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	                Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
	            Club Notice - 01/30/98 -- Vol. 16, No. 31

       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://babelfish.altavista.digital.com/cgi-
       bin/translate.    This  amazingly  useful  tool  does  translations
       between English and any  one  of  French,  Spanish,  Portugese,  or
       German.   They're not great translations, they're not very literary
       translations, but they are sufficient to convey the meaning  fairly
       well.   (I tried it on the beginning of Zola's "J'Accuse" and found
       it useful.  I *really* could have used it when I was getting  error
       messages  from  systems  in France, or submissions in french to the
       newsgroup I moderated.)  [-ecl]

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

       2. Remember when they used to say that the  American  President  is
       the  most  powerful  person in the world?  I remember back to those
       days when he actually was.  I guess he is not any more.  At least I
       overheard  a  conversation  today  in  which a woman was saying she
       really felt betrayed by Clinton.  I am now hearing calls to impeach
       him.   All  this  and  there  is no credible evidence of any wrong-
       doing.  So far there is no real evidence  against  him.   There  is
       only  an  accusation.   No,  I guess that is not even accurate.  At
       this writing there is an accusation that there  is  an  accusation.
       There is a potential accusation.  It is the test of twenty hours of
       illegally obtained tapes of private conversation, and very likely a
       tall  tale.   But  then  I  guess  the  impeachment is still in the
       potential phase also.

       But I guess the important question is whether he  is  guilty.   No,
       let's  be  more precise.  The question is whether he is effectively
       guilty  and  the  answer  is  a  resounding   "yes."    What   does
       "effectively  guilty"  mean?   Well,  let  me  give you an example.
       Would you vote for William Kennedy Smith  for  President?   I  have
       heard  that in a poll most people who remembered his name said that
       they would not.  Wasn't he involved in a rape case?  Yup,  he  sure
       was.   He  was  accused of rape, in fact.  It went to trial and was
       found innocent.  The law said he did not do it.  In fact, here is a
       real trivia question for you, who was his accuser?  I bet you don't
       know.  I know I don't know.  That is because if you bring a  charge
       of  rape  you can legally choose without revealing your name to the
       public.  Alan Dershowitz points out in an editorial that in  France
       if  you  make  a false accusation you are given the punishment that
       the accusee would have gotten, but in the United  States  the  only
       option  is  countersuit.   No countersuit is going to clear William
       Kennedy Smith's name.  I don't know if William Kennedy  Smith  even
       had  political aspirations, but if he is as innocent as he has been
       found to be in a court of law, the power of sexual  accusation  has
       legally  destroyed  any political career he might have had.  It may
       be for very good reason that the law has been set up this way,  but
       it certainly seems like the net result has some problems.  In spite
       of legal innocence, William  Kennedy  Smith  has  effectively  been
       found  guilty.   Neither  he  nor Clinton can ever really clear his
       name.  Once the accusation has made, it is effectively true.

       But even though the President is effectively guilty by  accusation,
       do  I  think  the  actual  misconduct really took place?  I have no
       idea, myself.  The question I ask myself is whether it is  probable
       that  a  President  in  office--someone  fairly intelligent--who is
       already accused of sexual misconduct would  have  so  little  self-
       control?   There  are  those who would like to believe that men are
       not responsible for their actions when it  comes  to  the  opposite
       sex.  It has about as much validity as accusations of PMS behavior.
       But I can tell you that  I  myself  have  been  told  that  I  have
       absolutely  no  self-control  when  it comes to sex.  As this point
       anybody who knows me just swallowed  their  bubble  gum.   It  sure
       makes me sound like I have a more interesting past than I remember.
       Anyway, I was told it by a woman who knew absolutely nothing  about
       me or my behavior; she made the judgment strictly based on the fact
       that I was a male.  And I expect for her there would be little that
       plausibility  arguments would accomplish.  The woman who said it is
       convinced that all men are out to abuse  all  women,  and  one  can
       never  prove  that assertion false.  For my part I am going to wait
       for some hard evidence before I draw any  conclusions.   After  all
       this  is  the  President who has had two or three new accusations a
       week and still nothing has been proven.  That means either he is in
       league  with  the  Devil  or he is just plain milquetoast innocent.
       But in either case next month he will be accused of having sex with
       someone like Tawana Brawley.

       But  now  what  is  the  next  move  for  the  woman  in  question?
       Regardless  of  the  truth  she  has two options.  She can tell the
       American public that that it  was  all  just  a  romantic  fantasy.
       Nobody  will ever trust her again.  Her career will be ruined.  She
       may even  feel  that  she  has  discredited  her  whole  gender  in
       politics.   And  people across the country will assume that she has
       been bought off and really has had an affair  with  the  President.
       Or  she  can  present  herself as a 90s professional woman who like
       many another has had an indescretion with the boss.  She might even
       give  it the spin of striking a blow against imposed, paternalistic
       mores.  I bet you a nickel I know which she'll do.  [-mrl]

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

       3. This week John Updike final novel in his five-installment novel.
       The title is RABBIT IS HASEN PFEFFER.  [-mrl]

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

       4. Top Ten Films of 1997 (film commentary by Mark R. Leeper):

       The following is the list of the ten films that I enjoyed most over
       the year.  I have to admit living in the wilds of New Jersey I have
       not been as active as I might have been in seeking out more obscure
       films  that  might  have  been  more qualified.  This was a year in
       which the multiplexes around  me  seemed  particularly  preoccupied
       with  getting  films  that had large explosions.  In addition there
       are films that will come to my area in  the  next  few  weeks  that
       might  have  made it onto my list.  With that in mind, here are the
       ten best of what I saw this year.

       1. L. A. CONFIDENTIAL: This  is  a  dense,  complex,  multi-layered
       crime story that may just be one of the best films of its kind ever
       made.  Great dialogue,  very  good  plot,  great  characters,  good
       musical  score, great photography. This is one of the most engaging
       film script we have seen in a while.  This is a film to  rank  with
       THE  MALTESE  FALCON  and  CHINATOWN  among  the best of the crime.
       Rating: 9 (0 to 10), high +3 (-4 to +4)

       2. THE ICE STORM: Ang Lee adapts the  novel  by  Rick  Moody.   Two
       neighboring  families,  each  in its own way dysfunctional, are the
       study of this film set over Thanksgiving  weekend  in  1973.   Both
       families  seem  obsessed  with  sex, but different people use it in
       different ways and react differently.  Lee very finely defines  his
       characters  and the film adds up to a powerful experience.  Rating:
       9 (0 to 10), +3 (-4 to +4)
       3. CONTACT: The first contact with an alien race has a huge  impact
       on  society.   We see that impact through the eyes of one woman who
       devoted her life to the search for extraterrestrial life.  The film
       adaptation  of  Carl  Sagan's CONTACT is in some ways a betrayal of
       Sagan's philosophy and  has  some  hefty  revisions  to  the  book.
       Knowing that I would like to down-rate CONTACT, but I have to admit
       what remains is a substantial and intelligent  film.   CONTACT  was
       produced  by Sagan and his wife, Ann Druyan, and that may be why so
       much of the film was on-track.  While not perfect, it is  the  best
       science fiction film we have gotten in a good long time.  Rating: 8
       (0 to 10), low +3 (-4 to +4)

       4. THE SWEET HEREAFTER: An opportunistic lawyer comes  to  a  rural
       Canadian town in which a school bus accident has killed many of the
       town's children.  With a  smooth  sincere-sounding  line  he  turns
       grief  into  anger in the hopes of building a class action lawsuit.
       Atom Egoyan's non-linear telling gets in the way a little, but this
       is  a  powerful statement about the law and about grief.  Rating: 8
       (0 to 10), low +3 (-4 to +4)

       5. ROSEWOOD: This is a powerful historical  account  with  an  epic
       feel  made  on  a subject that has never been adequately covered by
       film.  This story of a race massacre in 1923 Florida is intelligent
       and  exciting,  a  difficult mix.  Stylistically similar to MATEWAN
       and perhaps even better, John Singleton's film changes the truth  a
       little,  but  brings  a  an  important  incident  in  American race
       relations to audiences who  would  not  know  about  it  otherwise.
       Rating: 8 (0 to 10), low +3 (-4 to +4)

       6. AMISTAD: Steven Spielberg's account of the slave mutiny of  1839
       and its legal aftermath is certainly a good historical film, filled
       with facts and historical details.   Occasionally  it  is  actually
       powerful.   But  it lacks some of the emotional impact of THE COLOR
       PURPLE and SCHINDLER'S LIST and its pacing is off. Still, it  is  a
       useful and engaging source of historical perspective.  Rating: 8 (0
       to 10), high +2 (-4 to +4)

       7. EVITA: The on-again, off-again history of attempts to bring this
       Webber  and  Rice  musical  to  the  screen finally culminates in a
       spectacular film starring Madonna, Antonio  Banderas  and  Jonathan
       Pryce.   By  now  the  music  is mostly familiar.  The politics are
       superficially explained, but the visuals give the film a great epic
       feel.   It  is hard to imagine Madonna will ever have as powerful a
       role or be as good in another film.  Rating: 8 (0 to 10),  high  +2
       (-4 to +4)

       8. EVE'S BAYOU: A ten-year-old Creole girl grows up during one  hot
       Louisiana summer.  Director and writer Kasi Lemmons draws some very
       nicely defined characters for whom the viewer has real interest and
       empathy. One of the most touching and engrossing films of the year.
       It is also very well photographed with some very memorable  images.
       Rating: 7 (0 to 10), +2 (-4 to +4)

       9. THE WINGS OF THE DOVE: One of Henry James's lesser novels  makes
       one  of  the  more  entertaining films based on his works.  A woman
       whose guardian will not let her marry her poor lover plots to  have
       the lover seduce a dying heiress so he will inherit her money.  The
       story meanders a bit in going where the viewer knows it  eventually
       will,  but the view is nice along the way.  Rating: 7 (0 to 10), +2
       (-4 to +4)

       10. CHASING AMY: A pair of 20-something  buddies  who  co-author  a
       comic  book  are  split  over one's interest in a gay woman.  Kevin
       Smith takes what could have been rather trivial and  self-important
       material  handles it with a light touch, making a film that is both
       engagingly serious and genuinely funny.  Fans of Kevin  Smith  will
       not  be  surprised  that  the film is also at times fairly raunchy.
       The frank and often sexual dialog  is  realistic,  but  will  be  a
       turnoff to some.  Rating: 7 (0 to 10), +2 (-4 to +4)

       [-mrl]

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

       5. Three Books by Russell  Hoban:  THE  MOMENT  UNDER  THE  MOMENT,
       Jonathan  Cape, ISBN 0-224-03314-X, 1992, 260pp, L14.99; THE SECOND
       MRS. KONG, Universal Edition, ISBN 0-900938-75-7,  1994,  35pp,  no
       price  indicated; THE LAST OF THE WALLENDAS AND OTHER POEMS, Hodder
       Children's Books, ISBN  0-340-66766-4,  1997,  80pp,  L10.99  (book
       reviews by Evelyn C. Leeper):

       By looking at the header you can see my user interface doesn't even
       provide  me  with a way to type the British "pound sterling" symbol
       (or is it sterling still), so why, one might ask,  am  I  reviewing
       books priced in them?

       Welcome to the world of global commerce.

       The fact is that books published anywhere are pretty much available
       anywhere  (assuming  censors aren't busy opening packages).  In the
       last month, I've ordered books from three continents,  including  a
       British  book  from Australia and a Czech book, written in English,
       from a bookseller in the Netherlands.  So it is  actually  possible
       for you to get these books, even if you live in a keyboard-deprived
       country.

       Aside Number 1: Why do I find  myself  ordering  Britisher  Stephen
       Fry's  book from Australia, while the only place to get Aussie Greg
       Egan's new work is Britain?

       Aside Number 2: My palmtop, on which I write  this,  does  actually
       have international currency symbols.  Unfortunately, I can't upload
       it to my mainframe and have it work.

	                   THE MOMENT UNDER THE MOMENT

       This collection of eight stories, fourteen essays, and  a  libretto
       is  a  must  for  any Hoban fan.  For one thing, it's the only time
       I've seen his non-fiction available anywhere.  The  best  piece  to
       start  with  is  probably  "The  Bear in Max Ernst's Bedroom or The
       Magic Wallet," the keynote address for the  Sixth  Annual  Literary
       Conference  of  the Manitoba Writers' Guild in 1987.  In this Hoban
       talks about fiction and  reality,  and  writing  and  risk.   Other
       essays  relate  Hoban's  early  life--his background, what he read,
       what he thought about what he read, and how  all  that  shaped  him
       into  what he is today.  One or two have implied prerequisites; for
       example, his introduction to  HOUSEHOLD  STORIES  by  the  Brothers
       Grimm would have meant more to me if I had read the stories, but my
       childhood was squandered on Jules Verne  and  Franz  Werfel  (don't
       ask).   But  even  here, I found something remarkable: Hoban quotes
       Goya as saying,  "The  dream  of  Reason  produces  monsters"  (Los
       Caprichos,  Plate  43 in my edition, though it is noted that it may
       have been intended as the frontispiece,  and  may  appear  as  such
       elsewhere).   Hoban  then  disagrees,  saying,  "I  think it's when
       reason is *not* allowed to dream that it acts out its dreams  while
       awake,  and  then it is that monsters are produced."  But what Goya
       said in Spanish is  actually  ambiguous:  "El  sueno  de  la  razon
       produce  monstruos"  can  also mean "The *sleep* of reason produces
       monsters."  In fact, Goya elaborates on the caption by saying,  "La
       fantasia  abandonada  de  la  razon, produce monstruos impossibles:
       unida con ella, es madre de las artes y origen de  sus  marabillas"
       ("Imagination  abandoned  by  reason  produces impossible monsters:
       united with her, she is the mother of arts and the origin of  their
       marvels").   So  Goya actually agrees with Hoban: reason must unite
       with dream; one cannot eliminate the other.

       The  libretto,  "Some  Episodes  in  the  History  of  Miranda  and
       Callisto"  reminded me very much of a performance of Risako Ataka's
       "Tempest"  sponsored  by  the  Performance  Exchange  at  the  1995
       Edinburgh  Fringe  Festival.   Maybe  it  was that the latter had a
       single actor playing many roles, and Hoban's work, while not  quite
       that sparse, does have each actor in his time playing many parts.

       The stories have a range of styles, though certain ideas do  recur.
       Sphinxes  and  lions  seem  particularly common, as well as general
       references to mythology and that other realm which  can  be  called
       mystical or fantastical or spiritual, depending on your conception.

	                      THE SECOND MRS. KONG

       This opera has been set to music by  Harrison  Birtwhistle,  but  I
       haven't  heard  it.  (I know it exists, because an AltaVista search
       turns up four references to the opera in various  university  music
       department libraries.)

       The cast includes "Kong (the idea of him)" and "Death of Kong" (two
       separate  characters),  Vermeer  and his Girl with a Pearl Earring,
       Orpheus and Eurydice,  Anubis,  and  "Madame  Lena,  the  customary
       sphinx."  Hoban certainly has a thing about sphinxes.

	                    THE LAST OF THE WALLENDAS

       This is an interesting experiment.  Many of the poems are  suitable
       for  children,  but some are clearly more aimed at adults.  Now "by
       suitable for children" I  do  not  mean  that  it  is  in  whatever
       sanitized,  dull  state the MPAA in the United States seems to mean
       in its strange, unfathomable rating scheme, but rather that a child
       can appreciate it.  "The Plughole Dragon," for example, has a basic
       meter and rhyme that a child  can  follow,  and  a  straightforward
       method  of expression ("Down the plughole winking, blinking,/No one
       knows what he is thinking./No one knows  why  he  should  be/living
       there  so  blinking  free.").   At the other end of the spectrum if
       "K219," about the death of Sergei Preminin, and if the introduction
       to it doesn't give you nightmares, nothing will.

       I don't know if the name "Crystal  Maze"  is  a  reference  to  the
       television  show  of  the  same  name or just coincidence, but I am
       reasonably sure that there are echoes of "Albert and the  Lion"  in
       its  content.   (I assume the show is British, though we watched it
       while traveling in India.  "Albert and the Lion" is  probably  best
       known in its Stanley Holloway rendition.)

       I believe that THE MOMENT UNDER THE MOMENT may be out of print, but
       www.bibliofind.com  occasionally  has  copies.   THE  LAST  OF  THE
       WALLENDAS should be orderable from a British  bookseller.   As  for
       THE  SECOND  MRS.  KONG,  you  could  try  contacting the publisher
       directly.  [-ecl]

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

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

	         Capsule: The  American  socialist  movement  is
	         traced   following  the  trajectories  of  four
	         Jewish intellectuals who were friends  at  CCNY
	         in  1937.   Each  went in a different direction
	         after leaving school, but  each  continued  the
	         tradition  of  argument.  This is not so much a
	         contrasting  of  opinions  as  four   different
	         biographies  showing  how  different events let
	         them to different political  conclusions.   The
	         biographies   are   mixed  with  archive  films
	         covering half a century.  The film is  good  at
	         what  it  does, but it really should have given
	         us a better idea of what constituted each man's
	         philosophy  and  why  he  believed what he did.
	         ARGUING  THE  WORLD  barely  gets  beyond   the
	         superficial.    The   film  is  strong  on  its
	         explanation of history but weak on  philosophy.
	         Rating: 6 (0 to 10), 1 (-4 to +4)

	         New York Critics: 5  positive,  0  negative,  2
	         mixed

       ARGUING THE WORLD is a chronicle of political thought in the United
       States  from the late 1930s though the 1980s.  More precisely it is
       a study of four 20th Century political  philosophers--Daniel  Bell,
       Nathan  Glazer,  Irving  Howe,  and Irving Kristol--who began their
       careers in political  philosophy  as  friends  at  CCNY,  the  City
       College  of  New  York,  in  1937.   They  all  came  from  similar
       backgrounds.  They lived in New York City where the sidewalks  were
       often  decorated  with  political  street speakers, and even before
       college each was immersed in political thought.  One tells how  his
       sister  would  take him to see Clifford Odets plays, another how in
       front of his home were two buildings, the synagogue and  the  Young
       People's  Socialist  League.  Born into poverty, all four turned to
       Marxism as the hope for the poor of the world.   This  was  a  time
       when  the  revolution in Russia was fresh and new.  Many Americans,
       from a distance of thousands of miles, thought that  Communism  was
       in the process of saving the Soviet Union.  Take four young radical
       thinkers, already drunk with politics, and send them  to  CCNY  and
       what  develops is just what one would expect.  CCNY was then one of
       the radical campuses of the day.  It was boiling over with  excited
       political debate.  As writer/director Joseph Dorman seems to imply,
       the teachers were mediocre, but the best education was to be had in
       the cafeteria where there were constant agitated debates.  The room
       had a series of alcoves and different groups chose specific alcoves
       as  their  turf.   Alcove  One  was  where the pro-Trotsky students
       congregated.   Alcove  Two  was  where  the   pro-Stalin   students
       gathered.  (One wonders what became of them.)  Another alcove would
       be the ROTC  candidates.   These  four  Jewish  intellectuals  were
       Alcove One regulars.

       ARGUING THE WORLD traces the four through the war  years  with  two
       going  into  the  military.   With the conquest of Nazism it seemed
       that the world was ready for the Socialist ideal.   However,  their
       view  of Stalin and of Communism changed with the Moscow trials and
       the purges  and  executions  of  military  leaders.   They  started
       founding  and/or  writing  for magazines like "The Partisan Review"
       and "Commentary."  Irving Kristol started  having  a  significantly
       different  view  from the others during the McCarthy anti-Communist
       Movement.  While he did not think much  of  Joseph  McCarthy  as  a
       person, he defended McCarthyism.

       What has been a minor  irritation  with  the  film  to  this  point
       becomes  more obvious and at the same time more serious.  One would
       not  write  a  biography  of  Charles  Darwin  without  a  detailed
       explanation  of  evolution.   Dorman  does  not  seem  prepared  to
       actually present the beliefs of his  four  subjects  in  any  great
       detail.   While  the  four substantially agreed, it would have been
       useful to be told the substance of their beliefs, but  it  was  not
       important  to understanding their history.  But at this point, when
       they start to diverge in opinion it becomes frustrating just to  be
       told  that  Kristol  agreed with McCarthy's goals and Howe did not.
       These are deep and complex men with complex ways of  thinking,  and
       to   reduce   their   thought  to  so  superficial  a  level  is  a
       disappointment for the viewer.  Dorman wants to tell us  about  the
       four men but not bother to tell us really who they are.  We want to
       know Kristol's reasoning that led to his agreement  with  McCarthy.
       We  want  to  know the reasoning the others had for their different
       viewpoints.

       There is a  further  dividing  of  the  ways  in  the  60s  protest
       movements  and  particularly  in the relationship with the Students
       for a Democratic Society.  The SDS was the self-styled successor of
       the  previous generation's intellectual movement.  But the four saw
       the SDS as naive and utopian.  Instead of endorsing the  SDS,  each
       found  himself  disagreeing with the SDS and Tom Hayden, the leader
       of  the  SDS,  attributed  this  to   stodginess   and   de   facto
       conservatism.

       There was further divergence of opinion based on experience of  the
       late  60s  student  protest movements.  Nathan Glazer by this point
       was a professor at Berkeley where the students were able very  much
       to  disrupt  the  academic  environment  with impunity.  Glazer was
       called upon to negotiate and  in  the  process  lost  most  of  his
       respect  for the protesters.  His views became more conservative as
       a result, though not so far to the right as Kristol's.  Daniel Bell
       was at Columbia where the protests were put down with more force by
       the police and came out  of  the  experience  more  left-wing  than
       before.

       Dorman recreates the period with archival footage showing New  York
       and California at the time of the events, but what is on the screen
       frequently is just a scene without much obvious relevance  to  what
       is  being  said.   There are also interviews with various political
       figures who interacted with the four political thinkers.  The  film
       is  entertaining  and enlightening, but it leaves one wanting to be
       in on a discussion  among  the  men  to  find  out  what  the  real
       differences  in  their opinions and reasoning styles were.  Without
       that there is something dramatically missing from the film.  I rate
       ARGUING THE WORLD a 6 on the 0 to 10 scale and a +1 on the -4 to +4
       scale.  [-mrl]

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

	    It is necessary for me to establish a winner image.
	    Therefore, I have to beat somebody.
	                                  -- Richard M. Nixon (1913-1994)


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