PAGE EIGHT GENERAL UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 1940 Mid-Semesters Due April 3 The college office announces that mid-semester reports on students are due in the office by April 3, and that the period from April 10 through April 16 has been set aside for mid-semester advising of freshmen and sophomores, Dean J. H. Nelson stated today. Dean Nelson urged members of the freshman and sophomore classes to see their advisers concerning the condition of their work regardless of the quality of their grades. The names of sophomore and freshmen Bridge Finals---advisers with office hours will be posted on the bulletin board opposite the entrance to Room 121 Frank Strong Hall. (Continued from page one) and Lloyd Elledge, c'41; Malcolm Miller, c'42, and Clarence Miller, c'43; Gerald Banker, c'41, and Louis Weidman, d'41; Betty Banker, fa'43, and June Griesa, c'43; Anne Lewis, c'43; and Jim Surface, c'42; Bill O'Shea, c'40, and Jim Morris, c'41. The teams with the highest score tonight will receive medals. Upper classmen whose mid-semester grades are of failing quality will be notified through the mail. Such students are invited to consult with either Dean Nelson or Dean Paul B. Lawson. Students Hear--- (Continued from page two) As a climax for the activities, Dean John Warren Day of the Grace Cathedral Episcopal church of Topeka will speak at the Presbyterian church here at 7:30 Sunday evening. A list of the speakers and the organizations which they addressed during the week follows. Monday night; the Rev. E. F. Price, Kappa Eta Kappa and Prof. John Ise, Miller hall. Tuesday night: the Rev. Joseph F. King, Pi Beta Phi; Prof. John Ise, Ricker hall; Prof. U. G. Mitchell, Delta Tau Delta; Prof. R. A. Schwegler, Alpha Tau Omega; Theodore Aszman, Watkins hall; Prof. Allen Crafton, Phil Delta Theta; Prof. M. W. Storer, Corbin hall; Dean Paul B. Lawson, Chi Gamma Delta; and the rev. Harold G. Barr, Delta Upsilon. Wednesday night: Mrs. Ellen Paullin, Campus house and Prof. Theodore W. Paullin, 1231 Louisiana. Thursday night: Prof. John Ise, Prof. Theodore W. Paullin, Sign Alpha Chi Omega; Prof. N. W, Alpha Epsilon; and Prof. R. Storer, Alpha Kappa Psi; Prof. Al-Brewster, Alpha Omicron Pi. len Crafton, Phi Kappa Psi; the Rev. Friday night: Miss Eda Paddoe Joseph King, Gamma Phil Beta; Jayhawk Coop. THEY'RE OFF! Streaking down the mile-long icy trough of the Mt. Van Hoeverenburg run at Lake Phacid, N. Y. with "Bucky" Wells driving. Fifteen breath-taking turns to go. Fifteen chances to taste the supreme thrills of speed. But in smoking it's different, very different. "It's slow burning that makes a cigarette tick with me," "Bucky" Wells says. And he means what he says, because slow-burning Camels have been his cigarette for ten years. "ONE-TWO-BOB! ONE-TWO-BOB!" And, as the crew bobs, "Bucky" picks up speed...60-70-80 miles an hour, driving high on the glassy wall of ice as he swings the quarterton steel seld around the curve. But in the field of cigarettes, this during speedster gives the laurels to the quality of slow burning that he finds in Camels. You can tell by their mild, mellow taste that Camels burn cooler, slower—and scientists have confirmed this. (See panel, right.) Copyright, 1940, B. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, North Carolina If you want to know how it feels to go 80 miles an hour on a racing bob-sled "Bucky" Wells of Keene Valley, N. Y. can tell you. He's done it plenty of times. He likes those speed-drills on a racing bob. But when it comes to cigarettes "Bucky" Wells is on the slow side...the slow-burning slide. That means Camel! "Ive smoked Camels for years, and I know they burn slower," "Bucky" says. "There's cool comfort in a Camel. Mildness — more flavor. And — slow burning means extra smoking. Yes, penny for penny, Camels are the best cigarette buy. I'd walk a mile for a Camel!" Why would anybody feel that way about his cigarette? Try a Camel and see. Camels are a matchless blend of costlier tobacco...slow-burning. They give more pleasure per puff, more puffs per pack. In recent laboratory tests, CAMELS burned 25% slower than the average of the 15 other of the largest-selling brands tested—slower than any of them. That means, on the average, a smoking plus equal to 5 EXTRA SMOKES PER PACK! MORE PLEASURE PER PUFF MORE PUFFS PER PACK!