WEDNESDAY, SEPT 22. 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE 88c Will Provide 3 Meals of Fried Liver And Prune Whip' Davis, Cal.—(UP)A housewife with a calory-conscious eye and a firm grip on her pocketbook can produce three nutritious meals a day for 88 cents. Miss Lura Morse, home economics instructor of the University of California College of Agriculture, says it's so, despite soaring prices. O Psi Phi Pledges Two Leon Brunson, Kansas City, Kansas, and Roy Crouch, St. Joseph Mo., pledged Omega Psi Phi, Mondav. - * * Sigma Kapna Dances The pledges of Sigma Kappa will honor the Acacia pledges with an hour dance from 7 to 8 p.m. Friday at the chapter house. Sigma Nu pledges will be entertained with a tea dance by the Sigma Kappa pledges from 3 to 4 p.m. Sunday. 串 串 串 Monchonsia Tea Monchonsia hall entertainer Jacksley', Hopkins, and Sterling Hills with a tea Sunday afternoon. Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, and Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean, of women, were guests. \* \* \* Sigma Kappa Pledges Entertain Sigma Kappa Pledges Entertain The pledges of Sigma Kappa entail the pledges of Sigma Kappa at the Epsilon with an hour dance, at the chapter house. Corbin Hour Dance Corbin will entertain with an open house hour dance tonight from 7 to 8 p.m. Monchonsia Elects Monchonsia hall has elected the following officers to fill vacancies: Marion Lee Foster, social chairman; Joyce Burns, song leader; Sybil Klamer, intramural chairman; and Doris Long, activities chairman. Independents Meet Officers Officers of the men's Independent political party were introduced at the party's meeting Monday night. Robert Bock, president, reviewed the part independent politics plays in campus affairs. Donald W. Griffin and Walter Brown, College sophomores, were nominated for vice-president. Senators will be elected Sept. 27, Robert Bennett, treasurer, said. An estimated 10,000 desert plants are growing on 306 acres set aside for the desert botanical garden east of Phoenix, Ariz. The garden is the only one of its kind in the world. But, if the housewife thinks only of the pennies saved and ignores the nutritions lost, her 88 cents will provide a diet far short of a person's food needs. Miss Morse maintains. The girls in her home economics class prepared two sets of meals, each costing 88 cents in all for breakfast, lunch and dinner. They don't claim the following menu to be delicious, but they insist they're nutritious. Breakfast would include a softboiled egg, two slices of whole-wheat toast, butter, and grapefruit juice. One lettuce and cheese sandwich on wholewheat bread, pea soup, lettuce salad with mayonnaise, prune whip, and milk would be the enticement lunch. Finally, the model meal for dinner would be fried liver, one baked potato, sliced raw carrots, cabbage salad and mayonnaise dressing, applesauce, and milk. Net So. Nourishing. Miss Morse lists the likes of potato salad, cupcakes, baked beans, avocado salad and apple pie as tasty—maybe—but low in food value. She has helped prepare a chart—H.D. 460—"Checking Food Values in the Daily Diet." Thus, with one eye on the grocery store specials and the other on the chart, the housewife can plan her meals to get the most food value for her money, Miss Morse says. The chart lists other delectables besides fried liver and prune whip, she adds hopefully. Sagmoen-Pickering Sigma Kappa announces the pinning of Charlotte Sagmoen, College senior, Kansas City, Mo., to Alan Pickering, senior in the School of Business, Joplin, Mo. Mr. Pickering is a member of Phi Kappa Tau. Jewell Mischler passed chocolates, and Mrs. Irvin Messer, alumna, made the announcement. Miss Sagmoen received a corsage of red roses. Her attendants wore white carnations and Mrs. Mary Younkman, housemother, wore pink carnations. KU Player Marries Jack Fink, guard on the Jaynawaker football team, and Miss Dena M. Ransdell of Topeka were married Saturday evening at the First Methodist church in Topeka. Read the Want Ads daily. College Inn NOW OPEN UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Portland—(UP)—Mothers usually tell their daughters what every young girl should know. In Portland, the girls have retaliated by letting mom in on what every mother should know. 14th & Tenn. The girls had their innings at a Lincoln High school parent teachers association meeting. In a series of skits, the high school girls showed their mothers about the things they do that drives daughter "absolutely wild." Girls Tell Mothers How Not To Act Here were some of the things that the girls didn't like: Soups Cold Drinks BREAKFASTS SERVED FROM 6 A.M.----11 A.M. 1. Mother's gusny manner when meeting daughter's new friends. 2. Eavesdropping on telephone calls or mother's failure to take name and number when daughter is out. Sandwiches Malts 3. Partiality to another member of the family, particularly to a younger brother. —Orders To Go For Any Size Group— Open: 6 a.m.—1:30 a.m. BRUNO VESCO, Manager 4. Praise of other young people to build up a competitive spirit. 5. Mother's incorrect use of younger-generation slang expressions. 6. Excessive demonstration of affection in public, including use of pet and baby names, and exhibition of baby pictures. Soil treatment and a good rotation form the foundation of erosion control. JEROME PIANO CO. NEWTON B JEROME Piano Tuner and Technician 916 Illinois Phone 815 Sold PIANOS Repaired Bought Tuned Rented Refinished AUTHORIZED KIMBALL DEALER REFRESHINGLY SMO-O-O-TH "DAIRY QUEEN" Qts. 50c PACKAGES Pts. 30c TRY IT and YOU'LL BUY IT Rich, Delicious, Refreshing Dairy Queen 1835 Mass.