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... v / S. ..... TliE iilil V SKISCE4PEI Vol. XXI Mundelein College, Chicago 40, Illinois October 16, 1950 No. 2 Pianists In Program Pianist Joan Wersching gives Adele Mack, Angeline Mazza and Emily Kloc a preview of next Sunday's annual Fall Concert. Cecelians Present Annual Fall Concert The fourteenth annual Fall Con cert will be opened by organist Rose mary Donatelli, Sunday, Oct. 22, at 3:30 p.m., in the college auditorium. Miss Donatelli will play Guilinant's Preludio. Vocalists on Program Directed by Adalbert Huguelet, the college Glee club will sing Dedication by Franz and Kodaly's Ave Maria. Marianna Griglik, first operatic solo ist, will sing Adieu Forets, from Jeanne d'Arc by Tschiakowsky. Two Puccini selections will follow. Mary Heinz will sing Si Chiainano Mimi from La Boheme, and Un Bel Die from Madame Butter fly will be sung by LaVerne Galiano. Angeline Mazza and Anastasia McGow an will be piano accompanists. Rosemary Donatelli will play Guil- mant's Preludio at the organ. Pianist Joan Wersching with the Second Movement of Tschaikowsky's Concerto, will preceed Ruth Ryan play ing Concerto No. 1 by Rachmaninoff. Interpreting the orchestral parts for both pieces, at a second piano, will be Anas tasia McGowan. Organ to Accompany Concerto Saint-Sacns' rhapsodic and scintillat ing Concerto in C Minor, Second Move ment, will be played by Mary Mahoney. Organ and second piano accompanists arc Emily Kloc and Angeline Mazzo, respectively. The first movement of Beethoven's Sonata, opus 31, number two, will be played by Blandina Beitoo. Adele Mack will present a lyrical Chopin Etude, opus 10, number three. A modern selection of an exhuberant mood, Dolinanyi's Rhapsody in C Major will be played by Georgia Lambros. Faculty Member Leads Discussion On Red Menace Father John F. Connell, O.P., will dis cuss with thcN Philosophy club the topic, Atheistic Communisum Cannot Be the Foundation of World Peace, Oct. 24, at 1:00 p.m. in the auditorium. Father Connell will show how the elements of Communism are diametric ally opposed to the foundations of a world peace. Parents and friends will be welcome at this meeting of Mu Nu Sigma, and all are invited to participate in the discus sion. Placement Bureau Solves Work Worries Attention all employment seekers The Placement Bureau of Mundelein Col lege lias a list of positions available for students.'The Bureau located on the fourth floor, is open to all and current information will be posted on the bulletin board at the west stairs in the lounge. Sister Acts Head the Bill at Mundelein Thirty-one freshmen are sisters of former or present Mundelein students. Fifth of her family to attend Mundelein is Dolores Volini, sister of Marcella ex '48, Gloria ex '49, Virginia '51, and Yol- anda '53. Third of their families at Mundelein are Monica Brodbeck, sister of Ursula '43 and of Dorthea ex '48, and Kathleen Doogan, sister of Ann '51 and of Ethel '53. Also third of their families here are Barbara Campbell, sister of Mary Mar garet '48 and Dorothy '50; Katherine Lamb, sister of Mary Jane '52 and Patricia '53; and Maryann McDermott, sister of Patricia ex '48 and Geraldine ex '49. Margaret Ackermann is the sister of Joan '52, Barbara Bruno of Joan '53, Colette Carey of Mary '51, Agnes Dwyer of Marion '51, Marion Farrell of Mar cella '52, and Dorothy Fellegi of Mary '53. Angela de Florio is the sister of the late Rosalie ex '47; Dorothy Francoeur is the sister of Mary '52; Patricia Frey of Elaine ex '52; Rita Frische of Joellen 50. Margaret Gaudreau is the sister of Mary Louise '53; Beatrice Hector of Mary Louise '45; Joan Hoiss of Mary Lou '49; Mary Frances Kelly of Nancy (Continued on Page 4, Col. 3) Students Recall Life in Europe During War Years Starvation, war and fear Ina Eidenas and Milda Gublinskas, two Lithuanian girls enrolled at Mundelein under XFCCS auspices, bring with them grim memories of a war-etched heritage. Miss Eidenas speaks reluctantly. I was twelve years old when we left our country. We left because of the occupa tion of our country by the Russians. We fled into Germany. We did not expect Germans to be friendly tow:ards us, but at least we knew we would have the right to live. I spent World War II in Ger many. It left the most sad memories. It was not the war itself that impressed me so much, but that we should live among unfriendly iieople and we had to fight for every bit of food. We had Food Ra tion cards, but because we were foreign ers we had a hard time using them. We were very glad when the Amer icans came over and made it possible for us to come to America. We accepted it joyfully, because we can't return to Lith uania and we did not want to live any longer in a country within which such sad memories are connected. I am impressed very much by the generosity of the Faculty and student Ixidy. They all are very friendly to me, and without their help I would not be able to be in Mundelein. Miss Gublinskas begins her story thus: I was born in Lithuania, which some times is called Terrae Mariana. There I spent my childhood. When in 1940-1941 the Russians and in 1941-1943 the Germans occupied Lith uania, I changed my living places, be cause my parents, both graduate teachers, w-ere dismissed from their jobs. I at tended grammar school in Lithuania, but my gymnasium years were spent in Ger many. During the war I was in Germany and saw all the cruelty and danger that war brings with it. (Continued on Page 4, Col. 2) All'Out Campus Efforts Spell Success For First Benefit Ballet Opening Mundelein Super Salesmen Merit Coveted Box Seat Atvards Tonight, the Ballet Russe will open at the Civic Opera House. Mundelein has purchased the house for the evening as its annual bene fit program. The success of the venture will be in a large part due to the students who generously gave their time and effort to the various jobs that were as much a necessity as the troupe or the house. Box seats replaced orchids as awards to Mary Kay Gill, Catherine Larney, Ellen Flaska, and Mary Agnes Moran, who led their classes in returns. Seniors Patricia Considine, Sally Crisanti, Betty Guilfoyle, Joan Kares, Judy Langhenry, Paula Long, Judy McNulty, and Eunice Shackelford will greet ballet-goers with program books which will include the ads and patrons solicited by the students. Students assisting on the Adevrtise- ment committee are Elaine Muhair, Den ise Etten, Carol Higgins, Irene Pfac, Grace Benedetti, Ann Marie Doogan, Vileda Connolly, Gloria Kowaleski, Bar bara Heintz, Mary Cay Hannan, Mary Ann Klose, Alice Pawlak, Judy Mc Nulty. Author Exploits Parents in Satire Emily Kiiiibrough, author and gen ial satirist, will tell why Parents Are So Embarrassing, Nov. 8, at 8 p.m., in the college auditorium. Sponsored by the College Alumnae association, the proceeds from Miss Kimbrougb's performance will benefit the scholar ship fund. Author of The Innocents from In diana, and It Gives Me Great Plea sure, and co-author with Cornelia Otis Skinner of Our Hearts Were Young and Gay, Miss Kiiiibrough is a trans- continetal lecturer, and lias contribut ed articles to the New Yorker, At lantic Monthly, and House and Gar den. Thespians Produce Christopher Play The Velvet Qlove The Velvet Glove, a Christopher prize- winning comedy by Rosemary Casey, will be the first major dramatic production of the year. The play recently completed a Broadway run with Grace George and Walter Hampton starred in the leading roles. The story, in college setting, involves a diplomatic mother general who saves the bishop from an autocratic educational blunder and retains for her school the able professor who has been accused of radical tendencies. There will be three evening perform ances at 8:15 p.m., Nov. 17, 18, and 19. Cast and crews will be announced later. Poets Plan Publication Editor Mary Alma Sullivan has an nounced that Quest, a collection of poetry by Mundelein s'udents and alum nae, will go to press early iii Novem ber. Contributions may be left in 506 at any time. Hurdling the Hemispheres Four of the foreign students discuss their native lands with Patricia Dia mond, who has recently returned from a year of study in Greece. Seated, Milda Gublinskas and Miss Diamond. Standing, Agnes Masako Yui, Ina Eidenas, and Catherine Terazawa. Also on the Advertisement committee are Patricia O'Connell, Angeline Mazza, Rosemarie Giancola, Cathy Larney, Mary Carey, Kay O'Malley, Mary Graff, Joan Kennedy, Rosemarie Heckenback, Mari lyn Kolar, Jacqueline Fasules, Lucille Boldt, Mary Schweitzer, and Sally Ma- guire. Patron Committee Assisting on the Patron conunittee are Loretta Gibbons, Emery Tito, Florence Sponlioltz, Mary Catherine Davy, Bar bara Schmitt, Nancy Beach, Winifred Wellman, Marilyn Tucker, Lois Tallet, Betty Wellner, Suzanne Lob, Mona Mey er, Ellen Hennelly, Rosemary Mashl, Jeanne Lahy, Helen Keenan, Joan Ca hill, Mary Fran Anderson, Joan Acker mann, and Mary G. Ward. Aides on the Ticket committee are Joan Schrieber, Jeanne SpanknebeJI, Bet ty Byrne, Patricia Carr, Mary Kay Gill, Virginia Carr, Donna Gatto, Jeanne Pennie, Lorraine Pope, Dorothy Spratt, Nancy Brown, Katushka Didenka, Eve lyn Craig, Mary C. Leahy, Katherine Ryan, Angela O'Hara, and Margery Keating. Ticket Committee are Ticket committee assistants are Geraldine Tyrrell, Patricia Burke, Dol ores Nowikowski, Mary Allore, Frances Fazio, Michelina Pierini, Marianne Ga- rofalo, Norene Trapp, Rita Welsh, Ger aldine Mysliwia, Mary A. Sullivan, Pa tricia Church, Lois Schneider, Mary Breen, Kathryn Quinn, Jean Schaeffer, Gladys O'Brien, Virginia CUnite, Carol Seguin, Lauretta Jamel, Mary Ann Wenzel, Maurine McCarthy, June Viet- zen, Jane Roach, Barbara Baynes, jean Tracy, Jean Kilbasa, and Adele Grubba N.U. Professor Speaks on Asia Kenneth Wallace Colgrove, Ph.D., professor of political science at North western University, will speak here on the Far East Crisis, Thurs. Oct. 19. Dr. Colgrove served at the General Headquarters of the Supreme Com mander, Douglas MacArthur, in Tokyo, during 1945 and 1946. Last year Dr Colgrove appeared at the college to dis cuss the fall of China and Americai- policy faults in the Far East. Paris is Theme for Inter-College Dance Members of the Mundelein and Loyola French clubs will sponsor a dance, L'Automne de Paris, at Lewis Towers, Oct. 20, at 8:00 p.m. The event will fea ture Paris as its main theme. Madeline D'Hooge, president of Les D'Arciennes, Mundelein French club, will be assisted by Dorcella Spengler, Joan Cole, and Theresa Schillaci. The Loyola committee is under the direction of John Romano.
title:
1950-10-16 (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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Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College