The phone rings at the US Weather Bureau Hurricane Warning Center. Jim Tyler picks it up and a few seconds later says, “US Weather Bureau . . . yes, mam. Fair today and Thursday. No change in temperature. Moderate southwest winds.” Really, people are calling the US Weather Bureau to get the weather report?
Dr. Bronson is heading out to have dinner with Dr. Fredericks. Tyler tells him to say hello from his old student “Hurricane” Tyler. He says Dr. Fredericks gave him the nickname “because I used to be fascinated by hurricanes.” Used to be? Working in the Miami branch of the US Weather Bureau, I hope he still has a passing interest.
Tyler’s wife Julie and son Bobby come by the office. Bobby is in a scout uniform and excited about his camping trip that night. Tyler says it is a good night for it and gives Bobby a compass and a dollar. Just after they leave, a crazy report comes across the teletype. A freak hurricane has appeared out of nowhere with winds of 200 MPH. Colonel Stewart calls in from the Air Force Base to confirm this. Tyler is astounded. “200 MPH! Are you sure, Colonel? There must be some kind of mistake. I’ve never heard of a rotary speed that high. The record is only close to 90!” Wait, what? It has to be 74 MPH to even be classified as a hurricane. Did hurricanes only get up to 90 MPH in the 1950s? Have they gotten that much worse? Was Al Gore right?
Tyler calls home to tell Julie to keep Bobby at home. He is in a danger that could traumatize him for life, and that’s just from the Scoutmaster. Bobby has already left, though, so Julie tries to call some of the kids not yet picked up. Meanwhile, Dr. Bronson and Dr. Fredericks come back to the office. A new teletype message from a navy ship reports that there was a huge explosion just before the hurricane formed. Fredericks suggests that a submarine be dispatched to the hurricane to take some water samples.
After being stationary, the hurricane finally starts to move toward Miami with speeds now up to 250 MPH. Fredericks says, “Being out in a hurricane like this can be certain death.” Kudos for the unintentional laugh as they whip-pan over to Julie who gasps, “Certain death?” She pleads with Jim, “We’ve got to find those boys!”
There is not a lot of story in the rest of the episode, but there is a lot of fabulous stock footage. We get to see Air Force planes fly into the hurricane, waves crashing, warning flags going up, rainy gusts blowing down deserted streets, switchboard operators trying to keep up. Soon it is uneventfully over.
Julie and Tyler are still worried about Bobby, but he comes bounding in and they are happily reunited. Drs. Bronson & Fredericks smile and clink their coffee mugs together in congratulations like they had something to do with his safety. Kind of like when the FBI was high-fiving each other and saying “We’re #1!” when they caught the Unabomber . . . after 20 years . . . when his brother turned him in. Good job, fellas.
Bobby says, being a scout, he was prepared. The scoutmaster took the boys into a cave to safely ride out the storm. In a good series, he would have credited the compass for saving them; but I probably would have complained about that too. To their credit, they did surprise me by explaining the explosion that created the hurricane. It was a meteorite. Does that sense? I don’t know.
For what it was, I can imagine this being pretty entertaining to a kid 60 years ago.
Other Stuff:
- Margaret Field as Julie . . . ha-cha-cha!