10 Wednesday, November 11, 1970 University Daily Kansan Panhellenic to Choose Officers A new Panhellenic president and rush chairman for the 1971 school year will be selected Wednesday night. Candidates for the two offices were nominated by the sorority houses on campus in which they are members. Kathy Hofer, current president of Panhellenie, said the two new officers would be judged on the basis of a written test they would take. The new president and rush chairman will begin their new offices on December 1. Jim McMullan, a 1961 graduate of the University of Kansas, appears as guest performer on "The Young Lawyers" television show Monday night. McMullan is also scheduled to appear on a segment of his movie *Monthly*. He is present in Texas working on a movie "Windspitter." Profs Get Oil Study Grant KU Grad Appears on TV Three KU professors of chemical and petroleum engineering have received a $10,798 grant from the American Petroleum Institute to continue their investigation of the characteristics of oil and gas-bearing rocks, primarily limestone and sandstone. The three professors are Floyd Preston, professor, John Davis, associate professor, and Don Green, associate professor. From their study, the three professors hope to devise methods for predicting the flow of oil and gas through porous rocks and for assessing their effectiveness. Education Meeting Reset The monthly Student Education Association meeting, usually held on Thursdays from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., is held at 18:30 p.m. in Hailey Hall. The program consists of a panel student participation featuring Dale Scannell, dean of the School of Education. Any interested in education is invited to attend the Warrant Issued for O'Neal Kansas City—A warrant for the arrest of Felix Lindsey (Pete) on Friday night ended the day after Monday after he failed to be apprehended in the Jackson County court room. O'Neal was scheduled to appear for an appeal of an earlier conviction of disturbing a religious assembly. The conviction dealt with the shooting of a man who had been praying at a temple. O'Neal was sentenced last month to four years in prison on a federal gun violation. He is appealing that conviction. Judge A. Moore, who issued the warrant, ordered Neal's $500 bond forfeited. Austin Shute, O'Neal's lawyer, said he did not know where O'Neal was and the last time he spoke to him was last week. He said he was in jail for 30 days. Symphony to Present Concert The KU Little Symphony orchestra will give its fall concert 8 p.m. tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall. The orchestra is composed of faculty members, advanced students and townpeople. The conductor is an experienced educator in the school of Fine Arts. The concert is open to the public without charge. Vegetarians Find Living, Easiest at Commune Bv MARY BULLOCH CAROLYN ROTHERY Kansas Staff Writer AND Two of the members of the commune are students. They are Tom Miller, freshman from Elmwood High School, junior John Wiesmier, from Beatty, Ks., is an "admitted drop-in," which means he has been admitted to University, according to Tom. The youngest member of the group is Brad Reynolds from hush school last spring. There is a farm house on the south edge of Lawrence in which three men and a woman are living and working. There is a large number of people forming communal type arrangements on farms in the area, but there is something else happening. All the residents are vegan. The group stance encircles not only vegetarianism, but also Eastern philosophies and anti-war, non-violence ideas. Tom is an undeclared speech communications major at KU. He also participates in house jam and musical competitions, who is majoring in slavic and soviet area studies. She provides the tutoring for vacuums the living room a lot. Brad is a talented guitar player and an accomplished photographer. He plans to major in journalism when he enters the university where he is organizing a chapter of the W.W. Hasseters League in Lawrence. The idea to form a community was developed this fall by Jan Washburn, a graduate of University yoga class which Tom coordinated and decided that it would be easier for a group of students to teach her what she was getting tired of always having to cook her own meals. She said responsibility with another person. But the only one who wanted to coordinate would be another vegetarian. An idea for a house in the city was first considered, but it was felt that a farm in the country would be more rewarded. The old farm house at 2095 Iowa was rented at the beginning of this month. After the group went to Florida, the grandfather had once lived in it. Brad's grandfather gave the members some background on the house. It seems the man who wives whom he had treated as slaves. The man made his wives own the house, and built the house. Quantrill attacked the house during his raid, but it was burnt it, but it wouldn't burn because it was constructed of stone made bricks and green wood. The members are operating under a qualified vegetarianism program, allowing people who prefer to eat fish or fowl join their group. The original members do not any type of meat, however. Their meals consist mostly of food dishes made from grain. Most of the grain they use is whole grain and not the kind of prepared food that can be bought in a supermarket. Their supplies come mostly from local health officials and unprocessed and organic foodstuffs. This type of food is hard to cook. You need an amount considerable amount of time to cook. Most of these foods must be cooked or boiled for long periods. The vegetables they eat are cooked in their original state to preserve maximum vitamin content. Proteins are the easiest factor to be missing from a vegetarian diet. Some people have to spend a lot of time trying to eat foods which will make up for the proteins missing because they are not used as food. Tom said that it makes for more interesting menus when you have to eat a variety of foods for protein. All the members of the commune belong to a Free University in Paris. The group meets at the American Baptist Center twice a week. They meet with their friends and cook a meal together and split the cost, which usually is 15 to 45 euros. The commune members said they wanted to expand to include eight members instead of the present four. They said they would prefer saving three more cars by giving one man to keep the ratio equal. Plans for the spring include a beginning a compost garden to grow and vegetables and accustoming, accepting, member. They said they had already begun a compost pile with leftovers from their meals and by turning under the plants that was used this summer. The group said they wanted to try and raise chickens some time in the future. They also are looking about acquiring a goat for milk The group is currently discussing the possibility of starting a health food center and providing it to Lawrence or on their farm someday. Jan traveled to California and said the prices were lower for health foods and because many restaurants established for people with all kinds of tastes in food. Their idea for the health food center was the idea of competition would bring prices on this kind of food. Greatest ne British import since the Mayflower It may have taken 300 years, but now, genuine fish & chips are here. Genuine, that is, if they're Alfie's. Only Alfie (that sly rascal) takes the very freshest whitefish and fries it to just right golden crisp. And serves it up with the crunchiest, lightest chips in the colonies. Plus the tangiest, most tempting secret sauce you've ever tasted. So special, grown men weep for more! Try a bit of tradition for lunch or dinner. Today. Verily, there's a grand bit of Great Britain in every bite! down, and they would run it on a non-profit basis. RESTAURANT OR TAKE OUT Parents of the participants sound less than enthusiastic about the ideas. Jan, whose wife was an anti-vegetarian propaganda in the mail from them, Tom's parents helped the group acquire a large garden that was just tolerant of the ideas. Brad said his parents are worried about the corrupting influence of living arrangements of the house. 6th & Maine © 1989, Alfie's Fish & Chips, Inc. Tom said there are probably up to 30 communes in the Lawrence area and that local reaction has seen slight. The members are somewhat worried about the potential of fracking in local farms by outsiders. Use Kansan Classifieds KANSAS vs. MISSOURI NOV.21st Football Special INCLUDES: - ROUNDTRIP MOTORCOACH transportation with ice & mix * RESERVED GAME TICKET in the KU section * SUMPTUOUS LUNCH & DINNER in hearty portions * TOUR MANAGER services $19^{95} Total PHONE Viking 3-1211 Maupintour TRAVEL SERVICE TIGER TOUR AT PUSSYCAT PRICES 900 Massachusetts The Malls Shopping Center The fall look is boots; with mini's, midi's and pants suits. Beautiful, supple, leather boots that are bold, brash and brass. Very "in" and very necessary for the fall wardrobe. Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street "SOME ROUGH BEAST" FREE BEER FRIDAY NOV.13 FRIDAY SOPHOMORE CLASS PARTY