description:
Cardinal Stritch Presides Thursday kt Convocation College President Will Cite Magnificat Medalist J Thursday, April 12, at 2 p.m., is the liosen date for the first formal convo- fction of the year, the conferring of le Magnificat Medal upon Mrs. John j, Daly*. His Eminence, Samuel Car- Enal Stritch, D.D., Chancellor of the College, will preside. i Thursday's 2 p.m. classes will meet kl p.m. so that the entire student body lay be present at the convocation. Members of the Senior class, in caps And gowns, will lead the academic pro- tjtssion.which will form on the second loor and proceed down the grand srair- Jase to the auditorium. Procession Follows I Following in procession will be the 'acuity, the Administration. Mrs. Daly, lid the Cardinal. William H. Conley, Hi. D., Dean of the Loyola School of Iducation, will be marshal. The Invocation, the Magnificat from le Gospel of St. Luke, will be given Br the chairman of the Religion de triment, Father William P. Murphy, Sister Mary Josephine, B. V. M., president of the College, will read the Citation and present Mrs. Daly to His Iminence. Upon receiving the medal Mrs. Daly will give a brief response. Jis Eminence will address the convo cation, n k Following singing of the Star Spang- . (d Banner, the academic procession rill leave the auditorium, and guests rill assemble in the second floor so- r ial rooms for the formal reception, gt;lihich will begin at 3:30 p.m. Represent Alumnae Representing the Alumnae in the re living line will be Dorothy Sugrue '41, resident, and Jane Malloy Philbin '35, :Thairman of the Foundation fund. ' Bcth Goodwillie '47, Phyllis Peter- on '39, Ruth Klodzinski Klein '40. Cor- ine Otto Oberwise '48. Doris Bamett ' iegan '33, and Mary Margaret Mit- r hell Langdon '40, officers of the Alum- '4ae association, will assist Faculty Members as hostesses. ,e Annastasia McGowan '50 will play the y.rgan. Acting as ushers during the con vocation and- the reception will be jembers of the Service club. y Bettemae Caljon and Catherine Lar- Jey, Junior Home Economics jjudents, are co-chairman for the tea, thich will be managed by students in ie Home Economics department. ie J (Continued on Page 4, Col. 4.) Mirror, Mirror, on the Wall 3RC Members Talk At Notre Dame I Program Concerns Spain In Latin America Spain in Latin America will be the leneral theme of the Pan American Conference to be conducted in affili ation with the International Relations ubs at the University of Notre Dame, April 14, 15. d The conference will be inaugurated iaturday afternoon by a lecture pre- entcd by the Spanish consul. In a stu- Jent panel discussion Sunday on Spain a South America. Donna Merwick will fprcsent the Mundelein IRC and will jiscuss Spain in Bolivia and Peru. The acreasing interrelations of Spain with .'entral and South America will be tudied through their common culture 'aid political interests. s Members of the Mundelein IRC and listory department will travel to South :1end for the convention. They are soan Bruno, Dorothy Spratt, Mary Ri ll McDermott, Rita Kucera, Mary Mar garet Woods, Donna Merwick, Marion Juinn, Mary Schweitzer, and Patricia lagan. U It is anticipated that through this invention college students will learn d combat the prevalent anti-Spanish lias present in the world today. Freshmen Star in Recital, Party for Sophomores, Tomorrow from 1 to 5 p,nu Committees Plan Tea Music Students Appear For Big Sisters In Two Programs Freshmen Anita Sachs, Joan Dawson, Winifred Owens, and Rosemary Lind reflect on their appearance for the Freshman-Sophomore tea to be held tomorrow. (Story in Col. 4.) Springtime for Freshmen includes one of the largest interclass social events of the year, the Freshman-Soph omore tea, scheduled for tomorrow from 2 to 5 p.m. in the formal social rooms. Mary Breen, freshman president, and oan Dawson, social chairman, are be ing assisted by Freshman officers, gov ernors, and SAC representatives in making preparations for the tea. Joan Horan is chairman of the Hos tess committee, with SAC representa tive Laura Bergamin assisting. Bea trice Hector and Virginia Volini pre pared the Social Bulletin. Winifred Owens and Carolyn Kil- kenney are planning the entertainment while Ronnie Groom, Mary Ellen Ward, and Mary Therese Jordan are taking care of ordering and serving. The Tea Table committee is headed by Mary Agnes Moran and Barbara Mann, and Rehabilitation is under the direction of Agnes Dwyer and Pa tricia Dee. Other officers and governors assist ing on committees are Sheila Woods, Rosemary Jones, Constance St. Clair, Ann Fitzgerald, Barbara James, Judy Lindstrom, Melita Lynch, Barbara Moran, Anne McCarty, Diane Cochran, and Dolores Volini. THE FRESHMAN ISSUE Vol. XXI Mundelein College, Chicago 40, Illinois, April 9, 1951 No. 10 NFCCS Makes C C' C C C C C C c cp 7) lt;p lt;y o O v v s' NFCCS officers have announced that the Shamrock Festival, sponsored by the seven colleges and universities in the Chicago area, realized approximate ly 2066, of which 404.80 was raised in advance on the Mundelein campus. This 404 is just twice as much as the advance showing on any other re gional campus. The money is to be turned over to the fund set up by NF CCS to provide DP students with a Catholic college education. All money raised by the combined efforts of the seven schools in the re- giorl as well as the proceeds of the SAC Follies to be held at Mundelein will be given to the DP fund. Peg O'My Heart Comes April 27-29 The Drama department has selected J. Hartley Manners' light-hearted com edy, Peg O' My Heart, for its final major production of the year. The play will be presented April 27, 28, and 29 in the auditorium, with a matinee on Saturday, April 28. When it was produced in 1912, in New York, Peg O' My Heart so cap tured the hearts of its audience that it played one of the longest runs in New York theatre history. Peek, Not Pique... Research Corporation Extends Grant'hvAid For Chemistry Study The Research Corporation has given to the College 1,144 as a continuation for one year of the Frederick Gardner Cottrell grant made in 1949 on appli cation of Sister Mary Martinette, B.V.M., chairman of the Chemistry de partment. The grant will buy an Abbe re fractor and a monochromator, which will be used to continue investigation made by Sister Mary Martinette and the Senior Chemistry research stu dents in the field of stereochemistry of complex inorganic compounds. Founded in 1912 by Dr. F. G. Cot trell, Research Corporation is a non profit organization which utilizes the proceeds of applied research to pro mote advancement of science and tech nology by granting aid to small insti tutions. Voice Major Qives Recital, April 15 LaVerne Galiano, Voice major, will present her Senior recital in the Col lege theatre at 3:30 p.mt, Sunday, April 15. A requirement for the Bachlor of Music degree, the recital will consist of three parts, Old Classic composi tions, selections from the Romantic period, and Modern compositions. Miss Galiano's first group of num bers, from the Old Classics, includes Spirate Pur Spirate, by Donaudy; Ari oso, an arrangement of a Bach aria; Nymphs and Shepherds, an Old Eng lish song by Purcell, and I Know That My Redeemer Liveth, the oratorio aria from The Messiah by Handel. Patricia Dee, senior Music Educa tion major, will assist Miss Galiano, presenting three piano selections, the first two being Gavotte by D'Albert, and Evening in Granada, by Debussy. Miss Galiano will then sing Aller- seelen, All Souls' Day, by Richard (Continued on Page 4, Col. 5.) Sheilya Neary (above) and Mar- ibeth Carey, co-editors of the reg ular Skyscraper staff, look in on the hard-working freshmen as the Freshman Issue goes to press. Mixer Will Be In Qymnasium, April 13 The Mundelein gymnasium will be the scene of the Mixer Friday, April 13, under the chairmanship of Soph omore Gina Moran. Open to students of all classes, it will begin at 8:30 p.m., immediately after the French club showing of Beauty and the Beast. Abilities and talents of Freshman Music students will be revealed at the Freshman Concert tomorrow at 1 p. m. Mary Alias will entertain with The Revolutionary Etude, a piano com position by Chopin. Two other Chopin numbers to be played are Trois Ecossaises by Rose mary Ernst, and Etude Number 5, Op us 10, by Mary Agnes Moran. Play Scaramouche A duo-piano arrangement entitled Scaramouche by Milhaud will be per formed by Dolores Stevens and Emily Kloc. Also on the program is an ex cerpt from Bach's Peasant Cantata. Miss Kloc wil be organist for this se lection. The Glee club, under the direction of Adalbert Huguelet, has chosen to sing Come Greet the Day by Tschai- kowski, We Sing Thy Praise, by Tkack and That's More to My Mind by Coak- son. Mary Mahoney will accompany. Soloists for the concert are Mary Ann Piskosz singing O Mio Babbino Caro, by Puccini, and Mary Lou Hirsh sing ing Les Filles de Cadix, by Delibes. Miss Stevens will accompany Miss Piskosz and Miss Hirsh. Entertain at Tea Also on April 10, Freshman Music students will entertain at the Fresh man-Sophomore tea. Mary Ann Mc Caffrey has selected for the enjoy ment of the guests Gianina Mia, from The Firefly by Friml. The Madcap Marjorie by (Norton, and I Carry You In My Pocket by Grosvenor are selec tions to be sung by Miss Piskosz. Marilyn Lyons has chosen Summer Time by Gershwin and Some Day My Prince Will Come, while Rita Frische has selected The Gypsy Love Song by Herbert and Kriesler's Stars In My Eyes. Other vocal arrangements to be heard are Griegs' Strange Music by Ginger Walsh, Kern's I Dream Too Much, and Scott's The False Prophet by Miss Hirsh. Adding enjoyment to the tea will be Freshman Piano students Doris Stryck, Dolores Stevens, Mary Agnes Moran and Emily Kloc. Miss Stryck will play Mendolssohn's Praludium while Miss Stevens has chosen Waltz in A Flat. Miss Kloc will entertain with Galli- wog's Cake Walk by Debussy. Miss Moran's selection is Valse Brilliante, Opus 20, by Mana Zucca. Announce Dates, Courses For Summer Session With courses ranging from General Psychology to the History of Soviet Russia, the Summer Session will open June 26 and close August 3. Meeting Monday through Friday, classes will run from 8:40 to 11:45. With the exception of Chemistry, which runs for two periods and carries four hours of credit, all courses carry three hours of credit. The first period, 8:40 to 10:10 a.m., will offer the following courses: American Educational Systems Con temporary History, Form and Analy sis, General Chemistry, General Psy chology, History of Mathematics, His tory of Philosophy, 'Newman, Piano, Robyn Technique II, Shakespeare, and Voice. During the second period, from 10:15 to 11:45 a.m., classes will be offered in Analytic Geometry I, Elementary Cur riculum, English Literature Survey II, Essay Writing, General Chemistry, His tory of Soviet Russia, Keyboard Har mony, Piano, Physiology, Speech, and Voice.
title:
1951-04-09 (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
rights:
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coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College