description:
College Divisions Unite Talents in Education Forum Value of Knowing Truth in All Fields is Theme Of Discussion XIII CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1942 No. 3 Fall Fashions Will Be in Order Cecilians Will T1 o i /-. -r Honor Patron at When bophomores, Guests Dance Sunday Concert For War Bonds at Cotillion Tonight pum sixth a w program You're Easy To Dance With will be theme as Mundelein students and er escorts dance to the music of III Sands and his orchestra at the ihomorc Cotillion tonight. The pro- i of the Cotillion, which will be at Lake Shore club, will be invested in l'ir Bonds. Natmdas Fisher, social chairman of (sophomore class, will lead the grand rch in a turquoise blue peg-top dress. Jlblack velvet hat and black shoes and nes will complete her costume. Miss ler's escort for the evening is Robert ley, of Loyola. Another Loyolan, Thomas O'Brien, is rting Mary Catherine Tuomey, who pnaring a two-piece, pale-yellow wool is, trimmed in nailheads. Fresh ycl- t flowers will add a novel touch to sTuomcy's brown skull cap. IA small blue feather hat and black sand gloves will complement Cath- Cotillion Chairman Naundas Fisher freshmen File to Ballot Box Today I'il Select Class Leaders at Assembly lindful of the qualities of a good fa-, the freshmen will elect a prcsi- II and two Student Activities Coun- reprcscntatives at their 1 o'clock w.bly today. pith Marianne Donahoe, S.A.C. Hdent, in the chair, last Friday they ited for president Luella Hilde- and Mary Ann Anderson, both Alvcrnia high school, Eileen from Providence, and Mary Hornof from the Immaculata. .Nominees for S.A.C. representatives ijoan Tcmplcman, from Longwood; me McNulty, from the Immaculata; Germaine Duffy, from Providence; Beakey, from Carl Schurz; Mar- Simon, from St. Scholastica, and Frances Padden, from Marywood. Princely Palace Comes to College Stage in Fall Play Cast Busy with Rehearsals As Nov. 22 Nears Library Groomed For Coming Book Week Artists Illustrate Power Books in Wartime of Traditionally, the windows of the try, as well as the shelves, will be iring hook week, with designs by lilorts Bujewski, who is also making Biers for the occasion. Art work on k special Book Week bulletin board bUr will be by Ruth Schmigclsky. Designed to keep the public conscious i the power of books, Book Week, akh opens on Nov. 15, will have as Ipneral theme the slogan Forward all Books, while a Presidential quo- pon, hooks arc weapons, will be the Lm'cular theme of the exhibits in the Urge library. Illustrating the ways in which books vi indeed weapons, the exhibits will up volumes as morale-builders, as elections against intolerance, and as ieguards for democratic principles. mong the new- books dealing with par situations which will be on display- He V. L. White's They Were Ex- pnABLE; Stanley Johnston's Queen of B Flat Tops. Emile Gauvueau and later Cohen's Billy Mitchell, and Marion Hargrove's See Here, Private Hascrove. King, queen, knight, and fair ladies will be present on Nov. 22, at 8 p.m. when the curtain parts in Once in a Palace. With enchanting halls and court scenes as a background for chivalry and romance, the drama students, en acting Marguerite Krcgcr Phillip's comedy, will carry their audience into fairyland for three brief hours. Larraine Knaub will enact the part of the vain King, and Jeanne Horan will play the part of the princess, who is as cranky about a husband as her lather is about his coats. Comedy characters, Cut, Slash, and Stitch, the royal tailors, will be im personated by Mary Ellen Gallagher, Ruth Anne McCarthy, and Rosemary Roney, and the conquering hero, Prince Vito, will be impersonated by Grace O'Connor. Grace Mannebach will play the anx ious Queen Anne, and Royce McFadyen will appear as the romantic 16-year-old maid. Patricia Kelly and Mary Clare Howard will lend color to the scene as ladies in waiting. Faithful shadows of the king, the prime minister and the palace doctors will be played by Patricia Monaco, Betty Howard, and Mary-Jean Johnson. Freshmen Jeanne O'Connor, Claudia (Continued on Page 3, Col. 3) Enjoy Another Pause That Refreshes, Nov. 13 It will be coke time again on Friday, Nov. 13, and coke time is dance time at Mundelein when the students play hostess to Loyolans at a 3-to-5 p.m. party in the gymnasium. Students who wish to attend this second in the coke dance series may secure tickets from Marianne Dona hoe, Student Activities Council president. Loyolans may secure theirs from Frank Considine. erine Cunningham's light blue crepe dress. Miss Cunningham's escort, Verle Flood, attends the University of Iowa. Betty Jane McCambridge. class presi dent, will be escorted by Joseph New- house. Miss McCambridge will wear a black crept dress trimmed in gold with black accessories. Mr. Newhousc is a Loyola graduate. Viola Brennan is adding a Spanish touch to her outfit by wearing a tiny black lace mantilla on her hat. With her long-sleeved sapphire blue crepe dress she will wear black shoes and gloves. James McNulty from Loyola will be her escort. Brown accessories will set off Mary- Jane Harvey's green, peg-top dress. Joseph Ratty, a former Northwestern student, will escort Miss Harvey. Jerry Stutz, S.A.C. treasurer, plans to wear a royal blue crepe dress. Blue feathers of the same shade will trim her small hat. Don Quinn of Loyola is escorting Miss Stutz. Irene O'Flaherty is wearing an American beauty wool crepe. Black ac cessories will complete her outfit. Miss O'FIahcrty's escort, William McMana- nion, was graduated from Loyola uni versity. Of Instrumental And Choral Music Former Instructor Returns as Lecturer Paul Kiniery, Ph.D., dean of the graduate school of Loyola university, will discuss the lasting results of the past decade in a lecture entitled Changing America, 1930-1942, to be given at assembly on Nov. 19. An authority on political and so cial conditions Dr. Kiniery, who is a graduate of the University of Wis consin, taught sociology at Munde lein in 1930-31. Honoring their patron, St. Cecilia, the Piano club, the Glee club, and the Organ guild will present the sixth an nual concert in her honor, on Sunday. Nov. 8, at 3 p.m., in the college theatre. Students, their parents and friends are invited to be present. Patricia Kelly, drama major, will read a tribute to St. Cecilia, before the musical selections, and Mary Louise Gulick will open the program with an organ selection, Concert Overture by Rogers. Plays Valse Caprice At the piano, Rosemary Viglione, will play Valse Caprice, by Rubinstein, and, following her, Muriel Meinken will play Hungarian Fantasy, by Liszt, with Nicoletta Priola playing orchestral parts at second piano. Violinist Lillian Muza will play Sonata in G Minor, by Tartini, and soprano Ann McManus will sing Ouvrc ton Coeur, by Bizet. Glee Club Sings Following the intermission, the Glee club, directed by Walter Aschen brenner, will sing a group of three selections, including Pledge of Alleg iance, by Mallotte; Ave Maria, by Schubert-Riegger, and America, Glor ious Land, by Pecry. Soloist will be Shirley Hopper soprano. Organist Angela Voller will play a Debussy selection, La Fille aux Chcveux de Lin, and Bach's Bourree in E Flat, and soprano Eleanor Kandratcs will sing a Strauss number, entitled Spring in My Heart. Marianne Donahoe will conclude the program with the Liszt Concerto in E Flat Major, for which Barbara Ann Frick and Miss Voller will play or chestral parts at the second piano and (Continued on Page 4, Col. 3) Considering education as a quest for the truth which shall make you free, seven seniors will take part in a sym posium on Education for Free Men, at assembly on Nov. 12. Using the theme of National Educa tion Week, celebrated Nov. 8-15, the group will develop the idea that free men should know the truth in all fields. Introduces Topic Rosemary Shanahan. general chair man, will introduce the topic, and Pa tricia Tierney, Catherine Bettenbender, Jeanne Kaufniann, Ellen Foran, Eileen Ryan, and Rosamond McMillan will discuss the contributions to education lor free men. Miss Tierney, a biology major, will talk of the contribution of the natural sciences to education; Miss Betten bender, a history major, and Miss Kauf niann, a home economics major, will talk on the contribution of the human istic sciences. Discuss Literature, Art Miss Foran, an English major, will discuss the contribution of languages and literature; Miss Ryan, a music major, will talk on the contribution of the fine arts, and Miss McMillan, a biology major, will talk on the con tribution of philosophy and religion. Barbara Ann Frick will open the pro gram with an organ processional, by- Kern ; the Glee club, directed by Walter Aschenbrenner, will sing Malotte's Pledge to the Flag and Peery's America, My Wondrous Land, and Jane Claire Brown, organist will play a Faulkcs Recessional. Plan Lecture Series On Modern Problems Of Physical Science Designed to acquaint the student body with important modern phases of physi cal science, the recently organized Physical Science section of the Science Forum has arranged a series of popular lectures, to begin on Nov. 18. The initial lecture, which will be giv en in Room 607 by Sister Mary Therese, B.V.M., of the physics department, will by entitled Astrology Why Not, and is scheduled for 4 p.m. The December, January, and February- topics will be entitled, respectively, Uncle Sam Is Using Geologists in Many Ways; The Geographer Offers a Back ground for News in The Pacific; and Learning to Spot Aircraft. The dates College Jeep Inspectors . . . are Skyscraper staff members Rae Haefel and Mary Kay Jones who journeyed to Camp Grant at the invitation of the army men who heard about the Mundelein Jeep Drive. Pictured with them is Lieutenant H. Benson. The Bond committee chairmen report that more than one-quarter of a jeep's worth of stamps and bonds have been sold
title:
1942-11-06 (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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coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College