Page 6 THE BATTALION THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1981 THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH WELCOMES YOU SUNDAY SERVICES 7:30 A.M., 8:30 A.M., 9:10 A.M., 11:00 A.M. CANTERBURY Meets in Episcopal Student Center WEDNESDAYS 5:30 P.M. ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL CHURCH 906 Jersey St., 696-1726 (South edge of Campus) State Speech returned to victim of disease Computer overcomes handicap United Press International BALTIMORE — About six months ago, Bruce Baird s older brother, the victim of a debilitat ing disease, was speechless and almost completely paralyzed. “The situation got very grim. James went through a period of total rage and anguish.” James T. Baird was stricken witb amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, commonly known as Lou Gehrig’s disease. After his larynx became paralyzed and he could not talk, he was able to form words that family and friends could lip read. “But finally, he couldn’t even do that,” his brother recalled. So Bruce, with help from two friends, developed a computer that allows his brother to com municate messages that range from “Hi, how are you?” to re quests for grape juice for lunch. Baird’s invention is one of more than 900 computer-based inven tions from across the nation en tered in the Johns Hopkins Ap plied Physics Laboratory’s first na tional search for applications of Dennis Ivey's Lake view Club The Very Best In Country-Western Music and Dancing' Thursday “(Vickie Beer Night! ( Cover Lone Star Draft Beer SC a cup $2.00 Person or $1.00 a pitcher (We also serve Lone Star Longnecks!) Music by Dennis lyey and Band 18-Year-Olds: Saturday Don’t be left out! We admit minors! u Fiddlm Frenchie” Burke! Cover $4.00 Person For Reservations Call £23-0660 3 Miles North of Bryan on Tabor Road for the student who is a Baseball Player •Gloves*Bats • Shoes # Balls •Caps*Shirts • Gleets ALL BASEBALL GLOVES in stock 40% o OFF TRI-STATE A&M SPORTING GOODS 846-3280 3600 Old College Rd. 846-3570 f nawiii NATIONAL BANK Keeping the pace with Texas A&M, the fastest growing university in the nation, we bring superior service and convenience to our neighbors. We invite the students, faculty, and staff to bank with us ANYTIME. M 24 HOUR TELLER Texas A&M University 1 GaoKMncati Building. Mich*l T. Halbouty 1S2 Laundry ! Goodwin Hall 99 Logoatt Hi ! Dorm Service* Building ) Read McDonald Buridmo a Center. Kleberg 140 Dolterty y Sciences Building I Duncan Dining Hall 44 H. C. He Wen felt Building I Oceanography and Meteorology B > Oilseed Products Research Lab I Keathley Hall I Physiology ol Reproduction Lab I Haldentels Building 34 Spence Hell-Dorm 711 University Dr. • (713) 846-8751 Personal Computing to Aid the Handicapped. Ten from each region will be selected for regional awards in the Johns Hopkins search, said Paul L. Hazan, director of the program at the laboratory near Columbia, Md. Thirty 30 national semi finalists who will be invited to ex hibit their creations at the Nation al Academy of Science in Washington this fall. Ten national award winners will be selected. Prizes of $10,000 for first place, $3,000 for second and $1,500 for third will be awarded Nov. 2. Hazan said inventions submit ted have addressed an “amazing range” of concepts to aid the blind, deaf, mentally retarded and individuals with neurological and muscular conditions. David Ross, a 33-year-old gra duate student at Georgia Tech, devised a “singing” computer to help the blind. Ross explained a programmed card is added to an existing at- home terminal and when com monly used word pairs are typed, musical tones are played. The word pair “this is ”, for example, matches the first six notes of Scott Joplin’s “Entertainer.” “It’s pretty easy to hear when they make a mistake. The person can hear what they type and cor rect a ‘sour note,’ ” Ross said. Paul Kiepe, a 72-year-old in ventor in Payette, Idaho, came up with another musical aid. A music al score fits onto a special printed circuit board with notes about fingertip size. The circuit board is connected to a small electric organ and the song is played when some one touches the notes. Kiepe’s innovation is primarily aimed for use with mentally re tarded children. He built six of his musical machines and put on a Christmas concert in Boise. “It’s a beautiful sight to see a retarded child play music. It is very touching,” he said. Bruce Baird enlisted the help of Craig Linebaugh, a professor from George Washington University’s department of audiology and speech pathology, and Cip Richard Armour, an Air h computer scientist, to computer aid for his il A television screen sits at 4 foot of James’ bed in his Rods: home. 11e can generateinessas ask visitors questions and malt quests — all by twitching hisirr. cles, Bruce said. "The sensitivity of this thiad incredible. I tried it myselfij other day and the threshold low I wasn’t even aware 1 u moved,” he said. A typewriter keyboard is pi jected on the screen and acuie a small ray of light, hops fromt to key. If James wants tocalli hold file containing chit-chat, stops the cursor at “C,” Brut* plained. \ N i “He can send a mes answer a question, he can it anyway he wants to,” said. “The other day hew grape juice for lunch, so he ped the cursor at “F” forfoodt typed in grape juice.” Wife writes novels, husband sells them United Press International ARLINGTON — To be able to walk away from a successful career in television in search of a name in the elusive world of publishing takes a great deal of courage. Sandra Brown found the inspir ation for that courage in her hus band of 13 years. Michael Brown, until recently a news anchor at a Dallas televi sion station and the host of a popu lar talk show, began noticing his wife’s talent for writing while the two worked at the station. The two decided they should set up their own enterprise, with the wife doing the writing and the husband the promotional work. In the past year that the couple has been working in support of each other, Mrs. Brown has sold seven romantic novels to New York publishing centers, an incre dible accomplishment for an un known, unpublished author. Mrs. Brown hit publishing pay dirt in August with publication of her first romantic novel, “Love’s Encore,” by Dell Publishing Co. which has entered the highly luc rative world of romance-writing where sales have been running in excess of 300 million copies annually. Awaiting release on the heels of “Love’s Encore” are her other works entitled “Love Beyond Reason,” “Eloquent Silence,” and “Bittersweet Rain. Meanwhile, Mrs. Brown con tinues with her schedule of a novel-a-month and her husband is busy lining up television and media interviews, managing a household dominated by two young children, his own guest speaker engagements and taping television commercials. Mrs. Brown writes under the pen name of Rachel Ryan, a com bination of the first names of her two children. The children ex tracted a price to let their mother use their names. “I told them if they let me write for a few hours every morning without bothering me then I would put their names on every page of the book,”, Mrs. Brpwn said. Giving much of the credit for her success to her husband, Mrs. Brown said: “As a television talk show host, Michael has inter viewed several authors and it was his firm conviction that I could write novels. Like any journalist, I have always wanted to be a writer but had never done anything ab out it. He convinced me that I could.” "I^ove’s Encore has alltliei redients that followers ofi novels thirst for. The storyis an interior decorator iRj been commissioned to reran | 130-\ ear-old colonial homebji owner in Natchez, Miss. Tk the interior decorator, bychii encounters a flamboyantmanyi whom she had had a torrid* tic affair in her earlier life. Lih modern romantic novels, Mi Brown’s interior decoratorand® flamboyant man try to maltetl;, best of the unusual circumsta® into which they have beenth: L and reestablish their past. I Sex in Mrs. Brown’s novels® low the pattern in other success* » romantic novels, but the ditJOCfcJ Mrs. Brown insists, is®' ,(li: Unite M0CKLSAT Saturday September 19 8 o’clock Room 102 Zacli. Sign up by Sept. 18 in Rm. lOO Harrington Tower COST: $ 5 00 ence, her heroes and heroines indii in sex “only as an extensionoftl Today i love and it is never crude, e 253rd I don’t consider my bookt llow. explicit, she said. The niaino The me fcrence is that I write ofsextialiBhase. within the confines oflovingof* a solution to problem or to apliiffil'e me sophical question. ’’ Be eve “We don’t know how 'I#p us , Ju] Encore’ has been received, s| Those Brown. “But we have run our u® 1 ' the little survey and found that ail Ameri copies in local stores have htfflpton v sold out. I am her husband rll 11 this may not be objective. But iti.® incredible feat that au unho*» 3 unpublished author has beenalf , c '! lnin£ to sell all the seven books sliC“«p ( f| Cl written so far. That should sp-f, , J for her talent. P* 1846 6flST€RN ONION SINGING TELEGRAM! Select from more than 95 Original, Professional, Funny Musical Performances & Unique Gifts For All Occasions hS' til Vo,., v Bellygram Cake Clown Onion Fairy Onion Macho Man Mae East Offices Coast to Coast 10-5 p.m. Call 6 Days 693-7799 707 S. Tex. Avenue CollegeSn- Suite 306 C EMERGENCY CARE TEAM First Meeting: Thursday Sept. 10 302 Rudder * New Members 7:30 p.m. Welcome (( f Member F.D.I.C.