description:
uf-*' * ran M Hi 1 v gt; * mm : 7- XX MUNDELEIN COLLEGE, CHICAGO 40. ILLINOIS, NOVEMBER 21, 1949 No. 4 liege Review ikes Initial w This Week iblication Includes .Tse, Essays, Fiction (Picture on Page 3.) Review, college literary niaga- rill make its debut for the year leek, under the co-editorship of Culhane and Lois Hassenauer. ys by Miss Culhane, Mary Fran- nnery, Anne Llewellyn, and Vir- Volini are included. Two light under one heading, We Love arents, But are by Joan O'Con- d Dorothy Dresden. Critical Reviews tws are by Marion Ark- , Miss Culhane, Dolores Bres- I, Evelyn Donahoe. Marion Dwy- fllyn Kilkenny, Barbara Panozza, (uinn, and Virginia Wertheimer. t story writers are Miss Has- r, June Kieffer, and Mary Alma n. Rita Trojan and Miss O'Con- it the American Scene anecdote tribute Verse ty is contributed by Lauretta , Betty Birks, Rosemary Benigni, I Donahue, Mary Flanagan, Joan i, Rosemary Rapp, Eunice elford, Margaret Sullivan, Miss Mary Catherine Tobin, Miss and Joan Blakeslee. rations for the issue run from t designs to modernistic figures id under the editorship of Dor- rczepanski. Mince Your Pie, Not Your Thanks And Avoid Triple Cuts Before, After Holidays Thanksgiving recess begins at 5 p.m., Wednesday, Nov. 24, and ends at 9 a.m. Monday, Nov. 28. Every absence from the last class in a subject before a recess, or from the first class in a subject after a re cess is counted as a triple cut. Seniors: Apply Now For Year of Study Abroad Dec. 1 is the deadline for seniors in terested in foreign study to make ap plication for scholarships under the Pulbright Act. Available in the Dean's office is infor mation about the U.S. Government all- expense grants for graduate study. Regionalism or Universalism? Barbaara Bradford explains the regionalism of the western hemisphere to Noreen Trapp, Patricia Grannan, and Dorothy Smith, in preparation for the tri-regional convention of the Inter-American commission of the NFCCS, to be held here Dec. 4. imnae, U. of I, b, Appear On Mundelein alumnae, Mary '48 and Gloria Maloney '47. pear on the Mundelein Music Sov. 25, at 8 p.m.. over WFJL- Heinz' pianos solos will in- )n the Nile, by Neimann, and Etude, by Chopin. Maloney will interpret three compositions, the Schumann le in B Flat; Rachmaninoff's I and Debussy's Golliwog's folk. Sov. 18 broadcast over WFJL with a piano-organ arrangement uste Wiegand's Harp of St. with Rosemary Tierncy '47, :; and Ruth Kyar pianist, itring Ensemble played a Mo- jiber, and Joan Wersching, played a Chopin-Liszt solo, s. Miss Wersching also ap- in a piano-organ arrangement do from the Sonata Patheti- h Norma Kafcsjian at the or- tism, in keeping with the spirit istice Day, was the theme of ic broadcast on Nov. 11. nan Norma Galvin played John Carpenter's Polonaise Ameri- loria Maloney '47, pianist, and lymond Zech, organist, played r Herbert Medley, numbers included a Fred War- al arrangement of This Is My ltinued on Page 3. Col 1) Newman Music Hours In cooperation with the Newman club of the University of Illinois, under the chairmanship of Dr. Emerson Kempf, the Music department will present a program of Catholic music, at 5 p.m. Nov. 22, in the Assembly hall of the Medical center. Soloist will be Mary Heinz '48, who will sing the Gregorian hymns: Salve Regina. Salve Mater. Jesu Dulcis Me- moria, and Panus Angelicus. Text of the Salve Regina is ascribed to Hermannus Contractus, 1054; of Je su Dulcis Memoria. to St. Bernard, 1091-1153; text of Panis Angelicus is from the Matins of Corpus Christi and the Votive Office of the Most Blessed Sacrament, composed by St. Thomas Aquinas. Sodality Previews Coming Events The College Sodality announces two events for early December. An illustrat ed lecture on Fatima, given by Allan Janusch, is scheduled for the assembly period or. Dec. 6. On Dec. 7, vigil of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary, new members will be received in a cer emony at 4 p.m. in Stella Maris Chapel. The Reverend William P. Murphy. A.M., director, will preside and give the address. Tri'Regional Qroup Convenes Here, Dec. 4 Regionalism before Universalisni is the topic of the tri-region conven tion of the Inter-American commission of the NFCCS, to be held at Munde lein, Sunday, Dec. 4. Representatives from the Catholic colleges and the Newman club federa tion of the Chicago, Milwaukee, and Fort Wayne regions will be present. The convention will open at 9:30 a.m. with Mass in the Madonna Delia Strada chapel, at Loyola, followed by breakfast and registration. At 11:15 in the auditorium, the dis cussion of regionalism before univer salisni will begin. Thomas E. Downey, Ph.D., professor at the Uni versity of Notre Dame, will preside, assisted by Sally Touhy of Barat col lege. Presenting the positive and negative views of the topic will be Jean Zerfas of Nazareth college, Michigan; Mary Ruth Atistgen of the College of St. Francis, Joliet; Marilyn Bohn, Newman club of Whitewater State Teachers college, Wisconsin; LaVerne Cletten- berg of Alvernia college, Milwaukee; and Constantine Kasson of De Paul university. Joseph Menez, M. A., professor at Loyola university, will summarize the discussion, after a business meeting. Renediction of the Blessed Sacrament (Continued on Page 3, Col. 4) Cardinal Stritch Confers Magnificat Medal On Chicago Social Worker Mrs. Finan Mrs. Mary Blake Finan, who has given more than 30 years of service to the poor and the under-privileged in Chicago, traces her ideal of gene rosity to a Sister of Charity at Clarke college, who told her on her gradua tion day that Great love is much serving. From her Catholic college education, Mrs. Finan derived the impetus to work during her spare time for the improve ment of social conditions, and to use her professional experience for the general svelfare. Aids Catholic Charities She served on the Constitutional committee of the Catholic Charities during the first world war, and met President Woodrow Wilson several times during the convention. Mrs. Finan believes that the En cyclicals of the Holy' Fathers and the academic emphasis on social education have alerted Catholic women to the need for their coordinated efforts and to the tremendous good which they can accomplish. During the past decade, she insists, Chicago has experienced a metamor phosis in its attitude toward crime pre vention and social correction. Medal Honors Service For her part in that metamorphosis, for her service to God and to her fel low citizens, for her long record of un selfish and effective giving, Mrs. Finan will receive the Magnificat Medal, on Nov. 29. Established by Mundelein college in 1947, the Medal honors annually a Catholic college alunnia who, utilizing her college training to the fullest, in tensifies appreciation for Christian so cial living by the character of her own life and by her contribution to social, aesthetic, scientific, philanthropic, or religious leadership. Co-editor Of Paper Speaks On Panel At Press Congress Joan Merrick, co-editor-in-chief of The Skyscraper, will take part in a panel discussion of college newspapers, at the Catholic School Press associa tion congress, to be held in Milwaukee. Dec. 2-4. Such writers as Bruce Marshall and Maisie Ward Sheed are on the pro gram for the three-day congress, which Faculty members and students in the English and Journalism departments will attend. Both The Review and The Sky scraper merit All-Catholic Honors from the CSPA. which conducts an annual survey and rating for school publications. His Eminence. Samuel Cardinal Stritch. D. D., Chancellor of the Col lege, will preside at the first formal convocation of the year, when he con fers the Magnificat Medal upon Mrs. Mary Blake Finan. at 2 p.m., on Tues day, Nov. 29. Regular 2 o'clock classes will meet at 1 p.m. that day, and the entire stu dent body will be present at the con vocation. Have Academic Procession The members of the Class of 1950, in caps and gowns, will lead the academic procession, followed by the Faculty, the Administrative Officers, Mrs. Finan, Sister Mary Josephine. B.V.M., Presi dent of the College, and His Eminence. Sister Mary Josephine, B.V.M., will give the formal Citation, and Mrs. Finan will give a brief responsory. His Eminence will then address the assembly. Following the assembly singing of Star Spangled Banner, the academic procession will leave the au ditorium, and guests will assemble in the social room for the formal recep tion, which begins at 3:30 p.m. Alumnae Will Attend In the receiving line with His Emin ence and Mrs. Finan will be Doris Bamett Regan '33, president of the Alumnae association, and Jane Molloy Philbin '35. chairman of the Founda tion Fund committee. Presiding at the tea table will be four members of the Faculty: Mrs. J. Manley Phelps, Mrs. Paul Calesini, Mrs. Norhert Pochask, and Miss Eva Baskoff. Mothers of members of the Senior class, educational leaders, and officers of the Catholic women's clubs in the Archdiocese have been invited to the reception. Members of the Service club will act as ushers during the convocation and at the Reception. Rosemary Tierncy '47 will play the organ. Dean of Loyola Law School Lectures Tomorrow John C. Fitzgerald, LL.B.. dean of the Loyola University Law school, will lecture tomorrow at 1 p.m. on The Phil osophy of Law. A graduate of Boston college and of Harvard university, Dean Fitzgerald came to Loyola in 1928 as professor of contracts and business units, and was appointed dean of the Law school in 1937. During a leave of absence from the university, 1942-46, he served in the Office of the Alien Property Custodian. Summoned to Washington as chairman of the Vested Property Claims commit tee, he served as supervising judge of a three-man committee hearing claims for revesting property taken over dur ing the war on the grounds that it was foreign-owned. A member of the city, state, and na tional bar associations. Dean Fitzger ald comes to Mundelein as the guest of Mu Nu Sigma. 50 Economists Tour Manufacturing Plant Fifty members of the Economics club will be guests of the Western Electric company for a lecture and tour, on Nov. 25. Topic of the day will be Women's Part in the Telephone Manufacturing business, and the tour will reveal the techniques of assembly lines in large- scale production, and will investigate safety devices, wage scales, union poli cies, pension and personnel plans. Following the tour of the Hawthorne plant, the students will be guests of the company at luncheon. / s gt;
title:
1949-11-21 (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
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coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College