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SKYSCRAPER Page Three wst S. A. C. . . Students in the Secretarial -department have taken over much of the fastine work for the Benefit Card Party and Fashion Revue, scheduled for isril 23. Pictured are Patricia Mulkern, Bette Konle, and Marie Maher note to the mail box. Wend NCEA Meet m ce Sessions ktcr Mary Josephine, B.V.M., Pre- st. and Sister Mary Benedict, jLchairinan of the Psychology and cat-.'m departments, attended the ail Catholic Educational associ- meeting March 30 to April 4, in Francisco. tnting Mundelein at the spring I of the Chicago Catholic Science lis association. Sister Mary Es- B.V.M., chairman of the Mathe- department. addressed the Ma- itics section on the progress of jlufhcniatics tournament at Munde- ter Mary Carine, B.V.M., of the F department, spoke in the biolo- Ikttion on Science Clubs. The meet- kok place March 29 at the Museum Science and Industry. fitter Mary Marguerite Christine, BL, chairman, and Sister Marina. (jl, of the Chemistry department, t Mary Ignacio, B.V.M., chairman -;t Biology department, and Sister Sylvester, B.V.M.. chairman of (Physics department, also attended Jetting. tenior Receives honorable Mention tie Baiocchi, senior, is one of nine piiMt-ni college seniors given hon- emention by the Pepsi-Cola Schol- li;Board. Two thousand seniors ap- I lor graduate fellowships in the Intension by the Board of its schol- program. Piss Baiocchi ranked among the top per cent of the applicants, and I given the honorable mention for distinguished scholastic record. shmen Music knts Entertain Peshmcn in the Music department plained at the Freshman-Sopho- tu-,1. April 6. Beshmen orchestra members parti- in( vere Patricia Carr, Irene Mey- lEileeii O'Grady, Jean Schaefer, Nan- Wockncr, Gladys O'Brien, Joan breiber. and Jean Salerno. But Mahoney played Air De Bal lsy Maskowski and Chopin's Mili- Polonaise and Minute Waltz. The ihz in K Minor by Chopin was in- Iprcled by Angeline Mazza. Patricia Dee played the Notturuo by ipighi, and Jean Salerno followed Chopin's Waltz in E Flat Major. I Love Thee, by Grieg, was sung as fctbr I.averne Galiano and Virginia Mini. Mary Ann (iriglik sang Halm's ete My Songs Willi Wings Provided. Emidia Fabbri interpreted Carna- J by Valverde, and O Ask the Stars (ore You, an American folk song. Kss Volini sang My Heart At Thy Jet Voice, by Saint-Sacns, with An- krifnc Mazza as accompanist. Dean Presides At Section Meeting of National Group Sister Mary Bernarda, B.V.M., Dean, served as chairman of a conference composed of the deans of Catholic col leges March 29 at the Stevens hotel. The conference was held as part of the general meeting of the National Asso ciation of Deans of Women. Alumnae Discuss Marriage Career Joan Morris Agar '42 is chairman of the forum on Marriage which five Alum nae members will present at the assem bly at 1 p.m. on April 20. Mrs. Agar, who was editor of the Skyscraper in her senior year, and who contributed feature articles to maga zines, will speak on In-Laws or Out. Mary Louise Shannon McGarry '42, who teaches at St. Scholastica's, will discuss Housekeeping Problems of the Working Wife. Caroline Holland Mal- lon '36, who writes juvenile stories for the entertainment of her four children, will speak on Pre-Cana and Cana Con ferences. Royce McFadyen Crist '43, mother of two children, will discuss Training Children for the Future. Florence Grif fon O'Kecfe '38 will discuss the Family Bank Account. Mrs. O'Keefe's husband, Raymond O'Keefe, was recently named the outstanding young Catholic man of 1947. Delegates Plan Annual Red Cross Campus Activities Sister Mary Carmelyn, B.V.M.. mod erator, and nine students will repre sent Mundelein at the annual Red Cross College Unit conference, at Wheaton college, April 17. Student delegates from all the Chi cago chapter college units will attend and plan Red Cross .campus activities for next year. Attending the conference are Cecilia Godsel, Margaret Hanson, Maribeth Carey, Annette Bedessem, Maureen O' Brien. Constance Weber, Mary Jane Comcrford. Mary Tcresc McGcehan. and Eileen Dolan. Chemists To Hold Tea Chemistry alumnae and their children will gather here Sunday. April 18, at 3 p.m.. for a reunion and tea. Senior Chemistry majors will, serve as hos tesses. Cardinal Speaks Before Language Teachers Qroup Mundelein is Host To Annual Convention His Eminence. Samuel Cardinal Stritch. D.D.. chancellor of the College, addressed members of the Chicago Catholic Language Teachers associa tion at their spring meeting here April 10. Sister Mary Bernarda, B.V.M., Dean, welcomed the guests, and the Reverend Redmond Burke. C.S.V.. presided over the morning sessions. Discussion in the elementary school section, led by Sister Isabel. O.S.B.. principal of St. Timothy's school, in cluded an address by Sister Joan, O.P. Publishers Exhibit After the first session, guests visited a publishers' exhibit and an exhibition of Hummel prints. At the afternoon session, New Trier High school students, directed by Mrs. Elizabeth Kidd, demonstrated the cor relation between music and literature. Dr. Karola Gciger of De Paul consid ered aid to foreign students. Sectional meetings convened after the general sessions. High school English teachers, with Sister- Mary Leonore, R.S.M., of Mercy High school, as chair man, heard an address by Miss Mary Povcr. Sister Mary Irma, B.V.M., of the Mundelein English department, led discussion at the College English Round Table. Discuss French French teachers, under the chairman ship of Sister Mary St. Irene, B.V.M., chairman of the Mundelein French de partment, witnessed a demonstration of the oral-aural teaching method, given by Germaine Gallois Starrs, A.M., and a group of Mundelein students. Chairman of the German teachers group was Sister Casilde, S.S.N.D., of St. Michael Central High school. Sister Gretchen, O.P., of Rosary college con sidered the problems of teaching Ger man. Spanish instructors were led in dis cussion by Sister Mary Anthony, S.C.C., of St. Gregory High school, Sister Angela. S.P., and Sister Mary Liguori, S.S.X.D.: Latin teachers by Miss Mary FitzPatrick. Bureau Offers Career Hints Getting off to a good start in your job is as important as preparing for it, declared Sister Mary Frederick Ce cile, B.V.M., director of the Placement Bureau, in the first of a series of ca reer talks which will he given on Thurs days, at 3 p.m., in Room 405. Bring to your job all the enthusiasm and energy you can elicit, by choosing the kind of work for which your abili ties best fit you, Sister said. The second talk of the scries, You on Paper, to be given Thursday. April 15, will outline the plan of the campaign for a job. and instruct students on writ ing the letter of application. The in terview for a position will be discussed on April 22 in a talk called You on Sight. You on the Job, a description of office techniques, will be the final lecture of the scries, to be held April 20. All students are invited to attend these talks. Spanish Club Plans Party Members of Las Teresianitas will demonstrate their aquatic abilities at a splash party in the pool, April 13. A social hour will follow in the tearoom. Les D*Ardennes See French Film Members of Les d'Arciennes will be come movie-goers April 24 when they attend the French motion picture adap tation of the novel, Maria Chapdelaine, given by the Chicago French Film so ciety. The French students will then sample Parisian cookery at a luncheon in a French restaurant. Spring Review Due This Week Editorials Examine Secularism, Education The Song of the Gael, an essay by Ruth Casey, will he the lead article in the green-covered Spring issue of the quarterly Review, which will appear this week. Light essays published in this edition are Horror on Wheels, by Jo Aim Fi- gueria. Dry Behind the Ears, by Joan Aker; and Biographia llliteraria, by Mary Jean Ward. Articles are The Unbroken Thread by Lois Hassenauer; Four Crusaders, by Helen Jean Rogers. Short stories will include Half-Dollar Moon, by Helen Browne; My Son is a Busy Man, by Kathryn Malatesta: and Donovan Was Brave, by Virginia Dinneen. Student poets whose work will appear are Jean Jahrke, Lorraine Calhoun, Pa tricia Kiely. Mary Ann Mockler, and Rosemary Grant. Editorial topics are the increase of secularism in education, and the Medi ator Dei, papal encyclical on the litur gy. In the Book Review section, Mary- helen Dietrich will review The Great Rehearsal; Virginia Volini, The Gar- relson Chronicle; Patricia Kiely, Hor ace ; Joan Holland, I Sing of a Maiden; Joan Blakeslee. Abigail Adams; Judy Langhcnry, The End; Miss Mockler, Humanist as Hero; and Miss Mala testa. France Alive. The musical. Show lioat, will he reviewed by Mary Cul hane. The frontispiece, an adaptation from the Book of Kels, is by Mary Jane Lee Other linoleum cuts are by Corinne Carelin. Margaret Leipsiger, and Patri cia Shea. huii r ine Former Students Receive Profess At Mount Carmel Eight alumnae and former students were professed and seven others re ceived as Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary at Mount Carmel, Dubuque, Iowa, March 19. Those professed are Kathryn Fox '45. Sister Mary Alice Marie; Margaret Hyland ex '47, Sister Mary William Edward; Jean Le Marie ex '47, Sister Mary Charmaine, and Betty Kelly ex '48, Sister Mary Miehaclita. Also professed arc Margaret Ready- ex''48, Sister Mary St. Winifred; Anna Marie Van de Voorde ex '48, Sister Mary St. Etienne; Mary Catherine Rose ex '37, Sister Mary Sharon, and Carol Dia mond ex '44, Sister Mary Claudia. Those received are Louise Skodzinski '43, Sister Mary Christian Georgi- anna McGregor'47, Sister Mary Gcorgi- anna; Mary Jane Dougherty ex '48, Sis ter Mary Anncllen ; Diana Cook ex '49, Sister Mary Claudcl; Joan Madden ex '50, Sister Mary James Marie; Rose McNamee ex '50, Sister Mary Rose Angela, and Marian Pasidiora ex '50, Sister Mary Jean Victor. Students Observe Pan American Day At Notre Dame Members of the Sociology and Inter national Relations clubs attended the Fourth Annual Congress observing Pan- American Day. April 10 and 11, at the University of Notre Dame. IRC president Jacqueline Bledsoe was chairman of the regional meeting on church and state relationships in Mexico, and Maryclare Harrold and Anna Mae Kohl presented papers. Mary Ellen Martin, Miriam Keating, Mary Theresa Neville, Marcella Mul- veil, Genevieve Delana, Eleanor Garby. and Florence Moore also represented Mundelein at the Congress. II ER fetching Easter bonnet was no * * more becoming to sophomore Mar guerite Fiilirmann than the coronet of red roses which she wore as queen of Loyola's Queenship Ball, held Easter Sunday night at the Town and Tennis club. Tall, slender, and blonde, Marguerite was chosen queen over five other final ists in a competition sponsored by Phi Mu Chi fraternity, hosts at the dance. Her picture was submitted by Ralph Reeiie, a senior at Loyola, who escorted her to the ball. As queen, Marguerite received a 21- jewel wrist watch and a bouquet of white roses. / HERRY blossom time in Washing- ton, D. C.. found Patricia Emmer- ling. Eileen Kowalcski, Patricia Ncaliu, and Rosemary Wright in the nation's Capitol on a whirlwind tour which oc cupied their Easter vacation. Their sight-seeing included trips to Alexan dria and Charlottesville, Virginia, as well as to the historic shrines in and near Washington. A GAME of Charades, presented over television station WBKB, recently occupied a team of five seniors who tested their wits against a team from Loyola. In their first appearance on the program, Mundelein's representatives emerged triumphant and received a radio which they presented to the Dra ma department. On the team were Patricia Conley, Margaret Schriver, Marilyn Reynolds, Rosemary Martin, and Marion Kelly. pRESHMAN Mary Lou Hackett ' made her television debut with her parents and eleven brothers and sisters on station WBKB in a television commercial for the Pliilco Radio com pany. TWO recent productions of the Loyo- * la Radio Workshop cast Mundelein students in dramatic roles. Marion Kel ly, Jeanne Schubert, Jo Ann Logelin. Marilyn Reynolds, and Florence Jan- - kowski, '47, were in Veronica's Veil, presented March 25 on station WGES. Miss Logelin and Miss Jankowski also appeared in the Workshop's ver sion of Taming of the Shrew on March 31. IT'S spring, and four more seniors are * on the no-longer-eligible list. The latest are Lorraine Niski who is en gaged to Edward J. Trzaska, who at tends the Traffic institute, and Jane Adams who received her ring from Bill Donovan, a student at the Illinois In stitute of Technology. Loretta Tray- nick is engaged to Donald Juby. Patri cia Brennan received her ring from Jack Shanley. Represent College At NFCCS Convention Jacqueline Bledsoe and Mary Ellen Martin will represent Mundelein at the National Federation of Catholic Col lege Students convention, April 22 to 26 in Philadelphia. The NFCCS Press Commission will conduct a panel at the convention. The agenda includes discussion on Press Commission workshops, a decent liter ature campaign, and press assignments for regional activities. Loyola Professor To Discuss Law Charles Anrod, Ph. D., labor lawyer and professor at Loyola university, will lecture on the Taft-Hartley or In dustrial Disputes act, on April 14, at 8 p.m., in Room 405, for Sociology club members and their guests. A graduate of the University of Bonn and a specialist in labor law. Dr. Anrod will present a penetrating and objec tive appraisal of this complex piece of legislation.
title:
1948-04-12 (3)
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