Alaska’s Mount Redoubt, a 10,197-foot-high volcano located a little over 100 miles from Anchorage, is burbling anew. Witness the ashy stir via the Alaska Volcano Observatory’s three Mount Redoubt webcams; Microkhan’s favorite snaps regular pics from the volcano’s northern flank, though the angle from a nearby seismic station is mighty intriguing, too.
Entries from May 4th, 2009
Redoubt in (Almost) Realtime
May 4th, 2009 · Comments Off on Redoubt in (Almost) Realtime
Tags:Alaska·Mount Redoubt·volcanoes
I, Milkbot
May 4th, 2009 · 5 Comments
Growing up in Los Angeles, I always idealized cow milking. It seemed like such a delightful, salt-of-the-earth activity, with just the right amount of grossness thrown in for good measure. Plus, being the curious sort of bairn, I was always fascinated by the thought of tracing my beloved Kraft Singles back to the source. Turns […]
“The World Meets Nobody Halfway”
May 1st, 2009 · 1 Comment
Let Microkhan go on record as saying that we’ve enjoyed at least one frequently derided Sylvester Stallone flick (the campy-yet-terrifying Cobra). But when it comes to Over the Top, we have no choice but to agree with the masses. Like so many of Sly’s 1980s vehicles, it’s all-too-easy to envision the movie-exec brainstorming that went […]
Tags:arm wrestling·Bad Movie Friday·movies·Over the Top·sports·Sylvester Stallone
“Greater Liberia”
May 1st, 2009 · Comments Off on “Greater Liberia”
The earliest draft of Now the Hell Will Start contained a long passage about the efforts of Sen. Theodore Bilbo (D-Miss.) to deport America’s black population to West Africa. The Bilbo tangent got lost in the shuffle, and probably for the best. But the senator’s vitriol is something to behold, and it’s worth reviving for […]
Tags:Now the Hell Will Start·NtHWS Extras Month·politics·Sally Hemmings·Theodore Bilbo·Thomas Jefferson
Nixon in Ceylon
May 1st, 2009 · Comments Off on Nixon in Ceylon
In 1953, America dispatched Vice-President Richard Nixon to the island nation of Ceylon (still nearly two decades away from being rechristened Sri Lanka). The Eisenhower Administration was mighty worried about reports that Ceylon was shipping strategic materials to newly Communist China, a sign that the former colony might be contemplating an even more dramatic leftward […]
The Novelty of Schizophrenia
May 1st, 2009 · 3 Comments
An intriguing debate (PDF) over whether schizophrenia is a uniquely modern disease. Given the ailment’s genetic origins, Microkhan has long assumed that it’s been with our species since time immemorial. But based on their examination from 15th-century Islamic medical textbooks, a pair of South Carolina doctors disagree: Serefeddin Sabuncuoglu (1385-1470) was a general physician who […]
“…Like Them Dudes in Red Shirts Off Star Trek”
April 30th, 2009 · 4 Comments
Breaking early today to head downtown and catch a screening of Adam. (Thanks, James.) In my absence, enjoy the above slice o’ lyrical genius from MF Doom (or, as he now prefers to be called, DOOM). Any rapper who knows his Star Trek minutiae is worthy of only the highest praise.
Jaundiced for the Cause
April 30th, 2009 · 8 Comments
In today’s edition of NtHWS Extras, we’re taking a look at a nearly forgotten medical tale from World War II: The widespread use of Atabrine to combat malaria, with varying results. This story starts all the way back in the 19th century, with a bunch of Dutch smugglers who brought Cinchona seeds from South America […]
Tags:Atabrine·malaria·medicine·Now the Hell Will Start·NtHWS Extras Month·public health·quinine
The Kobe Bryant of Netball
April 30th, 2009 · 3 Comments
Microkhan’s Australian readers (we have at least two!) may already be familiar with Romelda Aiken’s spectacular exploits on the netball court. She is, after all, the best player on the Queensland Nationals, a lithe and aggressive scoring machine who recently racked up 42 goals in an upset win over the Waikato Bay of Plenty Magic. […]
Tags:Australia·Indonesia·Jamaica·netball·New Zealand·Romelda Aiken·sports
Microkhan’s Bicentennial
April 30th, 2009 · 2 Comments
Just realized that the quickie below on flu terminology was Microkhan’s 200th post. As such, now’s the perfect time to thank y’all who’ve helped build this blog since its early February debut. Really grateful for your daily clicks, given how much time and effort we’ve expended on this rather esoteric project. We’ve got plenty more […]
Tags:housekeeping·YTMND
Know Your Flu Terms
April 30th, 2009 · 1 Comment
What’s the difference between an epidemic, a pandemic, and a mere outbreak? Microkhan gives the skinny here. Apparently the dreaded Osaka flu doesn’t qualify as any of the above, at least in the non-Simpsons universe.
Tags:Osaka flu·public health
The Cannabis Debate, Circa 1894
April 29th, 2009 · Comments Off on The Cannabis Debate, Circa 1894
For today’s edition of NtHWS Extras, we’ll be covering a topic that’s been much in the news as of late: Cannabis laws. Ganja use plays a significant role in Now the Hell Will Start, as it did in the lives of thousands of American GIs during World War II. The book’s main character became a […]
Tags:Assam·British Empire·drugs·India·Indian Hemp Drugs Commission·marijuana·Now the Hell Will Start·NtHWS Extras Month·World War II
Thoughts on Lithium
April 29th, 2009 · 3 Comments
So there’s a fresh stir over Bolivia’s massive lithium reserves, which a French industrialist hopes to tap virtually all by his lonesome. This isn’t news to Microkhan, since we helped coin the term “the Saudi Arabia of lithium” last fall. But the object of our interest back then was Chile, currently the world’s leading lithium […]
Tags:Bolivia·Chile·China·lithium·mining·Salar de Atacama·Salar de Uyuni
Shacked!
April 29th, 2009 · Comments Off on Shacked!
Given that Radio Shack provides one of the least pleasant retail experiences imaginable, this doesn’t surprise me in the slightest. Though I wonder if the employee asked for the customer’s zip code while delivering the beatdown.
“The Palm Beach of Manchuria”
April 29th, 2009 · 4 Comments
The best novel we’ve read so far this year is Ian Buruma’s The China Lover, a criminally underrated fusion of first-rate historical reportage and thoughtful meditation on the nature of art. The book’s backbone is the true-life tale of a Japanese actress-turned-politician, whose career is recounted through the eyes of three lonely, movie-obsessed observers. The […]
Tags:Ian Buruma·Japan·Manchukuo·propaganda·The China Lover·Tokyo Rose·World War II
“A Crushing Insult”
April 28th, 2009 · Comments Off on “A Crushing Insult”
In today’s edition of Now the Hell Will Start Extras Month, we’re going to delve into one of the book‘s main themes: Military segregation during World War II. Time and again in the course of my research, I was struck by the virulence of Jim Crow attitudes within our nation’s armed forces. Despite the desperate […]
Tags:Now the Hell Will Start·NtHWS Extras Month·politics·pseudoscience·World War II
Top-Notch Pigeon Tech
April 28th, 2009 · 2 Comments
With legit cash available on the pigeon-racing circuit, there’s huge demand for gadgets that can ensure fair play. And that’s where Germany’s Unikon comes in, offering the very best in tracking rings, loft antennas, and clocks capable of simultaneously timing 250 birds. A video review of Unikon’s latest clock, the Champ, is available here, via […]
Tags:gadgets·pigeons·technology·Unikon
The Stability of Suicide
April 28th, 2009 · 2 Comments
It’s a bright, gorgeous morning here at Harlem headquarters, which obviously means it’s the perfect time to revisit one of Microkhan’s favorite topics: suicide. The graph above shows the suicide rate in the United States between 1950 and 2005. As you can see, the rate has been remarkably stable over the years, despite growing awareness […]
“…With No One Else in Sight”
April 27th, 2009 · 2 Comments
The great downside of music’s move toward digitization is the end of liner notes, the record industry’s equivalent of YouTube’s “Related Videos” feature. Microkhan fondly recalls discovering Donny Hathaway via the notes from The Chronic; half the hooks on that album were copped from the great-and-troubled legend of Chicago soul. Nowadays, alas, you have to […]
Countdown to Paper
April 27th, 2009 · 10 Comments
As of yesterday, we’ve got one month to go ’til Microkhan’s labor o’ love, Now the Hell Will Start, hits shelves in paperback form. To celebrate this joyous occasion, we’ll be doing a sorta DVD-extras thing from now ’til May 26th. Every day, Microkhan will scoop up some NtHWS-related material off the cutting-room floor, and […]
Tags:Burma Road·Herman Perry·Ledo Road·Now the Hell Will Start·NtHWS Extras Month·Ronald Reagan
Colombo Couture
April 27th, 2009 · 1 Comment
A new, government-approved t-shirt hits Sri Lanka’s capital. Tamils seem highly unamused; read the article’s, um, “impassioned” comments at your own risk.
Daytona for Squabs
April 27th, 2009 · 1 Comment
The winner of the 2009 Mercedes Classic will not, in fact, walk away with a shiny new car. But there are genuine riches at stake in this competition, to be held in the pigeon-racing mecca that is central Oklahoma. By Microkhan’s count, in fact, a sweep of all events could bring a pigeon owner $109,500—more […]
Alone in Samoa
April 27th, 2009 · 2 Comments
Microkhan has often wondered what happens to criminals who, upon completing their prison sentences, are deported to their countries of origin—countries they may well have left when they were just a few days old. A New Zealand broadcaster caught up with one such deportee in Samoa, who says that the experience is (to say the […]
Tags:crime·New Zealand·Samoa·traffic
Medieval Monkeys
April 24th, 2009 · 6 Comments
Microkhan has a longstanding fascination with non-human primates, and so was intrigued to stumble upon the homepage of Kenneth Gouwens, a history professor at UConn. One of Gouwen’s specialties seems tailor-made for us: “Distinctions drawn between humans and simians in the Renaissance and in our own era.” Alas, Microkhan wasn’t able to locate any of […]
Tags:Aberdeen Bestiary·lions·Medieval history·monkeys·primates·tigers
The Migingo Spat
April 24th, 2009 · 2 Comments
To the untrained eye, Migingo Island appears to be no great shakes. It covers just a half-acre’s worth of Lake Victoria, and it’s covered with the tin shacks of fishermen. Yet Kenya and Uganda both covet the ramshackle rock, leading to a border row that threatens to lead to outright war. Ugandan marines overtook the […]
Tags:Africa·British Empire·Kenya·Migingo Island·politics·Uganda
“Too Bad He’s a Killer”
April 24th, 2009 · Comments Off on “Too Bad He’s a Killer”
Microkhan recently opined that it’s best to avoid serial killers who fancy themselves musicians. To our great consternation, alas, the teenage girls of West Java seem to be disregarding this sage advice. They have apparently gone somewhat ga-ga over Verry Idam Henyasyah, a.k.a. “Ryan,” a condemned murderer who’s become an object of myriad schoolgirl crushes. […]
Tags:Charles Manson·crimes·Indonesia·psychology·Verry Idam Henyasyah
“I Still Need Him for Shooting!”
April 23rd, 2009 · Comments Off on “I Still Need Him for Shooting!”
As previously noted this week, Microkhan recently re-watched the great Fitzcarraldo as part of his ongoing screenplay research. Of particular interest was the second half of the film, in which Klaus Kinski’s aspiring rubber baron encounters a tribe of Amazonian headhunters. Since Now the Hell Will Start contains a similar culture clash, we wanted to […]
Tags:Fitzcarraldo·Klaus Kinski·movies·Robert Towne·Werner Herzog
Satellite Saviors
April 23rd, 2009 · 3 Comments
The Bouvet Rames Guyane is arguably the most grueling race on the planet. Solo contestants must literally row across the Atlantic Ocean, from Senegal to French Guiana. Yet even the strongest seafaring Frenchman is no match for Mother Nature, as Remy Alnet discovered about 400 miles from the finish line: I was inside the cockpit […]
Tags:Atlantic Ocean·Bouvet Rames Guyane·Kannad·maritime·Remy Alnet·rescues·SARSAT·satellites·sports
Headhunting in the Balkans
April 23rd, 2009 · 9 Comments
The practice of headhunting is typically associated with pre-colonial Southeast Asia, and for good reason: Prior to 1700, approximately one-third of the region’s populace engaged in the sadistic pastime. But the ritualized lopping off of skulls had its fair share of devotees in Europe, too. The tribes of Montenegro were avid headhunters, primarily targeting Ottoman […]

