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si1; i i i , B i brarians Attend 11 Conference at 5 Mel, Oct. 27 wo Former Students participate .aer Mary Aurclius, B.V.M., and X Mary Clara, B.V.M., attended .Bll meeting of the Illinois unit of tatholic Librarian association, at fr: Mel High school, on Oct. 27. t Reverend Harry C. Koenig, li- in at Saint Mary of the Lake jary, opened the first general ses- Jwith an invocation. Jo former Mundelein students, Mil- 'JMartinez ex '37, librarian at Von jen high school, and Mary Mar- I Morrissey, '35, librarian at Taft i school, participated in the round j for high school librarians, at the 4 jioon session. Reverend Crispin Wellbeys, ., librarian at Quincy college, led 1 :ollege discussion group in Con- I ing the Moral Aspects of the Copy- Law. uitJs Address allenges Seniors Yorld To Be Classroom, other Lovely Declares i a few months, you will be ex- 4ing the role of student for the fcf teacher, declared the Reverend ior E. Lovely, S.J., of Loyola uni ty, in an address to the members le Class of 1946 on Senior Sunday. lc whole world will be your class- Father Lovely continued, noting I whatever her career, the Catholic jjt graduate teaches by her example (her influence. 1 is for you to decide whether your Sing, your influence, will be dynamic kianity or indifference. There is no lie ground of inaction. her concluded his address by stress- Ae fact that, regardless of individual It, all men owe their abilities to God; all educated Catholics must be aware jeir responsibility to use their talents romote the glory of God and the ire of mankind. jt Exhibit Includes ok Jackets, time Decoration 'coking at the book illustrations in iArt Exhibit on the eighth floor is I meeting old literary friends. SI the charm of Louisa May Alcott's t Women returns with a glance at ly Jane Smith's illustration of that ric.-m classic, and all the warm iness of Marjorie Rawling's The Uing is revived in Lenore Behr's t wash of Jody and Flag. fring lives again in Irene Conway's iful library campus scene. Fruit re ps an ever-popular subject of stu- in art composition, and many tempt- (rsrieties are shown even bananas. Ix oil paintings share a prominent I as the latest additions to the exhi- I Among them, Ursula Brodbeck's let Dancer is faintly reminiscent of bs' technique with its delicate grays I lavenders. Barbara Keenan contri- Ls fashion illustrations to the exhibit, toying three separate techniques, tasonal advice is given to homemakers le water color sketches by Marianne Itrson and Mary Jane Smith. A room, k decorators demonstrate, can easily pans formed from season to season legh intelligent use of color and ac- L Cool greens, refreshing chintz, la maximum of light mark the sum- ituned room, while heavier draperies I warm tones are predominant in an kopriately furnished room for winter, fitricia Mitchell, Mary Margaret tpbell, Miss Conway, and Dorothy have just completed some black white studies and show card figures. SKYSCRAPER Studies Harp First student to en- I roll in the recently opened course in harp is Cecilia Lockwood, I freshman from Ken- tucky. Instructor in harp I is Florence Lambert, I former member of the I College Orchestra I who now has her own studio. I Winner of the WGN gold trophy for the young Chi- p cago musician most I likely to succeed, t I Miss Lambert has 1 played with the Chi- I cago Symphony Or chestra and has stud ied with Joseph Vito, Peter Eagle, and with Earl D. Blair of the American Conserva tory. Club Presidents To Form Council Under S.A-C. In an effort to develop greater co ordination among the various campus clubs, the Student Activities Council is organizing a Council of Club Presidents, which held its first meeting on Oct. 25. The presidents will meet with the S.A.C. once every month to discuss dif ferent group activities which may be of interest to more than one club, and to plan meeting dates in such a way that students belonging to several extra-cur riculars may find it possible to attend all meetings of each group. To promote greater unity throughout the college the Council hopes to foster inter-club social affairs and to stimulate joint programs for groups with related interests. Personality Clinic Attracts Students Every Tuesday Analyzes Problems of Personal Appearance To see ourselves as others see us is not just a Robert Burns quotation, to members of the Personality clinic in the Home Economics department. Every Tuesday at 9 a.m. students in the clinic meet in Room 408 for indi vidual analyses of problems about cloth ing, grooming, posture, and speech. Each student keeps her own rating sheet for personal appearance, and the final checkup after the series of lectures and demonstrations is completed will illustrate the improvements she has made in grooming and dress. Since placement, promotion, and suc cess depend upon attitudes as well as upon character, ability, appearance, and personality, a continuous record is kept on the social intelligence and person ality improvement of each member. Adapted especially to the needs of secretarial students was a special clinic conducted for them by Sister Mary St. Remi, B.V.M., on Oct. 18. Models for an hour, Patricia Erskine, Genevieve Brandt, Vivian Leonard, Elaine Sullivan, and Betty Neisen served as practical illustrations for analyses of the career girl. The correct colors, most attractive hair styles, and most suitable fashion lines as adapted to various personality types were demonstrated. Sodality Moderators Convene Here, Oct. 20 The place of the Sodality in the col lege program concerned represenatives from colleges in the Chicago area who gathered here on Oct. 20 for a Mod erator's meeting, arrangements for which were made by Sister Mary Mar- tine, B.V.M., moderator of the Mun delein Sodality. The moderators also made plans for a discussion program to be initiated by members of the Loyola university So dality. The Reverend Martin I. Carrabine, S.J., moderator of Cisca, was chairman of the meeting, at which the Revrend Lawrence Britt, S.J., of Loyola; Sister Ignace, R.S.N., of St. Xavier's; Sister John Berchmans, O.P., of Rosary; and Sister Francine, O.F.M., of St. Francis, Joliet, were present Spanish Club Qives Tea for Pledges Presenting its first social event of the year, Las Teresianas, the Spanish club, gave a tea for the pledges in the model apartment on Oct. 31. Julie Sitt, junior, entertained the group by singing Carmen Carmela. In an effort to familiarize the members of the club with Spanish conversation, the officers are conducting the business meetings entirely in Spanish. Sylvia Gaetti Calesini, A.M., is the club mod erator. Outside activities of Las Teresianas thus far include attendance at Spanish movies at the Globe theater and at the Pan-American Council lectures. Freshmen Discuss Greek and Roman Art Greek and Roman Sculpture, Archi tecture, and Engineering was the sub ject of a project presented by Mary Lcona Merrick, Patricia Troy, and Beatrice Goldrick for their History of Western Civilization class, on Oct. 26. Illustrated by some 70 slides, the pro ject depicted the development of Grecian sculpture from the earliest archaic forms, through its rise during the Age of Pericles, and its decline during the time of Alexander. In addition, the influence of Greece on Roman sculpture and architecture was shown. Cooperation or Chaos? Lecturers State Issue Leaders Must Serve, Sodalists Told Anyone who aims to lead must be prepared to serve, declared the Rever end Martin I Carrabine, S.J., moderator of Cisca, to members and incoming of ficers of the Sodality, on Oct. 23. Noting that the motto of the Holy Father is Servant of the Servants of Christ, and that Sodalists are dedicated to service of the Mother of God and through her to service of others, Fa ther Carrabine pointed out that under standing of others and sympathy with their problems are essential prerequis ites of service. Putting into practice the recommenda tion of service, 40 members of the So dality have volunteered for part-time work at St. Vincent's orphanage, car ing for children. The discovery of atomic energy has made obsolete the security provisions of the United Nations Charter, declared the Reverend Eugene Conway, S.J., in a lecture here on Oct. 30, and has made immediate revision of the Charter necessary to meet the needs of the atomic world and to preserve civiliza tion from suicide. Co-author of Patterns for Peace and of the nine Goals of San Francisco, six of which -were written into the United Nations Charter, Father Con way insists that political expedients must be used at once to hold the A-bomb in check while the moral forces of the world mobilize and realize that they alone can achieve enduring peace. To keep the secret of the A-bomb is impossible. To police the world against its use for destruction is also impossible. It is imperative, then, he concludes, that a world conference to form an arms commission, made up of both diplomats and scientists, be convened almost im mediately to form a realistic plan for the control of all ultra-lethal weapons, and that the veto provision of the Char ter be abolished, sinee it is based on a type of material and numerical power annihilated by the unleashing of atomic force. Father Conway is the cousin of Junior Jean Mullaney. Because dictatorships are more likely to break the peace than are democracies, they are always a potential danger to the world, insisted Irving Pflaum, foreign editor of the Chicago Times, in an as sembly lecture here on Oct. 25. Pointing out that the United States went to war with Germany in 1941 be cause the German dictatorship was men acing the safety of the Western world, Mr. Pflaum noted that the objective of the Allies was to destroy the Nazi ma chine, and then observed that the attain ment of that objective contained the very seeds of possible future conflict. The dilemma facing the makers of our foreign policy, he declared, is this: In crushing the Nazi dictatorship, they are almost inevitably paving the way for the rise of a new totalitarianism in Ger many the rise of Communism. The coming issue in the world, Mr. Pflaum insists, is the conflict of Com munism versus democracy a conflict which can be resolved only if the Com munist force can be persuaded by diplo matic skill to confine its dominance to its own present sphere of power and to respect the rights of democratic peoples to maintain their systems of self govern ment A lectuerer at Northwestern university, Mr. Pflaum gives a news commentary daily at 5 p.m. through Station WBBM. Page Three lAJhat Cjoes Jn . . . XV/ITH the spooks, witches, and pump- ** kins tightly packed away for anoth er year, we have managed to salvage from the ruins of Hallowe'en night a few interesting items. CELEBRITIES on the campus include three students who, in different years, were winners in the All-American Catholic girl contest sponsored annually by the Catholic Youth Organization. Senior Mary Ann Anderson, who is corresponding secretary of Cisca, re ceived the honor when she was grad uated from Alvernia high school. Sophomore Adele Baiocchi, mathe matics major, merited the honor when she was graduated from St. Mary's high school, and freshman Mary Lou Hafner, member of the Sodality, merit ed the award when she was graduated from Providence in June. V7lTH the arrival of a bracelet last month, sophomore Genevieve Scheff ler now has a complete set of Mexican Aztec jewelry. From the ponderous sil ver necklace dangle fearful jade faces of ancient Aztec heroes. The entire set is a gift from a Spaniard, George Ibar ra, whose ancestor, Diego Ibarra, took part in early Spanish conquests and colonization in Mexico. THE Outer Drive, the engineering * feat of which all Chicago is proud, was opened in 1933 to facilitate traffic along the Lake. Bands played, ribbons were cut, and the citizens looked proud ly at the latest in road building, -which out-Romaned even the Romans. There would be no more trouble for north and south bound traffic, they reckoned not any more 1 But the best-laid plans o' mice and men gang aft a-gley, and who knows, Mayor Kelly himself may have given a thought to what could happen if some one were lost on Outer Drive. Even he, however, probably never dreamed that a crowd of collegians would one day be stranded there. But they were stranded, one recent Tuesday morning in a double-decker bus, piloted by a returned veteran who had probably experienced no difficulty in making a beachhead in Italy or on a Pacific Island. Which could prove that going to school is harder than most things. Puzzled as to whether he should turn in on Wilson avenue or go on to Law rence, the driver, new on the job, fol lowed the advice of a passenger who had probably been making the trip daily for a year and went ahead to Law rence avenue. Road detour signs impeded further traffic north; the problem of backing a big bus followed; then came the greater problem of going the wrong way on a one-way drive; and finally came the problem of a viaduct for which there was much too much bus. The detouring continued until finally the Shangri-La group reached Wilson avenue again, only to be evacuated to another bus, which arrived at Sheridan Road and the Lake at 9:30 a.m., com plete with 25 tardy collegians and one member of the Faculty. Believe it or not . . . Round Table to Hear Best Seller Review Members of the English Round Table will hear a review of The World, The Flesh, and Father Smith, at 3:30 p.m. on Nov. 8, in Room 401. Miriam L. Rooney, Ph.D., Faculty member in the Education department and a charter member of the Round Table, will review Bruce Marshall's best seller, after the literary roll call and quiz. Lines from Newman will constitute the roll call, and Ifs and Famous Similics will be the subject of the quiz. Regular meetings of the Round Table are held on the second Thursday of each month with Nancy Enzweiler, head, presiding. i
title:
1945-11-05 (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