Friday, October 11, 1968 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 15 Insurance plan gains acceptance More than 1,800 KU faculty members and civil service staff employees have enrolled in the new Equitable Health Insurance plan, said Philip N. Rankin, director of personnel services. This equals the number of faculty and staff who originally belonged to the Blueu CrossBlue Shield health insurance, Rankin said. The current number of enrolling seems to indicate that University personnel have given full acceptance to the new health insurance program, he said. Rankin said a series of more than 24 meetings were held from September 9 to 24, to explain the change to the new health insurance. In addition, several notices went out to all personnel who did not return their enrollment cards by Sept. 25. KU student to be area supervisor Dave Dickensheets, Wellington first-year law student, has been appointed by Tau Kappa Epsilon national fraternity to serve as regional supervisor for three area TKE chapters. As a regional supervisor, Dickensheets will advise chapters at KU, Kansas State University, Washburn University, and a colony at Baker University, placing stress on scholarship, leadership, and fraternity service. While an undergraduate, Dickensheets was secretary, vice president, and president of TKE. He was also president of KU-Y and was active in Scabbard and Blade, honorary military fraternity. Patronize Kansan Advertisers Ring making at its loveliest in new TEXTURED GOLD WEDDING RINGS by ArtCarved HAND-FLORENTINED DAWN SET HAND-HAMMERED TORINO SET SATIN FINISHED A. CENTURY* OR SYMPHONY KU hosts Cwen group Marks Jewelers Del Eisele 817 Mass. VI 3-4266 Debbie Barnes, Miss America of 1968, will be the featured speaker at the Cwens national convention which will bring more than 200 sophomore college women to the campus today and tomorrow. Miss Barnes, former Cwen at Kansas State College at Pittsburg, will talk to coeds from across the nation at a noon luncheon tomorrow in the Kansas Union, convention sponsor said. Chancellor W. Clark Wescoe will open the convention at 7:30 Friday with a welcome address in the Kansas Union. Emily Taylor, dean of Women, who was a member and adviser to the Cwen chapter at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, will speak on the "Renaissance 1968-Cwen Style" at a noon luncheon tomorrow in the Kansas Union. In convention sessions, Saturday the girls will discuss campus problems and the effectiveness of the various Cwen organizations. Pam Russell, Iola junior and chairman of the local convention, said the two-day convention will end tomorrow evening with a banquet and initiation of new Cwens for the year. Miss Russell said the visiting Cwens will stay in the living groups of local Cwens and alumnae for the convention. The activities will be held in Lewis Hall and the Kansas Union. Cwens, a sophomore honorary organization for women, was founded at the University of Pittsburgh in 1922. The purpose of Cwens is to foster leadership, scholarship and fellowship among sophomore women, to promote leadership among freshmen women, and to serve the interest of their university. Cwens is an Anglo-Saxon word meaning "queen." Other members of the local committee are: Pam Withers, Festival Entry Kansas City junior; Barbara Mize, Atchison junior; Ann Bet Hefley, Manhattan sophomore; Karen Humphreys, Ashland junior; Sue Beth Mothersead, Raytown, Mo., senior; Patty Spencer, Overland Park junior, and Martha Dalton, Wichita senior. HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — "Prudence and the Pill," first movie to poke fun at the controversial contraceptive pill, will be 20th Century-Fox's official entry in Sicily's Taormina Film Festival. Science grant awarded pre-doctoral candidate A National Science Foundation grant of $1,400 has been awarded to Steve Rosen, a KU pre-doctoral candidate in anthropology, to study variations in hair of primates. The grant, effective for nine months, will support research for the final year of Rosen's work at KU. Gravitt's Automatic Laundry Laundry Service With The Student In Mind - Clothes Washed, Dried & Folded - Quick, Dependable Service - Reasonable Prices Open Mon.-Sat. 8:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. 913 New Hampshire How to tap a keg (and tie into the best reason in the world to drink beer) Pick up a half-barrel of Bud (good for about 245 12-ounce cups with foam) and the tapping equipment on the day of the party. Just set the beer in a tub of ice to keep it cold. 2 Just before the party begins, tap your beer. First, make sure the beer faucet is closed (you wouldn't want to waste a drop of Beechwood Aged Bud!). Then, insert the faucetand-pump unit into the upper valve of the keg, give it a quarter turn clockwise, and lock it in place by tightening the lower wing nut. 3 Next, insert the lager tap in the lower valve of the keg and give it a quarter turn. Now, set the keg upright in a tub and pack ice around it. 4 You're now ready to draw beer. Pump pressure to the proper point for good draw, usually about 15 lbs. That's all there is to it, but there's no rule against sampling just to make sure everything is perfect. Ahhhhh! It's no wonder you'll find more taverns with the famous "Bud on Draught" sign than any other! Budweiser. ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUISE • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPA • HOUSTON • COLUMBUS