THE COLLEGE NEWS Page Five 1944 Presents F our Candidates for New Self-Cov. Secretary The candidates nominated by the sophomore class for secretary of the Self-Government Association are Patricia Saint Lawrence, Jean Brunn, Diana Lucas, and Dora Benedict. The collegé vote for this office will be held on Tuesday, March 24. The secretary of ° Self-Govern- ment is a member of the executive board of the Association. She takes minutes of the board meet- ings and posts them on the bulletin board in Taylor. She writes let- ,ters to students who have broken the Self-Government rules. Patricia Saint Lawrence Patricia Saint Lawrence was president of her. class last year. She is the sophomore member of the Self-Government Association which puts her on the executive board. She is a member of the Science Club. Jean Brunn Jean Brunn, vice-president of the sophomore class, is on the sub- freshman and freshman handbook committees. She is a member of the Players’ Club and of the Stage Guild. Diana Lucas As treasurer of the Self-Govern- ment Association, Diana Lucas is on the executive board of the or- ganization. She is on the fresh- Postponement The David Hilt Tennent Memorial Lecture scheduled for this Saturday, March 21, Paradise Lost Overheard in the stacks: “Where the Hell is the City of God?” has been tentatively post- poned yntil May 6. ) man handbook committee. She is | a member of Choir and Glee Club and is promotion manager of the NEWS. Dora Benedict Dody Benedict is president of the sophomore class. She is as- sistant chairman of the chapel committee and is a member of the Science Club. Treasurer The following have been nomi- nated by the Freshman Class for Treasurer of the Self-Government Association: Mary Cox, Jerry Beal, Alice H’Doubler, Helena Hersey. B. M. and Haverford To Perform ‘Ei jah’| The Spring Musical Service with Haverford will be held on Sunday evening, March 22, in Goodhart at 8 o’clock. The combined choirs of Bryn Mawr and Haverford will present excerpts from Mendels- sohn’s Oratorio, “Elijah.” Soloists will be Mary Rambo, ’48, Nancy Sapp, ’45, Richard Bauer, of Hav- erford and Peter B. Trump, of the Haverford—School. Mary Rambo and Margot Dethier, ’42, will sing a duet; the Trio, “Lift Thine Eyes,” will be sung by Helen Burch, ’45, Barbara Nicholson, ’44, and Katherine Tappen, ’44. Mr. Willoughby will conduct the choirs. The presentation of an Oratorio is a new undertaking. | Alliance Will Sponsor Student Summer Jobs | Continued from Page One | 'students may wish to. gain in the | : : (field of their major departments, | with the defense effort. A similar plan was successfully | worked out last summer at Con- | necticut College. A list of possible employers or agencies was com- | piled there, and has been submit- |ted to -Miss Ward and approved. |Miss Alison Raymond, warden of | Pembroke West, is in charge of | getting the necessary information jand making the suggestions. Indi- vidual appointments with Miss Raymond will treat each student’s ! problem separately. Miss Raymond is bringing the old list up-to-date with positions made open by the war. These jobs include work in settlement houses, rural community organizations, land _ housing projects, which need student workers badly. There are also many positions to be had in few writing jobs and one or two | government agency positions. The ‘easiest work to get is the volun- teer job, but there are also possi- | bilities for salaried positions. Much of the work, while not di- rectly under the National Defense organization, is connected with the defense effort. There are some openings in research projects al- lied with defense. It is difficult to find jobs in students’ home towns, but this is’ possible in large cities. With this service the Alliance hopes to help the student to con- tact prospective employers, and also to decide where her effort would be best spent. hospitals and clinics, as well as a| Sophomores Piownit ~ Candidates for New Undergrad Secretary The Sophomore Class has nomi/ nated Katherine Brunn, Mary Sue Chadwick, and Tappen, Jean Anne Sprague as candidates for the secretary of the Undergradu- ate Association. The secretary of the Undergrad- uate Association, in addition to taking minutes of all board meet- ings and writing official letters, helps run the Activities Drive and is chairman of the Point Commit- tee. Katherine Tappen Katherine Tappen is Second Sophomore member of the Under- graduate Association. She is the Sophomore song mistress, a mem- ber of the Choir, and_ business manager of the Glee Club. She is active in the Players’ Club. Jean Brunn’s_ activities have been listed in the article on Self- Government nominations. Mary Sue Chadwick Mary Sue Chadwick is secretary of the Athletic Association. She is a member of the Varsity Players’ Club and teaches a Maids’ class. Anne Sprague Anne Sprague is treasurer of the Art Club. She is also hall rep- ;resentative for her class in Den- bigh. Trick-of-the-W eek Miss Gardiner: ‘‘Now I’m . going to run rapidly through ‘the digestive system of the worm.” Summer Camp Lists are being posted if the halls which students (es- pecially freshmen). ‘who are interested in volunteering as councillors at the Bryn Mawr Camp should sign. The camp, in Stone Harbor, New Jersey, is for underprivileged children. Volunteers are needed for one and two week periods in June and July. ¢ Miss Meigs’ Campus Portraits. Exhibited Continued from Page One serve her subjects, then paint their. pictures from her mental image. The trouble with this most recent portrait, she says, is that she and the “would-be student” live in. the same apartment, Madrigal Club The Madrigal Club, under Mr. Willoughby’s direction, “meets Monday afternoons at 5:80 and is’ still open to new members. There will be a concert in the spring. Spring is here, The grass is riz, I wonder where The flowers is. At JEANNETT’S The smoke of slower-burning Camels contains 28% LESS R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C. than the average of the 4 other largest-selling ciga- rettes tested—less than any of them—according to independent scientific tests of the smoke itself! * You'll find the answer when you try Camels yourself. From the first puff right through the last puff in the pack—and ‘pack after pack— Camels give you the flavorful smoking you like with the mildness that lets you enjoy it! So make it a point to try Camels—the milder cigarette with less nicotine in the smoke. t “HE campus favorite is Camel=the cigarette with: less nicotine in ‘bas smoke! Yes, country-wide surveys show that America’s favor- ite cigarette ranks first with college students, too. : pa ___ the Csavetfe of Costlier Tobaccos