description:
HEILA FINNEY HEADS SAC LEE CLUB, STUDENTS SING ON htricia Hollahan Vice-President If S.A.C. a' j*1 Regina Bess, Secretary, mDorothy Qaffney I A surer, according to results of the count on Saturday. Finney, whose home is in Texas, resented her class in junior year as Ktary of the Council and in sopho- K year as a class representative. An pish major, Miss Finney is a member the International Relations Club. U English-journalism major, Miss Oahan was vice-president of her class freshman year; a class representative loth sophomore and junior years. wing her freshman year, Miss Gaff- has represented her class on the iai ' lie 1 irly to Bed and I arly to Rise llight Be But Isn't the Motto jOf 10 Seniors jHd, by vote of the Faculty and the ior class, have been elected to mem- ship in Kappa Gamma Pi, national Dor society for Catholic college alum- 10 Seniors Make Honor Society Broadcast Will Originate in Auditorium Where Transmitters Will Be Installed when the Glee club and the entire student body will be guests on the NBC program, Hymns of All Churches, on Tuesday, May 8, at 1 :45 p.m. The broadcast is one of a series of four that will commemorate the eleventh anniversary of the Hymns of All Churches program, and the Mundelein broadcast will be of Catholic hymns. Directed by Fred Jacky, of NBC, the Glee club will sing the Gregorian Salve Mater; Ave Maria by Arcadelt, and a traditional May hymn, in which the student body will join. The regular Hymns of All Churches choir will also sing one nuriiber with the Glee club, and several Glee club members will sing solos. A member of the regular NBC choir will read a poem from Quest, and Bar bara Ann Frick will play organ accom paniments. Afternoon classes on the day of the broadcast will be held at IS minutes after the hour, with class bells ringing at 2:05 and 2:15; 3:05 and 3:15; 4:05 Cast and Crews for Everyman To Star in Performance, May 6 It Followed Her To School One Dayf and Being an Intellectual Little Lamb, Stayed to register for the summer school classes to he held at Mundelein, June 27 to August 3. The first period will be 8:50-10:20 a.m., and classes in American litera ture, chemistry II, debate, form and analysis and related arts, harmony IV, logic, piano,-principles of education, religion, and Shakespeare II, will be of fered. During the second period, 10:25-11:50 a.m., classes in American government, chemistry II, Church Latin, German II, mental hygiene, Milton, organ, piano, sight singing, twentieth-century Ameri ca, and violin will be held. Final exami nations will be given August 3. Senior Pianist Will Give Graduate Recital on Sunday, May 13 There May or May Not Mary Louise Guliek i ret thi lis if-j ol- nosen on a basis of character, lead- p, scholarship, and service are the wing seniors: Jerry Stutz, Ruth igelsky, Mary Catherine Tuomey, Casey, Jayne King, Charlotte tith, Mary Louise Hector. Irene Bter, Jean Spatuzza, and Mary Grace rney. President of the Student Activities nncil. Miss Stutz, an English-jour- lism major, has been an officer of Council since her freshman year, in honor student, and holds member- ip in Terrapins and in Laetare Play- l : n THL ' * ' *Tfji ll ' :. I4VER FRESHMAN ISSUE Technician for the drama depart- 1 (Continued on page 4, column 5) Vol. XV MUNDELEIN COLLEGE, CHICAGO, 40, ILLINOIS, APRIL 30, 1945 No. 11 ti Vwinkle, Twinkle, Little Stars . who on May 6 in the college theatre will appear in a star-spangled performance of Everyman. Twinkling in the front row Jire: Mary Beecher, as Knowledge; Edith Moscardini, as Good Deeds; Jeanne O'Connor, as Everyman; second row: 'ajMarianne Farrell, as Strength; Dolores Toniatti, as Five Wits; Rosemary Gormley, as Beauty; Anita Schwaba, as Dis- relcretion; Barbara Brennan, as Death; and Jean Hanson, as the Angel of Eternity. Little Jack Horner Can Have His Corner the rest of the world is going to come to Everyman, on Sunday, May 6, at 8:15 p.m., in the college theatre. Behind the scenes magicians will be Ruth Shmigelsky, creator of decor; Nor een Braum and Rosemary Comfort, stage managers, and a stage crew including Mary Anne Dunne, Jane Bush, Virginia Perry, Rita Crowley, Roseann Kennedy, Lucille Burns, Patricia Brady, and Mary Jane Lynch. Flashing the iridescent lights that create the illusion of stained glass win dows and other theatrical touches will be the light crew, including Edna Mae Holm, Rosemary Martin, Patricia Clo- hcrty, and Darlene Sherry. Veronica Daly is in charge of the curtain, and Marisue McCabe, Ethel Ann McGuire, and Vivian Nattcnhcimer arc on the property committee. A colorful task is that of the ward robe committee, Mildred Stanek, Mar garet Benza, Rosemary Snyder, Virginia Powers, and Alice Spiegal. Directed by Joseph J. Grill, the Col lege Orchestra will provide music for the play. Preceding the performance, the group will play Mr. Grill's arrange ment of Bach's Adagio and G Minor (Continued on page 3, column 2) Be Rings on Her Fingers and Bells on her toes, but certainly she shall make music wherever she goes. On May 13, at 3:15, the auditorium will ring with Mary Louise Gulick's interpretations of three groups of widely varied compo sitions. Three selections from the classical period make up the first part of Miss Gulick's program. The opening num ber will be Bach's majestic Fantasia in C minor, followed by the eminent com poser's stately and dignified Sarabande in G Minor from the Third English Suite. Deviating from Bach, the brilliant and showy Toccata in A Ma jor by Paradies concludes the classical group. Will Play Chopin Turning to the romantic trend for the second portion of her program, Miss Guliek will play three Chopin selec tions, Scherzo Op. 31, Etude in E Major, and Etude in A Minor. Chopin's inherent tenderness, coupled with the strength of his musical imagi nation, is everywhere present in his Scherzo Op. 31, played by Miss Guliek as her first romantic composition. In vivid contrast to this is the nocturne like Etude in E Major. In concluding the Chopin motif, Miss Guliek will play the Etude in A Minor, which never fails to assert its dramatic, almost tragic, character. Interprets Debussy The novel and captivating Bagetellcs by Tcherepnine, never before played in a Mundelein recital, will open the final group of the recital. Brilliant sunlight on Italian hills inspired Debussy to write the Hills of Anacapri, which will be presented next. Climaxing the pro gram will be Liszt's Hungarian Rhap sody No. 10, one of the most dazzling of his mosaic-like rhapsodies. Assisting Miss Guliek will he Dclla- mae Laughlin, lyric soprano, who will sing Cave Selve by Handel; Impatience, by Schubert; and the Jewel Song by Gounod, for her first group. Nominations for Class Officers Will be held today and tomorrow. The juniors and sophomores will confirm nominations with the Dean today, and will elect officers tomorrow at 1 p.m., in Room 405 anel the audi torium, respectively. The freshmen will confirm, nominations today and will have a nomination meeting in the auditorium at 11 a.m. tomorrow. Freshman Religion classes will meet at 1 p.m. -i O Lovely Night by Ronald: In Cuba by La Forge; I Heard A Forest Pray ing by De Rose, and Ay Gitanos by Eakin, will be Miss Laughlin's final selections. Barbara Ann Frick will ac company the vocal selections. Since the program occurs on Mother's Day, Betty Howard, senior drama ma jor, will read, during an intermission of the musical numbers, a poem to Mothers, by Mary Louise Hector. J / t
title:
1945-04-30 (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