Monday, February 8. 1971 University Daily Kansan 2 Skating Kansan Staff Photo by DAVE HENRY The Office of Traffic and Security, the Lawrence Police Department and the University Information Center all reported that as of Sunday night the ice on Potter Lake was hard, thick and skatable. But the young fellow in the photo already knows that—the only thing he needs is a pair of skates. Newspapermen to Attend Editorial Writing Meeting The participants in the conference are: W. W. Baker, editor, Kansas City Star; Clyde M. Eden, editor; Parsons Sun; Mort Storhoff, editor; Edward Bassett, dean of the School of Journalism; The William Allen White Foundation is sponsoring an editorial writing conference and Friday in the Kansas Union Newspaper publishers, editors and reporters from Kansas newspapers will attend the conference. Journalists' Panel Set John B. Bremner, associate professor of journalism; Calder M. Pickett, professor of journalism. "A Whig on Wall Street" will be a panel discussion on a panel session during the College of Law activities at 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Union Auditorium in the Kuala Lumpur University. Registration is scheduled for 9:30 a.m. Thursday. The conference will end about 3 p.m. Friday. Vermont Royster, director of Dow Jones and Company, former editor of the Wall Street Journal and this year's recipient of the William Allen White Award for contribute to the panel discussion. The Kansas State chapter of ZPC has invited the University of Kansas representatives interested in population and pollution issues to He will be joined by Joseph A. Pichler, KU associate professor of business administration; Ron Calgaard, associate dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, and Edward P. dean of the School of Journalism. There is a dinner planned at the Elks' Club Thursday night. Professor Finds Bag of Grass Series Planned On Population Those interested should contact Jerry Shay in 220 Snow Hall or call UN4-3202. Bluegrass "I thought perhaps the grassman had left it," Durt said. "Since the campus police are interested in plastic bags full of vegetable matter, I For a short time Wednesday it looked like the Grassman had struck again. Peter Dart, associate professor of journalism, found a plastic bag containing about a handful of vegetable material in the radio, TV, and film laboratory of Flint Hall. Kansas State University's chapter of Zero Population Growth is organizing a series of discussion sessions to coincide with awareness program scheduled for Feb. 9 on the Manhattan campus A check with Traffic and Security Thursday night revealed that the bag contained grass all right—bluegrass. Although the grass was not illegal, it was more suitable for consumption by Kentucky throughbreds than humans. KU police dismissed the matter. Law School Wins Grant The School of Law recently received a 862 grant from the Governor's Committee on Criminal Administration for use in the inmate counseling program at the Kansas State New Classes Begin In Free University A second group of Free University spring semester classes is beginning, Jerry Johnson coordinator of the school. Volunteer teachers and course suggestions were solicited during spring enrollment at a booth located beyond table eight. Obscura said some of the classes had begun and the remainder would start on dates agreeable to instructors and to the students. The list of classes includes each taste religions and philosophies, you possibly wine tasting, Yoga, rock and roll, ancient coins and the A supplement to the spring collection catalogue is the Clearer, House, a liaison group between volume workers and those who work in the library. provide volunteers to aid elderly persons, underprivileged children and uneducated children. Volunteers are also solicited for free to organizations such as the University Information Center. Osburn said the group hoped to A group called the Anarchist and the Armenian Species Bureau is also listed in the bureau. The bureau is supposedly the first institution examining from right and left perspectives concerning the proposition that freedom is a right. The spring catalogue says that the Free University exists to "help individuals interested in sharing their ideas and knowledge among others. Any can take or teach a course, or contribute to the administration of an event, with no fees, no tests, no grades and no required attendance. The course is free." Pentientary at Lansing. The counseling program for clients of his case has benefit for retrial, Keith Meyer, Kathy Murray and professor of law said Friday. Wilson's project as the first in the nation that used law students as inmate counselors, Meyer said. Since its development, more law schools have developed or are planning similar programs. The program was initiated in 1965 by Paul E. Wilson, professor of law. It is now supervised by the University of the program earlier this year. New Treatment Developed Continuation of the program was made possible through the federal Omnibus Safe Streets and Crime Control Act. Meyer said. Tiny Tumors Iced Out By ANN CONNER Kansan Staff Writer In a study involving nine patients, doctors Fernando R. Bonez and Tocqueo Foledo Stuart A. Smith of the department of otolaryngology (ear, nose and throat) described what they considered the first effective treatment for the disease. Papillomas are dangerous because they can cause aphysiology in children and breathing difficulties in adults as well as restricited vibration of the bones, words, preventing normal speech. Ice-cold temperatures, searing heat and special equipment combine to form a new method developed at the University of Kansas Medical Center for use of four lung-like tumors called papillomas. "It looks like a little cauliflower and is about the size of the top button of a ball point pen." Kirchner said. Meyer said the students did not represent inmates in the courts. Their primary function is to help inmate patients and do research for the client. In a telephone interview Monday, Kirchner remarked that it was also possible for the teen to become malignant in adults. Usually benign, papillomas grow in the skin or in the mucosa that line different body cavities such as the larynx, the nose, and the trachea or main vein from the throat to the lungs. "The main problem is that, in adults, these can grow in the local cords and they do not allow them to expand," she long for them to block up the One case in the study involved 13-year-old girl who had undergone a hysterectomy at age of three for recurring papillomas. After treatment at the Medical Center, she has been operated on once her operation 14 months ago. vocal cords." Kirchner said. Although no one knows exactly, which causes papilomas, it is known that the root or pedicle. In the past, the surgical treatment of papilomas were not successful because surgery took only the top part of the "cauliflower" and left the rest in the skin. The Medical Center's method is new not, because of new techniques, but because it can combine several older ideas. Blood vessels in the papilloma. severed in surgery, caused "In the past, surgery was unsuccessful because it left the root to sprout again." bleeding which obscured the root and spread the disease to surrounding tissue. Once it is clearly exposed, the root can be destroyed with pinpoint accuracy by burning it with a special torch. A filament placed on the uncovered root. Special self-cleaning micro-uterties (burning devices) have been developed by Clement and Concept lnc. for this purpose. The key to the KU physician's success with papilloma removals is to use a microscope like a microscope called a stained. The scientist sorted, frees the physician's hands, keeps the naxel exposed, and gives a magnified view of the tumor. "We touch it with this little finger. When the papillae is frozen, things happen: it attaches to the probes; we can pull it out, and we can bite it." When the tip of the probe touches the papilloma, the freenish area is pulled out by ball forms at the point of contact. After it is frozen, a gentle pull is all that is needed to remove the papilloma. There is no cutting or seeding. Since none of the nine patients mentioned in the paper had experienced any recurrence after treatment at the Medical Center, the method may be the only effective one for those suffering from piliomas. system fitted with a specially lesigned probe. "I'm getting patients from all over the United States, Kirchner said. Dwight Boring* says... Computerization is penetrating almost every aspect of human life, from space programs to the action of enrolment cards data Prof Researches Chinese Rv MOHAMED RUMEIS representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA The study of linguistics is no exception. Carl Leban, assistant professor of Chinese, is working on computerize Chinese symbols. 209 Providence Lawrence, Kansas Phone 842-0767 Dwight Boring The purpose of the program is to reduce Chinese, a language with about 50,000 characters, to a simple set of symbols. ... the only Company selling exclusively to College Men "Most languages have no more than thirty characters" Leban "So why not Chinese?" "Stands to reason that a life insurance policy designed expressly for college men — and sold only to college men — will be useful." Your money when you consider that college men are preferred insurance ricks. Call me and I fill you in on THE BENE-PACYON. College Life's famous exclusive exclusively for college men. Hearings Postponed The Student Senate public hearing on the enactment for the Student Senate Protest Bill, originally scheduled for tonight, have been postponed until Wednesday at 8 a.m. in the Council Room of the Union, according to Kevin Lagreau, Hutchinson senior and chairman of the hearing. The second hearing will be held as scheduled on Wed., Feb. 16, at 8 a.m. in the Council Room. The hearings are being sponsored by the Senate Committee on Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities and are open to any student or applicant. The enactment on Freedom of Protest concerns the rights of any non-violent student protest groups, according to Lagree. The enactment stated that the Student Senate may vote to support any protest that, in the opinion of the Senate, conformed to the Senate Code. He said the responsibility of such a non-violent protest group included some financial responsibility for damages which might occur from the group's actions. Anthropologist Speaks On Search for Origins KANAS CITY, Mo. The discoverer of the skull of an australiopheus, a primitive creature with a charac-teristic body of bothape and spoke Sunday on, "The Search for Man's Origins" at southwest High School in Kansas City. Mo. The discoverer was Richard E. Leakey The australopithecus lived about 2.6 million years ago. Leskey's discovery was made at the Holford golf course near its border with Ethiopia. Leakey said the conclusions femur or other body fragments about an individual specimen's detection are often in conflict with the conclusions an animal bears, he said. According to Leakey, the ancient mammal with the temporary of the genus homo and became extinct over a million years ago, leaving only a few bones. LEBAN SAID the Chinese are aware of this small set but they don't know the rules governing usage. "We need equipment and devices." Leban said, "that permits the computer to write and draw pictures." The Great Place To Go For Food & Fuel! PITCHERS $90^{c}$ three years in Taiwan for research and found that only a small set of characters is used in English. There are three thousand characters. Presenting new heights of ONCE THE method of computerization is perfected, Leban said, it can be applied in a variety of ways. One application may be the invention of a typewriter with a small computer attached to it to analyze the symbols. Computerization is being used to teach computer science in the computer has been invented yet to analyze Chinese characters, so they are given to the computer in their native language. Every Tuesday & Wednesday Night 809 W.23 Street 809 Mass. Leban started his project by trying to reduce Chinese into the smallest set of characters he could reduce and project them into thirty six characters. These characters, Leban explained, have great value only—they are written only when combined into words. 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