description:
March 16,1966 THE SKYSCRAPER Page Three Thrust and Channels Assess Student Role in Civil Rights Sister Mary Ignatia, B.V.M., academic dean, will moderate a panel of the largest group of top Chicago civil rights leaders ever to appear together, at the Seventh Annual Spring College Work-Con ference, March 19. The conference's theme this year is Civil Rights in '66 Thrust and Channels and is co-sponsored by the National Conference of Christians and Jews and the Illi- Top Theologians Conduct Meeting Reverend Karl Rahner, S.J., Reverend Joseph Sittler and Rev erend Edward Schillebeeckx, O.P., will be among the speakers at a theology symposium, March 31 through April 3 at Saint Xavier College, Chicago. Each session will be followed by an open panel discussion with the speaker and two participants elaborating on the issues suggested in the original speech. To allow further discussion for the audience with the speaker or other noted theologians, an informal session will follow the panels. Admission to this session will be limited and over-subscription to the symposium will be handled by closed-circuit TV upon approval of the registrant. Mundelein faculty attending the symposium with Sister Mary Ann Ida, B.V.M., college president, are Sister Mary Anne David, B.V.M., Sister Kevin Mary, B.V.M. and Sister Mary Thomas Daniel, B.V.M. of the theology department. Among the students participating will be Dixie McCleary and seniors Ann Ellen Berger, Peggy Hawley, Ei leen Hurley, Pat Kurauski and Laura Nutini. nois Intercollegiate Council on Hu man Relations. The day will begin at 9:30 a.m. at the Chicago Circle Campus, University of Illinois, with a key note address by the Reverend An drew Young, executive director of trie Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC). Sister Mary Ignatia stressed that the panel following Reverend Young's speech will give students the opportunity to assess their role in social equality by listening to leaders who have had direct expe rience in the civil rights movement. Members of the panel will be Ed win Berry, Chicago Urban League; Eugene Callahan, executive direc- t:;r of the Chicago Conference on Religion and Race; Edgar H. S. Chandler, executive director of the Church Federation of Greater Chi cago; Carl Fuqua, executive direc tor of the NAACP; John McDer- mott, executive director of the Catholic Interracial Council; Al bert Raby, convenor of the Coor dinating Council of Community Organizations; Lynward Stevenson, president of TWO (Woodlawn Or ganization), and Kale Williams, executive director of the American Friends Service Committee. After a folk singing session led by SCLC worker Jimmy Collier, students may participate in six workshops focusing on education, employment and housing. The conference will conclude at 4 p.m. with a summary by Rever end James Beval, director of direct action for the SCLC. The cost of the program is 50 cents which covers the registration fee. Faculty on Wheels' Workshop Explores Inter-group Conflicts The National Catholic Confer ence for Interracial Justice (NC- CIJ) will hold a workshop on Mundelein's campus from June 20- 24. It is open to both students and people outside the College. The conference is conducted by a trav eling group of sisters holding doc torates in history, economics, so ciology, anthropology and social psychology. State Purpose The purpose of the conference is to provide the opportunity for study of human conflict and its resolution, particularly in the field of inter-group relations. The workshop, which is designed to afford participants the opportu nity to acquire insights and tech niques for better human relations, will consist of lectures, dialogue and tours related to the local civic community. A film library, paper back collections and special printed materials on inter-group relations will be available to all partici pants. Host Teams The sisters conducting the work shop are billed as a college fac ulty on wheels for they drive from one part on the country to another wherever host centers, usually colleges or motherhouses, are located. This summer there will be five teams of sisters from different orders and different states, conducting the workshops all over the U.S. The workshops, affiliated with Loyola University, Chicago, will offer one hour credit in human relations under the sociology de partment. The cost of the work shop will be 30. Five ideal dates. Three dollars (*3) Join, in the most adventurous experiment of our time. Opera tion Match. Let the IBM 7090 Computer (the world's most perfect matchmaker) stamp out blind dates for you. It started early this year with 20,000 New England area college students. Now you and 1,200,000 college students in 500 colleges in 25 cities can join in. Just send us the coupon. We'll send you the Operation Match Quantitative Personality Projection Test pronto Then return the questionnaire with 3.00 before November 1, 1966. What you're like and what you like will be translated into our 7090's memory file. It will scan the qualifications of every member of the opposite sex from this area. Then it will select the five or more matches best for you. You'll receive your names, address and telephone numbers before November 19, 1966. You'll be what your date is looking for. Your date will be what you are looking for. In other words: the matches will be mutual. r i i i i i i i i i i i i i i L Dear IBM 7090, I am 17 or over (and 27 or under) and I want to help stamp out blind dates. So mail me my questionnaire. Quick Name School Address City State Zip Code Operation Match Compatibility Research, Inc., 3100 Sheridan Road, Chicago, Illinois I I I I I I I I I I I I .J German Film Follows Family In Adaptation of Mann Novel The first foreign film of the third term, Die Buddenbrooks, Part II, based on the novel by Thomas Mann, will be shown March 29, 6:30 p.m. in the College Theater. A 1961 German screen play, the movie directed by Alfred Weidemann runs 106 minutes. The fact that this showing is Part II has no effect on the viewers' understanding or enjoyment of the film, for Part II is itself a complete feature and may be shown independently. Part I of the movie was shown last year. In Die Buddenbrooks the Buddenbrook family is traced, through several generations, from its position of prestige to its decline and sub sequent end. In this transition from stability to uncertainty, births, deaths, marriages, divorces, successes and failures interact to initiate the final downfall of the Buddenbrook dynasty. The film features Liselotte Pulver, Nadja Tilber, Hansjorg Felmy, Hans Lothar, Lil Dagoves, Weiner Hinz, Rudolf Platte, Gunther Luders, Wolfgang Wahl and Paul Hartmann as prominent members of the Bud denbrook family. Music for the production is by Weiner Eisbrenner.
title:
1966-03-16 (3)
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