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Show Monday, January 4. 1993 The Daily Utah Chronicle - Page Three papers from page one Farnsworth was the first person to invent an television system. However, the patent office still gave partial credit to Zworykin for his work. RCA was forced by the courts to use Farnsworth's camera tube in the company's manufacturing. They also paid Farnsworth $1 million for the patent rights and he became the only independent inventor to be paid royalties by RCA, Morgan said. The company still gave credit to Zworykin as the original inventor of the television. "Farnsworth was the electronic, not mechanical, father of television. He bridged that gap with his idea of the "Farnsworth was an instrumental figure in electronic television as we know it. Nearly 300 patents go back to the Farnsworth name. The man was a " genius conceptually, Keith Morgan, consultant .. HELP WANTED Students are requested to nominate an outstanding professor for the RAMONA W. CANNON AWARD FOR TEACHING EXCELLENCE IN THE HUMANITIES Letters of nomination should be limited to a single nominee. Any tenured or tenure-trac- k faculty from the following departments who has taught three years at the University of Utah is eligible: Communication, English, History, Languages and Literature, and Philosophy. Letters of nomination should be submitted by January 8, 1993 to the Cannon Committee, College of Humanities, 205 Orson Spencer Hall. processor for special collections at the Marriott Announcing a "Special Topics" seminar for Winter Quarter 1993 the war years inventing a lumber drying machine. After the war, he began to build the sets again, but Westinghouse and RCA were already producing the sets, and Farnsworth was unable to catch up, Morgan said. Today Farnsworth is honored by Utah in the federal capital building as one of the two statues each state is allowed to contribute. Some parts of his original, invention can also be c found in the Smithsonian. foes will have an arsenal big enough to contemplate a surprise nuclear attack on the other. The pact, the most sweeping to come out of three decades of arms control talks between Moscow and Washington, slashes their strategic forces back to levels not seen in the United States since the early 1960s and in Russia since the The bold arithmetic of START 2 is also a tacit admission, and a humiliating one for some Russians, that the days of the Kremlin's striving for nuclear parity with the United States are gone.. History 391591 electron," Morgan said. Television Incorporated and began to manufacture his own television sets. RCA offered Farnsworth a job and $200,000 for his company. When he refused, they developed their own camera tube. With the coming of World War n," Farnsworth's products were unable to become commercialized, so he spent MOSCOW President Bush, intent on leaving the White House in a flourish of statesmanship, came to Moscow Saturday to sign a nuclear disarmament treaty so unprecedented in scope that Russian President Boris N. Yeltsin called it "our joint gift to the peoples of the Earth.' "The two powers who once divided the world have now come together to make it a better and a safer place," Bush, who leaves office in 17 days, said after arriving from Somalia, eight hours away and 70 degrees warmer. Sunday, in a ceremony marking the centerpiece of Bush's final summit meeting with Yeltsin, he and the Russian leader will sign the second Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty START 2 locking in cuts so deep that neither of the former Cold War mid-1970- s. Library, said. During the 1930's, Farnsworth developed Farnsworth Radio and Bush flies to Moscow for signing of START II treaty Introduction to Material Culture Studies Instructor: Catherine C. Grier Mondays and Wednesdays, 2:15 to 4:10 p.m. Credit hours: 5 History 391591 is a reading seminar introducing students to the history of material culture studies and methods of artifact study. Focussing on American material culture of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the course also will consider some subjects of current interest to historians of material life. These include but are not limited to foodways, the artifacts of dining, and social ritual; clothing, personal appearance and the construction of gender, -t- he automobile, its impact on American life, and its traces on the American landscape. The reading load for History 391591 is moderate ttfheavyt and students" will have several short writing assignments throughout the quarter. ' Enrollment is limited to 40. j Enrollment information: ... History 391, Index 9816 History 591, Index 1733 As he raised a glass in the Kremlin's vaulted Hall of Facets to toast Bush and his wife, Barbara, Yeltsin said that democratic Russia, which emerged from the collapse of Soviet communism one year ago, has broken with the logic of the arms race. "I think it important for Russia's might as a great power to be determined not by the quantity of missiles, but by the living standards of its citizens, the development of culture, education and national traditions," he said. The key clause of START 2 is the complete elimination of all strategic missiles equipped with multiple warheads, the most destructive and destabilizing weapon in the world. Bush, who spent the New Year's holiday with American troops involved in famine relief in Somalia, left behind his desert fatigues and dawn temperatures of 66 degrees Fahrenheit in the East African country to brave Moscow's coldest spell of the winter so far. At 2:41 p.m., when Bush emerged smiling and hatless from Air Force One here, it was a sunny, crisp minus 6. In a friendly welcome but one without pomp, bands or arrival speeches, Yeltsin greeted Bush with a big bear hug. land-base- d Russians unite with Serbian nationalists Hard-lin- e SesUhiin) since sliced bread ! BELGRADE A few days before Christmas, Serb militiamen encountered some unusual comrades at the front near the southern Bosnian town of Trebinje. About 1,000 Russians outfitted in Cossack uniforms had volunteered for duty. month earlier, television viewers in Serbia caught a glimpse of a dinner party with striking political overtones. TV broadcast, Vojislav Seselj, the During the Radical Party, and head of Serbia's extreme right-win- g Vladimir Filatov, a retired officer of the former Soviet army who is now a member of a Russian nationalist group, could be seen dining at the Hotel Yugoslavia as they dished up A state-controll- lllpllilt threats. nationalistic rhetoric along with Serbian nationalists, who have been blamed by the West for stirring up factional strife in Bosnia, and Russian hard-linerwho have challenged President Boris Yeltsin's reform efforts, have forged a convenient alliance out of the wreckage of the war in Serb and Russian nationalists have been united by common historical and religious ties. goals as well as by Russians and Serbs are predominantly Orthodox, an important bond in a conflict-tor- n region that includes Bosnia's Slavic Muslims as well as Roman Catholics in the former Yugoslav republic of Croatia. Serbs and Russians also share a Cyrillic script. In addition, Russia has traditionally regarded itself as the protector of the East Slav nations. It has looked with particular favor on tiny Montenegro, Serbia's ally in the remnant of the former Yugoslav federation. Some Montenegrins have boasted that "together with Russia, we are 150 million strong." The informal alliance between Russian and Serb nationalists has taken several forms. In recent. months, delegations of writers and politicians have traveled between Moscow and Belgrade, the Serbian capital, lending political support and counsel. Small numbers of Russian volunteers, sent by nationalist organizations, have joined Serb militia forces in Bosnia. Whether Russian nationalists are providing financial help is unclear. Among Russians who have visited Belgrade have been writer Ernst Sofonov, historian Yuri Yushkin and theoretician Aleksandar Dugin. Serbian historian Vesilin Djuretic and Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic have attended meetings in Moscow. anti-Weste- rn s, 8 cream cheeses. 11 bagels. 150 sandwiches. Bosnia-Herzegovin- a. long-standi- The Brackman Bagel. Fresh Top our round little bread with a mouthwatering spread or create 1 50 a unique sandwich-ov- er chewy inside, The Brackman Bagel is A delicious snack or meal-- no matter how you slice it! baked and full of variety: plain, whole wheat, sesame, rye, poppy, blueberry, cinnamon raisin, salt, onion or garlic. Crusty on the outside and combinations! warm from the oven.; . v. BR A Gil MAN DUOS' B A GE L B A K E R Y two-republ- ic |