description:
Colleges Sing Out Recitals Feature Groups Share Musical Talents Concert Billing I.et there be music might be the slogan of the month with both piano and organ recitals dotting the cal endar.' Participating in the intercollegi ate recital, Jo Anne Miks and Con- Stance Donohue will present a piano duet in the College Theater, Feb. 14 at 1:10 p.m. The girls will play Suite Champetre by Rieti. Also on the program will be San dra Zengri, pianist from St. Xavier College. Sandra will play Eng lish Suite V in E Minor by Bach. Barbara Kuenn from Rosary Col lege will sing Un bel di vedremo, 'Quando m'en vo, and Canzone di Doretta by Puccini. Nohema Fer nandez will accompany her on the piano. An insti-umcntal group from De Paul University will play Sonata for Flute, Oboe, Clarinet and Pi ano by Milhaud. The members of the group are Joseph Kainz, James Campbell, Ronald Roed and Carol Kozeny. The representatives of the col leges appeared at St. Xavier Feb. 12, at Rosary Feb.ti3, and they will play at DePaul Feb. 22. The musical spotlight will focus also on organists this month. Their recital is scheduled for 3:10 p.m., Feb. 26 in the College Theater. Kathleen Schevers will play Minuet in G Major by Bach and Sister Marlene, S.C.C. will play Prelude and Fugue in F Major by Bach and Alia Minuetto from the Baroque Suite by Williams. Folk sings will be included in the program, with Gail Topolinski play ing Song of the Basket Weaver by Russell, and Arlene Mootz pre senting The Angel's Grotto from the Bermuda Suite by Shure. Mary Anne Slater will demon strate her talent with Sketches from the City by Nevin. Fugue in D Minor and Toccatina for Flutes by Yon will be played by Geraldine Banik. The program will conclude with Helen Skala's renedition of Pre lude in B Flat Major by Bach, Sheila Kirby's Andante from Widor's Symphony No. IV and Catherine Frenzel's Toccata in G Major by Bach and Allegro Vivace from Guilmant's Sonata in D Major. If more voices make singing merrier, the music department can guarantee the success of their per formance scheduled for 8:15 p.m., Feb. 21 when Mundelein vocal ists share the College Theater stage with members of the Glee Club from St. Mary's College, Winona, Minn. Under the direction of Adalbert Huguclet, the Mundelein chorus will sing Magnificat by Sister Mark, I.H.M.; Koom Bah Yah, an African spiritual; Let Their Celestial Concerts All Unite from Handel's S a mp SO n ; Silent Strings by Bantoch and Cran berry Corners by Klein. The Mundelein Ensemble will present Four Sacred Songs of Night by Bright; In Trinidad a Calypso number; Three Caution ary Tales for Children with words by Hilaire Belloc and music by Frackenpohl. Jo Anne Miks will accompany the group. Brother Paul, F.S.C. will direct the St. Mary's singers. Their se lections will include Blessing, Glory, Wisdom and Thanks by Bach; Chorus and Finale from Die Meistersinger by Wagner; When the Felon's Not Engaged by Gilbert and Sullivan; Wider- spruch by Shubert; Smoke Gets in Your Eyes and Dancing in the Dark. Joining forces, both groups will sing Praise Him by Bach, selec tions from The King and I by T?o5 - -q r gt;r? BtamroMwttttn ird ***rnd Waring's Battle Hymn of the Re public. Tickets may be purchased for 1.25 from Glee Club officers before the performance or at the door. Performers will hold a dance in Coffey Hall following the recital. INTERCOLLEGIATE COOPERATION will be the theme as the members of St. Mary of Winona's Glee Club combine with those of Mundelein's to present a concert in the auditorium Feb. 21. The Marinotes, the St. Mary's orchestra will play at a dance in McCormick Lounge and Lewis Center, following the performance. Vol. XXXIII Mundelein College, Chicago 26, Illinois, Feb. 13, 1963 No. 8 Expand Interdepartmental Symposia To Focus on Contemporary Topics Mundelein has expanded its in terdepartmental symposium pro gram this year to include two sym posia. Both are focused on contempo rary topics and are directed by fac ulty members who chose to partici pate. Communism: Its Philoso phy, History and Economics is un der the direction of Sister Mary Jean Michael, B.V.M., chairman of the philosophy department, Sister Mary Eloise, B.V.M., chairman of thp pnnnntYWce d ' 'rtniPTlt artd Mr James Richards of the history de partment. Sister Mary Cecilia, B.V.M., chairman of the biology department and Mr. William Cozart of the Eng lish department will direct the sym posium on Science and Literature in the Modern World. Traffic Signals Blink Safe Path; Ceremony Celebrates Installation Mundelein faculty and students no longer take their lives in their hands when they cross Sheridan Road. Thanks to the efforts of Mayor Richard J. Daley and Alder man Paul T. Wigoda, a traffic light has been erected on the corner of Sheridan Road and Kenmore Ave nue. Mayor Daley and Sister Mary MAYOR DALEY is presented with a student thank-you scroll by Young Democrat President Sue Brown as he officially inaugurates the new traffic signals in front of the College. (L. to r.) Sister Mary Ann Ida, B.V.M, president of the College, Sue Brown, Mayor Richard J. Daley, Paul Wigoda, alderman of the 49th Ward and Mrs. John McGinnis watch the presentation. Ann Ida, B.V.M., College president, officially turned on the light at a ceremony Feb. 6. Also present were Alderman Wigoda; George A. Lane, 49th ward committeeman; Raymond Simon, deputy mayor; and Mundelein's Young Democrats. Sue Brown, president of the Young Democrats, presented the Mayor with a thank-you scroll from Mundelein faculty and students. Alderman Wigoda had previously tried, without avail, to pass two or dinances to install a traffic light. When the Mayor, however, visited Mundelein last September, he saw the hazardous traffic condition and promised to rectify it. The City Council then passed the third ordi nance. Observe Book Week Good reading for the entire family is the theme of Catholic Book Week to be observed in the library Feb. 17-23. Books from the Catholic Library Association for children from first to eighth grade, and for adults and young adults, will be on exhibit. A display of the three prize-winning student libraries in the campus Amy Loveman contest and new books added to Mundelein's library will also be featured. Student membership in the sym posia was determined by the invita tion of Sister Mary Ignatia, B.V.M., academic dean, and based on scho lastic records and faculty recom mendation. Participating in the Communism symposium are: Helen Cleary, Maureen Fleming, Katherine Mon tesano, Maureen O'Brien and Sis ter Mary Prudence, B.V.M., sen iors; Winifred Culkin, Maureen Glebauskas, Marian Kinzig, Mary O'Mellpy. juniors; Donna Bie- wenga, Carolina Molleda, Carol Walanski, sophomores. Attending the symposium on Sci ence and Literature are: Marya Pettit and Sandralee Reinholz, sen iors; Paula Copack, Lois Graff, Irene Skala, juniors; June Carter, Madeline Klaves, Mary Parent, Kathleen Ridges, Helen Skala, Lor raine Steinbronn, Mary Etta Tala- rico and Maureen Topping, sopho mores. Sister Mary Ignatia stated the purpose of the symposia is to make it possible to offer work of an in terdisciplinary character to gifted students who are most receptive and stimulated by such study. She explained that this program, animated by the rationale of the honors program, further extends the broad basis of learning upon which specialization can rest. Seminar format is used at the symposia which meet for two hours each week of the semester. Stu dents will be graded and receive two hours credit. Students Greet Jesuits Scholar Noted author, theologian and phi losopher, Reverend Martin D'Arcy, S.J., will lecture to a group of sen ior history and philosophy students Feb. 15 at 1 p.m. in McCormick Lounge. Father D'Arcy, on a lecture tour of the Midwest, will be brought to Mundelein by Professor Robert Ca- panegri from the University of Notre Dame. Discussion with the students will follow Father's lecture on A Christian View of History. Father D'Arcy has written in numerable books on topics ranging from communism to St. Thomas Aquinas and is spending the year as a visiting professor of philoso phy at Boston College. Alumni 'Team' for TV Three Mundelein alumnae will be featured on the national ABC tele vision show Alumni Fun, Feb. 24, at 3:30 p.m. The quiz show is pat terned after the College Bowl but features teams of alumni from vari ous colleges in the nation. The win ning team will receive 1,500 for their college alumni fund and the losing team will receive 500. The show, produced by John Cleary of College Bowl began in January. Representing Mundelein will be Mercedes McCambridge '37, drama major. While at Mundelein she was the recipient of the Laetare Golden Rose. In 1950 she won the Academy Award for best support ing actress for her role in All the King's Men. She has also ap peared in Giant and in several television productions. Also featured will be Geraldine Stutz, fashion executive and presi dent of Henri Bendell, Inc., New York. Jerry was a '45 journalism major and SAC president. She served as sportswear editor of Glamor magazine and general man ager and vice president of I. Mil ler's retail house. In 1957 she be came president of Henri Bendell, an exclusive New York shop fea turing women's apparel. She was named as one of the Ten Best Dressed Women in 1961 and has been listed as one of the nation's top woman executives. The third alumna is Toni Gil- man, ex '41, Chicago radio and tele vision personality. She is the wife of Dr. E. W. Immerman and mother of four children and appears as a panelist on WGN's Down You Go. Opposing the Mundelein team is a trio of University of North Caro lina alumni. Vernont Royster, edi tor of the Wall Street Journal, is a Pulitzer Prize winner. Richard Adler wrote the Broadway musicals Pajama Game and Damn Yan kees. The third member of the team is Voit Gilmore, director of the U.S. Travel Service of the Com merce Department.
title:
1963-02-13 (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