description:
TIHIE i mm gt;, c ;... . Voh XI MUNDELEIN COLLEGE. CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 29. 1940 No. 5 1940 uNUARY I The armies of Joseph Stalin rain kombs on Finland's southern towns. I.hilc- Moscow nights arc lasting from rin the afternoon until ') next morning I . . and the Finns light hack ... In liirinany Robert I.cy, speaking for the IVa/is. says, We have the divine right lr. rule I . . . Rumor has it that the lifst air raid on Britain is timed for a crtain day in the second week of OUTSIDE January . . . News comes AMERICA of Rumania's recent trade kreement with Germany. She in creases her sale of oil ti gt; Germany from 1.200.000 to 1.8(10.000 tons . . . Hit ler .guarantees lioundaries, it is rumored I . . Pope Pius pays a history making Irall to the Quirinal after several lik-cacles. to bless it as a mark of peace . . . Time Magazine is doubtful if Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain till go down as a great war figure I... and President Cardenas of Mexico maintains : The Monroe Doctrine never :i- recognized, nor could he. by Mex ico, or by the other nations of Spanish I America. I The seventy-sixth Congress begins lis third session three hundred and ii days before the people of the United States elect their president . . . the electorate takes conflicting reports linent the event and shows proper dc- wrec of democratic calm . . . Time re ports that President (off the record) lines not want third term . . . Newest iRirtuiK- Survey of Public Opinion shows lin-rwhclniiiig F.D.R. victory . . . Attor- WITHIN OUR uey (ieneral Designate BORDERS Robert Jackson calls ISnoM-velt Our Lincoln at Jackson lDa dinner at Cleveland, while the liact that Roosevelt's big tan campaign sombrero is packed away is cited as a niip.t cl coring note to aiiti-tbii'd-term- ers . . . The Most Reverend Samuel Alplionsus Stritch, of Milwaukee, is ap- Ented to succeed the late George Car- hal Mundelein as Archbishop of Chi- ogo . . . President Roosevelt in mes ne to joint session of Congress asks ior greatest peacetime military force prer known in United States history L. Frank Murphy succeeds Pierce But- on Supreme Court Bench . . . Dies iiiiiiittec ends 18-month investigation tin-American activities with 15.000 nril report . . . Roosevelt submits buel- lor fiscal year 1940-41. decrease of ficndittire 675,000,000 . . . the Senate Bums the death of 74-year-old Will- am Borah ... a serious, lonely, in- iim- statesman . . . Myron Charles Taylor, 65, sails to tone as first Ambassador of the pro- risional Embassy at the Vatican since Ruftis King left Rome in 1868, with hristmas message from President osevelt to His Holiness Pope Pius II . . . State department joins with 20 1ERICA ACTS other Ameri- NTERNATIONALLY can republics protesting to France, Germany, and cat Britain against violation of 300- sal'ety zone established by Dec- tration of Panama last October. Chicago learns that Father Dearborn ias a real man who never visited Chi- . . . Violinist Yehudi Mcnuhin re- Dives from a young soldier on the iND HUMAN Western Front an ex- STEREST pression of gratitude CONTINUES that, when life can be iakcii at every instant. Menuhin's mti- liic can come in over a farm radio and Isweep away the winds of this country, the planes overhead, the anti-aircraft engines. (Passed without censorship.) lUacMillan introduces new Dcmoc- racy readers for primer and first six grades . . . Americans sec G.W.T.W. (Continued on Page 4, Col. 4) Home Economics Department Plans Menus for Papers Suggest Balanced Meals For Every Day in Week Residents of the north side and the north shore who are interested in eco nomical, attractive, and healthful menus and foods features are invited to read and try the Star Budget menus prepared by the home economics department and pub lished in the Myers newspapers. This public service was instituted when the Myers syndicate, publishers of the I low nn Xews, Xoktowx News, Edge- watkh News, and other neighborhood papers, asked the College to provide menus, recipes, and features for a special foods page. Xow. every week, requirements for three meals a day for seven days are given, complete with shopping lists, calory and mineral content, and estimated costs. Pictures of prepared dinner tables, party buffets, and attractive, wholesome. easily prepared dishes aid the reader in planning family menus. Directions for colorful garnishes, appetizing sauces, dressings, spices, and herbs are included, since variety, appearance, and pleasant surprises are keynotes of the Star Bud gets. Home economics majors who cooper ated in buying, preparing, and serving the first Star Budget meals, all of which are prepared in the department before details are published about them, are Mildred Mahoney. Juanita Mayer. Dorotly Hein. and Geraldine McGarry. Corsages on Order For Skyscraper Ball Do yon prefer orchids or violets? Gardenias or rubrum lilies? Put your order in early for a gay corsage to be worn at the Skyscraper Hall, annual Christmas formal sponsored by the Student Activities Council and the Alumnae association. This first formal of the college so cial season will Ik- held in the Towel Room of the Drake Hotel on Dec. 27. with Dorothy I Ionian, president of the Student Activities Council, and Kath- i-riue Brennan O'Xeil '34. president ol the Alumnae association, as co-chair men. Alumna Directs Les D'Ardennes In French Play Pom REUSSIKK a Hoi.i.vwooii. a one- act comedy by Maurice Lacoste, will be presented by I.e.-. D'Arciennes. under the direction of Joan Itourquc '39, at I p. in.. 4 p. in., and 8 p. m., on Dec. 2. This coinedie francaise is a brief sketch ol' a self-inflated dramatic professor who builds up a young lady's hopes tor a I lollywood career only to dis appoint her at the last minute. What happens to the young lady, whether or not she becomes an actress. what the resultant action ol the play is all these ques- , . ... . Joan Borque tions will, be an swered on Dec. 2nd at the play. A French major during her college days. Mis-. Boiirquc has selected Patricia Bain to play the part of Professor Diipont; Mildred Welch to enact the role of Juliette, an ingenue: and Pa tricia Cummings to impersonate Louise Roland. Helen Sicinicnowski will give a pro logue to the play, in French. Kathryn Georgeouses will be prompter, and Xa- thalie Letcher will be in charge of prop erties. At l.es D'Arciennes meeting on Xov. I't. Rosemary Shanahan read a paper en titled Couture Courageous, and on Dec 3 Miss Letcher will discuss translation problems of French poetry, and Rita Mulbern will read a French play with a I lebussy accompaniment. What? Love's Labour's Lost When? Tonight, Tomorrow Where? The College Theatre All-Star Cast Cooperates With All-Star Staff For All-Star Shakespearean Play With Musical Interludes Calling all first nigliters Shakespeare's wit and humor will be pre sented tonight and tomorrow night by an all-star Mundelein cast, under the direction of .Miss Florence Krumlauf, with the College Orchestra, directed by Joseph J. Grill, providing musical accompaniment. Lovk's Labour's Lost, a production which, from advance .showings, will be outstanding in the annals ol college dramatic offerings, will be the culmination of five weeks of intensive work on the part of the actors, directors, stage crews, designers, technicians, and musicians. Brilliantlv colored costumes of six- Faculty Members Prepare Studies For Talk, Review Sister Mary Donald. B.Y.M.. bead of the classics department, will give a paper on the topic. Why the Classics? at the Language and Literature Conference to be held at the University of Iowa. Dec. 5-7. Sister Mary Auguslina. B. .M bead of the history department, contributes a review of Clement Eaton's FREEDOM OF Tnoi i,in in Tin. Oi.n South, to the October issue of the Catholic Historical Review. Mu Nu Sigma Honors Jesuits On Anniversary Climaxing a program honoring the Jesuits on the four hundredth anniversary of their foundation, the- Right Rev erend Thomas V. Shannon, rector of St. Thomas the Apostle Church, struck the keynote of the day in A Tribute To Jesuit Thinkers, his address before an audience of Loyola and Mundelein stu dents, on Xov. 19. Mu Xu Sigma, the college philosophy club, sponsored the program. Describing the work of the Jesuits in a variety of fields, Monsignor Shannon mentioned, besides the more famous leach ' ers, philosophers, and explorers, less well- known but equally important men. Mentions Papal Advisers Among these he signalized the three Jesuits who were valued advisors to His Holiness. Pope Leo XIII; the man who first perfected the method of forecasting tropical storms, and the Jesuits who have developed the science ol seismology. This review of the work of the Jesuits You Shall Have Music, Dec. 8, Chopin, Liszt, and Rubinstein The Cecilians plan a program ol six musical groups for the audience attend ing their second quarterly recital, to be given on Dec. S in the college theatre al 8:15 p.m. Five selections three of them by Chopin, whose piano pieces. accord ing to Dickenson, touch the high water mark of their kind -comprise the piano group. Dorothy Schreck will play his Grande Valse Brilliante. op. IS, and Rita McLean will give his Xoc- turne in F sharp major and Mazurka in II Hat major. The two other selections are the works of Rubinstein and Liszt in life, rivals for pianoforte fame. Marianne Donahoe will open the program with Rubinstein's Concerto D Minor. First Movement, with Grace Mannebach playing orchestral parts at the second piano: F.ilcen Ryan will play the Hun garian's Valse Oubliec. In the string group, Albina Gherardi contributes two violin selections, Ro- maiice Sans Paroles, and Rondo Ele gant by Wicniawski. Dorothy drill at i the cello will play Popper's Hungarian Rhapsody. Listed as organ numbers are Toecato j by Franck to he played by Angela Vol ler. Pastorale by Franck, and Scherzo by Weaver, both to be played by Mary Catherine Mother way. The Mundelein Vocal Ensemble un der the direction of Professor Otto A. Singenbcrger will give a group of three numbers, Sister M. Kditha's O Glori- osa. Dvorak's The Lord Is My Shep herd, and Tschaikowsky's Holy, Holy, Holy. Incidental soloists are Rita Cal- laghan and Maude Shuflitowski. Mildred Martinez will sing Voce di donna from La (iiocanda: Eleanor Kandratas. In Vienna Woods by the immortal Waltz King. Accompanists will be Marion Jacobs. Louise Szkodzinski, Genevieve Locaitis. Angela Voller, and Rosalie Wiora. (Continued on Page 3, Col. 2) in a variety of fields was the theme of an Ode, written by Virginia Cheatham teenth-century France designed by the ail department, will lend glamour to the garden setting ol the ball scene. A masquerade adds to the suspense of the plot when four heroines confuse their four heroes, and a Spanish Ambassador ci mpetes with the village clown for tin love of a country maiden. Action Complicates Plot Pageantry, court intrigue, and a little- matter of 500,0(10 crowns help to com plicate the plot, which has enough action to satisfy the most avid audience. Jean Tracy is assistant to the director. Doris Ruddy is ticket chairman, and the stage committee, which has been busy raking the sets designed in the art de partment, is under the supervision of Ruth Schmigelsky. ( thers on the stage committee are Edith Bukowski, Florence .lamia. Mary Ellen Winblad. Dorothy Huslik, and Frances Wilkinson. Dorothea Walters is properties chairman, assisted by Rosemary McDonald, Teresa Schmid, Jeanne du Moulin. Margery Mtirnig- han. Mary Jane McCarthy, Irene Mon- tayna. Marilyn Shay. Marcella Garrity, Ruth Rinderer and Audrey Tobin. Charlotte Safranski will assist the players with make-up. Doris Ruddy, chairman of ihc ticket and presented by Francesca Galgano, just I committee, is assisted by Mary Celeste before the Monsignor's address. Students Read Papers The program opened with a prologue by Lucille O'Connell. and continued with a discussion of Bellarmine the Controver sialist by Frank McGarr. Loyola '42, and one of Bellarmine and Political Philos ophy, by Edward Riordan '41. both of which told of the life of the Jesuit phil osopher, St. Robert Bellarmine. who, al the age of 1-1. began a magnificent career by successfully defending the Jesuit schools against malicious accusations. Members of the music department who assisted with the program were Ruth Perry, piano; Albina Gherardi. violin; Yvonne Pelletier. cornet; and Marion Stolid, percussion. S.A.C. Installs Mail Board; List The Student Activities Council has provided for a mail rack, to be located in the bookstore lounge, for communica tions between students. The rack will be set up on the two pillars in front of the bookstore- Another new feature to be introduced is a schedule of the events for the week. A list of all lectures, club meetings, and parties will be placed on the Student Ac tivities Council's bulletin board. The club representatives are requested to bring an nouncements of their activities to the Council tor this list. Shannon. Jane Redlin. and Elaine Mo gilka. Mary Catherine Motherway will pro vide i rgan accompaniments; Yvonne Pel letier will be the trumpeter; and Lorraine Guhbins will play the hunting horn. Juniors to Usher Mary Lou Bell is chairman of the ush ers, who have been selected from the junior class. Ushers Friday evening will be Dorothy McCarthy. Marie Xorris. Rosemary Lanahan, Ruth O'Hcarn, Kath ryn Rheiner, Colette Bergeron, Thora I lansen, Margery Linnehan. Betty Pra- liin. Anita Gibian. and Jane Brown. Ushers for the Saturday evening per formance are Anne Marie O'Rourke. Rita Valenzano, Irene Weber, Kathryn Warner. Dorothy Schneider, Dorothy Hein, Mary Anne Vitek, Rosemarie ( gt;s- tendorf, Margaret llagcn. and Geraldine Met Sarry. Debaters Meet Marquette Team lt; 'pening the inter-collegiate debate sea son on Xov. 28, Evelyn Teuiplenian and Rosemary Shanahan met a team from Marquette university, on the l'i Kappa Delta question. Resolved: That the Na tions of the Western Hemisphere Should Form a Permanent Union. The Marquette Hilltoppcrs upheld the affirmative, and the Mundelein team defended the negative.
title:
1940-11-29 (1)
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