THE MICHIGAN DAILY .8 'RinAY A FA+LR.TT lr*'T1 1 r 6L111nZ r C.lfiL UR11 ux la,' TEOROLOGY:- 'redict Increase u Weather Study By MICHAEL JULIAR Veather research will provide "a d of rich opportunity for young ple in the next 10 years," Prof'. Wendell Hewson, director of the teorological laboratories in the ineering college, says. L proposed tripling of manpow- and expenditures for weather earch has been recommended a special panel of meteorolo- s. Established by the National ademy of Sciences, the sugges- n for the creation of the panel s given by Jerome B. Wiesner, President John F. Kennedy's enee advised. Need Research ,eed for the expanded research gram is illustrated by the bil- is of dollars of damage to prop- y, forests and crops that is at- >utable annually to weather fac- s. The proposal would require billion and 2,000 more engineers' d scientists in the next 10 years. ?rof. Hewson says that in order solve these problems, "we must rn to work with weather and nate, not against them." rof. Hewson mentions an in- esting job that some meteorol- sts are now workig on - the ather of other planets. With a gathered by astronomers, the teorologists are attempting to derstand the weather on Mars, nus and Jupiter. Weather on Mars 'Weather phenomena on -Mars not as complicated as that on earth because it is an arid net-mostly desert. The reason our complex weather on the th is that there Is a lot of water e. Oceans and other bodies of ter evaporate and condense and nulti-faceted climate is a part our daily life.. Because Mars has less water, weather is simpler and by ob- ving the planet, possibly an un- standing of our own weather 1 come about," Prof. Hewson ex- ins. ;omputers are one part of our reasing technology that are ying a greater part in weather ecasting and analysis. For ex- ple, at Suitland, Md., the Unit- States Weather Bureau has a ge computing center for short long range weather forecasting. )n the subject of future weath- o Give Exam' or Peace Corps The next Peace Corps placement t wil be given at 8:30 a.m. to- rrow in the Civil Service Room the Downtown Post Office. er control, Prof. Hewson says that there are two schools of thought. The pessimists say that weather phenomena are random processes. Small causes produce large effects and therefore control of the weather would be next to impossi- ble. On the other hand are the op- timists who say that there is a close relationship between the cause and effect. "I would call myself an opti- mist," Prof. Hewson says. "There are certain steps that must be reached before the next ones can be achieved. Meteorol- ogists must first make measure- ments. After that, an understand- ing can be gained and laws de- duced from the data. Prediction of the future weather is the next step and last is control or modification. "Right now we are trying to un- derstand the weather and in the process we have the ability to make short, accurate forecasts of 24 hours or so. Longer range forecasts are still inaccurate and our control of the weather is slight," he adds. Schedule Debate On Strength of UN "Resolved: the United Nations should be significantly strength- ened" will be the topic of a debate between the University and the University of Toronto at 7:30 p.m. today in Rackham Amph. The negative will be argued by University of Toronto's Edward Gzik and James Kadonaga. Rais Kahn, Grad, and Albert Fower- baugh, '62, from the University, will take the affirmative. An open forum will be held after the de- bate. CORE To Discuss Recent Convention The Congress of Racial Equality will present a report on the na- tional convention held last week in Cincinnati and the prospectus for action in Ann Arbor at 7:30 p.m. today at the Friends Center. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation Last Chance to Register for Classes HEBREW HISTORY LITERATURE Sunday, Feb. 18, 3 P.M. 1429 Hill St. NSF Grant To Finance' Math Study M ahThe National Science Founda- tion has grantedtheUniversity funds for a summer directed read- ing program for any interested undergraduate honors students studying mathematics. The student stipends will be $60 per week for the eight week sum- mer session. Students will read in such areas as analysis, geometry, algebra and number theory. They will meet with a faculty member approximately once a week for discussion and will consult in- dividually with him. Students will also have oppor- tunities to do research in areas of special interest. Applications are available in the office of Prof. Jack McLaughlin of the mathematics department and will be due the middle of next week. Any junior, sophomore or freshman in the literary college honors program is eligible. This is the first year the Uni- versity's mathematics department has received such a grant. By DONNA ROBINSON Sixteen University medical stu- dents participated yesterday in the annual Student Research Forum, sponsored by Alpha Omega Alpha, the medical students' honorary. The forum, one of the highest honors which an undergraduate medical student can earn, con- sisted of formal papers about ten minutes long given in two simul- taneous sessions in the Medical Science Bldg.4 Some of the fields of research covered in the papers included: physiology, pharmacology, sur- gery, internal medicine, pathology, anatomy, bacteriology and pedia- trics. In the field of physiology, Peter H. Abbrecht, '62M, spoke of his research on how the rate of blood flow into the kidneys affects their efficiency in disposing of wastes and regulating the body's salt. content. John W. Cowden, '64M, whose specialization is pathology, re- ported experiments carried on to READ THESES: Medical Students Attend Annual Research Forum determine the effects of ultra- sound (very high frequency sound) on normal tissue. These experiments were under- taken as a preliminary to studies on the treatment of tumors with ultra-sound. The high frequency sound did destroy normal tissue effectively, Mr. Cowden said. If it can be focused accurately enough it could be used to kill tumors. Rogert M. Komorn, '64M, a stu- dent of pharmachology, spoke on his investigation of edema, , and excessive retention of extra-cel- lular fluid in the body. Other students participating in the forum were: John D. Bartlett, '63M; William D. Burton, '62M; Harold R. Clure, '62M; Richard W. Erbe, '64M; Verle E. Headings, '64M; E. Larry Knight, '64M; Jan Edward Leestma, '64M; James A. Light, '64M; H. Roger Netzer, '62M; Jerome S. Nosanchuk, '64M; Tom R. DeMeester, '63M; John Henzel, 62M; and T. Miyata, '65M. discount records You Know Your Student Registration Card Cost Money but. . . Did You Know It's WORTH MONEY* DISCOUNT RECORDS, INC\, while maintaining a consistent year 'round low discou phonograph records, has continued a high standard of record shop operation. * You'll find COMPLETE inventories (not just the best sellers-although we have on all available records of several hundred manufacturers. You'll be more li the record you want at DISCOUNT RECORDS. O You'll find courteous, intelligent assistance by clerks who KNOW records. 0 You'll find factory-fresh records that we guarantee unconditionally. 0 You'll find the largest selection of IMPORTS and FOLK MUSIC of any store in COME IN AND BROWSE! You've never seen so many records and such discou nt price on those too) kely to find Ann Arbor. nts! 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