description:
aticipate Senior Sunday .' ' gt; j Following dress rehearsal for Senior Sunday, Jewel Crosby, Shirley Wolfe, and Nancy Manning visit Stella Maris Chapel. The Senior Sunday d Mass will be celebrated in the auditorium, at 10 a.m., Oct. 31. hi lass of 1950 to ecu on Caps and Gowns -jr Senior Sunday Hmlicrs of the Class of 19S0 will olth in formal procession for the first t on Senior Sunday, Oct. 31. I black caps and gowns they will to the auditorium for 10 Mass and Holy Communion. cverend William P. Murphy, A.M., nan of the Religion department, be the celebrant. Murphy will give an address new responsibilities of the Breakfast will be served in room. I Order Copies of ilue Book'; Directory - Iff Presses Soon (Picture on Page 3) Ix hundred students have ordered If 1949-50 Student Directory. A sen- Iroject, the Directory will contain its, addresses, telephone and locker faers of all the students in the we. Faculty data will also he in- ;td. kiria Scannell is in charge of Di- pry organization. Members of her lailtec are Jewel Crosby, Lois Fal- Hoellen Frische, Lois Hassenauer, Kcia Padden, Betty Jacobsen, Nancy I?. Glcnna Link, Joan Merrick, Do- Muelleman, Melba Periotti, Mary ma, Theresa Tejeda. Angelina Tra- Lti, and Nancy Manning, ketone*, which are blue this year. go on sale about the end of the k Estimated price of the Directory ii cents. Writer-Editor Lectures Thursday Convert Will Discuss Catholic Liturgy Donald Attwater, writer, editor, scholar, and lecturer, will address the assembly, Oct. 27, on Catholics and their Liturgy. A convert to Catholicism, Mr. Att water made his first acquaintance with the Eastern Churches during the first World War, when he was a soldier in Italy, Palestine, and Syria. He is the author of more than a dozen books, including a two-volume study entitled Christian Churches of the East, A Life of St. John Chryso- stom. and three dictionaries, a Dic tionary of Saints, a Dictionary of Popes, and a Catholic Dictionary. During the second Wold War, Mr. Attwater gave more than 1000 lec tures to the British and American armed forces; subsequently he was on the faculty at a Dominican school in Wales and at the University of Notre Dame. He is presently associate editor of Orate FratreS and contributing editor to The Commonweal, and, since 1925, he has been associated with the Lit urgical movement. aternational stations Club otes UN Week pes gt;ed in costumes of various for- countries, International Relations members will bring ;i touch of the Bed Nations to the tea room this k in observance of national UN Today's affair concludes a week B activities. kiday. Thursday, and Friday of week, three skits concerning UN kms, written by Anne Llewelyn, kii Kilkenny, and Rita Trojan, presented over the Public Ad- m system. Be skits proposed to arouse student rest in the problems and policies of United Nations and to demonstrate I spiritual and temporal assistance the UN are needed. Catholic Women's Orchestra Offers Concert, Nov. 5 Religious of the city and students in high schools and seventh and eighth grades will hear a concert on Nov. 5, when the Catholic Women's Symphony orchestra appears on the Mundelein stage at 2:30 p.m. Directed by Joseph J. Grill, the or chestra will play the First Movement from Symphony No. 1 by Beethoven, Toy Symphony by J. Haydn. Also on the program will be Sleigh Ride, by- Anderson; Selections from Boris Godunow, by Moussorgsky; Cu ban Holiday, by Phillips, and American Fantasy by Herbert. Senior soloist Eileen Kennedy will play Romance from the Second Con certo for Violin by Wicniawski. Sponsored by Mundelein, the Orches tra was organized in 1947 to fill the need for a musical ensemble in which high school graduates might continue their musical interest and cultural con tacts. Vol. XX I. - J '- . .S' ' MUNDELEIN COLLEGE, CHICAGO 40. ILLINOIS. OCTOBER 24. 1949 No. 2 18 Seniors Are Student Teachers In City Schools Eighteen Mundelein students are do ing supervised student teaching this semester, under the direction of the Education department, to fulfill the requirements for teacher certificates. Speech majors Patricia Bradley, Pasqua D'Alessandro, Gloria Guilfoyle, and Donna Radtke, and Music major Jean Beckman are at St. Dominic school. Art majors Bernadctte Jacobs and Mary Ann Mollohan; Economics ma jors Mary Jane Henry and Ramona Pie czynski ; and English majors Alice Jean Dern and Dorothy Dresden are teaching at Senn high school. At The Immaculata are Mary Jo Bornhofen, Rosemary Colby, and Pa tricia Padden, English majors, and Mathematics major. Helen Marie Murphy. Teaching English at St. Gertrude's are Maxine Jahns and June Kieffer. Glcnna Link is teaching Physics at Sacred Heart academy. No Classes Nov. 1, All Saints Day Classes will not meet on All Eaints' Day, Tuesday, Nov. 1, a Holyday of obligation The feast is the twentieth anniversary of the gro'-nd breaking for Mundelein, and th? nineteenth anniversary of the first Mass celebrated in the Stella Maris chapel. Portia Faces Shylock As Students Revive Shakespearean Play Pasqua D'Alessandro and Donna Radtke will make Shakespeare's Portia come alive on the auditorium stage in the forthcoming production of The Merchant of Venice. For three days, Nov. 17, 18, 19, Por tia will bargain with the wily Shylock, as the Drama department exercises its artistic and technical skills in producing one of the most popular of Shakespeare's plays. The last professional production of the Merchant of Venice on the Chicago stage was in January. 1938, with Helen Hayes in the lead. Peggy Shaughnessy, Jeannine St. Bernard, Francine Blyzinski, and Si- mone Chapuis will also take major roles. The complete cast and the pro duction crews will be announced later. Forensic Qroup Debates Tomorrow At Longwood Inaugurating its first year as a mem ber of Delta Sigma Rho, national for ensic honor society, the Debate club will present its first discussion on Oct. 25 before members of the Long- wood Mother's club. The affirmative team, composed of La Von Froehlich and Mary Ann' War ner, will oppose Agnes Reiter and Mary- Frances Anderson, who will take the negative stand. They will debate the na tional collegiate subject, Resolved: That the United States should Na tionalize the Basic Non-Agricultural Industries. Following this, the club will partici pate in tournaments at Knox college, Bradley university, Northwestern uni versity, the University of Illinois, and the University of Wisconsin. Officers have announced weekly dis cussion groups in preparation for a series of debates with members of the Chicago Inter-city Debate league. Chemist Explains Use of X-Ray in Art X-rays in the Art Gallery will be discussed by George L. Clark, Ph. D., professor of chemistry at the Univer sity of Illinois, at a student assembly, Thursday. Nov. 3. Author of X-ray Analysis and senior author of a newly published Quantita tive Analysis, Dr. Clark will lecture and show slides on the use of the X-ray in the detection of master pieces. Dads-Daughters Match Wits In Labor-Management Debate Dad-Daughter day will be observed by the Economics club, Nov. 4, at 7:30 pm., when the fathers of three econ omics majors come to the College to diiscuss Labor-Management problems with their daughters. Fathers will take the side of Management, and daugh ters will defend Labor. The guests will include Edward P. O'Malley, treasurer and production manager oi a manufacturing company; A. D. Lighthall, president of a photo graphic company; and Thomas A. Sul livan, president of a firm of business consultants. The Reverend John T. Benz, assist ant at St. Edward's parish. Oak Park, will explain the position of the Church in Labor problems. Student speakers wi'l be Kay O'Mal ley, Barbara Lighthall, and Catherine Benz, sister of Father Benz. Joan O'Connor, Joan Kennedy, Carol Higgins, Patricia Smith, and Rita Becker will serve on the Reception committee. t Ushering will be Gay Pembroke Beth McGarry, Patricia Finn, Mar-* garet Casey. Marian Sanford, Shirley Higgins, Ramona Pieczynski. Julie Weglarz, Loretta Heenan, Irene Pfaff, and Emma Marzullo. Arrangements will be handled by Norma Boveri, Rose Sanfilippo, Mary- Lou Siwe, Marie Downey, Mary Graff, and Dell Scifres. Mary Jane Henry, Rosemarie Sch- weiikhamnier. and Nancy Hotton will serve as the Publicity committee, and Dolores Kohl, Catherine Wurmlinger, and June Kieffer will be in charge of refreshments. Biologists Travel To Notre Dame Biologists will be given an oppor tunity to study the year's most publi cized animals when they visit the new laboratory at the University of Notre Dame, on Nov. I. I The laboratory is the germ-free unit 5described in the Sept. 23 issue of Life magazine Honor Chopin In First Concert Of Radio Series Bishop Sheil Sponsors Centennial Broadcast (Picture on Page 3) Al the invitation of Radio Station WFJLFM, the Music department will present a series of concerts, on Fridays at 8 p.m.. beginning Oct. 28 and running for 13 weeks. Tlfc series, under the sponsorship of His Excellency, the Most Reverend Bernard J. Sheil, D. D., and directed by- Jim Amcche, will begin with a com memoration of the centennial of the death of Frederic Chopin. The first program will open with a piano-organ duo, with sophomore Betty Jean Murphy and Rosemary Tier- ney '46 playing theme music by Groton. Soloists will be Ruth Ryan, soph omore, who will play Chopin's Ballade in G Minor, and Anastasia McGowan, senior, who will interpret two Chopin numbers, a Waltz, and Winter Wind Etude. Also performing will be a string en semble, including Eileen Kennedy, and Patricia Krul, violinists; Dolores Rod riguez, cellist, and Dorothy Dresden, pianist, who will present Zigeuner, by Coward. Use Preferential Vote in Freshmen Class Elections Officers Begin Leadership Course Claire Healy, graduate of The Im maculata high school, was elected freshman class president, Oct. 18. Miss Healy had previously been elected to the Freshman Board of Governors. The voting, conducted according to the preferential ballot system, resulted in the election of Peggy Robertson from St. Gregory's, vice-president; Donna Merwiclc from Longwood, secretary; and Patricia Nicol from Maywood, treasurer. IS SOCIAL CHAIRMAN Rose Mary Palermo from St. Pat rick's was elected social chairman, and Jane Roach from The Immaculata is sergeant-at-arms. Sue Tobin from Mercy and Patricia O'Connell from The Immaculata are SAC representatives. The new leaders took their oaths of office at a freshman assembly Oct. 21 and will he given a three-week leader ship training course. Freshman governors, elected two weeks ago to administer class affairs until regular elections and to assist officers throughout the year, include 10 members of the class of 1953. ARE GOVERNORS On the Governing Board are Susan Rremner, of St. Scholastica's; Vir ginia Carr from The Immaculata; Mary Craddock, from Mount St. Mary; Vir ginia Flanagan, from Trinity. Also on the Board are Ellen Flaska from Providence; Mary Kay Freeland from Hoopeston/ Illinois; Clare. Hill- yard from Marywood; Mary Nikias from Alvernia, Patricia Reese from Mt. St. Mary: and Joan Simon from Nazareth.
title:
1949-10-24 (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