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Written by Nacho   
Archive Saturday -- crap from my old webpage.  Also, I'm hungover. History Week: Tornado!
by nacho

March 25th, 1948. The first tornado prediction is made by Captain Robert Miller at Tinker Air Force Base, Oklahoma. The following comes from Captain Miller's personal diary, a draft for a planned speech at the 50th reunion dinner in 1998.

March 20, 1948

After only 20 days as the forecaster at Tinker AFB, I was jarred from my restful sleep first by the sound of my staff sergeant masturbating, and then by the vicious vagaries of a massive storm. I was from sunny LA, as was my staff sergeant, so I wasn't used to anything like this. A massive cloud of darkness blasting across the empty and desolate plains, Midwesterners scattering like flies... Later, my staff sergeant would swear it was "raining men." He was as frightened as I when the storm hit.

Our mistake had begun earlier in the day. My staff sergeant, Brian Wilcox, and I had been studying the latest weather reports. Four hours before the storm hit, the skies were clear and the sun was out. Just like a normal day in sunny LA. We issued the forecast, "Head to the beach and enjoy the sun, fellow Oklahomans!" and called it a night.

We gravely underestimated the Midwest weather.

Around 9pm, weather stations to the west and southwest of Tinker reported thunderstorms in progress. Using the AN-PQ-13 radar system, a cornerstone of the advanced American radar system developed in May of 1945 by Otto Heidrich, we noticed that the thunderstorm cells being reported by the other stations looked particularly ugly. Then a message came in from the Will Rodgers Airport - "Tornado south. On ground. Moving towards you, Tinkerbells. Another blow to you Air Force pansies! GYMKATA!"

We knew we were in trouble.

When Wilcox and I saw the tornado, there was nothing we could do but watch it wreak havoc across the base. Then, inexplicably, the tornado held position and began to pulsate. We later learned that several relics had been belched out of the storm and left scattered on the approach to Hanger 37. Objects which, as impossible as it sounds, appeared to be from another time. Somehow, this particular tornado had opened a tear in the fabric of time and space. Now, we knew that Hitler's Germany had been working on this technology and, towards the end of the war, the Japanese had used this time-vortex against us at Okinawa. In the experimental stages, the Japanese used it to hurl little girls from the year 1342 at our front lines in the hopes of shocking our troops. Rumor has it, Hitler had more developed plans for this tear in the fabric...though, of course, we'll never know the secret.

Wilcox theorized that this was a fluke accident, something that had been put in motion by the Axis powers, but our CO -Major E.J. Dervishire - suspected something sinister. Could the Soviets have captured time-vortex technology?

The morning after the storm, Wilcox and I were told to set up an accurate prediction protocol for time-vortex storms.

March 22 - 24, 1948

For three days, Wilcox and I poured over all of the available statistics for the storm on the 20th. We noticed certain similarities between that storm and previous storms, all of which were ordinary tornado events. With one exception. In 1905, the mayor of Dead Indian Bend vanished and there were 14 triplet births on a religious commune up in Wakassessee, OK in conjunction with a possible Vortex Event.. We discovered that there was a specific "threat area" and, then, all we had to do was wait for a repeat. We knew the ins and outs of the storm, we knew that older storms looked similar. All we had to do was wait for the warning signs to develop, then we would be able to create an accurate prediction.

March 25, 1948

On the morning of the 25th, we noticed a pattern on the charts that almost exactly matched the morning of the 20th -sunshine and a clear day. Obviously, it was a "threat" day. We took this news to our CO. After we explained the situation, he asked if we were going to sound the Vortex Alert. If we did this, then it meant that all the personnel at the base would quickly group together and deploy the Vortex Net. After that, specially trained marines would be sent through the Vortex with a jeep, a packet of condoms, three starter pistols and 18 sticks of dynamite. To sound this alert, and then have it turn out to be a false alarm, would get us in a heap of trouble. I was uneasy until Wilcox spoke up.

"Well... It does look a lot like the 20th."

"I guess," I replied. "We don't really know, sir. We're from sunny LA."

"You don't have storms in California?" the major asked.

"Not in sunny LA." Wilcox replied sheepishly, eyes downcast.

The major insisted that we make a decision, so we went ahead with the Vortex Alert. The time was 2:50pm. As it turned out, we were correct - except what hit us that evening wasn't a Vortex, it was an ordinary tornado. We had inadvertently placed the first tornado warning and, therefore, set up a clear and accurate method for predicting tornados - saving thousands of lives and millions of dollars in property.

As I write this, it is March 20th, 1998. Fifty years since the events leading up to our historic tornado prediction began. I have returned to Tinker AFB with Wilcox and Dervishire for a reunion. It's good to see my old friends again.

We are only a few seconds from the exact time the Vortex woke me up 50 years ago. It should be a -

(Item 67541, recovered grid ref. AB 765 478. 14:35 on 3/21/98. Pocket-sized notepad, torn.)

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History Week: Meteor!
by nacho

In 1998, skywatchers and astronomers alike anxiously gathered beneath their telescopes, binoculars and skirts of their mammas. The event: The possible return of the Leonid meteor storm. The date was November 17th and 18th, and scientists hoped for a repeat of the greatest meteor storm in history - the 1833 Leonids storm, or, the "Night of Raining Fire," as it was known in Germany. Feuernacht shocked the world, led to the creation of religious cults, and is directly responsible for Andrew Jackson's "No black Catholics" policy, which created social tension in the United States and, ultimately, led directly to the Civil War.

Let's get in the time machine with Yesterday's Weather staff reporter, Webmaster Leff, and take a ride back to 1833. Hopefully Leff is wearing pants today.

Day Of Judgment!

1833, a cold November night in Anytown, USA. You have just gone to bed after slaughtering Cherokee children and raping Sioux women. Your slaves work hard on the bubblegum trees, and you have lived through another day without getting a spot of dirt on your impeccably white suit. You twirl your handlebar moustache and anally rape the Negro houseboy while tapping your cane against the urn holding the ashes of your father, Colonel Renoir Lafayette, the famed Revolutionary war hero who, at the age of 15, rode through the streets of Boston shouting, "Those bloody upstarts have seized the tea shipment! To arms! To arms!"

Only a few hours after you head to bed, you are awakened by a great commotion in the streets. A fracas, you think to yourself, brought on by the Abolitionist schoolteacher who shows too much ankle. Then someone is pounding on your door. At the same instant, you see flares of light outside of your window. The town is afire! You race to the window and look down. Crowds are milling in streets, shouting and pointing upwards. Tis not the town, tis the heavens! The heavens aflame! Streaks of light scream past in a deafening roar, the backdraft from the alien saucers whipping down and knocking people to the ground, scorching the thatched roofs and frightening the cattle. Several women lie down and give birth on the spot - especially strange, as they are not pregnant! It is Judgment Day! YOU ARE GOING TO DIE!

Yes, scenes like this played out in every American community on the night of November 12th, 1833. The 1833 Leonids storm was the greatest of it's kind since the days of Vulva, where Roman Gladiators were charged with the task of lassoing passing meteors and cracking them open with giant, silver hammers. For the first time, the study of meteors was placed on astronomers' agendas, right beneath the need to disprove the "cheese moon" theory.

On this night, conditions were ideal. Most of North America enjoyed clear skies, and the cosmic eruption in the early hours was visible to all. Tens of thousands of meteors appeared and brilliant fireballs rivaled the moon. Smoke trails snaked through the sky. Up till this point, people had thought meteors were caused by "frog storms," lakes that had suddenly erupted due to geothermal blasts in the unorganized territories. Amphibians, as was believed at the time, maintained a unique buoyancy once airborne and had a tendency to rain down on hermits and mining communities.

While scientists watched this supposed "frog storm" with fascination, local reports indicated widespread panic amongst the general populace. A South Carolina slaveholder wrote about his experience in the South Carolina Mercantile Herald:

"My slumber was disturb'd by dis~tressing calls from my Negroes. They are usually a quiet lot, but on this night they dost hath a cacophones (sic) roar. I mov'd out to the verandah and I shouted, 'Why dost thou shoutest so?' They then pre~ceded to call out for mercy, shouting prayers to their heathen, Negro god. I took my sword up~on me and began laying about with a mightily good thrashing to the nearest of the babbling brutes. Then I saw what appeared to be angels in the sky. Several hundred hundreds of lights doth appear, and I knew that my actions were sacred to God. I expired thirty expensive brutes that night to show my faith!"

Not Judgment Day!

Of course, it was not Judgment Day. This might be due to the fact that there is no such thing as a "Judgment Day," but, more importantly, the meteor storm was nothing new. People had seen it before. But, in 1833, after the Educational Purification practices put into effect by Thomas Jefferson in 1802, there was no "official" history beyond 1781.

The storm also contributed to several millenarian religious revivals - a blossoming psychosis in 1830's U.S. that is responsible for the script idea for Poltergeist II. Many of these millenarian sects remain today, like the Catholics.

Eventually, after several weeks of anarchy and mass hysteria, scientists uncovered the truth. As it turns out, the Leonids storm had been returning to earth every 30 years. Only three other displays, however, rivaled that of the 1833 show. First reported by Leonidite hunters on cave walls, the storm had been part of human history from the very beginning. The Leonidites were pottery makers and artists, driven into the ocean by advancing Mongol hordes in 1456 BC. Or something...we don't really know. But they did give their name to the meteorites. That's the important thing.

Subsequent storms have all been disappointing, as was the 1998 storm. But, hopefully in 2028, when history is once again forgotten, the world will be pitched over the edge of anarchy by the next Leonids visitation.
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