The QuilfonScm VOL. XLI Junior-Senior Banquet To Be Held Tomorrow Night Evelyn Cline To Present Piano Recital Evelyn Cline, assisted by Calvin Strickland, will present her Jun ior Voice Recital tonight at 8:00 in Memorial Hall. It will be the first Junior Recital to be present ed by a girl in a number ol! years. Maxine Ljung will be the accom panist. The program consists of Ger man, French, and Italian numbers with a duet from Don Giovanni. The last part of the program will be made up of light numbers such as "Summertime," "Bess, You Is My Woman Now," "I Got Plenty of Nuthin'," "The Nightingale," and "Love Is Where You Find It." The public is cordially invited to attend the recital. International Relations Club To Meet The International Relations Club will meet on Thursday, April 28, with the Intercollegiate Coun cil at the Student Union Building of Bennett College to take part in a lecture and discussion led by Dr. Chatterjee, a visiting professor at Bennett and native of India. Dr. Chatterjee, who was a personal acquaintance of Mahatma Ghandi, will speak concerning an Asian's views of the West. Discussion will follow the lecture with members of the Intercollegiate Council par ticipating. The Intercollegiate Council is composed of students and faculties of Guilford, Woman's College, Greensboro College, Bennett and A. & T. Colleges, interested in get ting to know each other and to discuss college, domestic and in ternational issues. The Guilford College group of the Intercollegi ate Council is under the guidance of Dr. Lovejoy and Mr. Stafford of the sociology department. The meeting is open to all stu dents and faculty, and offers an opportunity for a more learned understanding of the way that other nations look at the United States, their government and cul ture. The Guilford group will meet at Memorial Hall at 7:30 Thursday night. GUILFORD COLLEGE, FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1955 I - |njKj9 ' iki:4; ' ' " m?' jd ||l * .} In the above picture are the main cogs in the directing and planning of the Junior-Senior Banquet. Front row, left to right: Margaret Ann White, Betsy Marklin, Emily Warrick. Back row, left to right: Charlie Strider, Evelyn Cline, and Frank Laraway. Fisher And Tennyson In Chapel Lectures This past Wednesday we were fortunate in having Mr. Hallain Tennyson as speaker during the chapel period. Mr. Tennyson, the great-grandson of the Victorian Poet Laureate, Alfred Lord Ten nyson, is well known in his own right. He is the writer of books, plays and short stories. Mr. Tennyson is an active mem ber of the Society of Friends and during 1945 he traveled exten sively in India under the auspices of the American Friends Service Committee. He is presently occu pied with the writing of a novel about India. All of this and many other things can be said of Mr. Tennyson, but most of all we wish to express our enjoyment of the lecture which he gave on Wednes day. Today we have another out standing chapel speaker in the person of Dr. Edgar J. Fisher, Di rector of the Southern Region, American Friends of the Middle East. He will speak this morning on "The Middle East in Transi tion." He has spoken to many col ege and university groups and his lddress should be of interest to all of us. Revelers' Club To Present Spring Play April 29-30 The Revelers' Club will present its spring production on Friday and Saturday nights, April 29 and 30. The cast, under the direction of Lee Haring, includes Eileen Murray, Lee Haring, Billy Barnes, Jim Shelton, Dale Embich, Sydney Thompson, Nicole Schreiner, Mar tin Singer, Ted Brown and Samuel Walters. Lee Schmid has the po sition of Stage Manager. The Lady's Not For Burning, by Christopher Fry, is a poetic com edy set in fifteenth century Eng land. The characters are clear-cut and amusing. The plot is rather lost in the confusion of the telling but is simple to follow. It con cerns a young man who wants to be hanged for at leas, one murder he has committed and a young girl who is to be hanged for witch craft. She has no desire to be hanged and so Thomas, the young man, tries to prove to the mayor that it is ridiculous not to please each of them in their own fashion. The play will be held in Memor ial Hall with Guilford students admitted free. Bill lefiries And Carolinians To Provide Music Tomorrow evening, April 23, the Junior Class will honor the seniors at the annual Junior-Sen ior banquet to be followed by a semi-formal dance. Beginning at 6:30, a roast turkey dinner with all the trimmings will be served; afterwards, the band of Bill Jef fries and the Carolinians will sup ply dance music until 11:30. This year the Junior Class has worked hard to provide an even ing of good entertainment for its guests. The theme of the banquet and dance is, of course, kept a se cret until the awaited night, but from the rumors that have been leaking out, tomorrow night's pro gram promises an evening of un usual and amusing performances and fun for guests and hosts alike. The committee chairmen that have been in charge of organizing this event are: decorations, Ed Brown and Charlie Strider; food, Emily Warrick; invitations, Mar garet Ann White; programs, Betsj Marklin; and entertainment, Eviu Cline and Ketchel Adams. Calendar of Events APRIL 22 APRIL 28 FRIDAY, April 22 (1) Chapel, Mem. Hall, 10:15 a.m., Dr. Edgar F. Fisher. (2) Guilford vs. High Point, Base ball, High Point. SATURDAY, April 23 (1) Junior - Senior Banquet and Dance, Gymnasium, 6:30 p.m. SUNDAY, April 24 (1) College Sunday School Class, Fine Arts Room, 9:30 a.m. (2) S. C. A. Vespers, Hut, 7:30 p.m. MONDAY, April 25 (1) Class Meetings, 10:15 a.m. (2) Closed Study, 7:30-10:00 p.m. TUESDAY, April 26 (1) Guilford vs. East Carolina, Baseball, Home. (2) Guilfordian Staff Meeting, Founders Hall, 5:00 p.m. WEDNESDAY, April 27 (1) Chanel. Mem. Hall, 10:15 a.m., Dr. Herschel Folger. THURSDAY, April 28 (1) Guilford vs. Atlantic Christian, Baseball, Wilson. (2) W. S. G. Council, W. A. A. Room, 5:00 p.m. NO. 19