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Page 89 text:
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.,.lz.......... ..-,FNS l ww v ' ' 'X 1 H 5 ,Ei i :L :ill Honorary President First VicefPresident I -fly . - I REVEREND MOTHER AGNES MRS. J. R. KUTH 'i9i:'.a.,e I . . . J . ,l,3lfiz!:.-1,5 . 1. .1-,7. ..,.5.-. a Executive Secretary Second V1cefPres1dent A. SISTER M. KATHARINE MISS oT1LL1A SCHUBERT -' ii President Secretary . MRS. EDWARD HART MRS. R. A. BISSONNETTE is ' Treasurer ,N . QI' MISS MARY BROWN - Members of the Advisory Board are Mrs Harold Haley Mrs Elmer Johnson Mrs W il, . ' : . , . , . . ,.- 'l H. Kelly, Mrs. Stewart Reed, Mrs. Fred Proebsting, Miss Ethel Method, Miss Beatrice X 1 4 Nancy Finch. S il .- '41 Murnik, Miss Frances Sarazin, Miss Ester Donahey, Miss Helen Fitzgerald, Miss W. Members of the Executive Committee are: Miss Mary Barrett, Miss Margaret Brown, -Q Mrs. H. E. Bakkila, Miss Phyllis Champagne, Miss Blanche Chabot, Miss Elizabeth Davis, Miss Dorothy Devney, Miss Angie Dunning, Miss Florence Duggon, Mrs. A. DeShaw, Miss Rose Mary Eckman, Miss Stella Farrel, Mrs. S. H. Forgette, Miss Mar- garet jordan, Mrs. W. W. Koors, Miss Teresa Long, Miss Cecilia Lachowski, Miss Louise Lyons, Miss Mary Maney, Miss Elsie McAuley. A Future Scholastican . . . Annette Marie Kirchner, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. W. H. Kirchner, CLaurene E. Bissonnette, B. S., '32D Athens, Ohio. Mrs. Oliver Johnson sends the following interesting excerpt from the Ironwood, Michigan Daily. A club for the alumnae of the College of St. Scholastica, Duluth, was organized Monday evening at the home of Mrs. Stewart Reid, North Lawrence Street. Mrs. Reid and Mrs. Elmer Johnson, Wakefield, were named cofchairmen, Miss Nancy Caruso, Hurley, SecretaryfTreasurer. Charter members of the club include Miss Mary Germaine O'Neill and Mrsl Stewart Reid, both of Ironwooclg Mrs. Johnson and Miss Ann Jeanette Cavender, both of Wakef field, Miss Nancy Caruso, Mrs. John Shea, Miss Margaret Jackson, Mrs. Oliver johnson, Mrs. George Reid, and Miss Mildred Endrizzi, all of Hurley, and Mrs. Charles Michela, Bessemer, Michigan, and Mrs. Joseph Raineri. Oil June 6, 1938, The Alumnae of the College of St. Scholastica ,held a dinner meeting in the cafeteria. The meeting climaxed a program of events which included a tour through the Chapel of Our Lady, Queen of Peace, the new College Library, Rockhurst and Stanbrook Halls, and a general survey of the campus. After the Baccalaureate sermon in the chapel, guests and relatives retired to Rockhurst where the traditional Candlelight Ceremony was held and the graduating class of the College was admitted to member' ship in the College Alumnae Association. At the dinner meeting which followed Reverend Mother Agnes addressed the group and stressed the need for a closer bond between the Alumnae and their Alma Mater. On March 4, 1939,at the Greysolon Tea Rooms, the Duluth Alumnae Chapter, with Mrs. Edward Hart presiding, held a luncheon meeting to determine ways and means of raising funds to complete their payment on the Great East Win' dow for the Chapel of Our Lady, Queen of Peace. A series of progressive parties was inaugurated with twenty hos' tesses assuming charge. The Members of the Alumnae of the College of St. Scholasf tica have continued to focus their activities on raising funds for the Great East Window for the Chapel of Our Lady, Queen of Peace. The motif of the window is the influence upon the world of Cur Lady, Queen of Peace. In the center of the window is the figure of Our Lady. Grouped about her are turned toward the Author of Peace and Benignity are figures of the rich and poor, the young and old, the business man and the farmer. The Great East Wmdow not only indicates the dedication of the chapel to Our Lady, Queen of Peace, but also portrays a story. At the extreme apex of the window is a Christogram, a symbol of Christ, in the form of a semifcircle of rays, in- dicating that peace comes from Christ. In the center of the window, is the figure of Our Lady, with arms outspread in benediction over man, whose Mcther she became. Her mantle, enfolding the children of the world, is held on either side by two angels. Throughout the allfenclosing mantle is woven the mystical vine, its branches carrying, from the Source, the sap of life and grace to all races and nations. Under the mantle of Mary appear the figures and the symbols of the harbingers of peace to mankind. They are represented by the figures of great men or women whose standards and labors in the world reveal the peace of Christ, and by the symbols which typify certain activities of men by which peaceful administration is eifected. The Missionary activity is represented by some outstanding missionary.Saints: St. Patrick, for the white raceg St. Francis Xaviar, for the yellow race, St. Peter Claver, for the black race, and St. Isaac Joques, for the red race. On the right and on the left, supporting the weight of the mantle's folds, are the two great peace Popes: Benedict XV and Pius XI. On the lower left is the figure of the saintly Bishop Barraga, who explored this region and claimed it for Christ and the Church. Below these figures, is the figure of Mother Scholastica, breaking ground for the iirst mission school from which Catholic education spread in the Duluth Diocese. On the right, balancing these scenes are the figures of the three Bishops who developed the Church in this' diocese: Bishop McGolrick, Bishop McNicholas, and Bishop Welch. Capital and labor are represented by the industries, which, under the guidance of Christian principles bring peace and prosperity to society. Near the upper edge of the mantle is the symbol of Baptism, which ushers us into the peace of Christianity, and the symbol of Extreme Unction which brings us into the peace of Heaven. Symbolically represented, are the four minisf trations which bring peace between men: Healing, bringing peace or solace to pain, Education, bringing peace and en' lightment to the intellect, Jurisprudence, bringing peace to politics and law, and The Sacerdotal Offices, bringing peace to the soil disquieted by sin.-F. MALLEY
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