OMNI May 1979
OMNI May 1979
OMNI May 1979
'INTELLIGENCE DRUGS:
FREELYAVAILABLE
NEW
RUSSIAN STYLE
CYBERNETIC WAR:
'
.MICROCOSMOS- HARNESSING
THE GULF STREAM
onnrui
EDITOR & DESIGN DIRECTOR: BOB GUCCIONE
EXECUTIVE EDITOR: FRANK KENDIG ART DIRECTOR: FRANK DEVINO EUROPEAN EDITOR: DR. BERNARD DIXON
3IRI-.C
OR
VI-
O'" Al )VE"=T
EXECU":"
CONTENTS
FIRST
PAGE
Opinion
Contributors
WORD
6
8
10 12
OMNIBUS
COMMUNICATIONS
Correspondenc
Dialogue
FORUM
EARTH
SPACE
LIFE
Environment
16 18
Astronomy
Biomedicine
20 24 26
Harry Lebelson
STARS
Comment
Media
Report
THE ARTS
UFO UPDATE
32 35
CONTINUUM
CYBERNETIC WAR
Data Bank
Article
Fiction Article
Jonathan V Post
44
50
DARK SANCTUARY
MIND FOOD THE UNIVERSE BELOW
Gregory Bentord
Pictorial
Douglas Faulkner
Spider Robinson Scot Morris
GOD
IS
AN IRON
Fiction
GULF DREAM
RED STAR
IN
Article Article
Pictorial
70
ORBIT
James Oberg
F C. Durant
Vladimir
III
76
BO
88
VISIONS OF THE
COSMOS
SELF-DISCOVERY
Fiction Article
Savchenko
John Chesterman
Interview
Fiction
92 96
100 115
Monte Davis
Paul
J.
Nahin
EXPLORATIONS
SUNRISE
Travel
Trudy
E. Bell
Phenomena
Diversions
Ken Kay
Scot Morris
142
GAMES
LAST
Cover art for this month's Omni is a multi-image photograph by California filmmaker and photographer Larry Norager.
In
144
WORD
.IGS'-
Tnamas
711),
Von:a ecro
voIuit.l
8.
Copyright 1979 by
Omr
jj
SF
I
edS!
Cr.'-jiP.ii:
1-1H
-t,
!:=;.
-fi-iin.?*
image -on -image effect, Norager utilized a 500-watt laser projection to create The
Universe Within.
4
am
-M
ailing olticGS.
Publishe
OMNI
"Nothing worthwhile is ever a easily." wrote physicist -erigh M- Robert 'W Bussard. at the end of his now-famous paperdes'cribuig how to build a ramjet The. paper outlined plans for a spacecraft that would, em ploy powerful magnetic
fiel'
matter
fO
US
>.'
>
"
:-;"!
.-
i:r
,,
i(-;
of
n that
would be used to fuel the vehicle, lis purpose was obvious to carry men to the stars. Bussards paper-was published in i960,
three years after Sputnik
satellite,
/,
energy by laser beam, interplanetary Space shuttles, and. of course, an interstellar ramie?. Aii reaiiy warn to leave with you." he concluded. "Is the thought thatweopenour minds and think beyond next years budgel with its two thou:
twenty
thousand
-.-.
"
enjoy...
theilr^
artificial
.Yuri
was launched and ayearbefore' Gagarin became Ihe first human !c go space. In 'nose days everybody was talking about going to the moon and then onward into the depths of space. But that was. before the budget cuts, before the a nti technological sentiments of the 1960s
into
fu!!
any that's existed in this country. Don'tabdicate that -position!'"Whether or not the AIAA will abdicate its position as the four airhead oi creativity
is.
.
of
.'.gathered their
momentum.
T6ciz;y
it
a question
later
talks
seems, nobody in the -aerospace business about anything beyond the next scheduled dip into the federal
board did
^"Today,
it
seems,;
the aerospace
nobody
in
the
of
Bussard himself went on to. work at Lbs own companies, and later to head up thethen Atomic Energy Commission's engineering program in nuclear fusion; Then,. in' 1977, he was asked to address the board of directors ol American institute of Astronautics and
,'Vamos. to found nis
,': -
of the AlAAs new Technical Working Group on Future Flight Systems, charged to stimulate thinking en new technologies.' for [he year 2000 and beyond. was an
It
important step but only mefirst of many. Enthusiasm for our move info space,
is to
i!
if
have any
re*!
mien
within ihe
Aeronautics
students.
(AIA'.A).
a professional society
scientists,'
aerospace engineers,
and
"When got
!
interested
in
the
American
scheduled dip
into the
Rocket Society [the precursor ot the AtAA] back in 1938 or so, was kind c; a Bussard to the assembled board of the AIAA -'Everybody was looking at the big problem: Can we ever go to the. moor/' The world was young
if
and
hadn't
js
just sifting
I
come and gc
to
do were
iookoo
in
Only then, when-public support for the space program equals that exhibited on the July day in 1969 when Neil Armstrong and Suzz.Al.drin landed on the moon, will the promise of space begin to be. realized. Curiously, thanks to movies like Star. Wars and Close Encounters and even space operas like Battlestar Galactica, we now have among us a generation of young people wildly excited about .the J. possibilities of space. Each yearfhe average age of NASA employees goes up. Thus we have a generation gap on our hands, a split between the dream of space and its reality Luckily, there are men iii-e Bob Bussard at work to bring :he two
:
theme Aerospace
provocative
title
I
generations together
'vput-last
fall
--.-'"'-
a iong way to
I
The
like
situation
was well
by
ahead But as
detailed program.
Electrical
and
Electronic-Engineers-.'.
.
control,
us
will
this
and other things that will matter to year and next year the things that
gene rations- .of Americans champing at the bit to move cur civilization of freedom oack to the
"When
'.
me wondered where all thai childlike enthusiasm Bussard proceeded to shower the AIAA viih ideas about things thai will
. 1
space." he said. '"we say to. he~-. "vVaifl One pemenl of our budget, or one fifth of one percent ol out y;oss national product. ;s too. much for such childish dreams.' Hogwash! Civilization is
frontier of
;
moving
into
space
"CO
^mm
h
Ati'
DRJirUII
and
ot the
one does not the cradle forever. Humanity venture beyond the edge of the atmosphere and then will boldly move out and occupy all of the worlds and spaces around the sun." The Russians have come a long way
leading space artist in the Soviet Union, gave Omni access to some of the most treasured and revered works of Soviet space art to date. Sokolov's portfolio containing imaginative visions of distant planets, alien life forms, and far-off stellar
The monster of Loch Ness has been pursued with everything from harpoons submarines armed with machine guns. Beethoven symphonies and Scottish tunes have been piped through giant underwater speakers in hopes of luring
the beast.
tb
Now
TAD
high technology
(target
introduces
alarm detector), a
with
wooden
raft
equipped
an array
of
and
since their astronautical humiliations of a decade ago and are now much closer than most of us think to realizing Tsiolkovskiy's dream. This month Omni presents a rare and in-depth glimpse into the world o! Soviet space exploration, beginning with an exclusive article on Soviet space colonies by James Oberg. In
in Orbit" (page 76). Oberg. a specialist in Chinese/Soviet space programs, closely examines Russia's new aggressive and concentrated space effort, which is already laying foundations for such ambitious projects as robot tanker spaceships, pseudogravity. multimodular space stations, and. possibly, nuclearpower space tugs. "By the mid-1980s, the Soviets will have built several permanently inhabited space settlements in orbits around the earth and the moon," writes Oberg. "Why not? They've nurtured and treasured that dream, and now they're, moving boldjy to harvest it," To illustrate the contemporary space
systems begins on page 80. Rounding out Omni's "Soviet space package" is an excerpt from "Self-Discovery" (page 88), a novel by
Soviet science- fiction writer Vladimir
cameras loaded
in the world. "It's the most sophisticated animal trap ever devised," say journalists John Chesterman and Michael Marten. Will TAD finally catch the elusive Nessie?
"Red Star
Savchenko. Trained as an electrical engineer Savchenko began writing science fiction in the late '50s. His abilities as a raconteur, combining speculative science with a satirical view of scientific politics, has established him as one of the
leading Soviet novelists.
See
writing
Nahin ("The Language Clarifier," page A professor of electrical and computer engineering, Nahin has been science fiction for over a decade
100).
memory
way,
began
selling
activities of the
and learning are still unknown, 20 years of research have begun to reveal some of its secrets. Medical researchers have found more than a dozen chemicals said to promote "intelligence" in man or animals. Most strengthen the memory and improve learning ability. Some may even promote genuine creativity. Authors Sandy Shakocius and Durk Pearson claim that such "psychopharmaceuticals" are available now some of them right at your local drugstore. In "Mind Food" (page 54), they'll tell you where you can find these intelligence drugs and how to use them.
A graduate of Stanford.
recently
won the Harry Rowe Mimno Award speculative writing. Joining Nahin in this issue are two masters of science fiction, the infor
comparable Spider Robinson and Gregory Benford. Robinson ("God Iron," page 66), a folk singer and
the
Is
an
composer of his own music, recently won Hugo Award for his novel Star Dance. Benford. a physicist from California, marks his second appearance in Omni with
"Dark Sanctuary" (page 50).
DO
omni
onnrui
LETTER
THE CORPORATION
coannnuruicMTiorus
Religious Birds
In
or.
better yet,
made
that religion
the scientists themselves should have one of those contraptions attached to their own
to be a uniquely human impulse. Some birds seem to have a ritual they perform before ihey fan out over their feeding territory in the morning and again
seems
New
Orleans, La.
when they
Is
it
some
in
of the
forerunners
at night
the fact
of
man gathered
a safe refuge
that
line in
your readers must read carefully every your articles. To build your
I
has some survival value for birds, then perhaps some similar ritual provided the genetic base for our religious needs. Eugene Marquis
If
a daily bonding
ritual
negative matter.
James
Park,
Canada
"
Old Blue Eyes While it's a well-known fact that blue-eyed people are notorious for their outrageous behavior. E. 0. Wilson's statement "It's just one of those crazy things we got stuck with, like hair on the backs of our hands, or the difficulty blue-eyed people have
to the tropics" has left me wondering. Exactly what kind of "difficulty" do blue-eyed people encounter in the
Somehow must have skipped over the sentence "But we must be very careful how we handle it." gave the car a push to see if. as Dr. Forward said, would come* toward me. must have pushed too hard. for now I'm pinned against the wall. And away from me! can't get out by pushing
I
I
it
it
Help!
Addison
All in
His
Head
when they go
tropics?
It
that
I
am
troubled
by this minor point, but have been haunted by similar statements in the past. including "Oak trees are struck by lightning more often than any other trees" and "Bananas do not grow from seeds." am at a loss as to why oak trees attract more lightning and wonder banana
I
Concerning the statement in Dennis Overbye's article on Stephen Hawking [February 1979] that Beethoven never wrote an entire symphony in his head. For that matter, he never tried to write a single piece in his head. Not that he couldn't, but Beethoven's method of composition was wholly different. He rarely created a composition to which he could not have attributed countless revisions. His
this interesting
if
The man
to
whom
Mr.
Overbye was
spontaneous generation. So, what kind of difficulty do blue-eyed people have in the tropics 9 Perhaps they
bump
into
up spontaneously from the earth or have a falling oak trees. Jane Racinsk.-.:Bratenahl, Ohio
hard time dodging
.
probably referring was Mozart. Manuscripl evidence exists that demonstrates that Mozart almost invariably thought out a complete work before writing or trying it out on his clavier.
In fact, he was known to write entire symphonies in his head a feat that has been compared to Milton's dictating
Pain
I
accompanying the
Paradise Lost to his daughters or Hawking's memorization of the long strings of equations that give life to his
Pain"
ideas.
DIALOGUE
FQRURTI
ta which the readers, editors, and correspondents discuss topics arising out
ot
of
general interest are brought forth- The views published are not necessarily those of the editors Letters for publication
.
Patented Antigravity While Doc Forward's "Goodbye Gravity" [January 1979] does massage the notion that we may blunder onto the secret of
antigmvily sometime between next Tuesday and the end of time, it is rather lame in that it does not so much as mention work underway and even patented by gentle folk who have not forgotten how to roll up the shirt sleeves and put their gravitrons where their mouths are, so to speak. For those who wish to depart the "iffy" and hesitant domains of salaried academics. suggest you write to the Patent Office. They describe "electro-
with
instruments, both
acoustic and electronic. These new instruments and scales have new moods,
the serenity of 31 -tone, hitherto unheard the zonk of 19-tone, the hard brilliance of
17-tone.
Ivor
Darreg
Calif.
New
York,
San Diego.
Natural Rejection
find must comment on the February Arts column regarding Isaac Asimov [p. 28],
I
thoroughly enjoy reading Omni. In fact, read aside from is the only magazine
I
it
biological journals.
willingly-fly."
Are
However,
Dr.
I.
reserve
in
some
criticisms for
by
space illustrations have ever painted have been conjured up in my mind after reading a passage from one of the numerous works of Isaac Asimov find his detail to be some of the most moving ever wilten. giving one reason to believe Asimov himself must surely have flown through all the galaxy. Now am being asked to believe he is
of the best
I I I
Some
Good
kinetic"
in
a certain
Interview], In
who boasts
of
having
* disservice to evolutionary theory by suggesting that natural selection and his "natural rejection" could both operate at the same time, in parallel. This thinking is an example of the confusion of the linguistic form and the logical form of the
"afraid" to
fly-
Please tell me that Asimov prefers other of transportation oecause they are more romantic or something; can hardly must be forced to fly.
pioneers, bearing
modes
believe he
to
Richard
L.
Isakson
Take, a moment to consider these in mind before you dismiss them as "silly" that the same adjective applies to anyone who pretends possess a respectable theory for the control of a force no one has ever
theory of natural selection. In the most common linguistic form, it is often said that selection "favors" some adaptive trait. In the logical form, such progressive adaptation is explained as a
process
adaptive
explained.
Allan
J.
fitness of poorly
Grise
Calif.
Thus
former
in
nature there
never "selection
Asimov
replies:
love to
fly,
but only
in
Santa Monica,
Twelve Is Not Enough saw your February issue;
I
The
my
I
imagination.
generalization
writing.
Omni
that
of future-oriented articles
Richard F Norman
Department
of Bioiogy
"most writers spend most of their lives not Almost every one of the great masterworks was produced over a very short period of time." Was James Joyce consulted for this statement? Or Kazantzakis? The only quick masterpiece I've heard of was Handel's Messiah, which was composed only after a lengthy period
of deliberation.
to exist
1
The writers I've known pull double-duty: and to turn out their manuscripts. calumny from a man of Bova's fine reputation cuts me to the quick. hope he reconsiders.
To hear sjjch
I
many future-looking people in there, too. But was brought up short by the remarks of interviewee Carla Bley in the jazz article in the Music section. To paraphrase her attitude; Nothing should be composed that a piano can't play in its 12-tone tempered scale. Pianos definitely aren't the instruments of tomorrow. What other glued-together wooden machinery is in use today? Pianos
I
McGill University
Montreal, P.Q..
Canada
The
item in the January Continuum inadvertently dismisses one of the major controversies
Life"
in
modern
biology, or
life
exobiology Whether
is
Viking detected
on Mars
will
by no
that the
means
look at
belong to the nineteenth century, and while they spurred progress in music then, they thwart now. Most of the ordinary
it
show
odds
than
are for
existing
on Mars, rather
not.
I
been mined
to
As reported
12. 1978), the
in
New
Scientist (October
There
is
now a
non-1 2-tone
movement.
evidence o' metabolism in the soil samples. On Earih. this would certainly have been considered prima facie evidence of biological activity. On Mars,
it
was
questioner: largely
because
the hair on your head by combing your hair on a dry day. I would even be willing to admit that., if we tried hard enough, we could levitate a tractor with electricity. However, this electrical icvualion has some
deficiencies.
that
a noble endeavor to alter the ecosystem of the Sahara, let alone the entire planet Venus. To counter the problem of excessive
heat, Mr. Oberg would produce clouds and dust storms on the face of the planet while flooding the magnetosphere with ions. The clouds and dust already exist on Venus, which is the main 'reason remains
it
gas
failed
each
organic molecules in soil samples. Of the two other biology experiments, one remains ambiguous as to the existence of
life,
can work on
levitation).
(that it be charged for electric and the amount of that property to be adjusted according to the amount of mass to be levitated. However.
at
has
for
into the
mystery. Either
or'it
question in limbo. The findings of the LR experiment are quite explicit. Tests run in half a dozen !abo atories have fai cd to yield an inorganic explanation of LR results. Although the mystery of what Viking found on Mars could easily be exploited to pump for funding another go at Mars, the space
r
dense-matter gravitational levitation, all bodies in the levitating field is the same, and they don't have to be modified or touched in any way. If we were to attempt to levitate you by using a large-scale version of the Millikan oil-drop apparatus, most of the lifting forces would come where the charges would collect; at your hands, feet, and hair, while your middle would droop down. You would feel as if you were trussed to a pole
the response of
storms at the polar regions. far as the problem of water is concerned, the solutions presented are
ionic
As
hardly more feasible. No significant known to exist on Mars, and the extreme temperature on Venus would prevent the existence of water in its liquid form. The diversion of a comet to provide water is as impractical as is difficult. The path of such a comet would have to be controlled within minutes of arc. If such a diversion could be made
quantities of ice are
it
agency has shown a curious reluctance to do so. The reason: Viking is a hard act to follow. No one quite knows what to do next,
short of urging a
currently
without the destruction of the comet, the amount of material remaining would be absurdly small. It has been noted that the
entire
tail
manned
expedition,
of
bureaucracy.
Lewis
Indialantic. Fla.
Forward mentions how gravity could be overcome and puts forth several methods. They all. however, require agreat amount of mass. Nowhere does Dr. Forward
mention anything about electricity. Yet if am correct. Robert Millikan used that force in 1909 to counteract the gravitational force while performing his famous oil-drop experiment. He used two electrical plates, each of opposite charge, to eliminate gravity, so to speak, and vary both the
I
immediate neighbors is quite impractical, As one looks to the future, the emphasis should be placed on finding
at best.
other planets
like ours,
A
Overcoming
gravity by
solar
system
of
pseudo-Earths would be
Walter Boyeler
Tijeras, N.
electric current.
M.
velocities of
was
trying to
lift
oil
drop.
levitation is
course, that an oil drop is an incredibly tiny object and therefore has a very small mass, but maintain that if
realize, of
I
can be done for an oil it can be done for a tractor. In "The First Starship." also in the January issue. Owen Davies proposes a
eliminating gravity
drop,
You are right about the inverse-square law on the laser-propelled sail that I first proposed back in 1962. But for a laser, that law applies only outside what is called the "near-field" zone. Inside the near-field zone you can actually focus the laser
beam
or
make
it
travel in a parallel
beam
method of propulsion using a huge and a gigantic sail. Now had read
I
laser
that
that
demands
300 kilometers across and shooting out a green laser beam, the near-field zone
extends out to nearly 19 light-years! That means that nearly all light from a 300-kilometer laser array can be focused on a 300-kilo'rietF.r-diemeter sail even at distances of many light-years. Outside
the 19-light-year region, the
Monopoly agree wholeheartedly with executive Frank Kendig that scientific and technical information should not be the exclusive domain of established journals [First Word. February 1979], However. Mr. Kendig is in grave error when he suggests that these journals should not have a "virtual monopoly on new breakthroughs." The complicated process of peer review may delay the announcement of such breakthroughs, but
I
editor
this
delay
is
a necessity
It
is
the
amount of energy in the laser should decrease by the inverse square of the
distance.
What
ensure critical review At the same time, the popular press serves an invaluable
function
in
projected over a great distance would lose energy rapidly, making impractical for even an orbital weapon, much less a giant
it
rod. to
push an
interstellar
probe
six
inverse-square law
Planet Farming
will
apply.
Curtis
K.Deutsch
Austin. Tex.
light-years to Barnard's
star.
Am
wrong?
Ind.
University of Texas
Dr.
Kevin Z.O'Brian
_
Fort
ies: Yes.
Wayne.
Forward rep
bound
electricity to levitate
an
oil
drop back in
bits of paper or
1909. You
14
Social Darwinism Revisited Your interview in the February Omni did not reveal the essentially political nature of E. 0. Wilson's ideas. Sociobiology is
.
OMNI
CONTINUED ON PAGE
130
PARADISE LOST
EARTH
By Kenneth Brower
paniola,
ur earliest account of a tropical rain forest is from Christopher Columbus. Of the island Hiswhich he discovered in 1492,
Columbus wrote, "Its lands are high [with] many sierras and lofty mountains. All are most beautiful, of a thousand shapes, and all are accessible and filled with trees of a and am told thousand kinds and tall
. .
more cotton, cacao, and coffee wealth than any of England's or Spain's New World possessions. But that glow was an unhealthy one. Haiti was being mined. Its productivity was built on the abuse of land and people. The plantations grew on
hillsides ruthlessly
The
It
revolt of
northern Haiti, an Ozymandias of the Jungle. Christophe's Citadel might serve as a symbol for all Haiti. Fifteen years in
the building, at a cost, the story goes, of 20,000 lives, the citadel has walls 32 meters thick, a garrison large enough for 10,000 soldiers, and endless ranks of enormous cannons. To Napoleon, who had
trees.
were so
can
understand, for saw ihem as green and lovely as they are in Spain in May." The Hispaniola of Columbus, like most
other islands
entirely
in the West Indies, was covered by tropical forest. Today
later,
every 20
had
In
to
be replaced.
began a
finally
revolution for
attacked Haiti once, and to anyone else, the fortress said, "Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair." The Citadel today is
independence, which
1804. Haiti
succeeded
in Latin
in
was
the
first
colony
as grim and impregnable as ever, built on a mountainside that the tropical rain is
487 years
than 9 percent of
original cover,
and
that small relic of a jungle is going fast. Haiti, the nation occupying the western
third of the island,
has
failervfrom paradise
paradigm. It is this hemisphere's foremost example of the troubles that deforestation can bring to a tropicai land
to
win its independence. It seemed a promising beginning, but in truth the new nation's foundations were already compromised and crumbling. A second revolt, a revolt of the land, soon followed the first. Caused by the agricultural practices of the French, it gathered momentum with the fires and
America
to
washing away.
Today, the revolt of the Haitian earth has triumphed. It has undone the work of , Toussaint L'Ouverture, the liberator. It has placed every inhabitant of Haiti under house arrest. The land has lost its flexibility, and Haitians are once again slaves, this time to poverty and the caprices of weather. The vines and earth
.
and
its
people.
Haiti
plantations exported
"victory,
new revolt have cracked and tumbled the stone walls of Henri Chrisshifts of the
Ihe burgeoning
numbers
of Haitians.
tophe. The real Tontons Macoutes are the bogeymen of deforestation overpopulation, erosion, and floods. Haiti's lesson is larger than the island.
Haiti
is all
world in microcosm. The ruination there, having a narrower compass, was achieved
more
Haiti,
quickly,
abstract.
and
and its rules are easier to The Amazon Basin is just a big that's what we have to worry
about.
The tropical rain forest runs in a dark-green, neariy Continuous belt around the equator of this planet. It is confined almost entirely to the latitudes between the tropics of Capricorn and Cancer, although thin fingers of fores! poke south past
Capricorn
Australia,
into Argentina and western and a lobe of forest rises north above Cancer into Burma. The forest has a
number
is
in 1898. He described it as "evergreen, hygrophilous in character, at least 30 meters high, but usually much
Schimper
taller
grow
freely
because
of bo<
well
CONTINUED ON
RftGE 133
OMNI
SPINAR
Chartrand
111
away
in
trillion
a spectrum form a dossier of the elements thai are present in the source
lines in
suns, mystery
and
there
and so
the depths of
cosmic
night
is that far distant it must be space. exceptionally luminous to appear as bright seems to us. Even more puzzling, because appears as but a point of light even with the post powerful telescopes, it must be very small on a cosmic scale perhaps too small to produce all that radiated energy by any means within
as
it
it
current theory, We know the active parts of quasars must be small since they vary their light
pace
o( scientific
tically
Schmidt realized that the lines in the spectrum of one quasar could be he assumed that the quasar was moving away from us very last. When an object is receding from us, the Doppler effect shifts the wavelengths of the light we see toward the red end of the spectrum. This effect could have shifted normally invisible ultraviolet lines redward
explained
if
weeks, output in a short period of time even days. If such an object is to draschange its brightness, all parts of it must change in phase; uncoordinated changes would cancel out and produce
only a
then coordinate
Some
signal
the other side to change. The fastest information carrier the laws of relativity
spectrum,
if
permit is light, so if an object varies coherently within a day it must be no bigger than a light-day across.
Some
be nebulas
clouds
gas and
were
dust within our Milky Way galaxy. Others iar irom our city of stars; they were in fact galaxies in their own right. Still others
to
were so, the quasar must be whizzing away from earth at fully one tenth the speed of light! The quasar was therefore surely not a would have escaped from the star, for
it
Now, a light-day
is
about 26
billion
seemed
light
be single stars
mere points
among
the
of
on photographs of the areas of sky from which the radio waves came. Early names for these were "quasi-stellar radio
source," "quasi-stellar object," and their acronyms QSRS and QSO. "Quasar," probably the most glamorous term in the
entire galaxy,
astronomer's lexicon,
survived.
is
Wondering what these "radio stars" might be, optical astronomers spread their light into a spectrum displaying all the different wavelengths. The spectrum revealed a swath of light overlaid by bright and dark lines, particular wavelengths
where the
the star. Now, it
intensity of radiation is
Some quasars are surrounded by a faint haze; others spew out jets of material at tens of thousands of kilometers per second. Still other quasars do not radiate any radio waves. About 95 percent oi the
quasars are radio quiet. Thus the term meaning "quasi-stellar radio quasar
source" is inaccurate. Some astronomers think we may have to change others think may come to encompass
it;
it
material of
in
known that each chemical element emits and absorbs light of particular wavelengths under specific
well
The
if
first
of these
was found
in
in
1929,
when a faint
3
object
the obscure
18
OMNI
was
MYTH
By
Dr.
Bernard Dixon
was even more pleased than usual when peeled open my copy of the
I
and 39C
It
(101.3
and
Pasteuretia muitocida
a bacterium,
is
I technical
journal
Science
recently.
contained a paper by two physiologists from the University of Michigan Medical School that confirmed suspicions I've had for some years about a silly but widespread medical habit. Dr. Matthew Kiuger and Barbara Rothenburg have discovered evidence that physicians' eagerness to prescribe drugs like aspirin fo reduce a temperature can do more harm than good. This medical reflex is founded on the idea that a person's temperature should be brought back to normal as speedily as possible. In practice,
of new infectious virus particles falls from 95 percent of that at 35C (95F) to 2 percent. So even a slight rise in temperature reduces considerably the
a
Dr.
common cause
KUger and
related effects;
of
his colleagi.e
As the infected
rabbits'
The
implication of this
work was
clear.
C
While a substantially elevated temperature above 41*C (105. requires urgent treatment, the
F)
down
temperature rose, the amount of iron in blood plasma fell. So the duo next studied what happened when they cultured P. muitocida in artificial-nutrient media at various temperatures and with different amounts of iron. The results were striking. At the (emperature oi healthy
their
in influenza can be unwise. Increased temperature may well be the body's most potent means of thwarting
moderate fever
viral
In'
such medication may well interfere own defenses defenses often more effective than drugs. Andre Lwoff, an unconventional Nobel laureate, first questioned the idea thai
with the body's
whatever the concentration of iron. Fever temperatures inhibited their growth. Other investigators have reported that
the virulence of many disease-causing bacteria depends on their ability to secure
groups have con-rmed Prolessor Lwoff's observations and found that they apply to other microbes as well. What Matthew Kiuger and Barbara Rothenburg have now
adequate supplies
of iron.
Reduction of
this uptake may explain why a fever is an important, positive force in the fight
(ever
thus a
done
is
to
show how
invading bacteria.
And where
Lwoff
about ten years ago. Working at the Pasteur Institute in Paris, he discovered
that poliomyelitis virus
tissue-cultured cells at
human
infections.
The subjects
approaches 40C
(104F).
Between 38.5
New
drugs to reduce fever may well impair the body's own protective machinery. While aspirin remains an excellent drug to combat pain, prescribing it indiscriminately to reduce fever, as many physicians do, may be a serious error.
that taking
It would, in fact, be extraordinary these findings are not applicable to man as well as to rabbits. Dr Lwoff and his colleagues found that when dogs infected with the vaccinia virus were given fever-reducing drugs, their chances of dying increased. And mice suffering from virus encephalitis can be cured as easily by raising their temperature as by giving
if
them massive injections of antibodies. Kiuger and Rothenburg's tests illustrate one effect involving nutrition. Researchers
at the
til
-....'a
be your bo
of
good. OO
20
OMNI
FE IN
TARS
By
Patrick
Moore
^^k
1 1
%m
million
kilometers
it
shines
brilliantly in
the
our skies.
spirited impression of
If has been in the news of late because two Voyager probes have been
training Slippers.
swim,
at least passably.
is
the sea
teeming with
en route there. They did not try to land, of course, but flew past at a respectful distance, sending back spectacular
photographs and much information. We can never go near Jupiter ourselves because the planet is .surrounded by zones of lethal radiation and by an immensely powerful magnetic field. Yet we have finally begun to learn what is like under its upper layer of gas.
For
situation must be different. According to one recent model, Jupiter may be made up chiefly of liquid hydrogen, with only a
relatively small solid core.
If
true, this
provides a liquid environment. Moreover, there must be a region below the cold
very intelligent. Dolphins, sea lions, and porpoises are no fools, as we have learned. What, then, are the chances that,
somewhere, advanced
liquid
life
forms
live in
environment?
life
By "advanced
forms"
mean beings
Jupiter
who can' not only communicate, as dolphins admittedly can, but who have a real language and are capable of
teaching, building, and so on. Olaf Stapledon's magnificent novel Star Maker describes one such civilization. But, of course, that is only fiction; we have no proof that any intelligent race lives in a liquid environment. For that matter, we have no proof that life exists anywhere beyond the earth, and a few eminent
scientists believe that
return to that
later. In
it
thought that
it
authorities
could be a miniature sun, lighting and warming its moons. When this attractive idea was disproved in the 1920s, most decided there would be a rocky
ice,
upper gas and above the hot inner core where the temperature is much the same as it is in our own seas. It seems likely that most of the fundamental materials needed for life exist there, and this intriguingly suggests that living beings may be swimming happily about in the Jovian hydrogen oceans. Obviously, any such beings would be fundamentally different from any of the life forms we know on Earth. Yet the conditions there may not be quite so uncompromisingly hosiile to life as, for instance, the surface of airless Mercury or even that of the moon, the one world we can prove is sterile without any doubt. It is easy to let our imaginations run riot.
does
not.
will
which would in turn be overlaid by a gaseous atmosphere. Today this has also been assigned to the astronomical scrap heap. We have found that Jupiter radiates more energy than it could depended entirely on the sun. The inner temperature must be thousands of degrees. This does not make
if it
Would ihe Jovians have fins and flippers? Would they be able to talk? Their eyes
would have
to
be good; very
little
light
Rather surprisingly, there is a liquid away than Jupiter, -the member of the sun's family. One
Jupiter a miniature star, but it surely rules out any thick layer of subsurface ice.
could penetrate those murky depths. But they could know nothing about the great
universe around them.
commented
system
made up
and
assorted debris. This may be an extreme view but Jupiter is certainly more massive than all the rest of the planets put together. Its equatorial diameter is more than 140,800 kilometers, and its huge globe could contain a thousand earths. The surface we see through our telescopes is gaseous. We can make out dark belts, where atmospheric gas descends toward the planet's surface; bright zones, where the gas is surging upward; and such specific features as the Great Red Spot's huge oval. The surface of Jupiter is always changing, and our view of it alters in minutes. Jupiter spins round quickly. At less than ten hours, its day is the shortest in the solar system, though the Jovian year is 11.9 times as long as ours.
more than 40 years is that Jupiter's upper gas is rich in hydrogen, together with such unprepossessing hydrogen compounds as
thing
tor
One
we have known
admit to being something of a skeptic. have very little faith that life occupies the Jovian deeps. But one never knows! Unfortunately, it will be very difficult to find out one way or the other. With manned visits impossible, the most we can do is to dispatch an unmanned "entry probe" that would plunge to its destruction in the upper gas, sending back information for as long as possible. On the other hand, Jupiter has four
I
large satellites and at least nine small ones. Of these, Callisto, the outermost of
seems
to
be
the
most
Jupiter
may
promising target lor would-be explorers. It s we over a million kilometers from and is therefore safely outside the radiation zones. In the fat future, a Callisto expedition land. Its members will do all they can
'
to learn
I
whether anyone
will fail.
lives in Jupiter's
I
is
remote its
is
mean
24
772.8
Couia Jupiter's
roiling
gas hide
intelligent Hie?
hope am
I
DO
OMNI
TELB
THE ARTS
By James Delson
rave New World is not really science fiction anymore," says Burt Brinckerhoff, director of the Novel for Television. "It was in 1932, it's more of a social statement. to equate it with what might happen if
now
McDonald's took over the world." Aldous Huxley's classic story of a dystopian society has never been
translated to the screen. This
is
largely
because filmmakers and television executives have traditionally approached science-fiction social commentaries as
second-rate projects
continually ask their
in which scientists governments why the
world has turned out the way it has. Before now, Brave New World could offer only a seriocomic look at the plasiicized tuture
described above by
Mr. Brinckerhoff
not
the most commercial of prospects. The Brave New World ot Huxley's story
is
by inflexible rules. Birth is achieved through test-tube conception, engineered to produce five specific types of human life forms whose genetic codes are predetermined according to levels of intelligence. Emotion is downplayed, though sex is available for all. Drugs.
lives is dictated
induce a variety of responses. Euthanasia is accepted as commonplace, and those found guilty of nonconformity are exiled rather than imprisoned. As has been the case with so many recent science-fiction films, Brave New World came to be made only because of the popularity of Star Wars and Close Encounters of the Third Kind. "When the show's producer, Jacqueline Babbin, first brought the project lo the networks several years ago," Brinckerhoff explained, "she couldn't have gotten it off the ground without the success ot those two films. Before that, the feeling always seemed to be that there just wasn't enough here as a straight story, and as satire, there was fear that couldn't be properly handled. "I had worked with Jacqueline Babbin on a series called Beacon Hilt a few years ago," Brinckerhoff went on. "When she needed a director for Brave New World, knew would be an enormous challenge. Everyone has read the book, or heard of but their memory of it is generally clouded by time. As a result, a certain vision of the story lingers, colored by decades of mistaken memories. Our task was to have the audience come away irom their television sets having seen something that
it
I
they could
remember
identifying with,
if their recollections were inaccurate begin with. always enjoyed science fiction, I've never directed in the field before. It requires one to use his imagination, to reach beyond the boundaries and limitations of other types of stories to explore things. You can't just
even
to
"I've
though
look
down
a tunnel
and be involved
with
science fiction. The McDonald's remark wasn't meant to be offensive. The story just has that kind of implication. There are many things which are extensions of where we are now set 600 years in the tuture. We don't want io mislead people, though. Our film is a story about people, not an exploration ot the hardware that has_
come to be so
science
fiction
it
We just left
!o
it
it,
knew how
evolved
in
do
it,
just
every other
the world
to
Once we had established what was going to be like, we just tried be true to We didn't worry about how they traveled from one place to another very quickly, about what kinds of weapons they had, and those kinds of things. We
centuries.
it.
concentrated instead on what kinds of relationships those particular people would have within that atmosphere. "I was confused by Star Wars in one sense," Brinckerhoff continued, "I admired because so many but was baffled by people thought it was just pure entertainment. though! it was one of the most violent films had seen in a long lime,
it it
I
you took each laser ZAP! to be what was meant'io be. Somehow you can excuse it's just ZAP! instead of BANG! Bodies fall to the ground as soon as they're shot, and everyone has a Roy
if
it
it
if
Rogers pistol which fires endlessly without the need for reloading. No one feels pain, no one bleeds; they just fall down dead. "I want people to laugh at the future
we've created in Brave Wew World," Brinckerhoff suggested. "I want them to draw the parallels between 600 years in and 1979. Then, perhaps, they'll
CONTINUED ON PAGE
136
AJdc.i",
H-j&ey
.s
g/ea;
oy^joim n,
the future
26
OMNI
FILM
THE ART
By James Delson
conceived as a three-part miniseries, with each show running two hours in succeeding weeks. After NBC saw the first script, the initial producers were replaced by Glen Larson, who had already begun production on his Battlestar Galactica series for ABC. "I had originally been approached to do Buck," Larson explained, "but was loo busy developing Galactica so turned down. NBC came back later, having found the script they were given to be too much of a comic
I
, I
U ^J
f%
hen a new television version Such Rogers was announced in 1977, was
of
it
was
in
excess
ol
movie had
originally
When Larson explained that the situation would be very similar for Buck Rogers, NBC immediately began talking about discarding the second and third parts of the miniseries, They would go directly into a weekly show, using the film as a pilot. "By this time we'd learned a lot about the science-fiction market," Larson said. "We'd already had a taste of success with
ten million.
shot for television, and the film has done well in movie houses. Larson must have agreed with Dykstra to some extent, because he spent a great deal of money improving Buck Rogers's efiects
it
the release ol the theatrical version of Galactica in Canada. We said, 'Look, do this right from the beginning. Let's
let's
book.
"We decided
to
the whole project of three two-hour movies, but it was quite clear from the start that we'd put most of our time and money into the first one." The "start-up" costs
release this as a feature,' " If they could -shoot the special effects with big-screen professionalism, the film's success would preseil the series later on. "Since NBC had
No
It
on a show
enormous. On
had the
Galactica, Larson
successful."
John Dykstra,
sequences. NBC had not committed itself to a theatrical release when the filming was started, but from ihe beginning both Larson and director Daniel Haller were sure to cover themselves. They knew that even if NBC decided to show it on television here, it would at least get theatrical distribution abroad. "Whenever you do a television iilm that's two hours long or more," Haller said, "it is always considered eligible lor loreign release if it's any good at all. This means > that whenever you've got the time, you shoot more long shots to insert where you've initially placed all those close-ups so necessary for television. Of course, the theatrical version has to take a second position, because the show's
being financed as aTV movie." Since NBC hadn't made up its mind about releasing the film in US theaters, he had to stick to the planned schedule. "I didn't hear that we'd be getting a domestic release until some
Haller explained ihat
models, costumes, props, and other equipment, plus create a whole range
special-effects material.
had
felt its
effects
were not up
Though each
episode
of
standards for theatrical release. The film audience, however, didn't care that the
weeks
after the
show was
finished," Haller
"I was on another show by ihen, me to come back to shoot additional footage to flesh out the movie- thought, 'Oh Christ! Why didn't tell me? Why didn't know?' Bui nobody knew. You can't second-guess on a TV movie. There isn't time." Television politics finally allowed Larson to release Buck Rogers theatrically, His product/on company works out of Universal Si' 'dios, which provides him with facilities and serves as distributor on his films and shows. When NBC hired him to produce the miniseries, the deal
recalled.
some
they
became one
up." Larson
was brought
approach
in.
He decided
to
change
their
Marauder pirate
28
=s
may appear in
is
from so many novels for television and canceled a very large commitment with Universal, which was going to produce these shows for NBC. We got Buck back
..
OMNI
This woman, she is like my tequila. Smooth, but with a lot of spirit."
Her name was well we're not sure. And she appears to have been the only other love Two Fingers had besides his
"It's
tequila.
her spirit I capture in the tequila I make. It is soft but, oh, so passionate," he reportedly said. She traveled with Two Fingers as he brought the
taste of this-special tequila
north of the border. And then, without warning, they both disappeared leaving behind only the passionate taste of the Two Fingers Tequila we enjoy today.
lorted
and
Botded
ll
by
Hiram
or.)
Dns,
Inc.,
Peoria,
Tequila, SO
booklet:
Two
"
BOOKS
THE ART5
.
By Joe Haldeman
first
It
"Say,
in
smiling,
magazine the other day.' Since he was sat back and prepared to bask in
I
approbation. he was lull of praise, but as he some started to go into detail about it damned thing about a slug that ale Washington had to break in and tell him
a glow
ol
Well,
researcn satellite mat spec alizes in biology and medicine. A manned probe has just brought back living specimens from a planet circling another star the first life forms ever found. The study of them will revolutionize biology, of course, and the scientists are all enthusiastic and dedicated and best-and-brightest. One by one, they start to die. It is no
alien
one
permeates ihe
air.
that
it
was my
wasn't who had written the story; brother Jay; Jack C. Haldeman
I
it
When he stance writing =c;ence fiction a few years ago, gently suggested to Jay that he make up a snazzy pseudonym, so that people wouldn't confuse the two of us. He didn't like the idea, since he'd had the name a couple of years longer than but we did arrive at a compromise: He would use his full name and would shorten mine. Surely no one could mistake a "Joe
I
known disease; evidently they've somehow caughi a plague from one or more of the alien creatures. The captain puts the station under absolute quarantine, no shuttles in or out until they can solve the mystery, Trapped inside the sealed station with
is the Senate minority antispace politico who a junket to Delta III with the avowed purpose of finding justification for
as any I've seen), but especially the research people. There's a reason. When Jay and were growing up, most of our adult friends were medical
I
researchers, since our father was head of the Arctic Health Research Center in Anchorage, Alaska. After a while, drifted
I
I,
the researchers
leader,
virulently
has
made
it
physics and astronomy, but Jay stayed with biology. He eventually studied biological science at Johns Hopkins and* did research in parasitology, finally returning to the Arctic with a group doing
into
Haldeman"
Wrong. And
tor
it
a" Jack
C.
Haldeman
II,"
shutting
and
will pull
down. Now he's mortally afraid any dirty trick to break the
deadly contagion back to Earth. Then a key scientist is found near death, bludgeoned and stuffed into a locker. Then another, dead for hours, beaten
research on the parasites that hitch rides on whales. (I don't know if I'm the only science-fiction writer who's been a combat lumberjack, but I'm sure Jay's the only one who's been a whaler.) Then for eight or nine years he worked with blood
in what sounds like one of the most harrowing research situations
chemistry, possible.
quite a compliment to
half-correctly
we share 'a
last
criminal, or unjustly
be even remembered. The fact that name with an infamous beleaguered ex-civil
beyond
recognition.
servant, has nothing to do with it. Jay is a fine writer, but we are different
writers
I
There was no real problem so long as Jay stuck to short stories and let me do the books. No problem so long as he did light-hearted tales about sports in the
In Baltimore there is an unsavory district The Block, and over weekends convenes there an informal organization known to the area's medical people as the Saturday-Night Knife-and-Gun Club. Jay worked at a university hospital in the area with a group that was concerned about the physiological changes that occur in a
called there
and did hard-science, high-lech novels about important things like War and
future
I
body during the interval between mortal njury and death or, sometimes, recovery.
Religion
is
a hard-science
This shock-and-trauma unit had its own Helicopter (one must suspect they had a
humanity and the aforementioned Sex, and it's quite a good book, but has the wrong Haldeman's name on Just to add
it
fight
it.
Omni
called
and askedjrie to write a short piece about and about having a brother who is also a
it
amount of Defense funding), which would whisk them to the scene of a gang or head-on collision while there was still a chance of collecting a living specimen. After receiving the best of medical care, the victim would be retired to a special bed, where a computer could closely monitor his progress toward
certain
writer.
The book is called Vector Analysis, and most of it takes place on Delta III, a
30
my way
room
in
an
ill-fitting
suit of
through surgeon's
OMNI
"
\L
URES
UFD UPDATE
By Harry Lebelson
a long
shape
corning
for
me
right
Valentich disappearance.
hovering on top of me." With these words came the report of an extraordinary event that occurred on Saturday night, October 21, 1978. Alight Cessna aircrait piloted by twenty- year-old Frederick Valentich of Avondale Heights, Australia, vanished from the sky. Valentich, on a flight to Melbourne in clear weather and unlimited visibility, had a confrontation with an unidentified flying object at 7:06 rm, For the next six minutes, a game of hide-and-seek took place between the two craft. The UFO, described by Valentich in his final radio relay to Melbourne as metallic in appearance, cigar-shaped, and having
.
. .
It's now
Department
claims the
of
Transport
in
pilo:
was
c soric-ntcd
throughout the
have been
his
flying
own
be a UFO. This
Aviation
was discounted by
pilot
Company: "The
would have
The incidents in Australia and New Zealand are not atypical ot classic UFO encounters. Something appeared ro a diverse group of witnesses, each of whom
reported sightings that coincided with radar reports from local airports. The most
arresting
known
if the aircraft had begun to turn upside down, because the carpet would have come off the floor and anything else lying around loose would have bounced
oyowinsss account
of the
sighting on
December 21
in
New Zealand
on the coast,
his
plane. Following the pilot's last, desperate message, a long metallic noise was heard on the radio, then silence. Valentich has not been heard from since. His disappearance remains -a complete mystery. Varying theories exis: m regard to the
observed a UFO performing "impossible maneuvers" unlike those of any conventional aircraft. This sighting, along with later sightings ol similar-type craft by two
freight
from Captain Powell and Copilot Perry as they (lew m rneir freight plane near the UFO. Powell spotted a massive white light with a red tinge flying to his port at a distance of approximately 40 kilometers. "I m-.agineO n. was stationary but",
came
checking
with the
later,
found
it
to
be
still
even
window"
planes over
New Zealand,
20 kilometers as kept pace with the plane. The plane's radar indicated that the object was 64 kilometers out to sea. Both pilots watched as the UFO moved
25 kilometers toward the plane in seconds. At this point, it veered to the southwest am::: disappeared off the radar screen with no further trace whatsoever
five
An additional sighting was reported that same night by other aircraft. As a result, TV producer Leonard Lee of Channel
Melbourne instructed Qi.ent n Fogarty. a reporter on holiday in New Zealand, to [j jplicste t'le "light of Captain Powell's Argosy freight plane. Lee thought they would be able to make contact and film the unidentified flying object, which ultimately -they did. On a recent Washington. D.C., talk show hosted by physicist Bruce Maccabee and UFO author Philip Klass, producer Lee stated: "He [Quentin Fogarty] was the reporter asked to reconstruct the sighting. He was on holiday in New Zealand. We said, 'Would you please knock off holiday for a couple of days and go do the story, because we were short of news over the Christmas and New Year's period.' Philip Klass said, "You say you were short of news over the Christmas period?"
I
lilmed by
a Swiss
airport-security p'iicer
CDruriruuurvi
_^Hk
:
cilies in
space. Advocates of
lighting.
I space
. ;
^W
;
colonies argue that 'we already have the to build ihem. They also cite figures
living
jects
tion. Television
scenes set off from fhe pitch blackness by artificial People become genuinely confused as to whether obreal or figments ol their imaginaaddicts, say NASA researchers, are also prone to
habitats is economically feasible. But one detail has not been demonstrated: Will we like living "out there"? What will happen to the emotions and psyches oi people whose! up house in a space city? Will they hate it? Go crazy? And what about their loyalty to Earth? Will they turn against their home planet? It's not such a farfetched idea. In fact, it has already happened. It was not widely publicized at the time, but five years ago, in 1974, the third crew of Skylab staged what must be the
first
this
problem. Perhaps.
And
future
inhabitants of
space settlements?
Shimanagashi Syndrome is another possible hazard of space living. Named alter a punishmenf popular in ancient Japan, it's the psychological condition of feeling isolated, vaguely uncomfortable,
political
lives.
and intellectually stilted. In fhe original punishment, prisoners were exiled to tiny islands for the rest of their Today the same state of mind can also affect mainlanders
for
who move,
still
example,
Like
and sophisticated
feel isolated,
ward G. Gibson, and William Pogue were part of an elite. Each was highly motivated, superbly trained, and deeply committed to
the
to Hawaii. Regardless ol how modern their surroundings, Shimanagashi sufferers a feeling not shared by people born on the
island.
space mission.
like
much
the
first
and background they were' very two crews. But they were different in one way:
In training
A third
possible complication
of
is
is
simply
They were
Within a few weeks of arriving at Skylab they filled the radio to Earth with gripes: The other crews had messed up Skylab; the uniforms were ugly; the food was bland; the soap stank; and the space toilet was everyone's pet peeve. "I don't
waves
know how
it
that
sure wasn't by anyone who took a crap and noticed his posture." They also, complained about being overworked. "We're being driven to the wall," they hollered. Finally, when it became obvious that Mission Control remained insensitive to their complaints, they went on a one-day strike in which they refused to work and spent the time doing what they pleased. Earth and Skylab eventually settled their differences, but the question remains: If this kind of thing can happen with an
astronaut-caliber crew, what would ordinary people like you or me?
comes from moving into the unfamiliar space. But according to the three behavior experts who first described the condition Drs. Jay Shurley, Kirmach Natani. and Randal Sengel of the Veterans Administralion Hospital in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma this confusing state of mind passes once a person has absorbed the overload of new information and experiences. Shurley, Natani, and Sengel. however, worry about still other
the disorientation that
neighborhood
may
affect our
first
space
citizens.
be interesting
to look literally
come
'down upon'
earthbound
peers."
space
stress
do
to
more
One
city
is
possible effect of spending months or years in a space called the Solipsism Syndrome, which is NASA's term for
losing grasp of reality. It's a real condition often seen on Earth in the citizens of Lund, Sweden, during their long (18 hours at times) winter nights. To persons suffering from Solipsism Syndrome, the world begins to look like a series of stage sets individual,
For the near future, Shurley, Natani, and Sengel believe fhe people, who will do best in space are "latent heterosexuals" those with conventional sexual preferences but with little need for much physical intimacy. These are the same people who survive well at remote weather stations. The distant future is anybody's guess. Summing up all work done on space psychology, the three behaviorists note apologetically: "It is with acute but unavoidable embarrassment that we mustadmii that there is little data to present. ..." In other words, we can send a man into space, but we have no idea he's going
if
-
to
... or
cofUTiruuurui
ROCKET HOLES
The atmosphere may be a
life-sustaining blanket of
air,
Radioscience Laboratory,
the hole effect
FIRST
FLOWER
was
first
to
called
but
it
is
also an annoying
barrier to
ground-based
The Saturn rockets used to boost the space station into orbit burned a Ion of fuel per
second, he says, expelling carbon dioxide, hydrogen gas, and water. These exhaust vapors reacted
chemically with the plasma (ionized gas) of the
mystery." Now,
evidence
the
new
fossil of
members of the modern Bromeliaceae, or pineapple, The fruiting bodies, containing hundreds of
family.
primarily
visible
arranged fruits, resemble small pineapples. "The combination of features we see in these forms are known only in angiosperms." Cornet
spirally
telescopes on earth. turns out, however, that the very .activity of launching spacecraft may punch temporary holes in the atmosphere and give large earthbound instruments a brief but unobstructed view
Il
made
four hours.
"The discharge
may have
John
D.
McLeod
of extraterrestrial objects,
Radio engineers at
Stanford and Boston Universities plan to study
this "hole"
LASER CHEMISTRY
The methods
of
make
detail
in
chemistry
haven't drastically
changed
shuttle's
second Spacelab
quency radio sources such as the Vela and Gum nebulae." Dava Sobel
over the years. New compounds are made basically by mixing some
a 200-million-year-old "pineapple" could provide answers to one of the longest-Standing controversies in science: the
of Gulf
Researcher Bruce Cornet Research & Development Company in Houston, Texas, has
seed-containing
fruiting
vibrations.
Virtually everything that
well
prove to
frequencies.
praciice, for
company
of soldiers to
and Virginia, the fossils are nearly twice as old as the oldest previously undoubied
a resonant frequency
of the bridge,
in
FAT
POWER
collectively
ban
Americans are
2.3 billion pounds overweight. If the energy it took
to produce the food forthat excess fat were diverted
when
smoking
in
confined public
(iwlra -at. ihey would save 5.676 trillion calories, the researchers estimated. This
they can
laser.
spaces. And, notes Cohn, government tests conducted in 1973 showed that
gasoline
Because
lasers
generate light of only one frequency they can be tuned to excite a particular chemical in a compound, even to the point of knocking the chemical out of the compound, This technique has great possibilities, according to Dr. Norman Witriof, researcher at Louisiana Tech University:
"Right now, the method for simplifying
is
needs of all the homes and apartments in Boston, Chicago. San Francisco, and Washington,
yearly electric
js'earchers at the
to fuel more than a cars for two months. Maintaining the correct. weight would save an extra 3.43 trillion calories a year. In an age of increasing energy prices, dwindling supp es, and worl.dfood problems, unneeded fat may
enough
million
University of
Illinois
reached
that conclusion by
first
researchers said.
calculating the
calories
eat.
in
number of we
"/
Stuart Diamond
confess that
in 1901
!
used
said
years,
liters
but impossible to
at present."
make
Carl Frederick
cigarettes treated with Colite emit 60 percent less tar and 43 percent less nicotine than untreated cigarettes. While the invention
to both
125,000 BTUs.)
Thus, if the 50 million overweight men and 60 overweight women
million
avoided all predictions. It not necessary (o look too larinto the future; we see
. .
is
enough already
in
to
be
Certain
SMOKELESS
CIGARETTES
The expression "smokefilled back rooms" may ii an invention by the- man who developed lightweight aluminum car trim ever sees the light of day. The patented product is Colite a sodium silicate that is 50 percent water which when brushed on a cigarette prevents the tobacco from burning unless
that
it
will
the
US
Wilbur
become passe
a major snag;
in their
labs.
for
P.
A spokeswoman
Lorillard
the cigarette
is
puffed.
Company, one
of.
the
Unpuffed cigarettes
account for about 95 percent of the smoke that its way info the lungs of
know
specificallyof
finds
J.A.A. Gambardello
"
CDfUTIfUULIfUl
POOPED PASTE
Denial researchers at the
University ol
Illinois
OLDEST ANTS
A
party of entomologists
have
fluoride is
the males sport wings. All the members, including the workers, have stingers. Yet their social behavior is
primitively antlike.
toothpaste to
make
The
majority of present-
species thai died off more than 60 million years ago. They are perhaps the most
primitive living ants ever
of other species.
Australian ants
seem
to
be
behavior
was
like at
the
dawn
of
its
evolution.
Most entomologists agree that ants evolved from wasplike ancestors, but they are hazy about how the ant's complex social behavior got started, With the discovery of the Australian bugs, though, the fog is beginning
to clear. Like
"While theoretically
feasible., yet
and
technically television
may be
commercially
I
most
primitive
dreaming.
Fearing that kids may poison themselves by eating a full tube ol toothpaste, manuiaciurers qui in only small amounts of fluoride.
fighter, fluoride,
Lee De Forest
(inventor of the
gradually
disappears from toothpaste after several months. Although doesn't disappear completely, the substance apparently
it
effective. The reason for such small levels in the toothpaste to begin with
queens and
is
highly toxic
putting small
amounts
for
into
the paste
original
and loses
reasons
so
safety
Dr.
Indru
to the
matter
how
in
fluoride sinks,
is
still
effective
decay
In fact, in
stannous alone
to
is
enough
But
if
be an effective
cavity fighter.
bomb
"
SUN WOOF
Those with energyconscious dogs will be pleased to know thai they can now buy their canine an $800, solar-heated dog-. house. The large, cedar
:
sun.
Campers
in
meals
solar
A CLOVE A DAY...
There is now experimental evidence to verify at least some. of the legendary
that gar
cmay
also help
in
diabetes, pimples.
even
cancer
In all
magic
garlic
garlic
salt
and strength
eliminate the
to
go
in
Germany
in
Hown luci
eaf?Paava
days, wasting
the door
is
that
expensive energy
whBn
helps break up cholesterol blood vessels, thus preventing hardening of the arteries and heart disease.
Airola,
should you a
physician-nutritionist
who
opened.
is comand comes
Experiments
in
Japan and
of Garlic
The doghouse
pletely insulated
temperature 20 to 40 degrees warmer than the outside air even after the SUn has set by trapping
Russiashow that the pungent cloves collect lead, mercury, cadmium, and Other toxic metals in the body and' allow them, to be removed during bowel movements. So, city joggers who breathe the exhaust fumes, of traffic can eat
garlic
says that two- or three small cloves a day are sufficient. Taking this advicemay not win you many
friends, out
vou
will
sure
be healthy
S.D.
thing-
bomb
1
will
and stay
healthy,
and
sp.e-ak
-y-iKiQ yyjr
in ttte solar
Manufacturing
advised a doctor in a recent issue of Runners' World magazine. Other research has found
explosives.
Admiral
to
Leahy
And
are both
dog
and
solar fanatics,"
pranksters are giving "solar clothes dryers" as. gifts: namely, a clothes line and 20
1,
clothespins. S.D.
B Kg
-."
"Among
theories
finally-
.:!,;*>.
BKraBcffi
ventional sun-collecting
equipment. In the summer, he added, the solar panels on the doghouse can be covered, "so Rover doesn't " turn intoahotdog
rejected by scientists in the early Nineteenth Century [was the belief] that mice could be produced by hunk
The solar doghouse is only one of several offbeat solar devices produced by
America's technological geniuses. The US Forest Service has solar-powered outhouses (the sun powers
the
toilet flusher).
enclosing a of cheese and some old rags in a hat box," E..C. Large in
The Advance
of
the Fungi
"
The National
Academy o!
for the
Science exists
Farmers
members
Daniel
to write
each
Only fresh garlic
Airala, will
other's obituaries."
S.
wM ac.
Two or
tr.re
sr-'i.i::
c-'O
75P?rc!gy.
5H',-'i
-'-^--a
Greenberg, 1967
oreveni a
'
CDnJTIfUUURJl
ICE
If
AGE
each winter seems
last,
period,"
Kahn explained,
has
BANG! BANG!
Fighter planes have always been controlled manually by pilots. But this
is
mounted on
helmet.
the pilot's
pilot's
may
imagination.
of
Two geo-
becoming increasingly
South Carolina were awarded a S56.500 grant by the National Science Foundation to study long-term temperature changes recorded in
recently
shells ol foraminifera
temperature fluctuations
at the surface are to
needed
and
glaciers.
J.D.M.
From their studies of oxygen and carbon-isotope levels, Drs. Douglas Williams and Michael Kahn hope to
pinpoint precise temperatures at which the
shells formed,
CANCER THREAT
Insulating your
house
to
save energy
may have an unexpected and dangerside effect: lung cancer. Scientists at the Univ
and by
ous
extrapolation, predict
when
Age might
of cyclicity
of California's
Lawrence
"The pattern
of glacial
Berkeley Laboratories
believe that the reduced
ventilation resulting from
and
intergiacial
currently
difficult
as
aircraft
be-
common
many
materials.
with
spot would be picked up by an oculometer, and a computer would calculate the angle between the spot and the center of the eye. Theoretically, this angle can be translated into target
coordinates. Then, with his weapons properly aimed just
At the Wright-Patterson
by looking
will fire
become attached
ticles in the air
in
then lodge
at this
to par-
by
something
the lungs.
Conclusions
time
They have begun to design a system that will eventually allow fighter jockeys to aim by focusing their unaided
eyes, then
opponent
yells
arm and
fire their
"Bang! Bang!" Very tricky But what if the in this dogfight first, throwing his plane into an automated evasive
like:
Joel Davis
the magic word that will fire a particle-beam cannon or launch a cruise missile?
vi
maneuver with a "Nyet, nyet, apazdali!"7 (Rough translation: "Nyah, nyah, you missed!") Nick Engler
RAIN MAKER
Scientists may have found a rain-making substance more effective than silver
Schnells,
make
excellent
can-
crystallize water
as
warm as
iodide
for
seeding
tea leaves.
has confirmed plans to award a development contract tor an experimental laser system for detecting and tracking space objects.
[See "Cybernetic War" beginning on page 44.1 In another step, the army has awarded a 1.7 million
contract to
clouds namely,
The ocean q.uahog is found in 15 to 180 meters of water and hasa bla
when
LASER WEAPONS
The ubiquitous
major weapon
in
TRW's Defense
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) went to Kericho, Kenya, to find out why tea plantations in that area experience hail 132 days a year, which is probably a world record. (The record for any point in the US is about ten daysof hail per year.)
laser,
it
US
military arsenal.
ahtiarmor laser
weapons
The Army Ballistic Missile Defense Systems Command has contracted with Lockheed Missiles and
Alton Blakeslee
Space Organization
system
OLD CLAMS
If
enemy
intercontinental
extreme Kenyan
hailstorms are caused by dry tea-leaf particles that are continuously kicked into
ihe air by the
tea-leaf
their jobs.
Advanced Research
Projects Agency,
capability to put
chowder lately, chances are you've eaten a clam more than 100 yearsold. Research by Dr, Ida Thompson, an
assistant professor
concerned
and
These
found the
satellites out of
is
the
same size as
its
for
clam cocktail
in
Thompson discovered
taste
restaurants. Ocean quahogs more often used in chowders and fried dinners, which their stronger iodine can be masked by
quahog's shells together has microscopic bands on and that these bands correit
other ingredients.
Because
of their long,
spond to the clam's annual growth much like the rings across a tree trunk that are the measure of its age. The
they are
used as
clam
go
to smash'/'
CDQJTIRJUURJ1
SINGLES SCIENCE
A man who approaches a
women, perhaps, ihey
think,
The US Department
Energy
projects
of
needs
million,
with
wood. Engineers
woman
there are
plant to supply
grow
use.
energy
region's 50,000
One
proposal would
1983
In
Corporation
planning lo
down
wood
currently
wasted
would reach
maturity.
Much
in
of the action
today
is
now
the Northeast, which is 80 percent forest and contains more trees than did a century ago owing to reforestation of abandoned farmland. The city of
it
of
submarine
Burlington, Vermont, has converted a coal plant to supply part oi its electric
H.G.
Welts,
1902
seconds
date
usually
to
ask her
for
just long
enough
for her to say no, observed psychologists Leonard Jason of DePaul University and David Glenwick of Kent State. The average woman, furthermore, was approached by a man only once every 1 5 or 20
vations, behavioral
rehearsal,
sitization
designed
social skills
and desento
enhance
and
the
A RETURN TO WOOD
Wood, once America's primary heating fuel, is
slowly returning to
bar the approaches, too, increased in frequency while the length of conversations decreased.
Armed
with stopwatches
prominence. An increasing
women
are not
with
wood
in
electric-power
This is the first picture ever laken of an X-ray star. The star is Cygnus X-1, located about 6,000 tight-years from Earth and believed to contain a black hole. The picture was taken irom an orbiting
plants.
YOUR ^SSPORT TO
NFNITY
VALID FOR 12
of OMNI, to
Atthe special charter rateofSW you're invited, through the breathta kingly beautiful pages embark on a mind-expanding journey into the future. You will travel through the frontiers of m,na and space, where, bound only by the outer limits 'Of his man will seek his destiny among the stars. Don't miss the magazine that won wo gcla meads with :rs hrsr two ssues-an unprecedented honor a magazine uni-.ersallv ackno.v.eaged to be "the most beaulifu pub.icotion in the world"
uncharted
imagination,
SUBSCRIBE!
annrui
The magazine of tomorrow on sale today
OMNI
Sub5cnpt.cn Dept
,
PO
11737
Povrnent [Sl8
for
12 .ssues) must
accompany
aider
conflict in
batties
human
CYBERNETIC
BY JONATHAN V POST
WAR
if
to future historians,
In
any.
Geneva,
scientists
first
recently
announced the
containment of antimatter.
Antimatter annihilates ordinary matter on contact, releasing more energy than
the fusion processes in a hydrogen bomb. A beam of aniiprotons, each at an energy
of
course, computers, and by 1999 there will be roughly a billion of them either on or orbiting the
coding and
game
theory,
ring, in a vacuum. Computers guided these clumps of antiprotons by altering the effects
cryptography, and simulation. All depend upon one superweapon, the indefatigable
of powerful electromagnets.
speed
of
get
into this war? What is the war about? How will end? World War the Chemistry
I.
Instant
tion.
and cheap
World War II, the Physics War. exploited the innovative physics of aerodynamics, radar, submarines, rockets, and nuclear fission. World War III, the Cybernetic
is based on scientific advances equally known to the and equally important
War,
public
III
pulse
searchand
producing the mosl amazing tools for reyes, the most amazing mili-
tary systems. in 1979. we begin to see a pattern in the Cybernetic War. It is 'Anything you can do,
I
missile sweeps down from space, tosses dozen separate warheads. Each warhead adjusts its own trajectory, perit
out a
can do
better."
is
The strategy
of
hardware
forms evasive maneuvers, releases radarconfusing decoys, and plummets toward its own military bull's-eye, A "smart" bomb
escalation
equipment they have, we must have at least the same. America drop-tests the reusable manned space shuttle Enterprise trom a Boeing 747, Russia drop-tests a deltawinged space shuttle from a Tupolev Tu-95 Bear bomber. How do we know? A Lockheed "Big Bird" spy satellite snaps photographs Irom 160 kilometers overhead. Arab countries spend millions of petrodollars on American airborne digital computers tor avionics, navigation, and weaponry; Israel builds the Elbit System-80
for their
uses sensors (such as television cameras) and a compact computer to mimic the human processes of perception and decision making, thus finding its target by planning, instead of blind luck. But the MIRV has peaceful uses. Both the US and the USSR have launched scientific MlRVs at the planet Venus. Late "in 1978, some 15 distinct payloads splattered at the shrouded goddess of love like a shotgun blast. Of course, each piece of
is
one
that
World War
III
is
an interplanetary war.
own
Ktir jets.
it
"the best
weapon-de-
SIMULATION
AND DISSIMULATION
system
for
able today"
in major nations microcomputerized heat-seeking missiles, with which one soldier can down an enemy plane; terrorists begin to do the same. How do we know? Fragments of a Russian-manufactured infrared-deteclmg missile are found in Ihe charred wreckage of an airliner on the plains of
Government troops
slockpile
Computers, unlike people, have no way between real and imaginary worlds. Their data may have come from sensors or may have been programmed by the most abstract calculations. A computer program may process
of distinguishing
measurements
of
solid objects or from artificial "microworlds" invented by creative human programmers. Rather than being a drawback, this is one
of the greatest
Zimbabwe. In computer weaponry, whatever one side has. the other at least has on the drawing boards. Sometimes, as with Ihe IBM 370computer and the USSR's Ryad-2. they can barely be told apart. Robots are not necessarily as cute as R2-D2 or C-3PO. Sometimes they are as deadly as U-235. Today's genuine robots are sleek subsonic assassins. They are better known by the name ol cruise missiles.
Cruise missiles are relinemenls of the old-fashioned drones, or unmanned aircraft.
advantages
of
computer
technology.
Through the computer, a person can dream up a universe with its own strange laws and structures. This begins to explain the almost addictive attachment many
programmers develop for their machines and the reason that simulation has become
a major part of military tactical training.
pilot
ing from
can crash time and time again, learneach mistake, if his computer
is
simulator
the ground.
is nothing vague or imprecise in computer dreams of simulation, Mikhail Botvinnik, chess grand master who held the world championship for thirteen years, explains why computers have an advan-
Small, last,
sting, they
atomic
land,
There
the
air,
or sea.
Once
in
Might,
they zip
along at allitudes too low to be detectable by radar. Cruise missiles examine the landscape below and to the sides of their flight path, perform computerized terrain analysearch for landmarks using the techniques of pattern recognition, and compare these results to their own internal maps. They plot their own courses and home in on their targets with dazzling accuracy. Thanks to the new science of robotics and
sis,
tage in combat, "Man is limited, man gets tired, man's program changes very slowly. Computer not tired, has great memory, is very fast." Northwestern University's CHESS 4.6 program on a Control Data 1 76 can beat the Russian KAISSA computer chess player. Bui who is winning the simulation race? In
all
artificial intelligence,
likelihood, the
United States
all
will
mainin
within centimeters of their intended destinations, having searched with almost animal cunning Irom thousands of kilometers
other na-
tions unless
robot race,
makes
the
away.
Similarly, the
MIRV
or multiple indepenis
a nuclear-weaponsophisti-
depends on
When a MIRVed
Developed
Amplified
lasers
late in the Cybernetic War, computers and lasers nave their future uiax;r;caoiy ilweti. tig/it will transmit data as last as computers can generate it. In weaponry, hign energy -targeted by computers -will instantly vaporize flSStl or metal Irom many kilometers away.
!anks.
store
its
"Game theory," invented by Otto Morgenstern and John von Neumann, gave military strategy a solid mathematical foundation.
tactical planning in
all
Anything
rors
Trial-and-error
unacceptable when
mean
lives.
is
The model
pieces-
a chess-playing machine
select an option from a set of available options, and the outcome of each pair of deci-
Simulation
might include a list ot the positions ot the in a game situation, plus a mathematical description and evaluation of the legal moves available to each player. The model in a Navy computer might be an-
mend an optimum
known, a computer can recomstrategy. Such a strategy is usually a mix of options, with individual choices being made at random, Human lives may now depend upon the flip of a
sions
is
was
tions
predicted that
US
incursions into
Cambodia could
coded list of numbers. These numbers could be the latitudes and longitudes of a fleet of destroyers or the
other
SPEED OF LIGHT
Electrons
cuitry at
coin or the roll of dice. The value of computer modeling is high, because it can help to predict the future.
Simulation examines a set of alternatives and evaluates the possible outcomes of tactical situations. In chess, as in war one ultimately makes one's move, and the effectiveness of one's plan depends on what the opponent does next. In chess, as in war, it is undesirable and impossible to test all tentative plans and legal moves. The chess master works with a mental model of the game, imagining what the opponent's countermoves and counterplans might be in a number of alternative futures. The
flow
through computer
cir-
of
schedule
ol flights
from an aircraft
carrier,
Numbers might also describe the speed and maneuverability of the destroyers under varying conditions of weather and fuel consumption. The computer model for the aircraft carrier might list the communications frequencies of the individual
planes, their altitudes, or their
status.
If
computation is limited only by the speed of light. 298.117 kilometers per second.
Compared to this,
jets, bullets,
It
and missiles
natural for
seems
gate weapons that strike at electromagnetic speed and that kill at the speed of light, too fast for any
computer warriors
to
rives',
weapons
human
intervention.
late
in
the
to
the models are continuously updated match actual ships and planes, they are
enormously useiul in battle situations. A jet fighter's computer can track many objects at once, at faster-than-human speed, and perform the IFFN funcfion: identification, friend/foe/neutral. The computer application that automates the entire battle is known as C 3 communications, command,
;
commander works
jecting
imaginary helicopters
dummy
runs,
and
control.
If
the ships
in
imaginary,
we are
a microworld
commuter
A good simulation is still quite valuable if it can eliminate a few disastrous plans, Computer simulation has become an essential part of strategic and
Cybernetic War. Lasers and computers have their futures linked in several ways. Lasers transmit data as fast as computers generate it. They already connect certain computers in nigh-soeed c gital communications links and will likely play an increasing role in military communications. Lasers can be used as target designators. One soldier points a hand-held laser like a flashlight. Its focused coherent beam any illuminates a particular tank or plane target selected by the soldier. A second soldier launches a portable missile, which homes in on the glowing bull's-eye. The microcomputer chip for laser-designated missile-guidance systems is much simpler and cheaper than the microcomputers in MIRVs and smart bombs. Lasers can be used directly as weapons. High-energy lasers vaporize flesh or metal from many kilometers away. The Department of Defense has allocated over $200 million this year for high-energy-laser research, Also, the single largest source of funds for computer research today is DARPA, the Department of Defense's Advanced Research Projects Agency. Universities are loath to question Pentagon
largess.
American satellites have been zapped by Russian lasers since October 18, 1975,
when one of our early-warning defense satellites was blinded by infrared radiation while orbiting over western Russia. The ofexplanation (a gas-main fire) is almost certainly a cover-up. The Pentagon is unadmit the Soviet lead in hydrogen/' fluorine chemical laser weaponry. The Air Force has contracted with United Technologies for an airborne C0 2 gasdynamic laser. Carried by KC-135 or similar aircraft, such a laser could destroy antiaircraft missiles in midair. The Navy has TRW building shore-based chemical-laser facilities for cruise-missile and fleet defense. The Army has opted for an AVCO electricaldischarge laser to be mounted on an amphibious assault vehicle. Hughes has contracted for computerized-beam aiming and
ficial
willing to
fe>Cu<-luMV
"Before you ask the obvious question
yes,
it
is somew.'-'-af
autobiographical."
tracking for the Air Force and Navy; Perkin-Elrner doe's the same for the Army.
The Directorate
laser
weapon research
search and
ballistic-missile defense.
computersare now used to study laser fusion. Elaborate simulations test the use of lasers to create temperatures and pressures now found only in the sun and other stars. It appears that computer-aimed lasers, conof the world's largest
Some
nected
to
computerized- phased-array
rx,omi!g
the
ballistic missiles.
An LBMD
(laser
ballistic missile
ABM
ago seems inevitable lasers and computers together shift the balance
few. years
of terror
toward defense.
in
One Pentagon
told the
mind
Herald that Pratt & Whitney lasers probably not be used on people: "Frankly, no, don't think so, think it would be the type of weapon you would use on a highI I
Miami would
wondering how much more effective-rockbe if some machine could guide them accurately to targets. The. race was on to build the first electronic digital computer. Aiken at Harvard, Goldstineatthe University of Pennsylvania, and Von Neumann at the Institute for Advanced Study each led teams of engineers into the unknown. Turing had given England a head start. Due to security, nobody knew what Atanasoff had accomplished for the Naval Ordnance Labs at the Aberdeen Proving Ground. After the smoke had cleared, the winner was acknowledged lo be ENIAC, child of John Mauchly and Presper Eckert, The aerospace. firm Northrop immediately contracted Mauchly and Eckert to design a special-purpose- computer. This device would fit in the nose cone of an intercontinental ballistic missile. It would, in midflight, navigate by looking at Ihe positions of the stars. A prototype, BINAC, was demonstrated in 1949. General Groves and a
ets could
computer is now capable of communicating with anyone else with a computer by means of an absolutely unbreakable code. This was the dream of cryptographers in the employ ot Alexander Caesar, Napoleon, and' Hitler. The techniques known as "trapdoor functions" and "Rivest coding" are easily explainable to any mathematician
in
the world.
properties- of large prime numbers, and using a computer to perform the calculatwo people who exchange a numeripassword can thereafter intercommunicate with perfect security. The
tions,
cal "key" or
National Security
Agency has
tried to
sup-
press
this
mathematics
vate) quarters.
and
Security involves the controlled access safety of persons, hardware, and in-
formation.
Much
of
military information,
intimately
vice-president of IBM
seemed
interested.
value target."
The
com-
broke, joined Remington(later Sperry-Rand), developed the commercially available computer, UNIVAC. and made their first major sale
inventors,
Rand
first
puters is clouded by security. In each case, lawsuits were filed by inventors who
claimed
to
have
built or
designed the
first
of
GLOBAL
SPIES
revolution in
won a
the
these revolutionary devices. Atanasotf has patent suit and claims to have built
first digital electronic computer. Gould has won a patent suit and claims to- have sketched the first workable laser, Both cjaim that governmental secrecy and mili-
security has been breached by the KGB. The Russian spies reportedly lapped into CIA archives in the central computer system at Langley, Virginia. The General Accounting Oflice says that the Social Security Administration computers which keep records on almost all Americans are totally vulnerable to unauthorized snooping and tampering.
com-
munication with their colleagues. The same. applied to nuclear-physics research in late World War II. Cybernetics is a word invented by the multitalented genius Norbert Wiener Concerned with "control and communication in the animal and the machine," it is a mathematical theory developed in the early 1940s. Cybernetics describes the action of complex systems, whether in electrical
equipment
theory
or
in
the
human
brain.
The
came
was
The theory began with the war-research group of Wiener, Weaver, and Bigelow. They were trying to build an automatic antiaircraft gun that would not fire a shell at where an airplane was. Rather, it would fire where
Ihe plane
the
was predicted
ing evasive
in
USSR,
the same problem, for the same purpose. Perhaps the Cybernetic War began here, in war-research laboratories, during World Warll,
Note this connection with ballistics, the Study of bullets or missiles in flight. Vannevar Bush had already builtthe differential analyzer, a mechanical computer to solve some equations m bailees, but was too slow German V-2 rockets were raining death on England, and the generals were
it
"It's
all right
at those additives!"
It
was
huge
ship,
space
for us!
BY GREGORY BENFORD
PAINTING BY VINCENT
Dl
FATE
bolt
for just
a few
seconds.
away.
A
I
My
from
who? Where?
to scratch
checked
picked
it
Sen-
radar. Nothing.
some tangy squeeze tube soup and got even more curious. used the radar to nearby
I
rummage through
orbits.
of.
the
rocks, lookI
reached up
my
I
nose, think-
ing,
and
realized
my
were still sealed, vac-worthy. decided to keep them on, just in case. usually wear
light
is
I
sors said was carbon-dioxide ice with some water mixed in. Probably a comet hit the rock millions of years ago, and some of stuck. filed its orbit parameters away for a time like now when the market got thirsty. Right now the big cylinder worlds
it
I
some
long
speak
be a ship. checked The Belt hasn't got dust in to The dust got sucked into Jupiter ago. The rocks "planetesimals," a
it,
scientist told
me
vac work. It occurred to me that if hadn't been outside, fixing a jammed hydraulic loader, wouldn't have known anybody shot at us at all, not until my next
for
I
orbiting Earth
need
water,
CO a
methane,
routine check.
didn't make sense. Prospectors you if you're jumping a claim. They don't zap you once and then fade they finish the job. was pretty safe now; Sniffer's stuttering mode was fast and choppy, jerking me around in my captain's couch. But as my hands hovered over the control
Which
at
and other goodies. That happens every time the cylinder boys build a new tin can and need to form an ecosystem inside. Rock and ore they can get from Earth's moon. For water they have to come to us,
the Belters.
Belt to
It's
Sniffer took five hours to with it a big black hunk, a klick wide and abso-
worthless.
shoot
cheaper
in
energy to boost
in
automatic moly
bolts.
from the
it
is
to
couldn't
make them stop. My fingers were shaking so badly didn't dare punch in instructions. Delayed reaction, my analytical mind told
I
haul water up from Earth's deep gravity well. Cheaper, that is, if the rockrats Hying vac out here can find any. The screen rippled green. It drew a cone for me, Sniffer at the apex. Inside that cone
bangs-- whap, whap as they plowed in. Curious, yes. Stupid, no. The disabled skyjock was just a theory. Laser bolts are
real. wanted some camouflage. My companion asteroid had enough traces of metal in to keep standard radar from seeI
it
Moored snug
tried to
wing me.
asteroid's face,
I'd
be hard
me
was scared. Prospecting by yourself is enough without the bad luck ot running into somebody else's claim. All at
I
risky
loner.
forced
myself to think.
By
all
rights, Sniffer
drifting
hulk by
full
now sensors
The
And
nearly
Prospectors are hermits. You watch your instruments, you tinker with your plasma drive, you play 3-D flexcop an addictive
engines blown. Belt prospectors play for all the marbles. Philosophically, I'm with the jackrabbits run, dodge, hop, but don't fight. have some surprises for anybody
of holes,
I
punched
section
much
smaller
than
its
game; ought to be illegal and you worry. You work out in the zero-g gym, you calculate how to break even when you finally can sell your fresh ore to the Hansen Corporation, you wonder if you'll have to kick ass to
it
tries to outrun me, too. Better than trading laser bolts with rockrats at thousand-kilometer range, any day But this one worried me. No other ships on radar, nothing but that one bolt. It didn't
fit.
who
thing
suddenly
didn't-
want
to
be around. 9
get your haul in pipeline orbit for Earthside and you have to like when the nearest conversationalist is the Social/ Talkback subroutine in the shipboard. Me,
it
I
like
It
it.
Curious, as
said.
a quick computer program. The maintenance computer had logged the time when the aft sensors scorched out. Also, could tell which way was facing when the bolt hit me. Those two tacts could
I
punched
in
in to
the senIf
my
nose.
they
scorched
while
me
again,
I'd
have
itch
to button
up
my own
suck
me
it.
away but
out of the background noise In fact, thought was The thing came and went, fluttered, grew and shrank. gave a funny radar profile but so did some of the new ships the corporations flew. My rock was passing
came up
on the radarscope.
noise.
it
It
stopping the
give
me a
was worth
fix
on the source.
let
Sniffers
ballistic routine chew on that for a minute and, waiting, looked out the side port. The sun was a fierce white dot in an inky sea. A few rocks twinkled in the distance as they tumbled. Until we were hit, we'd been on a
zero-gee coast, outbound from Ceres the biggest rock there is for some prospecting.
Belt right
The best-paying commodity in the now was methane ice, and knew
place. Sniffer the ugly, segwith strap-on fuel pods that was still over eight hundred thousand kilometers from the asteroid wanted to check. Five years back had been out with a
likely
mented tube
call
home
Inside the cone was somebody who wanted me dead. My mouth was dry My hands were still shaking. They wanted to punch in course corrections that would take me away from that cone, test. Or was assuming too much? Ore sniffers use radio for communication it radiates in all directions, it's cheap, and it's not delicate. But suppose some rocker lost his radio and had to use his cutting laser to signal? knew he had to be over ten thousand kilometers away that's radar range. By jittering around, Sniffer was making impossible for him to send us a distress signal. And if there's one code rockI
slow,
about two hundred klicks from the thing and the odd profile made me cautious. went into the observation bubble to have a squint with the opticals. The asteroid I'd pinned Sniffer to had a lazy spin. We rotated out ot the just as got my reffex-opter telescope on line. Stars spun slowly across a
I
shadow
jet-black sky. The sun carved sharp shadows into the rock face. My target drifted up from the horizon, a funny yellow-white dot. The telescope whirred and
it
leaped
I
into focus.
it
turning.
sat there, not breathing. A long tube. Towers jutted out at odd placestwisted columns, with curved faces and
struts.
it's
answering a
I
sudden jagged
ble of
fretwork of blue.
yellow.
tor
asteroids
cadmium
deposits. That
was
in
So
ing
call
me
jum-
stupid.
took the
risk.
put
the days
ion
mium was
right,
rockets.
on
52
my
when everybody thought cadgoing-to be the wonder tuel for We found the cadmium, all and made a bundle. While was out own, taking samples from rocks,
I I
complex
structures.
It
was a
cylinder,
I
Sniffer
in
curious.
You've got to be curious to be a skyjock, both senses ol .the word, So color me stared at that green cone and ate
I
decorated almost beyond recognition. checked the ranging figures, shook my head, checked again. The inboard computer overlaid a perspective grid on the
image,
to
convince me.
TD5
sat very
still.
The
OMNI
CONTINUED ON PAGE
Picture
your
it:
It's
lime to learn a
lor
programming language
Your first step?
A trip to the
drugstore, ol course. Learning to program a computer is too lough a job to take on without
a good supply of your favorite "smart pills." At the pharmacy, the shelf
#4
Wr
marked intelligence boosters AND CREATIVITY EXPANDERS holds at leasl a dozen drugs. The
pbarmacis! fills your order: 1.000 Hydergine tablets, 6 bottles of Diapid nasal spray, a kilogram of ribonucleic acid (RMA) powder, 100 grams of d I- phenylalanine, a
gram
of vitamin
B eE, and a
NMND
Wonder drugs
(at least) 12
FOOD
ways
BY SANDY SHAKOCIUS
WOLFGANG HUTTER
and promptly learn new language witha lot more fun and a lot less pam than you'd have had betore you found intelligence drugs.
lake them on schedule,
One of
children. In [act,
il
your
as "possibly effective"
learning problems
the treatment ol
In
and hyperkinesis.
There is nothing futuristic about this scenario. The order is purs, and we're using il right now. The cooperative druggisi may be a fantasy (Did he ask for a prescription?),
T'-iis
major roles in motor .and sensory control, long-term planning, and primitive drives and emotions.' It is also one ot the chemicals that show the sharpest declines in the aging brain. Drugs such as scopolamine,
many cases Deaner has also helped or cured senile memory loss, apathy, and depression.
In
ally
but increasing brainpower is not. s a "how-to article. You can actuuse the drugs we. are talking about to
11
which
brain,
produce
in
Increase your
own
intelligence
and
cre-
ativity. We'll tell you how some of these drugs work, how to use them, and what
senile
memory
loss
elfecls and side effects lo expect. Several of the compojrvJs discussed here are vitamins or amino acids -nutrients that are generally exempt from government control 'and can be purchased freely. Others are
learning defects.
ways
supply.
There are several safe and effective to increase the brain's acetylcholine Choline, the raw material' from
is
levels. Deaner "washes. away" a cellular aging pigment called lipofuscin. a waste product that may interfere with the functioning ol nerve cells. Dr. Richard Hochschild, a ger.onlologist with the Microwave Instrument Company, used Deaner to lengthen the mean life span of mice by 50 percent and their maximum life span by a third. Another chemical basic to learning and
memory
1960s, Dr
ol
is
which acetylcholine
animals.
In
made,
raises brain
approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for other purposes. A few cannot be had in this country, lor reasons we. will go into later. Keep in mind that none of these drugs
prescription drugs
ment in which
worms
to
improves memory and serial learning. Choline is a nutrient lound in meat, eggs, and fish, so
ol
it
dose
of
ten
grams
crawl through a maze, then ground them up and fed them to other flatworms. The
has the FDA's approval for increasing normal intelligence, nor can they gel it. The FDA approves only drugs that prevent or cure diseases. boosters
Intelligence
in their scheme of things. If you improve your mental powers, you to evaluate the drugs yoursell. Medical researchers have found more than a dozen chemicals* that promote intelligence -learning ability or data processing in standardized tasks -in animals and man. Many have also been used to
the same maze significantly faster than worms on a normal diet. When he trained
them
sim-
ply
do not fit
have
w.anl to
will
Q The
natural
hormone
to run a different maze, however, it took them longer to masier the lesson. It seemed to be the worms' RMA that caused the effect.
memory
even
in the senile.
it
RNA itself is an effecfive memory booster in experimental animals, and such other intelligence drugs as orotic and inosinic acids work because the body converts them to RNA. Doses of two to ten grams a day are about right. (When you extrapolate
from animal experiments to human use, drug doses should be chosen so that they represent equal percentages of the subdry-food intake. Do not assume
reverse senile
memory
loss,
depression.
Moreover,
the user's
prolongs
intense.
and other
ages,
elfecls of aging.
As the
brain
orgasms and
9
it slowly loses its supply of neuro-chemicals that carry nerve impulses across the gap, or synapse, between one cell and another or becomes
transmitters
ject's daily
that
it
Doses
of artificially
ounces and you weigh 3,000 ounces you can take 1,000 times the mouse's drug dose. Small animals metabolize drugs far
is
supplied neurotransmitters, their biochemical precursors, and drugs thai mimic them
regulation
and can be
been used to replace the missing compounds, resulting in improved mental function. Even in young people, the supply
all
have
found
most health-food
stores,
daily
dose
eflect,
of three grams is reasonable for adults. Choline does have one unfortunate side however: Some people have gut
faster than large ones, so that the human dose ior some drugs is actually smaller than that for mice. Calculating dosages as a percentage of dry-food intake usually
compensates
In
addition to
memory-enhancing
ef-
substantially improved.
Each brain chemical has an optimum level, however. Above or below that amount, there's less improvement in intelligence, sometimes even a decline. The only way to
find out what is best for you is by systematic experiments. Drug effects can be subtle at first, and you almost always need a learning period to recognize and use any improvement in memory or data processing.
bacteria that digest choline, which gives the user an unpleasant, fishy body odor. Eating a high-fiber diet or large amounts ol
fect, RNA protects against oxidizing chemicals that seem to be a major cause of aging and probably contribute to senility. In
this, RNA supplements mimic many natural "maintenance" systems. Plants, for example, protect themselves against damage caused by oxidants formed by exposure to ultraviolet light with such antioxidants as beta carotene, the yellow pigment in car-
yogurt often changes the intestinal flora to eliminate the problem, Lecithin (phosphatidyl choline) raises the level of acetylcholine in the brain even more effectively than choline itself, and it
enough
can be expected
to
improve
memory and
The chemical details of learning and memory are not yet well underslood, though knowledge in this area is expanding rapidly. According to current theories, several chemical systems are involved-.
The
choline,
list
learning in the same way. In one successful experiment, test subjects took 80 grams per day, just over three ounces, and im-
proved
their
as
well,
so
to raise
your
prinosrnc.
phenyls. ;r in?
and related
compounds. 'ria;;n,"oii.:iv,|:iH:ri.;ji,np. dipcenvlhydarioin vi!aminB-s.N!5o'ropyl.ACTH,-o l-prolyll 'eucvl glycine- amide. cMior-i: Metrazei. and :jlr >'ch ir-c There are others, rjijr Toss art; -he most -rilsresting
Ritalin
"
intelligence. Unlike choline, lecithin causes no body odor. The prescription drug Deaner, known chemically as dimethylaminoethanol p-acetamidobenzoate, also raises acetylcholine levels and improves memory and
rots and other plants, and vitamins C and E. RNA supplements significantly slow the seen in old age. In one expera daily dose of 25 milligrams extended the average life span of laboratory mice by 16 percent. RNA does have some drawbacks, however. Because of its acidity, it can cause stomach upset. A little baking soda taken
deterioration
iment,
at the
same
seriously,
uric acid as a
is the cause worsen gout
uric acid
of
in
learning
in
the
aged and
in
hyperkinetic
RNA can
seriously
56
OMNI
people wiio already suffer from and may even cause gout in those who. already have
it
The
uric acid
causing permanent damage and severe Though 90 percent of gout patients are male, women can also suiter from it.
pain,
Have a uric-acid test .before taking and a month or so alter you begin.
For
in
all
RNA
that, oral
RNA is virtually
harmless
levels. Dr.
MaxOdens.
people up
80 grams per
suftered no ill effects. Many health-food stores carry RNA, but check the label before you buy. Yeast is about 6 percent RNA, but the plant's cell
walls are
they no longer improve learning ability oncefhe nerves have released most of their NE; the body develops a tolerance to the drug until more NE is snythesized, Depression often occurs during Ihis interval. Phenylalanine, an amino acid found in meat and cheese, is a natural forerunner of NE and a very effective mo'od elevator and stimulant tnat does not deplele the body.'s supply of NE. Doses of 10.0 to 500 milligrams a day lor two weeks completely eliminate, the depression seen after amphetamine use. Phenylalanine sometimes raises blood pressure, however so jeop'o
with hypertension should start with small doses and increase them gradually, making sure that their blood pressure remains under control. Though not controlled by the FDA. this drug is not yet available in pharmacies or health-food stores. It must be purchased as an industrial chemical, Vasopressin, also known as antidiuretic hormone, is produced by the pituitary gland. Its main task in the body is to regu-
sometimes develop
iyart
not.
pam when
using
seem modicailv
dangerous. Diapid remains eflective as long as- is used and. uni.isp cocaine, does tot ctuso depress. on .vnon discom-nced Hydergme. a very safe drug, isapproved
it
'ias
ical relative of LSD. Though it has no hallucinogen iu affects, produces a feeing ol exlreme clear-headedness ivu.cai o very low doses oi LSD Hyoe r '.:ine imorovss can relieve learning and memory' and
it
!
it
Confusion, apathy,
and forgetfulness
in
the
so hard
to digest that
the body
takes
in
very
little. If
than 12 percent RNA, you are probably just buying overpriced yeast with little available
nucleic acid, The drug Isoprinosine contains inosine, a
raw material the body can use to make RNA, coupled with dimethylaminoethanol, a molecule that helps the inosine pass through the blood-brain barrier, a membrane that prevents most chemicals from entering the brain. The drug increases nucleic-acid synthesis in the brain-cell polyribosomes, cellular factories where RNA copied from the DNA of the genes is translated into proteins. This is a key step in
aged-. This takes up to several months, depending on the condition's severity. The neurotransmitters deliver chemical messages between nerve cells. But within the cell a "second messenger" (cyclic AMP) delivers messages from the cell membrane to the nucleus. Hydergine controls, the level of the second messenger
inside brain cells. Caffeine is a stimulant with a closely related effect on the second messenger, but because, the action of
^FDA
can
It
regulations block
adoption of
many drugs
that
memory formation. Though marketed only as an antiviral agent that combats some strains of polio, flu, and herpes. Isoprinois a potent RNA booster. Dr, Paul Gordon, who developed the drug in the early 1960s, says it enhances learning efficiency, aids memory, improves behavioral organization, and increases organization and in-
sine
Hydergine is more selective, it de-esn't cause a corner-down or jitters like caffeine and increases intellectual performance over a much wider range ol dosages and rates of administration. A mutant fruit fly. called the "dumb" fruit fly, has recently been discovered. It is dumb becausethere is a defect in its control of the level of the second messenger. Hydergine also increases protein synthesis
is in
the brain.
of
Hydergme
drug3
in this
in
dose used
drug
is
FDA
regulations
the brain
complex
effects
that
benefits to
may be even more important than its memory and mood. During
memory and
increased their rafe of learning. A dose of 1.000 micrograms per day is reasonable. Yet another chemical vital to learning and memory is the neurotransmitter norepinephrine (NE). Learning ability is severely depressed by drugs that inhibit its synthesis or remove it from the brain. NE itself, on the other hand, improves memory. When not carrying nerve signals from cell to cell, NE is stored in microscopic pouches known as synaptic transmitter vesicles. To transmit a nerve impulse, NE is secreted into the synapse, then returned to the vesicle. Such drugs as the am-
other popular drugs release vasopressin from the pituitary, which may explain why
anesthesia, drowning, and perhaps stroke, to it protects the brain against damage due lack of oxygen and blood glucose. For this
reason,
it
cocaine improves learning in tasks that require focusing and concentration and
is
used
routinely
in
Europe
to
prepare patients
It
enhances the memory and the ability to re-experience remembered emotions. On the other hand, nicotine, alcohol, and marijuana inhibit vasopressin release. Medical researchers have found that 16 units per day of Diapid nasal spray, a synthetic version of vasopressin, restores
grow from each nerve cell. or neuron, in large numbers and form a complex network of cross connections. Each neuron may be in contact with
fine tendrils that
its
neu-
memory to amnesia
phetamines,
icle,
Ritalin,
and magnesium
pemoline block NE thereby increasing the amount of neurotransmitter in Jhe synapse. They also promote memory and improve learning in
patients and improves attention, concentration, motor rapidity, and memory in men in their fifties and sixties. We have used up to 40 units per day and- gained amazing improvements in memory and learning. We have also experienced prolonged and intensified orgasms, an effect nol mentioned in the scientific literature'
rites. These libers are essential for learning and data processing, but their numbers fall
with age. Until recently, sciwas permanent. It turns out, however, that a hormone called nerve-growth factor stimulates regeneration of the neurites. Six months to two years
off drastically
of
loss,
Hydergine therapy may also reverse this acting by the same mechanism as the
focusing and attention tasks, but this may occur because they are central nerve stimulants which raise activity levels rather than because of their effect on data-
Diapid has few side effects. Sfudies have found no effect pn blood pressure and urine volume, even at doses of 16 units per
day. Intestinal
natural hormone. Unfortunately, many physicians trythe drug on their patients for a few days or weeks and, seeing no immediate effect, give up.
are
irritation
Nootropyl,
patients
Several
hundred
million
abandoned
liie in
the
watery universe below for solid ground, a great transition began. As Arthur C. Clarke once said, "We creatures of
the land are exiles
dis-
placed organisms on the way from one element to another. We are still in the transit camp, waiting for our visas to come
through
to space;
We
and
are on our
way
there,
surprisingly enough,
regain
much
that
we
lost
we may when
we
left
the sea,"
is,
course, the
life
camp
began
THE
UNIVERSE
BELOW
PHOTOGRAPHS BY DOUGLAS FAULKNER
During early-morning feeding, these New Guinea ctenophores are in the open posffian ("above;. As the day progresses, they Sold up (bottom lett). The lully totded a (rap ieli; is carried aiong by the
t
<
Mastigias
in
lagoon (top
right)
lor protection,
marine lake (above ana bottom tight} have undeveloped Chios ;o :ack o' predators. Both revolve beneath surface to gather light.
wig
the
way
to
space. 3
obvious.
It
was, after
all,
in
encounter with the zero gravity of space. The jellyfish themselves are analogous to space vehicles. Several species, for example, contain symbiotic algae that live within their manubrium, the bushy area located behind the jellyfish's bell. These jellyfish, swimming just below the surface of the water, revolve counterclockwise at a rate of about one revolution per minute so that the symbiotic algae can receive equal exposure to the sun. Thus they are like solar satellites tracking the sun for maximum efficiency. It is fitting that we reconsider the universe from which we sprang. In the words of Arthur C. Clarke, "our pause here, between one ocean and the next, may be only a moment in the history of the Universe." DO
GOD
Ismelled
her before
I
IS
AN IRON
so, the
first
She had lived a life of unending pain, so it was only natural that her method of committing suicide would be through pleasure
BY SPIDER ROBINSON
the tront comes She was sitting in a tan plastic-surfaced armchair, the kind where placed beside up as the back goes down. It was back as far as it would go. It was A plastic block table next to the large living-room window, whose curtains were drawn. dozen unopened packages Of Peter Jackson cigarettes, a it held a digital clock, a
sight oi her
was shocking.
vial of cocaine, and a lamp glass jar lull of packs of matches, an empty ashtray, a full brutal clarity. with a bulb of at least 150 waits. It illuminated her with rats, her She was naked. Her skin was the color of vanilla pudding. Her hair was m broken. There was dust on nails unpainted and untended, some overlong and some her chin She sat in a ghastly sludge of feces and urine. Dried vomit was caked on
her.
and between her breasts and down her ribs to the chair. of freshThese were only part of what had smelled. The predominant odor was combined effluvia baked bread. It is the smell of a person who is starving to death. The such crisis. had prepared me to find a senior citizen, paralyzed by a stroke or some
I
judged her to be about twenty-five years old. moved to where she could see me, and she did not see me That was probably just first was the smile. as well because had just seen the two most horrible things. The shadows were They say that when the bomb went oft at Hiroshima, some people's much baked onto walls by it. think that smile got baked on the surface of my brain in the same way. don't want to talk about that smile. where The second most horrible thing was the one that explained all the rest. From it were now stood could see a triple socket in the wall beneath the window. Into plugged the lamp, the clock, and her, and one knewaboul wireheading, of course had lost a couple of acquaintances is by definition a solitary vice, and friend to the juice. But had never seen a wirehead. figure being carried out to the wagon, all the public usually gets to see is a sheeted
I I I
I
It
PAINTING BY
MARSHALL ARISMAN
the chair
The transformer lay on Ihe floor beside where it had been dropped. The
lated for
in
days on end, it is not the best idea the world to depress that someone's resI
switch was on, and Ihe timer had been jiggered so thai instead oi providing one
piratory center.
lurched
to
my
feet.
teen-second jolt per hour, allowed continuous How. Thai timer is required by law on all juice rigs sold, and you
live-
orten- or
tif
it
It was not compietely dark; there was a moon somewhere out there. Shelay on her
file.
need special tools to defeat it. Say, a nail The input cord was long, tell in crazy coils from the wall socket. The output cord disappeared beneath the chair, but knew where it ended. It ended in ihe tangled snarl of her hair, at the crown of her head.
I
Her ribs rose and fell in great slow swells. A pulse showed strongly at her throat. As knelt beside her she began to snore,
I
and broken shards of mirror from the medicine cabinel above. Aquamarine commode, lid up and seat down. Brown throw rug, expensive. Scale shoved back in a corner. made a massive effort and managed to set her reasonably gently in the adjusted her head, fixed the tub. hetd-both feet away from the chinstrap. faucet until had the water adjusted, and then left with one hand on my nose and ihe
I I
had time
for
It
my
hip, in
search
I
of
seemed
tion
incredible that
my
impulsive ac-
her
liquor.
ended
her
in
.snapped
skull,
into
snaked
iheir
and from the jack tiny wires way through the wet jelly to the
hypoihalamus, to- the specific place in the medial forebrain bundle where the major pleasure center of her brain was located. She had sat there in total transcendent
ecstasy
I
days.
moved closer, which moved, finally. surprised me. She saw me now, and impossibly the smile
had not killed her. Perhaps that had been my subconscious intent. Five days of wireheading alone should have killed her, let alone sudden cold turkey. probed in the tangle of hair, found the empty jack. The hair around was dry. If she hadn't torn the skin in yanking herself was unlikely that she had susloose, tained any more serious damage within. continued probing, found no soft places on the skull. Her forehead felt cool and sficky
I
There was plenty to choose from. found some Metaxa in the kitchen. took great
I
near my nose, sneaking care not to bring tasted like it up on my mouth from below
it It
il
it
to
smell
was overpower-
marvelous.
I
could not look at the smile; a fect lover. small plastic tube ran from one corner of the smile and my eyes followed it gratefully. It was held in place by small bits of surgical
burning lighter fluid and made sweat spring out on my forehead. found a roll of paper towels, and on my way back to the bathroom used a greaf wad of them to swab most of the sludge off the chair and rug. There was a growing pool of water siphoning from the plastic tube, and sfopped that. When gol back to the bathroom the water was lapping over her bloated belly, and horrible tendrils were weaving up from beneath her. It took three
I I
rinses before
was
fifty-liter
tape at her jaw, neck, and shoulder, and from there it ran in a lazy curve to the big water-cooler bottle on the floor
mated
I
and
that
made
She had plainly meant her suicide to last; She had arranged to die of hunger rather than thirst, which would have been quicker. She could take a drink when she happened and if she forgot, what the hell. to think of My intention must have showed on my think she even understood face, and it the smile began to fade. That decided
it;
I
people's
walls.
my brain
the
in
much
same way3
moved before she could force her me, neglected body to react, whipped the plug out of the wall and stepped back warily. Her body did not go rigid as if galvanized. It had already been so for many
I
topical anesthetic, and put it on the sores had located her on her back and butt. bedroom on the way to the Metaxa. Wet hair slapped my arm as carried her there, She seemed even heavier, as though she had eased the door become waterlogged. shut behind me and tried the light-switch moved trick again, and it wasn't there. forward into a footlocker and lost her and
I
I I
fresh.
yet.
but
it
days. What it did was the exact opposite, and the effect was just as striking. She
felt
immense and
it,
pulsing.
did not
want
to
went down amid multiple crashes, putting all my attention into guarding my nose. She made no sound at all, not even a grunt. The light switch turned out to be a pull
chain over Ihe bed. She was On her side, breathing slow and deep, wanted fo punt her up onto the bed. My nose was a
still
I
touch
It
or to think
I
seemed to shrink. Her eyes slammed shut. She slumped. Well, thought, it'll be a long day and night before she can move a volunmuscle again, and then she hit me before knew she had left the chair, breaking my nose with the heel of one fist and bouncing the other off the side of my head. We cannoned off each other and managed to keep on my feet; she whirled and grabbed the lamp, lis cord was stapled to the floor and would not yield, so she set her feel and yanked and snapped off clean at the base. In near-toial darkness she raised the lamp on high and came, to me, and lunged inside the arc of her swing and punched her in the solar plexus. She said guff! and went down. staggered to a couch and sal down and felt my nose and fainted. was out very long. The don't think blood tasied fresh. woke with a sense of terrible urgency. It took me a while to work out why When someone has been simultaneously starved and unceasingly stimuI
had
her.
She was
tary
I.
it
unreasonably heavy, and have carried drunks and corpses, There was a hall off and all halls lead to a bathroom. headed that way in a clumsy stagreached the gering trot, and just as deeper darkness, with my pulse at its maximum, my nose woke up and began screaming. nearly dropped herfhen and clapped my hands to my face: the temptawhimtion was overwhelming. Instead pered like a dog and kept going. Childhood feeling: runny nose you can't wipe. At each door came to teetered on one leg and kicked it open, and the third one gave the right small-room, acoustic-tile echo. The light switch was where they almost always are; rubbed it on with my shoulder and the room flooded with light. Large aquamarine tub, Styrofoam recliner pillow at the head end, nonslip bottom. Aquama.'.nc sink with ornate handles,
I
blossom
of pain.
I
nearly couldn't
lift
her the
third time.
I
was moaning
with frustration by
the time had her on her left side on the king-size mattress. It was a big brass fourposter bed, with satin sheets and pillow-
cases, all dirty The blankets were shoved bottom. checked her skull and pulse again, peeled up each eyelid and found uniform pupils. Her forehead and cheek covered her, Then kicked still felt cool, so the footlocker clear into the corner, turned out the light, and left her snoring like a chains aw.
to the
I I I
papers and documents were in her study, locked in a strongbox on the closet shelf. was an expensive box, quite
Her
vital
It
and
cigarette butts
and proof against anything short of had a combination nuclear explosion. lock with all of twenty-seven possible combinations. was stuffed with papers. laid her life out on her desk like a losing hand of CONTINUED ON PAGE 107
sturdy
It II
I
6S
OMNI
"We have
and somathing
tells
me we
just
to the total
amount
of
energy
in
the system.
The scale of
Coriolis-1
is
awesome. Each
know the
of its blades is the length of a football field and rotates at a slow but steady one rpm. which is kept in motion by the relentless push of ocean currents, The cylindrical duct surrounding these blades is an aluminum leviathan nearly the size of the Rose Bowl. Its wide end. where the divers are swimming, is 168 meters across, almost the size of three 747 jet liners, wing tip to wing tip. When Coriolis-1 is joined by 230
FREE-HANGING BLADES
Lissaman and Mouton demonstrated how a prototype co.uld be moored in the stream by two sets of cables: one stretching from a huge cement anchor more than two kilometers upstream (in this case, to the south), the other fastening to the ocean bottom directly underneath. The entire structure would be suspended about 30 meters below the surface. Getting an enormous propeller to spin
is no problem, but if it is to spin against enough resistance to generate worthwhile amounts ot electricity, the stress on rigid blades (fanning out from a central axle) would be so great that no known technology could make the blades strong enough. Mouton had two brainstorms, which he later patented. The first was to make the blades, whose tips are recessed
will then be converted to DC and sent, via copper cables, along the ocean floor toward Miami. The giant cylindrical duct of Coriolis-1 will be more than just a housing for electriwill have a specific hydrocal generators. foil shape that -will speed the water going
It
much faster than the surrounding Gulf Stream itself. Also, will be designed so that can be filled with air to raise the structure to the surface for repair or transthrough
it it it
portation.
'
other similar turbines along this stretch of the Gulf, the energy output will equal ten
IMPACTS
Peter Lissaman
made some
remarkable
nuclear plants
That's
about
enough
is
electricity to
underwater
calculations about the environmental impact of 230 Cor/o//s-type turbines arrayed between 32 kilometers east and 192 kilo-
meters north
of
Miami:
will
measured British/South African accent. "It isn't a Buck Rogers flight ot lancy. It really work. The materials to build the thing
are available today
we're
superstrong structures. The design is based on well-understood hydrodynamics. Constructing and installing involves standard marine and offshore oil-rig engineerit
A slowing of the Gulf Stream by less than 1 percent, even after many years of continuous operation. This is much less than the normal annual fluctuation in the Gulf Stream, which sweeps past Miami at over 2.5 meters per second in the summer, then slows lo an average speed of 1.6 meters per second in the winter.
ing and practice. And the electrical and transmission components are all off-theshelf items."
A change in the stream temperature of no more than a couple millionths of a degree Celsius, also a small fraction of ihe natural
annual fluctuation. in the water level of the stream amounting to less than four centimeters (a two-centimeter rise upstream of a turbine, a two-centimeter fall downstream). Probably no change in the water level greater than 0.1 millimeters anywhere along the Florida coastline.
the length of a
Lissaman's confidence stems from his working relationship with New Orleans engineer and Tulane University architecture professor Bill Mouton. Together they have mapped out a plan to harness the Gulf Stream. Bill Mouton firsl got the idea of using the force of a river to spin giant underwater propellers as he stood on the bank of the flooding Mississippi in 1973. After a few calculations, Mouton realized that his engine would be most efficient not in the Mississippi but in the mighty Gulf Stream, Mouton's first published proposal met
with scientific skepticism. Critics
football field
A change
and rotates
is
at
cylindrical duct
an aluminum leviathan
the size of the
Rose Bowl. 5
local
wave-making
effect significantly
waves
in
And
will
"None what-
They take
bles on the
their
shape when
the current
argued
Stream wasn't powerful enough, that one couldn't extract more than a tenth of the energy Mouton proposed without seriously slowing down. Mouton's
that the Gulf
it
and, incidentally, protected from even the worst slorms on Ihe surface. Only the boys in a ship's sonar room will know anything's
there. As for the impact on the Gulf Stream, I've calculated that merchant shipping is already putting much more energy and more heat perturbations into the water than the ent'ie Coriolis Project will."
down
scheme was
criticized at
all
levels:
The tur-
bine would be torn apart by underwater stresses; it wouldn't provide as much energy as projected; it would be too expensive; it would disrupt shipping, play havoc with Florida's beaches, kill the fish, and put the entire ecosystem of the North Atlantic in
jeopardy.
usual method of extracting power from rotary motion. Energy usually flows from an axle, but since axle-mounted blades in this case would require an impossibly strong
structure,
FISH
SWIM THROUGH
Mouton decided
to
draw power
to
By 1976, Mouton's plan seemed desRube Goldberg File. Then aerodynamics expert Peter Lissaman of Pasadena's Aerovironment, Inc., came out comprehensive study of the entire concept, which silenced most serious crit"I showed that the Gulf Stream is a massive energy system, more powerful than anyone had believed," Lissaman said. "It contains fifty times as much energy as all
tined for the with a
ics.
and
keep the
whole structure from rotating in water, there actually be two sets of blades rotating in opposite directions. Imagine two bicycle wheels mounted close together on the
same
tions.
and spinning in opposite direcA ball placed between the two tires
axle
friction of
the
the rivers
in
What about the danger to marine life? Bill Mouton: "We see no problem here at all. a net of bridle lines will connect the drag cable to the turbine's rim, and anything small enough to swim through the bridle lines will be small enough to swim right through the turbine. There's a sixtyfoot gap between the blades, and there's no fish in the ocean big enough to get caught in that." But couldn't a big whale get scissored between the two propellers turning in opposite directions? "Not likely," Moufon said in his down-home Louisiana drawl, "He could swim out of that pretty easily. These blades are free-hanging and flexible. A big creature could push them out of the way to
First,
swim through. Anyway, because o he it' of this thing and the whirring noise it will make, whales and big fish will probably keep their distance." Lissaman is similarly unconcerned
:
:=
about the prospect ol massive. fish fillets on the Florida coast. "Remember, these blades are spinning very slowly, about three or four meters per second You iry catching a trout by moving your net through the water at three or four meters per second and see how well you do. The biggest fish in the ocean could swim through these blades without even being touched, much less injured, which is to say (hat the little fish probably won't even know the turbine is
there."
toward :'\e Cai\boe,in and the Gulf Stream, the whole North Atlantic is a giant Nywheel. is caused by the Coriolis effect, named after Gas'pard G. Coriolis. the French mathematician who lirst described, an 1835 treatise, the mathematics of motion across a rotating su'face The Coriolis
This
in
'vVI ;e-i ecology is Drought into the equation, Lissaman points out with enthusiasm, "a deal. This is clean energy taken frqfrfan undepietabie
effect
ern
reservoir thai >s continually renewing itself. Mcmaiiy cos's money to do environmentally sound things. With this plan we'll be doing something good for the environwe'll be doing it cheaper."
ir
ment -and
their banks, compressing their currents against their western sides, which is just
CURRENT EVENTS
Su'c- y :ho
where
to be.
happens
i
that the
larly
be a
'';.".'
to
lor
positioned.
An analogous current in the North Pacitic reaches its gry^tosi speed in ire Kurosmu
Current off Japan. In the Southern Hemisphere, currents flow the opposite way counter-
some
glitches
Coriolis-1.
Perhaps fish will be attracted to these structures, as they are to drilling rigs, sugI
gested. "I hope they aren't," Lissaman said. "These turbines will spin continuously for thirty years withoul repair. don't think we'll get the kind of biofoul growth you see on old wrecks. This stream is going too fast Ships don't foul when Ihey're under way, only in harbor The speed of this current is just about large enough that there shouldn't be any major fouling, rusting, or
I
clockwise with
tions against
their greatest
concentra-
South
rent
ly,
are
western shorelines. Peru and Africa, swept by the Humboldt Curand the Benguela Current respectivein the same lucky position as Japan
"We may have to cnancc -,)[ estimates of what we can do. The final design of Corioi;s-I may be somewhat different than our blueprints show today, but will probably make the system even more appealing than is now One of these turbines can be completed in
"Sure," said Lissaman,
it it
for that.
twelve to fourteen months, once production is set 'in motion, making it a very attractiveinvestment. "My calculations nave
algae."
Mouton knew at heart but could specify: that the environmental hazard
nil.
was
if
across the board estimated the costs, underestimated the power output, ano overestimated the environmental risks; Also, my calculations
I
and that junking the project because might harm the Gulf Stream would be like forbidding children to fly kites because disrupting natural
no
fish
lull
system
of
a couple
the
the weather.
In
to
in that
fish
probably
words: "My figures caused a sensation. They reopened the doors and convinced scientists that this isn't a Rube Goldberg contraption it's really going to work." The
of Energy was so impressed granted 220.000 to finance the next phase of research, What was Lissaman. an aerodynamics expert, doing in an underwater project?
Department
it
that
hundred turbines operating over many years.-But we'll be able to measure the real impact gradually, because the units will be installed one at a time, in staged fashion, over aten-year period. The impact of placing the prototype out there will be less than percent of any of the stated figures. "I have no doubt there will be problems and heartbreaks, as there always are in any plan of this scope, honestly compare this with the building of the Suez Canal. It's that
1
I
same
interesting
and the United States tor being able to take advantage of ocean-turbine research.
Who owns
windmill
it's
like
makes
its
those waters? Who owns the ocean bottom where these engines will be anchored?
How
will
we
distribute the
power
to the dif-
.."
.
In fact,
economic feasibility Preliminary estimates suggest a price tag of $75 million for
At this point no one is ready to invest that kind of money. but the Department of Energy has already committed over $1 million to take the project through its next phases, which include designing the optimal shape of the hydrofoils and building and testing a 12-meterdiameter pilot model (expected to be completed in about T8 months). It is hopedthat
:
ferent states?
Lissaman's calculations were directly the result of work he did in Sweden to find out how close together a string of windmills could be placed without disrupting the performance of those downwind.
Coriolis-1
the prototype
unit.
A GIANT FLYWHEEL
one sense the Gulf Stream itself is a aerodynamic effects, because the prevailing winds set the water in motion. In a larger sense, tapping the Gulf Stream is using solar power twice removed. The sun's action on the atmosphere, combined with the earth's shape, rotation, and tilt, makes the winds blow as they do. The earth's counterclockwise rotation (as seen from the North Pole), combined with many
In
was comwas completed, and essenway Ferdinand de Lesseps, the and envisager, said would have to be. And when was finished worked just as he said would. The Suez was not like the Apollo Project, where, new technologies were needed simply indifferent corporations before
it
pleted. But
tially
it
the
original
inventor
it
it
it
it
it
result of
by the end
will
be so
suaded
-
promising that private industry will be perto put up much of the money to
Ignoring ecological considerations, the
build Coriolis-1.
other factors, propels the clockwise motion of North Atlantic waters. Flowing northward past ihe eastern United States and Newfoundland, across to England, and then south past the Canary Islands and back
be a good investment. In round figures, 230 turbines will cost S10 billion and provide over 10 billion watts of power. That breaks down to a bit
to
project would
seem
less than $1 a watt substantially less than wattage from new nuclear or coal-powered
volved state-of-the-art engineering applied on a very large scale. "I think this is the case with the ocean turbines. When they're done they may look a little different from these sketches. It's possible that the catenary System will be modified. All sorts of things will change a little bit. There will be unforeseen disasters and unforeseen bonuses more of the latter, predict. Some things will turn out to be much, much easier than we project now. B;rt, overall, think we have studied the plan
I
plants (which cost between $1.10 and $1 .20 per watt, depending on whom you ask).
closely
enough so
be any
OO
RED STAR IN
ORRIT
BY JAMES OBERG
The
first
true colonist of
space
is
already an adult.
He or she may be an engineer, scientist, doctor, or perhaps an Air Force'pilot the choice ot professions is wide and uncertain. But if some doubt exists about his or her
professional specialty,
little
his or
human
civilization.
Soon Russia
cosmonaut crews
rotated
periodically
home to
by replacement crews. From that moment on, there will always be human beings in space. The success of recent Salyut
missions transtormed the secretive Russians into effusive forecasters
to
of
all
careful preparation
marred by
too frequent embarrassments, the Soviets have reached a remarkable level of competence in an arena ol specialization that has,
for the
most part, remained free of American competition. And they appear to have no intention of
relinquishing that lead, ever.
Oflicial Soviet policy
is
explicit that
crews will be humanity's main road to the universe," Leonid Brezhnev told a convention of space researchers late last year. Lesser
stations with interchangeable
officials regularly
ered with solar cells sprout winglike Irom the middle section, and they provide electrical power.
This basic space machine has been launched at least eight times since 1971
(the present version
is
in Ts oikovskiy.
a legend.
jack
echo
this litany.
Observ-
century and
sci-
ers note that the Soviets do not envision such permanent space stations purely as
called Salyut
VI,
but
that
is
only
because some
failures
have
was
ends in themselves. Rather, the stations will be used as stepping stones to further targets: the moon, Mars, the building of orbital factories and power stations, and so
forth.
been ignored by official Moscow space storekeepers).. Each launch is an improvement over the preceding one, and the Soviets are promising many more.
separately,
unknown
cacy
tion"
Bolshevik Revolution. Tsiolkovskiy's advoof what we today call "space colonizawhich was promoted by the new
Today, the Soviets are laying firm technological foundations for their
dream of space
to form
Modified Salyut modules, launched nked together in space will be larger stations. Specially inSalyut vehicles will be towed
into lunar orbit,
regime as a propaganda gimmick, had genuine appeal to the expansionist, frontier-minded Russian soul. "The earth is the cradle of the mind," Tsiolkovskiy wrote, "but one does not live in
the cradle forever." Foreseeing the value of
Closed-cycle
life-support
systems,
pseudogravity, multimodular space stations, and possibly a nuclear-power space tug. Western specialists forecast winged space shuttles and larger booster rockets,
but these will not really be mid-1 980s.
needed
until
the
from where cosmonauts will study the lunar surface and then descend briefly In lunar landing modules. An advanced Salyutclass module might possibly become the command section of a Soviet interplanetary probe as early as 1989.
These
efforts
do
not exist in
a vacuum
of
or
solely on the
drawing boards
a space
tical humiliations of
By
Soviets
have
built
space nciii:-;! ahzation, he later added that "space travel will give us mountains of bread and unimaginable power." His most evocative passage stands as a monument to true vision. Written in Russian in the 1890s, it will probably be engraved on space vehicles down the centuries: "Humanity will not remain forever on the earth, but, in search of energy and room, will at first timidly venture beyond the edge of the atmosphere and then boldly move out and occupy all of the worlds and spaces around the sun."
1
several permanent space settlements in orbits around Earth and the moon. Present expectations
These
suggest
successes in space and hero worship of cosmonauts, provide a substantial reservoir of support for the space program. (The first man in space, Yuri Gagarin, though dead for more than a decade, has become
a veritable patron saint of space travel, complete with shrines and ceremonies.)
Soviet technicians view the
space
effort
in
the rnid-1970s
to shift-gears
as an opportunity to leapfrog ahead of Western technology and to overcome a severe native technological inferiority complex. The vast preponderance of Soviet technology industrial, medical, and scientific is almost entirely derivative, based not on homegrown innovations but on copying Western developments. Valuable Soviet
space-shuttle era, Soviet planners steadfastly laid out a new course. Gone were most of the headline-grabbing "space spectaculars" and the political manipulation that had previously crippled long-range planning. Gone were the frantic "Beat the Americans" crash programs or-
bureaucracy. They are rooted in the hearts and minds of Soviet society. The drive into space rests on several pillars: widespread public support, practical considerations of
middle-level technocrats, and top-level Kremlin favor. Yet this commitment, equaling five times the proportional resources allocated in the US, is not without opposition.
dered by the Kremlin. Instead, there lay ahead a step-by-step rational progression .of space exper menls supplemented by unspectacular (but fruitiul) earth-based
research.
advances have been set aside in favor of often inferior Western-derived alternatives, purely out of a lack of self-confidence.
Soviet exploitation of
all
To accelerate the development (moon flights were put off for a decade), Soviet planners split the Salyut program into two parallel efforts. While one
of
space
stations
Western Kremlinologisls suspect that space budget is the subject of vigorous (if unpublicized) debate within the Soviet Union. Conquering the universe 'must, for
the
that.
the moment,
compete
space
ment and consumer goods. But the profactions have prevailed and, strengthened by the heady successes of
1978-79, are
likely to
Space offers the prospect of a technological quantum leap forward, overcoming entrenched backwardness in many areas of the Soviet industrial
job reasonably well.
complex. based on
A communications
satellites is
revolution
remain dominant.
CLASS ENTHUSIASM
Russian popular enfhusiasm tor space exploration dates back to the 1920s, when the new Soviet government, eager to establish an image of a future-oriented society,
helping to solve congenital weaknesses in long-distance communications', which hobble the development of nationwide computer networks.
Management
tive,
three cylinders.
meteorological research conducted from space stations. Earth resources and mapping from space stations have been crucial in opening up new regions in Siberia for
meters.
encouraged popularization
of the topic
as
Soyuz
Irom Earth (the along with an airlock for space end is another docking port and propulsion rockets. Panels covcraft),
realities.
This was facilitated by the emergence of a genuine Russian space pioneer a halfdeaf rural schoolieacner named Konstan-
78
OMNI
expansion. Top-level support for the space program springs from three main sources: CONIINUEDONPAGEIir
industrial
VISIONS OF THE
An
offers revealing
COSMOS
space
art
BYFC. DURANTIII
Cosmonauts
Romanenko and Grechko carried a special cargo with them into orbit last March. Aboard Soyuz XXVIII were two paintings by Russia's foremost space ariist. Andrei Sokolov. The paintings were gouache on nonfolding cardboard, measured 47 and weighed 130 grams each, They were transferred to the orbiting space laboratory Salyut, there to becentimeters by 36 centimeters,
come
the
first
The cosmic art o: Andre: Sokol/.w iy-ginning ciccbwse Irom below: An early painting entitled Scfr Landing on the Moon; Shuttles to Spaco Station in Orbit,
Lunar Base; Transfer of Cosmonauts (between Soyuz
era';);
Launch
of
Sputnik
I,
PAINTINGS BY ANDREI
SOKOLOV
Sokolov 's paintings later returned to earth aboard Soyuz XXX in July 1978. Thrilled that his paintings had been sent aloft, the artist pre-
sented one
of
mand
ends,
pilot of
them to Polish cosmonaut Miroslaw Hermazewski, comie a Soyuz XXX. Entitled Cosmic Morning (page 8<i ), two Soyuz craft docked at both
it
by the morning sun. Sokolov Over the Aral Sea making corrections
lit
,
is
in
color tones
and geographical
features from notes provided by the crew. Since Sputnik I, Andrei Sokolov has dedicated his professional life to artistic concepts o! the cosmos. His art now numbers more than 150 works. These paintings vary; some are rough impressions, others are
precise and meticulous. He illustrates contemporary space activities of USSR and US, as well as future encounters with planets ol far-off stellar systems. Sokolov is big physically, over six feet, a burly and powthe
6 My
greatest challenge
In life is to
visualize
and depict
future
cosmic voyages. ?
6 Cosmic
human
imagination.
former motorcycle racer whose boldness is reflected in his art. Sokolov was born in Leningrad 47 years ago and grew up in Moscow His father was a construction engineer prominent in building the Moscow metro in the 1930s. Trained as an architect, Sokolov was captivated by Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 more than 20 years ago. Visualizing scenes from the book, he created a number of paintings, his first in this genre. The artist has presented one of these to Bradbury. Since 1965, Sokolov has collaborated with cosmonaut Alexei Leonov.
erful
An amateur
artist,
of
space
while
in orbit
and
upon return rendered them in watercolor and oils. Works of Sokolov and Leonov have been published in four art books in the Soviet Union; the most recent is Man in the Universe (1975). Moreover, collections of postcards and some 20 Soviet postage stamps carry their art. Through his close relationship with Leonov and other cosmonauts, Sokolov is
able to keep abreast of advances in space technology In 1975, the Soviet space artist married Nina F. Lapinowa. Today, they live in an attractive studio apartment in downtown Moscow Several years ago, the Soviet Artists Union sponsored a touring US space art throughout Russia. In exchange, a Soviet space show was displayed at the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum in 1976. Included were 14 works by Sokolov and Leonov. Under the auspices of the Smithsonian, the show has toured the US for 18 months and is currently in Wenatchee, Washington. Both artists have donated works to the National Air and Space Museum.
exhibit oi
art
DO
Much
a! Sote.'cvs an. has ne-;er oeen publisned in ihe US. counterclockwise !rom afwe.- Apollo-Soyuz Rendezvous in Orbit, Launch ol Soyuz XXVI,- Entering ihe Atmosphere of Mars; early vintage communications satellite Molniya XIV.
of the
'
Jl
tt
fl
M
#
4
SOVIET FICTION
but
'
i
i'i
f
i
n
f
ft
I
I
SELF-DISCOVERY
BY VLADIMIR SAVCHENKO
Translated from the Russian by Antonia
Bouis
riting
about
failure is
I'll
and
its
Wl
thirty-
eight-thousand-cell crystal
TsVM-12
coordinates in space, having temperature and nervous You could hear me, see me, feel me, take my temperature and blood pressure, analyze my breath, even climb into my soul and thoughts go right aheadl The signals from the sensors would have to teed the crystal
potential.
unit,
in
it;
.has
a solution,
it
it
solves
it;
if it
doesn't,
stops. Judging by
on, but every five or
control oscilloscopes
was going
six
computer. The
first
minutes the "stop" signal went on, and had to press it would
I
started thinking
month the digital printer didn't stir once to make a single mark on the punched tape. punctured the crystal unit
I
about The computer had to be performing arithmetical and logical operations with the
impulses from the crystal
unit.
it
with
all
the sensors.
I I
read
I
probe,
like
and Monomakh's
that
looked
an ancient warrior's
combinations for the TsVM-12; the computer would deal with them as though they were ordinary problems and produce something meaningful. In
into logical
poems. sang. gestured. ran and jumped in front of the lenses. stripped and
I I
dressed.
let
Savchenko
is
an
electrical
me
(brrl
put on
Monomakh's Crown
it,
I
the
in
the
was
dictionary into
memory bank.
The selsyn
engineer who began writing science fiction in the late '50s, His abilities as a raconteur, combining speculative science with a satirical view of scientific politics, have established him as a leading
Soviet novelist.
me,
that
is,
something moving,
And
nothing.
even
them on
that
at
auxiliary panels.
That
was
the
the
still so raw and contradictory that the computer could not bring the logical ends So would stop! That meant that one cycle in the computer wasn't enough. That meant and here, as usual in these cases, was embarrassed for not having thought of sooner that meant that had to arrange for feedback between the computer (trom the units where the impulses still were) and the crystal unit! Then the raw material would be inputted into the clever cube, transformed there one more time, and then fed into the computer, and so on,
was
together.
it
I'm only beginning to realize it now, but was precisely .the moment, if you look academically, that made a grave methodological error in my work. should have stopped and figured out just what cirit
I
I
it
cuits and logic my complex was building for itself; the sensors, crystal unit, and TsVM-12 with an increased memory. And. then, only when had it figured out, move a comon. And when you think about
I
it,
puter building
itself
grammed
to
do
If
I
so what
had done
terrific
disserI
tation topic!
right,
could
computer did was consecutive and logical! Even its desires for me to put on Monomakh's Crown and that was the most frequent request were transparent. Rather than process raw information from photo, was sound, smell, ai*d other sensors, much easier to use information already processed by me. But. my God, what reagents the computer demanded! From distilled water to sodium trimethyldyphlorparaamintetrachlorphenylsulfate and from DNA and RNA to a specific brand of gasoline! And
it
until
I
right there.
had
perked up.
condense the
fifty
logic cells
cooking! can about how one hundred and dozens of matrices because the TsVM and crystal
story
of
Now we were
But curiosity took over. The complex was obviously straining to deve-oo. Bui why? To
The
filled
lab
was changing
into
a medieval
it
understand man?
it
It
it.
The
I
my very eyes;
was
and me
instead of cutting
I
off
the voltage
on the panel, ran for the fire extinguisher on the wall!), and how got new cells, soldered the transition circuits, and coordinated the cycles of all the units just the
I
computer seemed quite satisfied that unand diligently carried out my derstood commands. People make machines for their own aims. But what kind of aims could a machine have? Or maybe it wasn't an
aim, but a kind of innate accumulation
in-
technical realization. usual difficulties But the important thing was gol the project
of
I
ground. On February 15 finally heard the longawaited clatter: The machine printed out a string of numbers on the punched tape. Before deciphering it, circled the table on smoked a which the piece of tape lay;
off the
I
I
string of
numbers
cigarette
puter had
printout,
first
If
and smiled vaguely. The combegun behaving. translated the and there it was, the computer's sentence: "Memory 10 7 bits." wasn't what was expecting. That's
I I
I
punched on
and connected them with hoses; glass tubing, and wires. My supply of reagents and glass was depleted in a week, and had to requisition more and more. The noble, soothing electrical smells, rosin and heated insulation, were replaced with the swampy miasmas of acids, ammonia, vinegar, and God knows what else. wandered lost in these chemical jungles. The stills and hoses bubbled, gurgled, and sighed. The mixtures in the flasks and bottles fermented and changed color; they precipitated, dissolved, and regenerated metallic pulsating clumps and pieces of poured and shimmering gray threads. sprinkled according to the computer's directions and understood nothing. Then the computer suddenly asked fo*r
with bottles, flasks, autoclaves,
I I I I
four
more automatic
printers.
was
why
away that
the
com-
"Memory
10 7 bits."^
happy so the computer was interested in something other than chemistry! worked
it, got the went!
puter "wanted" (I can't write a word like that without quotes) to increase its memory bank. Actually, it was all very logical. It was
receiving complex information that had to be stored somewhere, but the banks were
at
stuff,
connected
it
-and off
it
Increase the memory banks! A common task in building computers. weren't for Alter Abramovich's reIf it speci for me, the computer's request would have gone unheeded. But he gave me three cubes of magnetic memory and two 'of ferroelectric memory And everything
already
filled.
systems of a earthworms or electrical machines? And what limits would the complex reach? was then that let loose the reins and that was good or bad still don't know In mid-March the computer, which had
stinct,
which
is
found
in
all
= Probably this was the point at which created Ashby's "power information re- | trieval" or something like it. Who knows! That was when became hopelessly con- I
I
(used.
It
if
about the
tronics,
latest
proceeded smoothly. Bui a few days later the TsVM-12 repeated its demand, and And the comthen again and again. puter began to make other demands. What was feeling then'' Satisfaction. Fi.
began asking
I
was rushing
whole
city,
cryotrons, tunnel transistors, film circuits, micromatrices, had no time for analysis; all over the institute and the
lying
and
something was happening! tried the results out on my dissertation-to-be. was a little put off by the fact that the computer
nally
I I
my hands
on
all this
a typing pool. The machines were printing out numbers. Paper- ribbon with columns of numbers poured out of the machines like manna from heaven. rolled up the tapes, picked out the words separated by spaces, translated them, and made sentences. The "true" phrases were very strange and enigmatic. For example: "Twenty-six kopeks, like from Berdichev." That was one of the first. Was that a fact, a thought Or a hint? How about this: "An onion like a steel
the lab
like
I
Now
sounded
|
\
I <
"_
5 \
I =
'
glamorous
the
stuff.
wound."
It
was working only for itself. Then the computer began building itself! Actually, that was logical too; complex information had to be processed by units more complex than the standard ones of
the TsVM-12.
And it was all for nothing. A month later computer "got bored" with electronics and "took up" chemistry. Actually, this shouldn't have been unexpected either; The computer had chosen the best way to build itself. After all, chemistry isnature's way Nature had neither soldering irons nor cranes, nor welders, nor merely commotors, not even shovels it
street like an
'-
mean? Is a
I
;
My work-toad
printed out
cells
deciphered another tape: "The tenderness of souls, taken in Taylor's series expansion, in the limits of zero to infinity comes down to a biharmonic function." Well put, no?
I
;
\
and announced where and how they should be added. At first the computer was mounted satisfied with standard cells.
I
bined chemicals, heated and cooled them, lit them, boiled them and that's how everv living thing on earth came about.
And
I
all
of
it
was
nonsensi-
cal excerpts or
was going
to
take
90
OMNI
CONTINUED ON PAGE
120'
New technologies
guide today's explorers as they seek the ever elusive monster
The figures crowding the deck of the raft huddled together, collars turned up against the wind. Everyone was taking pictures. For two weeks they had
labored nonstop to build this and now they were about to find out if it worked. Dr. Ian Morrison, an Edinstudio,
They charmed
with soap.
it
with smites
and
Lewis
Carroll,
Over the years, the Loch Ness Monster has been pursued with everything from biopsy harpoons to yellow submarines and kayaks mounted with machine
guns, not to mention a gallant wing commander named Walflew patrols over the loch in his one-man autogiro.
had volunteered to simulate the monster. While strips of white tape were applied to his wet suit to calibrate him as a target, Bob
Rines, the expedition leader, briefed him on the dive. A mo-
his
lace
who
The monster-hunters have used mass surface vigils and infrared photography. They've played Beethoven symphonies and Scottish reels to the beast through underwater with pebbles soaked in speakers and tried coaxing salmon oil and with scrapings from the vagina of a sea
it
mouthpiece, stepped back, and disappeared with a splash into the choppy swell. There was silence except for the sound of the
wind.
Morrison
swam
cow.
thusiasts.
But those were the good old days ot amateur enThings have been very different since the Americans arrived high-powered lawyers and millionaire inventors, plus a skin-diving archaeologist and a subtle machine called TAD. the target alarm detector. High technology has come to scrutinize the loch and
its
needle jumped on the recording chart, and there was a loud click as the servomechanism of the target alarm detector locked on. The calendar-clock began ticking. "He's in!" shouted Rines. "He's in the field!" Nine meters down, the camera shutters opened, and for six thousandths of a second, eight strobe lights blazed into an area no more than 2.7 meters square. was barely visible on the surface. "Flash!" shouted Charlie Wyckoff, leaning in precarious fashion over the side, with his head in a water
It
the bizarre.
Squat and square, the battered wooden raft looked incongruous in the postcard-perfect setting of Loch Ness's Urquhart Bay, a piece of disreputable flotsam floating among the anchored yachts. There was no way was an array of of knowing that suspended beneath electronically synchronized lights and cameras, controlled by their own sonar system and loaded with the fastest color film in the world; that it was, in effect, the the jnost sophisticated animal trap ever devised world's first fully automatic underwater photo studio.
it
scope. "He's sixteen feet away. Fourteen feet. Twelve feet." Rines crouched over the sonar chart, calling the distances like Mission Control.
"Flash!"
"He's
in
all
over
the place!"
"Rash!"
"Now
The capacitors were pumping 450 volts into the system every three seconds. We crowded to the
"Flash!"
edge
down
beautifully.
must be a Christmas
feet. Six feet.
"He's thirty feet away and still locked in He's sixteen. He's fourteen. It tree down there! Eight
if
of rock.
The
its
by the world press. Over the years, about 3.000 eyewitness reports have been recorded, and they continue to come in at a rate of about a dozen a year. They range from descriptions of unusual wakes and
bottom
He's right under us. He's sifonly Nessie on the cameras. Oh. would give us a crack like this!" There was no comment. From the excited faces around us you could tell he had said for everyone. The rig worked, and the (AAS) latest Academy of Applied Science
ting
it
lands.
upon kilometer of dark bays and headThe sheer volume of water, from
The data also fail to reveal much about the nature and habits of the creatures. A ten-year selection of sightings was run through a computer by Dr. Roy Mackal, a
Among the photographs are the underwater sequences taken by Bob Rines on previous AAS expeditions: the famous
"flipper shot" of 1972 and the close-up of a head and neck taken three years later. They were taken by an automatic camera and were corroborated by simultaneous sonar
horizon to horizon five times over, makes the mind ache, It might contain anything. But atmosphere is not evidence, and
humped backs
to
head-and-neck
sight-
It
whetheryou think of the Loch Ness monster as a major scientific phenomenon or as a silly joke depends on how much evidence
you have seen.
ings and colortul claims of confrontations on dry land. About 15 percent of this verbal evidence is accepted as convincing or corroborated, which gives a solid core of about
Chicago University biologist. About the only patterns he could detect were that the animals usually appeared in calm weather, during the summer months, for an average
about a minute, and often around the river mouths, It was hardly-conclusive. The photographic and technical data are less easy to dismiss. Leaving aside hoaxes and anything remotely capable of being explained any other way. this amounts to ten still photographs, one 16mm film, and about fifteen sonar traces.
of
hump zigzagging across the loch. It was analyzed by the British Joint Air Reconnaissance Center, and their report was emphatic that could only have been a
it
recordings thai
showed shoals
of small fish
400 cases.
Unfortunately, it is all "soft" data that cannot be objectively checked. As with
was some
is
safari.
Like Stonehenge and Nazca, Loch Ness a place where the legend seems to grow
"
Accounts of the creature go back to St. Columba's first encounter of the recorded
kind in a.o.565, Its modern history dates from 1933. when the story was first taken up
out of the landscape. The first impression you get is of a huge trench of air and water
much play is made of the witnesses, but even nuns and policemen can be mistaken.
UFO
sightings,
reliability of
escaping m panic from a massive moving object. Although the resolution of the pictures was poor and they needed computer enhancement, they are by far the most convincing photos so far of the creatures. The film was taken in I960 by Tim Dinsdale, a former Rolls-Royce aeronautical engineer, and showed a typical monster
The sonar traces are the most convincall because they include paramesuch as speed and depth and some
10NFWGE1E3
Loch Ness looks as pretty as a postcard on the surface but hides a great depth (left). A scientist studies feedback (lop. right) sent from a raft of complex apparatus /below, right/ meant to penetrate the murky, peat-starned
Sonar and
state-of-the-art
photography yield
Meet an
architect of "the
most
who
left
irUTERVIEUU
think the nenry is simply a way to sweep the difficulties under the rug," Richard Feynman said. "I am, of course, not sure of I that." sounds like the kind of criticism, fitually tempered, that comes from the audience alter a controversial paper is presented at a scientific conference. But Feynman was at the podium, deliverIt
The theory he was questionquantum electrodynamics, has recently been called "the mosl
its
awed neither by the titans of physics around him (Niels Bohr Enrico Fermi. Hans Belhe) nor by the top-secret urgency of the The securily staff was unnerved by his facility at opening safes sometimes by listening fo the tiny movements of the lock mechanism, sometimes by guessing which physical constant the safe's user had chosen as the combination, (Feynman hasn't changed since then; many of his students at Caltech have acproject.
-
one part
itiro
in
a million.
When Feynman,
quired sale-cracking
After the war,
skills
Feynman worked at
here, as
he
in
I colleagues hailed it as "the great cleanup": a resolution of longI standing problems and a rigorous lusion of the century's two great ^ ideas in physics, relativity and quantum mechanics. Feynman has combined theoretical brilliance and irreverent J I skepticism throughout his career. In 1942, after taking his doctor| ate at Princeton with John Wheeler, he was tapped for the Manhal4 tan Project. Al Los Alamos, he was a twenty-five-year-old whiz kid
in this inlerview. Bethe was the catalyst for his ideas on resolving "the problem of the infinities," The precise energy levels
recounts
hydrogen atoms, and the forces between the elecchanges had to be taken into account), had already been the subject of pioneering work lor three decades'. Every electron, theory asserted, was surrounded by transient "virtual particles" that its mass-energy summoned up Irom vacuum; Ihose particles in turn summoned up others and
of electrons in
the result
charge
for
the problem
man,
at
was a mathematical cascade that predicted an nfinite every electron, Tomonaga had suggested a way around known just as Feynin 1943, and his ideas became Cornell, and Schwinger, at Harvard, were making the same
: '
Vegas and
believe
I'd
shared the Nobel Prize for physics in 1965, irrogra =. By then, Feynman's mathematical tools, the Fey r; man and the diagrams he had invented to trace particle in:oraci,ons were part ot the equipment of every theoretical physicist, Mathematician Stanislaw Ulam, another Los Alamos veteran, cites the Feynman diagrams as "a notation that can push thoughts in direcThe idea ol tions that may prove useful or even novel and decisive," particles that travel backward in time, for example, is a natural
crucial step. All three
couldn't nightlife in general looms large. "My wife actually accept an invitation to give a speech where I'd wear a tuxedo." he says of the Nobel ceremony. "I did change my mind a couple of times." In the preface to The Feynman Lectures on Physics widely used as a college text since they were grin, collected and published in 1963, he appears with a maniacal
have
to
outgrowth
In
still
of that notation.
1950.
Feynman moved
to Caltech, in
California. and
the
'Feynman
unmistakably the transplanted New Yorker's, but southern aporopriaie nabitat lor him; In its- environs seem the stories" his colleagues tell, his fondness for Las
conga drum, Among Feynman's other achievements are his contribution to understanding the phase changes of supercooled helium and his work with, Cahech coteague Mi, -ray Gell-Mann on the theory of beta decay of atomic nuclei. Both subjects are still far from final call resolution, he points out, Indeed, he does not hesitate to quantum electrodynamics itself a "swindle" that leaves important work of logical questions unanswered. What kind of man can do ContributThat ca, her while nursinc the "ic-si penetrgfhg doubts? America's ing editor Monte Davis brings out the true character of
playing a
celebrated physicist.
at
high-energy
physics from the outside, its goal seems to be to find the ultimate constituents of mattrace back to ter. It seems a quest we can the Greeks' atom, the "indivisible" particle. But with the big accelerators, you get fragments that are more massive than the particles
turns out surprising, the scientist is even more delighted. You think he's going to say, "Oh, it's not like expected, there's no ulti1
make a
living; their
of
mate
particle,
don't
that
that
you started with and maybe quarks can never be separated. What does do to the quest? Feynman: don't think that ever was the quest. Physicists are trying to find out how nature behaves; they may talk carelessly about, some "ultimate, particle" because mothat's the way nature looks at a given Suppose people are explorment, but:
I .
. .
it, No. he's going to then?" Omni: You'd rather see that happen? Feynman: Rather doesn't make any differget. You can't say it's get what ence: a/ways going to be surprising, either; a few years ago was very skeptical .about the
I
I
gauge theories,
partly
because expected
I
most Omni: And ads for programming schools on every matchbook! Feynman: Right. don't believe in the idea that there are a few peculiar people capable of understanding math and the rest o! the world is normal. Math is a human discovery, and it's no more complicated than humans can understand. had a calculus 'book once that said, "What one fool can do. another fool can." What we've been able lo
I I
was expecting
mist,
and now
it
and
threatening- to
It',-
someone who
hasn't
water ;pg a now continent, okay? They see coming along the ground they've seen that before and- they call it river, So they say they're exploring to find the headwaters, they go. upriver, and sure enough,
'there they are,
it's all going very well. But lo and behold, when they get up far enough they lind the whole system's different: There's a great big lake, or springs, or the rivers run in a circle. You might say, "Aha!
ridges and valleys after ail. Omni: Are physical theories going to keep getting more abstract and mathematical?
looks
like
like
Faraday
but it was fools who did it. studied There's a tendency to pomposity in all this, to make it all deep and profound. My son-is taking a course in philosophy, and*
the early nineteenth century, not mathematically sophisticated but with a very powerful intuition about physics? Feynman; I'd say the odds are strongly
against it. For one thing, you need the math just to understand what's been done so far, "Beyond that, the behavior of subnuclear systems is so strange compared to the ones the brain evolved to deal with that the analysis has to be very abstract. To understand ice, you have to understand things that are themselves very unlike ice. Farasprings day's models were mechanical
we were looking at something by Spinoza and there was the most childish
last
night
all
these Attributes
They've
land.
all!
The
real rea-
was
lo explore the
turned out not to be headwaters, If they might be slightly embarrassed at their carelessness in explaining themselves, but no more than that. As long as it looks like the way things are built is wheels within wheels, then you're looking for the innermost
and Substances, all this meaningless chewing around, and we started to laugh. Now, how could we do that? Here's this great Dutch philosopher, and we're laughing at him. It's because there was no exIn that same period there was cuse for Newton, there was Harvey studying the cirit!
wheel but
hell
it
it
and wires and tense, bands in space and his images were Irom basic geometry. think we've understood all we can from that point of view; what we've found in this cenI
were people which progress was being made! You can take every one of-Spinoza's propos lions and take the
contrary propositions and look at the world -and you can't tell which is right. Sure, people were awed because he had the courage to take on these great questions, but
it if
that
you
tury
is
different
Omni: But surely you must have some guess about what you'll find; there are bound to be ridges and valleys and so
on,..?
require a
lot
o!
math.
courage
question.
doesn't do any good to have the you can't get anywhere with the
Feynman: Yeah. But what if when you get there it's all clouds? You can expect certain things, you can work out theorems about the topology of watersheds, but what if you find a kind of mist, maybe, with things
coagulating out of it, with no way to distinguish the land from the air? The whole idea you started with is gone! That's the kind of exciting thing -that happens from lime to time. One is presumptuous if one says,
Omni: Does that limit the number of people who can contribute or even understand what's being done? Feynman: Or else somebody will develop a way of thinking about the problems so thai
Omni:
In
losophers'
we can understand them more easily. Maybe they'll just teach earlier and earlier.
it
for some lumps Feynman: It isn't the philosophy that gets me, it's the pomposity. If they'd just laugh at
themselves!
this,
It
"I
ii
think
it's
like
You know,
it's
is
called
"abstruse" math is so difficult. Take somethinglike computer programming and the careful logic needed for that the kind of
thinking that mama and papa would have sa d was on.y lor professors. Well, now it's
..part of
it
they'd
explain that this is their best guess. ... But so few of them do; instead, they seize on the possibility that there may not be any
ultimate fundamental particle and say that you should stop work and ponderwith great
"We're going to find the ultimate particle or If it the unified field laws" or the anything.
98
lot of
daily activities;
it's
a way
to
OMNI
FICTION
Eschewing
obfuscation,
rhetorical
THE LANGUAGE
CLARIFIER
BY PAUL
J.
NAHIN
Ihe
came
idea
during the divorce. He knew he was going to be screwed, but with the legal mumbo jumbo of the separation agreements, he couldn't figure out how he was being screwed. Janet's damn lawyer had drawn
them
up he'd
for that,
as he he had been
caught in a rather blatant, clear-cut position of adultery At the time, he had thought the wild-passioned honeyblonde had been worth it, but now he was beginning to
have doubts. He had a doctorate in semantics and was the author of two scholarly tomes on the meaning and structure of words, but Professor Willard Watson still couldn't understand what in hell was going on. Did he or didn't he get to keep the car? How about the house, the savings account, the cat and dog, the antique hutch, the silver, the ski equipment, the home library, the television sets, and all the rest of the earthly possessions collected over twenty-five years of marriage? And what about alimony? Asking Janet's fathead lawyer led merely to the receipt of additional incomprehensible letters, notices, an'd" other horrible documents. Just what the heck did it mean to receive a letter saying: Notice is
OMNI
"
hereby granted to Willard Watson, the first party of aggravation with respect to the aggravated second party, Janet Watson, ot an action for divorce, in the County of
Orange of the State of California. Actions involved include but may not be fully delimited by their listing here; the exposure ot the second party to loathsome disease by the
first
party
due
to participation in
perverted
of nature; public
embarrassment
of the
the wanton, unrestrained, lascivious behavior of the first party. The second parly maintains total freedom in the question of
complicity of action, and, except in those cases where litigation proves contrariwise, sues tor all common hereditaments, past, present, or future, to revert to the second party, except tor the sole ownership of
items, things, or other states of being in possession of the first party prior to the
initial
So, good friend that he was, Sam listened. At first he laughed hysterically, then he wrote a few equations, and seeing a little hope, he wrote some more. Then he became quietly excited, and finally, as Willard wrapped up his arguments, Sam became was with hysterical again, but this time excitement. It could be done, The two old friends shook hands and agreed to begin construction that very weekend." Willard would provide the description of the necessary syntactical transformations, along with a complete table look-up dictionary of all the required synonyms, antonyms, and
it
to
paw through
that
his
"Now
I'll
what
scheming
wife of mine
restraining
"Let's not
is up to!" Sam, as he placed a hand on his friend's shoulder. be hasty^We should really test
it
I
some more. Look here. have a copy ot today's campus newspaper carrying an
interview with the Undergraduate Dean. will you, the perfect test!" He
Listen to this,
in
institutions like
to
our
whichmay be expected
oopi.,ations,
homogeneous
transitive
Sam would
tise,
'
the parts,
It
they stood
in
first
Sam's laboratory, looking at their gleamA cubical box, precisely 119 centimeters on an edge, it had a smooth,
ing creation.
party and the second party. Professor Watson was somewhat per-
featureless appearance, with the double of two horizontal slots, One was
exception
plexed by
all
this.
So he
hired his
own
with
ta-.heaa lawyer.
then was twice as much paper that he couldn't understand. Willard learned the truth of the old New England saying 'A man
between two lawyers is like a fish between two cats." So he fired his fathead lawyer. And he stayed up for three straight nights, mulling over his desperate situation, until
the idea for the invention
came
to him.
He
quickly made an appointment lo see his old friend at the college, Prpfessor Sam Sklansky of the Physics Department. windy, and rainy day in It was a cold, early October as Willard ran from ihe park-
"Ready
.?"
. .
counters a tremendous diversity in the famsubcultures that students come from, in addition to the idiosyncratic mix of assets and liabilities that characterize them.' "Wow, Sam do we dare put that into it? It could blow the circuits!" "Might as well find out it the Language Clarifier really works, Willard." Sam soon had the Dean's words typed in clear, crisp, sharp letters. He shoved them into the input slot, and the machine responded in seconds with: No two students are alike. "Son ot a gun, Sam, look at that! The translation actually makes sense. Try something else on it." here's "Okay, Willard. Take a look at this another quote trom the Dean: 'We thus encounter students whose educational aims are crystal clear, as well as others whose purposes have all the clarity ot an amorphous mist emanating from a thick cloud of existential miasma.'" Quickly they typed this out and inserted into their machine, and they were soon in possession of the machine's response: Some students know what they want, and
ily
it
shoes soon filled with water, and he squished his way up the steps into the Physics Building. Even Nature was dumping on him now. Sklansky's door was open, and he walked in. dripping, sloppy wet, with water
ing
lot
works! enough for me. Sam Now, where the heck are those damn
it
lawyer's papers!"
marked
ready
"Okay,
"No,
"Well
input
It
was
The rest is history. Willard found out what the divorce was going to cost him. He still got screwed, of course, but with the Language Clarifier deciphering the papers from Janet's fathead lawyer, he knew precisely now he was being screwed. Actually, Willard was really unconcerned, as he and Sam expected to make a bundle selling their machine to business, higher education,
ior testing.
floor.
in
you can
Sam. Thanks
for
seeing
me
so early
the morning."
lone, iorlorn
"Please,
idea, so
insist."
I
you go ahead."
all
right,
do
just
a test problem ready." walked over to his desk, rolled afresh piece oi heavy white bond paper into his typewriter,
out
in
invented! You
letters;
Liquid precipitation
fell
cation
ning around
"Look, Sam, I'm desperate, and I've had a lot of things on my mind besides the weather. need your help, and need it fast. Janet's going to rake my behind over the
I I
heights, followed by the spherical solid version, with the process terminated by the
everything
and government. Their need for clarifiwas well established. Let Janet have secretly, Willard was happy to
me
reverse transport in the gaseous state. Sam took the sheet over to the machine, and with an expression that was a mixture of glee and apprehension, held it up to the
be rid of the damn cat and dog. He would recoup it all, and more, with the royalties
from the
Willard
Clarifier.
let
Sam handle
the business
it
end
serving on
"Willard,
me means
I"
you want to see Professor Shythe Law School. deal in physical facts, mathematical validity, in cosmic truth, not in. the mental hash-mash of
ster over
in
I
nod of input slot. his iriend's head, Sam pushed the paper in. After only a few seconds, another piece ot paper shot trom the output slot. Both in midair, and together men grabbed rained, then hailed, and firead: First
"Ready, Willard?" At the
it it it
was with of the Language Clarilier, and some greedy anticipation that he dropped in on him after the divorce was settled. Willard was flat broke.
"Okay, Sam, give
me
the news,
How
are
we doing
a piece
Willard.
in
Sam opened
It
lawyers!"
nally the
water evaporated.
I'll
ol paper,
across
to
"No, Sam, another fathead lawyer isn't what need. need you. want you to tell me
I
"Well,
unison. The
.-''Hey,
if
my
idea
is
possible."
be damned!" they exclaimed in Language Ck-rifier worked. hey, hey, Sam, it looks good, it looks
was a
dollars.
thousand
"There you are, Willard, your share of the proceeds from our first
three
sales..
And more
I
to
come!'
the
"Hot damn, Sam, knew it! Who bought iirst three machines businessmen dealing with government regulatory agencies?'
Sam
ster,
about M-e Lane Jigs C,;r ic -- oo.n :oc o.r tp decipher the they could use. thousands ol proposals they get from mdi. stria contractors every yea' He read: " 'Replying to your communication oi 28 Octobet we have after analysis
f
"Christ,
neil
she uia
know 7
how
it
'
let's run it through the Language' Clarifier you still have our prototype unit in your lab, right?" "Right, Willard. Let's go!"-' A few minutes- later the input slot gob-
Look,
of the
to,
in
broad ramifications
all its
of
and
it
pertaining
letter.
Then the
at-
three."
present
Clarifier.
and
future, forms,
to
the
tached
lowed. as tne
his
be
"Of course." excla ~ied Willard, slapping forehead with a hand. "Lawyers, would the prime .users of the Clarifier. wouldn't
all
Language
lound
present a
the
in
ritual
produce,
they'll
be
lorms
ol
ils
the next fifty years. What's old Shyster going to do with Ihem, anyway?" "Actually, Willard, you'ye got it backward. Shyster is writing a law book, and he's
Clarifiers tor
inventors. In view of the willingness' of Said inventors to receive and accept a yearly
Secrecy Act of 1947 folforty-lhree seconds ticked, by mulled over its latest task. nowols a ew Iransis'.ors giew hoi an amo'Tei csci aied with feedback and a mechanical gear-fair drive almost ground off a tooth or two. But finally the
Military
full
A
a
Clarifier
ts
Deep
up found to par as far as the publisher is concerned. Not scholarly-sounding enough, or something like that. So the Clarifier is just what he
that his early drafts weren't really
Willard, with a "I don't get it, Sam," said puzzled look on his face. "If Shyster's book isn't impressively complex enough, how's
stipend, in perpetuity, or for life, whichever terminates first, of one million dollars, they shall also accept the impact and import of ine Military Secrecy Aci of 1947. Title 12, Section 19.321 (see attached forms). Return of this document, with said inventors' signatures, will constitute a mutuary satis-
Clarifier finished.
r.eard
a-
Vie
Language
Cariiier.
and
yoi,
get a rnegabucka year for 'ile Don'r sign the agreement,, and they toss you id the slammer and throw away the key.
Sam
physes
lives
in
Hawaii
is
agreemen Sam put the letter down on his desk and drummed h.s imgers on the hard wooden
'actory
Orierwise. not.'"
teaching'',
~y-
and
the Clarifier going to help?" Sam leaned back in his chair with a
surface, "Well, Willard, what do you make o' than He idly flipped through !he frtythree single-spaced
"Willard,
in
my
boy,
fhumb
physics that
a process works in one direction, it says will almost always be true that it can go the
other way, too." Then Willard understood. "You don't mean, you couldn't possibly mean" "Yep, that's right. just moved a couple.of
I
1947 Military sounds to me like the bastards are afraid to have the Clarifier around! You know, if the military boys can use it to blow away the industrial proposal-writer s c/ap. suppose to dig through all the industry could use government's crud. too. Why, both sides would have to make sense. Imagine that!"
it
I
would be .ng. loo. "-a"icc Susan and indelicate to discuss wnat ihey are doing. Once, a year they meet in San Francisco, spi.t the million bucKs, have a few dfinksai Fisherman's Wharf, and ride the cablecar.
Old Shyster's book was a best-seller, thus proving you don't have to be smart to get paid a million bucks for forgetting what you know, and Oh, yes,
right.
Sam was
it
DO
now
old
Shyster
just
output
slot,
ble muddle you could possibly imagine emerges from the input slot. Should be a
legal best-seller,"
really
Willard was stunned, The irony of it was mind-boggling! As he stared at Sam, his friend chuckled. "Look at it this way. Willard. how many of the lawyers who'll read will know or even give a damn, whether or not?" they understand Before Willard could respond. Sam's
it it
secretary put her head into the office. "Excuse me, Professor Sklansky, but this
large envelope, from Washington, just came for you registered, special delivery, It looks important, so thought.l should give it
I
loyou
pretty
right away."
"Yes,
young lady
admiring her slender ankles, the motion of her firm thighs under a snug dress, her Wilreally spectacular bottom. "Careful, lard," cautioned Sklansky, the always obrecall, it was a servant physicist, "As
1
blonde who did you in last time, and besides, she's the best damned secretary I've ever had. So stay away from her!" "Ah, suppose you're right, Sam. but she
I
is
a nifty-looking gal.'' "Hmmph, grunted Sam, who had been reading the just-delivered mail. A slight frown was forming on his mouth. "Listen to this, Willard, it's from the Chief Legal Officer of Defense Research and Engineering in the Pentagon. Remember, wrote to them
I
"
VJammg Warning!
!
T>;e
earning
<s
CYBERNETICS
CONTINUED FROM
Pi
the
dered by TASS
The NSA, ten limes the size of the CIA, used gianl computers to scan almost every telegraph, teletype, and Telex message sent through American borders. For several years, these computers automatically searched for keywords such as "missile,"
"China," and "assassinate." Messages containing keywords were recorded, and human operatives alerted. Illegal snooping
needed to manage the.1 980 Olympics data and might be used for military purposes. The public is told little about the Cybernetic War. The computer industry advertises the nonmilitary
uses of its products. Universities teach computer science and computer business, but not computer war. Writers and critics, so articulate on the philosophy of artificial intelligence and on the unexpected home-computer revolution,
are curiously tongue-tied on the major isof war and peace. Technologists, on
be in miliary weapons and equipment. The typical soldier will be directed in the by a computer. He will be supported robot. He will computer-designed, computermanulactured, computer-aimed, and computer-actuated weapons. He will maintain secure jampreof communication
will
field
by an airborne computerized
carry
on so vast a scale is impossible without computers. The Cybernetic War emphasizes hardware and information, rather than soldiers and civilians. Superpowers routinely monitor one another's radar, microwave, and radio transmissions. Satellites eavesdrop, satellites snap clandestine telescopic photographs
lites
in
through a surgically implanted link to a computerized network. The major strategic weapons will be computer-directed beams of photons, nuclei, and antimatter. The major tactical weapons will be unmanned, as human reIlexes are too slow for the battlefield control
loop.
tive role in target-rich
sues
the defensive in conversations with antitechnological laymen, are reluctant to discuss military applications, In Russia, cyberneticist Shcharansky speaks out and
chine,
condemned
to the
ultraviolet
and
infrared, satel-
Human judgment will still play aselecenvironments. Most be made by maand most strategic decisions will be chosen by humans from alternatives presented by computers. Ideological warfare will thrive. New combinations of satellite video broadcasting,
seas
with nuclear- powered radar probe the for submarines. This global flow of
military
data
New
sume that by
globe
in
dif iicull
Washing-
debates sale
ern countries.
propaganda. Attitudes toward privacy will change, as details of a billion lives are stored within computer memories. People
will
and control systems, such as the Air Force E-3A or the Navy E-2C Hawkeye, are aircraft that carry computers and communications systems and serve as control centers in battles, executing and relaying or-
computers in the world, almost all of which will be smaller than a large book. A third will be for business and science, another third will be third irt people's homes, and the remaining
There
will
be roughly a
billion
there
be overwhelmed with information, and will be a major struggle for access to knowledge, as opposed to mere data.
Education
will
surpass entertainment
will
in
total cost.
Computer-designed materials
perform natural substances
plications.
in
out-
exotic ap-
Computers
will
pilot millions of
and noncornbustion rockets. Paper will have been replaced almost entirely for news delivery, money, and commercial announcements. "Library" will
no longer mean a oui.ding. Peoplewill read about the events of the Cybernetic War, but not in newspapers or magazines. The gap between the rich and the poor will grow, but the poor will be more aware of this and more capable of action. Resent-
ment
of
computerized-police-containment
tion
actions will mount. Sabotage of computer-managed production and distribusystems will provoke increased robotic security. Many will see the conflict as Man
versus Machine.
For the
tary
moment,
it
is
machine against
machine. The computer was born in a milicontext and has since permeated every niche of the military environment. There is nothing remarkable about the Cybernetic War in principle, except that might at any time flare up and scorch this planet as thoroughly as a sun gone nova. A war in which hardware hunts and kills hardware can iind human software caught
ii
in
between.
yet, paradoxically,
range of posAnd sible futures is expanded by the computer. technology If computers can advance the of peace as efficiently as they have advanced the technology of war, then people,
me
and
robots,
will
OQ
SANCTUARY
cylinder was po riling 'isai'v away from me, so radar had reported a cross section much smaller than its real size. The thing was seven goddamn kilometers long.
I
butt. looked back. A blue-white cloud was spreading out behind Sniffer, blocking any
I
detection,
I
ran
like
blip
showed up
thatfor one hour, then two. The again. It had shifted side-
stared
at that
didn't
want
to
be around there anymore. took three-quick shots with the telescope on inventory mode. That would tell me composition, albedo, the rest of the litany. Then down and scrambled back into the My hands were trembling again.
1
I
shut it bridge.
hesitated about what to do, but they decided for me. On our next revolution, as soon as the automatic opticals got a fix, punched in for' a radar Doppler and came back bad; The smaller dot was closing on us, fast, The moly bolts- came free with a bang. took Sniffer up and out, backing away from the asteroid to keep it between me and the blip that was coming for us. stepped us up to max gee. My mouth was dry and had to check every computer input twice. ran. There wasn't much else to do, The blip was coming at me at better than a tenth of a gee incredible acceleration. In the
there were (wo blips.
it
I I I
ways, to get a look around the cesium cloud an expensive maneuver. Apparently they had a lot of fuel in reserve. threw another cloud. It punched a blue-white- fist into the blackness. They were making better gee than could; it was going to be a matter of who could hold out. So tried another trick. moved into the radar shadow of an asteroid that was nearby and moving at a speed could manage. Maybe the blip would miss me when came out from behind the cloud. was a gamble, but worth it in fuel.
moved at even one percent the speed light, they would have spread across- the damn galaxy in a few million years. Some people ft nk that argument is right. They take a little [uriheftoo the aliens haven't visited our solar system, so check your premise again. Maybe there-aren'f any aliens like us. Oh, sure, intelligent fish, maybe, or something we Can't imagine. But there are no radio builders, no star voyagthey
of
whole
it
ers. The best proof of this is that they haven't come calling. I'd never thought about that line of reasoning much, because that's the conventional
you're
wisdom now; it's stuff you learn when a snot-nosed kid. We stopped stonback
so. But
it
It
around 2030 or
-about
it
now
that
though!
In three hours had my answer. The blip homed in on me, How? thought. Who's go! a radar that can pinpoint that well? fired a white-hot cesium cloud. We acI I I
Already,
habitats.
men were
living
in
space
was
get-
It mankind ever cast oft into the abyss between the stars, which way would go? In a dinky rocket? No, they'd go in comfort, in stable communities. They'd rig up a cylinder world with a fusion drive, or something like it. and- -set course for the nearest star, knowing they'd take genera-
they
tions
to-
get there.
Q didn't
like
but
it fit
Belt there
is
around, and a chronic lack of fuel so we use high-efficiency drives and take energy-cheap orbits. The blip wasn't bothering with thai. Somehow they had picked Sniffer out and decided we were worth a lot of fuel to reach, and reach in a hurry For some reason they didn't use a laser bolt. It would have beer a simole shot at this range. But
moving
there
I'd
I
known
it.
moment saw
maybe they didn't want to chance my shooting at the big ship this close, so they
put their
But then,
It
didn't
ting worried. Sniffer
strain.
I
add up. By the time was a few hundred klicks away from the asteroid was too small to be a useful shield. The blip: appeared
it
around its edge. don't carry weapons, but do have a few tricks. built a customdesigned puise mode into Sniffer's fusion drive, back before she was commissioned. When the. blip appeared started staging the engines. The core of the motor is a hot ball of plasma, burning heavy water deuterium -and spitting it, plus vaporized rock, out the back tubes. Feeding in the right amount of deuterium is cruciai. There are a dozen overlapping safeguards on the system, but if you know how
I I I I
what I'd seen, but now looked like was in for a long haul. The fusion motor rumbled and murmured to itself and was alone, more alone than I'd felt for a long time, with nothing to do but watch the screen and
-
A century or two in space would make them into very different people. When they reached a s;ar. wnere would .hey go? Down planets? Sure lor exploration, maybe. But to live? Nobody who grew up in freedom the cylinder world gives you, would want to be a groundpounder. They wouldn't even know how. The aliens wouldn't be much different. They'd be spaceiarers, able to live in vac and tap solar power They'd need raw materials, sure. But the cheapest way to get mass isn't to go down and drag it up Irorn the planets. No, the easy way is in the asteroids otherwise, Belters would never make a buck. So if the-aliens came to our solar system a long time ago. they'd probably continue to live in space colonies. Sure, they'd study the planets some. Bui they'd live where they would be comfortto the
able.
I
thought
I
this
think.
gam-
waits while dodged from rock to rock Ihere was plenty oi time. didn't like the conclusion, but it fit the facts. That huge sevenI
malcon-
kilometer cylinder
tents. Most of them are from the cylinder worlds orbiting Earth. Once you've grown up in space, moving on means moving out, not going back to Earth. Nobody wants to be a groundpounder. So Belter's are the
made.
I'd
I
moment
known saw
that,
it.
out there
but ships
finding
out.
would have
picked
So.
it
to.
up,
I
a dose of pulverized rock. The rock the runaway reaction, On top oi ifm: all in a microsecond, came a shot of cesium. It mixed and-heated andzap out the back, moving fast, went a hot cloud of spitting, snarling plasma, The- cesium
of that
came damps
The common theory is that life in general must be like that. Over the last century the scientists have looked for radio signals
i'.'oi."i
didn't
help much.
among
the stars,
results.
But
we
think
ing
So
and
lie
I
decided to hide behind One rock headsunward at a fair clip, needed sleep didn't want to keep up my fusion
I I
ionizes easily and makes a perfect shield against radar You can fire a laserthrough it, sure but how do you lind your target? The cesium pulse gave me a kick in the
the question
and
out
among
the stars?
comes up: there are aliens, why haven't they spread How come they didn't we even evolved?
If
bum
low
-they're too-easy to detect. Better to for awhile. stayed there for five hours, dozing.
I
When
woke up
couldn't
see
the blip.
105
"
"
Maybe they'd broken off the chase. was ragged and ihere was sand in my eyes.
I I
was
I
fer. Request microburst of confirmation on your hall frequency, Sniffer. We have a high-yield reading on optical from your
really scared this time. Belters and lasers could take, sure. But this was too much for
fis-
me.
ate breakfast and freed Snfffet from the asteroid I'd moored us to. My throat was edged us out from raw, my nerves jumpy. and looked around. Nothing.
I
I
560 megahertz
I
is
Ceres
Monitor,
on
fhe rock
I
turned up the fusion drive. Sniffer creaked and groaned. The deck plates There was a hot gun-metal smell.
rattled.
I
clicked off. The Bell is huge, but the high-burn torch I'd turned loose back there was orders of magnitude more luminous than an ordinary fusion jet. That was one reason carried them they doubled as a
it
I
tried to imagine what they thought of us. were young, we were crude. Undoubtedly the cylinder beings could have destroyed us. They could nudge a middlesized asteroid into a collision orbit with Earth and watch the storm wrack engulf humanity. Simple. But they hadn't done it.
We
Something
like that,
yes. Give
quality
and
in
it
becomes a human
a
which
it
name
is
itself
signal
flare, visible
alien.
had been
I I
in
my
skinsuif the
all
whole
By some chance somebody must have seen mine and relayed the coordinates to
Ceres. hadn't called All through the chase Ceres. It would have been of no use there
I
sort of sense,
I
These
things were
some
floated, frowning.
this to-
time and
either
didn't smell
that
good
and
pulled
shelter
boosted.
.
gether was like assembling a jigsaw puzzle with only half the pieces, but still
something
told
me was
I
right.
It fit.
It came out of nowhere. One minute the scope was clean and Ihe next a big one, moving fast, straight at us. there was no couldn't have been hiding
It
were no
craft within
range
rock around to screen it. Which meant they could deflect radar waves, at least for a lew minutes. They could be invisible. The thing came looming out of the darkness. It was yellow and blue, bright and obvious. lurned in my couch to see it. My
I
Belters are loners my instinct was always to keep troubles to myself. There's nothing worse than listening to a Belter whining over the radio. But now switched the radio back on and reached for the mike to hail Ceres. Then
And
to
be
of help.
A serene, long-lived, cosmic civilization' might be worried by our blind rush outward. They were used to vast time scales; we had
the wink of an eye. the cylinder beings undecided, hesitant. They needed time to think things over. That would explain why
they didn't contact us. Just the reverse, they were hiding.
fact
in
Otherwise
hands were punching in a last-ditch maneuver on the board. squinted at the thing and a funny feeling ran through me, a chill,
I
QThe
thing
came looming
It
out
It
was
old.
of the darkness.
There were big meteor pits all over the The surface itself glowed, like rock with a ghostly fire inside. But could see no ports, no locks, no antennas.
yellow-blue skin.
I
yellow
and
blue,
I
obvious.
turned
my
It
was
hit
swelling
in
had
laid
surprise,
the emergency board, all buttons. out good money for one special prospector overtook me if some
My hands were couch to see punching in a last-ditch maneuver on the board ... a
it.
It suddenly hit me. They didn't use radio because it broadcasts at a wide angle. Only lasers can keep a tight beam over great distances. That was what zapped me not a weapon, a communications channel. Which meant there had to be more than one cylinder world in the Belt. They kept
beamed communicai
chill
That implied something further, too. We hadn'l heard any radio signals from other civilizations, either because they were
and decided he needed an extra ship. The side pods held fission-burn rockets, powerful things. They fired one time only and cost like hell. But worth it. The gee slammed me back into the
couch. ass out
fuel
We
hauled
stopped. Something wasn't quite kosher. The yellow-blue craft had never fired at
using lasers. They didn't want to be detected by other, younger societies. They didn't want us to know they existed. Why? Were the aliens in our own Belt debating whether to help us or crush us?
of there. saw the thing behind fade away in the exhaust flames. The high-boost
Some
front
of
it
me. Sniffer would have been easy to cripple at that range. An angry prospector would've done without thinking twice. But
it
Or something in between? In the meantime, the Belt was a natural hideout. They liked their privacy. They must
be worried
Belt.
I
now, with
humans
exploring the
The
scorched.
smiled grimly
end and
triey didn't.
cut
in
burning
then
was
blackness
When
came
to,
was
floating.
The
boosters yawned empty, spent. Sniffer coasted at an incredibly high speed. And Ihe yellow-blue thing was gone.
Maybe
they'd
they just plain ran out of fuel; everybody has limitations, even things that can span the slars. stretched out and let the hard knots of tension begin to unwind, while Sniffer
I
Something prevented them. Some code, that ruled out firing on a fleeing craft, no matter how much they wanted to stop A moral code of an ancient socieiy. They had come here and settled, soaking up mining the asteroids, from our sun, energy getting ice from comets. A peaceful existence. They were used to a sleepy Earth, inhabited by life forms not worth the effort of constant study. Probably they didn't care much about planets anymore. They didn't keep detailed track of what was happen-
might be the first human to stumble on them, but wouldn't be Ihe last. "Ceres Monitor calling to hesitated. They were old, older than we could imagine. They could have been in stable, this solar system longer than man peaceful, inheritors of a vast history. They were moral enough not to fire at me, even though they knew meant they would be
I
,:
discovered.
They needed
cision to face.
time,
If
they might
make
ing.
coasted along. Time enough later to compute a new orbit.. For the moment it simply felt great to be alone and alive. "Ceres Monitor here, on 560 megahertz. Calling on standby mode for orecraft Snif106
Suddenly in the last century or so very short interval from the point of view of a galactic-scale society the animals down on the blue-white world started acting up. Emitting radio, exploding nuclear weapons, flying spacecraft. These ancient beings found a noisy, young, exponentially growing technology right on their doorstep.
tence, too.
sole officer. exploration.
thumbed on
is Sniffer.
I
the mike.
"Ceres, this
Rosemary Jokopi,
I
verify that
used a
fission
No cause
for alarm.
Nothing
OO
OMNI
IRON
CONTINUED FROM PAGE
solitaire
63
it
to.
It could not be murder: Even the.- most unscrupulous wire surgeon needs an
My hands went up reflexively, and poured my cirin:< on my head and hurt my nose more, wake up hard in the best of iic-ec- She was still snoring.-! nearly threw
I
and studied
tration.
Her name was Karen Shaviiski, and she used [he name Karyn Shaw, which thought
I
A lover, then. was relieved, pleased with my sagacity, and irritated as hell. didn't know why chalked up to my nose. felt
I I I
it
It
phony- She. was twenty-two. Divorced her parents at fourteen, uncontested no-fault. Since then she had been, at various times, secretary to a lamp salesman, painter, free-lance typist, motorcycle mechanic, library assistant, and unlicensed masseuse. The most recent paycheck stub was from The Hard Corps, a massage parwaitress,
lor
as though a large shark with rubber teeth was rhyihrnica:|y biting as hard as ne could- shoveled the papers back into the box, locked and replaced it, and went to
it
I
the bathroom.
with a cut-rate reputation. It was dated eight months ago, Her bank balance combined with paraphernalia I'd found in the
tell
Her medicine cabinet would have impressed a pharmacist. She had lots of allergies. It took me five minutes to find aspirin. took four picked the largest shard of mirror out of the sink-, propped on the septictank, and sat down backward on the toilet. My nose was visibly displaced to the
I I
empty glass at her was just past noon now; light came strongly through the heavy curtains, illuminating so much mess and disorder that Could" hot decide, whether she had thrashed her bedroom herself or it had been tossed by a pro. finally settled on the former The armchair I'd slept on' was intact. Or had the pro found what he wanted
the
It
I
make myself
breakfast.
If took me an hour or two to clean up and air out the living room. The cord and transformer went down theoubliette, along with most of the perished items from the fridge. full cycles for each load, a couple of hours all told. passed the time vacuuming and dusting and snooping, learning nothing more of significance.
it
closet to
me
that
right,
and
I
the swelling
was
tootlegger, a cocaine
stride.
floor.
of kleenex
all
on the
the
tis-
me
that
she was a
foolish
if the hares missed her, very RS was going to come down on her like a ton of bricks, Perhaps subconsciously she had not expected to be around, kept jigging She i',-;d Nothing there;
one; even
shortly the
sues, and stuffed them into my mouth. Then grabbed my nose with my right hand
I
was making up a shopping list about fifteen minutes later when heard her moan. reached her bedroom door in seconds, waited in the doorway with both hands in
I I
attended community college for one semester, as an art major and dropped out failing. She had defaulted on a lease three years ago. She had wrecked a car once and been shaded by her insurance company Trivia. Only one major trauma in recent years: A year and a hall ago she had
contracted out as host-mother to a couple
It was a pretty she had good hips and the right rare blood type but six months into the pregnancy they had caught her using tobacco and canceled the contract, She fought, but they had photographs. And better lawyers, naturally, She had. to repay the advance, and pay for the abortion, of course, and goi socked for court cOsts be-
<m had lost one friend to the juice. But had never seen a wirehead. All the
I
sight,
and Said slowly and clearly "My name is Joseph Templeton. Karen. am a
I
friend.
You are all right now." Her eyes were those of a small tormented
public usually
animal. "Please don't try to get up. Yo.ur muscles won't work properly and you may hurt yourself."
gets to see
figure
is
named Lombard/Smyth.
good fee
a sheeted being
wagon.V
ingly,
No answer, "Karen, are you hungry?" "Your voice is ugly," she said despairand her own voice was so hoarse
I
ugly"
clearly incapable. of
right
to the
leit,
flushing the
told her
would be
I
simultaneously with
my
left
hand. The
made up
a tray of
sides.
It didn't make sense. To show clean lungs at the physical, she had to have been off cigarettes for at least three to six months. Why backslide, with so much at felt more, stake? Like the minor traumas, like an effect than a cause. Self-destructive behavior kept looking. Near the bottom found something thai looked promising. Both her parents had been killed m a car smash when she was was papereighteen. Their obituary clipped to her father's will. It was one of the most extraordinary documents I've ever could understand an angry father read. cutting off his only daughter without a dime. But what he- had done was worse. Much worse. Dammit, didn't wprk either. So-there
it
I
and
much
star-
my front teeth met through the kleenex. When could see again the- nose looked straight and my breathing was unimpaired. gingerly washed my face, and then hands, and left. A moment later returned; something had caught my eye. was the
I I I
and
saltine crackers.
She was
I
the ceiling
when
got back,
put the
tray
down,
lifted her,
of pillows.
"I
want' a drink,"
I
It
was
only one toothbrush in ft looked through the medicine chest again and noticed this time that there was no shaving cream, no razor either
tions
you eat," said agreeably. "Who're you?" "Mother Templeton, Eat," "The. soup, maybe. Mot the toast." She got about half of it down, accepted some
'After
culine toiletries of
manual any
her
or electric, no
masper-
were
in
fectly legitimate.
I
didn't want to overfill her. "My drink." 'Sure thing." took the tray back to the kitchen, finished my shopping list, put away the last of the dishes, and put a frozen
tea.
I
went thoughtfully
mixed
steak
it
myself a Preacher's Downfall by moonlight, took it to her bedroom. The bedside clock said five, lit a match, moved the
into theoven for my lunch. When got back she was fast asleep.
I
and
suicides don't wait four years. And they don't use such a garish method either; It
footlocker
in front of
and put my
breathe
in
feet up.
decided had to be cancerous coke deal gone bad., or a very reptilian lover No, not a coke deal. They'd never have left her in her own apartment to die the way she wanted
devalues the tragedy.
either a very b c arcs
I
it
the feeble
light of
decided to run through all the possibilities, and as was formulating the first one dayI
ghl
smacked me hard
in
the nose.
Emaciation was near total, except for breastsand bloated belly she was all bone and taut skin. Her pulse was steady At her best she would not have been very attractive by convennona standards. Passable. Too much waist, not enough neck, upper legs a bit too thick for the rest of her It's hard to evaluate a starved and unconscious face, but her jaw was a bit too
107
trifle
little
make
tic
Animated, Iheface might have been beauany set ot features can support U beauty but even a superb makeup job could not have made her pretty. There was
tj-f
for the
someone as a
have to
an old bruise on her chin. Her hair was sandy blond, long and thin; had dried in snarls that would take an hour to comb out. Her breasts were magnificent, and that saddened me. In this world, a woman whose breasts are her best feature is in for
it
a rough time.
that
putting together a picture of a life would have depressed anyone with the a rhino. Back when had first seen her, when her features were alive, she
I
was
fit. Assume a really creatively sadisson of a bitch had gutted her like a trout, pure fun of it. You can'l do that to visitor 'or even a guest; you live with them, So he did a worlda lady who by her history is a tough little cookie, and when he had broken her he vanished. Leaving not even- so much as empty space in drawers, closets, or medicine chest. Unlikely. So perhaps after he was gone she scrubbed all traces of him out of the apartment and then discovered that there is only one really good way to scrub memories. No, couldn't picture such a -sloppy housekeeper being
it
At that point
that settled
it.
went
I
to !he bathroom,
lifted
and
uri-
When
the seat to
felt-tip
found written on the underside with pen; "It's so nice to have a man around the house!" The handwriting was
nate
I
hers.
I
relished
thinking aboui
hypothetical monster or the necessity of tracking and killing him. But was irritated as hell again.
I I
my
wanted
to understand.
For something to
sensitivity of
so
efficient.
had looked
But
sensitive.
Or had
I
that
been
damn
it
all
to hell,
life
Impossible to say now. could find nothing socket in her skull. You stories in any bar, on any
thought of my earlier feeling that the bedroom might have been tossed by a pro, and my blood turned to ice water. Suppose she wasn't a sloppy housekeeper? The jolly sadist returns unexpectedly for
Then
of coffee to the study and heaied up tried all the typical access her terminal. codes, her birthdale and her name in numbers- and such, but none of them would unlock it. Then on a hunch tried the date of
mug
that did
it.
ordered
instructed ihe
one
scar
for
room,
as
did.
addictive personalities, who decide at last to skip Ihe small shit. There were no tracks on her anywhere, no nasal damage, no sign
that
After five minutes' thought relaxed. That didn't parse either. True, this luxury co-op
lobby door to accept delivery, and tried everything could think of io get a diary or a journal out of the damned thing, without punched up the public lisuccess. So brary and asked the catalog for Britannica
1 I
on wireheading.
It
referred
I
me
to brain-
she used any of the coke she sold. Her work history, pitiful and fragmented as was, was too steady for any kind of serious Jones; 'she had undeniably been hitting the
it
did inexplicably lack security cameras in ihe halls but for that very reason its rich tenants would, be sure to take notice of
If he had lived here any time at all, his spoor was too diffuse to erase so he would not have tried. Besides, a monster of that unique and rare kind thrives on Ihe corruption of innocence. Tough little Karen was simply not toothsome enough.
reward, autostimulus of. skipped over the history, from discovery by Olds and others
1956 to emergence as a social problem the late '80s when surgery gol simple; declined Ihe offered diagrams, graphs, and technical specs; finally found a brief
in in
sauce hard
lately,
but only
lately.
Tobacco
1
section on motivations,
seemed
to
Thai left the hypothetical bastard lover. worried at that for a while to see if could
There was indeed one type of typical user had overlooked. The terminally Could that really be it? At her age? went lothe bathroom and checked fhe prescriptions. Nothing for heavy pain, nothing indieating anything more serious than allergies. Back belc-'-e telephones had cameras might have conned something out of her personal physician, but would have been a chancy thing even then. There was no way to test the hypothesis.
ill.
I I I
it
It
was
but
it
just
wasn't
enough
inside me that demanded an explanation. dialed a game of four-wall squash, and made sure the computer would let me win. was almost enjoying myself when she
I
screamed.
wasn't much of a scream; her throat saw shot. But it fetched me at once. the problem as cleared the door. The topical anesthetic had worn off the large "bedsores" on her back and buttocks, and the thought pain had waked her. Now that
It
was
about
for
it,
it
earlier;
that spray
was
only
supposed
I
a few hours.
pleasure-pain system
resprayed them, and her moans stopped nearly at once. could devise no means of securing her on her belly that would not be nighlmare-inducing, and dethought she cided it was unnecessary. was out again and started to leave. Her voice, muffled by pillows, stopped me in
scars.
I I
I
my
"I
tracks.
don't
know
you.
Maybe
"
real.
can
tell
you."
"Save your energy, Karen. You" "Shut up. You wanted the karma, you got
it."
I
shut
up..
Her voice was flat, dead. "All my friends were dating at twelve. He made me watt
until
fourteen. Said
couldn't
be
trusted.
Tommy came to take me to the dance, and he gave Tommy a hard time. was so emI
barrassed. The dance was nice for a couple of hours. Then Tommy started chasing after Jo Tompkins. He just left me and went off with her went in the ladies" room and cried for a long time. A couple of girls got the story out of me, and one of them had a bottle of vodka in her purse. never drank
I
I
started tearing up cars in oheof the girls got ahold of Tommy. She gave him shit and made him found take me home. don't remember
before-.
When
the parking
lot,
it,
out
later."
I
Her throat gave out and got water. She accepted it without meeting my eyes, turned her face away, and continued. "Tommy got me in the door somehow. was out cold by then. He must have been too scared to try and get me upstairs. He left meon the couch and my underpants on the rug and went home. The next thing knew was on the floor and my face hurt. He was standing over me. Whore he said. got up and tried to explain and he hit me a
I
couple of times. ran far the door but he hit me hard in the back. went into the stairs
I
and banged my head real hard." Feeling began to come into her voice for the first time. The feeling was (ear. dared
I
not move.
"When woke up
I
it
was
day.
Mama
I
must
nave bandaged my head and put me to bed. My head hurt a lot. When came out of the bathroom heard him call me. He and Mama were in bed. He started in on me. He wouldn't let me talk, and kept getting madI
der and
him.
hitting
madder Finally hollered back at He got up off the bed and started in me again. My robe came olf. He kept
I
hitting
me
I
in
the belly
and
tits,
and
his fists
were like hammers. Slut, he kept saying. Whore. thought he was going to kill me, so grabbed one arm and bit. He roared like a dragon and threw me across the room. Onto the bed; Mama jumped up. Then he pulled down his underpants and it was big
I
and
purple.
back and Her eyes were big and round, just like in screamed and screamed cartoons. and She broke off short and her shoulders knotted. When she continued her voice was stone dead again. "I wake up in my own bed again, took a real long shower and went downstairs. Mama was making pancakes. satdown'andshegavemeone and ate it, and. then threw it up right there on the table and ran out the door. She nevertore at his
BourbonAmerica's most
treasured native whiskey.
me
back, After
found a Sanctuary and school that day never started the divorce proceedings, saw either of them again. never told this to
I
I
it
with
girls, in
I
to blow her apart. But why had it taken eight years to go off? If his death four years ago had not triggered it, what had 7 could not leave until knew. did not know prowled her apartment like a why not.
enough
peace had
I
felt
since
arrived,
and as was
I
and people didn't give a damn have never understood the about, and pleasure in The best it's ever been for me is not uncomfortable. God, how I've wondered now know," She was starting to drift. "Only thing my whole lite turned out better' n cracked up to be." She snorted
cared
tor
I
caged
bear, looking
everywhere
for
some-
it.
sleepily.
I
"Even alone."
I
My
sat there for a long time without moving. got up, and my legs trembled when
I
made
supper,
Midway through the second day her plumbing started working again; had to change the sheets. The next morning a noise woke me and found her on the bathroom floor on her knees in a pool of urine. got her clean and back to bed and just as thought she was going to drift off again she started yelling at me. "Lousy son of a bitch, never have the could have been over! guts again now! How could you do that, you
I I I I
passing the living room on the way to the heard the phone. looked over the caller. The picSilently, ture was undercontrasted and snowy; was a pay phone. He looked like an immigrant construction_worker, massive and florid and neckless, almost brutish. And,. at the moment, under great stress, He was crushing a hat in his hands, mortally embarrassed.
liquor
I
it
was
saying.
is all
about."
Nothing could have made me hang up. know you're there. "Sharon? Sharon,
I
it
I'll
Terry says you ain't there, she says she called you every day for a week .and
That was the last time she was lucid for plied her with nearly forty-eight hours, successively stronger soups every time she woke up, and once got some teaI
I
bastard,
lently
what
into her. Sometimes she called by others' names, and sometimes she didn't know was there, and everything she said was disjointed. listened to her tapes, watched some of her video, charged some books and games to her computer. took a lot of her aspirin. And drank surprisingly little of her booze. still It was a time of frustration for me. all fit together, still could couldn't make not quite understand. There was a large piece missing. The animal who sired and raised her had planted the charge, of perceived that was big course, and
soggy toast
me
was so nice'." She turned vioaway from me and curled up. had to a hard choice then, and gambled on knew of loneliness and sat on the of the bed and stroked her hair as gently and impersonally as knew how. was a good guess. She began to cry, in
it
I
make
edge
It
banged on your door a few times. But know you're there, now anyway. walked seen past your place an hour ago and your bathroom light go on and off. Sharon, will you please tell me what the hell is going on? Are you listening to me? know you're
I
great racking heaves first, then the steady wail of total heartbreak. had been praying for this and did not begrudge the strength it
I
cost
her.
She
in
me. Look, you gotta understand, thought it was all set, see? mean thoughtitwasser.Arranged.lputittoTerry, cause she's my regular, and she says not me, lover, but know a gal. Look, was she lying to me or what? She told me tor another
listening to
I I
my body ached
felt
from
sitting
still
by the time
I
it
she fell off the edge into sleep. She never me get up, stiff and clumsy as was. There was something different about her
sleeping face now. It was not slack but relimped out in the closest thing to
lated.
I
you play them kind of games." Regular $200 bank deposits plus a cardboard box full of scales, vials, bags, and milk powder makes her a coke dealer,
bill
it
McGee? Don't be misled by the box was shoved in a corner, sealed with tape, and covered with dust. all, the only other illicit profession that
right, Travis
After
pays regular sums at regular intervals is hooker, and $200 is too much for squarejawed, hook-nosed, wide-eyed little Karen, breasts or no breasts. For a garden-variety hooker "Dammit, she told me she called you and set it up, she gave me your apartment
.
number." He shook
his
head
violently.
"I
can't make sense of this. Dammit, she couldn't be lying to me. It don't figure. You let me in, didn't even turn the camera on
first,
it was all arranged. Then you and done like we arscreamed and thought you was maybe ranged, and
.
terrific
overdoin' it a bit but Terry said you was a actress. was real careful not to really hurt you, know was. Then put on my pants and I'm putting the envelope on the dresser and you bust that chair on me and
I
I I
come at me with
that knife
you one. It just don't make no sense, will you goddammit say something to me? I'm twisted up inside going on two weeks now can't even eat." wentto shut off the phone, and my hand was shaking so bad missed, spinning the volume knob to minimum. "Sharon, you gotta believe me," he hollered from far far -away "I'm into rape fantasy, I'm not into rape!" And then had found the right switch and he was gone. got up very slowly and toddled off to the takliquor cabinet, and stood in front of
I
it
"We've got
to feather
our nest-
random
earnest, bailed, half-asnamed face hangng before me. Because his hair was thin sandy blond, and his jaw was a bit too square, and his nose was a trifle hooked, and his blue eyes were just the least little bit too far apart. They say everyone has a double somewh'ere. And Fate is such a witty little motherfucker, isn't he 9
I
She laughed experimentally, stopped failed to join in, 'And I'm a pair of pants with a hole scorched through the
ing.
when
programming
literally
odd? There is a primitive in our skulls that rewards us, overwhelmingly, every lime we do
"If
glutton
is
something damned silly. Like smoke a poison, or eat or drink of snort or shoot a poison. Or overeat good foods. Or engage
complicated sexual behavior without if it were not for the pleasure wo.uld be pointless and msane. which, when pursued for the pleasure
in
don't remember how got to bed. woke later that nigfu with the feeling that
I
would have to bang my head on the floor a couple of times to get my heart started again, was on my makeshift doss of pillows and blankets beside her bed. and when finally peeled ,-ny eyas open sne was sitting up in bed staring at me. She had fixed her hair somehow, and her nails were trimmed We looked at each otherfor a long moment. Her color was returning someI
I I .
at
At
God is an iron. Or else He's dumbest designer that ever lived." Of a. thousand possible snap reactions she picked the most flattering and nence most irritating. She keptsiient, kepi looking me, and thought about what had said. last she said, "I agree. What particular design tuckup did you have in mind?" "The one that nearly left you dead in a
a
felon, then
the.
I
I
And
alone, quickly
becomes
pointless
and
in-
sys-
"But the reward system is for survival." "So how the hell did ours get wired up so
your own shit," said harshly. "Everybody talks about the new menace, wireheading, fifth most common cause of death in only a decade. Wireheading's not new it's just a technical refinement."
pile of
behavior gets rewarded best of all? Even the pro-survival pleasure stimuli are wired so that a dangerous overload produces the maximum pleasure. On a purely biological level
that. survival-threatening
edge was
off
her bon.es.
told
"I
don't follow."
Man
is
is
programmed
to.
strive
hugely
for
"Are
you
I
erything
only other key
it
either illegal.
and she wouldn't give to you you weren't a friend. So what did she
I
you as damned
say?" got painfully up out of the tangle and walked to the window. A phallic, church steeple rose above the low-rises, a couple of blocks away. "God is an iron," said. "Did you know
I
odd? What's the most nutritionally useless and physiologically dangerous 'food' substance
in
And
it
seems
to
be .beyond the power of the human nervous system to resist it They put it in virtually ail the processed food there is, which is next
to all the food there is, because nobody can resist it. And so we poison ourselves and whipsaw our dispositions and rot our
"The error doesn't show up.as glaringly in other animals. Even surrounded by plenty, a stupid animal has to work. hard simply to meet his needs. But add in intelligence and everything goes to hell. Man is capable of outgrowing' any ecological niche you put him in he survives at all because he is the animal that moves, Given half a chance he
kills
himself of surfeit."
My knees were
to
sit
trembling so badly
feverish
had
that?"
I
down.
Eelt
turned to look
at her,
star-
and
nothing whatever to
on, lingering
thai
cruelty.
"Given Man's gregarious nature," went my aching nose, "it's obvious kindness is more pro-survival than
I
either an iron, or a colossal jackass. don'l quite know whether to be admiring or contemptuous." was out of words, and out of All "at once strength. yanked my gaze away from hers
I
"There's something else besides pleasure," she said. 'Another system of reward, only don't think it has much to do with the one got wired up to my scalp here, Not
I
I
brain-reward. Call
it
mind-reward, Call
it
But which feeis better? Which provides more pleasure? Poll any hundred
people at random and you'll find at least twenty or thirty who know all there is to know about psychological torture and psychic castration and maybe two that know how to give a terrilic back rub. That business of
your father leaving
all
his
money
to the
and stared at my knees for a long time. felt vaguely ashamed, as befits one who has thrown a tantrum in a sickroom. Alter a time she said, "You talk good on your feet." kept looking at my knees. "I was an economics teacher ior a year once." "Will you tell me something?"
I I
joy the thing like pleasure that you feel when you've done a good thing or passed
real tempting- chance to do a bad thing. Or when the unfolding of the Universe just seems especially apt. It's nowhere near as flashy and intense as pleasure can be. Believe me. But it's got something going ior it. Something that can make you do without pleasure or even ac-
up a
.
'a hundred dollars, can't the going rate' that was artistry. imagine a way to make you feel as good as
"If
can."
that
made you feel rotten. That's why sadism and masochism .are the last reiuge of the jaded, the most enduring of the perversions; their piquancy is" "Maybe the Puritans were right," she
said.
"Maybe pleasure
life is
is
the root of
all evil.
But God!
"One
I
of
my most
to
"What was the pleasure in putting me back together again?" jumped. "Look at me. There. I've got a half-ass idea oi what shape was in when you met can guess what it's been like me, and since. don't know if I'd have done as much for Jo Ann. and she's my best friend. You don't look like a guy whose favorite kick is sick ferns, and you sure as hell don't look
I I
I I
cept a
lot
oi pain lo get
it.
about, you're "That there, that's true. What's messing us up is the animal nervous system and instincts we inherited. But you said yourself. Man is the animal that outgrows and moves. Ever
thing
talking
that's
since the
trying to
first
ones. By Jesus,
pretty slow,
we
will yet.
Evolution works
said, "is
a button
my
friend Slinky
sell
John used
cost.
hand-paint and
below
I
like you're so rich you got time on your hands. So what's been your pleasure,
years
He was the
The
ever met.
go!'
only practicing anarchist button reads: 'go. lemmings, surely ieels intense plea-
these
nosy."
last
few days?"
I
is all. Couple oi hundred million to develop a thinking ape, and you wanl a smart one in a lousy lew hundred thou? Thai lemming drive is there but
"Trying to understand,"
snapped.
"I'm
A lemming
put
it
together."
working against it. Or else be any people and there this converat herself.
same
life
on being conceived and born in the firsi place. If feels good, doit." laughed, and she flinched. "So it seems to me that God is
it
I
sation
"And
not
-"'
And caught
myself.
"That was just random chance." She snorted. "What isn't?" "Well, that's fine" shouted, "That's fins. Since the world is saved and you've got it under control I'll just be going along."
I
yell. She I've got a lot of voice when ignored it uiierly, continued speaking as if nothing had happened. "Now can say ihat
I I
I
-and
my
life
will
dedicate myself
that
ihe very weak tea and toast I'm going to ask you to bring me in another ten minutes or so. But as ior this other stuff, this joy thing,
that
I
would
much
stand
intensity
know a goddam
it
and
"It
caring,
like to begin exploring, in as don'i really as possible. thing about it, but underhas something io do with sharing and what did you say your
I I
name was?"
doesn't matter!"
I
yelled.
/
'All right.
What can
do
for
ymiT
"Nothing!" "What did you come here ior?" was angry enough to be honest. "To burgle your fucking apartment!" Her eyes opened wide, and then she
I
the pillows and laughed until the tears came, and tried and could not help myseli and laughed loo. and we shared laughter for a long time, as long as we had shared her tears the night
before.
And
"You'll
gonna
need help
ter
on the
"OO
IRJTERWIEUU
:^:TIN-..-LL-i FRC-.-1
bverybooy knew thai for twenty years; it was in all the. books on quantum theory. Then we got the results of experiments by Lamb and Rutherford on the shifts in
angular
maintain through.
"You haven"! though! deeply let me define the world for you." Well, I'm going to investigate Wwithaul
profundity,
momentum
enough:
first
defining
it!
Omni:
is
drogen atoms. Until then, the rough prediction had been good enough, but now you had a very precise number: One thousand sixty megacycles or whatever And everybody said, "Dammft, this problem has. to be
solved."
developing a way to turn this kind of procedure into solid analysis -technically, to relativistic invariance all the way Tomonaga had already suggested how it could be done, and Schwinger was developing his own way. So wentto Bethe with my way of doing it. The funny thing was, didn't know how io
I
I
had in high school, you could take the imporproblem and multiply by your You know how a techchance of solving nically minded kid is he likes the idea of Anyway, if you optimizing everything can get Ihe right combination of those factors, you don't spend your life getting nowhere with a profound problem or solving lots of small problems that others could.
this notion that
-,-s
tance
it.
estimates of how you could avoid the infinities by subtracting this effect from that effect, so the quantities- that would tend to
some
Ihe simplest should' have learned long before, area but I'd been busy playing with my own theory so didn't know how to find out If my ideas worked. We did it together on the blackboard, and it was wrong. Even worse than before. went home and thought and
do.
practical
problems
in
this
go
to infinity
were stopped
in this
short,
order of
and mag-
nitude, and he came out with something around a thousand megacycles. remember he'd invited a bunch of people to a
I
thought and decided had to learn to solve. went back to. examples. So did. and Bethe and we tried it, and worked! We've never been able td figure out what went some dumb miswrong the first time
I I
it
do]ust as well. Omni: Let's take the problem that won ihe Nobel Prize for you, Schwinger, and Tomonaga. Three difierent approaches: Was that problem especially ripe for solution? Feynman: Well, quantum electrodynamics had been invented, in the late 1920s by Dirac and others, just after quantum mechanics itself. They had it fundamentally correct, but when you went to calculate answers, you ran into complicated equations that were very hard to solve. You could get a good first-order approximation, but
party at his house, at Cornell, but he'd been called away to do some consulting, He called up during the party and told me he'd
take.
when you
these
tried to refine
it
with corrections,
infinite
When he came it and showed procedure avoided the inad hoc and confuswould be good if someone it could be cleaned up. went up to him afterwards and said, "Oh, that's, easy. qan do that." See. I'd started to get ideas on this when was a senior at MIT I'd even cooked up an answer thenwrong, of course. See. this is where Schwinger and Tomonaga and came in, in
figured this out on the train.
how
ing.
this cut-off
:
fmiiesbi.
He
said
could show
how
had it set you back? Feynman: Not much, maybe a month, It did reviewed what I'd --e ancd because had' to done and convinced myself that work and that these diagrams I'd invented r.o keep ihii'C: straight were really okay. Omni: Did you realize at that time that they'd be called "Feynman diagrams:," that they'd be in the books? remember one. Feynman: No. not do moment. was in my pajamas, working on
Omni:
far
I
How
it
all
funny-looking diagrams, of blobs with lines sticking out. said to myself, Wouldn't it be
I
^Kp^
P
_ RIFF
^OF<KUM
funny if these diagrams really are useful, and other people start using them, and Physical Review has to print these silly picIn the tures? 01 course, couldn't foresee first place, had no idea how many of these pictures there'd be in Physical Review, and in the second place, it never occurred to me that with everybody using them, they
I
in an interhave no view, talking about the big bang, prejudices but when I'm working, have a
look
it
up
it
may
lot of
them.
in
.
about spent
all
It's
Omni: Prejudices
Symmetry,
favor of
.?
what?
see?
in a medical reterence book. You you then know more than your doctor does, although he that time in medical school, you much easier to learn about some
simplicity.
In
Feynman:
favor of
my mood
One day
I'll
be convinced
there's a certain
type of symmetry that everybody believes in, the next day I'll try to figure out the conto
it's not, and everybody's if crazy but me. But the thing that's unusual about good scientists is that while they're doing whatever they're doing, they're not so sure of themselves as others usually are. They can live with steady doubt, think "maybe it's so" and acl on that, all the time knowing it's only "maybe." Many people
adjourned
sequences
Professor Feynman's office, where the tape recorder refused to start. The cord, power switch, record button, all were in order; then Feynman suggested taking the cassette out and putting it in again.]
The mathematicians are exploring in all directions, and it's quTcker for a physicist to catch up on what he needs than to try to keep up with everything that might conceivably be useful. The problem was mentioning earlier, the difficulties with the equaI
Feynman: There. See, you just have to know about the world. Physicists know about the world. Omni: Take it apart and put it back together?
it
means de-
Feynman:
or
infinity,
Right. There's
always a
little dirt,
tachment or coldness. It's not coldness! It's a much deeper and warmer understanding, and it means you can be digging somewhere where you're temporarily convinced
you'll find
quark theories, it's the physiproblem, and we're going to solve it, and maybe when we solve it we'll be doing mathematics. It's a marvelous fact, and one don't understand, that the mathematicians had investigated groups and so on but in before they turned up in physics regard to the speed ot progress in physics,
tions in the
cists'
I
don't think
it's all
that significant.
or something.
the answer,
and some-
Omni:
Let's follow that up. In your lectures, you say that our physical theories do well at
Omni: One more question from your lectures: You say there that "the next great era of awakening of human intellect may well produce a method of understanding the
qualitative content of equations."
What do
talking
phenomena and
then X rays or mesons or the like show up; "There are always many threads hanging out in all directions." What are some of the loose threads you see in physics today? Feynman: Well, there are the masses of the particles; The gauge theories give beautiful patterns for the interactions, but not for
the masses,
this irregular
Feynman:
In
that
passage
was
"maybe
it's
it's
so"
the
and
act on that,
all
about the Schrbdinger equation. Now, you can get from that equation to atoms bondbut ing in molecules, chemical valences when you look at the equation, you can see
time knowing
only "maybe."
nuclear interaction, we have this theory of colored quarks and gluons, very precise and completely stated, but with very tew hard predictions, It's technically very difficult to get a sharp test of the theory, and feel passionately that that's a challenge. that's a loose thread; while there's no evidence in conflict with the theory, we're not likely to make much progress until we can check hard predictions with hard numbers. Omni: What about cosmology? Dirac's suggestion that the fundamental constants
I
change with time or the idea that physical was different at the instant of the big bang? Feynman: That would open up a lot of questions. So far, physics has tried to find laws and constants without asking where they came from, but we may be approaching the point where we'll be forced to consider
law
history.
body comes up and says, "Have you seen they're coming up with over there?" and you look up and say "Jeez/ I'm in the wrong place!" li happens all the time. Omni: There's another thing that seems to
what
chemists know about. Or the idea that quarks are permanently bound so you can't maybe you can and get a free quark maybe you can't, but the point is thai when you look at the equations that supposedly describe quark behavior, you can't see why it should be so. Look at the equations for the atomic and molecular forces in water, and you can't see the way water behaves; you can't see turbulence. Omni: That leaves the people with questhe meteorolotions about turbulence gists and oceanographers and geologists and airplane designers kind of up the
creek, doesn't
it?
Feynman:
frustrated
Absolutely.
figure
And
out;
happen a
lot in
modern
of those up-the-creek
he'll
it
covery of applications for kinds of mathematics that were previously "pure," such as matrix algebra or group theory. Are physicists more receptive now than they used to
and
at that point
be? Is the time lag less? Feynman: There never was any time lag. Take Hamilton's quaternions: The physicists threw away most of this very powerful mathematical system and kept only the
part
part
he'll be doing physics. With turbulence, it's not just a case of physical theory being we able to handle only simple cases do any. We have no good fundamental theory at all, Omni: Maybe it's the way the textbooks are written, but few people outside science
can't
all?
No leaning
either
way?
I
really,
That's the
way
am
the,
appear
to
real,
com-
that
became
about almost everything. Earlier, you didn't ask whether / thought that there's a fundamental particle, or whether it's all mist;
I
when
the whole
for
needed,
quantum mechanics,
in
Pauli
would have
the slightest idea. Now, in order to work hard on something, you have to get yourself believing that the answer's over there, so you'll dig hard there, right? So you temporarily prejudice or predispose yourself but all the time, in the back of your mind, you're laughing. Forget what you hear about scitold
I
you that
haven't
a new form. Now, you can look back and say that Pauli's spin matrices and operators were nothing but Hamilton's quaternions ... but even if physicists had kept the system in mind tor ninety years, wouldn't have made more than a few weeks' difference. Say you've got a disease, Werner's granular meclosis or whatever, and you
reinvented the system on the spot
it
plicated physical problems get out of hand as tar as theory is concerned. Feynman: That's very bad education, The lesson you learn as you grow older in physics is that what we can do is a very small fraction of what there is. Our theories
Omni: Do physicists vary greatly in their ability to see the qualitative consequences of an equation? Feynman: Oh, yes but nobody is very Dirac said that to understand a good at physical problem means to be able to see
it.
114
OMNI
OBSERVATORY-HOPPIN
EXPLORMTOnJS
By Trudy
E. Bell
There
travel to
fascinating,
or
is simply being awed by this magnificent piece of human engineering, which runs
more peaceful than simply stargazing at a splendid night skywondering what it all means. Will we ever any of those other suns? Are there other souls like us on a distant planet, looking up and wondering the same? A special breed of investigator is- devoted to finding the answers (o some of these questions, by studying everything in the
capfured the popular imagination so much as the Hale Observatories in southern California. Actually, they are two sister
installations at different sites; one is at Mount Wilson, northeast of Los Angeles, and the other is on Paiomar Mountain, between Los Angeles and San Diego. In
Admission to an observatory
is
universe from the movement of planets to the nature of such bizarre objects as
quasars and black holes, which explode go beep in the night. That investigator
or
is
the astronomer.
A telescope
for
is
essentially a
huge bucket
gathering
light;
the more light it can gather and the famter the objects it can detect. Although
space. Children under five should not be taken to an observatory; some places forbid children under ten or twelve, so ask first, It is usually a good idea to take a lunch arid fill your gas tank before embarking on your visit because observatories tend to be isolated; can be a long way to the nearest Coke machine, and you run out of fuel, towing charges are fierce. Dress warmly; The huge mirrors or lenses of the telescopes must be kept at nighttime temperatures during the day. so
of limited
it if
or write for
advance reservations
each sported the largest telescope in the world: The two- and-a-half- meter reflector at Mount
their time,
Wilson held the title from 1919-until the five-meter reflector was installed on
Paiomar Mountain in 1947. You Gan view the squat, massive, pale-green "Glass Giant of Paiomar" from a visitors' gallery.
There are no public observing nights, but there is a museum on the grounds with breathtaking photographs of planets,
stars,
telescopes.
days. In fact, in the domes of the largest telescopes, visitors are usually confined to glassed-in galleries because
chilliest
hundredsof tourists' warm bodies trooping under the opLics all day would render the telescope useless for work ihat
night.
becomes the
to the may reopen in the summer, allowing gaze. up at the newly refurbished two-and-a-half-meter reflector and several other instruments. Six hundred forty kilometers north of these astronomical monuments is the Lick
and wispy nebulas made with The Mount Wilson been closed
the
visitors to
now
to measure whai is happening in the next galaxy, you might be surprised to learn that many
observatories
the
interested public.
Some
observatories
employ co'';ege sue ems to conduct guided tours of their facilities, usually during the daytime, and to answer cuesi ons about the msMuuon's research.
Other
facilihe.s
nights duhng clear weather -evenings when you are given the chance to look through a medium-size telescope at the craters of the moon, the rings of Saturn, or Some multicolored luminous cloud of gas in the depths- of space, There are nundrccs of observatories sprinkled across the nation, ranging in
size -from modest college installations to major research facilities. You don't have to be an astronomer to enjoy a tour of one:
Half the thrill of gazing up at a steel-and-glass telescope six stories high
14
isimcapos
31
Or/sv-So'v
o.Ms.'de Tucson,
Am
Observatory on Mount Hamilton, California, 30 kilometers of winding road east of San Jose. Although the observatory composes hal~ a dozen instruments, only the two largest are on
public display.
Boston Bianmin Pereva Lowell (the brother of the poet Amy Lowell) for the express purpose o looking for canals on Mars, which Lowell thought might be evidence of an intelligent race. Much of
;
Each afternoon,
old steel
tours are
dome
of the
91-centimeter Great Refractoran instrument that enjoys-the dubious distinction of serving as the tombstone of
its
the work of the Lowell Observatory is still concerned with the so fir system, and the planet Pluto was discovered there in 1930.
in a peaceful pine forest on a hill at the west end of town, it is one otitis few major observatories that can be easily reached by public transportation. There is a one-hour lecture tour given every weekday afternoon during which the public is treated to a slide show, ashort lecture, and a. demonstration of fhe observatory's 61-centimeter Clark
oh so've- tone:? elsewhere in the country, particularly ores o' Historical merest. you are in the Midwest, you might like to spend a Saturday afternoon at the Yerkes Observatory at Williams Bay. Wisconsin, about 120 kilometers northwest of Chicago. This observatory is 'arnous for its
It
Set back
benefactor,
James
Lick,
whose body
is
buried in the telescope's supporting pier. This long, slim telescope, the largest retractor in the world when it was
completed
in
1888,
was one
of
many
'
fashioned by the excellent nineteenthcentury American optical firm Alvan Clark and Sons; fhe facl that it is still used nightly after 91 years is certainly an
excellent return on James Lick's investment. During the summer, on Friday evenings, the public is allowed to look
lens-telescope in the world; moreover, this particular instrument, instead of being painted Ihe usual batilcsh p gray. 'S cheerfully decorated n viv d colors: orange, white, and blue. On the East Coast is the US Naval Observatory in Washington, D.C.. which provides the standards ol time lor the
National Bureau of Standards and for everyone else: When you set your watch,
refractor
housed
in
inelegantly rotated by
is
institution in
through
this instrument.
half-a-kilometer walk
American Southwest is the McDonald Observatory on Mount Locke near Fori Davis, Texas. The mirror of the main
by Abraham
discovery of
Lincoln
and an account
of the
gaze
at the graceful
lelescope
a glassed-in v .sites' gallery and three-meter reflector US, Although the is two-thirds the diameter of the
Ihe two moons of Mars. A visit to the observatory's time center lets you see a bank oi a dozen or so atomic clocks, racks
of electronic consoles with slowly
moving
strips of
to the
some
the mountain; the view to the west embraces the southern part of the San Francisco Bay, and on rare crisp winter afternoons you can see the snow-capped
Sierras
to
conslanlly oeck rig tnemseives aga one another. Escorted tours take you
:
or
this
kilometers to the east. In Arizona, a prime site for astronomical observing, lies the Kitt Peak National Observatory. Affectionately known to some as "Telescope National Forest," Kitt Peak sports the densest concentration of astronomical instruments in the world. No fewer than 1- a flerent telescopes dot the
On several each month, you can look through instrument during frequently scneouled nighttime tours.
(twenty -six-inch) refractor.
nights
>
top of the mountain, which is some 80 kilometers west of Tucson. There you can
4.3-meter reflector was shof at but not seriously damaged in 1970 by a pistol-packing deranged oprician, During
Ihe daytime, regular descriptive lectures
Astronomers not only look at the -they listen to them as well. For a you might like to visit Ihe astronomy observatory in the US: the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) in Green Bank, West Virginia, about 200 ki omoicrs west of Charlottesville. Virginia on Highway 2892.
stars
different treat,
largest radio
There, set
among
riding
up an
a calm and
valley, half
in
are given,
Mayall
retlector,
is
around
right
antennas cup
see a short
their wire
In
the
summer,
visitors
not
There
also a visitors'
lery in the
dome
The unique
hallmark of the Kilt Peak Observatory is the McMath solar telescope, which from a distance. looks like a sleek white
upside-down check mark: a vertical white tower eleven stores nigh supporting a slanting shaft twenty sto'-os long. This shaft forms a 150-meter light, path ior the
some of the most exquisite ground-based photographs of made, some of which are hanging on the walls of the visitors' gallery. Throughout the year, on the last
Wednesday evening
of fhe
Universe and are then taken on a narrated bus tour that stops at several of the radio telescopes, no largest being a wirenet dish fully 192 meters in
diameter
If
one
of
is
not
month, there
is
sitors listen to
may
ihe-
beam
of sunlight that, to
when
it
finally
short lecture, see a film, hear an tell about his or her current
astronomer
more
information.
of
a locus in the observing room underground, forms an image of the sun nearly a meter across. Inside the telescope is a glassed-in visitors' gallery halfway down Ihe light path. The visitors'
comes
center at
Kitt
Peak
is
many
exhibits,
and even Papago Indian handcrafts. After a 'five-hour drive north of Kitt Peak
you come lo the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, founded in the gay '90s by
work, and (weather permitting) get to look through a ralnei eloory 205-centimeter reflector the largest lelescope in Ihe country through which visitors can gaze. The best site for an observatory, oi course, is one away from city lights and smog, where the an is steady and doesn't rain half Ihe year. For those reasons. Ihe largest modern research institutions are in the American Southwest. Nonetheless, there are plenly of
it
looking through the telescopes, and the people there may have more time to show
you around.
Clear skies!
i-or
DO
of
their hours,
a complete and excellent description some 300 astronomical institutions and see U.S. Observatories: A
'
'
RED STAR
Recognition of space activities as being rci cat ve 'T grea:-oowor status. Implementator, oi space colonization as a logical development in Marxis; sce.oiy. Tne oer.orai oiases of top officials. The current party line porirays the conquest of space as an inevitable outgrowth of socialism, an expression of the leading
tists
years and between 12 and 24 cosmonauts on board. n the nineties. Sovie; scienare already looking toiwara ic space stations with a crew of up to 12.0. These, in
. .
On
self-help
fact,
would be real space factories and research institutes." Professor Oleg _selo r serkovskiy, rector of the Moscow Physical and Technical Insti-
tuie,
where many Soviet space -.vcxe's are trained' and where space experiments are
wch
"inevitabil-
designed, jo-ned in the opt mistic forecasting: "Trends in the development ol contempota'y cosmonautics indicate that scieno ana production com;:, exes will be built
"
i
expansion cannot he emphasized enough. The Communist party has firmly committed its apparalus to sprinkling the Marxist equivalent oi holy wafer on the cannons of
the space crusaders'. Early space successes
significantly
in orbit and that metallurgical, machinebuilding, and chemical plants may be created beyond the limits of the earth
."
soon. Belotserkovskiy a
.
.
member of
the
USSR
in
"I'd
had enough
:
of philosophy. class
Academy
of Sciences and a Lenin Prize laureate, described another step in the development of Soviet space capabilities:
debates. was ook nq lor ;-cr;i--! thing to apply both my proltiiiijrsi -<\6 personal life,"
1
Russian science and power. Under Khrushcnev, the cmi's soac* p'ogram w,isubjugated, to an almost paranoid lust for "space firsts" that would' further humiliate the Americans. After Khrushchev's fall, the new regime relaxed ihs oiiective Temporarily. During the climax of the Apollo and Sky lab triumphs, however, new Soviet headline-seeking exertions' led to both
public and secret space dossiers,
tent of
soace flights depends also on the creation of new rocket engines utilizing nuclear energy." Whether he was describing a program already in progress or merely expressing a personal opinion is
"The fjtu'e ol
Dianetics. It explained how human beings function and interact. 11 laid oui techniques
"Dianetics
made
nuclear "space tug," however, would be a logical step in the next few years.
difficultly ascertain; a
me more alert,
more alive."
for handling
"I tried
"I
it
named
Petrov,
of
illness.
ne
oxin
which
is still
not
fully
appreciated
the West.
head of the Intercosmos Committee, whicii coordinates space research: Georgty Petrov (no
relation)
is
was more
a more shadowy
figure,
perhaps
alerl, able to gel more of whal wanted from life. "I had more energy. could accomplish In day what would have put off for two or ihrei
I I
a cenlury
in
Tie
space business
me
who
Even
my friends
noticed
seemed more
alive
since they helped set up the first Russian rocket factories in the early 1950s (under the camouflage name of "Ministry of Medium Machine Building"). Today they are the oadv socotary and the defense
space program.
According
deep
after
penetration into
space technical
in
"Dianetics opened my eyes to the world around me. Because feel good every day, enjoy life and experience il more, fully than
I
ever before."
Dianetics
is
the
first
effecfive science of
tf
minister their names are Leonid Brezhnev and Dmitriy Ustinov. Current versions of
their
in
use.
space explora-
Tnese wees are in agreement with numerous other suggestions <c"- 3 _._: spokesmen that Salyut space' voyages are
precursors ol
planets.
Find out for yourself how Dianetics has helped so many people realize their own pot_
and stress their personal enthusiasm. Much of this is undoubtedly an attempt to share in the glory of present space successes, but much oh it seems authentic. Both men are over seventy. Their departure from power will leave a question mark on the future of Soviets in space. Yet their
manned
expeditions to other
writes
for
Georgiy Petrov,
who
an annual
DIAKETICS
Soviet news-
suppor-
;c
continue
of
LAUNCH ITINERARY
With th s k no of multilevel support observers are curious about time schedules or Me Soviet space-colon, zaiion d.-ve.
papers, predicted that "orbital stations transported lo the moon with the help of tugs would be useful. The landing of people for a short while in two or three of the most interesting places on the lunar surface and the performance of the necessary research there will become possible. A permane'il station on the moon will give us little in this respect since means ol transport on the surface will remain limited for a
long while."
:a
^ml
Send me
Dept 0-2
Dianetics:
Moscow does
not
ti
sclose expected
INNOVATIVE ENGINEERING
Cynics can be forgiven
that these
for
launch dates (to avoid embarrassment from delays ana occasional failures)., but a broad-scope has been well delineated. Following the 140-day soace marathon ol iwc cosmonauts ale ast year. Hie Nnvasli
suspecfing
this a'-spaicn-
The
sta-
opment
in
the e-icntios of
liie
bgger space
;
tions, with a
expeclancy o uo
-o
-ve
Soviet
chines
in
tions. At
(or recycling water on space stathe NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, engineers are working on what
Experimental chlorella banks were also on board. Cosmonauts on these flights remarked
be
they call
low-up
on the unexpected psychological value of green gardens in the sterile blackness of space. Later spacemen conducted extheir
needed in space, since Soviet spacemedicine experts hope that the human
body, with proper conditioning and diet. can spend two or three years or more in "zero gravity" (a misnomer: the accurate
totypes" leading eventually to the design and construction of aciual flight hardware).
But the Soviets have been flight testing water-recycling equipment on Salyut
space-station modules since 1974, and a 50 percent closed-loop system became
operational on Salyut VI almost two years
periments involving tadpoles in a small aquarium, which the men tended far more frequently than required, even spending much of their spare lime just watching their
"nurselings." In postllight debriefings, the cosmonauts stressed the soothing effect of
re-
people who
having other living creatures around them. The present Salyut mission is also concentrating on oxygen-producing chlorella, food-crop experiments in the "Phyton" greenhouse equipment, and mechanical water-recycling systems. These projects have been explicitly designated for longterm space voyages and permanent space
never expect to return to the crushing gravity of Earth would appear to have no problem at all with weightlessness, indeed, the removal of such "natural" stresses (and Earth's ubiquitous disease bacteria and
ago.
in-
TRUE COLONISTS
such a medical development that might lead, within the next decade, to the appearance of the first true "space colonist." By the mid-1980s, the Soviets will have built several permanently inhabited space settlements in orbits around Earth and the moon. Present expectations suggest that the normal duty tour will be one
It
and engineer
entire year in
is
just
They are clearly not for show Another area of vigorous Soviet space research involves the use of spinning spacecraft to induce an artificial "pseudosettlements.
gravity" force (actually
it's
Siberia to investigate other biological techniques: Oxygen was produced from chloalgae; greenhouses provided wheat and vegetables; stills cleansed the water.
rella
just Inertia). In
tests near
lived for
weeks in cabins
in
the early
rotating arms, studying the little-appreciated problems of spin-induced vertigo. Already, spinning platforms aboard five-ton
in length, with longer tours possibly available for volunteers (including couples:
year
will
members
named
"Oasis" project.
exposed
experi-
Russian flax, cabbage, green onions, peas, and other plants were grown in space so scientists could study long-term plant genetics and germination patterns.
mental animals to space pseudogravity. (The US has no program along these lines, but the Soviets have allowed the presence of a few American experiments as hitch-
With such a large population, medical problems are bound to arise. Some patients will
be treated
in
to duty; others will necessarily be evacuated to Earth; still others, perhaps cardiac
cases, perhaps paraplegics, may be stranded in orbit by the hazards of the return flight's stresses or
by the dangers
of
their lives in
"normal" Earth-surface conditions,The first people committed to spending the rest of space might therefore be in-
voluntary.
Sizable space Dooulations such as those envisaged by Soviet space officials also imply other unplanned social dynamics: natural and accidental deaths, unexpected pregnancies, crimes of gain, revenge, and passion, and "black markets" in goods, services, and information. Perspectives offered by small expeditions and
in the earth's past history offer despair to the "social planners" and hope humanity. in space. The population of these space outposts
colonies
to the enthusiasts of
will
gradually
shift
residents and a vast majority of a culture where the population (now numbering in the hundreds, which introduces the new dynamics
manent
"short termers" to
is
dominated
by the presence of people who consider outer space their adopted home. Such settlers, and their children who will be born
Q/^cutOott.-
space, their dealhs and their births, will have gone a long way toward beginning to realize Tsiolkovskiy's dream. And this will only be fitting, since these space colonists will be Russians. They have nurtured and treasured that dream,
and raised
in
boldly to realize
it,
how goes
It
in
research?"
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plus
Check
or
Money
Order.
DISCOVERED BY ACCIDENT
Inferring y wo. discover eo i".- Bsamscoui-: !.-;;:; omte oy accident, because it was intended for use by the visually impaired. It has been thoroughly tested and is locav nt'ing usee at I'tj Opiune-ric Center of Ihe
clinics.
l_
American Express
Fxn
flat*
UniversiTies and
is
h=ii;i!i?<-.
T V
Zoom Lens
no gimmick, but a
scien-ificaiiv c-ssio;
ADDRESS
SELF-DISCOVERY
mathlinguists maybe they could figure
them out but changed my mind, fearing some kind oi nessy interdepartmental arI
and completely '"..id idea. put all the and put the tank in their brought all the wires from the computer, the ends of the piping, tubing, and hoses, poured out the remains of the reagents, covered the smelly mess with water, and turned to the computer with the
tinal
1
The closer we
I
more
place.
gument. MeanTiy[ui
info in anon
came
only
following speech:
from the first printer: "Add such and such reagent to flasks 1, 3. and 7. Lower the voltage by five volts in electrodes 34 -123."
The computer remembered to and therefore hadn't "gone mad." What was going on?
And so
"feed"
on.
itself,
it
"Enough numbers! You cannot express the world in binary numbers, understand? if were possible, what point is there to it? Try another way: in images, in something tangible, damn you!" locked the lab and left with a firm de-
And even
if
it
saw of him: his sloping forehead with a widow's peak and steep ridges over the eyes, Hat cheeks with a reddish, week-old stubble, haughtily pursed lips, and bored, squinting eyes. No, we had definitely met before, It was impossible to forget an obnoxious face like that. And that jaw my Godl should be worn only in the closet. My second thought: Should I say hello or walk by indifferently? And then everything around me no tripped on the flat pavelonger existed. ment and stood stock still, The person com-
it
'The most painful part was knowing that could do. had had. happen in other experiments, but in those, at least, could always backtrack and repeat the experiment. the bad effect disappeared, all the better; if not, we could analyze it. But here, there was nothing that could be replayed, nothing
there was nothing inexplicable things
I
termination to get
some
rest.
hadn't
been
ing toward
me was me.
thought (edited): What the
in
. .
able to sleep
for
If
Those were a pleasant ten days calm and soothing. slept late, charged my battook the teries, took showers. Lena and motorcycle outside town, went to the
I I
My
third
front of
me.
"H-h-hello.
the
chaos
that ruled in
my
how
I
that
of wavy,
are our solid-state circuits doing?" she would ask. "They haven't gone soft yet?" would answer in kind and change the sub-
skins
and
you from the film studio?" recognize my inde"The film studio? pendence!" My double smiled. "No, Val. the studios aren't planning a movie about us yet. Though now, who knows?"
I
puter
I
was
trying to say.
tin
even know where to hide the rolls of tape. In our institute we use the tape two ways: The ones with answers to new quesdidn't
tions are turned in to the archives,
rest are
Vasilyevich Krivoshein!
like
you
I
."
.
taken
home
in
to
paper very
tor
practical.
every bathroom
tine
and the be used as toilet had enough rolls Academic Town. day in April (after a
I
sleepless night in the lab fulfilling every caprice of the computer: pouring, sprinkling, regulaling) printer
makeup and
"Sure,"
Krivoshein,
me?"
number 3 gave me
I
the
was no
I
machines?
Here's my pass, you like." He displayed my worn, used pass. 'And came here from
the lab, naturally." 'Ah. so that's it?"
It's
the
(I
rolls
might have been muttering, "Streptocide, huh? Berdichev? Tenderness don't remember), of the soul? Onions?" and set fire to them. sat by the bonfire, keeping warm, had a cigarette, and understood that the experimen! was a failure,
them up
"Very nice to meet you. Valentin Vayou say? From the lab? see
silyevich,
I
or
uh-huh."
because nothing had happened, but because had gotten a mess. Once for welded from all a lark Valery Ivanov and the materials we had on hand a "metallosemiconducting potpourri" in a vacuum
And
not
And
then
realized that
believed him.
long sleeves."
oven.
got;
We
'got
in-
we broke
down
for analysis.
ail
Each
crumb of the
solid
ingot
showed
the effects of
they were all unsteady, unstable, and unreproducible. We threw it in the garbage.
And
sary
in
this
the
point of
scientific solutions
to iind
what
is
neces-
the mass of qualities and' of effects in an element, in matter, or in a system, and to throw out the chaff. And it hadn't worked
here.
in there? And what had happened? (I was already thinking of the experiment in the past tense.) It looked as though, through random information, had started some kind of synthesis in the complex, But what kind ot crummy synthesis was it? Synthesis of what? A man was walking toward me on the paved path. could see the green frees and
going on
Not because of the pass, of course. You could fool anyone with a pass. Maybe it was the realization that the scar over my eyebrow and the brown birthmark on my cheek, which always saw in the mirror on my left, actua ly were supposed to be on
I
maybe
it
was
I
something
in his
really gone mad during and run into my split perhope no one sees us, thought.
I
white
columns
I
behind him.
wonder, to anyone else, am I here alone or are there two of us? "So from the lab, you say?" said, trying to catch him up. "Then why are you
I
derstand
my
information.
headed
to the
And in the hallway my eye fell on a tank a beauLiful vessel made of transparent Teflon, 2~by- 1.5 by 1.2 meters;
it
I
limp, but
right foot
man had a slightly rolling his arms, and he didn't quite stepped more carefully with his
than with his
left.
I
coming from the old building?" "I was in accounting. Today's the
twenty-second," He took out a roll of fiveruble notes and counted off part of it. "Here's your cut.' took the money and counted it. "Why
I
noticed that
his raincoat
had
I
particularly.
acquired back in December with the idea using the Teflon for other things, but hadn't needed it. And the tank gave me a
of
flap
and
only half?"
I
said.
My
guy?
first
thought:
Where have
seen
this
sively.
"Oh, God!" My double sighed expres"There are. two ot us now, you know,"
120
OMNI
The
world's finest
\J>^
cigarette papers.
and now
in all sizes.
That exaggerated, exp-essive sigh never sigh like that. didn't know you could with a sigh. And his diction you can call the absoluie abI'll
I
said, "With poles and skin you can build a small hut -with rock, a big one." But when
tight skirt.
demean someone
it
we were
sence words
/
ot diction diction!
like
Do
that?
in the lobby of the Nord Restaurant, where we had stopped off for a bite, he came face to face with a stuffed polar bear with a tray in its paws and that
.baritone, "but
"Perhaps didn't quite understand you, Lyudochka." Hilobok was buzzing in his from the point of view of no! understanding completely, am only exI
I,
took the money from him, and that means he really exists thought Oraremy
, I
to
me. My
I
a researcher, and I couldn't care less about senses until I know what's going on here! you've come out "So you maintain that of a locked and sealed lab?" "Uh-hum. Definitely from the lab. From
senses
tricking
me? -Damn
it,
I'm
double's raincoat resembled mine very had much, down to the ink spot that added one day trying to get my pen to
work. But the fabric
pressing my opinion," "Harry has a new one," my double announced, "You see" even Hilobok accepts me, and you have doubts. Let's go home!" The only explanation can think of for
I
following
him so quietly
I
was more
elastic
and
was
In
that
almost greasy. The buttons were attached to flexible outgrowths, and there were no
stitches
in
the bathroom.
the tank." What do you "From the tank, my, oh. mean, from the tank?" "Just that, from thetank. You could have
.
. .
the fabric,
is
it
"Listen,
attached
to
and then he stuck out his head. "Hey, sample number one, or whatever
your
take
it
otf?"
My double was
"That does
il!
driven to a frenzy
not
set
up some handles.
barely
managed
to
It's
necessary
to un-
get out."
"Don't try to kid
dress
me
in this
could
that
I
really
. .
was
me! You don't think you convince me that you were no, that you were made by the
. .
you!
can explain
that's when you fell down over the eye when your father was teaching you to ride a horse. The-torn ligament in the right knee
name is. If you want to make sure that I'm all in order, come on in. And you can soap my back while you're at it" So did. It was a living person. And he had my body. By the way, didn't expect such thick folds of fat on my stomach and
I
sides.
have
to
my
barbells
more
often.
in
the most
manner
possible.
have the feeling it's going to take you a long time to get used to the idea that this has happened. should have known. After all, you saw that there was living matter in
I
4/f
was impossible
to forget
paced the room, While he washed, smoked, and tried to accustom myself to the fact that a computer had created a man. A computer had recreated me. Oh, nature, is this really possible? The ridiculous medieval ideas about a homunculus
. .
.
places. But that .didn't mean that was present at the conception of life. All right, let's assume that something living did
damp
And
"
man
it
only in a cioset.
And
then
transmitted over any distance, and' reordered into a man again, in the form of an Ashby's assertion image on a screen
. .
.
to get
"What do you mean?" Now it was his turn angry "And what did you think it would create an earthworm? a horse? an octopus? The computer was collecting and processing information about you, It saw you. It heard, smelled, and observed you. It counted the biowaves of your brain! You were around so much you callused its eyes! There you are. you have motorcycle parts you can only make a motorcycle, not
I tripped and stood stock still. The person coming toward me was me. 9
that there
the
work
(but, of
was no major difference between of the brain and of a computer course, Sechenov had maintained
all that had just been keep the brain going. Try to do
.
,
>
clever talk to
school.
of?
happened during fhe soccer finals in high What else do have to remind you
I
something practical with those ideas! had been done! And now looked as There, on the other side of the door, splashing and snorting, was no Ivanov, Petrov, or would have tossed them out on Sidorov
it if it
their
If
a vacuum
cleaner."
"Hmm. Well, all right. Then where are the shoes, the suit, the pass, and the raincoat
from?"
How you used to secretly believe in God as a child? How as a freshman you used to boast that you had known many women, actually you lost your virginity in Taganrog jus" before graduation?" That son oi a bitch! The examples he
when
picked!
"Dammit, if it can create a person, how is for the computer to hard do you think grow a raincoat?" The victorious glint in the eye, the clumsy
it
me. numbers? had burned the "paper" me. was trying to extract short, usable truths from the combinations of numbers, but the computer went deeper than that It stored this way and that, information, combining compared through feedback, picked and chose what was necessary and at some
ear
rolls
I
but
And those
with the
it
it
Am
But you know, "Well .yes. That's me you're me, I'm not so crazy about me." "Neither am I," he grunted. "I thought had some smarts...." His face tensed.
.
if
level of complexity "discovered" life! And then the computer developed it to the level ot man. But why? wasn't trying to
I
do
it
that!
I
"Grow 7 " ielt the fabric of his coat. A shudder ran through me. A raincoat wasn't
like that.
fit
mine. remember when was in school had to take charge of a delegate to a youth festival, a young hunter from the Siberian tundra. showed him around Moscow. He stolidly look in the sights: the bronze statues at the Economic Achievement Exhibits, the subway escalators, the heavy traffic. And when he saw the tall building of MSU, he simply
in
I I
FqStsteps behind me. "Good day, Valentin Vasilyevich," said Harry Hilobok, assistant professor, sciences candidate, scientific secretary, and institute busybody. didn't geta chance to open my mouth. My double grinned at Hilobok and his pretI
Now, as think aboui calmly, can figure out It did exactly what was frying to do, wanted a machine that could understand man and that's all. "Do you understand me?" "Oh, yes!" answers the listener, and both go about their business, happy with each other In conversation it's much easier. But in experiments with computers
it
I
"I
ty
companion and
said sociably.
"Good day
to you, .Harry
Hahtonovich!"
late
The couple walked pasl us in the light of plump brunette clicked and she had passed, Valentin aped her,
than never)
understanding
Excerpted by
Copyright
i
DO
1
of
I
____
i
Publ sn ng
'.ico.'C.'y
by
V'sdi.'in' Sav.;-
^ 1979 by
122
OMNI
LOCH NESS
calibrated
compulsion
to
measure
of size.
It
is
difficult
at
enough
to fake
monsters, the road has become a continuous-accident black spot from Fort AugusLochend.
surface sightings were roo rare and random to be studied and that the best way to was by underwater photographyin the creatures^ own environobtain evidence
ment.
It
was a daunting
task and
a depth of several hundred meters in the middle of the loeh is almost impossible. Unfortunately, sonar charts are as meaningless to most people as Space telemetry is, and they have received little attention. When all this evidence is taken into account, it is difficult for an objective person to deny the existence of something, call a phenomenon, in Locn Ness. Everything points to its being a group of large, previously unidentified animals, But there is no evidence whether they are mollusks, longit
from scratch. No one had done before, the loGh is nearly 300 meters deep, pitch dark, and very cold. But Rines discovered that the water had Some strange, and potentially useful, charac-
because
teristics.,
own and
Sound,
for
instance,
Academy
necked
any of the other theoretical contenders. The most likely explanation, simply because by contrast with the others there is no evidence
seals, reptiles, giant eels, or
against
it, is that they are plesiosaurs, deof the swimming dinosaurs that somehow survived from the Cretaceous Period and were trapped in the loch when it was cut off from the sea about 8,000 years ago. It is easy to theorize, but obtaining unassailable proof in the form of a speci-_ men or a skeleton is another matter. The loch is deep, and there are hundreds of meters of silt on the bottom to swallow up its
scendants
1962. The AAS, which now has Some 300 members, aims primarily to benefit private inventors and small technical firms. It also Sponsors educational programs and, almost as a sideline, supports research into phenomena that established academics shy away from, such as California's Bigioot and the Loch Ness monster.
great distances in tnermocline. The water is also remarkably transparent lo sonar and to certain radio frequencies, a property attributed to the high concentration of magnesium salts, although the curious geography of the loch, like a long funnel only two kilometers wide,
to
do
with
it.
Rines discovered that assembling speteams around such unusual problems produced a "think tank atmosphere. which is about as close to pure research as technology can get. Free of the usual academic or industrial pressures, the team aspire can to flexible goals anci opencialist
enced
solutions.
dead.
The problem of proof has haunted Bob Rines, now in his sixth year at the loch, and Tim Dinsdale. the veteran monster-hunter rides shotgun for the AAS expeditions. They represent different sides of the Loch Ness story. Dinsdale is an ebullient
When he first took an interest in Loch Mess, Rines began by redefining the problem. He was convinced from the outset that
keeping you in touch
technology.
Unfortunately, the water is almost to light. The lake is fed by hundreds of streams draining from the peat bogs in the mountains above and ihey have stained it a dark sepia. This is not suspended sediment, which sinks like everything else into the bottomless sump pf the Great Glen, but a type of suspended molecular dye that makes photography difficult and diving in the loch so hazardous that it is used as an initiation test among Scottish scuba clubs. On the surface, the water reflects a gray-blue sky, but underneath it is the color ol 14-year-old. scotch.
who now
urith
Englishman who oganized the mass surface watches in the 1960s and still spends months at a time in solitary vigils aboard his small boat, the Water Horse, committed to the- million-to-one chance of a close-up sighting. Rines is a quiet-spoken but determined American whose technology has changed the whole nature of the
"
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"You can't make do with long-range film anymore," Dinsdale admits. "But any really clear movie or time-lapse underwater photography would do it. Either of us could do
it
|U||I
flHL
^1^
jgj^J
The
I
..
*f=T
devices
made
easy.
in ten seconds or less." He paused and then added reveaiingly, "No 'one has done yet that's what makes it so exciting. It's a kind ol zoological Everest. mean, once Everest was climbed other people did but you don't know who
it
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siniwh', easily.
it,
they are,"
Both men share- a sense of urgency about the search, mainly because of increasing pollution in the loch. "What worries me," said Rine.3, "is that these things may be on the way out. Zoologists believe there would have to be
'
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eighteen or twenty creatures to Keep a colony going, but who the hell says they are procreating? This might be a dying colony," Ironically, the publicity given to Rines's photographs has only increased fio tourist pressure on the area and the traffic along the north-shore o?id Vol feel an irresistible
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Rines acknowlecged the dl-iculties. accepted the challenge, and set about picking his team. The inventors and scientists who joined him. and who have come back year after year, were a catalog ot hi-tech
talent.
was
Marty Kleins sonar group were back to continue their side-scan survey of the loch. Two years previously, they had discovered
Charlie Wyckofi and Bob Needleman. the portly vice-president of the AAS. were
some mysterious
in
and a
with
Presiding over
like
them from
the beginning,
Dr.
group
winching up the main rig. "That's Old Faithful." explained Needleman. "The lights and camera we started and which got the. pictures in 72 and 75."
Harold
"Doc" Edgerton. seventy-four-year-old professor emeritus at MIT. inventor of strobelight photography and much else, cofounder of the EG&G Corporator], and known to viewers of Cousteau's films- as "Papa Flash." His strobes -xenon-filled disoharge tubes that punch out more light in a fraction of a second than any conventional source and sonar were to be the main weapons in the assault on the loch. Since they needed side-scan "imaging" sonar as wel as convert ona echo sounders. Rines recruited Marly Klein, who had invented the technique while working for Edgerton at EG&G. John Lothrop, the Polaroid engineer who helped pioneer instant photography with Dr. Edmund Land, joined the team to take charge of the cameras. He designed the expedition's main 16mm stop-frame camera unit and exporimerteo with a variety of other rigs. In 1976 he designed and built the first "monster pots." These were selfcontained battery-powered sonar-strobe camera units, intended to be moored at different points around the loch to photograph anything of suitable size that came
Since something about the rig had apparently attracted the creatures their
them.
Bob Rines
useful
British
in
particularly
welcomed
Morri-
was
his diving
raft:
testing the
was so great that they had knocked it about on both occasions had been retained intact, including its low-powered strobe. Like the sonar, it was
curiosity
it
and his special interest in geomorphology might help establish just when Ihe loch had last been open to Ihe sea.
to join the expedition,
"It's
academic
interdisciplinary,"
electronics.
ence."
Bob
and
his
young
running continuously. call it the lure light,'" said Charlie, we have no idea whether it works. It's unlikely to be the light itself that atiracts them -Ihe water's too black. But they may hear the clicking noise of the strobe discharging, or it may be the electromagnetic field ii generates. After all, a shark can sense the magnetic field of a flashlight battery at 1,500 meters underwater." "We tested it in an aquarium in Boston." said John Lothrop. "The sharks and turtles hardly bothered, but the little fish came and circled around it all the time it was in the
left
"We
"although
water."
most convincing proof of aii because they include such parameters as speed, depth,
their bulky
Lothrop was disemboweling one of his monster pots. The contents were so lightly packed thai the Nikon F2 cameras with motorized cassettes could only be fitted in with their viewfinders removed,
Once in place,
and
at a
it's
size,
it's
difficuit to
within range.
Duane Marshall of Megapulse, Inc., designed the electronics, Ike Blonder of Blonder-Tongue provided the hydrophone equipment; and Charlie Wyckoff of Applied Photo Sciences, Inc., whose previous credits
Adjusting each element in the complex array had taken longer than expected, and work had kept up from early morning till late in the light, subarctic evenings. A whole day was wasted tracking down a fault in the
include the
first
NASA moon
films,
shot,
power system. Then the strobes began actup because the water pressure at nine meters made them leak. And when that
ing
and emulsions. Turning his attention from problems of too much light to an environment where there was almost none at all. he went in search of faster and faster films. This year he was trying out a new process he had devised for forcing the development speed of stock 16mm film from 400 ASA to an astonishing 25,000 ASA. The "studio" constructed under the raft in Urquhart Bay represented years of development and' combined all the team's resources. It incorporated many of their inventions, including the computer "gate" that measured the size of anything in the sonar beam. II ignored smaller inhabitants of the loch like eels and salmon but triggered the equipment when a larger (potentially monstrous) target appeared. The monster pots, their individual sonars
silenced, were
was
above Urquhart
useful as well as
licked, the
given up surface-watching, and there was a powerful Questar telescope-camera mounted in the living-room window. The garage beside the house was the team's unofficial headquarters, as well as workshop, laboratory, and storehouse for the crates of equipment flown out from the States. There
burning out. "Because they are sealed in, they get very hot," Wyckoff explained. "The strobes flash every three seconds, which is the best we can do without a cooling system. Any
melt.
Even
so,
we
are
in
more than a minute, and our Iriend is be in the field of view much
was a constant traffic up and down ihe hill as ihe gear was ferried from Tychat to Temple Pier and out to the raft.
Neither "our friend" nor "Nessie" seemed quite the right epithet for the black blurs on the sonar charts, there was so much
CONVERSATIONS ON A RAFT
The short trip out in the expedition's rowboat revealed a cat's cradle of ropes and ominous notices warning of high-voltage equipment. The slippery plywood deck was cluttered with strobe
reflectors, cases, cables, tools, and people. There was no guardrail, no protecagainst the wind, and, as always on Ihe loch, we could never quite forget the yawnus.
data about the creatures and so little information. What about "unidentified swimming objects," as in UFOs? "Objects don't swim," objected Lothrop.
"USAs," said Needleman thoughtfully, taking the pipe out of his mouth. "That's what they are. Unidentified swimming animals."
wires, with
grouped around
the main
rig as backup cameras. In the past the creatures produced blurred close-ups by almost climbing down the camera lens. This time, it they paid a return visit, there
tion
trated
would be no doubt about There would be as"many cameras and five times more light than had. ever been concenin one place in the loch before. The formidable team at work on the raft
it.
four limes
Although
we
were .only a stone's throw from the shore, the bottom was already 36 meters and shelving steeply.
On a wet afternoon a few days later, when raft was suspended and a steady drizzle had moored us in ihe Tychat workshop, we persuaded Charlie Wyckoff to tell us more about his techniques. How
124
OMNI
HE HAS INNER
you
is ten (o the secono power But trie Loch Ness water over a pfiih of one hundred lee*. ias a dens.ty in blue light of 1 in 10s5 That means that only one part in ten to the power qc;:j Mio.icr,: That's whai call dense. "That's in the blue light," he continued. "At the red end of the spectrum, where the infrared begins, the density drops right
.
iilty-iifth
th s
one [coed
half-
aown
io
in
I
10".
So
that
is
where we are
the density
not
it's
operating.
don't
rise
know where
heartedly, and to everyone s relief, work was soon resumed on the raft. Tie expec lion s boats commuted back
begins to
again, but
much
and
a- id
forth to
since water doesn't transmit infrared in the longer wavelengths." He explained that all the photographic
efforts were aimed at this narrow "red window" in ihe loci water Even the type of light emitted by the sirobes had been turned to advantage. Srobes norrrally operate at 2,000 to 10,000 volts and put out a distinctly bluish light; those under the raft used about
direct John Mills' were- spending numbing hours making- .an underwater photorriosaic of the stone, circles. From the sampes Morrison hao brought up. ne was now convinced that they were not prehistoric artifacts b.i: more likely lite remains oi
a v:ng
spoil
The Ancients
called it
COSMIC CONSCIOUSNESS
There are no physical limitations to inner vision . the psychic faculties of man know no barriers of space or time. A
. .
dumped during
joins
:.he
the nineteenth-centu-
ry construction of the
Caledonian Canal,
which
450 volts, which shifted the peak toward the red. He then turned to the question o films
;
The
a
at
mam rig camera was loaded with VNX, 16mm color- reversal stock developed by
rated
:
Kodak for television. It was nominally 400 ASA but was oes'grerl io ye
to
tro
o'ce-
Every morning ihe Klein team sat out m :'ie snail stone jetty in their boat, an ex-naval cutter borrowed from the. monasie r y
life.
about 8,000 ASA. This was very last for color film, but the process Wyckoif had invented allowed him to- push
developed
It
lot further.
produce a
positive
process a reversal film, you have very short latitude. Everything is lightening up, and in the long run you don't have enough density," he explained. His own process, on the otner hand, developed the film as a negative. "That way can really force ft, "Unfortunately,- the result is a blacksno-whi-.e -ather nan a color negative. So now put it in the bleach, which converts ie silver to a silver complex inal is soil, be Then put it into a color developer and let it go to completion, The color developer reI
Augustus, -ewng the heavy, torpedolike sonar '"sh" behind them. Apart from the stone circles, their side-scah equipment had already made some remarkable discoveries about the loch, including deep trenches in the bottom and overhangs along ;he orec onous sol.-in shore that might conceal caves, not to mention the wreck of an alrp.ane Ihal crashed during World War II. This year they were continuing hei. survey and making crossa-
schoc
ko.'l
mysterious world within you and learn the secrets of a full and peaceful life! The Rosicrucians (not a relithe
gion)
Know
hood
they
of learning.
have
shown
men and
Urquhart Bay the raft was hearing completion. The shore monitor on Temin
Back
showed that the electronics were the. cameras being, loaded, and the final checks carried out. Ike Blonder was adjusting his hydrophone equipment.
ple Pier
to utilize the fullness of their being. This is an age of daring adventure . but the greatest of all is the exploration of self. Determine your purpose, function and powers as a human being.
. .
women how
working,
duces the
silver,
I
silver nalide
back
at the
to metallic
'
This
but
it
forms a color
same time.
I
turning
reel
Write for your FREE copy of "The Mastery of Life" Today! No obligation. No salesmen. A nonprofit organization. Address: Scribe V.H.O.
Then put it in the" bleach and fixer and end up with a color image which is negative. So finally print onto color-print film,
I
recorder.
static
"That's
The ROSICRUCIANS
San
JoBe, California
mm
,
it
my
contribution."
95191U.S.A.
And in doing all this I'm able to get about 25,000 ASA instead of 400 ASA." By using same process to: soup up the film in themonster pots, Wyckofl pushed it from 200 ASA to 8,000 ASA. We asked him how accurate the color
the
His note of frustration was understandable. As head of Blonder-Tongue, one of the leading manufacturers of hydrophones, with large US Navy contracts, he had been dunk ng his sophisticated gear in
V.H.O.
U.S.A.
now
without re-
was.
"I'm
"It's not as good as it could be, But we're not looking for true color out here. " We're looking for color cliscr minaiion Wyckoff, like other members of the ex-
ted.
He-had even developed an ingenious playback device on the theory that any animal, even a monster, would respond to
territorial imperative and zero in ori the sound of its own voice. But without knowing what he was looking for, he found nothing to
the free book, The Maswhich explains how I may learn to use my faculties and powers of Please send
tery of Life,
me
record.
"You
The "voice" was an intangible. know what I'd do?" he said to us.
it
"I'd
me a monster.
business
it
in
of the
reminded him of what happened to King Kong. "Never mind that," he replied. "It would
We
asked Tim Dinsdale. 'Anything that would explain it?" "Yes. a submarine would." "Well. can tell you that there isn't a submarine in the loch at the moment." Dinsdale said emphatically. "It would have to come through the Caledonian Canal, and all transits of that kind are logged- But check, so that we can be one hundred perlion?"
I
the sonar chart gave no indication of tne type of pulse, and, with typical bad luck,
I'll
Blonder had switched off his hydrophone only half an hour before. Bui his tape machine was limited to a maximum frequency would not have ol 15.000 cps anyway, so picked up.
it if
This year he
Navy
recording,
ators, that
FUTURES
the safety catch year's expedition
cent positive."
What aboul
sisted,
a minisub.
Cummings
per-
"
marine noises trom the knocking of to the fluting of whales. Once again, there had been no response. What none of us then knew was that ihe voice of the monster was about to be recorded for the first time, and in a most uncuttlefish
something that could have been brought in on a trailer? "You'd have to get permission for something like that," Dinsdale replied. "It's a navigation channel. Apart from small fishing boats you have to get permission to put anything in or on the loch."
and The main aim of this had been achieved. "We've never had better equipment," said Charlie. "All we need now is a little help The
raft
was
There were plans to be laid for nexi year, improvemenfs to the gear, look-
usual way.
CONTACT
It
were no
the loch.
was
at the
back
of
everyone's mind, of
course. We joked about it and finally resigned ourselves to the improbability of its happening. And then it did. In the middle ol
Ihe work program, news flashed through the expedition that the sonar group had made contact with one of the creatures, and it was to prove the most significant
Bob Rines was as excited, as the rest of the team. was the complete answer to the skeptics who had dismissed previous
It
some angle that might have been or a jseljl new technique. "We're developing technology that's never been used before," said Rines. "For instance. Alan Gillespie at the Jet Propuling for
missed
Lab in Pasadena is an AAS member, and he had them analyze the 75 picture which we think is a head and neck. They through a computer that's able to do ran
sion
it
an almost
X-raylike study, to
see whether
it
contact
6 Monster pots,
their
yet.
On the afternoon of July 21, the sonar boat was traveling south from Lochend toward Urquhart Bay. The depth of the loch was about 194 meters, and the sonar "fish" was being towed behind the boat at a
depth of 33 meters. Tom Cummings and Gary Koszak, Marty Klein's two associates, were monitoring the side-scan's printout when a strong target suddenly registered
on the chart. It was a dark
blip,
main
was wood or algae or an artifact. The computer makes assumptions about different densities and strips them away layer by showed up every time as tissue on a layer.
It
creatures
produced blurred
followed by
of
a narrow movement,
also a thin
and
line
was
bony crest," coming of Sonar technology age, and Marty Klein is keen to try out his new "imaging" sonar, which produces almost photographic pictures. Rines, on the other hand, is more interested in developing the cross-beam sonar first tried in 1976. If the transducers could produce a narrow and powerful enough beam, it might be possible to set up a sound screen across the mouth of Urquhart Bay to monitor and
rapidly
emerging
of the blip's
at right angles on either side leading edge. To an experilike Cummings, this was itself The side-scan continued
mean
record anything going in or out. "Then there's the loch itself," Rines "There's a lol more we want to know about the topography and origins of the
added
area."
emitting a noise.
minutes before
they
lost
it.
through a series of checks to ensure that it was not ghosting or a machine malfunction. There was no question
hastily ran
make
past.
noises
all
either,
answered
There are certainly enough mysteries. The tenuous ecology of the lake still hasn't been worked out, tor instance. The expedition divers have already discovered a new
of deep-shoaling fish in the loch, there may be. others. Are there really caves along the south shore? And what about the dramatic fissures in the deepest
species
that
it
was
real.
They were soon being eagerly interrogated on Temple Pier. How big was it? Was there a definite wake? Were there any boats nearby? "There were no boats in the immediate
for
vicinity,"
immediately turned
shore and
do with
"The sound emitted by the target is of enormous significance, The nature of it and the duration indicate that it has nothing to the animal's means of propulsion. It
of
it
and
looks to me like all a sudden this thing became conscious that was being irradiated with sound energy and made a
there,"
said
Cummings. "The
closest
was
almost out of sight, and the contact was only about a hundred and ten meters away. was directly It's impossible to fell whether below. If it was. it would have been about seventy-five meters from Ihe bottom, but was certainly within a one hundred ten-meter radius of the 'fish.' It's almost identical to a surface target one gels when passing a powerboat with a high-speed screw causing a disturbance in the water." "Can you think of any rational explanait it
maybe there are bodies of water on bodies of water. Maybe there's an opening to the sea. Who knows?" Talk of next season made it easierto wind
the expedition. The team began leavone by one. There were charts, tapes, and samples to be stored for analysis back home. There were boats to be laid up and good-byes to be said except that no one believed they were good-byes. As long as there is the slightest doubt about the existence of the Locn Ness monster, the patent attorney and his space-age crew will be back, next year, in Urquhart Bay. OO
tered most strongly at a frequency of 50,000 io 100,000 cycles per second (cps), which is well within the range of sounds made by creatures like whales and porpoises. Echo-location systems used by most marine animals employ a doublepulse system that allows fhem to analyze Ihe phase difference in the echo so that they can detect the size and position of
objects or prey.
down
ing
126
OMNI
'
miMD
FOOD
and Metrazol promote theta activity. If has recently been reported that vasopressin also has this effect. In man, biofeedback can be used to increase theta rhythms,
oflen resulting in novel, often dreamlike, (nought patterns. Vasopressin and LSD increase theia In humans. People have said that they are more creative under the influence of such drugs as marijuana, LSD, vasopressin, and the- substituted phenethylamines, a group of chemicals related to amphetamine. So fan there is little evidence to support these claims, though it has been confirmed that LSD and vasopressin increase visualization and imagination, which are both parts of creativity. In one very interesting study. Dr. Alexander Shulgin, a chemist renowned among pharmaceutical experimenters for his ability to design intriguing new drugs, found that DOET, a substituted phenethylamine, dramatically increased creativity in people who already displayed it but thai it did not for uncreative people. These drugs are not available, and the FDA can-
find oul
turers,
to give
FDA has not approved even when We know one physician who wanted to learn about Hydergine research. It took him three months of writing letters and making phone calls just to get the forms he needed to ask the FDA's permission to receive "unauuses the
the doctor asks for them.
thorized" research reports from She
facturer. Fortunately,
tists
strange thafthe
FDA
communication just isn't the sort of cause Ihey are prepared to deal with! Many o! the experiments with intelligence promoters in animals have been performed with strychnine, which produces clear improvements in maze learning and in visual and spatial discrimination in rats. Strychnine is extremely toxic, however. Doses large enough to produce significant benefits carry with them a high danger of convulsions and even death. Two human-dosage lorms of strychnine were sold about ten years ago. These drugs are no longer offered. Strychnine currently has no medical value; the recommended doses are too small for measurable effect, and large doses are very dangerous. Most intelligence research has been done on memorization or computation, not on creative processes. One reason may be
thai there
is
little
who prescribe drugs from getting Ihe information they need to make decisions.
We hope that this roadblock in thepath to more powerful intellects will soon be eliminated. Data slowly filtering out of pharmaceutical laboratories have
that current
made
it
clear
FDA
ihe development of valuable new drugs in many fields of research. A growing number
not approve
rules.
demand
for creative
people in government and industry, where drones are less likely to rock the boat. IQ tests are concerned with memorization and computation rather than wilh creativity. It is possible to have a very high IQ and never think a novel thought. Some psychologists have reported that creative thinking is associated with so-called theta rhythms, a type of electrical activity in the brain. In rats, very low doses of strychnine
If you want to try the prescription drugs we've described, Ihere are several ways to improve your chances. A doctor who is newly in practice is more likely to give you a prescription than an old-line physician is and may know more about experimental drugs. Buy a copy of fhe Physician's Desk Reference, a handbook that will tell you when to avoid a given drug and what side effects to expect. Ask your doctor to test your kidneys, liver, and basic metabolic functions before trying any new drug, and repeat these tests at least once a year It will reassure your doctor that you are responsible enough to use the drugs and could prevent serious side effects. Do nof expect any doctor to be an expert on intelligence boosters. Physicians are not research scientists and seldom have the time to follow experimental reports. They
senators and congressmen are backing possible to would make introduce new drugs as soon as they prove to be safe instead of wailing lo satisfy the FDA's criteria for effectiveness: This is a step in the right direction. Listed below are some ol the medical reports on which this article is based. They are available at medical schools and at
of
legislation that
if
many
join
university libraries.
If
you decide
to
the search for greater brainpower, these reports are a good place to begin. In reading them, please remember that "intelligence" Is a complex system of dataprocessing abilities and that the tests used in these papers measure only a. few of them. Researchers often disagree over the
effect ol
desired effects.
OO
REFERENCES
;
.inii
:
"[Olein
Sy'-.Mit-si;')
Sc.-v,r:'.,o
See Ch.
Hirsch
40: Vasopressin
and Oxytocin.
Inin
Peltzman. "Reg.Jaiion
ffie Effects of the
is (1967). Available as
rint,
See,-;;, ','
and Wurtrnan
A;;tfiy;diii h'ko
No. 1077.
ot
:iii
creases
Aj-iiooo ess-air.
Rat Brain
Introduction ol
New Drugs
lor
.Ifciiii'ioknTii
i
Enterprise Institute
"i
",..- "-.t
',
-'!: J
l
Hocnsoh
Id.
'Eftec- o! DimelhYv.-'Nnoeinartol
on the
in
('i!;;.g;i:
73
La so iced
'.:
n'
poslei
of the
Moe
"
r-perimunts
Rc'ew
Oiad,-
Nj
'A-;.va\
meeting
Economics Co.
Federatk
Biology,
,
.riericanSii-ietih:;
Lxsx'rirneri'al
"Compoter-DelermineO
.'.
EEG
1
Patterns As-
"RNA and
i
al.,
eds.r
Aging,
Vol..
sociate
o Colli iOI
I'
:
in M-.Ti:ny-r.'!C .|.|-j;,ng
<;::;
He:,
oc r,en:c=i As-
By
nsky.
M:
Scritiner's. 1978.
(1976): 9-17.
pects
in
the Aging
Co'ii,"?,'
Me.'tous System,
pp
-A
Memory and
vt Neurology,
the
"IhIL.kiico
.:'
Vasopressin on
Memory
41.
(<ji-
153-55.
New
York:
Cholinergic Sy-y.em
(1974);
1
'
Ainni:
30
13.
"Effect ol
Cenlrophenoxine
;-i
lino'
;;:
-!
or o p
nn
Condi
>
IhH Lipoiusem
",;.;
'iicolr,
,n
ihe
Neu'ons
of Senile
Enhancemeni
Advances
Ch, 11.
in
Guinea
313-
Giconomo "Second
American
McsiO'igcr-;
:r,
She
Brain.
(1977): 108-19.
on Advances
in
E.pnn-nental Pharmacol-
[1977);
HM
C
Available- as Scientihc
Offprint,
No. 1368.
ogy
1
ol
Goodman and
Ol veros et
a.
'
.'.:!
-154.
I
Therapeutics
CQfuinnuruiCMTiarus
Family Portrait
masses searching lor something to deliver them from an increasingly confused world? Perhaps I've answered my own question.
Could not
all
with
refused to consider any interpretation of the Coyne incident other than that proposed by
its
of !his
UFO
business actually
investigator.
Thank you so much for. the heartwarming photo of Ipaac Asimdv holding his little
grandson. Harlan IFebruary 19791.
come down to a basic need for spiritual security? Human beings seem to need the
guidance
ot
of that event
the most
spiritual
Sunn Hayward
Huntsville. Ala.
to
plausible ought to contemplate the following question. Which" is more likely? extraterrestrial (1) That the "UFO" was an spaceship whose occupants were so
Jim Seigel
San Jose.
Asteroid Mining
Patrick Moore's "Shoals of Space." in the February Stars, poses the question that asbe a rewarding place to look metals to mine in the not-too-distant fuAsteroids, also might furnish cos-
Calif.
teroids might
for
ture
mologists with clues to the origin of the solar system and the origin of life on Earih.
Foxy Saucers If were piloting a UFO and wanted to take a look around the earth, would just wait until 'Venus was rising or make sure that there was a meteor tailing or a balloon, or something, in the area. David L. Travis
I I I
they were about to collide with a primitive man-made helicopter, or, if they did recognize that possibility, were still stupid enough not to change course or even extinguish their
dumb
as not
to realize that
sent a probe
(Halley's
would be an outright waste if NASA in 1985 toward two comets and Tempel II) without flying by a couple of asteroids. A comet-asteroid mission would save the need for a new probe, saving funds NASA does not have,
It
Clovis, N. M.
lights to avoid being spotted? (2) That the "UFO" was a fireball meteor. that, having never before seen such a spectacular sight, the helicopter crew's eyewitness account was not entirely accu-
and
rate''
Stupid Extraterrestrials?
My compliments \Q.Omni. and to James Oberg. for your willingness to discuss differing views and alternative interpretations of so-called outstanding UFO incidents. In his January review of the Coyne helicopter/UFO case, Mr. Oberg identified me as a member oi MUFON [the Mutual
agree with Jennie Zeidman that some dispeople are being "suckered," but agree on who is doing the suckering. nominate as likely candidates: (1) UFO "researchers" who argue that UFO sightings
I I
I
come
I.
make me
beyond
are the
UFO
their pet."
too,
hope
for intelligent
is,
life
Network]. Allow me to correct that statement lest MUFON's reputation betarnished by my espousal of ideas
due to anything and everything imaginable except human error and perversity, and (2) UFO rumormongers who allege that UFO data and cadavers of alien creatures are being concealed by the U.S. government, without ever producing evidence
are
to
come
Why
contrary to
UFO dogma. My
association
Why not utilize ire^hwatcr dolphins fitted with strobe photo equipment to locate the
Loch Ness? Here, mobility is since dolphins can be and attempt photography. The benefits over
creature
in
much greater
stationary
teniold. Instead
come
in
out of
would go
and ex-
pose
it.
B.
Goldman
Hills,
Forest
N.Y
Solar Solution
to
energy convocation. We split up into groups. Our object was to find a cheaper and better means of energy.
Many
and solar energy. would like to present the most developed solution, the one my group developed, the solar-energy-collectionand-conversion center. The center uses two mirrors (one of which is parabolic). The sun's rays are reflected from the mirrors and relayed to solar cells. This In turn is transferred to a computerized substation. Finally, from the substation, the power is transmitted to the houses through wires. feel this is a very developed idea. Michael Appelstem
I
Spotswood,
N.J.
tuel
and
create pick-and-shovel jobs that way, but it would destroy the economy and incapacitate the country
There are some few towns that do utilize wastes most effectively. see no reason of our most plentiful potential energy sources garbage is not being considered along with the Big Two nuclear and solar. Maybe because garbage has not yet been considered a -source of the other Big Two Money and Political Power
I
NASA Funds
In your March 1979 issue, you made an appeal to your readers to tell our govern-
why one
ment officials that we wish more money to be allocated to our space program. Well, you would be so kind as to print my tetter,
if
I
would
to
like to make my own personal appeal Omni readers and ask them to band
VirginiaS. Ballard
demanding
that
NASA be
What is the right solar answer? Solarpower satellites that would be developed by the "aerospace mentality" that Ms. Drusine speaks ot so disparagingly. A solar-power-satellite program would advance technological skills and scientific
knowledge, not just create pick-and-shovel would provide reliable power to our power grids 24 hours a day, so that we could build fewer power plants on Earth. It would open up the moan's- store of natural 3. so that our economy could grow
jobs.
It
Scotch
Deadly Meteors
Plains, N.J.
given a reasonable, budget, instead of the petty cash it receives in relation to other government agencies.
While enjoying my February issue of Omni, noticed an apparent error in your Space
1
Joseph Baroody
Bath. N.Y
DO
have
fatalities
would like to call your attention to the circumstances concerning the death of Leondas Grover, a Fountain County. Indiana, farmer.
PHOTO CREDITS
pai 3631
12.
Muse
Or;il- .:-i
Science, Boston; p ge 16- ,& :_cna age . Hate Observatory page 20 r>rCflnSTOE page 24 Cafefo
0*
Clifton
McCarthy
Mass.
A meteor had
floor
struck
and
killed Grover,
~<?cmolo;w; page 26
\3C
Na!i-:-r-.a
Bi:.^
7 ::-[;
page
Billerica,
Golden Garbage "Solar Politics" by Helen Drusine [January 1979] was excellent and informative as to why our sun is being eclipsed by the political
shadow
of nuclear energy.
relate the
passing through his body, his bed. and the beneath his bed. The following statement appeared the next day in the Lafayette Daily Courier after the authorities' examination of the scene: The mangled body of Graver lay on a bloodstained bed. Directly over the chest
of the
H-
inf.
page 37
led
Char
<:':
age 3 page 32 ICUFON; page 36 Iff! \".SA -.!-: Z net; page 37 left. The Be ghl UPI; page 38 left rasr* era; page 3B right. R. W ally: pege 39 right. Pat h D Si: a; paga 40 right. NASA
eaiche's:
Ight.
:L
40
41
.'::
left
left.
left,
44,
45
Who can
landfills,
reasons
for
not using
in
man was
Blac
the ubiquitous
garbage now
stinking
and
as
if
the ceiling.
hit
Aceclem-.. ol "ppl'-sa S
;
ergy?
Is
by a cannonball."
David C. Smith
Indianapolis, Ind.
national UP pages 93. i.UE 5v'.; n; page 1 5. Gaiy LaPP; page 133 0agel40 APRO; ilenc" Goodb red/Spec Gran -il-ar ermilat) Photograph
!
Sne.~.
Aftate for
Athlete's Foot
is
FDRURfi
CONTINUED FfiOM PAGE
14
the survival of
homogeneous
creatures.
better
based on two unproven assumptions: the that there are complex behaviors common to all people that constitute an ontogenetic "human nature"; and second, that differences between groups or indifirst,
Asexual individuals must be capable of bearing the burdens of survival for their entire species. That they can do so only in certain favorable environments is exactly
the point. Professor Daley must
ever, that
be assured, how-
than
There
is
nothing
in
genetics to support
humanitywill soon have the opportunity to sustain his speculations. If asexual cloning proves appealing and has a greater survival value than "risky encounters" on the savannah or four-poster, then
the concept of a preferred or most "natural" state of a genotype. The concept of "predisposition"
is
mammary
efficient
tigial
he may be certain that ovaries, testes, glands, and other hideously intrappings
of
Desenex:
Reall y better.
If
is a misrepresentation of what known about gene action. Different environments give rise to different genotypes
sex
will
It
become
Is
ves-
within
50 generations.
comforting
with varying fitnesses. There is no particular "best" or most "natural" genotype over
all environments. The overwhelming evidence is that a genotype that does well in one environment tends to be mediocre in others and that there is not necessarily consistency in the way different genotypes
to know that the human "mules" of that liberated future will be able to avoid "anxiety and effort" as they slither into a communal nutrient bath to replicate. Hal Kogel
Syracuse.
M.Y.
sii:i using Desenex, you should know that Aftate is better. in independent studies, the medication in Aftate has been proven to be more effective in killing athlete's foot
react
in
different environments.
tungusthanthe medication
in Desenex. In fact, doctors recommend the medication in Aftate 14 to lover the medication in Desenex. 14tol. Aftate is better than Desenex. Really
For example, one genotype may be large environment A and small in environment B. Furthermore, in the absence of knowlin
hotter. It'sthe
killer.
is impossiof a "norm of reaction," ble to determine how the differences of groups are reflections of genetic differ-
edge
it
Farg-Putonsky Correction Just a note to let you know how much enjoyed "PSI Burn" [December 1978], On rereading it, however, discovered that the statistical techniques used to assess your remote-viewirtg results are far from the most powerful that you could have applied. have therefore computed the FargI I
label directions.
ences. In orderto portray social behaviors as the results of natural selection, sociobiology assumes that there are genes for behaviors
like altruism, spite,
Putonsky Correction for Nonsignificance. You will be happy to know that the results -' 02a are now highly significant: P = 10
(1
-tailed).
genocide, xenophobia,
list is
long).
The fact is, there is no evidence presented by Wilson or others to support this assertion. Sociobiologists are undertaking a plan of biological determinism that is comparable
of to the social
In case you are unfamiliar with the FargPutonsky Correction, it is computed by mulfrom chance by the investigator's age (rounded to the nearest
year)
Darwinism
of
Herbert Spencer. They represent the roles women, the modes of aggressiveness,
religious beliefs,
and dividing by the cube root of the standard deviation times the desired level Farg and Putonsky have provided convenient tables of p-values for
of significance.
'/a-,
54-, 1/a-,
cultural
for
found in their seminal article "Corrections Nonsignificance XXII; The Standardized Paranormal Deviate," in B. B. Stat-Mann's
(Ed.)
III,
Vol.
ity
New
In
Haven, Conn.
Favor of Sex
Permit me to comment on Continuum's report on "Dangerous Sex" [February 1979] and the absurd contention that "the industry of two individuals working to accomplish what one asexually reproducing animal could achieve on its own is a questionable tack for evolution to have taken." Evolution takes no tacks. If individual diversity and functional specialization had not been particularly advantageous in the
ences. 1976 also noticed that your discussion of the survival problem omitted references to Evan Stephans's classic "Twenty Copies Suggestive of Reproduction" (int. J. Responsive Xerography, 1919. pp. 14-897).
I
Although some feel that Stephens expresses the problem in a rather extreme black-and-white manner, recent advances,
especially those related to the Patischall Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics, pro-
vertebrate biosphere, we brainy animals would likely be ingesting Big Macs through osmosis. Sexuality has proved its worth to complex organisms for thousands of centuries
vide a plausibility argument in which Stephans's earlier formulation may be viewed with a good bit (i.e., byte) of nonlocal color. A good discussion of the latter
may be found
pair,"
in
E.
because
amquitecertain.youare
waste
all
familiar.
of its energies in reproduction, requires diverse rjiethods of food gathering and a good mix of other activities that preclude
OQ
"
Aftateior
:ethel,
Jock Itch
is
conjiPETiTiaru
By Scot Morris
ur second competition broughl stacks of clever codifications of the human condition. Readers were asked to submit an axiom, on the order of Murphy's Law {Anything that can
better
than
Cruex.
(Murray) Gell-Mann's Law: "Whatever forbidden is required; thus, if there's no reason why something shouldn't exist, then
isn't
it
Reall y better.
If
still
go wrong
great
versal
will),
capable
isn't
laws
fill
a uni-
must exist." (Sam) Goldwyn's Law: 'A verbal contract worth the paper it's printed on." Nienberg's Law: "Progress is made on
know that
need to personalize the perversity of nature. Newton can tell you why a slice of bread falls, but lakes Murphy and his
it
alternate Fridays."
(Damon) Runyon's Law: "The race is not always to the swift, nor the battle to the
strong, but that's the
Aftate's medication has been tested and found to be more effective than the medication in Cruex for killing jock itch fungus. Aftate's powerful medication not only kills all major types of jock itch fungus, but also helps prevent rein-
legislative
colleagues to explain
why
it
falls
way
io bet."
fection.
butiered-side down.
Many readers sent long lists of other people's laws, sometimes crediling the sources, sometimes not. While we did not
intentionally
award secondhand
entries,
to
we
Sattinger's Law: "It works better if you plug it in," (Mark) Twain's Rule: "Only kings, editors, and people with tapeworms have the right use the editorial 'we.' It was impossible' to cross-check every
il
For the relief of painful itching and chafing of jock itch, get Aftate. It's the killer.
I'K
ioilo'/i
kk'- c:ired:oi'!
and we are
not
was
original. b.ul
we
Among
cepts:
body can win unless there happens to be a second entry." Agnes Allen's Law: "Almost anything is
easier to get into than to get out of."
Allen's Axiom:
trie-instructions."
"When
all
else
fails,
read
(Yogi) Berra's Law: "You can observe a lot just by watching." (Josh) Billings's Law: "Live within your income, even if you have to borrow to do it." Boozer's Revision: 'A bird in the hand is dead." (Samuel) Butler's Law of Progress: 'All progress is based on a universal innate desire of every organism to live beyond its income." (Paul) Erlich's Rule: "The first rule of intelligent tinkering is to save all the parts." Finagle's Law: "No matter what occurs, there is always someone who believes it happened according to his pet theory," The two laws of Frisbee: "(1) The most powerful force in the world is that of a disc straining to land under a car. just out of reach (this force is 'echnica'ly termed 'car suck'); (2) Never precede any maneuver by a comment more predictive than 'Watch
this!'"
did survey several published and unpublished collections of laws, and to the best of our knowledge the ten winners are all appearing in print for the first time. Our congratulations to- the winners. The rest of you should be consoled with Robert's Rule (Robert Minor, San Diego. Calif.). "The winning entry is never as good as your own," and should take to heart Scott's Admonition (Scott Isaacman. Philadelphia. Pa.). "You can't win. Learn to
enjoy losing."
THE WINNERS
1.
Hofstadter's Law:
"It
Law
into
account."
Douglas
2.
Morton's Law; "If rats are experimented upon, they will develop cancer"
W. C. Morton,
the
Jr.,
Bensenville.
is
III-
3.
never
III.
as
good as
first."
Eric
Emerson. Rockford.
is
4.
exceptions, nothing
Thomas
Mathis's
A. Epstein. Providence.
5..
Rule;
"It's
bad
luck to
be
superstitious."
Andrew
Mathis.
Wooster Ohio.
6. Laura's Law: "No,child throws up in the bathroom." Laura Czapko, Lake Village. Ind.
7.
at-
"
"
"
titude
'Anything lhal
irritate
you
will
Leo
field,
/.
lem
may
1
not
only as
be simplified to 'I.O. U..' but = U + court costs.' Harold Vaughn. Toledo. Ohio
Slick's Three Laws of the Universe: "(1) Nothing in the known universe travels faster than a bad check. (2) A quarter-ounce of chocolate = four pounds of fat. (3) There are two types of dirt: the dark kind, which is
white you are in school, there is a shortof qualified personnel in a particular then by the time you graduate with the necessary qualifications, that field's employment market is glutted."
"If
age
Marguerite Emmons,
Lexington. Ky.
and
"One man's 'Simple' is another man's 'Huh?' David Stone. Ironion. Ohio
9.
Stone's Law:
which
is
Ely
if
Slick. Fort
Lauderdale.
Sean
Duffy.
Wharton.
N.J.
"When hammering a
your finger hands."
10.
Carsweii's Corollary:
"Whenever man
nail, you will never hit you hold the hammer with both
comes up
invariably
to the
Irv
"When anything
it
used
to
its full
potential,
HONORABLE MENTION:
The Minn-Raff-Porter Insight of 195S: "There is no minimum in the worsening
Frederick
"If
will
break."
then
B.C.,
anything."
Canada
ity
John
Henck's Law
tional to
The probabil(2)
of entering
a contest
is
directly propor-
L.
Minn, Blue
will
Bell. Pa,
New
The
Orleans, La.
there
is
an opinion, facts
be found
to
support
it."
any city, when the number of lobbies exceeds the number of buildings, there
"In
probability of winning a contest is inversely proportional to the prizes to be awarded." Brian A. Henck. Warren. Mich.
Judy
exists a seat of
Greg
Beil,
Marshall, Tex.
"If you don't appreciate the amount of luxuries your budget can afford, you are
dropped
object."
Felix's Law: "Issues are resolved by the disputants who care the most." Corn "Decision makers are those who have the greatest vested interest in the decision."
.B.C..
Canada
Virginia Felix,
return
address)
(Mickelson adds: "I consider this to be a law since have yet to find either an exception or
tally
"Pro
is
to
con as progress
to
Congress."
MIST'S
Emmalea Kelley.
"If
Riverdale. Md.
dropped.")
ability of
Richard Dyson. Rochester, N.Y Law (Man in the Street): "The probsomeone watching you is proporyour action."
>
A = B and B =
C. then
A =
C. except
"The number
seeds
in
your
dope
Tulsa',
where void
or prohibited
by
law."
III.
versely related to
Roy
left."
Al
West.
Okla.
"Inflation is directly
p'opclional
it."
to the cost
"Since the mind can only recognize, or see itself, with itself, in itself, you can only 'know
his
a dog is by nature indifferent when dry, master commands the grandest affec-
Roshi.
people
it
thyself.'
Arbor.
when he
is
wet."
comes
to
buying wedding
Britain
Mich.
presents."
"One's
"The value of an
achievement
is
number
petently decreases
of
proportion to the
appeals
number
to."
Mark
of
people watching."
R. Frank,
Beech Grove,
Ind.
"A natural child is always conceived as soon as one is adopted." Charles LaBue. El Sobrante, Calif.
government program."
"Bodies in motion tend to remain in motion. Bodies at rest tend to remain in bed."
Hurewitz's
tional to
Principle:
is
"The chance
Dave Tewksbury.
of forgetting
.
.
something
. .
.
directly propor-
Clinton, N.Y
"Originality
Tim
to
Hill.
Pa.
"If it
doesn't work,
even Murphy does something right." Explains: "I discovered this law after having Murphy work for me for several
months."
J.
"No matter who you are. some scholar can show you the great idea you had was had by someone before you and even before
. . .
Darwin
"Infinite
R.
Maring.
of the
Izmir.
Turkey
intellectual
brilliance
him."
Martin
S.
Kottmeyer. Carlyle.
III.
an exam."
Rosmersholm's
the perforations."
is apaudience ap-
"Systems aligned with human motivational vectors will sometimes work. Systems opposing such vectors will work poorly or not
letter is directly
Mo.
always strongest
at
at
all."
Gall,
sent
in
by
"The
Eddie Ryan.
Seattle,
Wash.
is
Cole's Law:
am
to live,
then something
level of corruption in
government
must
die."
roadbeds."
Calif.
{Editor's
Barbara Gould.
Scottsdale. Ariz.
Cole's
Law as
Ted Cole, St. Petersburg. Fla. Note; Other references define cabbage.")
"thinly sliced
OO
132
'
EMRTH
botanists this forest
Latin. For
is
it's
and the
Arctic too,
apical
lores! will
often very quickly, but few JudeoChristians can find it in themselves to like the jungle. Perhaps the perceived hostility
of the jungle
lost by the end of the century," the conferees concluded. "The world is being con-
be
Germans
basis
in
fact
a
is
hostility with
plenty of
at-
with immediate
me
it's
jungle.
tackonit. But
Vegetation in the jungle grows free of normal restrictions. By definition, tropical is a place where conditions for plant growth are optimum. There must be at least 152 centimeters of annual rainfall, and those centimeters must be evenly distributed throughoui the year. There can be no cold season. Temperatures must average 19C (66F) from month to month, without sharp fluctuations. The soil must be well
torest
much
tundra.
intact
We
rights of the
though,
is still
and of deserts and even of pay lip service, at least, to the animals therein. The jungle, The Jungle.
it's
economic and ecological consequences." Prince Bernard of the Netherlands, whose country beais as little resemblance to tropical forest as can be imagined, is .worried. The prince, a noted environmentalist,
earth's plants
rate of six
The jungle,
true,
is
thickest
in its
fringe
along rivers, and Joseph Conrad was not exaggerating in calling it impenetrable
there. But inland the trees are
more widely
drained. When all these conditions coincide, vegetation goes wild and tropical
forest reigns.
The torest is characterized by very tail, slender trees growing in layered canopies. Usually there are three canopies a forest within a forest within a forest but sometimes there are only two. The trees of the highest canopy average about 50 meters, though some emergents reach heights of 92 meters, or nearly 300 feet. The trees of the lower canopies are adapted to the pro-
spaced. In dark weather the forest floor is indeed dim, but when the sun shines, its rays find their way fhrough the two or three canopies to fall in dappled patterns on the moss and fallen leaves of the floor Patches
disappearing at the hectares a minute, and that mankind nor rare animals have any unless we conserve the plant kingdom, the very basis of the lifesupport system of our planet."
forest, that the forest is
"neither
hope
in
25 years, Thailand's
be
young forest are dense and best to dein old climax forest it is possible to strike out in almost any direcol
tion. Still,
the rains are torrential; the snakes and feathered darts poisonous when you
gone, according to the United Nations Environment Programme, and in the Philippines and Malaysia, the forest will go in 10 years. In Borneo, where a short time ago, they say, an orangutan could have swung through the branches of a continuous jungle canopy from one end of that great
island to another, the forest is withering. Japanese and Korean timber companies are taking those hardwoods that are commercially valuable and poison-girdling the rest. The Amazon Basin, the greatest stronghold of tropical forest, is on its way to becoming the Amazon Deseri. Unless things change, the whole of the
tropical forest will
gressively dimmer light available there. Families of herbs that, in temperate re-
grow low io the ground, here grow as tall and girthy as trees. Here the vines are woody and as thick as a man's thigh. The
gions,
"grass"
is
18-meter-tall
bamboo.
"Milk-
disappear
in
the lifetimes
woody
twiners ascending to the tops of the highest trees, and ornamenting them with festoons of fragrant flowers not their own. Instead of your periwinkles we have here
what
handsome trees exuding a milk which is sometimes salutiferous, at others a most deadly poison, and bearing fruits of corresponding qualities. Violets of the size of apple trees. Daisies (or what might seem daisies) borne on trees like alders."
Tropical forest
is
pecole reading this. The conto be greater than for the tropical forest is still a we haven't cataloged half of contained therein. But we have some good ideas about what will follow. The earth will lose its greatest genetic
of
most
of the
we
imagine,
is
mystery, and
pool.
The thousands
tropical forest
We
find
will
he
sorry
if
characterized by large
plant
forest,
a forest, with their one or two dominant species is woefully monotonous compared with the steamy equatorial sort of where often more than 100 species
forest, say, or
and
animal.
easy
them; the trees go on lorever; and it is to get lost. These are not the sort of
that
a spruce
woods
forest,
humans
like to
gambol
in.
It
plants got their start there. What new and valuable strains will we lose? What new vegetable resources? We'll never know
this
We
will
lose
human
cultures,
human
di-
something
per hectare. When trying to species in a rain forest, a botanist can wander for days before spotting a second specimen (if he spots at all). Of all the world's landscapes, none is perceived as more hostile to man than the
of trees exist identify a
it
The
tion of
admittedly a disaster for the plants, and few humans therein, is not for all humanity to worry about. nternational Union for the ConservaNature (IUCN) is worried, nowever
versity.
like-us
jungle: the
Some of the least known, leastpeople in the world dwell in the Tasaday of the Philippines, the Yanomamo among these people
of Brazil.
is
The
attrition
appall-
jungle except perhaps the frozen country at the Poles. "Going up that river," writes Joseph Conrad of the jungle in Heart of Darkness, "was like traveling back to the
earliest
and in its World Conservalion Strategy, advanced in 1978, it reported, "The most important-consequence of the removal of tropical moist forest is perhaps so obvious that it is seldom stated. II the forest Is removed,
species
differ
230 known
and
all
the
.
contains
will totally
disappear
In
1957 there were 143. Eighly-seven whole peoples departed this planet in less than one human lifetime. We will have troubles with climate. An enormous amount of carbon dioxide is tied
moist forests
up
in
tropical forest.
Destruction of the
when veg-
and
were kings. An empty stream, a great silence, an impenetrable forest. The air was warm, thick, heavy sluggish. There was no
joy in the brilliance of
from those in temperate or more arid The emphasis is the lUCM'S. The United States is worried, though has no tropical forest of its own. In the
regions."
it
We will lose the metaphor of the jungle. We will lose those dark zones on the map,
unknown places where
to
it
would be possible
Deforestation.
"Without greater
make
forest
difficult for
cially for
snakebiften,
We
will
be
QO
another type of object, known as Seyferl galaxies. Thirty years ago, astronomer Carl
Seyfert noticed that
'
some
spiral galaxies
observed to vary in brightness. It was, as is customary, given a two-letter designation in a catalog of variable stars and so became BL Lacertae. Within the past few years, we have realized that BL Lacertae is anything but a star It is a cousin of the quasar, a cousin that sometimes even outshines its older relative. Several dozen similar objects have been discovered in succeeding decades. Astronomers call them BL Lacertae objects
or
have very bright centers. Something very energetic is going on in their nuclei. There
are also'
N galaxies
elliptical
galaxies
The supernova model envisions many massive stars in a tight cluster exploding one by one, or in groups, each explosion in such a cluster may trigger fierce thermonuclear outbursts. This model has fallen into dissetting off others. Collisions of stars
favor as
it
fails to
explain
of
some
of the ob-
served propetties
quasars.
of evolution, of the
same
basic phenome-
BL Lacs
or lacertae or lacertids.
One
one theory. Even galaxies may fit in: The otherwise unremarkable spiral galaxy we live in has a very intense source of radio and infrared radiation at its center. The big problem that needs answering
non, according to usually considered "normal"
be more glamorous
"blazars."
if
they were
dubbed
nous object in the known universe. Photographs of some BL Lacertae objects show that they are surrounded by a faint haze of light that displays a spectrum similar to that- of an elliptical galaxy. This ties in well with models of quasars as the
energetic centers of spiral galaxies.
fhese unusual objects is their source How can such small volumes produce such prodigious amounts of enall across the spectrum, from X rays to radio waves? How can they last billions of years? Astronomical journals have been rife with conjectures and speculations since quasars were discovered. Among the ideas proposed as power sources are black holes, white holes (which eventually evolve into black holes), colliding stars, chain reactions of supernovas, and huge spinning superstars or groups of
for'all
ot energy.
There is increasing evidence for symmetry on the part of BL Lacertae objects and quasars. This symmetry, not predicted by the supernova theory, leads to models in which the quasar is rotating. Material is pulled into a cosmic vortex, transmuting gravitational potential energy into intense heat and radiation, slinging material out into giant lobes of radio energy around the
center.
ergy
central object is an "accretion disk" a region where the inflowing matter collects. As it comes together and is compressed, it heats to about 10,000 degrees, not hot on an asirophysical scale but hot enough to shine brightly across millions of light-years. The complex interaction of the central mass, the inflowing material and the outflung material, and the accretion disk and the radiation go to make the quasar, and
Is Is
a black hole,
is
a spinar
maybe BL Lacertae
galaxies, or
There
may
also
be a connection
with yet
all
maybe
just
galaxies of certain
go through stages of being quasars ancT BL Lacertae objects, then quiet down. Other astronomers suggest that quasars and BL Lacertae objects are the same kind of bodies seen from different angles. Or perhaps there are different degrees of "quasarhood," with our Milky Way at the low end of the energy scale and BL Lacertae objects shining brightly near the high end.
types,
BL Lac and
Kf)JJ
Will just
We are hampered in our research by the great remoteness of the quasars and their kin and by the dust that intervenes between
us and the center of our galaxy. Both make difficult to see the details we would wish.
it
There
is little
hope
that
we
will
conquer
this
difficulty.
A~e^
which selectively absorbs light and radio waves. The mystery of quasars may be solved in the next decade by a large telescope above the atmosphere, able to
stare uninterruptedly in any portion of the spectrum. The Space Telescope, now scheduled to be launched in the early
we jumped."
1980s, will give us views of the cosmos never before possible. That is the subject for. next month.
DO
create dilferen:
w.-ilks lor
Me Alphas. Betas,
we
FELEW
i
Gammas,
Delias
corresponded
re a
lo their duties in
and Fosilons. Each walk lite, making body which was most im-
stop a
the
moment
in
;.o
/o ma;
if
we continue
at
headlong
same
rate ot
have any control over our destinies at all." Like those for the screen adaptafion of Superman-, the problems in trahslating Brave New World to -ho screen did not rest
solely with the physical job of getting the
portant the center oi their gait, Head people led with their heads, body people, those working in loading and hauling, led with their hands. The most contusing part of it was trying to teach hundreds of extras lo walk properly." Once the script was completed, Bnnckefholf and the rest of the production team went over it again and again, combing out words that n-ighi seem out of place in the distant future. "Our ears had become
immense
that didn't
problem," Brinckerhqlf said, "because every different type" of person in the Brave New World looks ^e the others in his group but different from the other groups, the Alphas all have to be six feet 'or over, they cannot have receding hairlines, they can't have blemishes on their faces, and so on. Then the Betas have to be, between fiveeight and six feet, and the Gammas have to be five-eight, and so forth. Everyone has to be slim, and everyone has to look young, even if they are supposed to be seventy. "Once we got everyone together, we had to diiferentiate the types of people in other
!
we thought were, the of the .film, so anything fit seemoo so jarring that. we'd be able to pick it out ol the script immediately If it got through our readings, onee an actor
attuned to -what
take totally for granted now would be different. Turning on a light, turning off a light, turning on a machine, turning off a machine, that was science fiction for me. That was my imagination at work.'' Despite the fact that Brave Nevj World was created for television, certain sophistications remain", though they are more suggested than graphically shown. "In the first quarter of the picture," Brinckerholf reHeeled, "a woman comes up to a man and asks, 'Will you engage with me tonight?' He says, Tm sorry, I'm busy; but call me sometime.' Now, as soon as the audience understands what the word engage means, they'll catch on that what we're doing is
really quite interesting. There are some wonderful kinds of advanced pleasuregiving devices which will be fun and attractive to people and, like everything- else in the film, will remain true to the atmosphere
speech patterns
of thai world.
"We've
tried to
ways,
ingly
(o
specific jobs
One of
show thai they were bred to do and that they lived accord t the major things we did was to.
everyone had impeccable speech, so slang suddenly stuck out like a sore thumb. "I've never done anything more difficult, because everything had to be thought out in Brave New World terms. The simplest things were often the most intriguing. For instance, how ones dne open a door 600 years from ribW? We decided that it would open by touch, so actors had to be instructed not to use any physical effort in How do people walk into a room? doing How do they sign their name? Everything
it.
certain things
altered to
certain
reason or another. The end of the story was make more sense and have a finality, as we don't expect there to be any sort of sequel in addition, one of the big things in 1932 was that everyone had
his
own
helicopter.
Today
that wouldn't
it
be
such a big thing, so father than update so that everyone had his own rocket ship, we more personal. In just decided to make Brave New World, everyone has his own space, his own compartment. Tom John, our art director, came up with the entire staging concept. , "We constructed our set on a sound stage at Universal. Tom designed it in modules so that we could move sections of around to create. different locales rather than building different sets on different
it it
don't think it's ever been done before to this degree, since the set filled the sound stage Universal has. It got confusing at times, because it was almost looking down on a set of blocks and deciding to move pieces of it around." Originally scheduled to be shown as two two-hour movies, on successive nights or succeeding weeks, NBC has now decided to run Brave New World in one night, cutting it down to fit a. three-hour time slot. Even though this will mean dropping out an hour of footage (actually about thirty-five minutes, considering credits, coming attractions, and catching-up iootage from the previous show), Brinckerhoff is still happy
stages.
largest
like
it
properly, aflords
contains absolutely no nutritional value, but when an excellent exercise for your teeth and gums."
chewed
fife decision. "I think it's a better approach," he said. "The story makes more sense when it's told all at once, because it's so cumulative. A setup may take place in one scene and not pay off until an hour later, and if it were shown in two nights, that might be lost. Although didn't recut it myself (he's now directing a TV movie called The Cracker Factory for EMI), I've been consulted by Jacqueline Babbin. We don't know how it'll be received, but we think we've avoided being arty-farty and have communicated both an entertaining and
with
revelatory story."
DO
IM
HCNTINUFO -^OM PAQF
2fi
make
the picture
for
seem
more as
from the
if
it
theaters
as a tradeoff of sorts."
monon-pinture dynamics, the kind of thing wish we'd been able to do with the Gaiactica movie."
start. In
realistic to have sound in space, to show explosions because of the lack of oxygen. and to have a spaceship bank and turn in a vacuum, why not have a three-dimensional
Everyone saw its potential, and Silverman was gracious enough to let Universal gamble on covering their TV losses with the
from Larson's film. "Of course, NBC is still a partner," the producer added. "They already own the movie rights and have an option on television rights beyond that. "They could conceivably go to a series as soon as it's released. I'm very glad things worked out this way. If you've got a good little movie, it's trustrating to just put on television for one. night. All that work and tfien it's over in two hours. "The opportunity of releasing this theatrically has given us a chance to put back all the things that Network Standards and Practices forced us to take out. On Gaiactica a young woman in Standards and Practices said. 'We will not allow Cylons [the robot foes ol Galactica's heroes] to hit a human being.' said, 'That's like doing a Holocaust where Nazis aren't allowed to kill anyone; they can only threaten.' She said, don't care.' So I've had to sit here with my hands tied, getting mail from viewers who
profits
it
I
scenes
make
the film
system it work$7 In 1979 there are still no set conventions about space operas.. The only considerastar
if
tion
scenes; Where he had previously had to givelhe characters banal throwaway lines, he has been able to "machoize" Buck's character. The key words in our conversation were; adult appeal, feature-oriented, sophisticated, realism, and expediency. "Time is our only enemy," Larson noted. "With a March 30 release date, we've only got about seven weeks to finish it. We've
pulled out
pain,
all
is (hat audiences must have fun. Perhaps there will come a time when space films have as rigid a code as westerns did, where one only broke the rules if one dared But for the time being,. space is wide open. Smith and Garber seem to be taking full advantage of their opportunity. You'll see Earth-style stunt flying in Buck Rogers, from barrel falls and 360-degree spinouts to high-speed dives and turns that are- designed to leave you on the edge ol your
Garber, our special-etfects supervisors, are creating some incredible footage. They only need the' time lo complete if. They've
been done before and others that were never done properly. We have a multiplane star field where the audience passes
through a star system instead of having in the background. John LDykstra] hates it, has a fetish against it." He's working elsewhere now. Dykstra and Larson argued about the
it
we want
'I
it
comment, T love the show, but it's hard to conceive of the humans' losing one battle against the Cylons, much less a thousand-year war, when the Cylons can't hit the broad side of a barn with their weapons.' Working in television has its frustrations.
"It's
as we could get to what we wanted in the short time we've been given. We've tried
not to
having his
line
question
own idea of where to draw the on the treatment of outer space, but the is still unanswered. Since it's un-
if
it
be the
DO
silly
game
and
it
just'drives
you crazy.
We had
a dou-
ble-entendre line cut for television that we thought was rather tame. Buck Rogers is in the boudoir of the villainess, and she's a very sexy lady. She's in a devastating outiit, luring him towards her bed, and she asks him about her father, the evil king who's trying to take over the universe. She says,
FREDERIK POHLS
'How do know that you don't want me to unseat my father?' Buck replies, 'Believe me, your father's seat is the furthest my mind.' Standards and Pracmade us cut the line. They've set themselves up as guardians of the public's
I
just
thing from
tices
and yet, now that we can put the line back in, and a lot more stuff that we couldn't do for television, they'll probably put the film on TV pretty much as it was made for the theaters. They feel they're no longer responsible because they didn't
morals,
have
to
make the
original decision."
^^ Up
of
Wk,
i
Because the
about 100 minutes, Larson went back into .production to provide additional footage,
reshoot scenes that proved unsatisfactory,
and redub some scenes where dialogue had been shortened by network censors.
"It's
The Hugo and Nebula award- winning author Gale way takes you mi n hi where the food bloc, the oil bloc and the people bloc warily coexist with each other. Until the discovery of Jem. Not since On The Beach has a novel created such a vivid, visionary sense of the future.
,
?.': .:; V every bit as heroic and petty, subtle and stubborn as our own leaders and
|
followers.
Look forward
best view of the futurt you've ever read. II starts on page.one of Frederik Pohl's JEM. $10.00
to the
tures aren't
"Frederik Pohl
is
not only reedited the film, we've shot new footage, including a fight between Buck
A Science
Fiction
Selection.
and the princess' bodyguard, a character called Tigerman. There are things that we
MARTIN'S PRESS
can do
in
widen
BOO
greens. There were dozens of beds arranged in a circle, feet first, around a raised dais, where a computer chuckled over a constant readout of their temperature, blood pressure, pulse, and so on. The lights were very dim, and the smell was mortal. Bottles and tubes and sighs and moans: If this is the stuff of science fiction, it doesn't find its epiphany in Star Trek's Dr. McCoy and Nurse Chapel standing over their cybernetic bed, exchanging worried frowns and pithy comments. It's Frankenstein's eldritch workshop, where lite and death interface within a maze of incomprehensible machinery) Jay had a cheerfully bright room downstairs, filled with
the Wind," which draws as heavily on his scientific background as did Vector Analysis If you're not familiar with the rest of his work, you might think that Jay is taking this advice too literally, being a medical Johnny
irUTERV/IEUU
the answer without solving equations.
solving
One-Note. Fortunalely, that's not so. A good case in point is his series of sports stories, of which a dozen or more have appeared in various magazines. Neither Jay nor ever had much to do with sports, having been bookish lads, but he is
I
equations is expedience you need to gain understanding. But until you do understand, you're just solving equations.
quite able to conjure out of his imagination very convincing descriptions of people swatting homers, crunching into quarterbacks, and so forth. occurs to me that do have one final
It
I
The
title.
Now,
quite a
good
title,
equipment designed
to
analyze a sample of blood down to its last molecule. He had the graveyard shift, and when nights were busy (i.e., when pawas a nine-hour tients were sinking fast), juggling act. But most nights he had hours of free time, no interruptions, and a typewriter. This is where his writing career got
trivial
il
pun connecting parasitology with linear algebra, but it won't sell books. Jay, you're not taking advantage of your name.
All
My most recent novel (plug) was called My Sins Remembered and my publisher was canny enough to drop my first name from the spine. Books about sleazy
,
Omni: As a teacher, what can you do to encourage that ability? Feynman: don't know. have no way to judge the degree to which I'm getting across to my students. Omni: Will a historian of science someday trace the careers of your students as others have done with Ihe students of Rutherford and Niels Bohr and Fermi? Feynman: doubt I'm disappointed with my students all the time. I'm not a teacher who knows what he's doing. Omni: But you can trace influences the other way, say, the influence on you of Hans Betheor John Wheeler. .?
I
it.
don't
just
know
the effect
I
Maybe
it's
my
to
character.
started
where
he was surrounded by
machinery, daily immersed in scientific research of the most dramatic kind. "Write what you know" goes the most ancient of writerly advice, and Jay certainly has done so. In the January Omni you'll find his forty-eighth published story, "To Race
futuristic
People would pick up the book it had been written by our namesake, H. R. And any bookseller will tell you that once a customer handles a book, he's halfway to buying so by the time he discovers the truth, it may be too
politics se".
thinking
don't
know how
understand
il
late
I
All the
President's
people, including myself. You ask, how can this guy teach, how can he be motivated if he doesn't know what he's doing? As a matter ot fact, love to teach. like to think ot new ways of looking at things as explain them, to make (hem clearer but maybe
I I
I
Parasites.
OQ
making them clearer. Probably whai doing is entertaining myself. learned how to live without knowing. 1 don't have to be sure I'm succeeding, and as said before about science, think my
I'm not
I'm
I've
life is fuller because realize that don't know what I'm doing. I'm delighted with the width of the world! Omni: As we came back to the office, you stopped to discuss a lecture on color vision
I I
you'll
be
damental physics, isn't it? Wouldn't a physiologist say you were "poaching'"' Feynman: Physiology? It has to be physiology? Look, give me a little time and I'll give a lecture on anything in physiology. I'd be delighted to study and find out all about it, because can guarantee you it would be
it
I
very interesting. don't know anything, but do know that everything is interesting if you
I
go
into
it
deeply enough.
is
too, although he's much wider in his interests than was at his age. He's interested in magic, in computer
like that,
I
My son
programming, in the history of the early Church, in topology. ... Oh, he's going to have a terrible time, Ihere are so many interesting things.
about how differenl things could be from what we expectec. take the Viking landers on Mars, for example. We were trying to
think
there could
be
life
equipment.
inter-
Yeah, he's a
like
me, so
at least I've
passed on
Ihis
esting to at least
Of course.
thing or not.
.
know
if
lhat's
a good
You see?
DO
UFD
CONTINUED FROM
PA
Nafor
Center
for
Space
Siudies,
had
Both Fogarly and an accompanying photographer retraced the route the Argosy plane took on December 21 and, astonishingly, located and photographed an
unidentified flying object ior five minutes. Their actual visual contact with the object lasted forty minutes.
years been compiling statistical data on European sightings. Analysis of.Poher's stalistical evidence occupied the group's activities for the first year, This research led to the expansion of GEPAN's operation to include the investigation of actual cases.
negat Bay in Brick Township, again on January 4. Police lieutenant Joseph De Angelo said he saw "a white circle of light with blue lights at either end which hovered over the bay for nearly forty minutes before it took off
and disappeared."
ficers
In
Tennessee, police
of-
were witness
in
to similar unidentified
sky.
objects
experts.
the night
its suriace, much like those of Venus. However, the possibility of its being
across
Venus was ruled out because at that time, the planet presented a crescent shape. In frying to go beyond the news accontacted Quentin Fogarly, The counts,
I
The evidence was so overwhelming in 1 such cases that GEPAN investigators admitted the existence of a "flying machine whose mode of substance is beyond our knowledge." Most of Ihe sightings occurred when ihe distance between the witnesses and the objects was less than 250 meters. Each case was investigated by a
to baffle scientific
is
to
produce the
physical proof necessary to validate these for one. feel the evidence phenomena.
will
be forthcoming.
Two
reporter stated that he would noi reveal any aspects of the slory unless he was paid Ihe sum of $500. Omni magazine refused his request tor that amount Fogarty was fold, however, that the story would be given legitimacy by ils inclusion in the magazine.
"I don't care aboul legitimacy or illegitimacy," said Fogarty, "I want to wash my hands of ihe whole thing." With this channel of information now closed and the original footage locked up by Wide World Photos in
four-person team including a psychologist. of the incidents included "sightings of humanoids." The conclusions reached in these and other UFO incidents appeared in
In the words of Allen Hynek, "There is an inadequate amount of information available based solely on newspaper accounts to make a balanced statement in regard to
we
have
lo wait
a five-volume report approved by GEPAN's scientific board, which includes members of the National Meteorology Administration, the Lyons Aslror.om.ca Observatory, and
and
book
ing
Guide
Sightings (Double.on
an
analysis of 1,300 cases, one comes away with the feeling that something is amiss, Both Allen Hynek (director of the Center
for UFO Studies) and Allan Hendry are of the opinion that a corrosive emotional atmosphere exists among the various UFO investigative organizations, which, in the
for
$10,000,
this
so
many
others,
has become
difficult to investigate.
and
A ielegram sent lo the New Zealand conDepartment of Scientific Industrial Research in Wellington re-
words
of Mr,
Hendry,
"is
profoundly
in-
garding recent UFO film footage by TV 1 of New Zealand, reads as follows: "The Department has made an examination of the footage shot by TV1 They have discounted the possibility that the objects sighted were in fact UFOs." When conlacted, ihe New Zealand mission to the United Nations had no comment other than those statements already given to the media. Likewise, the
.
it
Vi!
Sedonn.
Am
to evaluate
the
ity
Geodynamic Research
Center.
Australian,
sions to
In
UFO activ-
respective
doughnut-shaped objects, with a hole in the middle and giving off green, red, and white lighis, have been reported and photographed at dozens of Ideations between Palermo and Milan. Even in Rome OVNI (the Italian designation tor UFOs) have been seen by both police and citizens. Newspaper offices throughout Italy have been inundated with calls. There is the mysterious case of two fishermen, who,
has spawned at least five sightings in recent months. Two occurred near Jersey City, New Jersey. One sighting was witnessed in Brick Township, New Jersey, and two additional sightings were reported in Poplar Branch, North Carolina, and in Tennessee, Many more go unreported because of the press's tendency io ridicule such accounts.
With the statement of Allen Hynek that Mr. Hendry is providing the serious UFO investigator with a valuable tool in the form of this manual, one shudders to think of the poten-
When asked
US
to
comment about
the
re-
along with their boat, disappeared on a clear night while fishing in the Adriatic near Pescara during the high poini of the sightings.
In view of the need for a more comprehensive evaluation of UFO material; it is graiifymg to note that the- French government has taken a positive step. In 1977, a
cent sightings. Major Ralph Williams, of the Air Force, said, "The Air Force is no longer involved in the investigation of UFOs, and for any additional information one should go to either the National Archives or Project Blue Book." In the Jersey City account of January 4, 1979, an unidentified police officer observed a UFO for 20 minutes. The reason he gave for not wanting his name published
area one were left with only the information contained in the pages of this book. A major part of the text is devoted to what Hendry calls "The allegations [orj the reports themselves." Taking seriously the information contained within this book would represent a misinlerpretation ol Ihe
tial
for
progress
in this
if
facts. Mr.
Hendry contends
largely
that
"because
UFO
inter-
which were
telephone
Ufology
itself,
my
efforts
'
were
Groupemenf
d'Etude de Phenomenes Aeriens (GEPAN) was created with the backing of the French government. The group was put under the
direction of Dr.
140
was, "You know how those headlines read, 'Cop sees little green men.' " He said further, "We're trying to downplay these sightings as they
less biased than those of others who entered the field." (If Interest in the subject is not Hendry's motive for writing this work, what then is his motive?) His writing, however, exemplifies that very bias by conferring
it
come
in."
UFO
tools,
Another sighting, perhaps related io the one in Jersey City, took place over Bar-
on those currently involved in the inquiry, He brings info question the techniques, and procedures used by
investigators
and
scientists alike
in
evaluat-
OMNI
ing over 13 million sightings (as recently
revealed
I
self a UFO agnostic who finds "it is not personally important to me what UFOs turn out lo be. "Nor do question [he absence of
I
ruEXT Drmrui
higher academic credentials, which in some eyes could demean his observations
question only the assumptions on which his facts are based and the conclusions resulting from them in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary. In conclusion, Mr, Hendry states: "Unless we develop drastically new ideas and methodologies for the study of the baffling UFO cases and (he human context in which tfiey occur, we will watch the next fhirty years of UFO report-gathering simply mirror the
I
He further points out that civilian UFO groups lack the credentials necessary to deal with the complex subject of unidentified flying
olferonly
nothing of any compelling scientific value will be gained. There are. however, a handful of civilian UFO organizations in the
groups comprised
United States, along with many foreign of both laymen and representatives of the scientific community, with Mr. Hendry's evaluation
who disagree
of the situation.
is
Jacques
Vallee of
He
way
to
properly conduct research on the phenomis to centralize all existing files, both official and private, on a global scale, Once
enon
that's
is to initiate
the
the aegis of an international scientific commission. Such action is already being taken by the United Nations. It's a step important in itself, because for the first time an international governing body has chosen to acknowledge the need for information
Michel, a colleague of
first
method
The work
of
both these men, along with the constant flow of sightings throughout the world by qualified observers pilots, radar experts,
aviation
scientists
Hendry
book.
said for The
spite ot
its
To be sure, not
much can be
in
UFO Handbook
tions,
ture,
good
inten-
visit us,
indignation, a
except that perhaps in the near futhose nonexistent extraterrestrials will holding in their hands, with great copy of this book. With that in
I
mind,
think the
cause
of investigating
UFOs would be
pages
Mr.
of
The
UFO Handbook.
is
CO
for the
SCIENCE FICTION-
Lebelson
an investigator
Aerial
zation (APRO).
RHErUCXinETUA
&&M
3Se
w
photographs were taken.
iHHalliiai
'
','''
'
'
.-':.:-
SB
this
By Scot Morris
may be as shocking to you as it was but reliable sources tell us thai some readers oi this column have been in the act ol cheating. These readers do-not answer all questions completely before turning to the answer to see how they have done but have
This
to us,
leisurely
leaves the
travels
it
6. CUTTING UP THE CIRCLE. What is the maximum number of parts into which a circle may be divided by drawing four
observed
bumper
of the Ferrari
and
straight lines?
toward the Maserati at 100 kph. When reaches the Maserati, it instantly reverses
direction
7.
page
and
ilies at
the
same speed
Distribute
that
of coins.
actually
in
at airports,
and back to the answer page alter reading each question. They don't even fry. Well, we have ways ot dealing with such
readers. This month, for a change, there
is
back to the Ferrari and continues winging back and lorth between the rapidly approaching cars. At the moment the two
cars collide (or if thai is too disturbing, at moment they narrowly miss colliding), what is the total distance the fly has covered? (Hint: "I never studied calculus" is not a permissible reason for skipping this problem.)
the
3.
no answer page. You'll just have to work out the problems yourself, then wait until next month, when the answers will appearin this
column.
NO HOLE
IN.
is
a
to
In March, the first Omni cryptogram appeared in this column. Each letter was printed as its corresponding number on a standard telephone dial (2 = ABC; 3 = DEF; 4 = GHI; 5 = JKL; 6 = MNO: 7 = PRS; 8 = TUV; 9 = WXY; with 1
seem
to
but there
length
of
be enough iniormation
is.
cylindrical hole is
representing Q and Z and with representing punctuation marks and spaces between words). Decoded, and with the three letters that were inadvertently left out, the cryptogram
read:
10 centimeters. How many cubic centimeters of volume remain in the mutilated sphere?
lip-to-lip
No,
am not going to tell you the diameter of the hole, and no am not going to tell you the size of the original sphere. Yes, the problem is still solvable.
I I
:
EVERY CHECKERED CARD AN ACE? Four cards are on the table in front
8. IS
of
Each card
is
either
"We thought
that
we were
4.
in
have enough
We've taken somewhat better care to assure that this month's code is printed What does say?
correctly;
it
036702737086026630688063084308733700363
'j;M2343ij4S0tl=:jij.J4.''32S46i3a630i3464!J22o30
860974B303660S?f.';)J:..5i'71 V-528466700OO40 36W18nB44o t -1084280290628 372507353284660280255004607053780206472 2530003733625039766.
1.
bag. One is a regulation coin with heads tails on the other The two other coins are counterfeit: One has heads on both sides, the other has tails on both sides. Give the bag a good shaking, withdraw one coin at random, and lay it on
down
face.
The up face
Analysis:
is
heads. What
is
the
is tails?
down
face
FLIP-OFF.
Someone
offers
flip
one
I
one. II you have more heads than do, you win; otherwise, win." Is this a good bet? Why, or why not?
I
chances of drawing one or the other of them is even, the answerto the question
one-half, right?
this
Wrong. There
is
a flaw
is
in
right
2.
reasoning. answer''
What
is it?
And what
the
just
SOLVE
IT
circle-square-circle-square-circle.
If
the
expensive Ferrari is traveling at 30 kilometers per hour on a head-on collision course with an equally expensive Maserati, which is being driven at a
144
TOOTHPICK PUZZLE.
Is
there any
way
diameter
oi the
outside circle
is
10
to
arrange eight toothpicks so as to form two sauares and four triangles, without breaking any of the toothpicks?
centimeters, what
inside circle?
If
your head.
OMNI
10.
like
just three
that the
ten coins bowling pins, as shown below Shift coins and reverse the figure so apex is at the bottom.
the hole at leasl once during its insertion. The surface of the plug must not be concave anywhere all its surfaces are
flat
No
fair
or
bulge outward.
At a
13.
games
editor.
The
editor
11.
seated rectangular box and the usual household things like spoons and yardsticks and tables. The faces of the box are not squares, but all the angles are right angles. How can you. determine the length of the box's major diagonal, i.e., the length of the. longest straight line that could be enclosed within it? As with other puzzles in this column, there are ordinary
solutions involving the
screened a large number ol applicants before narrowing his choice down to three, whom he considered all equally qualified. He brought them to a room together and said that the job would go to the first one to tell what color mark was made on his own forehead. Holding two felt-tipped pens in his hand, he put a mark on each applicant's forehead. The sneaky editor actually did not use the red pen; he put black marks on all three foreheads, though the applicants didn't know this. "Now," he said. "I want you to raise your hand if you see a black mark on either of the two other
foreheads." Naturally,
raised their hands.
All
all
2. Print
your name,
last
name
first,
on the
in
3.
lop line following the word Name. Draw a circle around the word all
direction
4.
number 1.
Name
in direction
number
5. In
number 4, draw a circle around the word Underline and in sentence number 1 cross out the word
direction
anything.
6.
Now draw
circle
around the
title
of this
test.
7.
three
4,
8. In
drudgery
ot
equations and computations, and there are simple, elegant solutions that resolve
the problem rapidly
latter,
seconds one of them. Applicant A, announced that his mark must be black and was immediately
hired.
Circle the number of sentences 1,2,3, and 5, and put an x over number 6. sentence number 7, circle the even numbers and underline the odd numbers. Put a circle around number 4 in the fifth
sentence.
9.
How
did Applicant
figure
it
out?
Write
"I
can
follow directions"
and
directly.
It
is
the
title
of
course, that
we
IN
are looking
for.
A SQUARE PEG
MONEY. 0. Henry's famous short story "The Gift of the Magi" opens as follows; "One dollar and eighty-seven cents. That was all. And sixty cents of it was in
14.
word TEST.
10.
written.
11.
Va
has three holes in it, a circle, a square, and a triangle. The circle is 5 centimeters in diameter, the square is 5 centimeters on a side, and the triangle is isosceles with a 5-centimeter base and altitude. Carve a plug from a piece of wood that will exactly
pennies."
Is
at
wrong here?
15.
Draw a
12.
WORD ASSOCIATIONS.
Which word
Now
in
13. Put
Cross out the numbers 8 through 13. circle'the same numbers. an x in the. square inside the circle
The plug must be capable of passing all the way through all three holes and be snug with the edge of
fit
all
three holes.
the upper-left-hand corner of this page. Cross out your name and the date and rewrite them on the right side
14.
of the
page.
FOR CATHOLICS
widow's sister?
ONLY.
15. In the
space
at the
bottom
read
all
of this
page,
1.
copy
16.
number
the
1.
17.
WHICH
IS
is
CORRECT?
PADS.
any
Omit
them
entirely.
LAUNCH
like
in
Why
are
space
usually
centers located
Cape Canaveral
How
tropical climates?
instructions?
DO
IAJDRD
By Thomas
F Monteleone
nyone can be a UFO contactee. * mt Anyone can have a close m m encounter with the aliens il he has a fertile imagination. speak from experience, having been involved in a UFO-contactee hoax that began in 1967 and still haunts me today,
J^^
li
college,
D.C..
after
called
in to
a Washington,
radio talk
show to speak
He was a man named Woodrow Derenberger, who claimed to have been contacted many, many times by aliens
from the planet "Lanulos" galaxy of Ganymede."
in
the
"far-off
called in to speak to the show's "I just want everyone in the audience to know that can prove Derenberger is telling the truth." The talk-show host asked me how could do such a thing, and my reply was calm but touched with righteous indignation. "Because have been to
I
When
I
host,
said:
listening
that Mr.
rierit home to Lanulos as having replaced with a fake back in 1956 and they would have believed me! And so was introduced to the odd, achlngly pathetic world of the UFO cultists. These people called me long-distance from all over the country. They usually phoned very late at night and spoke in nervous whispers, claiming to be fearful of the FBI and the CIA, who were always trying to bug their phones. One of them, who would identify himself only as Mr. X, tapped on his phone mouthpiece with a pencil at 30-second intervals during our conversation (to confuse and disrupt their bugging devices, he told me). Many of the investigators were either presidents, founding lathers, or guiding lights of small, obscure UFO clubs and
;
it
ecstatic, telling me that the symbol was one of his organization's most closely guarded secrets, and now he was convinced of my sincerity because had
I
was
at
"described perfectly!" Several minutes passed, and he then confided tome that not the iirst contactee who had described that symbol. toid him was not
it
1
I
all
surprised,
organizations
Another investigator sat in my living room, listening to my story, and at one point he off-handedly told me that he was in constant "organic communication" with the UFO "Overlords," as he reverently referred to them. Explaining, he said that when the Overlords were near, his arms would break out in gooseflesh, This phenomenon, he claimed, had been occurring ever since he saw saucer ships over the skies of riot-torn Newark, beaming
Lanulos, too,"
told the
astonished host
and
Woodrow
and
I
such as the Arizona Saucer Spotters Extraterrestrial Society (ASSES) or the Wisconsin Extraterrestrial Intelligence Research and Detection Organization (WEIRDO). When they came to my apartment to interview me, they always
traveled alone, lived out of beat-up suitcases in third-rate motels, and
to
down
All
went
well until,
interview, the
man jumped
yanked up
became jammed
with calls,
the
show
He ran up to me, roughly his shirt sleeves, and showed goosefleshed arms, "They're here!" he cried repeatedly. "They're here! They
maniacally
his
me
purpose, on my visit to Lanulos. But on each occasion, he would give ground, make up a hasty explanation, and in the
different things
into a state of minor chaos. While on the air, conMr Derenberger's story on claiming to have seen totally
have an
affinity for
Radio Shack
portable tape recorders. One man, proclaiming himselt to be the Mystic Barber from Brooklyn, called me to say that he had heard about my contactee
know of this meeting, and they approve!" He ran to my window, threw back the drapes, and cried out to a blank, blue sky: "Come down! Come down and show
yourselves!"
the
UFO
I
end corroborate my own falsifications. He even claimed to know personally the "UFOnaut" who contacted me! In the months that followed what had
I
came to
regret ever getting involved with what must be termed a vast UFO cult. After speaking on the talk show, was contacted by many men who identified themselves as UFO investigators wanting to meet me. subsequently underwent long interviews with them, in which not only repeated my false experiences but also added further embellishments and absurdities just to see how far could carry the hoax before
I I
I
experience and knew that was telling the truth because he had eavesdropped on the aliens talking about me on their ship-to-ship radios. It seems as though this man had constructed a headset out of aluminum foil and coat hangers, which enabled him to pick up "extraterrestrial
I
vibrations."
Another
man flew
in
from
New Mexico
for "his files"
to, ostensibly,
interview
me
fortunate
of the
and spent three hours telling me how sad he was because he had never been enough to have seen the Masters
Universe and their great saucers. At one point, he produced a drawing of what looked like a hybrid of several Mandarin and Sanskrit characters and asked me the Lanulesian saucer had this symbol emblazoned anywhere on its hull. When replied in the affirmative, he became
if
I
being discredited.
To
my
horror,
soon realized
that
could
Washington Monu-
demonstrates most poignantly, the deep, psychological need that a need to in something greater than themis this need that makes them so so willing to accept anything you wish to tell them. played what It has been 12 years since thought would be only a harmless prank. Since then, have been questioned by countless UFO cultists. My "case" has been discussed in many books and magazine articles, even though expressly wished to receive no publicity. shudder to think what would have happened had sought public attention. In closing, would like to reemphasize that anyone can be a UFO contactee. There's only one hitch: The people who contact you will not be from the stars. 00
believe
pitifully gullible,