Aggielife Page 3 Monday • April 21, 1997 Rain, hail and tornadoes entice Texas A&M * ■" 71 he lightning flashes like a strobe light in the background of a large funnel cloud. Ninety mph winds rock cars, as softball- ize hail plummets from the sky. Citizens run for cover, but storm chasers run to the storm. Story by Shea Wiggins Artwork by James Palmer Storm chasers are common in the “Tornado Alley” region of the United States, which in cludes Oldahoma, Kansas, Nebraska and North Texas. A new organization this fall will bring Texas A&M student storm chasers together in the hunt for severe weather conditions. Texas A&M Mobile Severe Storms Data Ac quisitions (TAMSSDA), plans to offer meteorol ogy club members and graduate students a chance to see what nature’s most powerful forces are all about. The students will aid the National Weather Service in verifying severe weather warnings. Jason Jordan, an organizer of TAMSSDA and a sophomore meteorology major, has chased storms for three years. “You only get so much from textbooks,” he said. “Books show you one picture of a tornado, but when you go storm chasing, you see that no (two) tornadoes are the same.” Storm chasers in TAMSSDA will be notified when there is a chance for storms, Jordan said. He said he wants the organization to have three vehicles chasing storms, and other students in the Eller Oceanography and Meteorology Build ing can report severe weather to the chasers on walkie talkies and possibly cellular phones. Senior meteorology major Adam Houston, who is also helping start TAMSSDA, said storm chasers enjoy the chase. “It is kind of a cult,” he said. “Like a hunt—it is very testosterone-laden. We get together and tell old war stories and [boast] whether we forecasted storms correctly or not. It is like a boy’s club.” He said student storm chasers typically set aside a week at a time to chase, because long dri ves to severe weather are hard for students to fit in their schedules. Houston has seen many tornadoes in the seven years he has been chasing. A large torna do in Thorton, Texas, surprised him and four other chasers taking pictures of a storm. “We heard die tornado warning, and we were looking and looking,” he said. “We felt that qui et eerie calm, and suddenly one of the drivers said ‘What the hell is that?’ A tornado crossed the road five miles ahead of us, and we could see it through the lightning.” Houston said he and Dr. Louis Wicker, an as sistant professor of meteorology, saw multiple tornadoes in the Panhandle in 1995. “The storm was a F5 rating—the highest for a storm, based on damage,” Houston said. “A smaller tornado was going around a larger tor nado, and an 82-knot gust nearly rolled a car in front of us over. "We felt that quiet eerie calm, and suddenly one of the drivers said 'What the hell is that?' A tornado crossed the road five miles ahead of us, and we could see it through the lightning." Adam Houston, senior meteorology m^jor “We didn’t know whether to go forward or not. We couldn’t see the tornado, even though it was one-and-a-half miles wide, because the vis ibility was so bad.” Wicker, who has chased for about 18 years, said he has seen about 35 to 40 major tornadoes. “When I started, it was an oral tradition,”, he said. “You just talked to people who did it in the ’70s. Now there are storm-chasing web pages.” Wicker said a typical storm chase covers 300 miles a day, and longer chases can average 700 to 800 miles. “It amazes me more people haven’t been hurt, going 12 hours or more on the road in poor weather conditions,” he said. “But there has only been one person I have been aware of that died.” People who do not understand meteorolo gy should not make storm chasing a hobby, Wicker said. “It is a big commitment of time, energy and knowledge,” Houston said. “I guess that is why it is not as attractive as something like playing baseball.” Jordan said TAMSSDA members will be limited. “It is dangerous, and we have to keep the risks down,” he said. “Eventually, once we get started, maybe we can take other students.” Wicker said storm chasers chase on high ways, not fields, and chase in all vehicles, ex cept motorcycles. John Fulton, a sophomore meteorology and computer science major who has chased for three years, said his father influenced his love of chasing. “He was a relay guy for those who spotted storms,” he said. “I am more of a hurricane guy myself, but growing up in North Dakota, there are not a lot of hurricanes.” Fulton said he has seen funnel clouds, but nothing he could prove was a tornado. He has had more luck when he was just driving than when he actually chased. He said storm chasers must be trained to go out into the danger. “The people in Twister acted like idiots,” he said. “If you don’t know what you are doing, you shouldn’t go.” Weather services offer “sky-warn” seminars to train people properly to be storm chasers and spotters, Fulton said. Wicker said College Station has not seen a tornado since 1989, but warns students that the next two months is the most likely time of the year for tornadoes. “Keep your eye on the sky,” Wicker said. Houston said the organization will use members forecasting skills and knowledge of storm forms to call in severe weather to the National Weather Service. "We are not just a bunch of yahoos out there running off of adrenaline and endanger ing lives,” he said. On the left Is oil the knowledge squeezed out of students going to all other leading tutors. . On the right is the knowledge squeezed out of students going to r\ Question: let week of April 20 - A»r»l 27 Ae«~t 23m Fl«c 341 M**h 142 Review MmtH 151 Math 152. Mmth *52 Review fwr 212 I*»r« I Tfe** Af»r 22 Part 1 JVStttt Afar 2t Part * San Apr 2# Part I Mo» Apr 3U Part t Sat Apr Zfe IjaMMNMtt! 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As a donor since 1993, I have been more than satis fied with every aspect of your operation, which allows myself and others to contribute what we can to community service, all the while being serviced by diligent, but relaxed, workers. Everyone at the Plasma Center, from those behind the front counter to the phlebotomists to the supervisors, have made great efforts to insure that each donor feels hygienically safe, as well as keeping the atmosphere light. Like most, I started coming to the Plasma Center for monetary reasons, but I soon developed acquaintances that appealed to me almost as much as the original need for money, enabling me to look forward to each donation, not only for my wallet’s sake but also to see my friends. Like I commented to some one recently, talking to people at the Plasma Center was like getting mail from a far-off friend that you don’t get to do much with, but who you can talk to as often as you write. For those acquaintances and for your continual services. I would like to thank all of those I’ve come to know and appreciate over the past three years - Emily, and Tracy, Heath, and Marty, Ada and Josie, etc... more I can’t remember or those who have gone on to better things. So, as I graduate from this great University, I bid you all a fond farewell and strong commendations on such a successful blend of quality medical practice and friendly service. Thank you all and have a great sum mer. Thanks, C.E BiologicalS THE PLASMA CENTER 700 E. University Dr. 268-6050 4223 Wellborn Rd. 846-8855