description:
V fue ' J*:'1l4IPIEI -':.:. iBh .-.5 * :1 p- *' .-. ;v::'. ' .. :;-.v -B,. lt;i ' w. .; ..: , . .';. * . ** s.y-' ol. XVII MUNDELEIN COLLEGE, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, MAY 22, 1947 No. 13 i B, ect 12 Seniors to appa Gamma Pi Candidates Chosen for Scholarship, Service The votes of the Faculty and the sen- lass elected to Kappa Gamma Pi, Jioinl honor society of graduates of Ihulic colleges, 12 seniors, who are landing, for scholarship, leadership, ally, and service. Eflic lucky dozen are Marianne Pcter- l Rita Stalzer, Marion King, Regina iarbara Brennan. Ethel Dignan, fori'inc Jankowski, Grace F'oran, Geor- ina McGregor, Adelaide Costello, py O'Malley, and Mary Alice Sulli- n. Heads Council liss Peterson, Art major, is president tin- Student Activities Council, served president of her class in sophomore uniiir years, and served i n the mi::, i'. as a freshman representative. Hiss I less. Fnglisb-Jiurnaiisin maj. r I associate editor of The Skyscraper, ice-president of the S.A.C., and was (surer and secretary of the S.A.C. a sophomore and a junior. Hiss Dignan, Economics major and fcsident of the International Relations Chairman of the Inter-American oiniiii-iiiii nf the N.F.C.C.S. n English major. Mis- Foran is co- itiir-iii-chiei of the college literary bterly, The Review, and contributes day. Edits the Review iss King, an English major, is co lor in chief of The Review, has con- but. ( lo Today, and. was guest editor Extension magazine last summer, iss Brennan. a Drama major, is iilint of the senior class, and re- iuil the Gulden Rose award on Lac- re Sumlav for services to the Drama ill M, gt;li- Jankowski. co-editor-in chief of Skyscraper, is president of the Press lb anil a member of Mu Nu Sigma. Rita Stalzer, Psychology-Biology ma- I Served as senior S.A.C representa- f ami is active in Debate club, pHophy club, and Terrapins. Is Sodality Officer A Chemistry major. Miss McGregor is pe-prel'ect of the Sodality and an A i representative. Miss Costello. a imc Economics major, is NFCCS rep- entative for Mundelein. Mi . O'Malley, History major, is ac- ve in the Sodality, and i- secretary tin- Spanish club. Miss Sullivan, an hglish major, is president of the F.ng- :li Round Table, and ai active member the Sodality, and the League of men Voters. Instructors Attend Panels, Meetings Shier Mary Carmelyn. B.V.M.. Facul ty menilier of the Art department and . I ni the Red Cmss unit, served as I ember of President Truman's Ci n- reiu-e on Fire Prevention Education, ptrfi nut in Washington, D.C. May d-8. I, with Sister Mary Richard, B.V.M., the English department, attended the ional College Health association ting in New York, May 7-10. a'ry Kay Jones '44, of the Public Rcl- (Icpartnient, took part in a panel sioii at the St. Louis meeting of the perican College Public Relations as- jation, last week, describing the work f public relations in a denominational allege for women. With Highest Honors . . . Ethel Dignan, economics major, will be a candidate for the Bachelor of Arts degree Summa Cum Laude on Commencement Day. Mundelein Aids In Drafting N.S.O. Constitution S.A.C. Elects Delegates To Wisconsin Convention Together with students from Cali fornia. Texas, and Rhode Island, dele gates Dorothy Gaughan and Mary Lou Hafner will participate in the Constitu tional convention of the National Student Organization, at the University of Wis consin, Aug. 30 to Sept. 8. The Student Activities Council elected the representatives. Alternates are Adele Baiocchi and Helen Jean Rogers. The students will make the final de cisions about the aims and activities f the NSO passed at the Chicago Con ference last December. They will de termine its structure, its relationships with other organizations, and the dues it will charge member student bodies. They also will elect the national and regional officer's for the first year of the NSO. Scheduled to address the convention on educational problems are David Li'.ien- thal. Ellis Arnall, Mrs. Eleanor Roose velt, and William Benton, of the U. S. State Department. Appoint Faculty Member to Business Qroup Board Sister Marv Grcgoria, B.V.M., chair man of the Secretarial department, has been invited to serve as chairman of an executive board forming a North Cen tral chapter i f the Catholic Business Education association, which was organ ized in New York in 1945. Suggested by the Right Reverend Phil ip J. Furlong, secretary of education of the .Archdiocese of New York, the asso ciation aims to stimulate all Catholic ed ucators in the fields of commerce, fin ance, i r business administration to share their kuowldgee and skill; to perfect an esprit de corps; to encourage production of business education literature; and to improve standards and encourage re search and graduate work. Sister Mary Gregoria will paiticipate in a panel discussion of The Contribu tions of Catholics to Business Education, (Continued on page 6, column 4) 119 More Days Till Fall Semester The west door will swing open on Monday morning, Sept. 8, for Senior registration. Juniors will register on Tuesday morning, Sept. 9, and sophomores on Wednesday morning, Sept. 10. Freshman placement tests will be given at 1 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 5, and the Freshman Orientation pro gram will open at 9:30 a.m., on Wednesday, Sept. 10, and will close with freshman registration on Fri day, Sept. 12. Classes for the sev enteenth academic year will begin on Monday, Sept. 15. Six Seniors Plan Qraduate Studies Home Economists Receive Interneship Appointments Seniors who plan to do graduate work next year include Adelaide Costello, who has received a scholarship in nutrition to Syracuse university. Miss Costello is a Home Economics major. Mary Catherine Crosby, a Biology ma jor, will enroll as a graduate student at the University of Arizona, and Cath- leen O'Donoghue, Sociology major, will enter the School of Social Service at the Catholic University of America. Three Home Economics majors have received appointments for dietetics in- lerneships. Noreen Roche and Barbara Lundgren will interne at Cook County- Hospital, where Bonnie Turner '45 is a staff member. Joan Mullaney has an appointment to the Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit. Monsignor Kealy Will Give Baccalaureate Benediction Climaxes Ceremony 1 solemnly pledge myself to hold my degree as a sacred trust . . . These traditional words will be re pealed by members of the Class of 1947 in Baccalaureate Sunday. June 1, when the Right Reverend Monsignor J. Gerald Kealy. S.T.I gt;.. rector of St. Gertrude's church, gives the Baccalaureate sermon and administers the Graduate's Pledge of Loyalty and Service. A graduate of the North American ci liege in Rome, Monsignor Kealy was pri.lessor of sacred and mediaeval history at Quigley Preparatory seminary before his appointment at first recti r of St. Mary-of-the-Lake Seminary. In 1924, Pope Pius NI appointed him a Papal Chamberlain, in 1928, he was made a domestic prelate, and, in 1946, Pope Pius Nil appointed him rector of the North American college, a distinc tion which he has since resigned. Monsigner Kealy is a member of the Mediaeval Academy of America; of the Catholic Historical society; the Asso ciation of American College alumni; and the American Catholic Philosophical so ciety. While the Orchestra, directed by Jo seph J. Grill, plays the Mendelssohn Pro cessional, the seniors and the Faculty will march in procession to the auditor- (Continued on page 6, column 3) 161 Seniors Are Candidates For Degrees at Sixteenth Annual Commencement, June 5 His Eminence, Samuel Cardinal Stritch, D.D., Archbishop of Chi cago and Chancellor of the College, will confer degrees upon the members of the Class of 1947, and will give the Commencement address at the sixteenth annual Commencement exercises, on Thursday, June 5, at 10 a.m., in the college theatre. One hundred and sixty-one seniors, the largest class in Mundelein history, are candidates for degrees. His Eminence will award the Mundelein College Gold Key for schol arship to 11 honor graduates, of whom Ethel Dignan, Economics major, who will merit the Bachelor of Arts degree Summa Cum Laude, is the highest. *r ; ; ; I'ranked, Carole Gcccaris, Dale Glennon, Florence Glowacki, Muriel Glabman Goldstone, Lorraine Gondek, Beth Good willie, Rosemary Gormley, Eugenia Gregory, Virginia Grimes, Mary Guy- Nancy Habich. Kathryn llangsterfer, Eileen 1 lanlon, Jean Hanson. Mary Em Harrigan, Lois Hayhurst, Patricia Heath, Patricia Hereley, Edna Mae Holm, Lucille Janda, Joan Ka waguchi, Barbara Keenan, Betty Jane Kelly, Margaret Kelly, Therese Kelly, Roseann Kennedy, Lorraine King, Dor othy Kraman, Marjorie Kroske, Barbara l.anibe. Jo Claire Lambrecht, Grace Lcckie, Patricia Lee, Mary Jane Lynch, Mary Louise Lyne. Veronica Markey, Patricia McCann. Catherine McLaugh lin, Mary Claire Meyer, Muriel Millar, Betty Moloney, Margaret Monckton, Don na Mooney, Esther Mori. Peggy and Patricia O'Brien, Betty O'Connor, Ethel O'Connor, Cathlecn O'Donoghue, Mary Agnes O'Grady. Mary O'Malley. Rose mary I Yin. Bernice Filler. deceiving the Bachelor of Arts degree Magna Cum Laude will be Peggy Cona han, Mathematics major; Marion King, English major; Diana Satkus, Mathema tics major, and Rita Stalzer, who has an interdepartmental major in Biology and Psychology. Meriting the Bachelor of Arts degree Cum Laude will be Florence Jankowski, English-Journalism major; Marianne Pe terson, Art major; Lucille Stasenka, Ma thematics major; Mary Alice Sullivan, English major; and Eloise Thomas, Eco nomics major. Meriting the Bachelor of Science degree Cum Laude will be Pa tricia Holway, Chemistry major. The College Orchestra, conducted by Joseph J. Grill, and the Glee club, con ducted by Adalbert Huguelet, will pro vide music for the ceremony. The Orchestra will play the Mendel ssohn Processional and the Meyerbeer Recessional, and the Glee club will sing Psalm One-IIundred-Fifty, by Cesar l-'ranck, with Annastasia McGowan at the piano, and Zoltan Kodaly's Ave Ma ria, a capella. The Reverend John J. Sullivan, S.J., rector of St. Ignatius church, will give the Invocation, and the Reverend William r. Murphy, chairman of the Religion department, will present the candidates for degress. G. Michael Schmeing, chair man of the l.iyola university Chemistry department, will be marshal. Candidates for the Bachelor of Arts degree will include Sylvia Ainato, Joyce Archer, Zita Armstrong, Rosemary Ban ner. Regina Hess. Jonith Biggio, Edelle Boarini, Dorothy Breit, Barbara Bren nan, Patricia Broderick, Ursula Brod beck, Jane Bush, Annamay Byrne, Mary Cannon, Ann Carroll, Mary Castro, Do lores Cervenka. Jacqueline Clancy, Col- lette ('Milord, I 'i I -stc 'oari, In ne Con way, Lucille Cook, Mary Alice Court- ney, Patricia Czarnecki, Margaret Dalton, Veronica Daly, Dorothy Dimmick, Nan cy Donnelly, Mary Alice Dunne, Patricia Dunne, Rosemary Entringer, Helen Finn, Grace F'oran, Frances Frangella, Elaine Sociologist Joins Notre Dame Staff Sister Mary Liguori, B.V.M., chair man of the Sociology department, will be a member of the Faculty at the Uni versity of Notre Dame during the sum mer sessiui, having been invited to con duct a course in social problems. I Ioldcr of a law degree from De Paul university. Sister Mary Liguori has a Master's degree from Notre Dame and a doctorate from the Catholic Univer sity of America, where she studied on a fellowship. Donna Jean Powers, Colleen Rettig, Dolores Richo. Virginia Rogers, Mariellen Cunningham Sabato. June Saunders, Joyce Schmidt. Rosemary Schoen, Mary Ann Shaw, Joan Shea, Sister Mary St. Clare, B.V.M., Julie Sitt, Gertrude Spellbrink. Janet Sprickman, Geraldine Stack, Pa tricia Sullivan, Dolores Toniatti, Lor raine Uhlich, Esther Velis, Virginia Vlerick, Helen Celeste Shannon Walsh, Veronica Walsh. Maralyn Woodworth, and Grace Wurst. Candidates for the Bachelor of Science degree will be Dolores Arenberg, Bea trice Berteau, Patricia Branigan, Doro thy Case, Adelaide Costello, Mary Cath erine Crosby, Eleanor Cullerton, Marian Doerries, Patricia Ebbeson, Dorothy Fah- renhach, Rita I-'oehringer. Norma Gad- dini, Margaret Griebel, Margaret 11am- iltt n, Lois Hopkins, Elaine Jenkins, Helen Karkazis, Barbara Lundgren, Mary Vir ginia Lynskey, Georgianna McGregor, Mary Jane McNeal, Emogene Meehan, Joan Mullaney, Alverna Paulau, Noreen Roche, Nanette Salisbury, Elaine Scd- lack. Rosemary Viglione Umcnhofer, and Rita Winkates. Candidates for the Bachelor of Music degree are Eunice Dankowski, Lillian Logiudice, Jean Macferran, Gloria Ma loney. Catherine Prendergast, and Rose mary Tierney. Candidates for the Bachelor of Music Educatii n degree are Margaret Cashman, Lorraine Heffernan. and lone Henry. President Awards Certificates to Commerce Students Sister Mary Josephine, B.V.M., Presi dent of the College, will present Secre tarial Certificates of Recommendation to Mary Anne Bott, Catherine Fitzgibbon, Rita Hosna, and Elaine Ortell, on May 29. Following the presentation the stu- dents will be guests of the College at a luncheon. The secretarial certificate is awarded to those students who have completed a minimum of 40 credit hours and who meet stands of speed and proficiency in secretarial science. Holders of certificates are given special preference by the Col lege Placement Bureau. Skyscraper, Review Merit Ail-American, All'Catholic Honors Under the co-editorship of Florence Jankowski and Colleen Rettig, Grace F'oran and Marii n King, The Skyscraper and The Review have again merited All- American Honors, in an annual survey and rating conducted by Associated Col legiate Press. Of the 327 newspapers entered in the newspaper contest, only 79 merited All- American Honors, and of the 5.1 entered in the section for scmi-uu nthly papers ill colleges with enrollments above 500, only 9 merited All-American. The Magazine Service listed 9 out of 23 rating All-American honors. Of the 14 magazines from colleges with enroll ments over 500 students, only 4 won All-American. Both The Review and The Skyscraper also receive All-Catholic Honors from the Catholic School Press Association.
title:
1947-05-22 (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