The Great Assault on Nature's Secrets As IGY Ends, Its President Reviews the Pro ct's Accomplishments By MAHENDRA PAREKH THE YEAR 1958 marks a great event in the history of man- kind, a gigantic step forward in the continuing quest by man to reveal the secrets of the earth, the atmosphere and the sun. For sci- entists all over the world this is- the International Geophysical Year. During the period of July 1, 1957 to the close of this year, the sun is passing through one of its recur- rent states of enhanced eruptive setivit', a pernn of a maximum number of sunspots, solar promi- nnce and flares. This maximum activity of the sun, which occurs approximately every eleven years, was indeed ther~ deciding factor in the choice of p 1957-58 as a favorable time for an all-out world-wide study of the current problems of geophys- On July 1. 1957, scientists of over 60 countries be 'an a con- centrated study of the problems of man's physical envionment, seeking answers to many of the open questions which still bar the way to its proper understanding. Rocket Experts Prepare for Upper Atmosphere Research ALMOST 2,000 stations were set <">-.--_ up for simultaneous world- set in motion the project of the wide observation of atmospheric International Geophysical Year, winds, of the earth's magnetic 1957-58. field, of the aurora borealis and aurra ustali, o th imactof The committee held several aurora australis, of the impact of planning conferences during the cosmic rays on the earth's canopy next five ,years Finally in Sep-. of air, and of the fact of the sun. tember, 196, int e spacious These stations will be manned bl , of the s aions until the end of this year at a building of the Spanish National total cost to all participating Research Council n Barcelona, countries of nearly $300 million. came the last planning confer- ence. At this time the Russians A nestion may arise: What do announced their ,own satellite all these terms signify? Where project, so designed as to align does all this money come from? with American techniques; fifty- Why such an intensified attack four nations were now lined up and what will be its consequences? for IGY In other words, just what is the IGY and who are all the people H FIRST ESSENTIAL was to behind it. TH .ssh. y t ensure a 24-hour watch on the hi' is the story as told by the sun. Thirty-eight solar observa- President of the IGY, Prof. Syd- torics, girdling the earth, 'cre ney Chapman. Prof. Chapman has made ready for intensive observa-, been at the University since Sep- tion of the sun, tember, 1957, as a visiting lec- turer in aeronautical engineering. The watch on the sun makes it possible to detect sunspots, pro- T ALL BEGAN one fine spring minences, outbursts of radio-noise n190 during an in- and, most important of all, solar' evening in 15 uiga n lrs hs ra oge ffr formal talk among scientists in flares, those great tongucs of fire the May'and home of James Van that are believed to have a marked effect on radio communications Allen, an Ame'lan physict tandsidosrcataypcoc ' and other earthly phenomena - i educator. e et of an IGY came to including northern lights. Lloyd Berkner, President of the For the first time in history International Council of Scientific simultaneous observatories in me- Unions (ICSUt. Among the coim. teoeology, geomagnetism, and ion- pany was Sydney Chapman, a ospherics were lined up, strung well-known mathematician, physi- like beads from pole to pole along cist sand asterier from En - three strategic meridians of the land. These two men sparked the globe. Some of these were well beginning of an undertakii, the established observatories, others ovewhelming succes of which were easy enough to access, but has even surprised them. quite a few demanded considerable Prof. Chapman and Berkner, in pioneerin, work in their establish- 150, put tlhe ball squarely in the mentt and operation. court of the ICSU. Meeting in Washinton, D.C. in the fall of N TIlE ARCTIC there ae 1951, the ICSU gave sanction to many permanent scientific ob- the formation of a committee to servatories. The equatorial belt needed more attention particularly Mahendra Parekh is a stu- because of the enormous stretches dent in the College o f En- of open ocean, which have lonely islands over thousands of miles in eering. He is fronn India of the equatorial girdle as the Concluded on Next Page) For oer a quarter of a century "Michigan Men" have chosen "Saffell & Bush" Clothes because of their notable S-cVERBE character, brilliant needlework, excellent taste and their CFrIhSTMAS AT 'sErBECKS For that gift tIhat'si hard to fin ever constant qucality stanrlarcts. BOOKS, THE IDEAL GIFT " SUITS $60 to $125 SPORT COATS $37.50 to $60 GIFT STATIONERY OUTERCOATS $43.75 to $125 SHIRTS - SHOES - SLACKS * FOUNTAIN PENS AND PENCILS ' BRIEFCASES SSCRAPBOOKS, ADDRESS BOOKS SI & IHI OVERBEC BOOKSTORE 310 SouTH STATE STREET SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 23 Page Five