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Page Four SKYSCRAPER Shuffling Toward Victory Rosemary McFarlin and LaVon Froelich are contestants in the Shufflcboard tournament. Students Aid Girl Scout Reorganization Mundelein students, past and pres ent, arc utilizing their training in lead ership in connection with a movement to revive interest in the Girl Scouts of the Rogers Park district. June Kash '41, who is affiliated with both the National Council of Catholic Women and the Girl Scouts, is work ing to acquaint neighboring pastors with the advantages of Catholic troops in their parishes. Marion Travilini, Marie Egan, and Marcia Maloney are teaching swim ming at the New Lawrence hotel every Saturday. Doris Grove has arranged to teach basketball at St. Margaret Mary's, and Mary Jane Henry will coach at St. Ignatius, Patricia Fehr, Patricia Finn, and Lpla Uhwat are pre paring to teach riding. Eileen Scanlan Sherrier, chairman of the Physical Education department, will provide information for anyone in terested in helping the Girl Scouts. , Announce Table Tennis Winners Jewel Crosby and Mary Jane Henry won .the Table Tennis doubles, defeating Dorothy Dres den and Eileen Kennedy 21-12 and 21-15. The Table Tennis singles tourna ment is- progressing under the Strokes of participants Rosemary McFarlin, Josephine Marfise, Nancy Wokner, Katherine Smith, Miss Crosby, Nona Arnoldi, Dorothy Mc Laughlin, and Marjorie Stumpe. Write An Essay: Win a Trip To Scandanavia Steamship Line, Magazines Offer Awards Artists Photographers Poets Prose Writers Talent is worth high awards in five current contests. To commemorate the Swedish Pioneer Centennial in 1948, the Swedish American Line is sponsoring an essay contest on The Influence of Swedish Settlers on a Community or Region. Top awards are all-expenses-paid trips to Scandinavia in the summer of 1948, trips to Swedish Centennial celebrations, and Savings Bonds. The deadline is April 1, 1948, and manu scripts may not exceed 2500 words. Full details are listed on a poster on the his tory bulletin board in the lounge. Mademoiselle magazine is sponsoring a contest in which the 20 students turn ing in the best articles on some phase of campus life, academic courses, fadi, fashions, or organizations will be chosen as guest editors on the College Board in June. Jayn'e King '45 served as guest editor on the College issue in '44. The Condc Nast publications arc sponsoring a two-fold contest in art and photography. First prize for the best entry in cither department is a year's job or 2000 to he applied for further training. The three runners- up will be given Honorable Mention awards of 50 in government bonds. The National Poetry association has announced that entries in its contest will be accepted until Nov. 5. The entries, typewritten on separate sheets of paper along with the author's name, home address, and college address must be sent to the National Poetry Associa tion. 3210 Selby Avenue, Los Angeles 34, California. S5ku5crapina5 . . Indian summer is coming to an end. An occasional cool breeze holds the promise of winter frosts, and a few brown leaves cling tenaciously to the almost barren trees. At Mundelein despite last minute book reports and mid-semesters, stu dents are talking about homecomings, football games, dances, and jazz con certs. Angela O'Hara, Betty Ann Laird, Joan Harrison, Dorothy Quirk, and Margaret Leipsiger danced to the music of Henry Senne at Loyola's Au tumn Hop, while Mary Kieran, Mary Claire Lane, Mary O'Rielly, Betty Bu- col, and Patricia Mitchell attended the University club dance at the Saddle and Cycle club. Bonfires, school cheers, football games, and dances they all add up to Homecomings. Gabrielle Pembroke traveled to Winona for St. Mary's; Patricia McCabe to Davenport for St. Ambrose's ; Kathleen Hackett to Peru for St. Bede's; Mary Doyle to Renssa- laer for St. Joseph's. Mary Hesterman and Patricia Ketchum enjoyed the game and dance at Lake Forest's homecom ing. Evanston was the end of the line for Patricia Trudeau, Margaret Roherty, Harriet Diacos, and Diane DeVere at the Northwestern game. Cheering for the Hilltoppers at Mar quette university next week-end will be Virginia Perry, Margaret Wolf, and Mary Tuohy, while Grace Komornicll will go to Purdue for the military ball If you hear Joan Cribari, Julie WeJ larz, Ramona Pieczynski, Mary Divui or Martha Lou Edwards humming Stnl uss melodies, it may be because tfadj still have lingering memories of Chocolate Soldier. Barbara Phee, Mary Burns, Mildn De Vic, Dolores Heraty, and Louif Milazzo rooted for Notre Dame wh lt;B the Irish played Iowa. This wed end Marie Maher and Mary Mulvikfl will cheer the fighting Irish in tha game against Army. Patricia Emmerling, Eileen Kow l ski, Lorna Palmer, and Marilyn Eltfl will never forget the hayride par with the St. Frances Xavicr Cot Club. Mary Leona Merrick and Ruth Wd were among the enthusiasts at the Afl Star Jazz concert in the Civic Opel House. Preferring the aesthetic vnfl Mary Jane Rowontree and Dolores V iel, who enjoyed the opera Aida. The beauty and grace of dancing J ice and the humor of comedy skattfl combined to give an evening of enH tainment to Eileen Rooney and Majd Zelin, who attended the opening formancc of the Ice Follies. We're looking forward to a quarter of more seripus study (ah seeing our first exams), but we're saving a.little time for a new play another dance. Volleyball Mixer Opens Season The volleyball season officially opens with the mixer tournament, scheduled to begin this month. Entries thus far .include Geraldine. Harmuth, Jewel Crosby, Marilyn Kloss, Carol Jackwerth, Rosemarie Legcnza, Rosemary McFarlin, Mary Nolan. Con nie Naples, Eileen O'Shea, and Vivian Walkocz. Potential players may register on the Sports club bulletin board. Alumnae Artists Find Careers In Stage Design, Illustrating (This is the first of a scries of arti cles on Alumnae Careers, intended to acquaint undcr-yraduates with the type of work fur -which liberal and pre-pro- fessional training at Mundelein equips graduates from different departments.) Success is where you find it, say alumnae of the Art department who arc successfully finding it in a variety of artistic fields. A Cum Laude graduate and winner of a fellowship in Stage Design to the Catholic University of America, Ruth' Shmigclsky McGivcr '45 has been on the Catholic University staff and has designed settings for C. U. Theatre plays. She is currently in Chicago where her husband's play, All Gaul Is Divided, opens on Nov. 10 at the Civic theatre. Sally Davis '40, holder of a Master of Arts and a Master of Fine Arts de gree, is instructor in art at Bradley university, Peoria. She has exhibited with the Quad- City Artists in Davenport, taking sever al awards; took first prize in oil, land scape, and in still life painting at the Art Show of the Mississippi Valley Fair in 1946, and has exhibited in the Central Illinois Art Show, the Ohio- Valley Show, and National Arts Show in Denver in 1943, and in Charlotte, North Carolina, in 1946. At present she is a member of the Peoria Artist League, with which she exhibits. Virginia Gacrtner Broderick '39 is a free-lance artist for several advertising agencies, for Bruce Publishing com pany, Angclus Publishing company, the Marianist magazine, and the Junior Catholic Messenger. She has illustrated a number of books, including two by her husband, and did frontispieces for Ann Kuhn's Don Bos- co, and Blanche de Morteveille's A Rose L'npetaled, and black-and-white pictures for Mabel Farnum's The Seven Golden Cities, and LcCompte-Werum's Glory of. the Mohawks. Dorothy Scholzcn '43 is an artist with the A. C. Neilscn company, for which she does commercial charts, lay outs, lettering, and coloring. After completing her studies at Mun delein, Mary Jane Harvey Ratty '45 studied at the Traphagcn School of Fashion in New York. She has done fashion illustrating for Mandel Brothers, besides conducting her own studio and doing free-lance work. Betty Kruezer MO combines study at the Art Institute with designing pack ages for a cosmetics company. Ann Lally '35 holds a Master's de gree from Northwestern university, where she is working toward her doc torate, and she is supervisor of art for 30 Chicago Public Schools and teaches interior decoration several evenings a week for International Har vester company employees. Students Air College Problems On Radio Workshop The Varsity Board, staffed by Munde lein and Loyola students, broadcast its solutions to college and high school problems over station WGES Oct. 30, as a bi-monthly feature of Loyola Radio Workshop. Mary Claire Lane and Ruth Casey represented Mundelein on the Board, while Ellcnmae Quan, Frances Wager, Kathryn Malatesta, Patricia Conley, Florence Sigler, Marilyn Tamburrino, Jcri Mangold, and Patricia Runkle par ticipated in the audience discussion of the questions. Students from Chicago high schools also appeared in the broad cast. The next broadcast will be Thursday, Nov. 13, at 10:30 p. tn., over Station WGES. Journalists Attend Press Meeting Seven students represented Mundelein at the Third National Catholic School Press conference in Milwaukee, Oct. 31 to Nov. 2. Educators and writers representing every field of journalism discussed the requirements of good writing technique stressing the place occupied by the Cath olic school press. Among the speakers were the Reverend Gerald Vann, O.P., the Reverend Harold C. Gardiner, S.J., James O. Supple, and Frank J. Sliced. Attending the conference were Ruth Casey, Kathryn Malatesta, Jcri Mangold, Patricia Runkle, Ellcnmae Quan, Mari lyn Tamburrino and Frances Wager. Announce Review Staff Positions Co-editors-iri-chief of The Review, campus literary magazine, for the cur rent year are Ruth Casey and Kathryn Malatesta, both senior English majors. Associate editors are Patricia Muckian senior, and Lois Willard, senior; essay editors are Julia Tuohy, junior, and Mary Culhane, sophomore. Article editors are Joan Aker and Mar jorie Boyd, both juniors; and feature editors are Patricia Kiely, junior, and Lois Hassenauer, sophomore. Miss Willard and Helen Browne, a junior, are fiction editors; Miss Muckian is verse editor; Helen Jean Rogers, a sophomore, is book review editor; and Miss Tuohy is business and circulation manager. Tribune, News Are Student Benefactors On display in the lounge next week will be an exhibit of Youth on the Cam pus pictures, taken in 14 different col leges. Three are Mundelein pictures. The entire exhibit, including 38 pho tographs, is supplied to schools through the courtesy of the Chicago Tribune. Also as a Tribune courtesy, 150 stu dents in the Home Economics depart ment will visit the Tribune model homes this week, the final week that they will be open for inspection. Through the courtesy of the Chicago Daily News, students in English and other classes have received copies of Done in a Day, an anthology of recent articles which have appeared in the news. Also included are some classic writings by earlier Daily News staff members, including Eugene Field. Alumna Writes of Peace Plotters Joan Morris Agar '42, formerly oil College Publicity department, is the, thor of two articles in recent Ca;'. publications. Peace Plotters, Junior Grade, a fa story on the Institute for Study of I United Nations, held here in OctdS 1946, appears in the October issue of Anthony's Messenger. Homemakcrs, B. A., an account off Alumnae Homemakers' Forum, here last April with members of the Sfl ior class attending, appears in the Octfl issue of The Catholic Home Joigfl Mrs. Agar was chairman of the forunB which five alumnae participated. Both articles are illustrated with pb( graphs by Mrs. Agar's husband, I Agar, New World staff photographal Marion King, '47, contributes an J tide on college student attitudes in J Oct. 15 issue of Today. Author Encourages Study of Semantics S. I. Hayakawa, Canadian-born Jap anese, whose book Language In Action was a best seller, addressed the student assembly, Oct. 30, on the topic Sem antics and Public Opinion. An Assistant Professor of English at the Illinois Institute of Technology, Dr. Hayakawa began to write on semantics in anger at what he calls the use of language to prevent comunication. As a teacher, he became convinced that before people could really learn, they must cast aside the cliches that substi tute for thought. . Introducing: (Continued from last issue) I STYLUS CLUB: Ruth Casey, pi dent; Kathryn Malatesta, vice-pt dent; Joan Aker, secretary; Maryl bane, treasurer; Helen Browne, H chairman; Lois Hassenauer, pf chairman. BOWLING CLUB: Lorraine Nil chairman. FLYING CLUB: Patricia Rcfl president; Catherine O'Toole, t president. RIDING CLUB: Patricia Mitt president; Cecilia Godsel, vice-f dent; Patricia Fehr, W. A. A. n sentative; Gail Morgan, secretary; namae Kohl, treasurer. SPORTS CLUB: Eileen 0'Sfl president; Katherine Burwitz, president; Doris Grove, W. A. A sentative; Francis Endovina, seel Jewel Crosby, treasurer; Jean HaliJ cial chairman. TERRAPINS: Rita Augustin, dent; Mary Lou Hoiss, vice-presifl Laura Lee Hilgers, W. A. A sentative; Rita Buckley, seenfl Corinne Otto, treasurer; Gloria caster, social chairman.
title:
1947-11-03 (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
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