description:
Annual Three Day Retreat Opens with Mass, Feb* 1; Father Walsh Officiates The Reverend Joseph A. Walsh. S.J.. tfessor of Latin and Greek at Mil- Id Novitiate, Ohio, will direct the jdents' annual three-day retreat, Feb- -4. A faculty member at Loyola from 9 to 1921, when Loyola was only- academy and Mundelein did not ex- MtFatlicr Walsh later studied the clas- a at Cambridge university, Eng- 0 id. After his ordination in 1924, he pletcd his theological studies in Jfoly Mass, celebrated in the audi- irnn at 8:45 a.m., will open each day- prayer and meditation. In confer ees at 10:45 in the morning and at and at 2:15 in the afternoon, dilher Walsh will offer suggestions Br the solution of the many spiritual Mems which the war has thrust ce f upon the college girl. Benediction of the Most Blessed Sac rament, with the Glee club singing the traditional hymns, will conclude the final conference each day. Included in the selections which the Glee club will sing at Mass each day will be two compositions by Sister Mary Rafael, B.V.M., chairman of the music department, Hymn to the Little Flower, and Hymn in Honor of Christ the King. Soloists for the four days will be Gertrude Spellbrink, Peggy Routliff, Mary Jane Ostendorf, Marion Ciucci, Patricia Tennyson, lone Henry, Gloria Rassenfoss, Josephine Gcndielle, Dor othy Grill, and Mary A. Williams. Barbara Ann Frick, organist, Lillian Muza, violinist, and Dorothy Grill, cel list, will accompany the Glee club. THE : :.: ferry's ,-.. . vi .' lt; :.. tffitni S3 iVl v *--'v Si'sl: ::v.- -- gt; ,.w ii , w. .. ..;., . ;: ;.--.- Vol. XIV MUNDELEIN COLLEGE, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, JANUARY 21, 1944 No. 6 ociologist Plans Convention Program Bter Mary Liguori, B.V.M., cliair- Ku of the department of sociology, is serai chairman of the Chicago-land ention of the American Catholic iological society, to be held at the inah club, on Feb. 5. ie general theme of the meeting The Sociologist and Post-War Re duction, which leaders in the field Christian thought will discuss under following topics: The Changing ial Order and Race Relations, Dc- lency, and Public Welfare. ie Reverend Ralph A. Gallagher, , chairman of the Loyola univer- fr department of sociology, is execu- secretary of the association. cilians Present i Mid-Year Concert By Chopin, Liszt, Brahms, MacDowell Numbers New Committees Back Bond Drive Launch Campaign for Fourth War Loan Planned to satisfy the taste of every :ic lover was the thirteenth annual id-year concert presented by the Ce- ,Bians at the student assembly ycster- Barbara Ann Frick opened the pro- ' in with the Toccata from the Fifth pphony of Widor, a modern organ position following the formal pat- of the classic masters. The brilliant Concert Etude of Mac- ell, America's most individual com- r, was played by Catherine Prcnd- st. Following this selection, Jose- jkine Gendielle sang Peter de Rose's Heard A Forest Praying. Plays Chopin Ballade he poem that inspired Chopin to the Ballade in F Major, which as played by Betty Lamberti, is the tr to the radical extremes of mood Bt it presents. A Polish legendary illad, it is closely followed in the basic from the calm and serene be- lining through the sudden storm, ihich is like a frenzy in its excite- Hlt, on to the plaintive minor ending Aich, though greatly saddened, is gain peaceful. Lillian Muza represented another fclish composer when she played a liolin solo, Romance and Rondo, Op. by Wieniawski. Dellamae Laughlin Produced a new note when she sang k selection A Lovely Night, by Ron- ild. Trio Performs The College Trio, composed of Dor- hy Grill, cellist, Lillian Muza, violin- iit, and Barbara Ann Frick, pianist, : iycd Minuet by Haydn, a Brahms Hungarian dance, and Mignonette by Codard. Eunice Dankowski contributed i vocal selection by Hammond, en titled Song. Climaxing the program was the fiery, dramatic Hungarian Fantasy of Liszt, l composition based on a simple Hun- (Continued on page 3, column 2) Succeeding Dorothy Median and Margery Rowbottom, first-semester chairman of the College War Bond and Stamp committee, Leocadio Meloy will launch next month the activities of a new and enlarged all-college com mittee, announced by Helen Sauer, S.A.C. president, at assembly on Jan. 18. Mary Lavin is chairman of the jun ior class committee, and the follow ing students are division chairmen for the sophomore class: Lenore Behr, Es- telle Guest, Margaret Harvey, Patri cia Heffernan, Francine Lamb, Anita Schwaba, and Betty Wiersema. Representing the freshmen divisions on the committee are Barbara Bren nan, Dorothy Case, Kathryn Hangs- terfer, Ann Holinger, Patricia Lee, Gloria Maloney, Chloe Mezo, Muriel Millar, Mary O'Malley, Mary Jane Scherer, and Maralyn Woodworth. Alumna Sees Action With Army in Italy Serves in Front-Line Hospital First Mundelein graduate to go overseas in the service, Lieutenant Margaret Troy '39, nurse at an Evacuation Hospital in Italy, was one of the 20 nurses, doctors, and enlisted men who provided Christ mas cheer for the wounded in front line hospitals. On Christmas Eve, Lieutenant Troy was one of the choristers at Midnight Mass, celebrated by the Reverend Michael English, S.J., for merly of the Loyola faculty, now chaplain at the hospital. Lieutenant Troy, who enlisted a year ago this month, was with the Army in the African and Sicil ian campaigns before going into Ita ly- I gt;Qave'a'Pint Club Qains 200 Recruits Two hundred and one students have made appointments at the American Red Cross Blood Bank for Jan. 25, 26, and 27, according to Mary Jane Kent, chairman of the Blood Donor commit tee of the College Red Cross unit. A member of the Gallon club, Miss Kent has announced that already 65 students wear I-Gave-a-Pint Pins, and that a number of the students are regu lar donors. Promote Book Drive Virginia Dimmick, right, chairman of the Sodality Books-for-Service- men campaign, and Audrey Tobin pack contributions. Former Faculty Member Elected To High Office Army-Navy Encamp At Mundelein for Afternoon Dancing A former member of the Faculty of Mundelein College. Mother Mary Josita, B.V.M., was elected Superior General of the Congregation of the Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Vir gin Mary, at a general chapter held at the Motherhouse of the Congrega tion, Mount Carmel, Dubuque, Dec. 8. Mother Josita, who holds a Master's degree from Loyola university and who has done graduate work also at the University of Illinois, was a member of the Faculty in the English de partment here from 1931 to 1933, when she was appointed Principal at the Im maculata high school. Subsequently, Mother Josita was named one of the four provincial su periors of her Congregation, which office she held at the time of her elec tion to the Superior Generalship. The former Superior General, Moth er Mary Gervase, who has just com pleted a 12-year term in the highest office of the Congregation, was guest of honor at a concert in the Mundelein auditorium just one year ago today, on which occasion she addressed the students, commending them for their achievements and urging them to use their college years as a preparation for distinguished service to God and to the nation in years to come. Loyola Students Are Guests Tomorrow For Loyola, the Army, and the Navy- will be the motto of the tea dance, to be held tomorrow in the gymnasium. Guests will be the Loyola university medical and dental students in the Ar my and Navy reserve. The Student Activities Council is cooperating with members of the junior class in spon soring the dance. Helen Sauer, general chairman, will be assisted by Mary C. Tuomey, Lois Shay, Jean Spatuzza, Ruth Rinderer, Jerry Stutz, Charlotte Smith, Irene Foster, Mary Lavin, and Mary Frances Padden, on the reception committee. Tickets are being handled by Jean Casey and Irene O'Flaherty. Sheila Finney and Patricia Hollahan will be in charge of the music, while Rose mary Tarsitano will take care of the checkroom. Review Promotes Catholic Thought Winter Issue Will Be Off Press in February Win 10 Decisions In Debate Meets Chalking up 10 victories out of a possible 17, members of the Debate club have considered almost all angles of the international police force question during the past fortnight. Chaperoned by Joan Morris Agar '42, one of the tournament judges, Mary- Ann Anderson, Patricia Curran, Irene Kenney, and Jeanne McNulty went to Bloomiiigton last week-end to partici pate in the mid-west debate tourna ment at Illinois Normal college and won 7 out of 12 decisions. In a double-header encounter with Loyola on Jan. 7, Mary Louise Laucr and Charlotte Schnitzer vanquished To be distributed early in February, the winter issue of the Mundelein Col lege Review, will contain articles as varied as co-editor Mildred Welch's dis cussion of liturgical cycles, and Harriet O'Brien's light essay about the woes of food rationing. Audrey Anderson's consideration of modern book review standards will car ry out the 1943-44 theme of the maga zine: Education To Promote Catholic Thought, Currently and in the Post- War World. Writes about Novelist Graham Greene, an English Catholic novelist whose This Gun For Hire was a recently popular movie, is the subject of co-editor Margaret Jean Burke's arti cle. Other contributors to the article sec- Robert Hassett and John Mordzumi. -.u .i ii j d . i r i u c i *. on of ,e magazine are Mary Ann with the Reverend Patrick Walsh. S.J-.-,. . , , - , . ' , , . -,.. e. , j Off Anderson, Charlotte Schnitzer, Marion judging; and Rita Stalzcr and MarionM, P ... .. ' , , , v , t . , . D i , ,,,-, k ig, Geraldine 1 horpe, Irene O F ah- Kmg defeated Brian Buck-lev and Wil- ,- , , , , ng liam Raleigh, with army air cadet Thomas Conley judging. Wheaton and Mundelein each took one decision in the double-header en counter here on Jan. 11. Victors were Miss Anderson and Miss Curran of the negative and vanquished were af firmative speakers Miss McNulty and Miss Kenney. reen Book Line Forms to Right Semester examinations begin on Monday, Jan. 24, and continue through Friday, Jan. 28. Seniors will register for the second semester on Jan. 25; juniors on Jan. 26; sopho mores on Jan. 27, and freshmen on Jan. 28. Monday, Jan. 31, will be a mid year holiday, and the student re treat will open Feb. 1 and close Feb. 4. Classes will resume on Mon day, Feb. 7. erty, Eileen Murphy, and Irene Ken ney. Reviews Spellman Book Archbishop Spellman's AcrroN This Day, reviewed by Mary Catherine Tuo mey, will share a contemporary criti cism page with books selected by re viewers Adele Bujewski, Betty Wierse ma, Patricia Holway, Dorothy Rudman, Jane Forrestal, and Miss O'Brien. Contributing verse are Mary Louise Hector, Dolores Rudnik, Miss Rud man, Miss Thorpe, and Georgiana Mc Gregor. Mourn Former Loyola, Mundelein Professor The Reverend Joseph A. McLaughlin. S.J., professor of philosophy at Loyola and Mundelein since 1932, died at St. Francis hospital, on Jan. 9, after an illness of some months. Holder of a doctorate from Fordham university, Father McLaughlin was the author of a textbook used by logic classes throughout the United States. I
title:
1944-01-21 (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
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Text
language:
English
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Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College