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Page Four THE SKYSCRAPER May 12, 1958 TDflDUV WIWNFBQ (1. to r.) Patricia Coakley, Joan Wright, IKUrni nillllLnO Mary Lou Bartholomew, Donna Gullen, Janet Lynch, Joan Indovina, and Mary Therese Lenihan display bowling awards. Trophies Awarded to First Place Team After Season of Bowling Over Opposition The presentation of trophies to the first place bowling team of Joan Wright, Janet Lynch, Patricia Coakley, and Mary Lou Bartholo mew, juniors, at the Bowler's Ban quet in Desplaines, April 22, of ficially closed the bowling season. The winners had bowled over their opposition in 35 games. The second place team which finished only a half game behind them consisted of Lillian Chur chill, Donna Gullen. juniors, and Nancy Drewer and Patricia Ber- ger, seniors. In first place for high average is Donna Gullen with a 145, high series, Joan Indovina, junior, with a 464, and high game, Mary Ther ese Lenihan, junior, with a 176. Thirty-two girls making up six teams participated in bowling this season. Varsity Courts Victory At Tennis Tournament The newly organized varsity ten nis team participated in the 42nd Annual Tennis Tournament at Mil- likin College in Decatur, Illinois, May 9-10. Colleges from the entire Midwest took part in this annual event. The Mundelein team, accompan ied by Miss Sullivan, included Lor raine Gauvreau, Virginia Stoffey, Maureen McCue, Peggy Stokes, Marjorie Siemieniak, and Marilyn Vetter. Honors TEPS to the Wise Culled by Faculty Sister Mary Donald, Sister Mary Alexander, and Sister Mary John Vincent attended a meeting of the Illinois Chapter of the Con ference on Teacher Education and Professional Standards (TEPS) at Bradley University in Peoria, Illi nois, May 3-4. Accompanying the Sisters were Diane Barrett and Barbara Gaul of the class of 1956. Senior French Major To Serenade Winners Of National Contest Mary Olson, senior French major, will entertain the win ners of the National French contest sponsored by the French Alliance for Chicago High School students May 17 at 2:15 p.m. in the Fine Arts building downtown. A voice student as well as a lan guage major, Miss Olson will sing Apres un Reve by Maure and Connais-tu le pays by Massenet. She will be accompanied by Eliza beth Casieri. (Continued from Page 1) English: Mary Ann Herold, Lynne Sheeran; French : Jean En gelhardt. Mary Olson, Theresa Pasquinelli; History: Patricia Del- sing, Nancy Drewes, Anne Molloy, Mary Ellen O'Shea. Diane Sher wood: Home Economics: Patricia Berger, Mary Kunkel, Mary Ann Pacella. Mathematics: Patricia Cline: Music: Suzanne McBride; Physics: Patricia Kobel j Psychology: Kath leen Newman. Karen Tuley; Span ish : Maureen Joyce: Sociology: JoAnn Perkovich. The Ann Lally Creative Art Award, based on contributions to a college publication, will be awarded to Joyce Kuhlman. art editor of the Review. The Janet McCarty Fieweger Award will be received by Georgi- ana Baer, outstanding home eco nomics major. Activity awards, presented for significant contribution to co-curricular activities, will be: Glee Club: Barbara Bick, Lydia Rousseau; Orchestra: Suzanne McBride, Mary Jane McNally; Red Cross: Mary Haske, Mary Kunkel, JoAnn Pekovich; Review: Mary Ann Herold, Diane Sherwood; Sky scraper: Geraldine Battista, Marcella Brown and Maureen Connerty. Seniors who will receive recog nition for maintaining a 2.5 average for the past year are: Mary Bres- lin, Christine Cesario. June Che- nelle, Patricia Cline, Jane Cordes. Patricia Delsing. Joan Dohertv. Margaret Dorigan. and Jean Engel hardt. Mary Ann Herold. Joan Maher, Suzanne McBride, Mary Jane Mc- Nally, Marguerite Molitor. Anne Mollov. Kathleen Newman, and Ann Norton are also included. Jean Rieck. Lydia Rousseau. Alvena Schell. Lynne Sheeran. Sister Mary de Sales. SSC: Sister Mary Louise, SSC: Sister Mary Loyola. SSC: Sister Martin Mary. SABS; and Karen Tuley are also among these seniors. Sports Plan to Attend WAA Awards Banquet Chemises and sacks will replace team uniforms as the athletes gath er for the annual WAA Awards Banquet May 12. Planned for the Woodrose Room of the Edgewater Beach Apartments, this event- packed evening will close the sports calendar for the year. After the dinner at 6 p.m., seniors, Lorraine Gauvreau, last year's Hoffman Trophy winner, and Dolores Wacho- wiak will receive the Gold Seal Award. Junior Marjorie Sie mieniak will be awarded the Hoffman Trophy. Intramural and individual tournament awards will also be presented. Letter winners in inter-collegiate Varsity bas ketball and volleyball will be feted. Guest speaker will be James Car- nahan, Director of First Aid and Water Safetv of the Chicago Chap ter of the Red Cross. Mr. Carna- ban will speak on Canadian Wild erness Canoe Trips for Girls. Slides will illustrate this topic. A highlight of the evening will be the installation of the newlv elected officers for 1958-1959. Following the installation, ice-and-snow fans will enjoy the first Chicago showing of the slides from the Winter Weekend. These are the WAA award win ners: Varsity double letter win ners: Isabelle Anderson, Barbara Gotsch, Regina Keifer, Mary Kay Martin, Marjorie Siemieniak, Mar ie Catalano and Irene Lizak. Winners of basketball letters: Elaine Babiar, Jean Dewachter. Saly Greco, Marie Indurante, Rosemarie Schneider, Judy Sode- mann, and Joanne Walsh. Winners of volleyball letters: Rochelle Iovina, Marcia Linton and Dolores Wachowiak. Junior intramural basketball winners: Annette Busse (captain), Kathryn Murphy, Marianne Mur phy, Belle Anderson, Marilynne O'Dea, and Marjorie Siemieniak. Sophomore intramural volley ball winners: Barbara Gotsch (captain), Regina Keifer, Mary Kay Martin. Irene Lizak, Roberta Dirzius and Roberta Temple. Individual ping-pong tourney winner: Rosemarie Schneider. In dividual badminton tourney winner is Rochelle Iovino. Fencing Finalists to Fight For Championship May 13 With the words On Guard Mundelein's sixth annual Fencing Championship will begin May 13 at 7:30 p.m. in the college gym nasium. A humorous sketch and an award presentation will high light the tournament. The program will include a round robin competition in which six finalists, winners of the six weekly matches between the two fencing classes, will fence five bouts. The six finalists are Nan cy Itnyre. Kathleen Fitzpatrick, Maralyn Lyman, Jean De Wachter, Rose Rohter, and Judy Latrimore. Although point score and bouts won will be given some consideration, a technical jury will rate each fencer on her position, timing, execution of movements, c o m p o rtment, and control, therefore, making technique the prime signifi cance. Technical jury members will be Mrs. Harold Louis. Mr. Carl Maug. Mr. Thomas Funis, Mr. John Pon- ic, and Mr. Robert Venegas. Tin- Director, who determines which contestant has the right of way. will be Mr. Harold M. Louis who obtained his degree from the Aca- demie d'Armes Francaise. The second part of the program will consist of two fencing skits put on by the drama students. The skits will be The His tory of Fencing which will describe the evolution of the weapon, and the Fencing Tree, a humorous sketch of the novice. The last part of the program will be the awarding of the gold loving cup to the first place winner, and a silver medal to the second place. The awards will be presented by Mrs. Harold Louis, former fenc- insr instructor at Mundelein. Juniors Direct . One-Act Play - j Junior drama majors Dian. Callahan and Barbara Gaynor will assume new roles as directors, in tbeir off-Broadway one-act pro duction of The Diary of Anne Frank. The adaptation of the full length play will be presented to morrow in the Little Theater on the eighth floor at 4:15 p.m. Nancy Itnyre has the lead role of Anne Frank, a Jewish girl who, with her family and friends, bid out in a warehouse in Amsterdam to escape the Nazis. Vickie Moss will play Mrs. Frank; Moira Cole man, Mr. Frank: and Kathleen Fitzpatrick portrays Peter. Also in the production are Diane Pizza Dorothy Kennedy. Sherry Melfi, Arlene Cicbon and Barbara Porter. The play, under the supervision of Mrs. J. Manley Phelps, employs a new style of acting which uses no blocking, scenery, costumes, or props. The actors talk directly to the audience, not to each other. Sk Chemists Present Research Reports At Loyola Meeting Eugenia Mickevicius and Joan Parker will present the final re port on their senior research in Chemistry at the Student Sympo sium which is sponsored by the Chicago Section of the American Chemical Society at Loyola uni versity, May 17. Eugenia's topic will be The Preparation. Absorption, and Opti cal Rotation of the Urea and Methyl-Urea Complexes of Zinc. Copper, and Nickel Salts. This study may popularly be referred to as a finger-printing of these interesting coordination com pounds. From Eugenia's study much information can be drawn with regard to the arrangements of atoms in complex molecules. Joan's topic will be The History of Quinine. udcrapinad . . . FIRST THINGS FIRST: Congratulations to the new Student Activi ties Council, to the new class officers, and to the new Spiritual Coun cil May next year be the best in Mundelein's history DISAPPOINTMENTS: A damper was put on the Marshall Pidgeon Chicago Club party when the guest of honor failed to appear. The party just wasn't the same without him, Ann Kielty, Fran Houlihan, Judy Witt, Marilyn Coffey, and Eleanor Ferraina observed sadly. COLLEGIATE INGENUITY: Some clever and budget-minded stu dents solved the problem of how to see the SRO musical. My Fair Lady. Sheila Kelly, Joan Landes, and Mary Ann Zavala ushered at a performance, and all it took, they say, was A Little Bit of Luck. GOLDEN DOME NEWS: Much interest has developed on campus lately in Notre Dame, Indiana. We thought perhaps the reason for this was an obsession for riding the South Shore, but Julie Lyman, Marianne Morgan, Noreen O'Connor, Florence Larkowski, and Marilyn Riha confessed the interest could be attributed to Notre Dame's Junior Prom. A group of Notre Dame men have been invited to next Sunday's Junior-Senior Tea Dance. OBSERVATIONS: True intellectual pursuit inspired the University of Michigan sight-seeing tour of Betty Ciolino, Florence Klein, Arlene Douglas, Jane Daley, Joanne Gilmore, Therese Lenihan, Joan Wright, Mary Ann Walczak, and Mary Lou Bartholomew. Mary Jane Tausk has been practicing ballet positions since attend ing a performance of the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo. FAN CLUBS: Lynda Rousseau and the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity joined the Marvin Fan Club after one of those new Chicago inventions, a Shocktale party, inspired by Shock Theater. Harry James and his band added two fans in Sue Durburg and Jeanine Dwyer, who tried some new steps at Purdue's Spring dance. BON VOYAGE: Clutching her precious diploma, Senior Jean Re .- will tour Europe this summer. Barbara Jo Summers and Therese Zacker journeyed to Purdue Barbara attended an Alpha Sigma Phi dinner dance, and Terry chased ants at a fraternity picnic. Marilyn Zacharius made a short trip to Dubuque for Loras' Senior Prom. THREE CHEERS: Marilyn Vetter's short, but sweet, acceptance speech at the SAC nominations should inspire long-winded politicians everywhere. Incidentally. Marilyn won the office of secretary. Rousing cheers for the Granada restaurant, alias Pop's. Just about any afternoon, the Mundelein chapter of the Money Borrowing and Loan Society holds its daily meetings in one of the booths. After such monetary business is completed, and the menu is read, some very intelligent conversations can be overheard. And a long and vigorous college cheer for Loyola university and their successful Fair.
title:
1958-05-12 (4)
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
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Mundelein College Records
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English
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Chicago, Illinois
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Mundelein College