description:
Cecilians Honor 5 Patron in Annual Autumn Festival )rgan, Piano, Violin, and Voice Students Are In Concert Three composers of the romantic Shool, Liszt, Chopin and MacDowell, All he represented in the annual Fall imccrt in honor of Saint Cecilia, which E Cecilians are to present at the as- mbly on Nov. 27. 1' The entire program will be dedicated t i Saint Cecilia, as well as two num- * ;rs in particular: the Hymn to Saint I ecilia, to be sung by the vocal cnscni- e with Maude Shuflitowski as soloist, ml Rosalie Wiora's organ selection of ' ie Grande OlTertoirc de Saintc Cecile, i f Batiste. Play Batiste Offertory At each of these Fall Concerts, one Batiste's Offertoires de Saintc (Y- ile i- played, to strike the keynote of ie program. jj Junior piano majors Louise Skodzin- B ci and Marianne Donahoe will play two-piano arrangement of the scc- ig nil movement of MacDowell's second il bnccrto. in D minor. J This concerto, since its performance y the composer at the London I'hil- c Brownie Concert in May of 1903, has g ccmiie one of MacDowell's best-loved ii -orks. Miss Donahoe will take the Jchcstral parts at the second pano. Two numbers in the Spanish vein will i f presented by Organist Angela Vol- l, er and Violinist Albina Gherardi. Miss Poller will play itonnet's Rhapsodic v( Btalane. Miss Gherardi, accompanied it Dorothy Grill, will perform the r jerra Morena of J. de Monasterio. l Sing Mozart Lullaby 1 The classic school will be represented I X the Lullaby of Mozart, to be sung ;nby Shirley Hopper. Patricia Herbert, q Bd June Murphy, accompanied by *l larbara Frick. A third vocal selection, Harris' En- Omire Song, will be presented by soloists rlita Callaghan, Kathleen O'Connell. Bine McManus, Bette Anne Kelly, and Marian Long. Fantasie Impromptu, one of the sev- n (Continued on Page 3, Col. 5) Id 'fall Review Has Qone to Printer Wtories, Verse, Essays, Are Among Contributions gt; Hemispheric Solidarity through the Religious Bond of the Mystical Body is I he theme of the Review for 1941-42, fl Hording to co-editors Virginia Coffey 1 pd Altine Kelleher. Miss Kelleher has 1 Bitten an editorial outlining this topic id Helen Sauer presents an essay i ring this theme in the fall issue. 'OTA midnight pilgrimage made during f Er six-week sojourn in Quebec this siim- j er is the subject of Mary Stokes' ar- :1c, Pilgrimage to Beaupre, in the first i lie. Sherli Wolf writes A Tribute to m line Kilmer, and Mildred Welch con- ' dcrs St. Thomas Moore's views on the 8 racation of girls. ' ' I i- for Remembrance, by Margaret *an Rurke, is the story of John Buchan, P'Can.i'lian statesman, writer, and poli- ' Ban, and Ellen Foran tells of Sigrid ndset, Novelist. ' I Among the short stories to be in the frst Review is co-editor Virginia Coffey's sBd Jeff. Edith Bukowski, whose brother c9it Annapolis, is at home writing about Ale Navy. Timothy's Debut, by Mary ' I (Continued on Page 4, Col. 3) freshmen Elect Class Officers S, Pe With Freshman President Suzanne flauman presiding, the Class of 1945 nftcted Catherine Cunningham and UBisemary Knockaert representatives on Gfce Student Activities Council, at re- U fnt meetings. ' Jerry Stutz was elected vice-presi- e fent: Dorothy Klink is secretary; and lary Burns is treasurer. Social chair- la n of the class is Betty Geary, and fergeant-at-arms is Naundas Fisher. TIHL . Ks5?3v * s/ V-.,- lt;*-/ .MS. fc u Volume XII MUNDELEIN COLLEGE, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, NOVEMBER 19, 1941 No. 4 Thank God . . . for a mind to think and a will to do and a heart to love. for the gift of life and the gifts of soul and sense. for faith in the practicality of old ideals. for the right to seek the truth and live in accordance with it. for the stability insured by be lief in one God and one moral standard. for the ability to embody the teachings of the Church in daily living. for the opportunity we are given by Catholic education to learn the meaning of life and of human des tiny. for a knowledge of irrefutable or thodoxy in the midst of rank ma terialism. for a recognized Constitution that recognizes the unalienable rights of life and liberty. for a country, a nation, and a gov ernment which permits us to say, Thank God. They're Homeward Bound Northwestern Invites Dr. Hopkins to Lecture Zoologist Will Qive On Amoeba Series Dwight W. Hopkins, Ph.D., of the zoology department, has been invited to give a series of lectures before the protozoology class at Northwestern university. One of the foremost American auth orities on the amoeba, Dr. Hopkins, who has received several grants for research from the American Philosoph ical society, will lecture on the contrac tile vacuoles of the amoeba. Formerly a member of the staff at Johns Hopkins university, Dr. Hop kins has done extensive research on the amoeba at the Marine Biological laboratories at Woods Hole, Massa chusetts, and at the laboratories on Tortugas Island, Florida, and in Ber muda. ... for Thanksgiving. Janet Farrell, left, will be in Indianapolis, tomorrow morning; Jeanne Moehlig, center, will be in Detroit, and June Wetzel, right, will be in Dayton. More than half of the resident students are going home but they'll all be back on Monday. Debaters Announce Intercollegiate Dates The college debaters already have five debates on their schedule. On Dec. 6, they will hold two discussions on Labor Unions. One will be at North western university, the other at North Park college. The University of Chicago will meet the debaters here on Dec. 11. The two teams will discuss the national ques tion, Resolved: That the Federal Gov ernment Should Regulate by Law all Labor Unions in the United States. 29 Saints Come By Mail from 14 Different Nations Philatelic Week Inspires Unusual Postage Stamp Exhibit Scott Field Takes the Cake Sent By Student, Eats It Too Janet Farrell's Baking Wins Hearts of Soldiers; Proves That Home Economics Pays There's an old adage about the way to a man's heart, and Army men are no different from other men, only more so. A student in the home economics de partment has new evidence to support this theory. Her experiment was con ducted inadvertently, however. It be gan with the simple gesture gt;f sending a gift to a selectee friend. The student is Janet Farrell, a soph omore. She sent a cake to a trainee at Scott Field, Belleville, Illinois. He shared it. And, like pigeons after pea nuts, post cards came fluttering into her mailbox. The boys liked her cake. More, they said. Dear Janet: There arc no words in Webster's dictionary to say thank you the way I wish I could. A fond ad mirer of your baking. The whole barracks is in a pleasant uproar oi appreciative comment. (What girl wouldn't purr at that?) Judging from the sample, I wish to say that you are, no doubt, one of the few really good cooks in the world today. (Miss Farrell is considering lending her laurels to Oscar of the Waldorf). Let's have more. (Well, they all said that.) Miss Farrell's favorite (after the letter she received from the cake's original recipient) is a poem: Your Cake teas marvelous, I must say. Il incited in my month a.i'ay. My stomach never felt so good, I'm sure it never understood. This one thing more, and this is true There should he Millions more like you. (*Poet's name withheld maybe his mother can't cook as well as Miss F.) Dear Janet, Sweet Janet, Dear Dear Janet, Sweet Sweet Janet, . . . twenty- five tributes, all like that And, of course, the courses in home economics may be due for a little credit. But the implications are clear; the adage is true. Saints by Mail is the title of a stamp exhibit, including stamps honoring 29 different saints, from 17 different coun tries, which is now on display in the bookstore lounge as a feature of National Philatelic Week. The largest group is from Hungary, which has represented on its various stamps eight different saints, seven of whom, oddly enough, were associated (lur ing life. King Stephen of Hungary is pictured with his queen, Saint Gisela. Their son Emirick, who was martyred before he ascended the throne, is pictured on an other stamp; on still another, his tutor. Saint Gillart, is shown with the man who ruled in Emirick's place, King Ladislaus. Another Hungarian stamp honors Queen Elizabeth, famed in the legend of the roses. Italy has pictured on her stamps three famous saints, Benedict, Francis of Assist', and Anthony of Padua. From Vati can City arc stamps honoring Saint Pe ter, Don Bosco, and Saint Francis dc Sales. A Grecian stamp pictures Saint Paul (Continued on Page 3, Col. 5) Happy Holidays The College will close after class es today for the Thanksgiving re cess, and will reopen on Monday, Nov. 24. The Skyscraper extends to the Faculty and students cordial wishes for a happy vacation. Show Influence Of Art in Every Field, Nov. 24-28 Club Members Demonstrate Air Brush, Etching, Linoleum Utilizing every resource from Chau cer to dress design, the art department members are joining in a concerted effort to make the College definitely art-conscious, especially during the week of Nov. 24 to 28. To acquaint students with the tech niques of modern art, the Art club members will conduct a series of work shop demonstrations during the lun cheon hours, 11 a.m., to 1 p.m., next week, in the fifth-floor gallery. Chairman of the student workshop in sculpture is lane Trahey, with Vir ginia Mehren, Margery Happ. and Irene Fitzgerald assisting. Are on Committees In charge of the etching is Mary Cole, assisted by Dorothy Scholzen, Florence McDonnell, and Shirley Klod- zinski. Chairman of the linoleum com mittee is Anita Caparros, who has as helpers Dorothy Scliaar, Betty Nowak. and Vali Ballantine. Virginia Coffey is in charge of the air brush committee, with Rita Valen zano, Edith Bukowski, and May Farmer. Irene Waldron '39, art major who has been in charge of the annual Cisca Art exhibits for the past two years, will lecture on leather work, at 3:30 p.m.. on Nov. 25, in the sixth-floor lecture hall. Plan Exhibits In demonstrating the significance of a cultural knowledge of the fine arls, student artists are recruiting pro fessional and amateur work of all types relating to every branch of knowledge, in an attempt to show the value and the widespread relationship between the fine arts and other curricula. History, economics, music, drama, languages, scripture, and home econom ics will be presented as well as pho tography and advertising. In the field of social science. Mary Jane Harvey will exhibit mediaeval printing, replicas of stained glass win dows from Chartres cathedral. Use Greek Designs Grecian orders of architecture, an cient vases and sculptures will be Meta Shifris' contribution to the field of Eur opean history. Mindful of the 13 colonies, the American history classes will display Colonial interiors and architecture. Paintings with economic unrest as their theme will be displayed as a related social science exhibit. Old Testament paintings and repres entation of the Virgin in art, together with historical motifs of the catacombs and earl) lt; Christian frescoes, will make the religious significance of Art Week important. Rockwell Kent's vivid illustrations of Chaucer and Shakespeare will high light the collection of works prepared for the English department. The evol ution of printing, from hieroglyphics to mediaeval gothic, will lure those stu dents with ink in their arteries, Intro ducing a modern note. Dorothy Clark will display the art of cartooning, with Peace as her theme. The liturgical art of Germany throughout the ages will be presented by Cyrilla Boyle in the German depart ment as an example of art in the field (Continued on Page 4, Col. 1)
title:
1941-11-19 (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:
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