Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 14, 1971 Page Six THE MICHiGAN DAILY - - .. -- t r . _,® -- . 7 POLLUTION EFF ECTS DEBATED Weather control nears reality California students lire state lobbyist UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Have a Legal Abortion Performed by License Certi- fied Gynecologists in New York State. ...... . ..... SAN FRANCISCO (A) - On a recent flight into San Francisco, an airline captain, encc. ering fog, announced the flight was bein0 . erted to Los Angeles because the weatherman had made a mistake. Aboard the flight was a delegate to the annual meeting of the American Meteor- ological Society Convening in San Francisco. He took out a business card, scribbled "It wasn't me" on the back and sent it up to the crew. Although meteorologists probably always will encounter difficulties predicting each quirk of the weather, sudden airplane- diverting fogs soon may be a thing of the past. Scientists have learned how to briefly dis- pel certain types of ground fog by seeding For instance, weather scientists are split over what the results of weather modifica- tion experiments mean. Ecologists warn that even the most innocent-looking weath- er modification project could wreak havoc with the environment. "It is clear that we as scientists have developed a primitive but probably real caps ability for manipulating certain kinds of atmospheric processes and as a result we are entering a new era, an era of weather management," Dr. Robert White, acting di- rector of the National Oceanic and Atmos- pheric Administration, told the American Meteorological Society. The new era had its beginnings in the late 1940s when scientists discovered that silver iodide, or dry ice, caused growth of ice crys- encouraging results. By seeding a brewing thunderstorm, scientists force it to give up 'rain early, preventing formation of hail. But many weather scientists say results of experiments have been overrated. "No analysis has ever satisfactorily shown whether cloud seeding has actually caused a net increase in precipitation or only a re- distribution," Dr. Helmut Landsberg of the University of Maryland wrote in a recent issues of Science magazine, Inability to predict the outcome of their efforts is weather scientists' biggest handi- cap. Attempts to increase rainfall in a small valley may unknowingly be changing the weather hundreds or even thousands of miles away, One of the most dramatic examples of the effect of air pollution on the weather was discovered at La Porte, Ind. Meteorologists with the Illinois State Wat- er Survey found evidence that air pollution at Gary, Ind, 30 miles upwind, has been substantially increasing La Porte's rain, hail and thunder for 40 years. During each of the six steel production peaks at Gary between 1923 and 1968, rain- fall at La Porte increased correspondingly, Between 1946 and 1967, La Porte received 47 per cent more precipitation than areas upwind of Gary. The popular theory is that air pollutants - dust, smoke, soot, chemicals - act just like cloud seeding agents. Lead from auto- mobile exhaust, for example, may be com- bining with iodine already in the atmos- phere to form lead iodide, which acts sim- ilarly to silver iodide, a favorite cloud seed- ing chemical, Such chemicals may be increasing cloud cover throughout the world. Scientists also know that urban areas are vast "heat islands" caused by expanses of heat-absorbing asphalt and concrete, re- striction to air flow by tall buildings and heat from man's activities. Clouds ascend over the heat island, giving up their mosture as rain or releasing heat that could trigger a thunderstorm. Air pollution also is cutting sunlight over most cities by at least 15 per cent, more in many heavily polluted areas. And research has shown that although some levels of pollutants increase precipitation, heavier concentrations cause too many ice crystals to form, decreasing precipitation. But theories advanced so far about the the effect of air pollution on world climate are speculative. Predictions that increasing' levels of carbon dioxide will heat the earth, melt the polar ice caps and raise the oceans several hundred feet are countered by pro- phesies that increasing dust, smoke and clouds will cut sunlight, cool the earth and bring the onset of another ice age. SACRAMENTO, Calif. (P)- University of California students, often trend setters in radical poli- tics, are dealing with the estab- lishment on its own terms. They've hired a lobbyist to represent them at the state Capitol. Richard Twohy, a 26-year old law school graduate, was named this week as a full time, paid stu- dent body lobbyist. For $10,200 a year Twohy, a graduate of Seattle University and New York University School of Law, will represent the nine UC campus student body presidents on legislative matters affecting the often controversy-wracked univer- sity. Twohy will provide i'iformation to his 110,000 student bosses on government matters of interest to them. Twohy said his lobbyist post can help "conservative and radical ,tu- dents alike, fraternity people, com- mune people, dorm people, and bald and the hairy and down the line." He said his office will deal only' with matters directly affecting the. university, which has an enroll- ment of 110,000 and won't touch upon general issues which concern students, such as the environment, drugs and law enforcement. "If we do our job well, we'll pro- vide an alternative to street con- frontations," he said. The lobbyist office will give students the means "to extend expressions of their grievances and their hopes and visions within the system," he said. Twohy said that in the future the operation may be expanded to in- clude student seminars on the leg- islative process or even "shadow committees"-group of student to attend each meeting of the legisla- ture 's committees. Student body presidents praise the idea,but caution it won't mean' an instant end to street confronta- tions by frustrated students. Adult politicians of both parties also are optimistic. UC Berkeley student president, Craig Fenech. whose campus was the focal point of the 1964 Free Speech Movement and subsequent demonstrations and violence, said "burning and rock throwing have been large ineffect- ual and counter productive." Pregnancies to 12 wks.- Pregnancies 12-18 wks- -$200.00 --$350.00 FREE Transportation-No Waiting. Leave Det. A.M. -Return early P.M. Call for the BEST ECONOMICAL PLAN available in the MID-WEST. 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But the new optimism that man soon will manage the weather, even if only on local or regional scales, is tempered by mounting evidence that air pollution already is chang- ing the weather. It may even be altering world climate. The spectre of weather modification, planned or accidental, has raised a host of ecological, social, economic, legal and poli- tical questions that have sparked a spirited debate among scientists. tals in supercooled clouds - clouds in which moisture remained unfrozen although the temperature was below freezing. The ice crystals would attract nearby droplets of moisture and turn into snow. The research that followed is beginning to pay off. A recent project showed that seeding hur- ricanes can reduce their death-dealing winds. Hurricane Debbie's winds in 1969 were cut from 15 to 30 per cent - substan- tial reductions in a storm in which winds exceeded 100 miles per hour. Scientists have learned how to spot winter clouds in which seeding is likely to increase snowfall. The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation has begun a five-year, $5 million project in the San Juan Mountains of Colorado to in- crease the snowpack and the subsequent spring runoff in the Colorado River, which serves parched areas of Arizona, Southern California and Mexico. Experiments to suppress hail and reduce lightning in thunderstorms also have shown ., I I Bells $8.50 DENIM Bush Jeans Bells ..... Pre-Shrunk Super Slims. $10.00 ... $8.00 $7.50 ... $7.00 CHIECKMATE State Street at Liberty Join The Daily Concerned About the UrCrisis? INVESTIGATE CAREER OPPORTUNITIES IN COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH PLANNING! The University of Michigan Program in Health Planning is recruiting pros- pective masters degree candidates. Applkation deadline is March 15, 1971. For application forms and further information write or phone: RICCA FEIN Program in Health Planning School of Public Health phone: 764-9474 B.A.'s in social sciences preferred. Full financial assistance available. A ADYLAN ERPIECE. "It came on the radio in the late afternoon and from the first note it was right. Bob Dylan bringing it all back home again. "Then 'New Morning' [title song] came on. Like an early mist. So clean, so sweet. This must be the day that all my dreams come true.' What a love song! What a message to all of us blinded as we are by paranoia, grimly trying to see through the murk and the smoke and the blood. 'So happy just to be alive underneath the sky of blue...' "God it's beautiful ... it is the most reassuring thing that has happened this year of the bombings." -Ralph J. Gleason, Rolling Stone "Put simply, 'New Morning' is a superb album.... If poetry can be a story that must be sent by telegraph, then this is certainly one of Dylan's foremost achievements as a poet. Words, music, singing, piano work, all of the highest order. "It seems almost superfluous to say that this is one of the best albums of the year, one of Dylan's best albums, perhaps his best. In good conscience, all I can really say is get it yourself and prepare to boogie." -Ed Ward, Rolling Stone Bob Dylan'New Morning." On Columbia Records t and Tapes ti 4 I