Rhododendron Produces Blood Pressure Drug Atlantic City, N. J. ? A new drug taken from the leave* of the rho dodendron, a common flowering shrub (wind in many hone gar dens, may help control high blood pressure in man. Two doctors from the Emory University (Ga.) School o( Medi cine told a meeting of researchers here that the drug, andrornedo tuxin. already has been effective In lowering blood pressure in ani mals. Connecticut's violent death rate is an annoal 44 per 100.000 com pared to 58 per 100,000 for the nation. Weather Expert Comments On Quirks of Hurricanes What can be done about hurri canes? Are they predictable? Can they be deflected or destroyed? What caused the two big recent storms to move in such an unusual way? Are the tropics moving northward? Could an atom bomb be used to break up a hurricane? According to Dr. Jerome Spar, research associate professor of me teorology who will teach a course this fall in "Forecasting the Weath ?r" at New York University's Di vision of General Education, it is doubtful that weathermen will ev er be able to predict storms with tbe accuracy the public expects. "No meteorologist," be says, "can forecast with any confidence where or when a hurricane will form. In general, weathermen don't even try. It U like predicting which of 10 people will first develop cancer. But, as in diagnosing the disease, COST OF LIVING 93% 1059 267o PRICE OF ELECTRICITY DOWN! As your use o { eleoWoity has gone up, your average price per unit has gone down ? can you say that about any other house hold necessity?. CAROLINA POWER & LIGHT COMPANY they try to detect the hurricane as soon after it is born as possible. "Analysts are helped immeasur^ ably in this task today by Air Force and Navy reconnaissance that fly directly into the storms. On the other hand, the job was compli cated recently when the govern ment removed a weather ship sta tioned about 230 miles east of Cap* llatteras. Meteorologists hope, how ever, that the ship will be replaced soon with an automatic buoy weath er station." The methods available for pre dicting where and how fast a hur ricane will move are still inade quate, the NYU scientist says. Hut the answers may be discovered in the extensive research on the fore casting of storms now being con ducted by the Weather Bureau, Air Force. Navy, and many of tho nation's universities. "It's doubtful," Dr. Spar believes "that exploding an atom bomb would have any effect on a hur ricane, unless the explosion itself were of the dimensions of the storm. In that case, the storm might be far less dangerous than the bomb. "It has been suggested that an atomie explosion in a baby hurri cane when it is just forming and the energy of the storm is still small, might prevent its develop ment. Perhaps this is possible, but it can also be argued that the ex plosion might cause a worse storm. The best guess is that there would be no effect. It is significant to remember that the Pacific atom tests did not produce any large or developing storms." No two hurricanes are alike. I)r. Spar points out. The winds in the storms are always changing and the only certain factor is that they do blow counterclockwise in the Northern hemisphere and clock wise in the southern hemisphere. Hurricanes whose winds whirl at a speed of 75 miles or more an hour may be moving less than 10 miles an hour. A slight change in storm direction may mean the dif ference between disaster and pleas ant weather. "The path of a hurricane is usu ally parallel to the winds in the upper atmosphere," Dr. Spar ex plains. "The storms move like a small whirl or vortex in a stream. Streams that carry or steer the hurricane are currents of air more ; than a thousand miles wide and several miles deep. When this current of air flows far to the north, the storm moves northward. This is what happened to hurri canes Carol and Edna. They were steered by a current of air extend ing far to the north and they moved northward. The same thing happened with a similar hurricane in 1938. "Most storms do not come under the influence of such northward moving currents and therefore re main in tropical climates. From this point of view Carol and Edna were unusual. But they are unlikely to establish a trend; nor are they to be construed as evidence that tho tropics are moving northward. "The behavior of both recent storms, however, was normal as far as the steering current was con cerned. By using the steering rule, Weather Bureau meteorologists Teamwork Builds Better State Fixing the food was almost as muck fun as eating U when Rnx boro recently opened its Wcstood Park with a feast for over 500 The park is one of Roxboro's projects in the "Finer Carolina" contest i sponsored by Carolina Power & Light Co. Social Security Officer Explains Amended Law "The 1954 Amendments to the Social Security Act which Presi dent Eisenhower recently signed into law have a direct effect upon the survivors of individuals who died between July 1, 1940 and August 31, 1950," N. A. Avera, dis trict manager of the Social Securi ty Administration, said today. He added, ''We are referring spe cifically to those cases where the individual died without having an insured status under the Social Se were able to predict the approxi mate paths the storms would take. Unfortunately the speed of the storm is not predicted so easily. It was the -.brupt acceleration of Carol which caused some difficul ty." Dr Spar's course on the weather, designed for the layman, will cov er such topics as the Mterpreta tion of weather maps, why it rains, highs ami lows and whatx they mean, weather and aviation, prob ing the stratosphere with balloons and rockets, the question of wheth er our climate is changing, what the clouds mean, the weather and atom bomb, and cold fronts and warm fronts. "Weather forecasting need be neither a complicated nor a hap hazard process for the average per son," Dr. Spar points out. "The fundamental concepts and meth ods of forecasting are well within the reach of the layman. Although most people are interested in the weather, few are able to interpret competently the bulletins of the Weather Bureau." curity Act at the time of his death. For instance, if an individual died in October 1943, it would have been necessary for him to have nine quarters of coverage after 1930 to be fully insured. "If he did not have nine quar ters of coverage, we could have used an alternate method of deter mining his insured status. The alternate method was that he have at least six quarters of coverage out of the three years before his death. If neither of these condi tions applied to the deceased, no , benefit payment could have been ) made at the time of his death. "Under the amended law, howev er, if this same individual has only six quarters of coverage at any time after 193C, the survivors would now be eligible to receive benefit payments effective with the month of September 1954. "We believe it advisable for the survivors of all individuals who have worked under social security and died in the period from July 1, 1940 through Aug. 31, 1950 to re- i contact our office. We are assum ing, of course, that those individu als who do contact us will be the | survivors of persons who have | worked under the social security taw and who have not previously received a benefit payment of any kind with the exception of a possi ble lump sum payment. "It is estimated that approxi mately 100, (KM) cases of this type throughout the country will be re opened and benefit payments made \*herc it was not possible to do so previously," Mr. A vera concluded. A representative of the social security office can be seen at the courthouse in Beaufort the first and third Thursday of each month at 1:30 p.m. The highest automobile road in the United States reaches the sum mit of Mt. Evans 14,260 feet?, says the National Geographic So ciety. Counterfeit Money Gag lesults in Probation San Francisco ? (AP) ? Two irinters counterfeited U S. curren y, (hen lit cigarettes with $3 and 10 billi and tossed the "money" round in a bar. Some bills later howed up in Honolulu. 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