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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 08/07/98 -- Vol. 17, 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 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.fnal.gov.    Fermi   National
       Accelerator Laboratory, including a clickable tour of the facility.
       [-ecl]

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

       2. While I was in Chicago a friend gave  us  a  tour  of  Fermilab.
       This  is  a  lab  with  particle  accelerators.   The  building  is
       surprisingly like Holmdel was in the late 1970s.   It  has  a  big,
       uncluttered atrium.  They still have funded clubs of all sorts with
       a big investment in the social life of its employees.  They have  a
       thriving cinema club which they give facilities for.  They schedule
       concerts for the staff.  People who come in do  not  have  to  wear
       badges.   The  whole  atmosphere was a lot like Holmdel in the late
       70s.  It gave me a good feeling to know that Fermilab is  at  least
       20 years behind Bell Labs.  [-mrl]

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

       3. I was reading a piece about global warming and  the  possibility
       that  the  ice  caps  will melt and raise the level of the sea.  Of
       course, this is a serious problem since the land near the water  is
       not  highly  banked.   If the land rises with a slope of 1/24, then
       you will lose two feet of beachfront for every inch the water level
       increased.   Of  course  it  will  take a heck of a lot of water to
       raise sea level an inch.  It is the difference in volume between  a
       sphere  the size of the Earth and one that is two inches greater in
       diameter.  All that is multiplied by about 3/4 since about  1/4  of
       the  surface  of the earth is covered by land.  A quick spreadsheet
       calculation and I get that as about 2000 cubic miles of water would
       have  to  be  liberated to raise the water level one inch.  That is
       not an absurd amount, but it  still  would  take  quite  a  bit  of
       warming.

       But really what got me thinking is they  talked  about  melting  in
       West  Antarctic.   That  sort  of  brought  me up short.  Just what
       exactly is West Antarctic?  Where is it?  How do you determine what
       part  of  Antarctica  is  West  Antarctic?   Now I know where South
       Antarctic is.  It is a circle around the South  Pole.   How  big  a
       circle  can  be argued, but it is a circle.  North Antarctic is the
       outer rim of the continent toward the coastline.  But there  is  no
       Western  Antarctic.   Of  course, if you are not too far north, you
       can start someplace in Antarctica and start walking west  and  just
       keep  walking  forever.  There is always an infinite amount further
       west you can go.  It is the same for east.  So I would  think  that
       there is no Western or Eastern Antarctic.  It is all central.  This
       also gives the answer that nobody  ever  thinks  of  for  the  Bear
       Problem?   You know the one.  A hunter shoots a bear, walks over to
       the bear.  He then walks one mile south, one  mile  east,  and  one
       mile  north  and is back where he started.  What color is the bear?
       The answer is supposed to be while because  he  must  have  started
       from  the  North Pole.  Note that there are lots more points in the
       South than there are in the North.  There is a  circle  around  the
       South  Pole  with  circumference  of  one  mile.   You  could start
       anywhere a mile north of that.  You could start one mile north of a
       circle  that is a half mile in circumference.  It is the same for a
       third mile.  So there a are a set of rings around  the  South  Pole
       that  could  do  it for you.  The rings get closer and closer until
       they converge to a ring one mile north of the South Pole.

       The map that accompanied the  article  does  not  seem  to  concern
       itself with such niceties as West Antarctic and East Antarctic.  It
       shows Antarctica with Western Antarctic on the left, East Antarctic
       on  the  right.   The  Weddell Sea is in the upper left; the Indian
       Ocean is on the right.  So what does this  map  think  is  directly
       north  of Antarctica with this orientation?  Now this must not have
       been an easy decision to make because  it  is  somewhat  political.
       When you have the freedom to say, with some justification, that any
       point on Earth is due north of you, what do you choose?  In a sense
       you  are  siding with a given hemisphere.  You are saying that what
       they call north, you will also.  You  are  telling  people  on  the
       other   side  of  the  world  that  what  they  think  of  as  your
       northernmost point, you think of as your southernmost point.   That
       is  pretty  insulting  when you come to think of it.  It is showing
       real favoritism for someplace in the  world,  but  what  place  was
       chosen?  Well, it would appear that naturalized Antarctica citizens
       (there is no indigenous human population and  the  penguins  aren't
       talking)  have  chosen  to  think  of  their  north as being a line
       through the Greenwich Meridian.  Antarctica has chosen to think  of
       themselves as being directly south of Greenwich, England.  They are
       of course, but they are also directly south of Newark, New  Jersey,
       and they do not think of themselves that way.  I am sure this was a
       real propaganda victory for Britain.  Rah!  Rule  Britannia.   This
       may  be  just  one  more confirmation that God is an Englishman.  I
       suppose that it doesn't really surprise me, but I would have  liked
       them  to  choose  some place more imaginative.  I know what you are
       thinking, but that is how I feel.  I am not still bearing a grudge.
       It is not just because the English burned our Capitol down.  Though
       they did.  [-mrl]

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

       4. ALTERNATE GENERALS edited by Harry  Turtledove  (Baen,  ISBN  0-
       671-87886-7,  1998,  348pp,  US$5.99)  (a  book review by Evelyn C.
       Leeper):

       Mike Resnick has edited eight alternate history  anthologies;  this
       is  Harry  Turtledove's  first.  The first thing I noticed was that
       there was very little overlap  between  the  authors  in  Resnick's
       anthologies and this one.  In part that is probably due to the fact
       that the editors deal regularly with different people, but it  also
       may  be  connected  with  the  publishers and their emphasis.  Baen
       Books is known  for  its  military  science  fiction  and  in  this
       obviously  military  collection  regular Baen authors are featured.
       So I suppose it's a reasonable prediction that if  you  like  their
       other works you'll like this.

       Of course, I am not a big fan of military science fiction.  I  read
       this  for  its  alternate  history  content, which turned out to be
       minimal, but, thank Ghod, not connected with  the  perfectly  awful
       and  completely  inaccurate  back  cover  blurb:  "At Gaugemela the
       Macedonians had Alexander and the  Persians  had--Darius.   Result:
       world  conquest.   But  what if the Persians had--Erwin Rommel.  Or
       what if George S. Patton had commanded Southern forces at Bull Run,
       and  Lincoln  had become a Confederate prisoner?  The possibilities
       are endless. . . ."

       Alexander, Rommel, Patton, and Lincoln do not appear in this  book,
       nor  do Gaugemela or Bull Run.  Whatever possessed them to put this
       on the book?!

       If one manages to get past the blurb and the rather garish metallic
       cover  with bursting stars with authors' names, what does one find?
       Well,  apparently  all  the  authors'  notes  on   the   historical
       backgrounds that they used were omitted.  Since not all the stories
       have backgrounds obvious to the non-historian, this will  make  the
       book  somewhat inaccessible to a reader coming to alternate history
       for the first or second time.  (After you  read  alternate  history
       for a while, you pick this stuff up, even if you were not a history
       major.)

       [Not all stories are commented on.  Not every story had features  I
       wanted to comment on.]

       The first story, "The Test of Gold" by Lillian Stuart  Carl,  is  a
       reasonable lead-off, though I had the feeling that if this story of
       Boudica and C. Marcus Valarius was the strongest in  the  anthology
       (as  the  lead  story  traditionally is), it would be a fairly weak
       collection.

       "And to the Republic  For  Which  It  Stands"  by  Brad  Linaweaver
       started  out  with  an  intriguing look at Julius Caesar's possible
       musings about the Roman Republic.  Unfortunately, lines like "[h]er
       breasts  are  perfect, smooth hills rising and falling like legions
       marching over countless  landscapes  of  countless  campaigns"  and
       expository  lumps  like "[t]his night of March the fourteenth there
       is much to think about."

       "The Craft of War" by Lois Tilton was one  of  my  favorites.   She
       used  a  different  style  and an original approach, and managed to
       avoid making it just the description of battles and maneuvers  that
       so many stories here were.

       Joy Lynn Nye's "Queen of the Amazons" was an  example  of  what  is
       often  called "alternate history," but to me doesn't quite qualify.
       Everything is described right up to the change, and then it  stops.
       There  is  no  extrapolation  of what happens next, which is what I
       read alternate history for.

       "The Phantom Tolbukhin" by Harry Turtledove is at  least  alternate
       history,  and  goes a bit beyond the "troop movement" stage, though
       not nearly enough.

       "An Old Man's Summer" by Esther  Friesner  is  another  story  that
       attempts  a  different  style.   Probably  the most literary in the
       volume, it is not the sort of alternate history  story  one  starts
       out expecting it to be, and it provides a refreshing change of pace
       to the book.

       "Billy Mitchell's Overt Act" by William Sanders  uses  yet  another
       stylistic  technique--articles, interviews, and quotations--to tell
       the story of a different Pearl Harbor and a different result.   And
       Sanders  follows  his changes through to a reasonable extrapolation
       of their future, rather than just leaving it hanging.
       "A  Hard  Day  for  Mother"  by  William  R.  Fortschen   is,   not
       surprisingly  to  anyone  who  recognizes  the  title, about Joshua
       Lawrence Chamberlain, and though the  execution  is  well  done,  I
       found the premise a bit weak and the conclusion unlikely.

       Brian M. Thomsen's "Bloodstained Ground" does have Mark Twain, so I
       may  be more favorably inclined toward it than otherwise.  Frankly,
       the Twain aspect was more interesting than the Custer one (which  I
       suspect was supposed to be the main part).

       Overall, I found  this  less  rewarding  than  some  of  the  other
       alternate history anthologies around.  For the person who is new to
       alternate history, I would  recommend  the  new  reprint  anthology
       ROADS NOT TAKEN (edited by Gardner Dozois and Stanley Schmidt) as a
       better introduction.  For the experienced alternate history fan,  I
       would  say  that  this  is  of  more  interest  for  those  who are
       interested in the  military  aspects  of  how  alternate  histories
       happen  than  those who are interested in the sociological results.
       [-ecl]

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

            Go into the street and give one man a lecture on
            morality and another a shilling, and see which will
            respect you more.
                                          -- Samuel Johnson


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