Monday, Nov. 28, 1988
American Notes COMMUNICATION
If E.T. had been there, he could have phoned home. Last week hundreds of people lined up at AT&T headquarters in New York City to videotape greetings to the cosmos that the company will beam into the heavens between Thanksgiving and New Year's on powerful transmitters. Says AT&T spokesman Brian Monahan: "We're just gonna shoot them out there." The signals will travel the universe at the speed of light, and they could conceivably be picked up by creatures on other planets.
But the aliens might have trouble returning the call. Earlier in the week, one of the world's largest radio telescopes, a 300-ft. steel dish, suddenly collapsed in a high mountain valley in West Virginia. A long list of important scientific projects will be hampered until it can be replaced. Astronomers have used the dish to probe 10 billion light-years into deep space by tuning in radio frequencies similar to those an intergalactic civilization might use to communicate with earth. It would be a shame if somebody out there tried to get back to us and the phone was out of order.