description:
AFTER THE BALL IS OVER, queen candidates and their escorts recall the crowning event of the Skyscraper Ball at the Merchandise Mart, Dec. 28, the selection of Queen Anne Miller, (above center). Pictured with Anne are junior Jackie Bergen and senior Pat Riggs. (Below 1-r) sophomore Rosemary Har rington, junior Sue Rice and freshman Koselle Delisi. Noted French Company Enacts Modern Version of Moliere Play A company of world-famous French actors will present a well-known Moliere comedy Feb. 14 at 8:15 p.m. in the College Theater. The Theater du Vieux-Colombier, noted for their portrayal of French plays, will present a modern dress ver sion of L'Ecole des Fcmmes, School for Wives. Centering around a love-triangle Girls Give Hearts Away At Annual Freshman Mixer My Funny Valentine, the fresh man class mixer, will be held Feb. 10, from 9 to 12 p.m. in the college gym nasium. In keeping with the Valen tine theme, the girls will be given hearts on which to sign their names. Each boy will receive a half heart and seek to find its owner. Loyola, DePaul, Notre Dame, St. Joseph and St. Procopius are among the school and fraternities invited. The band of Al Peters will provide the music. Admission is 1. General chairman is Sue Coon, aided by Kathy Clark and Carol Fullam. As sisting them are: Jan Jearas, deco rations; Janie Ostrander, refresh ments; Mary Tucker, tickets; Bonnie Relli, hostesses; Kay Knipp, publicity; Eleanor Deutsch, invitations; Patti Tighe and Maureen Smith, coat check; and Maureen Burns, rehabilitation. EXAM SCHEDULE Jan. 23 Monday MWF Classes 9 (9 a.m.), 3 (12 noon), 2 (2 p.m.) Jan. 24 Tuesday TTh Classes 9 (9 a.m.), 12 (12 noon), 3 (2 p.m.) Jan. 25 Wednesday MWF Classes 10 (10 a.m.), 11 2 noon), 1 (2 p.m.) an. 26 Thursday TTh Classes 10 (9 a.m.), 11 (12 noon), 2 (2 p.m.) Jan. 27 Friday MWF Classes 8 (9 a.m.) 12 (12 noon) TTh Classes 8 (2 p.m.) Classes meeting on MWF or any two of those days follow the MWF schedule. Classes meeting on TTh, MTTh or TThF follow the TTh schedule. Classes meeting on MTWTh may follow either schedule. Classes meeting for one and one- half hours may schedule the exam according to either hour. Classes meeting one day a week may schedule the examination at their convenience. plot, the production will feature Joelle Picaud in the part of Agnes, who is to marry Arnolphe, but is actually in love with his friend, Horace, portrayed by Henry Poirier. Robert Marcy who directs the play also takes the role of Arnolphe. In a recent review of the play, Ga briel Marcel, French critic, empha sized that the character of Arnolphe is so very close to our own times that he seems to live among us. I am con vinced that Moliere never had a more human conception, or one more pa thetically true to life. Jean de Rigault, the manager of the American tour of Moliere's Ecole des Fcmmes, brought Marcel Marceau to America for the first time in 1955. In 1958 he sponsored Racine's Britanni- cus with the Theatre du Vieux Colom- bier group and in 1960 Moliere's Le Misanthrope with the same players. Tickets for the performance are 2.50 and 3.50 and may be purchased in the language lab from 12 to 2 p.m. President Cites Benefactors' Gifts For College Needs Friends and benefactors of the col lege have recently contributed more than 14,000 in gifts, Sister Mary Ann Ida, president, reports. Most of the funds have been used for improve ments in student services and equip ment, Sister adds. An additional 10,000 was presented to the College in a New Year's Day greeting from the Alumnae Associa tion, the president said. The gift rep resents the pledges and cash received since the opening of the current Alum nae Endowment drive last October. Included in the 14,000 total is a 5,000 memorial fund for the new dor mitory established for Walter T. Law less, benefactor, by his widow. For the third consecutive year, Gulf Oil has determined the amount of its check by the number of alumnae con tributors to the College. Gulf's 365 gift like the alumnae gift is about 200 per cent higher than its 1958 donation. Gifts totalling 8,490.44 are contri butions from various corporations through the Associated Colleges of Il linois. Another 1,000 is from friends. Purchases from gift funds to date include the new reading clinic facili ties, additional audio-visual equip ment and carpets, and furniture for the East Room. J 3 Mundelein College, Chicago 40, Illinois, January 18, 1961 Vol. XXXI Fr. Klubertanz, TextbookAuthor, To Visit Campus Philosophy students will meet the author of two of their textbooks today and tomorrow when Father George P. Klubertanz, S.J., honors Mundelein with a two-day visit. Today at 2 p.m. Father Klubertanz will give a lecture in 405 which is open to all students. During his visit he will also visit philosophy classes, speak to the science teachers and stu dents on the philosophy of science, and address the psychology integration group. Father Klubertanz, who is enroute to Rome, is dean of the School of Philosophy and Letters, St. Louis Uni versity, and past president of the American Catholic Philosophy Asso ciation and the American Metaphysi cal Association. He is the author of Introduction to the Philosophy of Being, and Phi losophy of Human Nature, used in Mundelein's metaphysics and philoso phy of human nature classes respec tively. Father has also written The Discursive Power and St. Thomas on Analogy. Distinguished Panel HeadsWTTWProgram Mundelein's second telecast for prospective students and their parents will be presented tonight at 6:30 on WTTW (Channel 11) as part of that station's College Days series. This 15-minute live program, Scan ning the Skyscraper, will offer infor mation about admission requirements, degrees, major subjects, tuition and other facts about Mundelein. Highlights of the telecast will be the comments about the College by a distinguished panel composed of Dr. William Shoen, father of Ellen '58; Marian Anderson '51, career alumna; Dr. Richard Stalzer, fiance of Mary Ellen Cahill '59; Arthur McGinnis, English faculty member; and Sister Mary Jannelle, B.V.M., chairman of the drama department. Irish Author Views Beat* Impact on Literary Scene Sean O'Faolain, well-known short- story writer, will conclude this semes ter's Concert-Lectures Series on Thursday at 1:10 when he views the recent impact of England's beatniks on its contemporary literature. Discussing Britain's Angry Young Man, Mr. O'Faolain will delve into Jesuits Conduct Retreats During Semester Break Reverend Joseph T. Mangan, S.J., and Reverend James J. Condon, S.J., will conduct retreats for the student body during the semester break. The college retreat, scheduled for Jan. 30- 31, Feb. 1, is held at the college for students who are unable to attend a closed retreat. The five-day Sodality retreat will be given at Our Lady of the Cedars, Lake Villa, 111., from Jan. 27 to Feb. 1. Father Mangan, who teaches moral theology at St. Mary of the Lake Seminary,, Mundelein, 111., is the moral theologian for the Archdiocese of Chi cago. Father has also written maga zine articles on moral questions. Each day of the retreat will begin with conferences at 9:30 and 10:30, followed by a dialogue Mass and Com munion at 11:30, lunch at 12:15 and conferences at 1:15 and 2:15. The final conference each day will end with Benediction. Father Mangan will be assisted by two priests in hearing confessions. Loyola nurses will make the retreat again this year. During the same week, Father Condon will be the retreat master for the 49 Sodalists at the Cedars. Former director of the Sodality at the Uni versity of Detroit High School and at Loyola Academy, Father Condon is now serving as assistant to Father J. McQuade, general director of the Sodality. He is currently engaged in the transfer of the National Office of the Sodality from St. Louis to Washing ton, D.C. the kind of life that has produced writers of that title. He claims that these authors are in a dilemma be tween the wish to be complete mem bers of a desirable society and the frustration of non-conformist indi vidualism. A native of Cork, Ireland, Mr. O'Faolain travels extensively through out the United States as a visiting professor at American universities and as an occasional short story and essay writer for Holiday magazine. One of his most recent, The Three Chicagos, appeared in the December issue of Holiday and presented a per sonalized study of the city. Mr. O'Faolain is also the author of numerous biographies, histories, a play and translations from Gaelic. His book of short stories, The Man Who Invented Sin, published ten years ago, was reviewed by the Irish Press as being so remarkable in Sean O'Faolain range and achievement that it stands as a challenge to any living writer in the same medium. A member of the Irish Royal Academy of Letters, Mr. O'Faolain earned his degree from the National University in Dublin. He was a Com monwealth Fellow in the United States from 1926 to 1928 and in the following year was a John Harvard Fellow. He also holds a master's de gree from Harvard. Barry Goldwater To Speak Here Senator Barry Goldwater, (R-Ariz.) will speak in the Mundelein Audi torium at 4 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 18. His talk is in conjunction with the Il linois Young Republicans convention sponsored by Loyola University. The public may attend without charge. Goldwater, defeated last summer by Richard Nixon in the race for the presidential nomination, is the ac knowledged leader of the conservative wing of the Republican party. He is already being cited as a possible presi dential candidate in 1964. The Conscience of the Conserva tive, Goldwater's recently published book, has been rated a best seller. AVOIDING THE PRE-8 A.M. DILEMMA, Eileen Coughlin makes use of the book- drop as Jack Dougherty, its builder, looks on. Designed for the students' convenience, the bookdrop will especially aid those who wish to return books before or after library hours. WANT A VARIETY SHOW? Vote yes or no today in the lounge across from the elevators from 9-4 p.m. Although a vote was taken last fall, only l/4 of the stu dent body cast ballots, which is not a representative choice of the en tire school.
title:
1961-01-18 (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