description:
March 4, 1957 THE SKYSCRAPER Page Three Organists Play Classics and Seasonal Selections In Concert On March 14 Students will play selections ranging from Bach to Widor in the Organ concert, March 14, at 3 p.m., in the auditorium. With spring just around the corner, Joan Tree will open the program playing Springtime, by Stebbins. Patricia Garrett will switch the theme to orange blossoms when she plays Soederman's Swedish Wedding March, and Regina Gate- ly will suggest the north woods with Wind in the Pine Trees from Mountain Sketches, by Clokey. Sue Haglund will offer numbers by Bach and by Fllasser, and Jac queline Buffetti will play Bach's Prelude in B Flat Major. Lucille Sirchio's Gavotte by Thomas; Mary Ann Stepps' Inter mezzo by Rogers. Katherine Jack son's Dreams by McAmis, and Di ane Morton's Sicilienne by Paldis Whitcomb follow. Jacqueline Kosturik will play Toccata in D Minor by Nevin; Charlene Hincks will play Scher zo by Deaver, and Annette Lubker will interpret Debussy's Girl with the Flaxen Hair. Elizabeth Gonwa will play Prelude in D Minor by Bach and Clouds by Ciega. Mary Fllen Burg will play Scher zo from A Minor Sonata by Rogers, and Sister Jane de Chantal will play three selections. Toccata by Cor Kee. Adagio from Sixth So nata by Rheinburger, and Allegro Vicace from A Minor Sonata by Guilmant. Marilyn Zanke and Sylvia Dominguez will play an Or gan-Piano duo, Bach's Sicili- ano, and Jeanette Nowaczyk will play Tasker's Meditations and Ward Cronham's Grand father's Clock. Miss Dominguez will interpret Saint Saen's Barcarolle, and Han del's Allegro from Water Music, and Diane Szardowski will play Sketches from the City by Nevin. Parreannie Wilson's numbers will be Prelude and Fugue in A Minor by Bach, and Grande Offertoire de St. Cecile, by Batiste. With Carole Bauer at the piano Moonyeen Brown will offer De bussy's Ballet from Petite Suite, and Miss Brown will play two or gan numbers, Laughing Waters by Weaver and Finale from Sym phony Number Six by Widor. See The Mousetrap Faculty Members Attend Meetings, Publish Papers Sister Mary Pierre, B.V.M., chairman, and Sister Mary Renee, of the Home Economics depart ment, attended the Central Regional conference of Home Economics Education, at the Congress hotel, Feh. 22 and 23. * * * Sister Mary Marina, of the Chemistry department, contributes to the 1957 Proceedings of the Illi nois State academy of Science an article entitled Some Problem in the Synthesis of an Anti-Malarial Intermediate. * * * Sister Mary Martinette, chair man. Sister Mary Marina, and Irene Weber Bohan '44 of the Chemistry department, attended a seminar at Loyola, Feb. 20. Speaker was Dean T. S. Wheeler of University Col lege, Dublin, Ireland, who spoke on Education in Ireland. an appropriate number In Department Chairmen Meet With Freshmen Freshmen facing the problem of choosing a major will attend con ferences with chairmen of the vari ous departments March 14 at 1 p.m. During two half-hour sessions, the Freshmen will have an oppor tunity to ask questions and clear up any doubts they may have about the courses required for a particular major or the job opportunities it offers them. SHAMROCKS as decorations capture fancy of Roselle Primeau, Elizabeth Casieri, and Jean Purcell, whose mothers are committee members for the St. Patrick's Day Benefit dinner sponsored by the Woman's Auxiliary. Marian Contest Recognizes Five Winners Five students won recognition in the Marion Art and Music con tests, sponsored by the Chicago Region NFCCS in connection with the Marian Congress, Feb. 24. Rita Mnichowicz won first prize for a Pieta painted on a textile- wall hanging. The announcement was made at the College of St. Francis, Joliet. Alvena Schell won an honorable mention for an oil painting entitled Madonna and Child. Marilyn Zanke took first honor able mention in the Music contest for her original composition, When 1 Meet God, for solo voice with piano accompaniment. The words are by Robert Farrcn. Carol Ann Byrne set to music a poem, Mary's Journey, by Sister Mary Irma,'B.V.M., of the English department, and won an honorable mention. The selection is for so prano and alto voices with piano accompaniment. Katherine Jackson won third honorable mention for a composi tion for solo voice with piano ac companiment. Titled On the Feast of the Assumption, it has words from the Office of the Blessed Vir gin Mary. SL Students* Mothers Aid Committees (Continued from Page 1, Col. 3.) Other committee members are Mrs. Leo Burke, mother of Mary ann, a senior, and Kathleen, a freshman; and Mrs. Robert Day, mother of Maripat, a senior, and Eileen, a freshman. Mrs. John Coyle, Mrs. Walter Fiedler, and Mrs. Conrad Kies, mothers of seniors Marie, Alyce Mac, and Joan, also are on commit tees. Juniors' mothers serving on com mittees are Mrs. Anthony Casieri, mother of Elizabeth; Mrs. Thomas Cashman, of Mary Ann; Mrs. De Witt Purcell, of Jean; Mrs. Wil liam Schoen, of Ellen. Sophomores' mothers serving on committees are Mrs. Anthony Mc Grath, Mrs. Albert McGuff, Mrs. Charles Rohner, Mrs. Thomas Printen, mothers of Patricia, Bev erly, Mary, and Margaret. Freshmen's mothers assisting with the benefit are Mrs. L. Ray mond Latrimore, Mrs. Bernard Kelly, and Mrs. Bernard Hellgeth, mothers of Judith Ann, Patricia, and Patricia Ann. Mrs. James Carroll, Mrs. Joseph Johnson, Mrs. John Kelley, Mrs. Edward Codd, Mrs. John Enright, Mrs. Walter King, Mrs. Albert Rohlfing, and Mrs. Charles Shra- mek, mothers of alumnae, are as sisting. See The Mousetrap Musicians Present Concert Tomorrow Students in the Music department will present a musicale tomorrow at 3 p.m. in Studio 703. Mary Skla vounos will play Capriccio, Opus 116, Number 3, by Brahms. Patricia Coakley, accompanied by Mary Ellen Burg, will sing Were My Song With Wings Provided, written by Halm. Flizabeth Ca sieri will play Sonatine Modere by- Ravel. Joyce Mach will play Borowski's violin solo, Adoration, with Kather ine Jackson accompanying. Sylvia Dominguez will interpret Humor- esque by Poulenc. Debaters Place In Tape Tournament; Discuss Foreign Aid, Mid*East The Debaters will swing into ac tion by competing in the Illinois State tournament at Navy Pier, March 15 and 16. Diane Sherwood, Maureen Swee ney, Marguerite Phillips, and Alice Bourke will debate five rounds each, alternating Negative and Affirma tive sides on the Foreign Aid ques tion. Also represented in the tourna ment will be Northwestern, Bradley, and Loyola universities, and De Kalb Teachers college. In preparation for the State com petition the squad engaged in de bates with Indiana State Teachers college on Feb. 28 and partici pated in the Chicago Area contests held at Lake Forest college on March 1. See The Mousetrap History Major Studies Mystery Of History A century-old mystery is the sub ject of Valeria Luback's senior His tory project scheduled for presen tation before Faculty members and the History majors on March 12, at 4 p.m. in Room 402. Miss Luback traces the various attempts made through the years to discover the identitv of the Public Man. In 1879, the North American Re view printed an anonymous manu script in which the Public Man de scribed the first eventful year of Ahraham Lincoln's administration. From internal evidence, historians have concluded that the Public Man must have been frequently in con tact with Lincoln, yet was trusted and respected by southern senators. Although the Public Man is still incognito, the various techniques used in the past to trace the author of this mysterious manuscript have led to many possible solutions. A taped discussion by Munde lein speakers on the role of the United States in the Middle East is one of the 12 tapes selected from 42 entries for the semi-finals of the Sixth Annual Public Discus sion contest. Student participants June Chenele, Martha Mastersen, Barbara Covey, Kathleen Newman, and Maureen Sween ey competed in their collegiate section against Notre Dame, the University of Redlands, Idaho State college, and tapes were judged at the University of Nebraska. Mundelein's tape along with the tapes of the other semi-finalists in this region, Kansas State Teach ers college, University of Texas, and the University of Illinois, will be judged at the University of South Dakota. The best tape from each of the three regions will be judged in the finals at the meeting of the Cen tral States Speech association in April. udcrapinad... Sure'n many eyes are smilin', Irish and otherwise, as the spirit of St. Patrick again lives in our hallowed emerald halls. Our wee leprechauns tell us that among those present at the Old Vic's presentation of Richard II were Sandra Ivan, Therese Osow- ski, and Claire Christensen. Pres ent at Romeo and Juliet were Bar bara Sylvester, Dolores Ferraro, Maureen Sweeney, Joan Maher, and Mary Ann Cashman. Our wee reporters also told us that Margar et Nicholson saw Trolius and Cres- sida. Wishing one another Top of the evening were Maribeth Naughton, Nanette Wendling, Nancy Scanlon, and Jovita Juirgi- las as they entered the Studebaker to see Much Ado About Nothing. Also among the theatre-goers was Maureen Manion who saw No Time For Sergeants. Not MacXamara's band but the Boston Pops Symphony Orchestra was the topic of conversation among Diane Sherwood, Maureen Connerty, Shelia O'Halloran, El len Schoen, and Geraldine Lynch. Pecking through the windows, our wee leprechauns spotted Bar bara Hegan, Patricia Callahan, Phyllis Fulgaro, Nancy Haske, Margaret Cory, Mary Alice Min- wegen, Jeri-Ann Boyle, Judith Az zarello, and Lillian Lohr at the Alpha Delta Gamma Fraternity party. Dancing the Irish Jig at St. Jo seph's Mardi Gras were Carol Stortz, Janet Lynch, and Elizabeth Garbais, while Marguerite Phil lips charmed all the laddies at the Northwestern Sweetheart's Ball. Donna Gullen laid down her shil lelagh long enough to go skiing at Iron River, Michigan, and Barbara Guderian borrowed it to shake at the Boston Bruins when they played the Chicago Black Hawks. Wearing the green at Loyola's Washington Whirl was Patricia Hellgeth, while Marijo Daly whirled down to Washington, D.C. The Little Ones were full of praise after seeing the paintings of Betty Ellingsen and Lucille Kabo at the No Jury Art Exhibit at Navy Pier. They listen happily while Mary Cook played Irish airs on her new Baldwin organ. It's no blarney that Beatrice Hoang will be a member of Made moiselle's College Board, and that a little bit of heaven seemed to fall on Sylvia Bica, when she recently became engaged to Ray Emerich. Looking like a wild Irish rose, Mary Rohner fell under a gay spell and wore a flower tiara when she was Queen of Loyola's Military Ball. ART MA IORS Jane hordes an lt;* Jean Rieck put finishing touches ranuunu QQ Firgt Semester exhibit, now showing on the Eighth floor. It includes work in various media.
title:
1957-03-04 (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