>e see in (He of ’ rea lly, wt} ls ; ' Ve try' | 0 lts ) •‘orizins rawi »g a drei le says. • opportunity tt'o fashion i,. pean point o| llr st-hand i t . ss Profession. or a bout of an Ameri- lir’al Center J symptoms a t following be cold may . cold air or k, Morgan >rt attack.” who attrib- an be cured al infect'on nil it makes it casv,”he ce 5oh ing i s pun ards int h attitu lopped his years ^bools' 1 Monds' aiidgro*' years, rt traini i the ps) ouble o rs. nistntoi' ire than violent g student i from las Meinphis ick, Arl a'hert ersii Reader ‘frees’ blind Device reads print; goofs no problem Alabama pilot lands his biplane between cars on Interstate 20 THE BATTALION Page 7 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1978 j United Press International LANSING, Mich. — It speaks in a monotone, occasionally mis pronounces words and reads large numbers digit-by-digit. But the sounds are beautiful to the young students of the Michigan School for the Blind, which recently received the $50,000 reading machine from the U.S. Office of Education. The school’s machine, displayed for news media last week, is one of 40 produced thus far by Kurzweil Computer Products. The reading machine should in crease the selection of books availa ble to the blind because they will not have to wait for readers, talking books or Braille versions of modem novels and texts. The machine, with a scanning “eye,” reads lines of print by recog nizing the shape of letters, then verbalizes them through its robot like voice. Various controls enable students to change the pitch and speed of their mechanical reader, repeat words and sentences, punctuate phrases and even spell out unfamil iar words. Kurzweil spokesman Gayle Po we |L who is visually impaired Sai< ^’ j T ^ e reac ^ in g machine is not intended to replace records and ^ * s valuable because it will increase the independence and privacy of the blind. AVith the machine, we can read our own bills and mail and not have to have someone read it for us.” The machine obeys the rules of English phonetics, but sometimes gets confused. Read, for example, always is pronounced “red.” But students quickly learn to adjust to the little goofs and to the unhuman voice. One observer at the demonstra tion said getting the hang of the machine is something like listening to a British movie. “For the first few minutes it might as well be speaking Chinese, but pretty soon, it sounds normal.” The machine’s photo eye can read just about any print that is put be fore it and Powell said it is hoped future models will be able to read handwriting as well. United Press International PELL CITY, Ala. — Le Grand Bud Dawes of Birmingham joined the eastbound traffic on Interstate 20 Saturday, which was not unusual in itself — except Dawes was in an airplane. Dawes was flying his homebuilt biplane from Birmingham to Tal ladega when the spinner on the propeller flew off, knocking 18 inches off one propeller blade. Dawes landed his plane between two eastbound cars about three miles west of Pell City. No one was injured and the disabled aircraft made the rest of the trip to Tal ladega behind a wrecker. “I have been flying for about 30 years as a hobby,” Dawes said. “It is the seventh airplane that I have built. Tuesday Nite % Welcome back to the Restaurant! TM International House of Pancakes . Live At I HOP CHEESE OMLETTE AND THREE PANCAKES ONLY $149 Good between 10 p.m.-2 a.m. 103 COLLEGE 846-1817 mUMUNIMt APARTMENTS ^ c, “ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED” Furnished & Unfurnished Efficiency, 1, 2 & 3 Bedroom Apartments No Escalation Clause or Fuel Adjustment Charge Professional Maintenance Staff (24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE) Two Beautiful Swimming Pools Tennis Courts Party/Meeting Room with Sundeck Health Spas, including Saunas for Men & Women Three Laundry Rooms On Shuttlebus Route Rental office open Monday through Friday 9-5 Saturday 10-5 Sunday 2-5 693-1110 1 501 Hwy. 30 693-1011 183110 Begin expected to shun latest Sadat proposal United Press International Prime Minister Menachem Begin pledged to respond Monday to President Anwar Sadat’s latest peace demands, but Israeli govern ment sources said the response would be a flat refusal. The sources told UPI that Begin has decided to turn down Sadat’s demands for establishing a timetable by which residents of the oc cupied West Bank and Gaza Strip would receive political autonomy. U.S. Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd delivered a letter from Sadat to Begin Friday, that sources described as conciliatory, but which did not indicate any change in the Egyptian position. But Israeli national television said the renewed direct personal contact between Begin and Sadat may be the only real progress that was achieved in the exchange. Begin promised a reply to the newest Egyptian initiative within 24 hours and Khalil, who was scheduled to leave Washington Saturday, extended his stay until Monday to await the response. The negotiations, which opened Oct. 12, bogged down three weeks ago because of Israel’s opposition to the Egyptian demand for linkage to a settlement of the Palestinian problem. Khalil met with President Carter and Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, and conferred Sunday by long-distance telephone with Sadat in Cairo. Egypt is believed to favor the American compromise proposal to hold elections for an autonomous administrative council in the oc cupied West Bank and Gaza Strip by December 1979. Palestine Liberation Organization leader Yasser Arafat in an inter view televised Sunday criticized Carter for a “complete retreat” from his position in favor of a Palestinian “homeland. ” But Arafat predicted that no Middle East peace could last without the involvement of the Soviet Union. “Without the second super power, you cannot have a complete peace in this area,” he said. hack Radi STEREO RECEIVERS FOR HOLIDAY GIFT GIVING ministratw an coi-port irtland akt kindergarts tie aimed i with p# >ns jn noi' olent c4 .hlic ^ under oW 63 sexual packers 0 slifi nd’ ilional Max, a 1,1111 Tapp}' a ‘ ,t, like a ^ rorilla^ i his nali' 1 n hop*; born go' 1 ’ ,ika. Hej ing "L , for a i* ■ing'f on ted 0 • A hv a 1 ' ned n) , ; ent to ^ e feniak* anas a»d 1 ter o' 1 ;rot lliU’ ■ag 6 ' u led of , a ntl 1 led on 1 ; tes SA-200I Stereo Amplifier $279.95 TM-1001AM/FM „ Stereo tuner 'r- 1 - a S A-1001 Stereo __ I Amplifier $179.95 STA-64B $259.95 STA-95 $399.95 STA-64B $259.95 SCR-I800 Receiver/Cassette Recorder $339.95 STA-2100 $599.95 Culpepper Plaza Rrs. \f. F 10-8:30 Sat. 10-6 693-1444 ■ ■ ■ - gili; • - . r # V/SA Villa Maria Mon.-Sat. 10-6 846-7384 ,\o?> * C °fJo^ beeV fKS* se' .cX e ^ uVx e w c, 0 o e ’ \AaV^ . u eff' c ' e ^or a orV-^'Voroe Culpepper Plaza