Catherine Sullivan. Team VII: Margaret Anderson. Charlene Anzalone, Carmtla Cutaia. Geraldine Farley, Mary Jane Henry. Rose Mashl. Mary Ellen Simon, Vivian Walkosz, and Lucille Winkler. They're Lovely They're Engaged Terrapin Tryouts To Be Held March 3 For 10 Aspirants With swimming again in style at Mundelein the Terrapins will hold their second semester tryouts Wednesday. March 3. Mary L lt; u Hoiss is in charge and hopes to greet approximately ten candidates. Judges arc Rita Buckley, Mary Jane Comerford. Shirley Dun- more. Cecilia Lock wood, and Helen O'Connell. Pauline Allen. Charlene Anzalone. Peggy Barrett, Peggy Butler. Denise Etten, Gloria Lancaster, and Mary Beth Zciuer will demonstrate ballet stunts and skills for 25 children from the Swift grammar school on March 10. This edu cational project is under the direction of Rita Augustin, assisted by Miss Hoiss, Marygrove Sponsors Basketshooting Event The campus basketball sharp-shooters have entered the annual baskctslr oting contest for Catholic colleges for women. sponsored by Marygrove college, De troit. Contestants arc required to attempt 25 free throws and 25 short shots. The winning individuals and schoi Is will be awarded merit certificates. This year marks the third contest. Marygrove college and the College of New Rochelle. New York, respectively, have won the first two. Entry lists are posted on the Gym nasium and Sports club bulletin boards. AH results must be in by March 10. Pictured above are engaged senicrs bottom row: Margaret Wolf, Anita McCarty, Rosemary Kiley, Corinne Otto, Ida Quintiliani. Top rcw: Betty Jayne Lang, Colette Dalton, Nancy Morris, Natalie Formusa, Mary Agnes Williams, Mary Ellen Simon, Mary Beth Zeiner. Teams Try Out For U. of C. Playday Tryouts for Playday. March 6, at the University of Chicag . will be held this afternoon at 4 p.m. in the gymna sium. Two teams will be chosen, each to play two games. Sixteen teams from various colleges in the Chicago area will attend. Other Catholic colleges participating are De Paul and Rosary. Last year, Mundelein won all four games. The teams will attempt to repeat that record this year. WAA Reminds Students About Point System Will you be wearing a W. A. A. letter this spring? The W. A. A. point system is still in i peration this year, and students who are to receive recog nition at the May banquet must have all points recorded in W. A. A. files two weeks previous to the date of the ban quet. Eligible athletes must earn 250 points during the year to receive an award. Copies ef the requirements are avail able in the Gymnasium office. Alumnae Dramatist Find Acting, Teaching, Careers Careers in drama attract majors of the Drama department who, after grad uation, become radio actresses, readers and teachers. Two 1946 graduates, Jeanne O'Connor and Edith Moscardini. do part-time work in televisii n, as members of the Associated Television Actors at Station WBKB. Miss Moscardini also writes scripts for the station, and teaches al the Patricia Vance Finishing School foi Girls. Miss O'Connor teaches speech in parochial schools and at Englewood Evening school. Also in radio. Marjorie Thomas '40 is instructor in radio at Northwestern university's school of speech, and is fac ulty advisor ' r Northwestern's Radio Guild and a member of the advisory board at WBI'.M for the Workshop, which sponsors a weekly half-hour Guild program. Mercedes McCambridge Fifield '37. now on a world tour with her husband and five-year-rid son, is on leave of absence from radio, where, according to Variety, she is the radio actress most in demand. Royce McFayden Crist '43 divides her time between care of her tWC small sons and work in speech correction with the Illinois Division of Handicapped chil dren and at a south side parochial school, Mary Louise Shannon McGarry '42, is director of dramatics at St. Schol- astica's. Name Chairmen For SAC Benefit (Continued from p. 1 col. 3) busy solving ticket problems. Jeanne Smith and Peggy Egan head the Patron committee; Eileen Rooney and Re simary Murphy, the Door com mittee. Chairmen of the Arrangements com mittee are Marilynne Lafsen and Mar gery Coughlin. Patricia O'Donoghuc and Mary Jo Bornhofen, co-chairnien. are in charge of tables. The fashion revue will be directed by Virginia Perry. It's Your World... A summer of study in Guatemala for 220 . . . read all about this and other travel opportunities in the XSA pam phlet Study, Travel, and Work Abroad which is now on sale. There is much discussion of late oil student government. Ralph Dungan, formerly a student at St. Joseph's col lege in Pennsylvania, now vice-presi dent of NSA. has written an excellent booklet on the subject called STU DENT LEADERSHIP AND GOV ERNMENT IN' HIGHER EDUCA TION. For the sum of five cents and a few words to your delegate, you also can be in-the-know. The Joint Committee for Student Ac tion inaugurated its orientation pro gram for Catholic student leaders when the Right Reverend Monsignor Reynold Hillenbrand lectured Feb. 29, on Cath olic Student Leadership Today. Msgr. Hillenbrand spoke at Curtis hall before an audience of Catholic collegians from the Chicago area. The student sessions of the program will commence March 8 with a discus sion of Student Responsibilities. The Background of the Student Move ment will be the subject of a speech by Paul Kirk, president cf the student government at De Paul university, March 22. Ralph Dungan, vice-presi dent of NSA, will consider the topic, Our Challenge in the Coming NSA Convention, at a session on April 5. Adele Baiocchi, Dorothy Gaughan, Mary Lou Hafner, Helen Jean Rogers, and Dolores Wojciechowski have been invited to participate at a discussion of President Truman's Committee on Civil Liberties Report, at Roosevelt college. on March 9. This discussion also is an outgrowth of the Educational Oppor tunities panel and is the brainchild of Mundelein's delegate, Helen Jean Rog ers, and of Roosevelt's delegate', Ray Clevenger. Skyscrapings . . The seniors are smiling again. I vcrsations at the aftcr-comps di ;:' Spencer's ros'aurant concerned M other than Markonikoff's rule, the 31 f' s r school of liberalism, the 0 i a Greek of Homer. Bilogy majors have left their larirs behind them. The dire pj tions of the results of c mprehtni never came true. Instead of retro to rest homes, the seniors r.tiro Lake Delavan to seek relas Among them were Jeanne Smith, tricia Muckian, Doris Grove, Mary Ward, Frances Wager, Betty Hi Genevieve Engel, and Marilyn 1 burrino. Fe r a more peaceful cure, n Baumgartner and Elaine Meyer e Druce Lake camp, while Jane 01 spent the week-end at St. Mai; the-Woods. Though mere juniors. Eileen Eo spent a week-end away from -tudk St. Mary's. N tre Dame, and Yl Winkates went to Michigan Stale Still h Iding top honors in Chid entertainment is Annie Get Your say spectators Mary Keough, I Clarke, and Lois O'Hern. Looking for the green carnation, Fallon, Geraldine Linden, and Pit Hallahan, went to see Wilde's Windermere's Fan. Mary Devine joyed John Loves Mary, and Pst O'Shea, The Red Mill. Patricia Mulkern and Sally H: watched a fencing match hftj Northwestern and Wisconsin. Catherine O'Malley and Bettyj O'Neil plan t' take in the cirai week-end, where Patricia TirreD already been to see her uncle, I pe-ze artist. Barbara Flaherty, Mary Jane I and Bernadette Jamrowski bccaim bop fans at Stan Kenton's dl while Mary Culhane, Lois Hassei and Dolores Krucker attended ll cert. Mary Kearin swam at a splash at the Sheraton hotel, but Pit Smith and Betty Neville preferrd polo game at the Chicago Annon The Musical Society hostessed sj ner dance at the Ambassador I attended by Helen Thomas, Q Stevens. Katherine Reves, and Get Cosmas, while Patricia Ketchun to the Lake Forest college dance; Jane Fell and Patricia O'Csl danced at the Naval Armory. The Diacos sisters spent a wefl sponsored by the Greek Sympa club at Illinois. Leap year turnabout is one fl for Mary Griffin, Virginia Neff, I O'Shea, Katherine Burwitz, and Ellen Martin who invited their ftj to dinner and a show. Economist Discusses Socialized Medicine C. W. Strow. Ph. D., ccononi visor of the Research Council for nomic Security, discussed socil medicine at a meeting of the Ecoin club, Feb. 25. Dr. Stow defined socialized mel as a general term meaning ma which serves the needs of secietjj program of nationalized or collect medicine calls for state or federal trol over medicine and the direcfl all activities. The actual plan advocates thj contributions be put in one fund would be drawn from for doctors' auxiliary services. Each em) would pay two per cent of his ca to this fund and the employer pay two per cent of the salary ol of his employees. Citing many arguments foi against socialized medicine. Dr. noted that the plan needs perfects is necessary to consider the possi that, although medical care wod equalized and many lives won saved under the plan, initiative an mulas within the medical proj might be destroyed.
title:
1948-03-01 (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