PAGE EIGHT THE CAMPUS ECHO THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1957 NCC Alumni Win Top Jobs, Support The Teams ABOUT THE ALUMNI By LINDSEY A. MERRITT Alumni News Editor CHARLOTTE CHAPTER AIDS ATHLETIC PROGRAM The Charlotte Chapter of the Alumni Association recently sent checks totaling $155 to the National Office here at NCC to be applied to the special athletic scholarship fund and to pay dues i WHERE ARE THEY??? for some chapter members. According to a spokesman for the Charlotte group, another check to assist the athletic pro gram will be forthcoming in the very near future. Marion Jacobs, ’51, presently employed in the Charlotte school system, is president of the Char lotte chapter and J. Mills Hollo way, ’50, Business Manager at J. C. Smith University, is treas urer. Congratulations to the Char lotte Chapter for a commendable undertaking. HOSPITAL FOOD SERVICE SUPERVISOR Lily Holloway, a member of the graduation class of 1954, is now employed as a Food Service Supervisor in the Methodist Hos pital in Philadelphia. Prior to accepting the Philly position, Lily was a Home Eco nomics instructor in the Pickney High School in Carthage. While here, Lil was an active member of the Cooley-Winchell Home Economics Club, the Cheering Squad, WAA, and a member of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority. She is now a member of the Philadelphia Chapter of our Alumni Association which her brother,, H. H. Holloway, ’50, heads. LEEK, ’51 BLOUNT, ’56 WILLIAMS, ’55. BLACK, ’56 TWIN CITY CHAPTER FETES TEAM, SUBMITS DUES The Winston-Salem Chapter, headed by Bennie L. Moore, held a reception for visiting alumni and members of the basketball team recently when Floyd H. Brown’s, ’45, Eagle basketball club journeyed over to the neigh boring city for a CIAA contest with the W-S Teachers College Rams. The reception was held in the W-S YWCA and refreshments were served to all team members and alumni who were in attend ance. The Eagles ,of course, won the game 82-73 to show their ap preciation for the feast. More recently, the National Association received a check from the Winston-Salem group for membership dues for twenty. The members who are now em ployed or reside in the twin-city are: Doris Armstrong, Olivia Bat tle, Nettie Booker, Savannah Craighead, Rev. Leroy Davis, Claudius Downs, Delores Dyson, \L// UJCK' -inrn'-uwii!* mm B ay toaste%^ ASTRONOMERS! Long sunsets make you impatient? Do you hate standing around, twirling your telescope, wait ing for dark? Cheer up . . . now you can fill thatgap! Take out your Luckies —and you’re in for a Twilight High light! Luckies are out of this world when it comes to taste. That’s be cause ^ Lucky is all cigarette . . . nothing but fine, mild, naturally good- tasting tobacco that’s TOASTED to taste even better. Light up a Lucky yourself. You’ll say it’s the best-tast ing cigarette you ever smoked! Lily Holloway, ’54, is em ployed as a Food Service Supervisor in the Methodist Hospital in Philadelphia. Glover Hill, Verdelle Hill, Girtha Jeffers, E. B. Johnson, Annie O. Jones, James L. Lassiter, Bennie Moore, Arthur Payne ,Laura Ann Penn, Ernestine Pratt, Greneva Puryear, Gladys Roberson, and Pauline Wilson. Mrs. N. G. Booker is corres ponding secretary of the chapter. TO HEAD D. C. ALUMNI John Peele, Jr., ’55, has been elected as president of the Wash ington, D. C., chapter to replace J. Calvin Adams, ’54, who was recently called into the Armed Forces. Peele, now employed in the Government Patent Office in Washington, was former co editor of the EAGLE and served on the staff of the CAMPUS ECHO while enrolled here at NCC. Rosemary Alsbrook, ’47, is vice president, and Hattie J. Tay lor, ’55, is corresponding secre tary of the Capitol City alumni. STUCK FOR DOUGH? WHAT IS A NOISY POUnCAl MEETING? WHAT IS AN ANGRY BUTCHER? r.^START STICKIINGI ^ MAKE *25 We’U pay $25 for every Stickler we print—and for hundreds more that never get used! So start Stickling— they’re so easy you can think of dozens in seconds! Sticklers are simple riddles with two-word rhyming answers. Both words must have the same number of syllables. (Don’t do drawings.) Send ’em all with your name, address, coUege and class to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box 67A, Mount Vernon, N. Y. Raucous Caucus Cleaver Heaver HARTHA BACHNER RADCLIFFE JAMES BUTLER. BOSTON COLL. JAMES POWELL. ALABAMA WHAT !S A BAD-NEWS TELEGRAM! WHAT IS A HUG IN HOLUND? WHAT IS FAKE CLASSICAL MUSIC? WHAT IS A WOLF IN SHEEP’S CLOTHING? Dire Wire Dutch Clutch W. L. GARNER IOWA Mock Bach Sham Lamb CAROL POST. COLL. OF THE SEQUOIAS ANNE FELL. OKLAHOMA HOLLY JENNINGS O. OF N. CAROLINA Luckies Taste Better “IT’S TOASTED” TO TASTE BETTER . . . CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER. ERICA’S LEADINO MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTES (Continued on Page 121 PRODUCT OF ©A.T. Co. PLACEMENT BUREAU LOSES ASSISTANT NCC’s Placement Bureau’s Services have become so out standing that the bureau is now without one of its assistants. Mary Elizabeth Mebane, ’55, former graduate assistant in'the Placement Bureau has resigned that position to accept a job as Teacher-Librarian in the Aca demy Heights School of Pine hurst, N. C. While enrolled as an under graduate here in NCC Mary majored in English and was a member of the CAMPUS ECHO and Alpha Kappa Mu. As a sen ior she was named to Who’s Wli» Among Students in American Colleges and Universities. Dr. W. M. Brown, Director of the Placement Bureau told this writer, “The absence of Miss Mebane’s services in the Place ment Bureau has been felt tre mendously; however, we were well pleased to be able to rec ommend a North Carolina Col lege graduate to fill the im mediate position at Academy Heights.” Hundreds of NCC graduates have received a job assistance from the Placement Bureau and all seniors, graduate students or others interested in the service of the Bureau should stop by Room 02, Administration Building, and file eroployment credentials with the Placement Personnel. Carolyn Black, ’56, is now a science teacher on the faculty of Carver High School, Winston-Sa- lem, North Carolina.