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October 4, 1961 THE SKYSCRAPER Page Five Faculty (Continued from Page 1) Harth is a member of the Modern Language Association. Dolezal received his bachelor's and master's degrees from De Paul and is working for his doctorate at Loyo'.a. As senior editor of the Society for Visual Education, he has written several series of edu cational filmstrips. He has also taught at the Latin School and is a member of the National Council Teachers of English and Delta Epsilon Sigma, national Catholic honor society. Return from Brief Absence Two other English teachers, Mrs. H. Karsten Schmidt and Mrs. David Spencer are returning to Mundelein after brief leaves of absence. Mrs. Schmidt was given her bachelor's degree by the Uni versity of Wales and her Diploma of Education by Cambridge Uni versity. She got her master's from Indiana, where she is a candidate for a Ph. D. Besides her teaching experience at Mundelein, Mrs. Schmidt has taught at the Beck- enham Girls School in England and at Indiana. Mrs. Spencer attained bachelor's standing at the University of California and master's at DePaul. A former teacher at Oregon State University, she also is a member of the Modern Language Association. Team Joins In Mundelein's French department has a husband and wife team join ing it. Gerard de Jubecourt re ceived two bachelor's degrees from the College of the Jesuits in France, a bachelor's degree from the Sorbonne, and a law degree from the University of Grenoble, France. Mrs. de Jubecourt, who will be a language laboratory assistant, received her bachelor's degree from Michele de Cimiez, France. The new member of the history department is James J. Richards who was granted his bachelor's degree by Notre Dame. Richards has done graduate work at George town and is currently working for his master's degree at Roosevelt. He has lectured at Air Defense Command headquarters in Colo rado. Sister Mary Neal, B.V.M., who received her bachelor's degree summa cum laude from Mundelein and her master's on an NSF grant, from Notre Dame, is the new teacher in the mathematics department. She formerly taught in a Wichita, Kan. high school. The newcomer to the psychology department is Ronald E. Scholzen, who got his bachelor's and master's degrees from Marquette. He is a member of Alpha Delta Sigma, national professional advertising fraternity and the Licensed Personnel and Guidance Associ ation. Official Instructs Evangelos Rousos is the new so ciology department member. The holder of a bachelor's degree from American University and a master's from Northwestern, Rousos also attended the Uni versity of Athens, Greece. He is an expert on international law and is secretary of the Greek Consulate in Chicago. Teaching moral theology this fall will be Father Michael Dempsey who has returned after an absence of three years. Receiving his A.B. and M.A. from St. Mary af the Lake Seminary, Father also holds a Licentiate of Sacred Theology degree from the same school. Mole Hisses Mixers As Misses Nix Moles ' by Jack LeMoult NFCCS DELEGATES Fran Wolosewick and Dorothy Zadrozny meet with Paul O'Bryan of Notre Dame University and Father Launighin of Texas at the recent Congress in Pittsburgh. NFCCS Congress Acts; Lauds Corps, Committee The 18th National Congress of the National Federation of Catholic College Students which was held in Pittsburgh this summer took a firm stand on issues of current import ance. Some of the highlights of impor tant resolutions passed are: A commendation of the aims of the Peace Corps with the added im plementation that the Peace Corps Program and its ideals be publi cized on the campus. This reso lution passed unanimously. Full support was given by the Federation to the policies, pro grams and aims of the Civil Rights Commission. It was strongly main tained that the existence of this Commission which is now pending before the House be extended in definitely. Strongly debated were two con troversial resolutions: the first in favor of the House Committee on Un-American Activities and the second in support of the Freedom Riders. Debate on HUAC continued for over four hours until a position of qualified support was adopted by a small majority of 110 to 97. The Federation as a whole was in favor of some type of sup port for the House Committee. The two main positions debated were: conditional or qualified support of the activities of HUAC and un conditional support of the House as it exists today. Mundelein delegates Dorothy Zadrozny and Fran Wolosewick maintained the position of qualified support, in accord with the vote of the student body last semester which expressed support of the HUAC but strongly recommended revisions in its policies. The resolution which was adopted supported the House Com mittee but urged: l.The aims of the House Com mittee be clarified. 2. Judicial procedures employed be established in conformity with American legal traditions. 3. That the committee confine its activities to gathering ma terial relevant to possible legislation. The opponents of this reso lution, advocating unconditional support, feared that if stipulations were placed on the activities of the House it would reduce its effective ness and possibly endanger the ex istence of this committee. A resolution in support of the Freedom Riders was passed after many hours of debate by a majority of 151 for, 73 against. The passage of this particular resolution was achieved on purely moral basis without consideration being given to. the inadequacies and technical difficulties within the statement of the resolution. The North Central Region was split in its voting with 11 for, and (Continued on Page 6) The following is an excerpt from the Xavier University News which we thought would he of interest to any Mundelein girl who has ever attended a college mixer. This is the male viewpoint: At Holy Cross College they call it the cattle show. It is the rare combination of a cocktail party without cocktails, and a slave market without slaves. You dress to the teeth on the night of the affair, applying the Old Spice liberally, and set out on an ad venture the likes of which can be found only in a college. After paying your dollar you are admitted to a veritable paradise of young ladies, all waiting to be asked to dance. Or so you think. At first sight it looks like the com bined huddle practice of about ten girls' football teams. There are girls, grouped together by the tens and twenties, standing in conversation with one another apparently oblivious of the poor men who've paid to meet them. You then begin the barbarian practice of looking over the girls. No wonder they stand in groups It is a defense mecha nism constructed to protect them from the idle window shoppers. Ah, then comes the moment you've found a loose one. It usually takes about five minutes to dis cover that she is only 14, and even though she looks five years older, you feel embarrassed. The mixer usually turns out to be one big job: you constantly try- Biologists Launch Project To Step Up Communication Operation Whitecoat, the newest thing in Mundelein's bi ology department, has the eyes of the whole College upon it to see whether the solution to better stu dent-teacher communication can be achieved through a project of this type. The Whitecoat Brigade consist ing of six upper-division biology majors, Denyse Colombo, Sandra lee Reinholz, Palmira Petrauskas, Stephanie Hubert, Geraldine Nowak and Patricia Pietraszek is NSA Delegate (Continued from Page 4) Regional Congress last spring was noticeably missing. There was less bloc voting and issues were, to a larger degree, considered on their own basis rather than a reaction to the College or individual pre senting them. The conservative coalition of southern colleges and YAFers re ceived an average of 15 per cent of the vote on their proposals. Most legislation fell into the moderate- to-liberal range (in the Kennedy- Rockefeller sense), and supported student participation in social and political activities, civil rights liberties. Humor was reflected in a satiri cal daily newsletter entitled SILLY (Student Institution to Liberalize Lethargical YAF) whose motto was If you are too far right, you get left out . . . The at titude of most delegates was ex pressed by the leader of the moder ates (Harvard's answer to Mort Sahl) in these words: We lean to the left, but we don't fall over. conducting all the freshman gen eral biology laboratories. Lecture for the classes is given, as usual by a faculty member but all the preparation and execution of lab work is left to the White- coats. Once a week they all meet with Mr. Edwin Kaszynski to dis cuss their mutual findings and problems. The idea for Whitecoat was born last spring in the minds of the biology department faculty. Students were approached this summer and evoked such enthusi asm that the project was launched in the fall. ing to find the right girl, and the girls trying to look as disinterested as possible. Are they really disin terested? Not from the conversa tions I've had with them. It ap pears that at one of the big mixers there is nothing a girl would rather do than dance with a boy. They also claim that when they leave you at the end of a number it is usually because they think that you don't want to dance with them any more. At one of the local institutions the girls go so far as to play br'dge while the boys are desper ately trying to round them up for a dance. I guess the real problem lies in the attitude we have toward one mother. Doesn't it seem rea sonable that if you want to meet and know a girl you will look at her, and smile approvingly? And doesn't it seem reasonable that a girl can look interested and pleas ant when men are around? In Europe when a man sees a pretty girl he smiles at her. In America, when we see a pretty girl the accepted thing to do is look in the other direction. At a college mixer the accepted thing to do is look bored and apathetic. Perhaps we would have better socials if the girls could ask the boys to dance. Oh that's out of the question, says my friend quoting from Emily Post. Well, why not have the girls of a rea sonable age come, say from 17 up. Oh, says my friend, look at all the money you'd lose. Well, at least we could teach the boys how to dance, and recommend a few ways to start and carry on a con versation, says I. Looking at me with a slight smile my friend an swers, Are you kidding? MLA Publishes New Guide for Term Papers The English department has adopted the revised term paper guide published by the Modern Language Association. The guide is now available in the bookstore at a cost of 10 cents. Included in the style sheet is data on footnotes, margins, quotes, bib liography and corrections. The format will be used in Eng lish classes throughout the college. **M-' ON THE LEFT BANK of Lake Michigan that is senior art majors Sister John Mary, B.V.M., Jill Salvaggio, Judy Dax and Barbara Duffie enjoy their water color class. Where else? By the water. The girls were photographed by Father Thomas J. Bryant, S.J., Loyola professor.
title:
1961-10-04 (5)
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