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Volume X MUNDELEIN COLLEGE, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, MARCH 15, 1940 No. 10 Give Scholarship Examinations on March 30, April 13 Seniors Recommended By Principals Are Eligible To Compete According to an announcement from the Administrative offices, the annual scholarship examinations in Liberal Arts ill be given at the College, at 9 i. m., on Saturday, March 30. Exatni- nations for scholarship in Drama will be given at 1 p. in., on March 30. Examinations for scholarships in Art. and Piano will be given on Saturday. ppril 13, at 9 a. m.; examinations lor scholarships in Voice will be given fat 10 a. m.. on April 13: and exami- nalioii for scholarships in String In struments will be given at 2 p. m.. on April 13. Eligible to lake the examinations are all high school seniors who are recom mended by their high school principals. Application blanks may be secured by writing to the Office of the President, Mundelein College. 6363 Sheridan Road. Chicago, and the blanks should be re lumed to the College not later than one week before the date set for the examination. Hostesses to the high school seniors Bin the days of the examinations will be members of the freshmen class, headed by the officers, Marianne Dona hoe, Phyllis Fuener, Mary Veeneman. Patricia Byrne, Rosemary Deneen, Eileen Ryan, and Shirley Decker. WENR Broadcasts Holy Week Script For the fourth consecutive year, the College will present a Holy Week broadcast. Veronica's Veil. The play will he presented over the Red Network of the National Broadcasting Company, with WENR as the Chicago outlet, at 3 p. m.. on Saturday. March 16. The dramatic story of the Passion, as seen through the eyes of the Roman patrician, Veronica, is one of the most consistently popular productions of the radio workshop. The script has been revised this year by the script class, under the direction of Miss Louise Lit- ten. Frances Galgano, Isabel Molloy, Ma ry Lou Bell, Mary Celeste Shannon, and Rita Kloss will enact the feminine roles. Lewis Baldwin, former Loyola stu dent, will take the part of Julius, and Billy Malkemus, brother of Jane '37. will take the part of Simon. An NBC bari tone will take the role of Christ. Organizes Benefit Party New Spring Review Discovers Talent Student writers whose work appears for the first time in the Mundelein Col- ixge Review, spring issue of which ap pears today, include Ruth Mader, a sopho more, whose story is set in her native Germany, while Catherine Dwyer, Rose mary Anderson, freshmen, and Eileen Fink, sophomore, are presenting essays and poems as their initial contributions. Betty Shanahan, a senior, offers an essay with a novel twist entitled The Least of These. The fiction section includes an Irish story, The Sons of Erin Laughed, by Virginia Cheatham. Joan Morris is the author of a coincidence story, Nothing Personal. A timely survey of the peace programs king offered now is the subject of an article by Barbara Ohab. An essay, Nun of Gundersheim, by Mary Caroline Bemis, deals with the life of a mediaevel nun. Literature of The Skyways, by Virginia Coffey, will also appear in the group of essays. The illustrations in this issue have been contributed by Dorothy Scholzen, Rita Valenzano, Georgene McGowan, Betty Kreuzer, and Sally Davis. Science Lecture Will Be April 9 Dr. J. William Peters, of the Univer sity of Illinois, will give the annual Science Forum lecture at the general assembly, at 1 p. m., on Tuesday, April 9. Sponsored this year by the Mathe matical academy of the Forum, the lecture will be on Human Angles in Mathematics. In 1936 the Science Forum established the Annual Lecture, one of the semi-pop ular nature, designed to enable the gen eral public more adequately to appreciate the contributions that science and math ematics are making to modern civilization. New Archbishop Places Faith in American Youth Seniors Welcome Prelate At Union Station March 6 my the Annamarie Berk, president of the Student Activities Council, is general chairman of the All-College Benefit Card Party, which will be held in the Grand Ballroom of the Stevens Hotel, on April 18. Announce Vacation, Holy Week Tradition The College will close at 1 P.M. today for the Faster recess, and will reopen on Tuesday, March 26. Traditionally, the students form a Mundelein guard of honor on Holy Thursday, singing the Sodality time list, and taking Adoration in their parish churches. Lecturers Note Timeliness, Timelessness of St. Thomas Lest You Forget Deadlines Are- Lest you forget the deadline for the Daily News short story contest, which brings the winner a 25 award, is Mon day, April 1, and the deadline for the Creative Writing contests sponsored by the College is April 10. Manuscripts for the Daily News should be submitted in Room 305. Essays, short stories, verse, contemporary criti cism, and editorials for the Mundelein contest should be submitted in Room 506. St. Thomas grasped the mediaeval philosophical situation in its setting and solved it in the light of eternal truth. declared the Reverend Gerald B. Phelan, Ph.D., Agrcgc en Philosophic (Lohvain), last Tuesday. Doctor Phelan, president of the Toronto Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Stud ies at Toronto, Canada, delivered the Epilogue of the Celebration in honor of St. Thomas which began on Feb. 29. Two types of modernity exist, Doc tor Phelan maintained, one which is transitory and dependent upon condi tions : and the second which possesses the eternal value of truth, the same in any age. St. Thomas was a modern thinker.'' the speaker continued, because he solved the problems of the time in terms of eternal truths. He led thir teenth century philosophers in the strug gle against erroneous Arabian thought, and defined the true, dignity and identity of man. Doctor Phelan described the falla cious philosophy of Averroes and Avi- cenna as a hybrid of Nco-Platonism and Mohammedanism, predicated on the thesis that man cannot discover truth for himself, but merely receives it when conditions are favorable. That the Christian God is One of essential being, and can bestow being through an act of voluntary creation. was proved by St. Thomas, the lec turer asserted. More than any other man he deserves to be thought of, not only as a saint and as a thinker, but also as the apostle of our times. Wrong thinking is the basis of all wrongs, declared the Reverend Wil liam P. Boyd, in his address to the members of Mu Nu Sigma in the Stella Maris Chapel on March 7. The dis tressing economic, social, and political conditions in the world today are all the fault of wrong thinking. Father Boyd stated that the Aeterni Patris of Pope Leo XIII, the document which establishes the Summa Theologi- ca of Saint Thomas as the text to be taught in Catholic seminaries, points out how and where we can attain truth. Saint Thomas Aquinas sifted all things into one whole system. He was a philosopher, and over and above that he was a saint, he explained. Father Boyd's address followed Holy Mass celebrated by the Reverend Francis J. Trainor and offered for the members of Mu Nu Sigma in honor of St. Thomas Aquinas, their patron, on his feast day. During the Mass, the college choir sang. Student Council Adds New Names To Committees Commerce Department Assists Faculty Member Publishes Article The Current issue of The Business Education World carries an article by- Sister Mary Gregoria, B.V.M., of the economics department. The article is one of a symposium on The Value of Business Experience, to which educa tors from commerce and economics de partments in American and Hawaiian schools have contributed. With only 32 days, 768 hours, and 46.- 080 minutes left before the Student Activities Council Party opens in the Grand Ballroom of the Stevens Hotel, on April 18, lists of sub and under-sub committees have been zestfully attached beneath the names of committee chair men, and the entire commerce depart ment has contributed volunteer service in advance preparations. Class chairmen appointed to assist with the work of the ticket committee are Betty Shanahan and Marie Marck, seniors; Catherine Miller, Mary Ma- rotta. and Marie Von Driska, juniors; Evelyn Nelson, Mary Ellen O'Brien, Doris Ruddy. Collette Bergeron, and Ann Wilkins, sophomores; Jean Bemis, Shirley Klodzinski, June Secry, Royce McFadyen. Ellen Clare Dougherty. Genevieve Locaitis, Shirley Smith, Charlotte Kepner, and Julia Case, freshmen. Door sub-committees include Ruth Klodzinski, Betty Jane Lindlcy, and Annette Specht, seniors; Helen Fischer. Virginia Parr, June Kash, Betty O'Con nor, juniors; Joan Morris, Nancy Ly man, Rosemary O'Donnell, Jeanne du- Moulin. sophomores; Paulette Lear, l inc Grace, Florence Kelly, Margaret Mcluerny. Margaret Zwicker, freshmen. New appointees on the patron com mittee include Dorothy Kauffman and Catherine Keller, seniors; Patricia Hol land, Dorothy Shreek, Dorothy Adams, juniors: Rita Kloss, Mary L. Shannon, Rosemary Lanahan, Betty Burke, Peggy Schweisthal, sophomores; Rosemary Deneen. Jean Smith, Elaine Leis, Shir ley Decker, Patricia Tierney, Frances Butt. Rosemary Shanahan. Rita Guest, Catherine Barton, freshmen. Assisting the advertising committee are: Patricia O'Toole, Roberta Scheid, and Patricia O'Connell, seniors; Pcggy Meade, Mary Louise Sylvester, Ellen (Continued on page 3, col. 1) I take this entire diocese to heart, declared His Excellency, Most Reverend Samuel A. Stritch, D.D.. on his arrival in Chicago on March 6. hut I give youth a special place. American youth is the Christian answer to many of the things that are being done by youth and in the name of youth in foreign lands. The new Archbishop declared. Let American youth give an answer to those forces that are trying in this country to build institutions that can never stand. With representatives of all Chicago's Catholic schools, members of the senior class, wearing caps and gowns, stood at formal attention as the new Archbishop entered Union Station at 2:30 p. m., on March 6. Representing Mundelein, Annamarie Berk, president of the Student Activities Council, was a member of the official escort which met the Archbishop in Milwaukee and accompanied him to his new Archdiocese. The following members of the ( lee club took part in the welcom ing chorus at Union Station: Mary Gertrude Macrk, Maude Shuflitowski. Corrine Simon, Dorothy Sieben, Doro thy Shields, Genevieve Locaitis, Anita Caparros, Colette Roche. Virginia Eck- man, and Eileen Ryan. Marianne Donahoe, Marjorie Stan ley, and Dorothy Homan, freshman, sophomore, and junior class presidents, visited the Archbishop's home on the day of his reception, bringing a gift of roses from the College. Senior Artists Put Reflected Qlory on Canvas Robert Burns would be delighted with Betty Kreuzer, Georgene McGowan, and Sally Davis, senior art majors. These last two weeks they have been paint ing self-portraits, and every day they have seen themselves as others see them. We never want to look at ourselves again, lamented Miss Davis, daubing her right eyelid. Did you get any surprises? asked Miss Kreuzer, adding more color to her aquamarine sweater, and holding the can vas to the mirror to compare it with the subject. Disappointments, if that's what you mean, Miss McGowan answered as she nonchalantly put a little more curl in her blonde hair. Each artist was surrounded with ma terials, a mirror on an easel before her, another easel holding the canvas, and a draped screen behind her which served as background for the portrait. The work was done in oils with Grant Woods' palette, that is, a palette limited to four colors to produce greater color harmony. Miss Kretizer's portrait is a seven- eighths view of herself in an aqua marine sweater against a dubonnet background. Miss McGowan pro jected her personality into a front view, with her white, blouse outlined on for est green. A girl in a henna-colored dress, her dark hair framed in clear yellow, bears the signature of Sally Davis. (Continued on Page 3, Col. 1)
title:
1940-03-15 (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
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Mundelein College Records
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Text
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English
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Chicago, Illinois
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Mundelein College