page 6 daily nebraskan friday, february 17 1978 Beautiful people deserve beautiful food Come try our new natural food additions to our menu Featuring vegetables, crepes, fried rice, and fresh spinach salad Scott's PIEDMONT PBneake Shoppe 1275 So. Cotner Sun.-Thurs. 7:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m. Fri & Sat. 7:00 a.m.-2:00 a.m, WA If you consider yourself attractive, charismatic, photogenic, and are thin, taller, and have beautiful feet, Backstage Ltd. wants you to represent us for the year. Win a $500 SHOE WARDROBE! See both Backstage Lincoln locations for entry details before March 4th. cm WA Among the fine brands to be modeled win be these pretty lace dress heels by fmpo . . . I2T $ Q A New Dimension in Entertainment surrounding you in a total Environment of Sight & Sound Friday end Scturdny G:C0 - 9:30 12 prlca drinks Sunday - 2-feFS Ail liigfit 1118 So. 72nd Omaha R gents initiate new agenda rule A new policy regarding appearances before the NU Board of Regents will make it easier for the public to communicate with the regents, according to corporation secretary William Swanson of Lincoln. The policy, in effect for the first time for the Feb. 18 meeting, will be a more formal policy than in the past, Swanson said. Now, a request to appear before the board must be made in writing and presented to the corporation secre tary ten days before the scheduled meeting time, he said. Once the agenda is made public, requests to discuss items not on the agenda will not be granted, according to the resolution. Requests for personal appearances to discuss an item already on the agenda must be made 72 hours before the convening time of the meeting. Previously the policy called for all requests to be made ten days before the meeting. This meant people often would request time to speak but would hot always know what was on the agenda, Swanson said. Requests to appear before the board also must be accompanied by a concise statement of the subject to be presented and those who will make the presenta tion, the resolution states. When the request is granted, the person making the request will be told what time to appear. Students, faculty and staff who want to appear before the board should submit their requests to the chancellor of their campus. The chancellor will "then forward the request to the corporation secretary. Feeding the flock is class concern The recipe: 8 quarts milk, 10 bags flour, mix with a handful of students and voila! Food for the UNL student masses. Preparing meals for the flocks of UNL students at the East Campus Union is not an easy chore, but 14 UNL stu dents are getting a firsthand experience. Linda Schroeder, a food and nutrition graduate teach ing assistant, said the students work in the kitchen as their lab for Food and Nutrition 470, a quantity food and equipment class.' "We divided the class in half-half working Tuesday morning to prepare the noon meal and half on Thursday morning," said Schroeder, adding that students prepare only a portion of the food. Barbara Einspahr, a sophomore food and nutrition ma jor taking the class, said the students began preparing food last week. The first week was a sanitation lab, where the techniques of sanitation were explained, she said. The next lab focused on how to use, service, and clean equipment which, Einspahr said, is surprisingly complex. Einspahr said this week she baked 10 dozen whole wheat rolls in lab. Kathy Stalnaker, a junior food and nutrition major also taking the class, said her first assignment was measuring ingredients. . "I've never worked in that large of;a kitchen or measured such large amounts before,' she said. ; Stalnaker said the purpose of the class is learning to prepare large quantities of food, which requires much planning. "It takes several people to cook a meal, and it has to be done at a certain time and be consistent in quality," she said. Both Einspahr and Stalnaker agreed that the regular East Union kitchen workers were very helpful. Dean Young, East Union food service manager, said it was agreed when the East Union was built that the food and nutrition class would use the kitchen for labs. - 1 i ' 1 J t At u AyH.v'l wj 7 ' Mi A in - a jm Tfc " mum XL . . mum d The fact that The MBAucalculator was designed for business professionals is a great reason ior ouying one wniie you're a student We designed The MBA to help professionals arrive at fast, accurate answers to a broad range of business and financial problems. The same ones you 11 face in your busi ness classes. 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