Hall forum debuts, Wescoe is guest "I would think that others will be impressed by what has been done here today and would do the same," Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said Sunday at the first annual McCollum Hall Forum. Chancellor and Mrs. Wescoe were distinguished guests at McCollum Hall's first open forum, an event, first of its kind at KU. The forum consisted of a dinner for 800, with about 400 faculty and administrative staff members who were invited by hall residence aid Cindy Elder, Topeka sophomore and forum co-chairman. ON ARRIVAL at McCollum, faculty and administrative staff members were assigned to hosts and hostesses who escorted them to the cafeteria for a candlelight dinner. Fraternity trying for KU recharter Delta Gamma chapter of Delta Sigma Phi fraternity is planning to recharter on the KU campus. Because there were not enough men in the house at the end of last semester, the fraternity decided to give up their house. The group is now looking for interested men to form a new chapter. When the original chapter was formed, five KU men were involved. There are now five men working on the rechartering. Jim Euler, Shawnee Mission junior and past president of Delta Sigma Phi, said, "We will need at least 20 men to get a colony going. The procedure we are following is the same as if we were beginning a new colony. We have an advantage, though, as we have a stronger alumni group and a more solid financial background." The original Delta Sigma Phi house was located at 1233 Oread, next to Abington's bookstore. After the dinner, the guests toured the floors of the hall where they had informal discussions and coffee with the men and coeds of McCollum Hall. Chancellor and Mrs. Wescoe visited informally on the floors of the hall making a five-minute stop each in two rooms on the men's wing. IT IS A SHAME, the Chancellor said, that such an event is held once. It has more attraction than the usual hall activity, he said. "It should be made annual," Wescoe said. Miss Elder said: "I am pleased that the faculty as well as the students enjoyed it so much. We are going to continue this as an annual event." A better way of understanding the students was the general description of the forum's aim among the guests. "WE SEE THE students during the day," Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of the School of Education, said, "but a lot of people never see how they live at home. I think this is a very nice arrangement." New SUA chiefs Student Union Activities officers for 1967-1968 were chosen last week by the Union Operating Board. John Hoppe, Ottawa junior, was appointed president, after the Board completed its interviews Wednesday evening. Bruce Patterson, Larned junior, will serve as vice-president, and Tom Swale, Prairie Village junior, was chosen secretary of SUA. Next year's treasurer will be Henry Russell, Galesburg, Ill., junior. Daily Kansan Monday, March 20, 1967 A blindfold test for beer. If anybody ever says you can't pick Budweiser with your eyes shut,you can call his bluff. beer and take a sniff. Notice a difference? The one with the clean, fresh aroma is Budweiser. Now taste. This gets a bit tricky. But the one beer that tastes like beer without any one flavor jumping out at you (like hops, or an extra sweetness, or sometimes a sour or sharp taste) is Budweiser. That's because Budweiser is blended—by our Beechwood Ageing. We want you to taste the beer, not the recipe. First, stick your nose close A Coffeyville High School senior was crowned State Safety Queen Friday night at the Kansas Teenage Traffic Safety Association (KTTSA) convention in the Kansas Union. Budweiser. Beauty crowned at teen safety meet If anybody pulls a beer-tasting test on you, now you know how to win. Just follow your nose. KING OF BEERS ANHUESE-BUSCH. INC. ST. LOUIS NEWARK LOS ANGELES TAMPA HOUSTON other girls were selected safety princesses. Miss Janis Herman, selected from a field of 36 girls from state high schools, was crowned 1967 queen by Gary Hunter, president of the KTTSA, and Miss Kathy Robey, 1966 Safety Queen. Six The queen and her princesses presented traffic safety talks to the more than 400 representatives of 90 state high schools attending. Indoors or out, warm weather or cold, Lady B's bring you a chic fashion look in classic, fun footwear. They're sleek in look...trim in fit...wonderfully light and comfortable. Leisurely fashioned for dorm, travelling, shopping or just lounging around. Numerous styles and colors to choose from...complete size and width ranges. Come slip into YOUR pair of Lady Bostonians----today! $13.95 VI 3-2091 813 Mass Prepare For Easter! Now's the time to get those spring-looking clothes clean for Easter and the spring season. Let New York Cleaners give your wardrobe that fresh spring look this Easter. Spring Clothes Need Alterating? See Us. 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 ALTERATIONS - REPAIRS - REWEAVING Serving Lawrence for over 50 years