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The Lodorians pose standing in their performance attire. The original caption for the photo reads:
"'Hang down your head... Tom Dooley, Hang down your head and die..." strains of four-part harmony floating up from the practice hall of the Loyola LODORIANS... id est, our glee club.. this year, club boasts over thirty active members.
Repertoire consists mainly of folk songs, with a few religious selections for more hallowed occasions... Lodorians sung for the Rogers Park Community Festival in October, for Founders Day, for a charity benefit at Hull House in late fall... performed their traditional duty of leading hymns for the annual Christmas celebration at Madonna Della Strada Chapel... finished the year with a stint in Loyola's Variety Show in March...
Mr. David Campbell directed the group this year, his first."
"Top row: Jerry Wojtascowski, Margaret Manning, Roger Dore, Carol Kubistal, Ken Pveviti, Carol Offut, Ron Dombrowski, Jim Kubik, Frank Collins, Mike Benic, Ned Whiting, Marty Wisenberger, Cheryl Canner, Jackie Faller. Second row: Noel Smoran, Sonia Zdrilish, Barbara Bega, Mary Young, Pat White, Jeanne Kragh, Sally Beazens, Carol Knes, Janice Potacki, Geraldine Griffin, Alberta Matulis, Peggy McCarthy, Jerry Baril, Eve Friend, Joyce Reddington, Janne Neu. First row: Mr Campbell, director; Patricia Brown, Deanna Collins, Agle Augustus, Mary O'Connell, Barbara Doyle, Eleanor Stocker, Diane Dohm, Marie Mycek, Diane Ehrman, Penny Riddiford, Eunice Richter, Margaret Herminutz."
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This article in the Loyola News details Tom O'Hara's record-setting performance at New York, where he set a new world record for the indoor mile. It contains a picture of O'Hara speaking into a microphone.
O'Hara would go on to break his own record a month later (in March) at the Chicago Stadium.
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An aerial view of the Loyola University Medical Center in Maywood, Illinois. The Hines Veterans Administration Hospital can be seen in the top left of the image.
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The 1963 Loyola's Men's Basketball team, winners of the 1963 National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Championship, pose with their championship trophy.
L - R: Capt. Jerry Harkness, John Egan, Chuck Wood, Vic Rouse, Les Hunter, Rich Rochelle, Jim Reardon, Dan Connaughton, Ron Miller, Mgr. John Gabcik, Asst. Mgr. Fred Kuehl, Trainer Dennis McKenna. Kneeling: Coach George Ireland and Asst. Coach Jerry Lyne.
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An aerial view of the former campus of the Rome Center. A stream of students can be seen walking across the road from one building to the gates of another part of the campus.
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Mundelein College (represented by the skyscraper) reclines on a couch while connected to a machine. There is a framed certificate with the word 'Psychiatry' at the top right. To the left of the comic is a bookshelf with books. One of the books has the name of an author, "Freud", on it.
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(L to R:) Dr. Chas Abildgaard, Milton Mozen, Joseph Scheidler, Mary Georgia, BVM, Ignatia Griffin, BVM, Sharon, BVM, Donatus, BVM and James H. Mullaley and other unidentified students stand in front of a building during the Selma March.
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Irene Meyer, BVM, Georgia, Irma Corcoran, BVM, Ignatia Griffin (later Mary Griffin), BVM, and "Ruby" Bonnie Rochetto, surrounded by a crowd, gather in front of a bus as they prepare to head to the Selma March.
On back of photograph:
"SM Irene Meyer * far left (Head of psychology dept.) SM Georgia [Dominic?] SM Irma Corcoran SM Ignatia Griffin *(later Mary Griffin) far right nun" "enroute to Selma "first Row left: "Ruby" - Bonnie Rochetto" "Mundelein College".
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Operation Breadbasket Choir sings and claps their hands with members of the audience joining in.
On back of photograph: "Breadbasket Choir".
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Shinda Tripp, LaShondria Purnell, MuCUBA treasurer, Felisha Tripp and Antonia James sing gospel songs during Black History Month at Mundelein College.
On front of photograph: Miscellaneous crop marks.
On back of photograph: "1990".
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Telisa Castille poses with her portrait of Mayor Harold Lee Washington. Mundelein College United Black Association (MuCUBA) had awarded Washington with the inaugural Black Leadership Award.
On back of photograph: "1989", "aB 87", "1-31". There is a separate slip of paper behind the photograph with the following: "JANUARY 31", ".06 1.95 112%".
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A woman religious lines up a cue in a game of billiards with a group of young boys at a Kiwanis Boys' Club.
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A group of five visiting Mexican students wearing suits and dresses smile in conversation with two women religious.
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Madeline L'Engle speaks with three Mundelein students, who sit near her on a sofa or on the floor. L'Engle holds her glasses on her lap.
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A group of students and adults hold pillows, suitcases, and a Mundelein College banner as they wave in front of a charter bus, on their way to the College Bowl competition.
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Three couples, with the girls in fancier dresses and the boys in uniforms, pose with leafy potted plants below a large portrait of John F. Kennedy.
A cropped version of this image appears in the Skyscraper, Mundelein's student newspaper on November 20, 1963, Page 1. The title of the article is "I Should Have Said No..." by Joan Gulab with an account of a student photographer's journey to report on the event on November 2. The image's caption reads: "THE CALL TO DUTY is answered by Mundelein students and cadets (l. to r.) Bobbie Richard, John W. Arrington, Anita Kaiser, Clint Price, Frank Cosantino, and Carol Grundmann."
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A group of students, the Mundelein chapter of Student Mobilization, meets over a lunch table to plan the anti-Vietnam War, one-day, student mobilization event.
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An article describes the weekly Mundelein Speak-easy events, open to Mundelein and Loyola students, moderated by WLS radio disc jockey Stan Dale. Discussions were frequently on controversial topics and could run for hours, and students and faculty could participate in the debates. The writer says that the Speak-easy has been "whetting the appetites of budding intellectuals". Future guests include Chicago mayor Richard Daley, Alabama Governor George Wallace, and Barry Goldwater. Photographed past guests are Dick Gregory, Ald. Dupres, and Eartha Kitt.
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An article describes the weekly Mundelein Speak-easy events, open to Mundelein and Loyola students, moderated by WLS radio disc jockey Stan Dale. Discussions were frequently on controversial topics and could run for hours, and students and faculty could participate in the debates. The writer says that the Speak-easy has been "whetting the appetites of budding intellectuals". Future guests include Chicago mayor Richard Daley, Alabama Governor George Wallace, and Barry Goldwater. Photographed past guests are Dick Gregory, Ald. Dupres, and Eartha Kitt.
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Students sit on striped towels as picnic cloths on the Mundelein gymnasium floor, with glass Coca-Cola bottles and snacks. Students laugh and converse with each other in groups around these picnic cloths.
This photo appears in the student newspaper, The Skyscraper, on May 18, 1960 (page 8), with the following caption:
"JUST PLAIN FUN was had by all at the Freshmen-Big Sister picnic May 10. Gerry Komperda, freshman (center) especially enjoyed the picnic with her big sister Marge Ryan (far right) after winning the prize for having the most attractive box lunch. The picnic was held in the gymnasium because of rain, but that didn't dampen anyone's spirit."
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Students sit in rows of seats attending the Memorial Service for Martin Luther King, Jr. after his assassination. The main student holds a hand up to her mouth, as does the student behind her.
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Two students face almost entirely away from the camera, one of them holding a guitar. A crowd of mostly students has gathered, standing and sitting on the top step on the raised area where the first two are standing. Parked cars are nearby, and the Mundelein Skyscraper's East side is visible.
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A group of Mundelein students and women religious are all gathered in a large room facing an unseen television to the left.
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Two students in white uniforms on the left side of the photo smile, while one holds a spoon and looks down at a metal drum labeled "TEEN-AGE DIET (MIDDLE INCOME)", which sits on a table with trays of food and beverages representing a day's food.
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A group of students and women religious, including one playing a guitar, greet three cast members of The Trouble With Angels, holding signs that read "Mundelein College Welcomes Rosalind Russell to Chicago," and the same for William Frye, Heyley Milles, and [M]ary Wickes. They are all singing, while the center cast member in a fur coat mimes holding a hand up to her ear to hear better.
On back of photograph:
"Premier of Jane Trahey's 'The Trouble with Angels' a benefit at the Granada Theatre" "#109" "Crop + reduce to 5 1/4 x 4 1/4" "Mundelein College, Chicago"