editorial 1 970s: era of nothing? I! UP of i oojX Form KM DATE: s2ancaiy2.,i22i N-2-: fU9-Afa 1 1 i?$t& - - ... : , '1 r f ' f v v. 1 J stiND to: Ky by III AkZ. in i A L T fc ill ; v 4 c i f m i i a-" i i t B? 'f .. t il I a nf fit I As decades come and go, they are branded with titles of generalization meant to set them apart from previous or succeeding eras. The 1950s are remembered as the years of rock 'n' roll, greasers, hot cars, sock hops and 45 r.p.m. records. The 1960s saw the emergence of the hippie cult, civil rights marches, antiwar demonstrations and the accompanying publicity of a vocal youth group. Then came the 1970s. Although fast-talking promoters are now experiencing a boom in the rock 'n' roll revival, most of the characteristics of the 1950s have faded. Greasers have been replaced by $8 shag haircuts. Hot cars have been replaced by foreign economy cars and their recent counterpart-American economy cars which seem to be nothing more than miniatures of the ill-designed full-size American car. Sock hops have been replaced by Fillmore style concerts, where, instead of dancing with his best girl, a young man sits cross-legged on the floor and nods rhythmically. Those small records with the large hole have been replaced by stereo album sets designed for playing on expensive and technical pieces of machinery able to produce as many as four channels of sound simultaneously. Even less of the 1960s remains. However, the 60s cannot be replaced with newer or more expensive versions ot the same products. since the 60s were years without products. And, unlike the 50s, where the individual characteristics had merit of their own, when the 60s left, they left completely. When those true hippies (who wore patched and faded jeans now easily purcnasea at many department stores) abandoned their cause, they took with them all the riots, demonstrations and marches and, rightly so, all the publicity of a vocal youth core in this country. Think for a moment of what the 1970s will be remembered for. The end of the Vietnam war? Not likely, since that end seems to be a matter of interpretation. The fight against pollution? Unless big changes occur in management in this country, also not likely, since Congress and other representative bodies continue to permit extensions to large corporations for time to clean up plants and factories. Of recent interest has been Watergate. Will the 70s be remembered for this government scandal? Again, not likely, since the American public tired of this issue early in the Senate hearings. Those who are behind Nixon will be behind him forever, and those who aren't never will be, but Watergate will be forgotten. Rather it seems that the 70s will be remembered for the re-emergence of such grand old Americanisms as the hiding of a calf or pig on the fourth floor of a girls dormitory. Or spending Saturdays in front of that great invention the vegetable box, commonly referred to as the TV. Or, especially locally, watching 22 young men attempt to break each others bones on a carefully marked field of plastic grass. Or, and this could be the worst possible memory, spending time doing absolutely nothing. Remember the 1970s-those great years of nothing. Tim Anderson m m Scientific investigations foster monster myths m rr - "r fm rr it eEr.... , : If "Up to now, most zoologists have treated the whole subject of sea serpents, abominable snowmen and similar creatures as something that is not quite nice. It is as though they feel there were some gigantic conspiracy afoot to undermine their ideas of what does and does not exist in the world," anthropologist Gerald Durrell said. Last Monday, a team of 30 Japanese scientists, armed with a complex array of detection equipment, sonar, cameras and a mini sub arrived in Scotland to prove the existence of a Loch Ness monster. Parts of the loch have been under 24-hour watch by local persons and monster enthusiasts since the historic Grey photograph of 1933. But for learned men to travel 6,000 miles to Scotland--not to mention the monetary investment in equipment, to search for a sea monster must raise a few questions, if not eyebrows. Man's monsters seem to be as old as man himself and have traveled with him to ever corner of the globe, His monsters may vary in shape, size and disposition but all share traits of being unexplainable and rarely seen. One could write volumes speculating on the purpose and functions of monsters for simpler peoples, but why does this fascination with the monster still exist in our modern scientific age? Perhaps the monster of today owes his survival to the scientists themselves. Science has advanced to a stage of complexity far beyond the common man's grasp or comprehension, This complexity tends to isolate the scientist He apparently loses his humanity, and instead becomes a type of wizened old sorcerer, contemplating and altering the world with his mystical tools. The scientists have saved the monsters simply through their traditional denial of their existence. The monsters have been left to the layman. And until very recently, it has been the laymen who made the discoveries. Hugh Grey, who first photographed the "Nessic", was a worker at a local aluminum plant, and the list of eye witnesses now numbers in the several hundred. Each picture snapped, every sighting logged, strikes another pleasant blow against the omniscience of science. But a more careful review of this rivalry between layman and scientist leads us to a more essential hypothesis; perhaps man needs his monsters and the invigorating uncertainty that comes with them. One often can hear instructors from varying disciplines explaining how simpler people used myths to explain the awe of their environments, One could say then, that science has replaced the myth in our age, but why then (Jo our monsters survive? Perhaps our "Nessies", Yetis and UFOs serve as a delicate yet stubborn repository of man's basic wonder and awe of life. Perhaps their existence preserves for the world, mysteries, things unrecorded, and unbound by the binary fences of the scientist and his computer. A monster ceases to bo a monster when it is captured, measured and put on display. iohn michoel osheo iistQnt: J And it is for this reason that I hope our momters are more clever than the scientists in this latest effort at Loch Ness. The seeking of the unknown is not a realm restricted to scientists alone, it is the domain of all men, and luckily we have monsters who are obliging enough to let us chase them. daily nebraskan monday, September 17, 1973