description:
laios of True Blue S.A.C. . . . Better Than Topaz or Ivory Is the Check for 400 sent by the College recently to the Bishops Committee for Relief and Rehabilitation in Europe. In response to an appeal to American students for aid to students abroad, the Sodality raised more than 300 for the drive and the College made up the rest. His Eminence Eugene Cardinal Tisserant Will hiceis do not photograph, but smiles indicate that prospects are good for the success of the benefit Card Party and rishion Revue, scheduled for Friday, April 25, in the Stevens Grand Ballroom. Left to right, Mary Leona Merrick, peasurer; Mary Margaret Doyle, secretary; Regina Bess, vice-president, and Marianne Peterson, president. Inly Four Gray ays Remain jfore the Benefit Card Party and Fashion tevueSponsored by S.A.C. the aid of the entire student body the alumnae, will be given in the cl ballroom of the Stevens Hotel, m Friday evening, April 25. ;i iarianne Peterson, president of the o idem Activities Council and general c lirman of the benefit, has announced gt; it the senior class is leading in quota t irns. p (odeling the bridal gown in the fashion ue will be senior Virginia Rogers. . I maid-of-honor will be Peggy Cona- . I and her bridesmaids Zita Armstrong Joan Shea. All four students are ( pgccl. llectcd from the senior and junior Bes, the models will display en- ibles from Russeks Michigan avenue lip Seniors chosen are Jonith Biggio, ' rial Millar, Lorraine King, Mary.. Shaw, Patricia and Peggy O'Brien, prniary Gormley, Rosemary Tierney, Continued on page 3, column 3) Silver Crossed Palms of Three Mundelein Poets Who Took Top Position in a contest sponsored recently by the Chicago unit of the Catholic Poetry so ciety of America. Joan Morris Agar '42 won first place with a sonnet, On the Refugees, which appears in the current QUEST. Marion King, senior, placed second with Pax Tecum, the 1947 retreat poem, and Irene Kenney Cummins '46 placed third with a poem from QUEST, Song for Passage. Mrs. James Kelleghan is chairman of the society, and Reverend John Lar- kin, C.M., of De Paul university, judged the contest. Iuvquoise'Rimmed tlantic City, 7ashington, D.C, Boston, St. Louis Welcomed pacidty Members in Past ticks to educational meetings. Bister Mary Josephine, B.V.M., Presi- ip cf the College; Sister Mary Bene- chairman of the Education depart- at; and Sister Mary Corita, elementary supervisor of the B.V.M. Board ucation, attended the meeting of the Bonal Catholic Educational Associa- in Boston. Titer Mary Bernards. Dean; Sister jry Augustina, chairman of the His- department, Ellenmae Quan, and lice Moore, student delegates, at- led a meeting of the National Fcd- Bon of Catholic College Students in Jso attending the NFCCS meeting loledo was Ethel Dignan, senior and dent of the International Relations who represented the Federation's gional commission on Inter-Ameri- Action. Miss Dignan gave the ccm- n's report, and, with Tom Murray Notre Dame, conducted a quiz i. ister Mary St. Helen, Registrar, is ding the annual meeting of the trican Association of Collegiate Bstrars, at Denver, (stcr Mary Carmelyn, of the Art de- ontinued on page 4, column 2) Seniors Leaving The Lake and The Blue Skies of Mundelein for graduate schools may take the Graduate Record Examination on Monday, May 5, from 1 to 5 p.m. and on Tuesday, May 6, from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. The examination is a measure of gen eral education in eight fields with an advanced test in the major subject, and is administered four times each year on a nation-wide basis. A large number of graduate schools in the United States and Canada recom mend and many require that the results of the examination be submitted as one of the credentials for admission. Be Quest Speaker at Spring Meeting of the Illinois unit of the Catholic Library Association to be held here on Satur day, May 3. Cardinal Tisserant was formerly librarian at the Vatican. Opening with the welcoming address of Sister Mary Josephine, B.V.M., President of the College, the all-day meeting will continue with the address by Cardinal Tisserant entitled The In fluence of Catholic Librarians on Inter national Understanding. Students and their guests are invited to attend the morning session. Some 500 librarian guests will then be served luncheon in the tea-room, after which they will tour the buildings. At 2 p.m., departmental meetings of the college, high school, eelmentary, parish, and hospital divisions of the unit will assemble to discuss mutual library problems. Exhibits from Cadnus, Compton's, and other book distributors will be on display on the auditorium mezzanine. Sister Reparata, O.P., director of the library school at Rosary college, is newly-elected president of the national organization. Chairman of the Illinois unit is The Reverend Redmond Burke, C.S.V. Sister Mary Aurelius, B.V.M., Li brarian, is general chairman of the spring meeting. In a Mauve Mood? A Dubonnet Depression? Let Music Soothe You at The Freshman Concert to be given on April 29 at 1 p.m. in the auditorium. Are you a music lover? Do you crave the flourish of a Levant, the dy namics of a Waring Chorus, the soar ing voice of a Pons, or the strings of a Kriesler? We can't guarantee such greatness, but we can promise that you will go home with a pocketful of ex cellent music. At the piano, you will find Angelina Traficanti playing Rigoletto Paraphrase by Verdi-Liszt; Margaret Garner play ing the Rhapsody in B Minor by Brahms, and Grace Dvorak giving Pre lude Op. 28, Numbers 18 and 23. Then, for your pleasure, two voice students, Rosemary Briel singing O Mio Babbino Caro, by Puccini, with Grace Dvorak accompanying, and Bet ty Tholl, La Givornetta by Sibella. For the lover of strings, Elinor Ko- kesch, Eileen Kennedy, and Therese Urbanek will comprise a violin trio. Their selections will include Perpetual Motion by Bohn and Menuett from the E Flat Major Symphony. The Glee club, under the direction of Adelbert Huguelet, will sing three numbers, In My Little Teakwood House, and Walk Softly, both by Wal ter Goodell, and The Lark in the Morn, an old English folktune. Two Gleaming Mahogany Capehart, Zenith radio-phonograph combinations are the gift of an anonymous donor to the Mu sic department through the courtesy of the College orchestra. The Zenith machine is equipped with public address system, recording de vice, and frequency modulation. Dorothy Dimmick, senior, has con tributed an album of Solesmes Abbey Gregorian chant to the record library IIHIE / * '. ft *' :. i S I ,'is; ' *' * lt; lt;rt M? MtiH K-: .- ' R4DER rredhman J ddue Vol. XVII MUNDELEIN COLLEGE, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, APRIL 21, 1947 No. 11 They're the Cream Delicate Rose Of the Crop Tones of Romantic Agreed Students Music Will Blend with Vibrant Modern Melodies in (Picture on page 3) the graduate recital of senior piano major Jean Macferran on the after noon of May 4. The pianist will play the first two movements of MacDowell's Concerto in D minor, the Larghetto Calmato and the Presto Giocoso, as the opening se lection. Catherine Prendergast will play the orchestral parts. Works of Chopin, including Mazurka, opus 17, No. 1; Nocturne in F Sharp, and the Ballade in A Flat, dominate the second portion of the program. Danses Fantastique by Shostokovich, Reflections on the Water by Debussy, Prokofieff's March, and The Rhapsody No. 12 by Liszt will climax Miss Mac ferran's program. Rosemary Briel will assist at the re cital. In the Limelight . . . as they elected Mary Margaret Doyle, Marilyn Larsen, and Patricia Padden as officers of the Student Activities Council for next year. Miss Doyle, the incoming president, is a veteran Council member, having served as sophomore representative and as secretary. The new secretary, Miss Larsen, is a history major and a member of the Debate club. Miss Padden, the treasurer-elect, served the freshman class in the same office. Nominees for incoming sopho more and junior officers will be presented at class meeting tomor row at 1 o'clock. Elections will- be held Thursday. Incoming seniors will choose their leaders on April 29. Drama majors Jean Hanson and Dolores Toi atti are pictured backstage planning lights and shadows for their recitals. (Story on page 3.)
title:
1947-04-21 (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