Poge Ten FHE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 4, 1972 I.1 it SYSTEM INCOMPLETE: . . Ferency 1 kU tF1 VU1.111 . LII1 t/.AL1nL 11 '1 "it donation forei n language students inconveniencedo. foreign anggua] n Pry P (Continued from Page.1) completely soundproofed. T h e y also have no doors. Users claim there are distractions from other booths and passers-by. Erwin Hamson, director of the language lab, says the - closed booth system was tested out, but wasn't used in the actual project because of the exhorbitant costs of ventilation systems and addi- tional soundproofing. Besides, fire regulations would require a sprink- ler system to be installed in each individual booth. Hamson says he's aware of com- plaints about equipment malfunc- tions. "It's the company's fault," he claims, "There's absolutely nothing you can say in the face of equipment which doesn't work.", He explains that new equipment usually goes through 'a "run-in" period, when it is tested before be- ing put into use. But workers from Instructomatic didn't show up to begin installation until Aug. 15. Because of this, the system wasn't completed until Sept. 1 and is now being debugged while stu- dents are inconvenienced or dis- couraged from language practice completely. Nigel Harlan, president of In- structomatic, doesn't seem overly concerned about the problems tak- ing place. He expresses optimism that the system will function prop- erly in a short time. He described this as a "normal shakedown period." All this leads one to wonder why the University dumped the Mason Hall language lab so fast instead of waiting until the whole com- puter system was completed. Hamson claims, "We couldn't maintain the old lab any more over at Mason Hall." He admits the old lab was "real- ly a kind of mistake." It was never properly installed and many parts could no longer be replaced, he says. One of the few noticeable im- provements besides the glittering novelty of new equipment is the switch from headphones to speak- ers. Germanic languages Prof. Robert Kyes describes the switch as "approaching the ideal situ- ation." Without the headphones on, the student has more ear-to-mouth con- trol over his own voice, as well as the chance to hear the language spoken in a more realistic manner. If the blueprint lives up to its specifications, the future may be very bright indeed for the lan- guage students. Many new and diverse services will allow the student more con- trol over his education. At some time in the future the student will be able to stop and start tapes at will, jump back and forth to any place on the tape, and record and play back his own voice. Concepts such as video and com- puter-assisted instruction will also be possibilities. Officials have even considered running the system on telephone lines to provide extended service in the dorms. All that may be a reality for to- morrow, but today's language stu- dent will have to settle for some- thing less than perfection. i.. t./.t../.i 1t../l. (Continued from Page 1) In an interview following the press conference, Ferency told a reporter that Bullard had used the news of his payment to personal political advantage, violating an understanding he said he had reached with Bullard in a tele- phone conversation. Bullard, for his part, denied ever making such a deal. "It was clearly a campaign con- tribution," Bullard maintained. Kicking Quaalude According to Drug Help of- ficials Quaaludes - a common street drug in the city - are highly addictive and with- drawal is a dangerous process. Withdrawal, they say, is safe only under medical supervi- sion, and "cold turkey" with- drawals can be fatal in some cases. Both Drug Help' (761-HELP) and the Free People's Clinic (761-8952) can arrange free medically supervised w i t h- drawal. These agencies urge anyone who suspects he or she may be addicted to call or visit. BY APPOINTMENT PHONE 973-1990 Thomas B Roth, O.D. ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF HIS NEW OFFICE FOR THE PRACTICE OF OPTOMETRY AT PINE VALLEY OFFICE BLDG. SUITE 103 2500 Packard Rd., Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104 NEW SUPELCO CATALOG AVAILABLE CHROMATOGRAPHY SUPPLI ES, LIPID STANDARDS, PESTICIDE STANDARDS, HAMILTON SYRINGES, CH ROMOSORB, SI LYLATI NG REAGENTS ... and NOW FREE PHONE CALLS WITH A DIRECT TELEPHONE LINE TO SU PELCO, INC. Bellefonte, Pa. 16823 CALL: ENTERPRISE 6811 Meanwhile, see our daily ads in the classified section of this newspaper starting next week. QRL Daily Photo by ROLFE TESSEM Hamson gestures towards his new toy Taxpayers ptt.heat on Nixon WASHINGTON (P) - Replace- ment of the heating system at President Nixon's seaside resi- dence in San Clemente, Calif., 4was paid for with taxpayers' money because the previous sys- tem was "in such a condition that is was a threat to the Presi- dent's safety," a Secret Service spokesman said yesterday. The spokesman would not spe- cify what was the matter with the previous system, or even what kind of system it was. He said he did not want it to appear the agency was favoring any par- ticular type of heating system. The new system is electric. Use of some $13,500 in public funds to replace the system was reported Tuesday by syndicated columnist Jack Anderson, who also said Secret Service officials told him it was replaced because of concern for the President's safety. The Secret Service, confirm- ing the Anderson report, said the government paid for the replace- ment because "we were the ones that urged the system be chang- ed over." The spokesman, responding to questions, said a certain number of things have been done to presidential residences in the past at government expense. He cited lighting and surveillance systems as examples. Anderson said the work was done at the same time laborers were converting an -adjacent Coast Guard station into a gov- ernment-office complex to serve the Western White House. He said no one noticed that the gov- ernment took care of the instal- lation of the new system in the private 10-room manor overlook- ing the Pacific and its guest house. Penunoffers seven credits [or the new semester 1. THE FIRST SEX. Elizabeth Gould Davis. An eye- opening report On the superiority of women over men. Could well become the handbook of the women's movement. $1.45 2. THE LEAVES OF SPRING: Schizophrenia, Fam- ily and Sacrifice. 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Sixteen arti- cles attacking the ruling-class bias of university courses as they are now being taught. $3.75 7. RADICAL PERSPECTIVES IN THE ARTS. Edited by Lee Baxandall. Essays-by Herbert Marcuse, Jean-Paul Sartre, Fidel Castro, and others-examin- ing the arts in relation to capitalism, class values, patronage and property, communism, freedom of expression, and the future. $2.45 These and other important Penguin paperbacks are now on sale at your campus bookstore. PENGUIN BOOKS INC 7110 Ambassador Rd LEim oMd.21207 We'll be on Campus OCTOBER 9 & 10 for the purpose of recruiting those graduating this year as: CHEMICAL ENGINEERS (B.S. or M.S.) ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS CHEMISTS (B.S. or M.S.) 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