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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 08/08/97 -- Vol. 16, No. 6

       MT Chair/Librarian:
                     Mark Leeper   MT 3E-433  732-957-5619 mleeper@lucent.com
       HO Chair:     John Jetzt    MT 2E-530  732-957-5087 jetzt@lucent.com
       HO Librarian: Nick Sauer    HO 4F-427  732-949-7076 njs@lucent.com
       Distinguished Heinlein Apologist:
                     Rob Mitchell  MT 2D-536  732-957-6330 rlmitchell1@lucent.com
       Factotum:     Evelyn Leeper MT 3E-433  732-957-2070 eleeper@lucent.com
       Back issues at http://www.geocities.com/Athens/4824
       All material copyright by author unless otherwise noted.

       The Science Fiction Association of Bergen County meets on the
       second Saturday of every month in Upper Saddle River; call
       201-933-2724 for details.  The New Jersey Science Fiction Society
       meets on the third Saturday of every month in Belleville; call
       201-432-5965 for details.  The Denver Area Science Fiction
       Association meets 7:30 PM on the third Saturday of every month at
       Southwest State Bank, 1380 S. Federal Blvd.

       1. URL of the week:
       http://www.geocities.com/Athens/4824/reader9.htm.  My  Readercon  9
       report.  [-ecl]

       ===================================================================

       2. There was a forest I know of where the animals all lived happily
       and  ate  well  for  many years under the rule of a family of noble
       lions.  Every few years the family chose the lion  who  was  to  be
       king  of  the forest.  The animals sometimes wished that they could
       take part in the choosing.  But the king was always a  lion,  noble
       and  strong  and  who  looked out for the animals of the forest and
       made sure they always had plenty to eat.   For  in  a  forest,  the
       animals live by what they can find to eat.

       When the food supplies would run low the  king  would  think  about
       where  to  get more food, and he always thought of something clever
       to find more food someplace.  So the animals were never too unhappy
       with the choice of the king.

       Now the succession of lions one day worked its way to a proud young
       lion named Ballen.  Ballen was anxious to become king of the forest
       because he had all sorts of plans for how the forest would be  run.
       And Ballen's day finally came and he told himself, "Now I really am
       the king of the forest."

       Ballen was first concerned that there might not be enough food  for
       the  lions.   The  forest needed the lion to rule intelligently and
       justly.  If the lions did not eat  well,  was  any  animal  in  the
       forest  safe?  Ballen said that each animal of the forest would eat
       just a little less so there would be more food left  over  for  the
       lions.   But this was just for now.  Surely with a good lion ruling
       the forest, all would have much to eat.  And this was a small price
       to  pay.   With  so many mouths each eating only a little less, the
       lions had plenty of food.  But some animals grumbled that they were
       going  hungry.   Ballen knew that there had to be more food for the
       forest.  He looked off to the south of  the  forest  and  saw  that
       there  was rich farmland.  But it was farmland ruled and cultivated
       by Man.  Ballen sat down and started thinking about Man.   All  the
       animals  of the forest feared Man.  Man was strange and did not act
       like the animals.  But wasn't Man just another animal?  Ballen  had
       heard  the stories of lions sometimes catching and killing a man in
       times of hunger.  Man was a big animal but not a very fast  runner.
       Even  the  little  squirrel  could outrun a big man.  It would be a
       simple matter to take the food from the farm fields  and  bring  it
       back  running  faster than Man could run.  This was a good plan and
       Ballen told the animals that they had to  give  more  food  to  the
       lions to repay them for finding such a good idea.

       For a short time the plan worked and there was more to eat, but Man
       set  traps  for the animals and some animals were injured.  In some
       fields new fences kept out the animals.  In the end very little new
       food  was  found  because of Ballen's plan to raid Man.  But Ballen
       and the other lions said the idea was good even if it did not  work
       out  and  they  celebrated  with  a banquet while the other animals
       looked sadly on.

       Ballen next noticed that the floor of the forest was  covered  with
       brown  leaves.   Any  animal  that was hungry could eat his fill of
       leaves, Ballen reasoned.  This, Ballen decided was  a  really  good
       plan  since  there  were so many leaves on the floor of the forest,
       more than anyone could count.  For such a good plan, Ballen decided
       that  he  should get rewarded with more food.  But when the animals
       tried to eat the leaves they found that they  the  leaves  did  not
       taste very good and were dry.  In fact there was nothing nourishing
       about the leaves.  But Ballen still  insisted  that  he  should  be
       rewarded for such a good idea.

       The problem with the  forest,  Ballen  decided  one  day,  is  that
       animals  can  hunt for food only during the day.  When the sun goes
       down, the animals all find beds in  the  forest  leaves--well  that
       they  were good for--or return to their burrows.  The answer was to
       look for food all day and all night.  But what animal would stay up
       all   night?    Ballen   thought  and  thought.   Then  he  had  an
       inspiration.  "I am suddenly brilliant," he decided.  "The  animals
       that  stay up all night are bats.  Let us bring bats to the forest.
       Oh, this is a good plan, and I deserve a big reward."  Ballen  went
       to  the  bats  and told them he wanted them to leave their cave and
       come and live in the forest with the rest of the animals.  "We  are
       perfectly  happy  living in our cave," the bats told him.  "No, you
       are a lot better off in the forest where all animals look  out  for
       all other animals.  The bigger the forest, the more all the animals
       can take care of all the other  animals.   Come  and  live  in  our
       trees,"  Ballen  told  them.   "We  are  not  going," said the bats
       firmly.  But that was not that.

       So that night, when all the bats were out hunting  insects,  Ballen
       and the other lions climbed the hill over the bats' cave and pushed
       down stones until the door of the cave was covered.  When the  bats
       returned  to their cave they found they could not get in.  They had
       no choice but to go and live in the high branches of the  trees  of
       the forest, though it was never so cozy as their cave.

       The coming of the bats was celebrated by the lions  who  made  sure
       there  was  a  big banquet and every lion ate well.  And Ballen ate
       the best of all.  But the animals of the forest had  less  to  eat.
       And  in  the  weeks  that  followed the animals wondered why Ballen
       wanted the bats.   Yes  they  hunted  at  night,  but  they  hunted
       insects.   The  bats  catching  insects  helped  none  of the other
       animals.  And  the  bats  complained  all  the  time  about  living
       unprotected in trees.

       Finally Ballen decided the bats were not such  a  good  idea  after
       all.   The bats would complain about living in the trees, the other
       animals would complain that bringing in the bats did not  help  the
       forest.   Indeed  it was hard work ruling the whole forest.  Ballen
       announced one day that the bats would  all  have  to  go.   And  in
       addition, all the animals east of the forest stream would also have
       a new king.  Ballen told himself this was a very  good  idea  since
       there  were a lot of animals east of the stream, but there was less
       food.  With more food and fewer mouths, Ballen could  have  a  nice
       banquet.   And  he  did  divide up the forest and he did celebrate.
       "Let us have a smaller forest still,"  said  Ballen.   The  problem
       with  our  forest  is that there are STILL too many mouths to feed.
       And many of the mouths belong to bodies that are old and tired  and
       do  not  produce  much food.  Let us make the forest smaller like a
       younger and more vital forest.  So that  was  done  and  there  was
       celebration,  at  least  among the lions, all of whom stayed in the
       forest.  Many of the animals who were chosen to leave had  to  find
       another  forest.  Some had been looked out for by other animals and
       some had looked out for other animals.  For some it was an  unhappy
       day.

       The day came when Ballen had to choose a successor.   And  he  knew
       that  many  of the animals were becoming unhappy with lions, though
       he was not sure just why.  But the lions knew of a leopard who  had
       a  reputation  as  a good hunter, a fast runner, and a good leader.
       With the promise of food, the  leopard  would  come  and  rule  the
       forest.   Ballen  did  not want to give up his place as king of the
       forest just yet.  The leopard would stay in the forest each year in
       the  position  of  chancellor  of  the  forest,  while he was being
       groomed.  He told the animals that  the  leopard  would  soon  rule
       them,  but  he  had some learning to do first.  The leopard was not
       happy, but time, he thought,  would  fix  that.   The  leopard  was
       anxious  to  become  king.   However,  Ballen  was  not  happy.  It
       bothered him more and more that this leopard would  follow  him  as
       king  of  the  forest.  Ballen never really liked leopards, anyway.
       And when he asked the  other  lions,  none  of  them  really  liked
       leopards.

       One day Ballen asked the leopard, "Why do you want to be king?"  "I
       want  to  rule,  I  want food, I want power.  I think I can run the
       forest."  Ballen thought about this answer.  The next day  he  went
       to  the  leopard and said, you know that it is really the lions who
       make decisions in the forest.  A  leopard  can  never  really  lead
       lions.   The  leopard  was angered at first, but he realized Ballen
       had told him the truth.  Then  he  was  only  saddened.   "I  never
       really  thought about that," he said.  "This leopard would not have
       made a good king," Ballen thought to himself.   "You  have  been  a
       good  friend,  and  now  an  understanding  one," said Ballen.  And
       Ballen had a good idea.  "You will have to leave, but you will have
       enough  food  for  life."  Ballen had all the animals of the forest
       bring food and put it in a big pile.  The leopard took  eight  days
       just  taking  away  the  food.   And  nobody knows where he put it.
       Ballen told the animals that this decision was for the good of  the
       forest.   And  they should have been happy to contribute to the big
       food pile because it would mean more food for  all  the  animals  a
       later day.  And Ballen celebrated.

       I heard these tales from an owl who once lived in the forest.   But
       she  has  gone  one  to another forest where there is more food.  I
       never heard if Ballen still ruled or another  of  the  lions.   But
       when  there  is  not  enough food in my forest--and sometimes there
       isn't--I am glad that I am where I am and  not  in  the  owl's  old
       forest.  [-mrl]

            Everything considered, work is less boring
            than amusing oneself.
                                          -- Charles Baudelaire