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SKYSCRAPER Pa g -Three 941 in Review (Continued from Page 1, Col. 1) he ashingtoii . . . German army of 00,000 launches intensive drive lard Moscow . . . The House of epresentatives passes second lease- lid appropriation of six billion dollars . The third cabinet of Prince Konoye sinus in Japan . . . General Hideki Ojo heads the new government there. George Hopkins lands on Devil's Brer in Wyoming to win a 50 bet ' ountain climbers are sent to his ' scue . . . Lorenzo Cardinal Lauri, 76. bambcrlain of the Roman Catholic nurcli. dies in Vatican City . . . fj f. S. S. Kearney is torpedoed while t KitroI duty off Iceland, first list of . S. casualties arrives in the States. . New York re-elects Mayor jorello H. LaGuardia . . . Raven erman dies . . . President declares a Navy Day speech that history * Is recorded who fired the first shot. erring to the U. S. S. Kearney: also gt; nniuiiiccs that the Nazis plan to ibolish all existing religions Protcs- int. Catholic, Mohammedan. Hindu, nddhist, and Jewish alike . . . Corncll- prtmouth game attracts attention after n Sorncll scores touchdown on fifth down n Jwin, 7 to 3 . . . The Reuben James v Itorpedocd and sunk near Greenland. ringing death to 76 men . . . The ,( bviet government leaves Moscow a . . Kharkov, industrial center of li M Ukraine, falls . . . John L. Lewis nects the President's request that the Iptive coal mines be kept open . . . ' 'resident orders seizure of Air Asso- . Btes plant at Hendix. N. I., to end 1 trike . . . * I0VEMBER Mrs. Roosevelt and the Anu-ricnn- orn Duchess of Windsor meet, shake fends. Royal couple lunches with the resident as First Lady flics to Chi- I Bo . . . The U. S. Navy- tanker Salinas torpedoed near Iceland; there K no casualties . . . The Neutrality li Ac is repealed to permit arming of American ships and their entrance into . xmihat zones . . . Soviet Russia is ledgcd a billion dollars in I.end-I.ease id . . . Litvinoff is new representative if the U. S. S. R. in the nation's capital . . William Kissam Vanderbilt gives a 3,00(1.000 yacht to the U. S. Navy . . . n an Armistice Day address, President oosevelt says li is in our charge low ... to see to it that 'these dead hall not have died in vain' ... Arsenic is revealed to be the cause I the deaths of 11 Ringling Brothers , nd Barninn and Bailey- elephants . . . ptivc coal mines closed by strike of c 3.000 miners who demand a union shop 0 . . Saburo Kurusu, Japan's special en- tl fy. speaks with President Roosevelt lS ml Secretary of State Hull . . . British pen large-scale offensive against Axis Irces in Libya . . . The United States ie loman Catholic Hierarchy announces )l Is stand on Christianity and the War. :. Bows readiness to keep in step with the bvernment program . . . Japanese voy Kurusu and Ambassador Nomura 0 pntiniic to discuss settlement of dis- K (reemcnts with Secretary Hull . . . u arly Thanksgiving observed in 32 i Ites . . . The time or the date does lot alter the thanks . . . John L. Lewis 0 ills a halt to the coal strike after t icepting arbitration by a three-man bard ... A seven month scige of Bbruk is lifted by advanced British i roups . . . TJ. S. forces establish base I Dutch Guiana in agreement with the 1( ttherlands and Brazil . . . TJ. S. 1( larines leave China by order . . . IECEMBER Metropolitan Opera Season opens itll Mozart's The Marriage of Figaro I. . In special session the Japanese :e ibinet decides that peace talks in iii Washington should be continued . . . m resident asks for clear statement of pan's aim in Indo-China . . . Russians aim to have turned the tide in the attle for Moscow . . . Chicago sees ' new morning newspaper with the ri ising of the Chicago Sun ... In reply the president's question. Japanese ate that there are no troop move- (Continued on Page 4, Col. 5) 1:* Military Psychology Is Review Subject Literary Magazine Will Have Varied Contents Psichari, an article by Ellen Foran about a man and his military psycholo gy, will be of interest to all. when they read the Winter issue of the Rkvikw, on Feb. 16. Again the Latin-American theme. which was adopted at the beginning of the year, will permeate the magazine. One selection is Rosemary O'Donnell's article. Vargas. Dictator of Brazil. The life and works of the famous South American poetess. Sister Juana Inez, are discussed in an article by Nathalie Letcher. Newman as a Stu dent is the topic of essayist Mary Eliza beth Walsh, whereas F.lsic Cramer will write about the William H. Hudson Centenary. What arc the Pope's ideas about peace? You will learn much about them when you read the collaborated work of Helen Printy and Rosamond Mc Millan. T. A. Daly, the American poet, will have the philosophy of his poetry- brought to light by Barbara Ohab. In lighter vein will be essays by Margaret Jean Burke and Teresa Schmid. Fiction writers Virginia Coffey, Mary Harrington. Ruth Feiereisel, and Edith Bukowski have promised stories that will attract everyone. Ruth Tcntler and Miss Burke are editing the American Scene and Ruth O'Hearn and Miss Tcntler are writing editorials. Verse and book reviews will be writ ten by Miss Burke. Laurette Keshen. Denise Rigoulct, Miss Coffey, Mildred Welch, Miss Cramer, Mary Alice Wein berg. Altine Kelleher, Miss Printy, Lou ise Szkodzinski. and Eileen Murphy. Play Chopin, Liszt At Musicale, Jan. 14 Three selections by Chopin were played at the Wednesday Musicale, Jan. 14. Adele Ethel Kaczkowski played his Ma zurka in R flat major: Betty Ann Yunker his Mazurka in B flat minor; and Mary Louise Gulick his Etude in A flat. La Campanella. a Liszt arrangement for piano of a Paganini selection, was played by Louise Szkodzinski. Yvonne Pelletier played a tango by Alheniz, whose music carries on the traditions of Chopin and Liszt. Debussy's dreamy Clair de I.unc was played by Mary O'Brien, and his Evening in Granada was played by Barbara Ann I'Yick. Marianne Donahoe played Men delssohn's Rondo Capriccio. Rita Callaghan sang the Habanera from Bizet's Carmen, and Audrey Ewry's se lection was Let My Song Fill Your Heart, by Charles. Miss Donahoe ac companied Miss Ewry. Players, Choir, Orchestra Give Program, Jan. 22 Comedy, Dramatic Play, Scheduled Hold your hats and away we go The ride may be a little humpy hut Gran'ma will see that we get there. What ? Why we're talking about the automobile that's going to be on the Mun delein slage at 1 p.m. on Jan. 22. Why? Because the drama department is going to present a play at that time called Gran'ma Fixes the Car. Bar bara Gale will be Gran'ma. Others in the cast arc Ruthe Bransfield. Mary- Cath erine Davy. Dorothy- Toohey. Sybil Slott. and Mary Catherine Tuomey. On the same program will be the Verse Speaking Choir, directed by Mrs. J. Mauley Phelps, which will give Harriet Monroe's America and The Kitchen Clock, by Vance Cheney; and the Or chestra Ensemble which will play be tween the presentations of the drama department. A second play, Heartless, is stark drama- with a tense plot and four inter esting characters played by Ann Trave, Larraine Knaub. Mary Major, and Betty Pinnegan. QivesDirections For Total Defense Sees It as Only Anstver to Total War Total war, in which the entire popula tion is attacked, must be met by total de fense, in which the entire population par ticipates, declared John Langdon, repre sentative of the Office of Civilian De fense, in an assembly lecture on Jan. 6. There are two kinds of Civilian De fense, continued Mr. Langdon. a Loyola graduate and former president of the Chi cago Youth Council, civil protection, which is army controlled, and voluntary participation, which is operated by the community. His scries of suggested plans by- which students may take active part in civilian defense included the organization of a health committee; the establishment of a Red Cross unit; a resolution to follow carefully instruction given by authorities in time of disaster; appointment of a com mittee to collect and save paper and rub ber: an organization to promote the sale of defense stamps and bonds; a resolution to contribute money and services to the U. S. O.. and finally, sincere, devout, and persistent prayer. Following Mr. Langdon's talk. Mr. George Redecco, representing the First Aid organization, presented a motion picture on first aid and cited the merits of taking a first aid course. What Qoes On THIRD FINGER, LEFT HAND. Christmas Eve and engagement rings arrived simultaneously for Seniors Adele Ross and May Farmer, who bring the number of engaged girls in the class of '42 up to five. Allele's fiance is Henry Plahctka, formerly a Loyolan. now in the Army Air Corps at Corsicana. Texas. Air Cadet Plahctka will get his wings in June, when Miss Ross will receive her degree. Art major May Farmer's ring was given to her by Harry- Shahino of Evanston. who was elected president of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity when he attended the University of Wiscon sin. Mr. Shahino is now a chemical engineer with Du Pont. AND BRING YOUR FRIENDS. An idea of the lengths to which one frosted student would go for relief from our recent sub-zero wave may be con strued from the following library notice found on the desk on the morning of Jan. 8, when the mercury had dropped to 14 degrees below zero: Dante's Inferno Circle T VII Please Reserve. ERRARE EST HUMANTJM. When a resident student, enroute to the library, was asked by her roommate to bring back Portrait of Jennie, she returned, not with Robert Nathan's novel, but with the reproduction, from the library's pic ture file, of the portrait of Jeanne Ba- bou. by the French painter, Clouct. What would have occurred, we wonder, had she been requested to return with One Foot in Heaven? FILIPINO FRIPPERIES. Unique and beautiful are the carved-ivory jewelry and exquisitely embroidered kerchiefs, made from the fiber of the pineapple plant, sent to Dorothy Mc Carthy from a first lieutenant in the anti-aircraft corps at Corrcgidor. Philippine Islands, of all places. The Christmas gifts were shipped, of course, before the December 7 crisis. Skyscrapings ll All Comes Back to Me Now. might well be the theme song for collegians as they tell about the way they spent the last days of '41 and how they ushered in '42 . . . Patricia Flynn, Altine Kelleher, Verle Ryan, Catherine Harrison, Regina Wherity, and Mary Jane Harvey had a chance to exchange personal New Year's greetings when they attended De Paul's Alpha Delta fraternity dance . . . The glamour night of the year found Marie Norris, Laura Mahoney and Margery Linnehan dining and dancing at the South Shore Country club . . . Virginia Coffey has more simple attachments the clock ticked twelve at grandfather's farm in Kansas as it did every place else . . . Al though her name denies it, Maryanne Achten must have some French ten dencies, for she started the evening by dining at Jacques French restaurant. How Maryanne Brockhaus, Patty Gould, Kathleen McNulty, LaVerne O'Toole, Shirley Hopper, Paulette Lear, Ruth Rinderer, Marie Nordby, Mar garet Hagan, and Alice Rose Hartnett finished their holiday playtime we do not know but, we do know that they started off in fine style by attending Pi Alpha Lambda's supper dance . . . As petite Sonja Henie glided across the ice, Margaret June O'Brien, Lor raine Cizek, Beatrice Hones, Geraldine Hoffman, Nancy Lou Kelly and Jeanne Kaufmann watched her attentively . . . No one enjoyed Notre Dame's Chi cago club dance at the Stevens any more than did Margery Rowbottom, Marcella Garrity, Jane Lyons, Rita Callaghan and Marie Keating ... In the Continental Room of the Stevens Rita Kennelly and Rosemary Lanahan again blinked to Del Courtney's de lightful rendition of Stormy Weather . . . Jane Freres and Jean Hahn had a splendid time at a dance given by St. Mary's college, Winona . . . Jane Addison and Irene Weber always answer, The Bismarck, when asked where they would like to go . . . Rose- marie Ostendorf didn't have to wish to be in Peoria for she was there, and all glamorous to attend the Tau Omega Zeta formal dance . . . From now on camellias are Gene Brabets favorite flowers, she bad such a good time tea dancing at the Camellia House . . . Margaret McNamee suggests the I'iali- nese Room at the Blackstone to all who haven't been there ... A new hand, yet a good one, is Les Brown's, remarked Dorothy Grill, Margery Happ and Jeanne Coughlin, who had an after theatre supper at the Blackhawk . . . Holiday playtime wouldn't have been complete for Helen Dwyer, Helen O'Day, Patricia Tubby if they hadn't gone to the Panther Room . . . Noth ing less than the Empire Room would have satisfied Frances Wilkinson . . . They went, they saw. and they liked the Pump Room very much They: Vali Ballantine, Phyllis Van Huele and Grace Mannebach . . . A laugh a minute was afforded Nancy Lally, Doris Ruddy and Audrey McDonald, when they saw Louisiana Purchase . . . If you want to see your friends have an open house, as did Viola Bren- nan. Some of the callers were Lenore Brockhaus, Virginia Wathier, Berna dette McSweeney, Mary Elizabeth Huston and Jerry Stutz . . . Inez Thomas was hostess at a luncheon and among her guests were Ruth O'Hearn, Alyce Pankau, Barbara Ohab, and Mary Celeste Shannon . . . Not tea for two, but tea for many was served by Ann Wilkins when she entertained Kathleen Warner, Ruth Conway, Colette Berg eron, Virginia Arado and Dorothy Hein . . . Chatting around Irene Fitz gerald's tea table were Virginia Krejci, Betty Jane Sockness, Patricia Leahy, Audrey Ewry,' Sherli Wolf, Marie Nordby, Joan Crowley, Madeleine Gourtney, Mary Kay Jones, Patricia Herbert, and Virginia Mehren . . . If it isn't bowling it's skating at the Arena for Angela Voller . . . Doris Knockaert prefers watching pro fessionals skate; she saw the Black- hawks play the Montreal Canadians in one of the best hockey games of the season . . . Goodbye for this time . . . study- hard, but keep in the back of your mind our next college dance the Junior Prom another not-to-be-missed social affair. Organists Present Familiar Melodies At Concert, Jan. 20 Intermezzo by Bonnet, a favorite of all. will he played by Angela Voller at the Organ Recital, on Jan. 20. Miss Voller has also chosen Romance Sans Paroles, another selection by Bonnet. Priml's Indian Serenade as played by- Mary Elizabeth Wolfe will delight lis teners. Lovers of Bach's Prelude and Fugue in D Minor will appreciate Mary- Rita Brady's rendition of it. As soothing as its title indicates, When Evening Shadows Gather will be played by Betty Ann Yunker. Berceuse by Rogers will be played by Mary Rita Brady, and Toccatta, by the same com poser, by Jane Claire Brown. Beverly Craggs will play Sibelius' Finlandia. and Rosalie Wiora will con clude the program with Widor's An dante Cantabile and Mueller's Echo Caprice. Music Has Charm To Combat Exams Arture Toscanini and the NBC Sym phony Orchestra have recorded the first and third Acts of Wagner's Die Gotter- dammcrung with all the colorful dynam ics needed to express the lyrical flights and bright picturesque episodes of the Rhine Journey to the heroic tragedy of Siegfried's last scene. Benno Moiseivitch, pianist and dis ciple of Rachmaninoff, has recorded with the accompaniment of the London Philharmonic Orchestra the composer's Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini, with exacting brilliance that belies the tech nical difficulties of the many unique variations which make the Rhapsody- musical labor. Hindemith's Matthias the Painter, which was composed in 1938. has been recorded with all the musical finesse of the Philadelphia Orchestra under the distinguished director, Eugene Ornian- dy. who introduced the creative art of the composer during the 1940-41 season. Like Lily Pons and other singers. Richard Crooks, accompanied on the piano by Frederick Schauwecker, has made recordings of classic airs. Qive Pre'Holiday Musical Program Guest artists in a pre-holiday recital at St. Mary's high school were Mar ianne Donahoe, Louise Szkodzinski, and Marian Anthulis, music students. At the piano. Miss Szkodzinski played Chopin's Etude in C Sharp Minor, Opus 25, No. 7, and the Waltz in E Minor. Miss Donahoe presented the Hungar ian Rhapsody, No. 15, by Liszt, and Miss Anthulis played a violin solo, Meditation from Thais, with Dorothy- Ann Grill as accompanist. Loyola Philosopher Addresses Mu Nu Sigma The philosopher, John of Salisbury, will be the subject of a lecture by the Reverend William J. Millor, S.J., of Loyola university, at the Jan. 20 meet ing of Mu Nu Sigma, the philosophy- club. Father Millor. professor of Latin and Greek at the graduate school at Loyola, has studied extensively in Europe and received his doctorate from Oxford university.
title:
1942-01-16 (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
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Students
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Universities and colleges
subject:
Women's education
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Mundelein College Records
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English
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Chicago, Illinois
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Mundelein College