description:
Ilinois College Federation Meets Here, March 12 Delegates Will Discuss War Problems in Schools War Programs in Colleges and Uni- feities will he the topic for discussion the opening conference of the Federa ls of Illinois Colleges, which will here on Friday, March 12. Sster Mary Justitia, B.V.M., Presi- oi the College, will welcome the Hates, and Carter Davidson. Presi- M of Knox college, will respond. ilia- P. Carpenter, secretary of joint Army-.Navv War Manpower mission Committee on College Pro log will lead the opening discussion. War Programs in Colleges and mersities. lowing luncheon in the tea-room, which the College Trio will play. annual business session of the group be held, ident William Edward Shaw, of lis Wesleyan university, will be iraian of an afternoon discussion on ration of Liberal Education in * of War, at which Donald J. Cow- president of Carleton college, will discussion leader. the final meeting, scheduled for p.m., Edward J. Sparling, president Central Y.M.C.A. college, will pre- at a discussion of Post War Prob- . Dr. Davidson is president of the ration: Dr. Shaw is vice-president. ii Dr. Sparling is secretary-treasurer. Flavor Review with Patriotism, Spring Artists Illustrate Timely Articles rThe first March winds will blow open pages of the spring REVIEW. Ameri- p patriotism will be the underlying I the student literary magazine. Jayne King hints the WAVES will fare a significant place in her short riicy Also Serve. Mary Eliza- lab Walsh's article entitled Icelandic as will acquaint her readers with par in the air force. Elizabeth Millar's Travel in Wartime raises to be a timely light essay. B article Rooks That Represent krici will be Mary Alice Wein- fcs contribution. Ruth Tentler will rThe American Scene. Veering away from the wartime lame, Margaret Jean Burke will relate beriences in a dancing school in her Ht essay Danse Macabre. Denise jBgoulet assures pleasure as well as bisdom in her essay on Chinese Provr ms. Grounded, a story by Mary Har- pton, suggests a touch of spring per. rl editor Dorothy Scholzen. assisted Kulh Shmigelsky. Dorothy Schaar. rjorie Schaller. Mary Cole, and rley Klodzinski. will create illus- Bons, Faculty Member Gives Lectures Conducts Discussion During Wisconsin Blackout Miriam I.. Rooney, Ph.D. of the edu- Bhl :u (I sociology departments, is: pin. a series of lectures to women's Wis in Wisconsin. Scheduled lo speak before members :' the Marinette. Wisconsin, Women's dull. Dr. Rooney learned just before the Itcting'that the city of Marinette was ping to have a blackout simultaneously ith her appearance. Unable to delay the lecture because I train connections. Dr. Rooney not far lectured in total darkness but also toiiductee an open discussion. Other lectures on Dr. Rooney's sched- ile will be given at Green Bay and at DtPere. THE mm, .. ... .7- -.- w.t-.... f- - MUNDELEIN COLLEGE, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. FRIDAY. MARCH 5, 1943 No. 8 Vol. XIII Pianisty Soprano Appear in Senior Recitals, Sunday Shirley Hopper, Eileen Ryan Present M.usic of blasters Two senior music majors. Eileen Ryan, pianist, and Shirley Hopper, so prano, will unite their talents to give a joint recital on Sunday, March 7. at 3:30 p.m. Miss Ryan will open the program with Saint-Saen's Piano Concerto in (i Minor. Orchestral parts at the second piano will be played by Rosemary Viglione. Sings Handel Number Following this. Miss Hopper will sing Angels Ever Bright and Fair, from Handel's Theodora: Vedrao Carino, from Mozart's Don Giovanni; When Love is Kind, an old melody; and Lo Hear the Gentle Lark, by liishop. The next group, two selections played by Miss Ryan, will include Allegro con brio and Adagio from Toccata in (i Major, by Bach-Bauer, and Sonata in (I Major, by Scarlatti. Miss Hopper will sing Brahms' In Summer Fields; Franz' Er 1st Ge- kommen: Schubert's The Shepherdess, and, from Massenet's Manon, Scene and Gavotte. Plays Shostakovitch Danses Fantastiques opus 1. by Sho stakovitch; La Catbcdrale Engloutie, by Debussy; .and Concert Etude opus 30. by MacDowell, will be Miss Ryan's final numbers. . Concluding the program. Mi gt;s Hopper will sing a group of a ou r songs. Ronald's Prelude: Carpenter's The Sleep that Flits on Baby's Eyes; Grieg's Solvcjg's Song, and Benedict's La Capinera. Barbara Ann Frick will play Miss Hopper's piano accompaniments, and Suzanne Hager will play flute obbli- gatos for two of her numbers. Mary Caroline Bemis Ml, one of thi seven highest ranking honor students ever graduated from the College, has volunteered for service in the Women's Auxiliary Army Corps, and has been assigned to Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia. A history major and a Summa Cum Laude, Miss Bemis is the sister of Senior Jean. Save Your Sugar and Bake a Cake for Him Sophomores, and all other stu dents who wish to participate in Mundelein's second Bake-a-Cake- for-a-Soldier Day, are saving por tions of their rationed sugar for the delicacy they will whip up on March 17. Since many of the servicemen to whom cakes were sent last year are now overseas, the sophomores, led by chairman Irene O'Flaherty, plan to deliver the cakes to the Council of Catholic Women for distribution to Catholic servicemen's centers throughout the city. Any student in any class, who wishes to participate in the Bake-a- Cake Day, may sign the pledge posted on the sophomore bulletin board and begin to save her sugar. Takes Two to Make a Concert Sixteen Cadet Teachers Prepare Now to Fill Need For American Educators - - Mediaevalist Will Discuss Doctrines Of Thomas Aquinas Father Qerald B. Phelan. Canadian Philosopher, Comes March 11 The Reverend Gerald 15. Phelan, Ph.D.. I.I..D,. F.R.S.C. distinguished Canadian scholar, will discuss Per- soiialism in the Social Doctrines'of St. Thomas, in his lecture at the general assembly, on March 11. The Mediaeval Academy of America, which includes only 50 Fellow's, num bers Dr. Phelan as one of its members. He is also a Fellow of the Canadian Academy of St. Thomas. Translator of St. Thomas' On .the Governance ok Princes, Dr. Phelan is the first president of the Pontificalln- stitute of Mediaeval Studies. The In stitute was founded in 1929 by the Basilian Fathers at St. Michael's, one of the corporate colleges of the Uni versity of Toronto. Dr. Phelan began his work at St,. Michael's in 1925, assisting in the de velopment of mediaeval studies in-the, college. He worked with courses which cover all the civilization and cultiirc-of . the Middle Ages, including theology, philosophy, canon law, history, Latin and vernacular languages, archeology, and paleography. -,. At the celebration of the four bun- drctli anniversary oi the Jesuits,- Dr. Phelan was one of the leading speakers. Since then he has addressed many groups of philosophers, scientists, and theologians, both in the United States and in Canada. This is his third ap pearance at Mundelein. Spend Five Hours a week Instructing in Major Fields of Study Two Chosen Officers At Cisca Convention Two students were elected officers of Cisca at the meeting on Washington's birthday. Patricia Hollahan, Vice- president of the freshman class, was chosen recording 'secretary, and Jean Patnoe. president rt'f Las Teresianas and junior vice-prefeC.tj-of the Sodality. was re-elected treasurer; Miss Hollahad has been a member of t isca for the past three years, and Mis* Patnoe has attended its meetings for six years. ..*' Neil Maloney. Loyola freshman, was elected president; Bitty' Ryan, Rosary junior, is corresponding secretary; and lull llinkus, a Loyola frcshma,n. was chosen vice-president. Sixteen student teachers, who will Ik- ready after graduation to help fill the vital need for educators in America today, are gaining experience in Chi cago high schools this semester. . The cadet teachers spend five hours a week in the classroom on the other side of the desk. Dolores Bujewski is teaching biology at Alvernia high school, and Patricia Tierney is teaching biology at Notre Dame high school. Jeanne Horan and Royce McFadyen are teaching drama at Angel Guardian Orphanage, and Miss Horan is also teaching drama at The Immaculata high school. Two Are at Cathedral Gertrude Quinlan and Ann McManus are teaching history and English, re spectively, at Mundelein Cathedral high school. Jane Addison is -a labora tory assistant in the home economics department, here at Mundelein, and Phyllis Zjelinski is assisting in the biology laboratory here. Marianne Donahoe did her practice teaching first semester at Help of Christian's grammar school. Louise . Szkodzinski. is. Reaching music at St. Gertrude's and.-.Sacred Heart schools, and Eileen Ryan- is teaching music at St Timothy's, . . Teach Latin Helen Sauer and Mildred-Welch, ara teaching Latin at St. Scholastica's academy, and Jeanne Coughlin is teach ing home economics at Barat Academy of the Sacred Heart in Lake Fores . Rita Kennedy is a laboratory assist ant in chemistry here, and Mildred Kuratko assists in the dietetics labora tory. It is estimated that over 40,000 schools, mostly rural, have closed be cause of the scarcity of teachers. An other estimate lias predicted the short age of 50.000 teachers next September. . . . and classical melodies, on the piano and in song, will fill the auditorium Sunday afternoon when Eileen Ryan, public school music major, and Shirley Hopper, voice major, appear in a joint recital. Announce Benefit Card Party Will Be April 29 Marianne Donahoe, president of the Student Activities Council, has announced that the annual card party and fashion revue, sponsored by the Council with the cooperation of the student body, will be held this year at the Medinah club, on Thurs day evening, April 29. Proceeds of the party will be in vested in War Bonds which, at their maturity, will be converted to the1 library fund. Victory Qardeners Confer Next Week Determined to keep Chicago ahead ill the national Victory Garden move ment, the Office of Civilian Defense has arranged a series of four conferences to be given in Chicago next week. The north side conference will be held in the Mundelein auditorium, at 7 p.m. on March 13. with Professor Lee A Somers of the University of Illinois in charge. George T. Donoghue, father of fresh man Cecily, is director of the Victory Garden department of the Chicago O.C.D., and Fred G. Heuchling is as sistant director. Circle These Dates Circle on your calendar Sunday. March 14, and Sunday, March 21. On the fourteenth, Marianne Donahoe, pub lic school music major, will give her senior recital at 3 p.m. in the college theater. On the twenty-first, the Or chestra, conducted by Joseph J. Grill, will present its annual concert, in the theater at 3 p.m.
title:
1943-03-05 (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