description:
00 Candidates, Largest Graduating Class, Receive Degrees from His Excellency, Archbishop Stritch, at Commencement Summa Cum Laude Excellency, the Most Reverend .1 A. Stritch, D.D.. Archbishop of ;o and Chancellor eif the College, nter degrees upon tl e 103 members s-iiior class, the largest graduat es in the history of th.- College, d deliver the address at the fourteenth iuai Commencement exercises, on fineiay, June 4, at 10 a.m., in the- col ic theatre. The Very Reverend James Hussey, ., acting president of Loyola universi- will give the Invocation, and the Rev- lid William Magee. S.J.. of the Phil- Bhy department, assisted by Miriam Rooney, Ph.D., of the Education dc- rtment, will present the candidates for rees. G. Michael Schmeing, Ph.D., the Chemistry department, will pre- as marshal. Leading the class in academic honors Kathryn F'ox and Mary Louise llec- r, both of whom will be candidates for frees Summa Cum Laude. hii logy major. Miss Fox is a cau date for the Bachelor of Science de- Hree- Summa Cum Laude, and Miss I lector, an English major, is a candidate for the degree Bachelor of Arts Summa Cum Laude. Four students will be candidates for degrees Magna Cum Laude. Barbara Ann Frick will receive a Bachelor of Music degree Magna Cum Laude, and Dorothy Geishecker will receive a Bachelor e,f Science degree Magna Cu:n Laude. Meriting the Bachelor of Arts degree Magna Cum Laude will be Lor etta Gburczyk anel Eileen Murphy. Candidates for tlu- Bachelor of Arts degree Cum Lauele will be Mary Mc Laughlin, Jerry Stutz, Mary Alice Wein berg, and Rose Wirth. Sister Mary Callista. P.H.J.C. Sister Mary Pauline, P.H.J.C, Florence Flesch, Adeline Hess, and Therese Rees will he candidates for the Bachelor of Science elegrce Cum Laude. Mary Louise Guliek is a candidate for a Bachelor of Music degree Cum Laude. and Ruth Shmigelsky is a candidate for a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree Cum Laude. Candidates for the Bachelor of Arts degree will be Rita Anderson, Rita Bloe- dorn. Virginia Boots, Viola Brennan. Lenore Brockhaus, Eugenia Brudzinski. Mary Burns. Ida Ann Cardone. Mary Grace Carney, Regina Casey, Marjorie Cavanaugh, Dorothy Clark. Dolores Cor- rigan, Mary Davy. Jane- Dougherty. Eleani r Endersbee, Naundas Fisher. Mary Kay F'itzpatrick. and Irene Foster. Mildred Fox, Chloris Freeman, Marie Galiano, Mary Ellen Gallagher, Patricia Gerlits. Victoria Greco, Flora Grippo. Rita Guinane, Mary Jane Harvey, Evelyn Holland. Isabelle Hennessey. Mary Jane Kent. Virginia Kicnzlc. Celia Kilgariff. Jayne King. Dorothea Kostantooros, Amalia Kukiilski. Angela I.aCesa. Joan LaMontagne. and Mary Lavin. Audrey McDonnell, Mary McGee, Jac- Miie'iiu- Michelsen. Florence Miller, V'er- na Jane Nelson, Elizabeth N'owak, Sue Oberlin. Harriet O'Brien, Mary O'Brien. Irene O'Flaherty, June Rettig, Denise Rigoulet. Maura Roche. Rosemary Roe- tier. Joanne Santucci, Elizabeth Seguiu. anil Lois Shay. Stella Sisto, Charlotte Smith, Jean Spatuzza. Madeleine Stuehler. June Tatge, Cecile Thomas, Mary Catherine Tuomey, Anne Velis, and Veronice Wallensack. Two members of the Sisters of Charity, B.V.M., will also receive degrees. Candidates for the Bachelor of Science degree will be Cyrilla Boyle, Betty Brod sky. Margaret Bromley, Gloria Dolan, Peggy Donovan, Margaret Drummond, Virginia Finan Moyer, Lois Forman Schmidt. Patricia Tubby. Bonnie Turner. Helen Walz. and Eileen Wolfe. Dorothy Ann Grill, June Murphy, and Betty Ann Yunker will be candidates for the Bachelor of Music Education de gree. Marjc rie Ann Schaller is a can didate for the Baclv.-lor of Fine Arts degree. Three seniors, who will complete their work during the summer, will be can didates for degrees in August, Sister Mary Dcicola, O.S.F., Sister Mary Im- eldine, O.S.F., and Marylaurine Barr Milligan. (Continued on page 3, column 4) .ASj r...*. 111. MUNDELEIN COLLEGE, CHICAGO, 40, ILLINOIS. MAY 31, 1945 No. 13 17 Seniors Win Mundelein College Qold Key on Basis Of Excellent Scholarship A Diller, a Dollar, A Ten O'Clock Scholar The Mundelein College Gold Key, highest award for scholarship, will be conferred at Commencement upon the 7 honor graduates. Recipients of the Gold Key will be Kathryn Fox and Mary Louise Hector. Summa Cum Laude graduates, and Bar bara Ann Frick. Loretta Gburczyk, Dor othy Geishecker. and Eileen Murphy, Magna Cum Laude graduates. Cum Laude graduates, who will also receive the Gold Key, are Sister Mary Callista, P.H.J.C, Sister Mary Pauline, P.H.J.C. Florence Flesch. Mary Louise Guliek, Adeline Hess. Mary McLaughlin, Therese Rees, Ruth Shmigelsky, Jerry Stutz, Mary Alice Weinberg, anel Rose Wirth. Miss Fox, a biology major, is president i f the Biology section of the Science Forum, and did practice teaching at the Convent of the Sacred Heart. Miss Hec tor, editor of Quest in her sophomore year, is co-editor of the Review this year and president of the Stylus club. Miss Frick, who is majoring in organ and is president of the Organ Guild, will receive a Bachelor of Music degree. Miss Gburczyk. an economics major, niinorcd in English and did her practice teaching at a nearby high school. A candidate for a Bachelor of Science- degree, Miss Geishecker is chairman of the Chemistry section of the Science Forum and a chemistry major. Miss Murphy, an English major, is co-editor of the Review and vice-president of the Stylus club. Sister Mary Callista and Sister Mary Pauline, candidates for Bachelor e gt;f Sci ence degrees, arc home economic ma jors. Candidate for a Bachelor of Science degree. Miss Flesch is majoring in chem istry and minoring in biology and physics. Miss Guliek, who will receive a Bachelor of Music degree, is majoring in piano and is publicity chairman of the Cecili ans. A biology- major. Miss Hess is minor ing in chemistry and will receive a Bachelor of Science degree. Miss Mc Laughlin is majoring in economics and minoring in physics and history. Miss Rees. a mathematics major and chair man of the Mathematics section of the Science Forum, i gt; a candidate for a Bachelor of Science degree. Miss Shmigelsky, an art major and candidate for a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree, is a member of the Philosophy club and received from the Laetare Players this year an award for the most distinguished service ever rendered them by an auxiliary member. Miss Stutz, president of the S.A.C. and an associate editor of the Sky scraper, is majoring in English-journal ism and minoring in history. An asso- iate editor of the Review. Miss Wein berg is majoring in English and minor ing in French and history. Miss Wirth. a mathematics major, is president of Die Rothcnsteiner Gesell- schaft and did her practice teaching at the Convent of the Sacred Heart. or are you a 10 o'clock scholar? Did you used to buy War Stamps every day, and now do you buy them every month? Do you want the war to he over? Do you want your favorite en sign, your seaman first class, your own special army pilot to come home- soon and victorious? Then mobilize your money for the Seventh War loan. You've seen the picture of the Stars and Stripes going up on a hill in Iwo-Jima. Four thousand servicemen and more will stay on Iwo-Jima. Thousands of other men including YOUR serviceman may stay on other island outposts UN LESS YOU BUY THE STAMPS AND BONDS THAT INSURE VICTORY. There is more than a personal motive, however, behind our Sev enth War loan giving. The Seventh War loan, dedicated to the memory of 1'resident Roosevelt, may be the last we'll need to support. If the Seventh loan is the success we can help to make it. the flag of peace may be raised in lands around the world. With iis elevation. Naziism and Asiatic totalitarianism may be erased from the earth, and Freedom of Speech. Freedom of Worship. Freedom from Want, and Freedom from Fear will have a chance to become realities for people everywhere. (iivc the tenth of a dollar now. and another tomorrow, and another the next day and the next and all the days and insure victory, peace, and your serviceman's return. The Chicago office of the I'nitcd Stales Treasury department lias secured permission t gt; reprint the- above editorial and distribute 4.00U copies of it. It was written by Katherine ilurwitz for the Freshman Issue of The Skyscraper. College to Give Its 1000th Degree Mary Louise Hector, who will re ceive a Bachelor of Arts degree Sum ma Cum Laude at Commencement, will be the one thousandth graduate to re ceive a degree from Mundelein Col lege. Fall Classes Open On September 24 Freshmen Week will open at 9 a.m.. on Monday. Sept. 17, with sophomore hostesses reporting to welcome incoming students who will take tests, attend lec tures, and be guests at several social af fairs before freshman registration on Friday, Sept. 21. The incoming seniors will register on Tuesday morning, Sept. 18, and the in coming juniors on Wednesday morning. Sept. 19. Incoming sophomores will reg ister on Thursday, Sept. 20, and the freshmen will close Freshmen Week with registration on Friday morning, Sept. 21. Classes will open for the fifteenth aca demic year on Monday, Sept. 24, and the Mass of the Holy Ghost will be cele brated on Friday, Sept. 28. Three New Awards Given to Students For Achievements Three recently established annual awards were presented for the first time- on Honors Day, the Janet McCarty Fie weger Memorial award in home econom ics; the Granela Spanish award, and the Geraldine Hoffman award for athletics. Helen Walz, senior home economics major, received the award for achieve ment in home economics established this spring by Mr. and Mrs. Joseph McCarty of Kaukauna, Wisconsin, and Lieut. Wil liam Fieweger, U.S.C.G., in memory of Janet McCarty Fieweger '41. The Spanish award, which went to Rosemary Templeman, freshman, for (Continued on page 7, column 5) Kathryn Fox. who will receive a Bachelor of Science degree with highest academic honors. Mary Louise Hector, winner of a competitive scholarship to the Catholic University of America, who will receive an honor Bachelor of Arts degree. De Paul President Delivers Address At Baccalaureate Qlee Club Collaborates with Orchestra on Musical Background Varied as the careers of a woman may be in the modern world, manifold as her talents and ambitions may be, the patent fact is that her prime interest must be the conserving of the Christian conception of her own dignity and in violability and the preservation of those institutions the heme and the family of which she is the very heart and soul. asserted the Very Reverend Comerford J. O'Malley. President of De Paul university, in his address to the seniors en Baccalaureate Sunday. May 27. Challenging the graduates. Father O'Malley continued, Seldom in the history of Christian civilization has there been a time demanding qualities of leadership as in this our day. The challenge to leadership is given to every graeluate of a woman's college. Although conferences of nations will be held to determine the details of the plan. Fa ther reminded his audience, in the backwash of war there are pn bleius which may be overlooke 1 al the con ference tables, problems that have to do with the maintenance of Christian standards of morality, pertaining to the home, marriage, and womanhood. The attacks against these- institutions made on the screen, the stage, in cur rent literature, and current fashions, calls for a degree of intelligence, a seriousness of purpose, a quality of leadership which should be cultivated in higher institutions of learning. em phasized Father O'Malley. After the- Baccalaureate address the seniors re peated after Father O'Malley the grad- (Ccntinued on page 7. column 4)
title:
1945-05-31 (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:
This image is issued by the Women and Leadership Archives. Use of the image requires written permission from the Director of the Women and Leadership Archives. It may not be sold or redistributed, copied or distributed as a photograph, electronic file, or any other media. The image should not be significantly altered through conventional or electronic means. Images altered beyond standard cropping and resizing require further negotiation with the Director. The user is responsible for all issues of copyright. Please Credit: Women and Leadership Archives, Loyola University Chicago. wlarchives@luc.edu
coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College