description:
jmen From Idiana Appear Concert . Joseph's College armonizes Sunday nliining their musical talents, the Bciuhs of Mundelein and St. Jo b's college will present a concert, 114. at 3:30 p.m., in the college Briuni. j program will include selections St. Joseph's Quartet and several with a modern flavor Little iDriim, Wagon Wheels, Old Man and Traveling. Daniel O'Con- i gt; director of the St. Joseph glee It Mundelein Glee club, under the lninn of Adalbert Huguelet, will I nt The Heavens Are Telling, by In, and Tchaikowsky's Come I the Day. (combined choruses will interpret j Ite Spirituin, a seven-part hymn 1 chucltky, and a Fred Waring ar- tnicnt of Sequeira's Hymn of ino selections are also a part of concert. Mary Mahoney will play I Palm and May, by John Ire- I; and Ruth Ryan will interpret Bin's The Fountain of the Acqua me Preludes in F major and F k by Chopin will be offered by J) Wellner. Natti Waltz, a Delib- ohanyi composition, will be played Jlarilyn Egan. liolin soloist Eileen Kennedy will Romance and Rondo Elegant by owski and Patricia Krul will play Rosonarin by Krcisler. ompanists arc Dolores Rodriquez iDorothv Dresden. lominate Student leaders Tomorrow laminations for officers of incoming rr and Junior classes will be held ass meetings tomorrow, and elec- I will be Thursday. I a closely contested race for the le of president of the Student Ac- Hies Council, Peggy Butler, presi- of the Junior class, was elected, El 25. leona Adams, close contender for presidency, was chosen viee-presi- I Miss Adams is currently secre- lof the SAC. and is a member of 1 Riding Club. loth Miss Butler and Miss Adams I English-Journalism majors and hers of the Skyscraper staff, sphoniore Drama major Carolyn tuny was elected secretary by a slide majority, and Freshman Joan Ion was elected treasurer. Miss Benny is the present treasurer of Council. Miss Simon, a resident Went from LaGrange, is on the Ihman Board of Governors. May Devotions Unite Campi Daily at 11:50 a.m., Mundelein and Loyola students gather on the Loyola campus for May de votions in honor of Our Lady of Fatima. The devotions are sponsored by the Sodality of both colleges. / y'vAhs.-- Summer Session Opens June 26 For Six Weeks Plenty of work but afternoons free for play and study arc guaran teed students who attend the Summer Session, which opens June 26 and closes on August 4. Classes meet Monday through Fri day, from 8:50 a.m. to 11:50. During the first morning session, 8:50 to 10:20, the following courses will be offered: Ethics, General Psychology, English History, Differential liquations, Ro mantic Movement, Speech, Art Ap preciation, Organic Chemistry, Ele mentary Education, Piano, Voice, Ro- byn Technique (music) I, and Ward (music) I. During the second period 10:25 to 11:50, classes will be offered in Cur rent Affairs, Integral Calculus, Milton, Principles of Education, Survey of English Literature I, Organic Chemis try, Methods of High School Science, Elementary Education, Piano, Voice, Orchestral Instruments, and Free Counterpoint. Bishop O'Brien Donates Oils By Three Artists Through the instrumentality of His Ex cellency Bishop William D. O'Brien, D.D., three oil paintings, previously hung in the Art Institute, have been added to the Mundelein collection. All three are displayed on second floor. Mass in Brittany, by I.ucicn Simon, hangs opposite the elevators. A painting of Catholics hearing Mass in a Breton chapel, the work is representative of Simon's popular scenes of the province. Born in Paris in 1861, Simon painted his family and friends until, in 1890, he traveled to Brittany and then dedicated himself to work there. His portraits are at once realistic and synthetic, vigorous, and roughly frank. He died in 1945 On the east wall of the elevator alcove hangs The Beheading of John the Bap tist, by Charles Sprague Pearce, an Amer ican artist who painted this dramatic scene in 1881. He died in 1914. An English landscape painter, Harry Thompson, produced Un Cavalaire, or Landscape with Sheep, which hangs op posite the social rooms. Thompson died in 1901. THE ' . f -w*' *: *fll j v 'SHISflAPEI ii **' s'.iJL .-* t-- ..' '- '-ilk, v '.'.i kj - He Vol. XX MUNDELEIN COLLEGE. CHICAGO MAY 8, 1950 No. 11 Students Join With All Schools Taught By B.V.M.'s in Nationwide Holy Year Observance on Thursday, May 11 Choristers Listen for Echo Checking their recorded singing with the liturgical score book are Glee club members Dolores Nolan, Rosemary Donatelli, Ruth Ryan, Agnes Coco, holding book, and Joyce Knox, operating recording machine. NFCCS Delegates To Elect Regional Officers at Rosary Fresh from the national congress, delegates and students from the Chi cago region of NFCCS will meet at Rosarv College, May 14, to decide policy and elect regional officers for the 'SO-'Sl school year. Holy Mass, two plenary sessions, and a general reorganization of com missions will form the all-day program. Father David C. Fullmer, Ph.B., As sistant Superintendent of Catholic Schools of the Archdiocese of Chicago will be speaker at the congress. pple A Day Brings Teacher Chalk in hand English major Virginia Alszyna receives an apple from members of her class school, Miss Olszyna is one of 25 seniors doing student teaching in local schools, through school principals. (Story on Page 3.) at St. Gertrude's the courtesy of Here It Is With Decimal Points Statisticians Qet Students Number Where do Mundelein students live? This practical problem occupies the minds of the Statistics class who pre sent herewith the results of an in vestigation they have conducted as a class project. Eighty-five per cent of the total en rollment live within the city limits. Of this 85 per cent 56.3 per cent reside on the north side; 24.7 per cent live on the west side, and 19 per cent live on the south side. In round figures, 165 freshmen live north, 58 south, 60 west; the sopho more class lists 103 north siders, 47 south siders, and 40 west siders. Juniors who come from a northerly direction are 74 in number, from the deep south 43, and from the far west 17. Seniors traveling their last weary miles from the north side number 71, from the south side 34, and the west side 25. Peter Pan Bows On Stage May 19 Like spring, Peter Pan will be a little late this year. .But he's coming May 19, 20, and 21. Be cause of the illness of technical director George F. Petterson, who has been making settings for Mundelein plays for more than a decade, the play was postponed. Fred Feldt, technical director of Evanston's Children's Theatre, will replace Mr. Petterson. The matinee for children of alumnae, a benefit for the Alum nae Fund, will be at 2:30 Sunday afternoon, May 21. Joining in a commemoration of the Holy Year observed by all schools conducted by the Sisters of Charity. H.V.M.. Mundelein stu dents will offer the Prayer of Prayers, the Missa Recitata, at 9 a.m., May 11, in the auditorium. As a token of reverence for the Holy Father and of gratitude for ihe privileges of the Holy Year, ihe Missa Cantata will be offered for Mis Holiness during the month of May in each of the 179 schools conducted by the Sisters.. Father William P. Murphy, A.M.. chairman of the Religion department. will preach the Jubilee sermon. The Glee club will sing the Cum Ju- bilo Mass and Offertory Motet, and will celebrate the Mass and give the Ave Maria by Arcadelt. The Prop ers will he from the Votive Mass of Our Lady, Salve Sancta Patrons. The assembly will chant the Responses and sing as Recessional the traditional Hymn for the Pope. Mother Mary Josita, B.V.M., Super ior General of the Congregation and a former member of the Mundelein Faculty, will bring to the Holy Father in the fall a spiritual bouquet repre senting the Holy Year tribute of the 65,000 students in B.V.M. schools and the 2000 Sisters who teach them.. B.V.M. schools are in 9 archdioceses and 17 dioceses ranging from New York, to Mississippi to California, to Hawaii. The Sisters conduct 132 ele mentary schools, 45 high schools and academies, and two colleges. State Academy Hears Scientists' Research Results Dimitri Sokolof, Ph.D., of the Bi ology department, delved into the mys teries of some of the smallest but most wondrous animals that the microscope reveals when he conducted a demon stration lecture on ciliates at the meet ing the Illinois State Academy of Science, May 5, 6, at Augustana col lege. Biology and Chemistry majors were also on the program presenting the results of their senior research proj ects. Dolores Bresingham reported on her study of cicatrization in plant tissues, and Marilyn Tucker described hcr lt; re search, a comparative study of the structure of the nuclei of some valvo- calcs. Both Miss Bresingham and Miss Tucker are Biology majors. Chemistry major Joan Haninger out lined for the delegates the research pro gram of the senior students of the Mundelein Chemistry department. This program included her own research on dyes and their application to synthetic libers, that of Melba Pierotti and Catherine Clancy on paper and column chromatography and the work on com plex coordination compounds of cobalt, ruthenium and iridium which was car ried on by LaVon Froelich, Betty Neville and Mary Sowinski. On May 6, Melba Pierotti and Bet ty Neville reported further on this work at a meeting of the Student Af filiate group of the Chicago Section of the American Chemical Society held at Illinois Institute of Technology.
title:
1950-05-08 (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:
This image is issued by the Women and Leadership Archives. Use of the image requires written permission from the Director of the Women and Leadership Archives. It may not be sold or redistributed, copied or distributed as a photograph, electronic file, or any other media. The image should not be significantly altered through conventional or electronic means. Images altered beyond standard cropping and resizing require further negotiation with the Director. The user is responsible for all issues of copyright. Please Credit: Women and Leadership Archives, Loyola University Chicago. wlarchives@luc.edu
coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College