page Eight THE SUMMER DAILY Wednesdoy, June 6, 1973 K.C. suburb trying out futuristic tv system By PATRICK A. MALONE OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (UPI) - Flick on your television set and watch a rotating display of sport- ing goods. Punch a button and you've just bought a new set of golf clubs. Turn the channel and talk to yottr doctor. Show him where it hurts; let him take your tem- perature and pulse via remote sensors. system lets you talk back to your TV, and your TV listens. Special amplifiers, which boost the cost of a two-way system 55 per cent, enable the double strand cable to carry 12 channels out on each strand and three back in. This means that each TV can re- ceive 24 channels and, with broadcasting equipment, send on six other channels. "We're on the threshhold of a "We're on the threshold of a real revolution in communications, perhaps even changing the structure of a community.' -Murray Nolte Telecable manager IT'S TIME for the community college's great books discussion. Tune it in and you're arguing with readers in a dozen other homes. If you think none of this will really happen for at least 10 or 20 years, you're wrong. It's just around the corner in suburban Kansas City. What has made this futuristic two-way television system more than science fiction is a 600-mile system of coaxial cable laid by Telecable of Overland Park, Inc., throughout nineKansas C i t y suburbs in northeast Jhson County, Kan. JUST AS in ordinary cable TV, the cable carries signals from the Telecable studios to any household willing to pay $5 a month to triple the number of channels received. Some of the channels transmitted are out-of- town stations snared by Tele- cable's big antenna; others are special service channels o n 1 y available via cable, such as 24- hour news and stock market re- ports. Unlike ordinary cable TV thiso goo a xy Robe Hggig, Pele r2e ad ' Se= PiwresCp. pesem AOfi. ,M C' es Amv ur-M*donBrando Rkharc'8urton-Jome Cobum John Huston Walter Mtihau Ringo Starr Ewa Aulns. Candy [R] Technicolor® CRC . Music by: THE BIRDS and STEPPENWOLF THURSDAY & FRIDAY (6-7) (6-8) 7:45 & 10:00 P.M. Modern Languages Bldg. "JE 1Y b aC,9P real revolution in communica- tions, perhaps even changing the structure of a community," Tele- cable Manager Murray Nolte said in an interview. TWO HURDLES block the goal of two-way cable communications. One is developing commercially feasible broadcast equipment for the home. The other is of the chicken-egg variety. Both prob- lems, Nolte predicts, will be at least partly solved within a year. Nolte likens his chicken-egg problem to that of broadcasters in the early days of color tele- vision: Which comes first, the programming or the equipment? There would be little point in buying a color TV if all broad- casts were in black and white. But if no one had color TV, why go to the expense of broadcast- ing in color? SIMILARLY, Nolte explained, there is little point in paying a hefty sum to have a little box with an adding machine-like key- board installed in your living' room if it just sits there. But if you could punch a button on the box and buy golf clubs or the week's groceries, you might go for it. While electronic engineers work on the cost factor and marketing specialists tinker with the chick- en and the egg, Telecable is go- ing ahead with plans for some non-profit two-way applications. "We're sitting here with WO miles of cable, every inch 'ti'n two-way capability, the only ma- jor system like this in the coun- try," Nolte said. "So we're vsv anxious to prove it's economictl- it viable." HE LISTED some of the: ies being planned and others just talked about. ^ The company is planning tele- vised discussion groups among several remote locations. T he Johnson County Community Cal- lege would set the topic and a discussion leader, and partici- pants in the regular affair would gather at one of about a dozen homes equipped with cameras and other broadcasting gear. A program for teaching handi- capped students who cannot leave home was tried once experiment- ally and should be started again in the fall. The teacher, who oth- erwise would travel from home to home for one-on-one tutoring, would sit in a studio; she could give personal lessons to a half dozen students simultaneonsly by fliping the channel from student to student. THE SHOPPING SERVICES will become available when it becomes feasible to Install the boxes with adding machine key- boards in more than a few horn- es. Those little boxes will feed in- to a computer that will make pos- sible a wide array of services, from instant voting and banking at home to calling up on the screen something from a mem- ory bank, such as tonight's TV listings. Doctors at the University of Kansas Medical Center have ex- pressed serious interest in med- ical services via two-way tele- vision, Nolte said. One program would offer house calls of a sort by sending teams of paramedics to homes of bedridden patients. Sensors would then be attached to a camera set in front of the patient, whom the doctor could then "see" without leaving his office. Another program would connect a pediatrician to school nurses for consultations. A QuiCK cflat Governor Winfield Dunn of Tennessee takes time out from the National Governors' Conference for a brief telephone chat in the lobby of the Saraha Tahoe Hotel in Stateline, Nev. The governors' meeting began Monday and ends today. WAR MEMORIAL: Israeli police halt Arab shop strike JERUSALEM () - Arab shops closed briefly yesterday to observe the sixth anniversary of the 1967 Arab-Israeli war, but they reopened as soon as police began marking striking shops with black paint. Arabs in the Israeli police force, escorted by Israeli infantrymen, moved down main shopping streets painting black circles and crosses on the shutters of closed shops and writing down names of the shop- keepers. POLICE HELD 10 shopkeepers until they agreed to reopen. Almost all the merchants who went on strike yesterday morning were doing business again by noon. Police Chief Joel Barelli said the end of the merchants strike was "another failure" for Arab guerrillas. CEREMONIES also were held elsewhere in occupied Jordan to mark the anniversary. Armed troops patrolled east Jerusalem streets in trios, but the Holy City and the occupied zones of Jordan and Gaza were quiet. Only minor incidents were reported. Grieving relatives gathered at cemeteries to mourn Jordanian troops killed in the six-day war and ceremonies were held in Arab town halls. Some town councils declared a half holiday, to mark the Arab defeat and to protest the Israeli occupation. ASIDE FROM the pressure on shopkeepers, the Israelis made no visible attempt to halt the demonstrations. One Arab merchant told Israel's state radio "it is my democratic right to close my shop and Israel is a democratic country." But like the others he reopened for business. Peter O'Toole, Sophia Loren and James Coco in The Greatest Romantic Musical Adventure of All Time! * STARTING FRIDAY * 603 E. LIBERTY " DIAL 665-6290 LAST TWO DAYS! Ends Thursday 4h Special W k! 6-Times:4 Hit 1 P.M.-3:30 ® Week! 6:10-8:45