description:
THE Volume VIII MUNDELEIN COLLEGE, CHICAGO. ILLINOIS, FEBRUARY 18, 1938 No. 8 Socialists Discuss Industrial Peace At College Forum Seventeen Students Register For General Meeting Of Cisca, Feb. 22 With Dr. L. T. Flatley, professor of economics, as chairman, the Sodality will present the second College For um of the year, in the study hall, on Sunday, Feb. 20. al 3 o'clock, with Industrial Peace as the topic for dis cussion. Mary Eraser will open the discus sion with a consideration of the Cath olic Ideal of Industrial Peace. Annamarie Masterson will talk mi Obstacles to the Attainment of This Ideal in the Past, and Helen Farrell will discuss Obstacles to Its Attain ment at Present. Margaret Mary Murray will con clude the formal program with a talk on Catholic Contributions to Industrial Peace, after which discussion will con tinue from the floor. The College Forums, sponsored by Cisca, were inaugurated last year with the first Forum held at St. Xavier college. Seventeen students have registered for the thirty-third general meeting of Cisca, which will be held at Fen wick high school in Oak Park, on Feb. 22. The meeting will open with Holy Mass at 9:00 a. at., followed by ge- eral and sectional meetings. After luncheon at 1 o'clock, the meetings will reconvene until Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament at 4 will close the session. Faculty Members Attend Symposium Sister Mary Esther, B.V.M., and Sis ter Mary Josine, B.V.M., attended a symposium on the Algebra of Geome try and Related Subjects at the Univer sity of Notre Dame, Feb. 11 and 12. Among the speakers were Dr. Mar shall H. Stone of Harvard university, Dr. Karl Meager of the University of Notre Dame, and Dr. A. Adrian Albert of the University of Chicago. Alice Addison Complete Plans For Junior Prom At Stevens Hotel Dancing lo the continuous music of Jack Russell and his orchestra in the newly decorated Boulevard Room of the Stevens Hotel, more than 200 coup les will be guests of the junior class next Monday evening, Feb. 21, at the annual formal Junior Promenade. Blue and white, according to fashion discussion, will be the predominating colors at the Prom, in the gowns of the guests. Social chairman Alice Addison will lead the dance wearing an Alice-blue gown, while Edythc Williams, wear ing white crepe, will challenge Ameri can fashions with her latest European import. Geraldine Connell, junior president, will wear blue moire; Frances Geary, vice-president, will wear white, and Geraldine Ferstel S.A.C. representative, will wear blue crepe. Chaperons for the evening will in clude Mr. and Mrs. Cecil O. Addison, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Boehme, Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. Coens, Mr. and Mrs. James M. Finnegan, and the following Faculty members: Dr. Miriam Laugh- ran Rooney, Miss Gladys Bucher, and Miss Eileen Scanlon. Crosses Atlantic Five Times To Take Mundelein Degree Cosmopolite of the junior class is Edythe Williams, 21-year-old Ameri can girl who enrolled at Mundelein in September 1933. and who has crossed the ocean five times in her desire to complete her education in the United States. Daughter ol T. W. Williams, Philco radio executive who was transferred from Chicago to London in 1934, Miss Williams sailed for England after her first semester here, and returned in February of the following year. She crossed to England again in June 1935. with a round-trip ticket in suring her return to the United States and to Mundelein in September. The following summer she toured the Continent, and, in the fall, attended school in Switzerland. She spent the summer of 1937 traveling in the Bri tish Isles and in France, Germany, Switzerland and Italy. In September, 1937, she enrolled at the University of London, and on New Year's Eve she started across the Atlantic again, stopped over briefly in New York, and is now established in the residence hall. Although Miss Williams finds life in London interesting and exciting, she prefers Rome to any of the European cities she has visited. We went down into the Catacombs, she remarked, with a monk as our guide. It was very interesting, but a little eerie, especially since we all car ried tapers. We went to the Coli seum in glaring sunlight and I was so thrilled I could scarcely speak. It has been one of my life-long dreams just to sit in the Coliseum and think, and I did. Miss Williams visited the Vatican and St. Peter's, the art galleries in Florence, the Cathedral of Milan, which is her favorite of the Gothic cathedrals, the Riviera, and the Paris Exposi tion. She also attended the Coronation, and, with her lather, wrote a descrip tion brochure about it for her Ameri can friends. A journalism major, she is writing a series of articles for the Skyscraper on her impressions of life abroad. Observe Catholic Press Month in Clubs and Library College Will Sponsor Writing Contest Opon To All Students Observing February as Catholic Press Month, ihe English department is announcing the annual Creative Writing Contest, the library is pre senting displays of Catholic books and magazines, the Stylus club has issued the winter number of The Clepsydra. the Sodality, with Catherine Heerey as editor of the New Woki.ii Cisca page, is focusing attention on Catho lic literature, and the Press club is fea turing the Catholic press in this is sue of the paper. The Contest, which includes divis ions lor poetry, short stories, essays, editorials, and book reviews, is open to all students. Deadline is April 5 Manuscripts, which must be submit ted in room 506 before 6 p.m. on April 5, will be judged by outstanding wri ters, and awards will be given in June. The winter CLEPSYDRA, edited by Jo anne Dimmick and Elizabeth Higgins, in its lead article, calls attention to the work of Marie Noel, Catholic poet recognized in France as one of the foremost writers of the century. Eliza beth Dimmick has written the article, which is illustrated by Georgene Mc- Gowan. Other notable articles are a story, Sherwood Street, written and illus trated by Virginia Gaertner, which portrays the influence of literature in the psychological development of a child, and a story, Vale of Tears, by Angeline Wilcox. Artists Contribute Especially interesting in this issue of the Clepsydra are the linoleum- block illustrations designed and cut by the following members of the art department: Virginia Gaertner, Geor gene McGowan, Lilian Krcz, Irene Waldron, Ellen Birnbaum, Dorothy Kullman, and Clemcncc Bisson. In accordance with tradition, the Skyscraper, edited by Annamarie Mas terson, celebrated its seventh birthday with a party, at the opening of Catholic Press Month. Under the chairmanship of Priscilla Moore, Geraldine Ferstel, and Frances Geary, staff members had a Birthday Breakfast in the tea-room following the close of Retreat at Holy Mass on Feb. 4. Terrapins Sponsor Telegraphic Meet; 60 Schools Enter With more than 6D schools entered, the Terrapins, sponsors for the 1938 National Intercollegiate Telegraphic Swimming Meet, announced recently the largest enrollment of colleges since the organization of the contest. Included in the list of entries are the Universities of Chicago, Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin, and Barat, Be loit, and Rockford colleges. Preceding the Telegraphic Meet, scheduled for March 15, will be the Inter-class meet, to be held at 1 p.m. on Feb. 24. The class meet will con sist of individual and group races and fancy diving. Captains of the classes are Lucille Small, senior; Irma Rilling, junior; Marjorie McPartland, sophomore; and Ellen Jane Fitzgibbons, freshman. Military Order of Purple Heart Sponsors Three-Act Drama on Feb* 22 and 24 Will Be Cited His Excellency, the Most Reverend Bernard J. Sheil, D.D. Bishop Sheil to Receive Citation; Soldiers To Be Quests His Excellency, the Most Reverend Bernard J. Sheil, D.D., auxiliary Bish op of Chicago, will be cited by the Military Order of the Purple Heart, at the play on Feb. 22, in recognition of his distinguished and self-sacrificing aid to the disabled service men at the Great Lakes Naval Station. National Commander T. M. Thom son of St. Paul, Minnesota, will also be honored at the premiere perfor mance, at which members of the Mili tary Order, troups from Ft. Sheridan, representatives of the American Le gion, the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the Army, the Navy, and distinguished representatives of both Church and State will be present. The play is being presented at the request of the Military Order, whose national chaplain, the Reverend George T. McCarthy, recommended to the Na tional Commander some months ago that Mundelein College be commis sioned to prepare and present for the first time the romantic story of the oldest and most distinguished military- order in the United States. Alumnae Present Carnival, Feb. 25 The spirit of Mardi Gras will per vade the College next Friday evening, Feb. 25, when the Alumnae association holds the first evening social in the history of Mundelein, a carnival, with Ann Lally '35, president of the asso ciation, in charge of a committee plan ning a varied program of entertain ment. For those who prefer cards, there will be tables in the social room. In the gymnasium the devotees of the Big Apple may Susie Q and Shag to their hearts content to the music of the Georgians. Refreshments will be served in the college tea-room dur ing the festivities. Margaret Cleary Is Author Sallie Agnes Smith is Guest Star Sponsored by the Military Order of the Purple Heart, an original three- act drama, The Order of the Purple Heart, written by Margaret Cleary '37 with Sallie Agnes Smith, '35, radio actress, as guest star, will be presented in the college theatre on Feb. 22 and 24. by Sigma Rho Upsilon. drama alum nae group. Mayor Kelly is honorary chairman of the committee assisting with the play. The hero is one of the three original members of the Order, Daniel Bisscl, Revolutionary soldier who was com missioned by General Washington to leave the American ranks, enlist with the British, and act as a secret service agent in the enemy camp, where he was under the direct command of Bene dict Arnold, then a general in the Bri tish forces. Characters Are Historic General Washington, Lafayette, Rochambeau, Benedict Arnold, and a group of soldiers and officers from both camps lend a colorful military atmosphere to a tense talc of espion age, which reaches a climax when the revolutionary spy, now a sergeant in the British Army, becomes ill with fever and, in delirium, discloses to a Bri tish physician the real reason for his heroic exploits. The heroine, Judith Revere, is played by guest star Sallie Agnes Smith '35, professional radio actress now ap pearing in the new NBC feature, Valiant Lady. Dorothy White '36, win ner of the 1937 Chicago Beaux Arts award, has a leading role. Vernon Anderson, Loyola alumnus, plays Ser geant Bissel. Miss Anne Larkin, of the Mundelein drama department, is directing the play. Members of Sigma Rho Upsilon, in colonial costume, headed by Merce des McCambridge '37, NBC actress starring in Guiding Light and appear ing in First Nighter, Lights Out, Grand Hotel, Tale of Today, and Dan Hard ing's Wife, will be hostesses at the premiere performance. Loyolans Take Part The cast includes Judith Revere, fi ancee of Daniel Bissel, Sallie Agnes Smith '35, guest star; Jill Revere, younger sister of Judith, Dorothy White '35; Madam Revere, mother of Judith, Marion Ryan '35; Colonel Hum phreys, friend of the Revere family, Bertram J. Steggert, Loyola regis trar; Daniel Bissel, non-commissioned man in rebel forces, Vernon Ander son, Loyola '37. Maria, maid in Daniel Bissel's camp, Prances Burke '35; Sydney Nor ton, British Soldier, Oliver P. Powers, Notre Dame '32; Dick Flood, British Soldier, Patrick Flanagan, Sherry's College, Liverpool, England; Doctor Caldwell, physician in British lines, D. Herbert Abel, Loyola professor; General Benedict Arnold, now in Bri tish army, Lawrence Goodnow, mem ber of University of Chicago choir. Major Revere, father of Judith, Lau rence Acker, Manhattan college; Lc Comte de Rochambeau, guest of honor at Revere ball, John Morrissey, Loy ola university; Le Marquis de Lafay ette, Frank Edgerle; George Wash- ton, Leslie E. Birger; University of (Continued on Page 4, Col. 2)
title:
1938-02-18 (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
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Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College