description:
Page Four SKYSCRAPER Mundelein, Loyola Combine Teams, Bowl Weekly Strikes, Spares Mount Up for 52 Boivlers Under the management of Beth Good willie, Vincent Alesi, and Anthony Busal- acchi, Mundelein and the Loyola Vet eran's club have initiated a Mixed Bowling League, which bowls every Thursday at 6 :30 p.m. Bowling for averages on Feb. 28, Robert Matthies led with a 530 total and high game of 211. Miss Goodwillie made high Mundelein average with a total of 385 and high game of 140. On the first team are Nanette Salis bury, Mary Ann Huber, Bob Levin, and Tom Kwedinski. Second team members are Mary Jane McNeal, Norma Gad- dini, Jim Dillon, and Bill Barrett. Betty O'Connor, Virginia Sversky, Ray Babiarz, and Edward Dendor are on the third team; Barbara Lund- grcn, Dolores Olcckowski, Dick Nickola, and Leslie Koczur arc on the fourth. Team Five includes Dolores Hughes, Jacqueline Clancy, Dave Regan, and Tom Diffendahl. On Team Six are Doris Conway, Patricia Sly, Phillip Cor- boy, and Henry Sophie. Team Seven includes Catherine Mc Laughlin, Cathleen O'Donaghue, Bill Kennedy, and Bill Tilka, and Team Eight includes Betty Maloney, Miss Goodwillie, Mr. Alesi, and Mr. Busa- lacchi. Seniors Margaret Greene and Estelle Guest are with Roman Wagner and Ted Panaretos on Team Nine, while Jean Ondesco and Virginia Neff, with Joe Grindler and Dick Klaw, are Team Ten. Ten. The last three teams are composed of Rosemary O'Donnell, Jeannette Brander, Jack Woodall, and Howard Brown; Mar garet McCormick, Rosemary Tarsitano, Ray Blanchard, and Nelson Secley; and Rita Marie Augustin, Mary Beth Ziener, Bob Matthews, and Dave Moore. All-Stars Defeat Alumna Team in Basketball Scoring 44 points to the Alumnae's 22, the AU-Star Varsity Basketball team was victorious in the game played on Feb. 28. Co-captained by Maura Roche and Jean Spatuzza, the Alumnae team was com posed of Lenore Brockhaus, Lois Shay, Catherine Cunningham, Jerry Stutz, June Rettig, and Cecile Thomas, all of the Class of 1945. Varsity All-Stars included Eileen O'Shea, Mary Ann Shaw, Katherine Burwitz, Regina Bess, Cecilia Beck, Lynne Larson, Catherine McLaughlin, Jeanne Smith, Doris Grove, Dorothy Case, and Betty Jane Crawford, with Josephine Roche as captain. Harriet Diacos and Louise Pesut lent their cheering support to the Alumnae, while Dorothy Gaffney, Betty Niesen, Rosemary Kiley, Mary Agnes O'Connell, Dolores Shannon, and Lorraine Calhoun led the Varsity team cheers. Between halves, Miss Gaffney and Miss Smith offered an amusing diversion from the excitement of the game with a parody of a recent song hit. Design Class Exhibits First Semester Work Visitors to the Art exhibit on the eighth floor have been delighted, per plexed, and inspired to learn more about modern art after viewing the first semes ter work of the Design class. Stressing space and shape in their de signs, the following students have con tributed to the display: Kay Lahey, Patricia Mitchell, Patricia Meany, Cor inne Otto, Merilyn Bryan, Patricia Klise, Margaret Leipsiger, Marian Dariotis, Jane Bush, and Eugenia Brudzinski. Also on display are figure sketches drawn by Miss Mitchell, Dorothy Breit, Miss Klise, Muriel Glabman, Irene Con way, and Margaret Mary Campbell. Mary Jane Smith and Marianne Peter son contribute examples of commercial advertising art. Members of the Art club have visited the George Bellows exhibit and are planning a visit to the Thomas Hart Benton exhibit at the Associated Artists Galleries. Terrapins Entertain High School Guests When the scholarship examinations were held March 9, the Terrapins pre sented a swimming exhibition for the enjoyment of the high-school guests. College Teams Play At U. of Chicago The College Basketball teams partici pated in a play day on March 9, from 10 to 4 p.m., at the University of Chicago. Representing the freshmen were Ella Endres, captain, Lynne Larson, Frances Endovina, Concetta Serra, Marcella Mulveil, Patricia Gross, Helen Drocas, Patricia O'Donoghue, and Constance Naples. The sophomore team included Eileen O'Shea, captain, Katherine Burwitz, Cecilia Beck, Doris Grove, Jeanne Smith, Betty Jane Crawford, and Joan McGuire. Playing for the juniors were Catherine McLaughlin, captain, Regina Bess, Mary Ann Shaw, Beth Goodwillie, Dorothy Case, Barbara Lundgren, and Dolores Olekowski. Senior players were Jeanne McNulty, captain, Josephine Roche, Francine Lamb, and Estelle Guest. Students, Alumna Appear in Programs Representing the College Program Bureau, Patricia Czarnecki, junior drama major, gave a series of readings for the Young People's club of Our Lady of Grace parish, on March 4. Betty Mae Huber, vocalist, and Joanne Keenan, accompanist, presented a musical program for the Wilmette Catholic Woman's club on Washing ton's birthday. Earlier in the month, Miss Huber sang before the Woman's club of Mundelein, Illinois. Betty Kreuzer '41, of the Art depart ment, lectured recently on Art in In dustry, as guest of the Dwight, Illinois, Woman's club, and Barbara Keenan, junior art major, lectured on Outstand ing Catholic Artists of Today before members of the St. Nicholas Parent Teacher group in Evanston and before members of St. Jerome's Sanctuary so ciety. Peggy Cole, Kathryn Burwitz, Ra- mona Marino, Mary Ellen Martin, and Patricia Yunker have been invited to give a repeat performance of their forum on Indonesia, at Great Lakes Naval Training Station. Bacteriologists Study White Rats Faculty Member Gives Carroll Forum Lecture Miriam L. Rooney, Ph.D., of the Edu cation department, lectured on The Fu ture of the Family at the Charles Carroll Forum, yesterday afternoon, at the Mor rison hotel. Earlier this month, Dr. Rooney dis cussed The Family, Foundation of So ciety, before members of the Fort Wayne Catholic forum, at Fort Wayne, Indiana. Other recent lecture engagements of Dr. Rooney's include a discussion of the problems of parents, given before mem bers of the St. Mary's Parent Teacher association in Evanston, and a discussion of The Child's World, at the Federation Day program of the South Side Catholic Woman's club. St Alumna Is on Staff of Mental Hygiene Society Among the initial registrants when Mundelein opened in 1930 was Marg uerite Lundy Walker, '34, now on the staff of the Mental Hygiene society of New York. Mrs. Walker was a pioneer member of the Cecilians and a sociology major. After receiving her B. A. from Mun delein and her M. A. from the Loyola University Graduate School of Social Work, she did senior Case Work for the Chicago Relief Administration. In 1937- 38, Mrs. Walker was a faculty member of Loyola's School of Social Work and was Clinic Supervisor of the Adult Psy chiatric Clinic at Loyola's School of Medicine. She did graduate work at the Univer sity of Southern California before mov ing to New York and accepting her pres ent position. Several articles of Mrs. Walker's have appeared in Sociology and Social Re search. Among these are Types of Mal adjusted Personality and Conjunctive Theory of Personality Reorganization. Mrs. Walker is a member of Alpha Kappa Delta, sociology honor society. Sniffer, experimental white rat, weighs in, with the assistance of senior biology major Jeanne Doucette, while Margaret Mary Kaindl and Virginia Darovic, also senior biology majors, prepare to vaccinate Snooper, another experi mental rat. (Story in CoL 4.) Lively Rats Romp For Science's Sake Sniffer and Snooper are two white rats who, with their brother Control, live in the bacteriology laboratory. Control is a lazy rat who cats, sleeps, and is weighed three times a week, but Sniffer and Snooper work hard for the advancement of science and the education of the Bacteriology classes. Three times a week they are weighed to see if they keep up with non-experi mental Control. Then they are given in jections of an especially prepared vaccine, consisting of bacteria suspended in saline solution, and killed with formalin. This vaccine causes the rats' bodies to form substances called antibodies, which protect the animals against attack by the bacterium present in the vaccine. In the same fashion, vaccines are prepared from disease germs, and human beings are vaccinated against small pox and other diseases. ' Sniffer, Snooper and Control will be killed at the end of the experiment and their blood serum used in a series of demonstrations. The students will see the bacteria clumped together, and their pro teins precipitated, and will learn the im portance of the salt solution in the reaction. You would be surprised at what I have learned about the habits of rats, sighs Margaret Mary Kaindl. And what we have learned about col lege girls I squeak Sniffer and Sn6oper as they sit up in their cage and gnaw their crusts of bread. Control just sleeps. u5craplna5 . . . March is an undecided lion, torn bel tween the bright gold sunshine of glorious spring and the soft, envelop ing lavendar mists of a holy Lentej season. March is also the month after FeM ruary ... a time when, class adjust ments made and Senior comprehensives dispensed with, light-hearted col girls feel really free to frolic in Amerij ca's winter wonderland. And frolic they did They arJ Joyce Schmidt, Joyce Evans, Jeanettel Brander, Marilyn Wenzel, Jean Koch, and Jeanne Doucette, who helped tol make St. Juliana's parish dance at thq Edgewater Beach Hotel a success. Barbara Lundgren plans to tell hed grandchildren about that dream coma true a date for the University on Wisconsin Junior prom. At the Buttery the other day wera Jeanne Kiley and Mary Lou Thurberj And at just about the same time, Mani Jane Dukes, Angela Krieter, and Dm lores Hoban dined at Shangri-La. You should hear the juniors companj notes on their favorite dining-rooms Regina Bess stands staunchly by uf Ivanhoe. Dorothy Case champions the Edgewater, Patricia O'Brien defend the Pump Room, while Marialyce Snlli-I van has memories only of the Empire Room. Affairs sponsored by local universi-l ties are never neglected by MundeleinJ ites. Mary Agnes Williams attended De Paul's Homecoming dance, Colleei Rettig was a guest at Northwestern university's Miami Triad at the Edge-J water, and Patricia Curran and Man Ann Anderson joined in the cry oj Timber at Loyola's Woodchopperi Hop. Three of a six-some at the Boulw vard Room not long ago were Kather- ine Malatesta, Elaine Jenkins, and MM ry Em Harrigan. Jeanne Schubert has breathed deeply of the flower-scented air of the Camellia House. Martha loql Edwards lias inspected the portrait of the Beau Bath at the Pump Rooml Irene Kenney celebrated the week end after comprehensive examinations by flying to Detroit to visit her fianceJ Mary Jane Lee finally learned all the lyrics of Anchors Aweigh, at a Navy dance at the Skyline club. Marion Kartheiser was present fon the unfolding of an historical event-H when De Paul defeated Notre Dams in basketball. Seniors Eleanor Arends and Loia Hintze found post-examination solacfl at the Empire and Boulevard Rooms. Guest lists at the Walnut and PaiH ther Rooms now include the names ofi Mary Jane McNeal and Mary Leona Merrick. Patrons of the Arts arc thankful that the winter season is long enough for them to cover almost every presentaJ tion in town. Dolores Richo and KM nette Salisbury were Sclwyn-bound fotj a view of The Joyous Season just be fore Lent. Listening to . . . an looking at . . . Blossom Time pleased Lorraine Uhlich, Norma Gaddini, and Dorothy Fahrenbach. Dramatizes Life Of Song Writer (Continued from page 1, column 4) turcsquc Hollywood home the home that A Perfect Day, Just a Wcaryiri fori you. and / Love You Truly helped to build. The monolog, which has been writtenl in four episodes, portrays Mrs. Bond'l struggles as an unknown composer here in Chicago, and her later triumphs in the music world. Particularly appropriate and in kee ing with the entire program will bel Rosemary Tierney's presentation of fa- vorite Bond selections on the organ. Mrs. Bond is noted also as a com-1 poser of children's songs, sacred songsf and musical background scores formfrj tion picturei. J
title:
1946-03-11 (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:
This image is issued by the Women and Leadership Archives. Use of the image requires written permission from the Director of the Women and Leadership Archives. It may not be sold or redistributed, copied or distributed as a photograph, electronic file, or any other media. The image should not be significantly altered through conventional or electronic means. Images altered beyond standard cropping and resizing require further negotiation with the Director. The user is responsible for all issues of copyright. Please Credit: Women and Leadership Archives, Loyola University Chicago. wlarchives@luc.edu
coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College