description:
Page Four SKYSCRAPER Racquets, Balls, Nets, Terrapins, Horses Ready WAA AH Set For Ne lt;u gt; Sports Season For sports-minded students, the Women's Athletic association offers a full agenda of contests, tournaments, and special events. Initial activity of the year will be the interclass table tennis tournament, fol lowed by volleyball, basketball, and badminton intramurals. The Varsity Volleyball and Bas ketball teams will play other col leges in league games this year, and will take part in a number of intercollegiate playdays. Equestriennes arc planning and soon will announce their first breakfast ride. Riding classes are offered every Monday at Parkway stables at 4 p.m. Highlight of the Riding year is the annual Horse Show, in the spring. The Tennis club, organized last spring, is inviting beginners as well as stars to swing racquets in its contests. The Terrapin club, concerned with swimming, is planning many splashy' events, including tryouts which will be scheduled this month. Climax of the Terrapin year is the annual Water Ballet held in May. The bright light off in the distance is the WAA Winter Sports week end, usually held at Lake Delavan, Wis consin. It is a weekend of rugged out door activity skiing, tobogganing usually strategically scheduled between semesters. Students interested in sports are urged to watch the various Sports club bulletin boards, and to visit the gymnasium and swimming pool. WAA practice and games take place every Tuesday and Thurs day between 4 and 5 p.m. in the gymnasium. Students Discuss Social Justice Representing the Chicago region as delegates to the Ninth Congress of the National Federation of Catholic College Students held at the University of Notre ' 1 )ame August 29 to Sept. 3 were Dolores Sullivan and Joan Bruno from Mundelein, and 38 students from Loyola, De Paul, St. Navier, and other regional schools. Including a nationwide attendance, the Congress afforded opportunity for ex change of ideas and survey of the best methods of promoting projects on indi vidual campuses. A report of human rights was approved, giving the Catholic students a public stand on basic rights and social justice. NSA Discusses Red Student Groups NSA members hold their initial meeting Oct. 9, at 3 p.m. in Room 402. All students are invited to attend. The con troversial topic of discussion will be NSA's Relations with Communists Stu dent Groups. This subject, because of differing opin ions of students, was held in dispute at NSA's fifth convention, at the Univer sity of Indiana, in August. During the summer, Mary Nikias, Bar bara Baynes, Dorothy Hertl, and Florence Clarke continued working towards friend ly relations with students of other coun ties. They entertained 20 delegates from Switzerland, showing them some of Chi cago's highlights, such as the Tribune Tower, the General Electric company, and a day of fun and pkknicking at Starved Rock. Cokes and Cases Openl Welcome Freshmen Pledges The question, Resolved: all freshmen should be welcomed to Delta Sigma Rho, encountering no opposition, was accepted in the affirmative by all debaters at the freshmen pledge coke and cookie party, Sept. 24. Stressing the need for articulate Cath olics today, President Shirley Geiser ex plained the point system required for en trance into the organization. The national collegiate topic for the year is Resolved: That the Congress of the United States Should Enact a Compulsory Fair Employment Practices Law. Discussion meetings are being organized on the problem of how the US can most effectively combat the threat of commu nism. Celebrity Comes To Class Publications, Alumna, Receive National Acclaim The Review, campus literary publica tion, and The Skyscraper merited All- Catholic Honors in a nationwide survey and rating conducted during the summer by the Catholic School Press association. Judged upon Catholic action, enter prise, coverage, and general apprearance, the Skyscraper gained the added honor of being named a newspaper of distinc tion. For the second consecutive year, a Mun delein student won the Editorial award in the writing contest sponsored by the CSPA. Barbara Bidwell '52 took the prize for an editorial titled Seek Security in Con templation published in the special Re treat issue of the paper in January. College Receives Research Qrant (Continued from Page 1, Col. 1) Sister Mary Therese, who holds a doc torate in astronomy from Georgetown uni versity and who has spent the summers of 1951 and 1952 in astronomical research at the Mt. Wilson-Palomar observatory in Pasadena, California, has had experi ence at the University of Michigan in spectroscopic analysis both in the visible region and in X-ray diffraction work. SAC Speaks Up Summer is almost forgot, but the assistance given the SAC in preparing for the Big Sister party and other Wel come Freshmen events is well remem bered. To all students who gave gen erously of their summertime, the SAC is deeply grateful. * * Circle Oct. 10, the date for the first intercollegiate Mixer. One of the chief advantages of a mixer early in the year is that examination and compre- Columbus Came, Will You? hensive shadows have not yet cast their darkness over bright personalities. So you are invited, and so are students from all the local colleges. * * One cannot go far in the corridors or lounge these days without hearing or seeing the words La Traviata. Now stop and think is this due to any ef fort of yours? If not, it should be. The opera ben efit is student-sponsored and there are approximately 800 students. About 40 have volunteered their services at Opera headquarters on the mezzanine. That means that about 760 have done nothing. Sponsorship does not mean that one affixes her name to a list and then does nothing. It means, rather, that she re solves to interest her friends in the benefit, to sell tickets for it, to se cure patrons and advertisements for the program. It means that she reports for service for at least an hour or two each week. And it also means that on the evening of Nov. 13 she will share the glowing satisfaction of those who enjoy the opera plus the knowledge that, thanks to them, it is a successful Mundelein benefit. Making plans for the First All-College Mixer of the year, to be held in the gymnasium, Oct. 10, at 8 p.m., Anne Carr and Noreen Galvin, freshmen, and Loyolans Bill Siebert and Jimmy Healy. (Story on Page 1.) Science Teachers Meet at Mundelein Approximately 130 delegates attended the forty-fifth meeting of the Chicago Catholic Science Teacher association, held here Sept. 20. Sister Mary John Michael, B.V.M., President of the College, welcomed the teachers, citing the importance of science in the Catholic school curriculum. Hostesses for the day were Ann Nil- les, Mary Kay Cummings Genia Angelin, Noreen Finley, Alberta Ziomek, Mary Anne Klose, Gloria Kowaleski, Claire Gerbeck. Charles Correll, famous as Andy in the Amos and Andy radio show, poses with Mrs. Correll, left, Geraldine O'Keefe, and Monica Brodbeck during his visit to the Radio Acting class, Sept. 16. Dads Make Date With Daughters Fathers came to school Friday night, but they didn't come in quest of book knowledge. They came, escorted by their daughters, to attend the second annual Father-Daughter night. The first Father-Daughter night, held in April of last year, was so successful that the Fathers organized themselves into a club, with officers, meetings, and a genuine desire to be of service to the Col lege. Sister Mary John Michael, B.V.M., President of the College, welcomed the guests, and Mr. S. E. McCarthy, father of Valerie' '52, presided at the meeting. Mr. R. A. Neff, father of Senior Loret ta, explained the Membership plan, and students in Music and Drama presented the program. Refreshments were served in the tea room, and students again proved that Like Father, Like Daughter is as good a phrase as Like Father, Like Son. College Sponsors Chinese Artist (Continued from page 1, col. 5.) mer session, was formerly head of the Romance Language department at Wright Junior college. Miss Sabine Heller, who holds a Master of Science degree from Pur due university where she has done ad vanced work, returns to the Chemis try department after a year as trans lator in the chemical division of an oil company research laboratory. The College will sponsor the research of a young Chinese ar tist, James Kuo, who has taught at Mt. Mary college, Milwaukee, and at Anhwei Art institute, China. Mr. Kuo holds an A.B. degree from the Chen Chi university, Nanking, and an A.M. from the University of Missouri. In 1947, Mr. Kuo was selected by the Chinese government to receive a U.S. State department grant under the Ad vance Scholar Program of Emergency- Aid for Chinese Professors. Andy Thinks Radio Will Make Big Comeback Chats Freely With Radio Acting Class Say something as Andy, asked I class, and Mr. Charles Correll, who i cently celebrated his twenty-fifth ani versary as part of radio's famous Am and Andy teams said quite a bit. 1 and Mrs. Correll toured the College; spoke to the Radio Acting class, S 16. His navy blue suit didn't lose a crea;tn nor his white hair turn whiter, whcnico said, Radio is all but dead, but I it will make a terrific comeback, beca it is a tremendous means of advertisita He believes, TV is a killing job. ,thi you're through living, get on televisi* ter Recognizes Good Spot Radio, however, certainly roused itfci to give the Amos and Andy shuwBa number one rating. Modestly, and so ie what gayly, Mr. Correll attributes success to having a good spot. He thl one could say a, b, c, and still get kind of rating at his time. oa 1 y Mrs. Correll thinks differently. A , softly she said, They never let doi and they appreciate their success. We're lucky to have the public ea' us, Mr. Correll added. ;. Although the show portrays NegrSch Mr. Correll is convinced that the cl/ar acters are a cross section of life. HejJei Amos use Southern dialet because J cj do that dialect best. He believes that n race likes to have itself portrayed lumes ously. nne Helps With TV Script ,7- On the Amos and Andy TV show raj of the radio scripts are rewritten tor a new medium. When the TV progi yo par: Br was initiated, Mr. Correll and his helped direct the new actors in the p Ba which they had established previously n, the radio. , In the old days, we did almost e d part. I tried to do a woman once-is that was enough be quipped. To gt;n Radio Acting class, Mr. Correll hadfO advice. If you can't feel, you're deadpr; fore you start. f ie
title:
1952-10-01 (4)
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