PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY,APRIL 25,1941. Co-op Delegates Begin Arriving For Convention Co-op convention delegates from nine states are arriving in Lawrence by bus, automobile train and thumb, to register in the Memorial Union building. Keith Martin, president of Rock Chalk Co-op, reported this afternoon. Conventionites will be entertained at a buffet supper at 6 o'clock this evening at the Rock Chalk and Jayhawk Co-ops, after which a general assembly will be held. At 9 o'clock tonight delegates and the Rock Chalk and Jayhawk men will swing their partners at an old-fashioned barn dance in Robinson gymnasium. All meetings of the convention tomorrow will be held in the Memorial Union building. The program for tomorrow is as follows: C. H. MULLEN . . 1940 Honor Man. News From Page One At 8:30 a. m. there will be a general assembly, keynote address and general announcements. Later there will be discussion groups on membership and administration, recreation, education and publicity, to be led by John Moore, Y. M. C. A. executive secretary, and Merlin Miller, representative from the Consumers Cooperative Association, Kansas City. ANNOUNCE AWARDS--work. The medal will be presented at a later date. Outstanding Students One hundred and fifty-four other students were recognized as the outstanding students in their various classes and schools. Of this number 105 were seniors who constituted the highest 10 per cent in scholarship in their respective schools. Seventeen were juniors, ten sophomores and twenty-two freshmen. During the course of the program the Chancellor announced the junior men who had been elected to Sachiem, senior men's honor society. This list included Maurice Baringer, James Brown, James Burdge, Robert Fluker, Clint Kanaga, George Kettner, Keith Martin, Eugene Ninginger, Clarence Peterson, Fred Robertson, James Surface, Robert Trump, Arthur Wahl and Robert Woodward. Transfer Mortar Boards The conclusion of the honors announcement came with the transference of Mortar Board. The newly elected senior women's honor society is made up of Helen Edlin, Mary Ewers, Sue Johnston, Nancy Kerber, Margaret Learned, Jeanne Moyer, Particia Riggs, Doris Twente. Mary Helen Wilson and Lois Worrel. PACHACAMAC IS IN--and they cheered wildly at every announcement no matter who seemed to be winning at the time. Greatest confusion of the evening resulted when a mistake was made in counting the ballots from the College, and all of them had to be recounted. The first count from the senior class showed a tie for the presidency, but a re-check gave the office to the Pachacamac candidate by one vote. JUDGE OTIS SPEAKS--formula for success. He remarked that he, along with Chancellor Malott and a few others, now had condensed biographies in that book of condensed biographies where they knew "what to reveal and what I conceal." "because no one else quit at the same time" he did. He went on to describe how he finally was elected to Phi Beta Kappa due to careful following of his On the more serious side however, Judge Otis said it was not so necessary to speak on "The Importance of Scholarship" to those students who received honors this morning and he consequently addressed his talk to those not so well "inoculated with the love of learning." Judge Otis based his talk on the definition of scholarship. However he said, "When'I think of scholarship, I think, not of the formal definition of the word but of the great scholars, the champions of liberty and truth." He used Socrates, Cicero and Milton as examples of scholars." From such men we should receive inspiration, for they truly knew and understood the meaning of truth," he said. In conclusion Judge Otis left this ringing statement with his audience, "We stand on their side against savagery and barbarianism. These scholars are our first and last line of defense." DAD ought to know. Look at the wall behind him—his personal military history. Photo of the troop. Dad by himself, very proud in his old-style choker-collar blouse. And his decorations—the Order of the Purple Heart, Victory Medal, Croix de Guerre with palm. "You savvy quick, soldier," he says to his son as that chip off the old block in the new uniform proflers Camels. "These were practically 'regulation' cigarettes with the army men I knew. Lots of other things have changed, but not a soldier's 'smokin's.'" Right! Today, and for more than 20 years, reports from Army Post Exchanges show that Camels are the favorite. And in Navy canteens, too, Camels are preferred. Just seems that Camels click with more people than any other cigarette—whether they're wearing O.D., blues, or civvies. You'll savvy, too—and quick—with your first puff of a slower-burning Camel with its extra mildness, extra coolness, and extra flavor, why it's the "front-line" cigarette! The Smoke of Slower-Burning Camels gives you EXTRA MILDNESS, EXTRA COOLNESS, EXTRA FLAVOR and What cigarette are you smoking now? The odds are that it's one of those included in the famous "nicotine-in-the-smoke" laboratory test. Camels, and four other largest-selling brands, were analyzed and compared... 28% Less Nicotine than the average of the 4 other largest-selling cigarettes tested-less than any of them-according to independent scientific tests of the smoke itself over and over again...for nicotine content in the smoke itself! And when all is said and done, the thing that interests you in a cigarette is the smoke. YES, SIR, THE SMOKE'S THE THING! SMOKE CAMELS! R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, North Carolina BUY CAMELS BY THE CARTON — FOR CONVENIENCE, FOR ECONOMY BY BURNING 25% SLOWER than the average of the 4 other largest-selling brands tested - slower than any of them - Camels also give you a smoking plus equal, on the average, to 5 EXTRA SMOKES PER PACK! CAMEL _ THE CIGARETTE OF COSTLIER TOBACCOS