Tuesday, January 27, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three 1 I I 'Enforcer teams' tour Beirut streets By AP and Reuter BEIRUT, Lebanon - Cease- fire "enforcer teams" toured Beirut yesterday using bull- horns to urge rival gunmen to clear the streets. Despite the aura of impending peace, Chris- tian concern mounted over the growing Palestinian role in Le- banon. Looters also made off with $1 million worth of cigarettes: from a government depot and other gunmen sacked the Agri- culture and Justice Ministries without meeting any resistance. T Vcelebrates its , - I 50th anniversary LONDON (AP)-Television had its 50th birthday yester- day, having come a long way from an outlandish contraption made of knitting needles, tin cans and cardboard held to- gether by sealing wax and glue. A half-century ago, John Logie Baird, a shock-haired I Scotsman, astounded 40 eminent scientists on a wintry Lon- don night with the first public demonstration of his "tele- visor." THEY WATCHED FASCINATED as "a faint and often blurred" image of the head of a ventriloquist's dummy called "Bill" fluttered on a crude screen in the inventor's labora- tory in the sleazy Soho district. The picture of the dummy's head impaled on a stick was transmitted from one room to another in Baird's second-floor laboratory on a weird machine made largely of ordinary household items and a spinning disc. At about the same time in the United States, an Ohio- born inventor named Charles. Francis Jenkins was also be- ginning the transmissionrofcrude black and whitesilhouettes. Jenkins continued his work with a number of broadcasting companies until his death in 1934, but history books give, Baird most of the credit for the invention of television. BRITISH JOURNALIST BILL FOX, 86, who was closely associated with Baird and witnessed the first demonstration, recalled that the transmission caused a vibrating hum that "went right through my head." FOX LATER PARTICIPATED in Baird's experiments and became th'e first face to be transmitted across the Atlantic to New York in 1928. "I sat on a chair beneath 1,000-watt lamps. It was very hot. I sat rigid. Then I heard Baird shout: move, speak, say anything," he said. "At that moment my face was being transmitted across the Atlantic. A friend in New, York watching the receiver recognized me. I said something, although they couldn't hear me in New York. But the dumb show was to prove that the picture was really of a living person." AFTER THAT TRIUMPH, Baird told Fox: "I think I can do color." His optimism was never rewarded, and his system was never used by the British Broadcasting Corp. The BBC started the first regular television program,confined to 'the London area, in 1936, using the electronic system. Baird's system was partly mechanical, using the spinning disc to transmit pictures. Baird did produce color" transmissions, but the company he set up foundered a few years later. Baird died in 1946, just as commercial television was getting off the ground. He left an estate of $16,800, a poor return for what became a billion dollar industry around the world. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETINI } X4"r"°" r ' {:?}'}rS' ? f: :S yr,=? " ;} h ce in w h< Isi iw is re N w at li ul ri CI W lit or 0de BUT THE sackings were ex- message that a hijacked Soviet eptions to a general tighten- airliner was on its way to Is- ig of order across Lebanon, rael. 'here about 10,000 persons ISRAELI officials said they ave died in civil bloodshed were told by a West European nce April. airport that a radio message The general feeling in Beirut had been picked up from a man 'as that the worst of civil war who said he had hijacked the over. However, the country Tupolev Airliner and ordered emained virtually partitioned the pilot to fly to Israel. etween heavily armed Moslem After the alert was called off, nd Christian camps with a po- the officials said the plane was tical settlement on paper only. believed to have landed in the The "enforcer teams"-made Soviet Union and .the hijacker p of Palestine Liberation Ar- was presumed to be dead. iy troops in Moslem areas and Under Lebanon's truce plan, ght-wing Christian militias in the country's 60 per cent Mos- hristian areas - worked to- lem majority is to get a big- ard a Tuesday evening dead- ger share of political and eco- ne for restoration of law and nomic power in the country, rder. now concentrated in the hands THE 6 P. M. - 11a.m. EST- of the Christian minority. So far eadine fnr withdrnwnlo f th Ithis has not been implemented. THE LATEST cease-fire end- ed fighting with Palestinian units in effective control of most of Lebanon. But the Chris- tians were not defeated mili- tarily. Their private armies maintained complete control of half of Beirut. They also remained secure in a mountainous rectangle be- tween Beirut and Tripoli to the north, representing about a quafter of the country. Khaddam met with key Christian leaders, including Maronite Patriarach Antonios Khraish. The Christians said they reaffirmed the need for Lebanese state control over . some 300,000 Palestinians living, working and training as guer- rillas on Lebanese soil. THE TOP Maronite political leaders, including Pierre Ge- mayel of the Phalange party, also underlined Christian can- cern at the growing Palestinian role in Lebanon, particularly the Liberation Army. L ____ ____ I r ude ur wunrawai oz ie gunmen was set Sunday by a committee of Syrian,' Palestin- ian and Lebanest army offic- ers set up to enforce the four- day-old cease-fire worked out by Syrian Foreign Minister Abudl Halim Khaddam. Meanwhile, in Tel Aviv, a man was presumed to have, been killed In an unsuccessful attempt to hijack a Soviet air- liner over Moscow yesterday, Israeli airport officials said. Earlier,Tel Aviv's Ben Gur- ion Airport was put on a 90- minute alert following a radio TH MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVI, No. 100 Tuesday, January 27, 1976 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published da iily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. I A RAVEL MICH. 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Cullen, Jr., pres., Wayne State U.: Rev. Malcolm Carron, pres., U. of Detroit, "Coping with Declining Resources," 165 Bus. Ad., 4 pm. Business Students Assoc.; OAWM; BBSA; Beta Alpha Psi: Natalie Lange, v-p, Booz, Allen, & Hamil- ton, management consultants, "Consulting: Today and Tomor- row," Hale Aud., Bus. Ad. Bldg., 4 pm. English: Gelman-Palidofsky, poet- ry and Dance, Pendleton Rm., Un- ion, 4 pm. Med. Tech. Training Program Meeting: All sophs interested in applying for junior yr., W5603 Univ. Hosp., 7:30 pm. General Notices CEW: Winter series, "Reports.from Returning Women: Research and Progress," noon-1:30 pm, 1st 7 3rd Tues; Marsha Clinkscales, "Dif- ferences of Non-verbal Behavior Be- tween Blacks and Whites," Tues., Feb. 3; for more info, contact 328 Thompson, 763-1353. -Hears Lease Termination SIGN UP FOR INTERVIEW: SGC OFFICE 3RD FLOOR, UNI DEADLINE: 4:30 p.m. W Appeals idol! 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