description:
or- 'ad- 1 iey, riel I eaj ter, THE . .. s..;-' imm .... AneXlV MUNDELEIN COLLEGE, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, FRIDAY, Nov. 19, 1943 No. 4 ur on Friday toth Anne McCarthy and Irene Foster will have stellar roles in tonight's etion of Once There Was a Princess, three-act comedy presented by the i department. 1 Review To Be Distributed After Vacation Have Double'Header Debate with Loyola I Selects Theme for Year; Notes Archdiocesan Centenary Discuss National Question: World Police Force (Pictures on page 4) rasing the spotlight on its cen- theme for 1943-44, the problem Winging Catholic thought to bear I current problems, the autumn- I Mundelein College Review, lit- 5 magazine, will roll off the presses t Thanksgiving. location Takes Inventory, by Mil- I Welch, is the first of a series of IS which will outline and em it the platform of the Review for Irarrent year. tamemorating the Centennial of Archdiocese of Chicago, Mary Lou- Bector is the author of the opening k of the issue. Entitled Ballad of (Illinois Lake, the poem has a fron- jitce illustration, by Patricia Gal- tr. 1 Are Co-Editors pwditors-in-chicf Margaret Jean ;e and Mildred Welch. head the , with Helen Sauer, Audrey Ander- and Harriet O'Brien as associate Bars. lttne Kenney and Mary Ann irson are in charge of essays; Tatge, Irene O'Flaherty, and Ei- Murphy are fiction editors; Dc- Rigoulct, Angela La Cesa, and ley Payne take care of articles, Mary Catherine Tuomey and Mary Weinberg are feature editors. Edit Verse, Reviews iiss Hector and Geraldine Thorpe Jit the verse; Ellen Perry and Adele Kcwski edit the reviews, and Miss fillagher is art editor. illiss Burke, Miss Murphy, Miss Tuo- ty, Mrs. Payne, and Jeanne O'Con- f contribute to the essay section se ctions ranging from the scholarly to (Continued on page 4, column 5) Two Loyola debate teams will meet two Mundelein teams in the first in tercollegiate debates of the season, on Nov. 23, at 3 p.m., in rooms 404 and 405. Both encounters will be on the na tional question, Resolved: That the United States Should Cooperate in Establishing and Maintaining an In ternational Police Force. Mary Ann Anderson and Patricia Curran will uphold the negative in one of the debates, and Charlotte Schnitz- er and Mary Lou Lauer will defend the affirmative in the other. Miss Anderson and Miss Curran are preparing entries in the National Dis cussion Contest on Inter-American Af fairs, sponsored by the Office of the Co-ordinator of Inter-American Af fairs and conducted under the auspices of the American Council on Education. Freshmen Continue Electing Officers Election of vice-president and other officers will take place at the fresh man assembly today, at which Eileen Harmon, class president, will preside. A week ago today, Regina Bess and Marianne Peterson were elected to rep resent the freshmen on the Student Activities Council. A graduate of Alvernia high school, Miss Bess was vice-president of her senior class, sports editor of the school paper, and a star athlete and debater. Miss Peterson, who was graduated from Mount St. Mary-on-the-Fox, was president of the Student Council in her senior year, president of the Civics club, vice-president of the Aviation club, and a staff member of the school paper. Three-Act Play Takes the Stage Tonight at 8:15 Production Crews Are Ready With Scenery, Lights, Properties (Pictures on page 1, page 4) When the curtain goes up tonight and Sunday night, at 8:15, on the drama department's fall production, Once There Was A Princess, the audience will see an unusual stage set ting, designed by Ruth Shmigelsky, junior art major. Slanting her college work toward a career in theatrical designing, Miss Shmigelsky, who gets many of her novel ideas about sets and lighting from ballet performances, constructed the entire setting, with the aid of the freshman play production cast. Supervises Freshmen For the past month, she has spent her free time in the drama workshop, di recting and working with Joyce Arch er, stage manager, Mary Scherer, stage crew manager, and the following mem bers of the scenery crew: Julie Lcni- han, Barbara' Mendelsohn, Rosemary O'Connor, Nancy Enzweiler, and Ve ronica Walsh. Also assisting with the setting were Noreen Braum, who, besides taking part in the play, will take care of the curtain; Peggy Routliff, Patricia Ry an, Patricia Hereley, Annamac Byrne, Rosemary Comfort, and Rosemarie Lloyd, of the property crew. Assist with Setting Still other helpers are Patricia Czarnecki, Evelyn Mando, Mary Pa tricia O'Brien, Mary Thometz, Do lores Toniatti, and Margaret Dovgalo, of the lighting crew; Patricia Scully, Marianne Farrell, Virginia Lee, and Betty Lamberti, who are in charge of wardrobe, and Joan Moore and Mar jorie Kroske, who assist with make-up. Doris Foley Kennedy is director of the two casts, and Joseph J. Grill will direct the College Orchestra, which will provide music for the production. Play Desert Song Following The Star-Spangled Ban ner, which will prelude the perform ance, the Orchestra, which has chosen its numbers from music popular .be tween 1925 and 1933, the period of the comedy, will play selections from The Desert Song, by Sigmund Romberg. Other orchestral numbers will be two songs from the '20's, Forgotten and Who, and Valse Triste, by Sibelius. Near the end of the play, the string quartet, including violinists Lillian Muza and Mary Jane Hogan; cellist Dorothy Grill, and violist June Mur phy, will play I'll Take You Home Again, Kathleen, and the Orchestra will take up that melody as the cur tain closes. Happy Thanksgiving With examinations only a mem ory, the College will close for the Thanksgiving recess after classes on Wednesday afternoon, Nov. 24, and will reopen on Monday, Nov. 29. . . And on Sunday Grace O'Connor and Patricia Rocap will replace Friday's stars when the play is repeated on Sunday, Nov. 21, at 8:15 p.m., in the College Theatre. Qlacier Priest to Lecture, on Nov. 23 Father Hubbard Will Talk on War in the Aleutians 757 Students Have Only 125 Different Names; Mary's Lead The Reverend Bernard J. Hubbard, S.J., the Glacier Priest, will lecture at the general assembly, on Nov. 23, on The Aleutians, Battleground. When Father Hubbard talked here last fall, he predicted the recapture of Kiska and the ultimate set of the Ris ing Sun. His lecture this year will include accounts of the progress of the war in the North Pacific. A celebrated author, lecturer, and scientific explorer. Father Hubbard has been affiliated with the Western De fense Command, and he has made many trips to Alaska and the Aleutians. Bom in San Francisco and educated at Santa Clara university, of which he is now a faculty member, Father Hubbard did advanced study at the University of Innsbruck, Aus tria, and served as chaplain to the Empress Zita. Patricia's, Margaret's, Joan's, Jean's, and Betty's Are Next Open Thanksgiving Bond Drive, Contest All Students Eligible to Vote For Classmates Cooperating with Marjorie Rowbot tom and Dorothy Meehan, chairmen of the War Bond and Stamp committee, the Skyscraper is sponsoring a three- day drive to buy extra jeeps for Uncle Sam for Thanksgiving and to select one student from each class for the Thanksgiving Bond Chart. Beginning at noon today, each student who buys a Stamp or Bond may cast for a member of her class one vote for each penny invested; thus a 10-ccnt Stamp will equal 10 votes; an 18.75 Bond will equal 1,875 votes, and so on. The contest will close at noon on Wednesday, Nov. 24, and the winners will be announced before the College closes for the Thanksgiving vacation. Approximately every sixth girl at Mundelein is named Mary, or a double name of which Mary or Marie is a part, according to statistics compiled by Mary Martha Cooper and June Park. These two sophomores also reveal that there are only 125 different names among the 757 Mundelein girls, 123 of whom are Mary's in one form or anoth er. On the Double Of the combinations, Mary Margaret and Mary Catherine are the most popu lar. Vying with the Mary's for name popularity are the 45 Patricia's and the 34 Margaret's. Next in line are the Joan's, the Jean's, and the Betty's. Most unusual names are Chloris, Dellamae, Almaric, Godcliva, Stacy, Alverna, Amalia, and Eddy Jo. Sug gesting foreign countries arc the Mau reen's and the Eileen's, probably col leens. Nanette, Bernadette, and Geor gette suggest la France; Ramona and Dolores and Marie are reminiscent of Spain, and Olga suggests Russia. Confuse Everyone Confusing to the Faculty, the other students, and, probably, to the stu dents involved are the name duplica tions. The name Mary Catherine Quinn may refer cither to a senior or to a freshman, and the same is true of the names Patricia Kelly and Rosemary Viglione the two Rosemary Viglione's, incidentally, are cousins. There are two Therese Michaels in the freshman class; two Jeanne Kileys in the sophomore class; there is a freshman Patricia O'Brien and a fresh man Mary Patricia O'Bryan.
title:
1943-11-19 (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