description:
irmer Students Enter Novitiate if former Mundelein students e' lt;- I the novitiates of religious com ities during the past three months. j ur graduates of the Class of 194-1. IJartt Jean Burke. Patricia Gal- Patricia Rocap, and Mary 5, entered the Congregation of tile rs of Charity of the Blessed Vir- Uarv. q joining the Sisters of Charity Mary Loretta Feller and Julianna a, both members of the freshman ast year. ihleen O'Donnell ex '-J5 joined the deans at Sinsinawa; Gloria Ras- i ex '46 entered the novitiate of iters of Providence, and Sue Gib- tx '46 joined the Dominican Sis- i Kcntuckv. iimnae Sale Aids Scholarship Fund rummage sale, sponsored by the Ibrship committee of the Alumnae Btion, will be held Oct. 7. at 537 Division street. irman Jane Redlin '43 has an ted that the proceeds will be con- lerl to the scholarship fund for I daughters. Students have coop- I by bringing various saleable ar- Laetare Players Prepare Annual Fall Production From now until Nov. 5. the date- set for their annual fall production, students in the drama department will be busy with rehearsals for the four one-act plays scheduled to be presented at 8:15 p.m. that evening in the college theatre. Directed by Catherine Denny Phelps, the group of plays will in clude The Hoi.-r-Gi.ass. a morality play, by William Butler Yeats, famed Irish writer, and The ROMANCERS, an eighteenth-century comedy by Ed- mond Rostand. The two other plays are Did You Say Mink, a modern comedy by Mary Thurman Pyle, and Tin: Princess With the Shiny Nose, by Magdalene Kessie '35. A former Laetare Player, Miss Kessie, who is now teaching in the suburban schools, is the author, also, of another one-act play entitled The Summons of SAriel. Dr. Manion Declares Moral Law Is Basis Of Just Qovernment nors Foundress In Lecture Before Student Assembly the annual Foundress Day convo- o yesterday, the Reverend John F. m drew a comparison between the (the Blessed Virgin Mary and the of Mary Francis Clarke, who ided the Congregation of the Sis- of Charity of the Blessed Virgin T, in Philadelphia, in 1833. brother of Mary Rose Brown '37, Btr Brown, who attended element- schools conducted by the Sisters of ritv of the Blessed Virgin Mary, is pastor of St. Malachy's church. There is no problem in the world today which could not be solved by a faithful adherence to the ideal that all men are created equal, Clarence P. Manion. Ph.D., professor cf law at the University of Notre Dame, declared in his talk on Americanism on Sept. 28. Declaring that the phrase all men are created equal is an often quoted but seldom understood expression, Dr. Manion explained that all men arc equal in the sight of God and that they are created, not horn, equal. Any dis cussion of Americanism be insisted, is based on this fact. In an interview after his lecture, Dr. Manion declared that anyone who claims to be an atheist is, in reality, stating that he does not believe in the Constitution and Declaration of Inde pendence and their acknowledgment of a Supreme Being. Atheism, he summed up, is sabotage. ress Ideal Christian Life In Course in American Home riotis phases of making and kecp- happy home, from balancing a it End buying wisely to appreciat ed music, arc included in the new hour course in the American home, td to sophomores this fall, igncd to meet the need of young who, although trained in the I arts and equipped for careers, lack a knowledge of the funda- ils of borne making, the course proposed originally in a Faculty littee on Postwar Planning, i committee, one of four working year in cooperation with a North tral committee to which the College ngs, concurred in the view of edu- K generally that the preservation be American home is a prerequisite the preservation of the American Bocracy. cordingly. the course was planned, . an isolated unit independent of k curricular offerings, but, rather, survey of religious, cultural, and omic principles as they relate di- m to family life and family rela- Uips. fciors, for example, study the Papal kclical on Marriage in their re in classes; students in home eco- Iks learn meal planning and prin ks of nutrition; economics majors m financial problems of the home. t new course will correlate facts m these departments and will add ; it will be a formal study of the problems involved in marriage, the establishment and maintenance of a home, and the guidance and individual development of children. In tut first of the four units of the course, students study the home as a fundamental social unit, considering the requisites of a good home, the choice of a partner, and wholesome family relationships. The second unit, presenting the home as an expression of aesthetic values, will include suggestions for making literature, art, and music appreciated in the home, and will include lectures on interior decoration. Unit number three will deal with family finances, with emphasis on bud geting, understanding of leases, insur ance, credit, checking accounts, wills, and contracts, all of which will ulti mately concern the homemaker. The problem of nutrition will be han dled in the fourth unit, which will con sider the home as a builder of health. Instruction in intelligent buying and meal planning, in economical house keeping, in child care, in the preven tion of disease, and in rudimentary care in illness and accidents completes the course and gives the student prepara tion for this vital side of family life. A two-semester course carrying credit in home iconemics. the American home course will be open to sopho mores, juniors, and seniors as a two- hour elective in the second semester. SKYSCRAFER Aiding the Nurses These Nurse's Aides, Evelyn Holland, Patricia Hollahan, Patricia Hef- fernan, Mary Gaughan, Marjorie Schaller, and four others not pictured, Mary Em Harrigan, Patricia Paterson, Elaine Jenkins, and Grace. Wurst, report to Mary Catherine Quinn, publicity chairman of the College Red Cross unit, about their hours of service. Install Officers at Sodality Reception Sodality members prepared for the new year with Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament, a sermon, formal installation cf officers, and an intro ductory meeting, on Oct. 3. Urging continued devotion to the Blessed Virgin and service to her. the Reverend William Clark, professor of religion, pointed out that every student can give valuable service to others through the Sodality. Officers consecrated in the Chapel ceremony are Rosemary Boeder, pre fect; Helen Walz, vice-prefect; Fran- cine Lamb, secretary, and Mary O'Mal ley, treasurer. Committee chairmen who spoke at the meeting following the installation are Betty O'Connor, E.O.L.; Cccile Thomas, Literary; Adele Baiocchi, So cial Action, and Mary Lavin, Apostolic. All Sodalists will cooperate in a so cial action sponsored Courtesy Week, scheduled for the last of October. So dality headquarters are in Room 308. Red Cross Qroup Unites Students In War Activity Through the College Unit of the American Bed Cross, Mundelein stu dents are again contributing their share- to the war effort. Classes in nutrition, held every Tuesday at 2 and 3 o'clock, are under the instruction of Mrs. W. R. Bernell; 35 students are enrolled. Forty-four students attend home nursing classes, which are held every Thursday at 2 and 3 o'clock, with Dolly Twitched, R. N., as the instructor. Freshmen Choose Board of Qovernors 14 New Members Are on Faculty (Continued from page I, col. 4) ter's degree from Northwestern, and Esther Wethington, a graduate of Mt. St. Joseph college, Ohio, arc in the biology department. Isabel March, M.A., of the occupa tional therapy department, has done graduate work at the University of Iowa and at Wayne, and is a regis tered therapist from the Roston School of Occupational Therapy. Margaret Neville, M.A., of the Eng lish department, attended De Paul and Northwestern universities and is now working on her doctorate at Loyola. Betty Kreuzer '40, who has done graduate work at the Art Institute and who has had experience in recreational work and crafts with the Chicago Park district and at Gardiner General hos pital, assists in the art department. Patricia McDcnnough Paterson '39, is assisting in the physical education department. Guiding freshman affairs until class election? will be 15 students elected this week to the Freshman Board of Gov ernors. The group includes Jeanne Smith, Ellenmae Quan. Frances Welling, Pa tricia Haydcn, Patricia Gallagher,, Terese McGreal, Mary Jane Ward, Jo Ann McCarty, Mary Claire Lane. Elizabeth Kelleher, Martha Wade, Pa tricia Conlcy, Mary Margaret Doyle. Jane Butler, and Renec Mendelson. Student Committees Arrange Parent Tea Two Weddings Announced Sylvia Gactti, A.M., of the Spanish department, became the bride of Paul Calesini, at a Nuptial Mass in St. Cal- listus church, on August 12. Another recent bride is Agnes McNeill, A.M., a member of the faculty last year, who was married in August to Lieut. John Donohtie, at a Nuptial Mass at St. Clement's church, Sheboygan, Wis. Marylaurine Barr Milligan, Eileen Wolfe, and Helen Walz w-ere chairmen of the home economics student com mittees in charge of arrangements for the Parent-Daughter Day reception on Oct. 1. Assisting on committees were Rita Barr, Helen Bielawa, Betty Brodsky, Cyrilla Boyle, Margaret Bromley, No reen Condon, Ann Corkell, Mary Ann Council. Peggy Donnovan, and Lois Forman. Also on the committees were Gene vieve Hannon. Esther Kyros, Jane Mc- Muiray, Virginia Moyer, Louise Pesut, Lois Shay, Patricia Sly, Betty Ann Sullivan. Patricia Tubby, and Bonnie Turner. Seniors and other students who as sisted at the reception, under the chair manship of Irene Foster, included Le- nore Brockhaus. Louise Brady, Viola Brennan, Dolores Corrigan. and Sheila Finney. Otbe- studejit assistants were Naun- das Fisher, Margaret Mary Kaindl, Marcia Maloncy, Joan Moore, Betty Nowak, Ruth Shmigelsky, Jean Spatuz za, Cecile Thomas, Dolores Toniatti. and Rose Wirth, Page Three What Goes On... ' pALES of the odd doings of fresh- * men in their first haze of collegiate- daze are not unusual in this column, hut when two seniors are guilty of freshmen tricks, we think that is new-s. The two aforementioned seniors dashed from the comer drug store into the locker room, collected beoks, and ran up four flights of stairs only to dis cover that English Renaissance is held on Friday and the day in question was Thursday. I ATEST bride in the senior class is *-' Marylaurine Barr Milligan who was married to 3/c petty officer Wil liam C. Milligan on June 3. Junior Rita Barr served as her sister's maid of honor and junior Dolores Downey was her bridesmaid. Mrs. Milligan. aptly enough, is majoring in home eco nomics. Her husband is stationed in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. QTILL another bride busy with *-' school-hooks is sophomore Jo Anne Me-Kcown Puis, who was married to Ensign Willard G. Puis, Jr., on Aug. 26. with two Mundein sophomores, Pa tricia Dunne and Dorothy Barthcl in her bridal party. Ensign Puis attended the University of Minnesota and is now an instructor at the Glenview Na val Air station. pYELYN HOLLAND'S sparkling * smile is matched by the sparkle- on her third finger left hand which affiances her to Charles Mennis, who is studying at Northwestern university under the Navy V-12 program. Miss Holland, a senior, is a home economics major. ANOTHER newly engaged Munde- leinite is Dolores Hoban, sopho more history major. Her ring, sent to her by James Logar, AMM 3/c, came from the Hawaiian Islands. Mr. Lo- gar's home is in Rochester, N. Y. W/F-LCOME back messages are in order for a number of former Mundelein students who have returned, after several semesters' absence, to complete their studies This group includes Rita Kennedy Larsen, Jac queline Jacobs, Dorothy Bchm Simp son, Mary I Gorman, Jane Grant Crow ley, and the Roche twins, Maureen and Josephine. / LASS bulletin-boards are collections -* of odds and ends of facts. The following gem appeared on the senior hoard last week under a seating plan for assemblies. (Comments are ours.) Seniors: Please note places. If there are any errors or omissions, please write omitted names on this slip of paper and sit in Row K. (This would seem to be clearly stated, but in a couple of hours the following note appeared.) Cannot possibly sit in Row K. Am already in rows C and F. Mary Louise Hector (We admit that feat would be a bit difficult.) (Still later, this plaintive note ap peared.) Please, may I take one of Mary Louise Hector's places? Cyrilla Boyle Trio and Soloists Entertain Parents Members of the College Trio. Lillian Muza. violinist; Dorothy Grill, cellist, and Barbara Ann Frick, pianist, played a scries of selections in the tea-room during the Parent-Daughter Day re ception, and also took part in the con certs presented in the auditorium. Vocal soloists at the concerts were Tunc Murphy. Josephine Gendielle. Dcl- lamae Laughlan, Eunice Dankowski, Marilyn Vosberg. and Mary Agnes Williams, with Catherine Prendergast, Margaret Cashman, and Miss Frick accompanying. Violin soloists at the concerts were Bernicc Bielew-a and Miss Muza, and organ soloists were Rosemary Tierney. Mary Frances Padden, and Miss Frick. Piano soloists included Muriel Mein- ken, Catherine Prendergast, Man- Louise Guliek, Jean Macferran, Lor raine Heffcrnan, and Beth Goodwillie.
title:
1944-10-06 (3)
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