THE COLLEGE NEWS Pége Five Nominees Named For Undergrad . The Junior Class has nominated’ the following candidates for Vice- ‘President of the Undergraduate Association. ) Ada Klein Ada wae First Sophomore. Mem- ber to Undergrad’ and also the Freshman Member her first year. She was Manager of ’48’s Fresh- man Show. She is spending her Junior year in Mexico, where she was head of the Smith Group for the first semester. Ann Chase Ann is Secretary of Undergrad, and Chairman of the Undergradu- ute Committee for the Drive. She was vice-president of her Freshman elass. Betty Hamilton Betty is First Junior Member of Undergrad. She was head of the Activities Drive this year and was one of her class Chairmen Fresh- man year. Ning Hitchcock Ning is Publicity Head of the Alliance, and was head of the In- dustrial Group last year. She also helped organize the Art Studio. Leila Jackson (alternate) A former member of the class of ’46, Lee took two years off to join the WAVES. Before she left B. M. Six Beats Drexel’s Varsity Bryn Mawr defeated the Drexel varsity basketball team 26-21 on the losers’ floor on March 1, but decisively lost the second team game 47-18. Bryn Mawr comfortably led the home team 15-5 at'the half, but al- lowed Drexel to diminish the mar- gin by the end of the game, to make it an exciting finish. Ning Hitchcock led the ‘scoring with 16 points. : In the second team contest, on the other hand, Drexel ‘increased their lead, after the half, to leave no doubt as to the outcome in the final period of the game. Leading 12-9 at the half, the winners loop- ed 35 additional points to leave the score 47-18. Polakoff was Bryn Mawr’s high scorer with 7 points. she was.elected Alliance Treasurer and was head of the Vocational Committee. She is on the Public- ity Committee for the Drive and on the Alliance Board. Amoret Bissell (alternate) Bissell is Second Junior Member to Undergrad and Secretary of the Undergraduate Committee for the Drive. She is a member of the Curriculum Committee and of the Chapel Committee. Fifth Toynbee Lecture Continued from Page 1 ority is distinguished by religion, France as an area in which intel- lectual and artistic attainments are the distinctive feature, and back- ward colonial areas as typical of the third type. In the latter case, the. proletariat is usually classed as the “native” element, people in- habiting the area prior to the con- quest and remaining on sufferance of the conquerors; this set-up, said Professor Toynbee, is typical of the Western World, especially: of the Protestant people originating in Great Britain. The fourth case, in which assim- ilation is.prevented by the unwill- Shows Effect Of Society and Psychology on Nations ingness of the dominant group on the ground of racial distinction, Professor. Toynbee illustrated by the caste system in India and also by the racial problems of South Africa_and-the-United-States.-The problem is most complicated when the conquered territory has become the home of both groups, rather than the outpost of distant author- ity as in the case of the British Empire. The position of the proletariat is made difficult by the fact that an aggressive culture will probably be absorbed piece-meal, a process usually bringing unfortunate ef- fects. (AE Voc. Conf. Analyzes Careers in Writing Continued from Page 2 vertise, choosing the mediums to carry the a tisements, and test- ing the copy after it is printed. in art and copy writing as well as mechanical Creative work takes arts like engraving and printing. The business end of publishing in- cludes such things as accounting, checking ads, and integrating the work of the other departments. In the fourth division, service, there are usually very few opportunities i for women. SMOKING PLEASURE CHESTERFIELD THE LARGEST SELLING CIGARETTE © IN AMERICAS COLLEGES @~ ( BY NATION-WIDE SURVEY ) Bisa: “ in Have J ut by Elizabeth Woodward America’s foremost authority on young people’s problems Somebody’s arm must have slipped when they cut you out. You didn't follow the pattern at all. So you wince when you look at your- There couldn't be another forehead in the world There couldn't possibly be another mouth like yours. And why under the sun did you. have to be blessed with two cowlicks? Wouldn't one have been enough? If you could have only been born looking like everybody else ! Oh, you have the right number of ears, eyes and noses. But what an assortment ! And are you ever stuck with them I Well, there was a little girl and she had a little curl. There ~ was a horse with a horn on his forehead. If you asked them what they thought about their claims to fame she'd say her eurls weren’t cute...he’d say his horn was horrid. But every- body knows about that girl and that horse... because they didn’t look like everybody else! So why. not. make your private thorn your trademark? Emphasize your quirky eyebrow...concentrate on featuring your cowlicks...play up your unusual hairline...sleek your- self to go with slick, straight hair. Instead of trying to camouflage your secret worry...brazen it into a talking point. Play it up...let it do something for you. Everybody’s going to see it anyhow...so let them know that you, too, know it’s, there! Make it interesting...register it on your audience. Make them remember your featured feature. Should you have two to deal with...and one a real problem...you can flag their eyes into seeing only what you want: them to see. And that takes the hurt out of thorns! ~ self in the glass! like that. the tantalizing frogrance is - COPR. 1947 ROGER @ GALLET, INC. ROGER & GALLET DRY PERFUME| Lipstick e Compacts « Perfume e Eau de Cologne "Copyright 1947, Laooerr & Myaas Tosaceo Co. 2: 5