@@@@@ @   @ @@@@@    @     @ @@@@@@@   @       @  @@@@@ @@@@@ @@@
         @   @   @ @        @ @ @ @    @       @     @   @   @   @   @  @
         @   @@@@@ @@@@     @  @  @    @        @   @    @   @   @   @   @
         @   @   @ @        @     @    @         @ @     @   @   @   @  @
         @   @   @ @@@@@    @     @    @          @      @@@@@ @@@@@ @@@

                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 10/30/98 -- Vol. 17, No. 18

       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 2E-537  732-957-6330 robmitchell@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
       201-447-3652 for details.  The New Jersey Science Fiction Society
       meets irregularly; call 201-652-0534 for details, or check
       http://www.interactive.net/~kat/njsfs.html.  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.fortunecookie.net/reading_list/johnglenn/johnglenn.htm.
       John Glenn reading list.  [-ecl]

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

       2. Mark Leeper's  Toronto  International  Film  Festival  coverage,
       which was originally scheduled to run as six parts, will now run at
       least eight.  [-ecl]

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

       3. A certain beer company (who I have no intention of plugging) has
       registered  themselves  as  the official sponsor of the Millennium.
       Does this mean that without their sponsorship the Millennium  won't
       come?  Maybe that is the way to avoid the Year 2000 Bug?  I want to
       know whom they are giving the sponsorship money to.  [-mrl]

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

       4. This notice would not be complete  without  some  discussion  of
       this  event  that occurred sixty years ago this very night.  Sunday
       night, October 30, 1938, the country was  already  jittery  at  the
       events  going  on in Europe.  It looked like Adolf Hitler was going
       to pull Europe into a huge war.   Orson  Welles  decided  that  his
       Mercury  Theater on the radio would do a somewhat sensational radio
       play.  The Mercury Theater did radio adaptations of  classic  works
       of  literature.   They  had  done A TALE OF TWO CITIES and TREASURE
       ISLAND--that  sort  of  thing.   They  had  already  received  good
       critical  response to their production of DRACULA, done some months
       earlier.  They decided to return to the horror for Halloween.  More
       specifically  they  would  to  do  a  major work of science fiction
       horror, an adaptation of H. G. Wells's WAR OF THE WORLDS.

       Howard Koch wrote a script for the radio play.  Koch would later go
       into  writing screenplays for films including CASABLANCA.  The play
       was written with a major stylistic change from  the  other  Mercury
       Theater  plays.   All  but  the last third of the story was done in
       what we now call "real time" as if  it  was  happening  live.   The
       story was given all the realism the studio production could muster.

       The play was made to sound  like  standard  radio  broadcasting  of
       Raymond  Raquello  and  his orchestra from the Meridian Room of the
       Hotel Park Plaza.  The dance music was  repeatedly  interrupted  by
       fake  new  broadcasts  of explosions on the planet Mars and a great
       flaming object falling in Grovers Mills, New  Jersey.   The  object
       unscrewed  as  a  reporter told the audience.  He went closer for a
       look inside.  "Good  heavens,  something's  wriggling  out  of  the
       shadow like a gray snake.  Now it's another one, and another.  They
       look like tentacles to me.  I can see the thing's body.  It's large
       as a bear and it glistens like wet leather.  But that face.  It ...
       it's indescribable.  I can hardly force myself to keep  looking  at
       it.   The eyes are black and gleam like a serpent.  The mouth is V-
       shaped with saliva dripping from its  rimless  lips  that  seem  to
       quiver  and  pulsate....  The thing is raising up.  The crowd falls
       back.   They've  seen  enough.   This  is  the  most  extraordinary
       experience.   I can't find words.  I'm pulling this microphone with
       me as I talk.  I'll have to stop the description until I've taken a
       new  position. Hold on, will you please, I'll be back in a minute."
       Soon the fictional Martians were attacking people  with  heat  rays
       that burned the flesh from their bodies.

       People already nervous  about  the  possibility  of  war  panicked.
       People  armed  themselves to fight the Martians; they jammed roads;
       one woman was found ready to take sleeping pills rather than go  by
       the  heat  ray.  An inoffensive water tower thought to be a Martian
       war machine was riddled with bullets.  People  hid  in  attics  and
       cellars.

       In the years that followed Welles would always put an innocent look
       on  his  face  and  claim that he never intended for the play to be
       taken seriously.  Others  would  claim  that  there  were  frequent
       reminders  that  it  was  only  a  play.  The original broadcast is
       easily available and I have heard it several times.  I think Welles
       was not being honest.  The real-time segment is about forty minutes
       and runs uninterrupted.  There are no reminders that the  story  is
       not  real.  Welles made every effort to make the earlier segment as
       believable as he could manage.  My suspicion was that  he  expected
       the  audience  to  believe what they were hearing and stay in their
       seats until the ride was over.  Even in the broadcast he said  that
       he  could  not soap everybody's windows so did the next best thing.
       Most people agree what he did was even more effective than  soaping
       windows.   He  probably was more successful than he really intended
       at making the story believable.

       That was six decades ago tonight.  Happy Halloween.  [-mrl]

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

       5. THE MIGHTY (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule:  Two  outcast  boys,   one   learning-
                 impaired  but  physically  imposing,  the other
                 intelligent but physically handicapped, form  a
                 close  friendship  in  this moving family film.
                 Max and Kevin help  each  other  through  their
                 personal  problems  and together make one whole
                 and  formidable  person.   While  the  plot  is
                 predictable,  the  film  is  substantial and as
                 entertaining for an adult as it would be for  a
                 teen.  Rating: 7 (0 to 10), +2 (-4 to +4)

       Nobody expects very much of Max Cane (Eldon Henson) the  son  of  a
       man  in prison for murder.  Max himself is learning impaired and is
       spending his third year in the seventh grade.  Nature has not  been
       kind  to  Max  who  is big, mean-looking, and rather ugly.  Kids in
       school call him Killer Cane,  (perhaps  an  allusion  to  the  Buck
       Rogers  character;  there  are other science fiction allusions).  A
       local hoodlum gang, The Dog House Boys, are not sure if  they  want
       to pick on him or if they want him to join their ranks.  Max's life
       is somewhat less than satisfying, living with his dour grandparents
       (Harry  Dean  Stanton  and Gena Rowlands) and getting the knocks he
       does at school.  Then a new boy moves in next door.  This is  Kevin
       Dillon  (Kieron  Culkin)  with  a  sadly twisted body and a genuine
       intellect.  Kevin lives with his mother  Gwen  (Sharon  Stone)  and
       does  "kid-intellectual  things"  like  reading  and  playing  with
       scientific toys.  A birth defect has left Kevin with a  bent  spine
       and an inability to walk without his crutches.  Neither boy is much
       good at making friends, but Kevin  immediately  sees  that  Max  is
       almost a perfect complement to himself.  Where he is strongest, Max
       is weakest; where he is weakest, Max is strongest.  But Max has  no
       interest  in  being friends with his bookish neighbor and Kevin has
       to bribe him with money to act as his legs.

       Max is a poor reader and is given Kevin for a reading tutor.  Kevin
       has  Max  read  Sir  James Knowles's LEGENDS OF KING ARTHUR AND HIS
       KNIGHTS and uses it to inspire Max to  read  like  no  professional
       teacher  has  been able to.  Max carries Kevin on his shoulders and
       together they become one person  whom,  after  the  style  of  King
       Arthur, they dub Freak the Mighty.  Then time and again their frame
       their friendship in Arthurian terms, as if they  are  a  knight  in
       quest  of  adventure.   Together  each  is  able  to face up to his
       personal problems and either overcome them or accept  them.   While
       the film travels a predictable course, it is a credible one.

       This is director Peter Chelsom's third film  and  he  seems  to  do
       something  entirely  different  each  time.   His  HEAR MY SONG was
       likable nostalgic comedy set in London  and  Ireland.   His  second
       film FUNNY BONES was a very dark and strange look into the world of
       the stand-up comic mostly taking place in bleak Liverpool.  Now  he
       tells  the  story  about friendship set in South Cincinnati.  Eldon
       Henson is a good choice for Max and is certainly not the  appealing
       sort  of young actor one generally sees in film.  On the other hand
       Kieron Culkin  is  obviously  a  Culkin  but  one  who  is  not  so
       saccharine  as  his  brother  Macaulay.  Sharon Stone is making the
       transition from glamorous actress to character  player  skillfully.
       One  sees  little of her previous sensationalist roles in her Gwen.
       Here she  does  a  forty-ish  mother  with  real  strength.   Max's
       grandparents  are  supposed  to  be  as  humorless as the people in
       "American Gothic," but they are played by Harry  Dean  Stanton  and
       Gena  Rowlands.  The one problem in that casting is that Harry Dean
       Stanton has a hard time looking humorless.  Even when he is  trying
       to be serious there is always a twinkle in his eye.

       THE MIGHTY is a Canadian production with a  screenplay  by  Charles
       Leavitt,  based  on the novel FREAK THE MIGHTY by Rodman Philbrick.
       It is broken into chapters, like a book, and narrated by Max.   The
       score  is melodic with a strong Irish influence that seems a little
       out of place with non-Irish characters and the Ohio setting.   John
       De  Borman's camera seems to see Cincinnati as a city of hard steel
       bridges and concrete, just over the hill from the boys' homes.

       This is really not simply a children's film but a family  film  and
       one  that  adults can enjoy.  It had very good word of mouth at the
       Toronto International Film Festival (though it was not one  of  the
       films I saw there) and deservedly so.  I rate it a 7 on the 0 to 10
       scale and a +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

       6. THE CELEBRATION (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: It is Helge's 60th  birthday  and  his
                 whole  family has turned out to celebrate.  But
                 as people get drunker  things  are  things  are
                 going to be said and things will be done.  This
                 will be the pivotal day in  the  life  of  this
                 family.   THE  CELEBRATION has a slow start and
                 takes a long time to get going, but  there  are
                 some powerful moments.  Like BREAKING THE WAVES
                 this film uses the  conventions  of  Dogma  95.
                 THE CELEBRATION is a very mixed bag.  Rating: 6
                 (0 to 10), 1 (-4 to +4)

       New York Critics: 11 positive, 0 negative, 3 mixed

       The audience tittered when before the film a certificate was  shown
       saying the film followed Dogma 95.  Indeed, even the filmmakers who
       subscribe to Dogma 95 do not know if it is serious.  Dogma 95 is  a
       Danish  movement in filmmaking that is a reaction to over-polished,
       unrealistic Hollywood films.  Films made with Dogma 95  conventions
       are  shot  generally  with  a  hand-held camera with natural sound.
       Shooting is done on location rather than at a studio.   The  effect
       of the unsteadied hand-held camera give THE CELEBRATION the feel of
       a sound home movie, but the lack of music gives it also some of the
       immediacy of a stage play.  My wife claimed that BREAKING THE WAVES
       made her seasick and this film did much the same.  It clearly has a
       very  positive  effect  by  fighting  burgeoning film budgets.  The
       crudeness of the production  adds  a  certain  credibility  to  the
       story.   Like  monochrome it contributes to the mood.  And oddly an
       unfinished photographic style gives a film more credibility in  the
       same way that saturated Technicolor makes it less credible.

       THE CELEBRATION is made with Dogma 95 conventions and like Dogma 95
       it  is  a  mixed bag of positive and negative touches.  The film is
       105 minutes, but seems longer because it takes almost  an  hour  to
       get  to  the  serious content.  By the time one gets to the serious
       content, one has almost forgotten the blur of people in  the  first
       hour.   Lost is characterization that would be interesting once one
       could place the characters in the main story line.  In  the  spirit
       of  Dogma  95  parsimony the film has a minimum of music--the first
       music in THE CELEBRATION is a music box heard over the end-titles.

       It is Helge's 60th birthday  and  the  entire  extended  family  is
       gathering  to  attend  a  gala  party  at  a  hotel  Helge (Henning
       Moritzen)  manages.   Arriving  are  older  son  Christian  (Ulrich
       Thomsen),  younger  son  Michael  (Thomas  Bo  Larsen),  and middle
       daughter Helene (Paprika Steen).   The  fourth  child,  Christian's
       twin  sister  had committed suicide some time earlier.  We see some
       family tensions, but at first they do not amount to much.   Finally
       the  banquet  begins  and the children start toasting their father.
       Christian's toast starts fulsome and  typical  of  what  one  would
       expect, but in the middle he throws in an accusation that Helge had
       sexually molested him and Linda.  People do not know what  to  make
       of  this  little  piece  of unpleasantness.  If Christian will only
       apologize the party can continue, but each time Christian  makes  a
       speech  he broadens on the accusation.  What is there to do so that
       the party can go on?

       Once the story gets going the drama is powerful and  has  overtones
       of  American  scandal  politics  making  it  much more topical than
       director and  co-writer  Thomas  Vinterberg  could  have  expected.
       Though  the  story  loses some of its potential impact by resolving
       whether the accusations are true, there is a very good play in  the
       second  half  of  this  film.   If  Vinterberg had started with the
       banquet and elaborated on people's reactions this could have been a
       very  powerful  piece of social commentary.  As it is it wastes too
       much of the viewer's time getting where it needed to  go  and  then
       never sufficiently develops characters like Helge's wife.

       This is an okay film that missed its opportunities to be  a  really
       powerful  experience.  While Dogma 95 will turn off some users, the
       film's taking too long to get to its  real  story  is  its  biggest
       flaw.   I rate it a 6 on the 0 to 10 scale and a +1 on the -4 to +4
       scale.  [-mrl]

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

       7. MAMALOSHEN (a theater review by Mark R. Leeper):

       "Mamaloshen" is Yiddish for "the mother language."  It is Yiddish's
       affectionate  name  for itself.  And when you are in a country with
       an unfamiliar and bewildering language one does feel  an  affection
       for  the  familiar and comforting strains of one's native language.
       So at its best Mandy Patinkin's short but sweet  stage  performance
       MAMALOSHEN  is  much  more  than  the singing of a cycle of Yiddish
       songs.  It is a textured view of the Jewish immigrant experience in
       the early 20th century.  The songs, mostly in Yiddish with a little
       English sprinkled in, are a look--or rather a listen--into  several
       facets of life.  One song will be a mother's humorous lament caring
       for her bickering children.   Another  looks  at  the  story  of  a
       sweatshop  worker  who  gets  fed  up and goes on strike.  And what
       besides sing do they do for entertainment?  Well there is a Yiddish
       song  to  the  tune of "Take Me Out to the Ball Game."  And with so
       much Yiddish music how could we  possibly  miss  having  a  wedding
       scene complete with the breaking of the glass.

       One might well ask how does  one  know  what  songs  in  a  totally
       foreign  language  are  about.   So what's so totally foreign about
       Yiddish?  In the  first  place  Jewish  immigrants  peppered  their
       language  with  English  phrases.   What is not English is in large
       part from the German with a high number  of  cognates--recognizable
       sound-alike   words.   And  each  song  gets  a  five  or  six-word
       description flashed  on  the  stage.   And  finally  there  is  Mr.
       Patinkin's  expressive performance containing no small component of
       acting talent.  So rather than sitting  there  and  thinking  "nice
       music,  I  wonder  what it means" the audience is swept up into the
       world of the Jewish immigrant.  One is immersed in the world of New
       York's  Lower East Side without ever hearing the phrase "Lower East
       Side."  What one does not recognize in the music adds some  air  of
       mystery, but nothing confusing or unpleasant.

       What is confusing however is the mixing in  of  more  recent  music
       from      Simon     and     Garfinkle     to     MARY     POPPINS's
       "Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious."   Some  of  this   is   quite
       melodic, but it pulls us roughly from the nostalgic trance Patinkin
       has created and does it for no apparent  reason.   When  the  music
       mixes  in  "Take  Me Out to the Ballgame" or "God Bless America" it
       emphasizes the dual-allegiance of immigrants, hanging onto the  old
       loyalties  and  developing  new  loyalties  for  the  new.  But the
       experience loses its authenticity with obvious  anachronisms.   And
       with  a  total performance-length less than 70 minutes one hates to
       give up the time to anything inauthentic.

       The story is  that  Joseph  Papp  asked  Patinkin  to  perform  one
       authentic  Yiddish song for the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research.
       When he heard the expression and  emotion  Patinkin  put  into  his
       Yiddish singing he told Patinkin "This is what you should be doing.
       This is your job."  And indeed if Yiddish had maintained more of  a
       following over this century this indeed might well be what Patinkin
       would be doing.  But Yiddish has been a dying  language  in  1900s.
       That is because the Holocaust in large part murdered it and because
       the founding of Israel reintroduced Hebrew as a competing  language
       for the Jewish people.  Not just a language, but a literature and a
       culture were in danger of being lost to the ages.  It has  taken  a
       few  stubborn  people  to hang on to Yiddish and revive it.  But if
       Jews were not a stubborn people, they would probably not  still  be
       Jews.   And  a  song  cycle  of  Yiddish songs--well mostly Yiddish
       songs--still packs an auditorium.  [-mrl]

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

       8. The 1998 Toronto International Film Festival (film  reviews  and
       commentary by Mark R. Leeper) (part 4 of 8)

       09/14/98

       Up and out.  Breakfast from McDonalds (to get some protein).   This
       is the first film we will see with Kate.

       ELIZABETH (British-Indian)

       CAPSULE: The first hour is beautifully  realized.   In  the  second
       hour  the  writing gets a little muddled and the style becomes less
       original.  Still, this story  of  the  coming  to  power  of  Queen
       Elizabeth is enthralling.  She is a bit too much a 1990s woman, but
       the photography is very good.  Rating: 8 (0 to 10), high +2 (-4  to
       +4)

          - Directed by Shekhar Kapur.  Unusual to see an Indian directing
            a film about a British monarch.
          - Very powerful telling of the rise to  power  of  Elizabeth  I.
            The  first  hour  was  spellbinding.  The director filmed with
            real power.  By the second  hour  the  writing  had  gotten  a
            little muddled.
          - David Hirschfelder (SHINE) provides a very melodic score.
          - Many overhead shots to show the  size  of  the  buildings  and
            smallness of people.  Photography kept dark.  Many scenes done
            in rich blacks and reds.
          - Somehow reminiscent of a Hieronymous Bosch painting with  some
            of its weird and powerful images.
          - False move in showing Elizabeth practice an argument  using  a
            technique  like would be used to show outtakes.  It seems like
            too modern an editing technique.
          - Elizabeth begins as a pawn and learns  to  fend  for  herself.
            Deciding best way to be rid of Elizabeth, Queen Mary instructs
            a bishop, "Your Grace will find some proof of her treachery."
          - Very harrowing and haunting scene of an execution by  burning.
            Do not bring young children.
          - Wolsingham (Geoffrey Rush) is Elizabeth's Secret  Service  and
            is ruthless in protecting her.
          - I like films of this period  and  few  are  done  as  well  as
            ELIZABETH.
          - She may be written a little too much like a modern woman.

       JERRY AND TOM (United States)

       CAPSULE: Two used car salesmen are also contract  killers  for  the
       organized crime syndicate.  We see them over the course of years as
       the Mentor loses his edge and the younger learns the skills of  the
       older  man  but  does  not  inherit  his scruples.  Humor and drama
       intermingle.   Joe  Montegna  leads  a  cast  of  familiar  actors.
       Rating: 7 (0 to 10), 2 (-4 to +4)

          - Directed by Saul Rubinek.  Screenplay by Rick Cleveland  based
            on his own one-act play.
          - Older killer Tom (Joe Mantegna) teaches Jerry  (Sam  Rockwell)
            the  nuts  and bolts of the killing profession.  Including how
            to make things like a chainsaw work.  Jerry is a dim bulb.
          - Paternal Tom eventually becomes bothered by  the  ruthlessness
            of his partner Jerry.
          - Many familiar actors  in  small  roles.   Peter  Riegert,  Ted
            Danson,  William  Macy,  Saul  Rubinek  (who  also  directed),
            Charles Durning, Maury Chaykin.
          - Initially a comedy, but the serious elements take over.   They
            could not remain flippant about murder for long.
          - Amazing scene transitions that look like one  continuous  cut;
            yet there are no special effects in the film.  All transitions
            done by building a recreation of the previous set next to  the
            following set.
          - Humorous allusions  to  real  events.  (E.g.  Kennedys,  Jimmy
            Hoffa).

       A Thai noodle house for lunch.

       I WOKE UP EARLY THE DAY I DIED (United States)

       CAPSULE: An escaped mental patient loses the loot  from  a  robbery
       and  goes on a search for it.  This is basically a silent film.  It
       often borrows its style from Chaplin and other comics, plus  adding
       some  manic  style  of  its own.  Do not expect to see much Ed Wood
       here.  Rating: 3 (0 to 10), high -1 (-4 to +4)

          - Hollywood really is the place where dreams come true.  Clearly
            with the renewed popularity of Ed Wood somebody wanted to have
            a new Ed Wood film to cash in with.  Supposedly this is a lost
            script  from  Ed  Wood.  There is little about I WOKE UP EARLY
            THE DAY I DIED to remind one  of  Ed  Wood's  style  (or  lack
            thereof).  If this unfilmed Wood script really exists not much
            of it seems to have made it to the screen.
          - A lot of familiar people in small roles.  Billy  Zane  is  the
            star,  going  from a huge-budget film called TITANIC to a very
            low-budget film.  He is actually better as a comic actor  than
            a serious one.
          - Some scenes could be out of an Ed Wood film  so  either  parts
            really  are by Wood or are made to be in his style.  But there
            are not enough of those.
          - No dialog except on pieces of stock footage.   The  claim  was
            that  this  was  the  first  time  that was done.  Actually it
            wasn't.
          - Tippi Hedren, John Ritter, and Bud Cort in small roles.
          - A lot  of  slapstick.   (Anyone  remember  Wood  even  putting
            intentional   humor   in  a  film?   His  films  usually  took
            themselves very seriously.)
          - Hip and occasionally funny but unlikely to be authentic.   Not
            funny enough to deserve a good rating.

       THE SLEEPWALKER (Argentina with subtitles)

       CAPSULE: In a distopic future in which a  disaster  has  wiped  out
       memories  of 300,000 people, one of the amnesiacs has memories from
       another  time.   They  may  be  the  key  to  finding  a   fugitive
       revolutionary   leader.    Toward  the  end  there  are  a  lot  of
       interesting ideas introduced.  Rating: 6 (0 to 10), high +1 (-4  to
       +4)

          - Directed by Fernando Spiner who co-authored.
          - Fairly prosaic totalitarian society.   Plot  of  secret  rebel
            person or place is fairly familiar.
          - Photography in monochrome with some objects in color  to  call
            attention  to them as in SCHINDLER'S LIST and ZENTROPA (a.k.a.
            EUROPA).
          - Main character Eva awakes in a cathedral and  is  arrested  by
            security  forces.   No memory but an accident with amnesia gas
            has left 300,000 people without memories.   Nobody  knows  who
            was  married  or  related  to whom.  (Did none of these people
            carry identification in this totalitarian state?)
          - New state draws the letter "K" backwards wherever it  appears.
            How did this come about?
          - Government can look at  tapes  of  main  character's  visions,
            memories, and dreams.  Not well done since main character sees
            herself in the third person in her own dreams.
          - The State is looking for Gauna, a poet and resistance  leader.
            Agent Kluge chasing main character decides to join her.  Cross
            country chase.
          - Matte work not good by some countries' standards.  But artwork
            is good.  Some interesting ideas about the future.
          - Toward the end there are a lot of ideas.

       We had a dinner at Flo's  Diner.   The  food  was  supposed  to  be
       genuine  diner  fare.   But I come from New Jersey, which is really
       diner country and Flo's is sort of an idealized version.  The  food
       was  very  good.   I  had  a  hot  turkey  sandwich and fries.  The
       chocolate milkshake was very good and served the old fashioned  way
       in  a  stainless steal pourer.  For desert I had strawberry-rhubarb
       pie.

       [to be continued]  [-mrl]

                                          Mark Leeper
                                          MT 3E-433 732-957-5619
                                          mleeper@lucent.com

            Whoever despises the high wisdom of mathematics
            nourishes himself on delusion and will never still