I nt ue on- tU' all’ VS' BLUES s- Vol. XXIX No. 9 QUEENS COLLEGE, CHARLOTTE, N. C. April 23, 1951 Choir Presents Folk Ballad nt Moseley, Sinclair g. ^ Pupils Present 1 Music Recital The Queens College Department Music presented pupils of Mrs. ^Isie Stokes Moseley and Mrs. Vir ginia Smith Sinclair in a recital °n Friday evening, April 13, 1951, 8:15 P. M. in Ninniss Auditor- '“m. The delightful program, I'^hich was pi'esented, was as fol- iows: Allegro con spirito Andante con espressione ^fom Sonata No. 12-K311, Mozart Nancy Duncan Sonata quasi una Fantasia, Op. 27, No. 1 Beethoven Andante Allegro Allegro molto e vivace Dizidra Reimanis Spring Time Becker To Spring Gounod Dorothy Hill Beatrice Richardson, accompanist ^^tude Op. 10, No. 4 Chopin Dzidra Reimanis Nocturne, Op. 27, No. 1 Chopin Second Ballade, Op. SB Chopin Beatrice Richardson Nel Cor Piu Non Mi Sento, Paisiello I Know That My Redeemer Liveth, from The Messiah Handel Ruth Ward Beatrice Richardson, accompanist Tour Russian Folk Songs Liadoff-Siloti Legend of the Birds I Danced with a Mosquito Cradle Song Lance Nancy Duncan T'a Soiree dans Grenade....Debussy' Beatrice Richardson Scenes fron; Carnaval, Op 9. Schuman Dizidra Reimanis Serious Seniors Gallivanting The Seniors are not to be blamed coming to breakfast in jeans ^•id plaid shirts on Wednesday, ^Pril 11^ or for sneaking off for the, to have fun and to act fancy- ^ee. They must have felt gay as marched out of chapel, singing '^ith loud voices, “We’re Going on ^ Picnic.” It was the day of the 6nior Picnic when they went to ^iand Point on the Catawba River ^ spend the entire day. During this ^y in which no classes met, the ®^iors bathed, played baseball^ tennis, and card games. A tasty, ^^ch was prepared for them by Squires and Miss Albright. aft Composer Will Attend Concert On May 6 About five o’clock on Wednesday Ternoon, a group of tired Seniors I ^turned to their Alma Mater with ^’^a-burned faces, aching limbs, and ^bawing desires to return to their ®®Sons and to finish their college I ?^beers. Barron, Reynolds Top Scholarship In Graduating Class Miss Helen West, Registrar, has announced the names of the Vale dictorian and Salutatorian of the class of 1951. The Valedictorian will be Margaret Barron, who has a scholastic average of 2.6, and the Salutatorian will be Alice Reynolds, whose average is 2.5. Margaret hails from Seneca, South Carolina. She has been very active throughout her college years. During her sophomore year, Mar garet was chosen as Treasurer of the Student Christian Association, President of the Home Economics Club, and she was on the Dean’s List for her high scholastic achieve ments. As a Junior, Margaret was again placed on the Dean’s List, elected to Sigma Mu, honorary scholastic fraternity, and she was also Secretary of the Student Chris tian Association. She was elected by the Student Body to be the Boarding Student Vice President of the Student Christian Association during 1950-1951; and again, her name ranked high on the Dean’s List. Margaret is majoring in Home Economics. Alice is a Charlotte resident and one of the most popular of the Day Student Seniors. She has given much of her time to extra-curri cula activities during her four years at Queens. During her fresh man year, Alice won the first place award in the WCTU Essay Con test. As a sophomore, she main tained the high scholastic require ments for Dean’s List. Alice served in the capacity as Business Mana ger of the BLUES during her junior year; and during the second (Continued On Page Three) Music enthusiasts at Queens and in Charlotte are looking forward to the second presentation by the Queens College Choir of “Half Moon Mountain” by Edwin Ger- schefski. This composition will be a part of the annual ISCM concert on May 6, at 4:00 P. M. in Ninniss Auditorium, and will be a high light of the Fine Arts Festival. Other works to be presented on the program are a “Sonata for Four Hands” by Poulenc, played by Elsie Stokes Moseley and Nancy Eagle, and Bartok’s “First Sonata for Violin and Piano,” played by E. Lindsey Merrill and Martha Rowe Merrill. “Half Moon Mountain” is a folk ballad, the story of which was taken from an article by Robert Hagy which appeared in Time magazine several years ago. The story concerns itself with an elder ly couple who, although they lived only a short distance from New York City, refused to adoptt he modern way of life. Their outlook was consistently that of several centuries ago. The only “modern conveniences” of which they ap proved were their “old age pension checks.” The story is a most ap pealing combination of humor and pathos. The musical setting is di vided into four sections: Fifty-five Minutes From Broadway, Land of Plenty, Black-Haired Woman, and Back to Their Shack. The composer of “Half Moon Mountain” is dean of the music school at Converse College in Spartanburg, South Carolina. Mr. Gerschefski is nationally known as a concert pianist as well as a com poser. At one time he was secretary for Joseph Schillinger who develop ed the Schillinger System of com position and orchestration, a sys tem now used by many of the com posers writing movie music in Hol lywood. Earl F. Berg, as in last year’s presentation of the Gerschefski composition, will be heard as bari- (Continued On Page Four) Juniors Try Senior "Rats" In Special Court On Thursday evening, April 12, at 5 o’clock, the Juniors and Seniors donned their jeans and plaid shirts and went out to the Gottleib cabin off Providence Road for the annual Junior-Senior affair. Several out- of-doors games were played by the group, after which a most delicious picnic supper, consisting of barbe cue, slaw, brunswick stew, pickles, potato chips, rolls, and coffee was served by Rogers Barbecue Cater ers. Following supper, a most hil arious “Rat Court” was held by “the Junior Order of the Mooses” (better known as the Junior Class). The defendants were various mem bers of the Senior Class. The fol lowing were “tried” for having made general offenses: Rainey Gamble, Martha Harrison, Louise White, Mary Long, Pete Peterson, Alice Reynolds, Virginia Love, Gwen Ewell, and Lucy Dunn Guion. Approximately sixteen of the girls of the Senior Class have been “pinned” or have received dia monds; these persons had to stand before the group and tell how she got her boy-friend to propose. Those receiving this “punishment” were as follows: Bertie Ayers, Jane Blakely, Martha Harrison, Mary Long, Sara Claire Little, Betty Ann Pyron, Lorraine Murphy, Katie Chapman, Holly Lambdin, Betty Wayne Williams, Emily Shipp, Caroline Collins, Lois Dell Strong, Betty Fowler. The picnic was certainly a suc cess, and the Junior-Senior affair given in honor of the Class of 1951 will be an event long remembered by both the Juniors and Seniors. Students Chosen To Serve On Advisory Council The following students have been chosen to represent their college on the Freshman Advisory Council: BOARDING STUDENTS Biddix, Sarah Frances Boyd, Kitty Coleman, Marthann Crosland, Jean Davis, Jackie Dobbins, Beth Harvin, Louise Heer, Carole Hines, Joan Johnson, Jackie Lyons, Evie McLaurin, Jane MacPherson, Frances Mclnnes, Harriet Mintz, Mary Emma Mitchell, Laura Peede, Ruby Powell, Pat Query, Anne Sherrill, Anne Skelton, Charlie Stockner, Carol Tillson, Barbara Turner, Sylvia Warren, Charlene White, Louise Enloe DAY STUDENTS Anderson, Jane Black, Patsy Chambers, Dorothy Gettinger, Georgianne Hager, Grace Harmon, Patsy Hon, Charlotte Hovis, Joann Lemmons, Mary Lib Potts, Margaret Smith, Willodene Stegall, Bettie Queens Literary Group Honored At Davidson On Thursday, April 19, the mem bers of the Queens chapter of Sigma Upsilon, national literary fraternity, traveled to Davidson College as guests of Upsilon chap ter there. This was the first time a group of women has been present for one of the Davidson groups’ meetings. At only one other time has a woman been invited to read her work for the fraternity. Five of the members of the Queens chap ter and three Davidson members read some of their work. Mae Mc Clure read her short story, “Human Nature and the Soul”; Louise White, Frances MacPherson, and Murphey Alexander presented a group of their sonnets; Claribel Moles read her story, “I Was a Day Student.”