SATURDAY, MARCH 30, 1957 THE CAMPUS ECHO PAGE THREE Over 200 On First Semester Honor Roll Here Sophs, Seniors Lead Honor Roll By ANNIE M. SPAULDING Six students with perfect academic averages of “A” head a list of one hundred and ninety students on NCC’s honor roll for the first semester of the cur^ rent school year. The remaining 186 students earned “B” honors during the same p>eriod. Those making all “A’s” in clude Portia J. Burt, senior, Hillsboro; Marvin N. Daven port, senior, Washington; Theo dore E. Gilliam, sophomore, Durham; Yvonne J. Griswell, senior, Columbia; Annie Mae Spaulding, sophomore, Durham; and Allen J. Wright, senior, Asheville. This marks the second con- secative year that Portia Burt, Yvonne Griswell, and Annie Spanlding have made all “A’s.” Thirty seven students, all juniors and seniors, made the Dean’s List. These include: Lon nie L. Adams, Willow Springs; Iris Braswell, Tarboro; Calvin Lee Brown, Roanoke Rapids; Christina R. Browne, Columbia; Loleta Brown, Tarboro; Her-i bert Bullard, Clinton; Claudi- ette BuUuck, Rocky Moimt; Julius L. Chambers, Mt. Gilead; Earlene R. Coward, Washing ton; Janie M. Crawford, Dur ham; Patricia Davidson, Char lotte; Leonard A. Davis, Hun tersville; Marion C. Davis, Asheville; Statin Davis Jr., Wil son; Carrie L. Fair, Asheville; Essie Garner, Rooky Mount; Cicero M. Green, Burgaw; Jua nita Gregory, Durham; Law rence Hampton, Leaksville. Claressa Hightower, Gaffney, S. C.; Shirley M. Hobbs, Wilsonj Marcus Ingram, Albemarle j Shirley T. James, Jamesville; Joyce Johnson, Rose Hill; Na-i poleon Jones, Wilson; Carrie M. Lane, Selma; Inez Lawhorn, Aberdeen; Barbara A. Lump kin, Durham; Helen M. Mc Clain, Durham; Bobbie Mickles, Charlotte; Anna J. Newkirk, Apex; Sigredda Richardson, Nashville; Annie R. Robinson, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.; Genevieve Robinson, Asheville; Valjeanne Simmons, Winston-Salem; Ome ga Smith, Newport News, Va.; Andress Taylor, Durham; Ma rion D. Thorpe, Durham; La- vern Whitehead, Chinquapin; Shirley R. Williams, Siler City; Weldon F. Willoughby, More- head City. Other students on the “B” honor roll for the first semes ter were: James Alston, Mar garet Anderson, William H. An derson, James A. Barnes, Vir ginia Barnes, Sadie Battle, William R. Battle, Naomi J. Berry, Herman Boone, Lucy M Brandon, Ernestine Brewer, Roy J. Brock, Barbara J. Brown, Earlene D. Brown, James C. Buford, Bernice Bul lock, Yvonne Bullock, William N. Burnette, Lee Q. Calhoun, Dora E. Carrington, Edward Chapman, James M. Chavis, Eva B. Cheatham, Burnell Close, Roberta J. Cooke, Bar bara Crockett, Shirley Dudley, Clarence H. Ellis, Sarah J. Ellison, Marlene Enoch, Ella T, Eure, John C. Exum. Others are Johnnie M. Fair, Ulysses Faulkner, Samuel J. Floyd, Annette - R. Frederick, Carolyn C. Futress, Carolyn J. Gatling, Samuel Gibson Jr., Mattie E. Giles, Sterling B. Gor-i don, WiUiam Goudlock, Irisi Grant, Catherine Greene, Clara Hairston, Esther R. Hammond, Ophelia Hankins, Thelma Y. Harlee, Charles E. Harris, Ger-Drewlyn Richardson, Fredreda trude Harris, Harold M. Harris, Readie B. J. Harris, Claude Har rison, Lizzie B. Harrison, Har old L. Hauser, Shirley G. Hayes, Patsy E. Headen, James E. Hedgepeth, Gloria L. Humph rey, Myra Hunter, Mary J. Hos kins, William E. Jackson, La-» Rose James, Cynthia D. Jarman, Philip Jefferson, Faye Jeffries, Luther R. Jeralds, Marvin John son, Rose M. Jones, Samuel Jones, Doris Jordan, Mable Jor dan, Therlon Joyner. Also in the “B” Honor Roll are Eddie Kearney, Clifford Koontz, Robert L. Kornegay, Raymond A. Lacy, Bertha M. Lewis, Charlotte McClamb, Cynthia A. McDonald, Betty A. McKenzie, Barbara S. McLin- den, Glenda Manning, Herman Manning, Paul R. Mason, Lloyd M. Mitchell, Doris E. Moore, Iris L. Murphy, Jesse K. Mur phy, Gloria R. Newton, Thelmai Norman, Barbara Odom, Geral dine Ormond, Barbara Overton. Clarice Parker, Bettye Patter son, AJma Peace, Madelyn Pen- nix, Bertha J. Peterson, Theo^ dore L. Pickett, Valeria M. Powe, Marshall Redding, Al bert E. Reid,- Bessie L. Reid, ft : C. Roberson, Francis Roberts, Ethel A. Robinson, Daisy' L. Smith, Anna L. Sowell, Sarah D. Spivey, Annie Rose Stephen, Vernice Stephens, Rudy Street-^ er, Mary F. Tate, Naomi Thomp son, Geraldine Tillery, Miriam Towe, John H. Wallace, Merilyn H. Washington, Roger C. Wat son, Barbara E. Wells, Jean E. White, William F. White Jr., Davesene Wiggins, Dorothy M. Williams, James E. Williams, Melvin R. Williams, Anne Wil son, Ronald L. Wilson, Lenoris Witherspoon, and Pauline Wynn. Poetry Contest Open To Students NCC students are being in vited for the first time to com pete in the third annual River side poetry writing contest. The contest is being sponsored by the interdenominational pro- testant Riverside Church of New York city ajid is open to all students of accredited col leges in the United States. Winning poems will be pub lished in a special anthology, consisting of Marianne Moore, Alan Swallow and Howard Nemerov. A board of judges will review the entries. The closing date for manu scripts is May 1, 1957. The win ning poems will be announced by August 1. Competing students must be; 26 years of age and under and must first submit manuscripts to the college representative here. The selection which sur vives local competition will be Juniors Sponsor Blind Jazzers By ANDREW EVANS The junior class of North Carolina College invited the Rhythm Kidds of the State School for the Blind in Raleigh, to make a repeat performance in the B. N. Duke auditoriimi on March 29, 1957. The Rhythm Kidds enjoyed immense success in an earlier performance here forwarded by the representa-1 which was sponsored by the tive to the Riverside Contest Board on or before May 1. Poems must be original, un published (except in collegej publications) in English and un der one hundred lines in length. English instructor H. G. Daw son Jr. has been named by Dr. W. Edward Farrison, English department chairman, as the NCC representative. He may be contacted for further informa tion in either the English office on the third floor of the Class Room Building or the CampuH Echo office on the first floor of the library. junior class. Since their organization about five years ago, the Rhy thm Kidds have won praisea throughout the eastern section of North -Carolina and in por tions of Virginia. Mr, Marcus Ingram, who was once a student at the State School for the Blind and who iS' now a junior at North Carolina College, was master of cere monies for the group. Having played in the band during his latter high school days, Ingram still keeps in close contact with the group. iVHAT fSA lUCKY lunch WHAT WAS HELEN OF TROYf Chic Greek JACK FILES. U. OF ARKANSAS WHAT A MENU! A dank frank, an ol’ roll, k pallid salad, and a dry pie. Let’s face it, friend—yoiir lunch-time fare needs brightening! Recipe: Kght up a Lucky! It won’t make a filet out of that frank, but it’s a Noon Boon nevertheless. A Lucky, you see, is all cigarette—aU great smoking, all the way through. It’s made of fine tobacco—mild, good-tasting tobacco that’s TOASTED to taste even better. But why wait till noon to try one? Right now, you’U say Luckies are the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked! WHAT IS A GREENHOUSE ? Bloom Room t. eUY WILSON. U. OF VIRGINIA WHAT'S A SHY HINDU SOLDIER? Meek Sikh ROBERT FRIEDMAN. U. OF CALIFORNIA WHAT IS A STOLEN BOAT? Hot Yacht DAVID KLEIN. LOYOLA U. OF LOS ANCCLES WHAT IS A GREEDY ENGUSHMAN? Mutton Glutton RICHARD MANNING. PITT WHAT IS A STRICT DISCIPLINARIAN f Mean Dean CLAUDE ERBSEN. AMHERST WHAT IS A CLUMSY SAILOR I Anchor Clanker JOHN SIMS. AUBURN STUDENTS! MAKE $25 Do you like to shirk work? Here’s some easy money— start Stickling! We’ll pay $25 for every Stickler we print—and for hundreds more that never get used. Sticklers are simple riddles with two-word rhyming answers. Both words must have the same number of syllables. (Don’t do drawings.) Send your Sticklers with your name, address, college and class to Happy-Joe- Lucky, Box 67A, Mount Vernon, N. Y. Luckies Taste Better ‘IT’S TOASTED” TO TASTE BETTER ... CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER! -SWifiaiy,- ©A. I. Co. PRODUCT or AMERICA’S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTES

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