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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 05/02/97 -- Vol. 15, No. 44

       MT Chair/Librarian:
                     Mark Leeper   MT 3E-433  908-957-5619 mleeper@lucent.com
       HO Chair:     John Jetzt    MT 2E-530  908-957-5087 jetzt@lucent.com
       HO Librarian: Nick Sauer    HO 4F-427  908-949-7076 njs@lucent.com
       Distinguished Heinlein Apologist:
                     Rob Mitchell  MT 2D-536  908-957-6330 rlmitchell1@lucent.com
       Factotum:     Evelyn Leeper MT 3E-433  908-957-2070 eleeper@lucent.com
       Backissues at http://www.geocities.com/~ecl.
       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://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov.  US Geologic  Survey
       home page.  Lots of info about volcanoes.  [-ecl]

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

       2. On my trip to Japan I was looking around the plane  at  all  the
       product  placements and ads you see.  It is getting as bad as going
       to a movie.  In fact even the films you  see  on  the  flights  had
       product  placements.  It used to be you got dinner on the plane and
       they would sort of hide whatever  brand  name  products  they  were
       using.   After  all,  they  got nothing out of showing you that you
       were eating Kraft  cheese.   Then  someone  at  the  airline  asked
       themselves  why not see if they could get the stuff cheaper if they
       left the brand names on it.  Now everything you  get  has  a  brand
       name.   You  get  Anheuser-Busch  pretzels,  Evian water, odd brand
       names that you never heard of for the cookies, Scott tissue in  the
       bathroom.

       Before and after the movie they now have little short films to keep
       you  entertained.   And  dog-gone-it  every  one  is an ad for some
       company trying to sell you something.  One of the things  they  had
       was  a  look  at  film special effects created by Silicon Graphics.
       They did effects for films like INDEPENDENCE DAY and TWISTER.   Now
       I  don't  know  why anyone would brag about the effects in TWISTER.
       From a distance you can get a good enough effect by showing just  a
       woman's stocking the way they did in THE WIZARD OF OZ.  By the time
       you get near a tornado it just looks like a windy day.  There  just
       was not enough to be all that impressive in TWISTER.

       They showed a piece from SPACE JAM, a  new  film  combining  Warner
       Brothers  cartoon  characters  with  live-action basketball players
       defending the earth against basketball players  from  outer  space.
       That  seems  to  me  like  bragging that you made the bolts for the
       Tacoma Narrows Bridge.  According to them "this is  the  future  of
       film-making."  I have been feeling somewhat depressed since I heard
       that.  I am really afraid that with falling  educational  standards
       in  this  country  he  may  well  be  right.   It would be nice for
       Hollywood to get back to films where the interesting effects are in
       the  writing  just like it would be nice to get back to music where
       the effects are created by the composer and not the technology, but
       I  see neither in the offing.  There is both a falling supply and a
       falling demand for good writing  and  composing.   It  is  easy  to
       decide we want another SPACE JAM and turn the crank to get it.  You
       cannot say next year we will have another film like A MAN  FOR  ALL
       SEASONS.   If  you  try  to  turn  the crank for that you will fail
       miserably.  [-mrl]

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

       3. DANTE'S PEAK (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: This  is  a  disaster  film  that  has
                 nearly   everything  going  for  it  but  plot-
                 originality.  But for a couple of nice  touches
                 in  the scenario, it is very much the story the
                 viewer expects.  However, with the exception of
                 a  few  exaggerated scenes, this is pretty much
                 what volcanoes really do.  For  me  that  makes
                 DANTE'S  PEAK  the  volcano  film  to  see this
                 spring.  Rating: high +1 (-4  to  +4)   Spoiler
                 Warning:  Following  the  review  is an excerpt
                 from a U.S. Geological Survey response  to  the
                 film  DANTE'S  PEAK.   While  it will certainly
                 reveal in advance events of the film,  it  also
                 enhances the viewing experience by allowing the
                 reader  then  appreciate  the  film   with   an
                 educated palate.
                 New York Critics: 2 positive,  13  negative,  5
                 mixed

       When I see a historical film I ask myself  whether  it  is  a  good
       story  and whether it is accurate to history.  Similarly when I see
       a disaster film, particularly one in which the menace is caused  by
       something  scientific,  I  ask  myself is it a good story and is it
       scientifically accurate.  I tend to weigh the latter  as  important
       much more than most people since for me a good deal of the value of
       the film is to show me something that could happen to  me.   I  can
       escape  into a film much better if I think that what I am seeing is
       reasonably  possible.   Well,  DANTE'S  PEAK  deserves  only   very
       lukewarm  interest for its story, which is in large respects a very
       off-the-shelf disaster film plot.  For me, however, a big  plus  is
       that  most  of  the time it was not really very far from scientific
       accuracy.  There are a few unrealistic scenes  (most  I  recognized
       from having read the FAQ included below), but for the most part the
       film was fairly believable.

       DANTE'S PEAK opens with a scene in a volcanic eruption.  The  force
       of  the eruption has nature reversed in some fundamental ways.  The
       sky is blotted out and flaming rocks are  falling,  seemingly  from
       the  clouds.   Volcanologist  Harry  Dalton  (Pierce  Brosnan)  has
       allowed himself to get to close to the eruption he was studying and
       it  paying  the price.  This is four years before the action of the
       story, but it effectively conveys the Biblical doomsday  feel  that
       is  associated  with  being caught too near a volcanic eruption.  A
       few years later he still works for the U.S. Geological Survey  when
       he  is  asked  to  take  a look at some seismic activity in a place
       called Dante's Peak, Washington.  Even he points out that it  is  a
       cornball  name  for a volcanic mountain.  This place was just voted
       to be the second best small town in the country.  Shortly after  he
       arrives  Dalton  decides  that small town number three is due for a
       promotion and this region which has  not  seen  an  active  volcano
       since some time about 5000 BC may be ready to go active again.

       It will come as no surprise to the viewer that Dalton's  suspicions
       are  well-founded  and  the  volcano  does  indeed erupt.  The plot
       follows the familiar disaster film formulae  of  disagreement  over
       whether  there  real  is  a threat to the small town, with Dalton's
       supervisor (Charles Hallahan) unwilling to commit to  believing  an
       eruption  is  coming.   Having  been  involved with the politics of
       having called a false alarm in the past, he wants to avoid  at  all
       costs  a  false alarm here.  But the cost turns out to be high with
       many people caught in the town at the time of the  disaster.   Once
       the  eruption  comes there are familiar sequences of people getting
       into danger and of rescue.  But at least the threats are relatively
       realistic for the eruption as are the numbers of people killed.

       There are some nice touches in the  script.   There  are  financial
       reasons  for  the  citizens  of  Dante's Peak to want to ignore the
       warnings.  However the townspeople, led by town mayor Rachel  Wando
       (Linda  Hamilton  of  TERMINATOR),  are  smarter  than  townspeople
       usually are in disaster films.  If the U.S.  Geological Survey says
       it  is  time  to go, they seem ready enough.  The film is much more
       about the USGS team's wrangling to decide if they feel the mountain
       is  really going to go.  That seems fully believable.  Much of what
       we see  seems  realistic,  even  at  the  expense  of  some  visual
       excitement.   The  sky is darkened and ash is falling so it looks a
       lot like a dismal snowy day.  One scene that does seem to be driven
       by  the  effects  rather  than  logic  shows  elevated highway just
       outside this tiny isolated town.  The special effects work is  very
       convincing  particularly in a flood scene near the end.  There is a
       somewhat contrived setting near the  end  of  the  film.   I  might
       almost  believe it would be there, but that the ELF would work from
       there seems unlikely.

       The makers of other recent disaster films could take a lesson  from
       DANTE'S  PEAK.   Unlike VOLCANO or JURASSIC PARK characters you get
       to know and get to like do not survive.   There  is  some  risk  in
       killing off a good character, but it maintains the dramatic tension
       of the film and keeps the story realistic.  The team sent from  the
       U.S. Geological Survey actually look like a team of people that the
       USGS might send, not a bunch of  attractive  young  actors.   Other
       nice  touches  in  the  script  include  the fact there is no human
       villain.  You would think that a film with a volcano does not  need
       a  human villain, but the makers of a major film like OUTBREAK, for
       example, felt necessary to put in a human to defeat as well as  the
       title threat.

       While the story values are weaker than they might be, DANTE'S  PEAK
       is  a  good  cinematic  recreation  of  what  it  must  be  like to
       experience an erupting volcano.  It is certainly the better of  the
       two volcano films being released this spring.  Not a great film but
       worth a high +1 on the -4 to +4 scale.

       Spoiler... Spoiler... Spoiler... Spoiler...  Spoiler...  Spoiler...
       Spoiler... Spoiler...

       The following is an excerpt from the  U.S.  Geological  Survey  web
       site               at               http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/News/
       DantesPeak/dantes_peak.html.  I  am  very  pleased  that  the  U.S.
       Geological Survey created this information page, as I think it much
       enhances the enjoyment  of  the  film  and  also  sets  the  record
       straight   where   the  film  strayed  from  accuracy.   There  are
       references to the film throughout the site,  thought  this  section
       most directly discusses the science of DANTE'S PEAK.

        DANTE'S PEAK FAQ'S (frequently asked questions)

       U.S. Geological Survey Volcano Hazards Program February 10, 1997

       MOVIE FACT OR FICTION?

       Q: Is the eruption depicted in Dante's Peak realistic?

       A: In many but not all respects, the movie's depiction of  eruptive
       hazards  hits close to the mark, especially as regards the enormous
       power unleashed during an eruption. Stratovolcanoes in the  Cascade
       Range  and  Alaska erupt explosively and produce pyroclastic flows,
       clouds of volcanic ash, and debris flows (lahars) that behave  much
       as  shown  in the movie. Lava flows at these volcanoes, though, are
       usually thick and slow moving, unlike the fluid flows in the movie.
       Fast-flowing  flows  of  basalt  lava are common in Hawaii, though.
       Real eruptions may be considerably larger or  smaller,  and  affect
       larger or smaller areas, than those shown in the film.

       Q: Can eruptions really threaten helicopters, as in the movie,  and
       other aircraft?

       A: Yes. Encounters between aircraft and clouds of volcanic ash  are
       a  serious  concern.  Jet engines and other aircraft components are
       vulnerable to damage by fine,  abrasive  volcanic  ash,  which  can
       drift  in  dangerous concentrations hundreds of miles downwind from
       an erupting volcano.

       During the past 15 years, at least 80  aircraft  have  accidentally
       encountered  volcanic  ash  clouds,  and  in  6  cases  jet engines
       temporarily lost power. An international consortium  of  government
       agencies,  including  the  U.S. Geological Survey, Federal Aviation
       Administration, and National Weather  Service,  is  now  monitoring
       ash-producing  volcanoes and tracking volcanic ash clouds to reduce
       the likelihood of future encounters.

       Q: Can the temperature of  hot  springs  near  a  restless  volcano
       change quickly enough to injure bathers?

       A: Temperature changes can and do occur, but  usually  more  slowly
       than  shown  in  the movie. In fact, the temperature of hot springs
       may increase, decrease, or stay the same  during  volcanic  unrest.
       Increases  in  water  temperature, when they do occur, usually take
       days or weeks to develop, rather than a few seconds as shown in the
       movie.

       In rare cases, earthquakes can suddenly  disrupt  a  volcano's  hot
       groundwater  system, changing its temperature. And earthquakes have
       been known to temporarily increase  the  flow  of  water  from  hot
       springs, sometimes causing geyser-like activity that could threaten
       bathers.

       Q: Do earthquakes large enough  to  collapse  buildings  and  roads
       accompany volcanic eruptions?

       A: Not usually. Earthquakes associated with eruptions rarely exceed
       magnitude  5,  and these moderate earthquakes are not big enough to
       destroy the  kinds  of  buildings,  houses,  and  roads  that  were
       demolished  in  the  movie.  The  largest  earthquakes at Mount St.
       Helens in 1980 were magnitude 5, large enough  to  sway  trees  and
       damage buildings, but not destroy them. During the huge eruption of
       Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines  in  1991,  dozens  of  light  to
       moderate  earthquakes  (magnitude  3  to  5)  were  felt by several
       hundred thousand people. Many houses collapsed, but  not  primarily
       because  of  the  shaking.  Heavy,  wet ash from the eruption and a
       hurricane accumulated on roofs and crushed them.

       Stronger earthquakes sometimes DO occur near volcanoes as a  result
       of  tectonic  faulting.  For  example, four magnitude 6 earthquakes
       struck Long Valley caldera, California, in 1980,  and  a  magnitude
       7.2  earthquake  struck  Kilauea  Volcano,  Hawaii,  in  1975. Both
       volcanoes were quiet at the time. The Hawaii earthquake triggered a
       small  eruption  at  the  summit  of  Kilauea.  No eruption has yet
       occurred at Long Valley, but the area has been restless  since  the
       1980 earthquakes.

       Q: Can a town's water supply become contaminated when a volcano  is
       restless?

       A: Yes, but probably not as quickly as shown in  the  movie.  If  a
       town's   water   supply   originates   directly  from  a  volcano's
       groundwater system or from a stream  that  has  been  covered  with
       volcanic  ash,  the  water  could  become  contaminated  with foul-
       smelling gases or fine ash and other sediment. Some volcanic  gases
       such  as  sulfur  dioxide dissolve in groundwater, making the water
       acidic. Sulfurous odors, however, are caused  by  hydrogen  sulfide
       gas, which smells like rotten eggs.

       Q: Do scientists drive across moving lava flows?

       A: No. Any attempt to drive across an active lava  flow,  even  one
       that  has partly solidified to form a thin crust, is likely to lead
       to disaster. With a temperature  of  1,700  degrees  Fahrenheit  or
       higher,  fresh  lava  will quickly melt rubber tires and ignite gas
       tanks. And if a vehicle gets stuck in moving lava, well,  you  know
       the rest of the story.

       Q: Can carbon dioxide gas from volcanoes kill trees and wildlife?

       A: Yes. At several volcanoes around the world, carbon  dioxide  gas
       released  from  magma  has  accumulated  in  the soil in sufficient
       concentrations to kill vegetation or has collected in low areas and
       suffocated  animals.  At  Mammoth  Mountain  in  California, carbon
       dioxide has killed  about  100  acres  of  trees  since  1989,  and
       visitors  to  this  area  have  occasionally  suffered  symptoms of
       asphyxiation when entering cabins  or  below-  ground  excavations.
       USGS  scientists  have  concluded  that  the gas is escaping from a
       magma body beneath Mammoth  Mountain.   The  magma  itself  is  not
       currently moving toward the surface, but the USGS is monitoring the
       situation carefully.

       Q: Can volcanoes suddenly become restless and erupt within one week
       of the first signs of activity?

       A: Yes. The first steam eruption at Mount St. Helens on  March  27,
       1980,  was  preceded by only 7 days of intense earthquake activity.
       The climactic eruption, on May 18, followed seven weeks  later.  An
       eruption  of  Redoubt  Volcano  in Alaska on December 13, 1989, was
       preceded by only 24 hours of intense earthquake activity. But other
       volcanoes have been restless for months or years before an eruption
       occurred, and sometimes a  period  of  unrest  doesn't  produce  an
       eruption at all.

       Q: Are robots used by the USGS to monitor volcanoes?

       A: No. We rely on observations and measurements made by experienced
       scientists  and  on  critical data sent by radio or satellite relay
       from monitoring  instruments  installed  around  a  volcano.  These
       instruments  include  seismometers,  tiltmeters, Global Positioning
       System (GPS) receivers, gas sensors, mudflow (lahar or debris flow)
       sensors, and temperature probes.

       NASA has tested a robot named Dante  at  Mount  Erebus  volcano  in
       Antarctica  and  Mount  Spurr  volcano in Alaska. The USGS believes
       that, on Earth, experienced volcanologists are a  better  and  more
       cost-effective alternative for monitoring dangerous volcanoes.

       Q: Can volcanoes produce large explosive eruptions  and  rivers  of
       fluid lava at the same time?

       A: Not usually. During a single eruption,  a  volcano  CAN  produce
       both lava flows and ash, sometimes simultaneously. The red, glowing
       lava fountains and lava flows in Dante's Peak (including the active
       flow  across  which  Harry  Dalton  drives) are characteristic of a
       fluid magma, called basalt. In contrast, explosive gray ash columns
       and  pyroclastic  flows shown in other scenes are characteristic of
       more viscous magmas, called andesite,  dacite,  or  rhyolite.  It's
       uncommon  for  a  volcano  to  erupt  magmas  of  widely  different
       composition at the same time.

       Q: Can lakes near volcanoes become acidic enough to be dangerous to
       people?

       A: Yes. Crater lakes atop volcanoes are typically  the  most  acid,
       with  pH  values  as  low  as  0.1  (very strong acid). Normal lake
       waters, in contrast, have relatively neutral pH  values  near  7.0.
       The  crater lake at El Chichon volcano in Mexico had a pH of 0.5 in
       1983 and Mount Pinatubo's crater lake had a pH of 1.9 in 1992.  The
       acid  waters  of  these lakes are capable of causing burns to human
       skin but are unlikely to dissolve metal quickly. Gases  from  magma
       that  dissolve  in  lake  water  to  form such acidic brews include
       carbon  dioxide,  sulfur  dioxide,   hydrogen   sulfide,   hydrogen
       chloride,  and  hydrogen  fluoride.   However,  the movie's rapidly
       formed acidic lake capable of dissolving  an  aluminum  boat  in  a
       matter of minutes is unrealistic.

       [-mrl]

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

       4. VOLCANO (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: VOLCANO is  a  bizarre  disaster  film
                 that  treats  an  erupting  volcano as an urban
                 crisis.  It is sort of a horizontal version  of
                 THE  TOWERING  INFERNO.  Lava, seen as the main
                 threat from the volcano, is treated a  sort  of
                 monster that lurks in tunnels and crawls out on
                 the street devouring all in its path.  Most  of
                 the real dangers of a volcano like the force of
                 the blast and superheated gasses get what is at
                 most   a   superficial   and  much  toned  down
                 treatment.  Tommy  Lee   Jones   stars   as   a
                 functionary   trying  to  keep  a  lid  on  the
                 problem.  The visuals  are  colorful,  but  the
                 script  is just terrible.  DANTE'S PEAK had its
                 faults and perhaps was  no  great  shakes,  but
                 VOLCANO  cannot  hold a candle to it. Rating: 0
                 (-4 to +4)

       This is the spring of two different volcano  movies,  DANTE'S  PEAK
       and  VOLCANO  and it surprising how differently the two films treat
       the same sort of disaster.  DANTE'S PEAK was a  dark  and  downbeat
       film  taking  place in Mt. St. Helens territory and its disaster is
       filmed in dark colors.  Its message is that volcanoes are immensely
       powerful  forces  of  nature  and  even with the help of technology
       about the best we can hope for from a confrontation is to get  away
       alive.   But  they  are  impressive.  VOLCANO is set in Los Angeles
       among famous landmarks.  It tells us that with a bit  of  ingenuity
       and  a  little time any problems including volcanoes can be solved.
       Much of VOLCANO is tongue-in-cheek with in-jokes about well-  known
       Los  Angeles  personalities  and  digs  at  the controversial Metro
       system.  In short VOLCANO is just one more  colorful  action  film.
       It  seem  to  have  had  little interest in seriously exploring the
       possibility of a volcano in Los Angeles.  It does not seem to  have
       been based at all on any existing accounts of real eruptions.

       For Mike Roark (played by Tommy Lee Jones),  the  director  of  the
       Office  of  Emergency  Management,  the  first  day of the disaster
       starts off badly... with an earthquake.   In  spite  of  officially
       being  on  vacation, he wants to jump immediately into action.  But
       his first problem is that he has to find a  sitter  to  manage  his
       rambunctious thirteen-year-old daughter Kelly (Gaby Hoffman).  When
       he gets to his job, Mike's way of managing is to be  in  the  field
       investigating  while  his assistant (Don Cheadle) manages things in
       the office.  It is not long before the earthquake problem gives way
       to  a mystery of several workers who were mysteriously burned in an
       underground tunnel by something strange that left no  sign  of  its
       presence.  Whatever it is leaves scorching only on its victims, not
       on the walls  of  the  tunnel.   It  is  time  to  call  in  spunky
       seismologist  Dr. Amy  Hoffmann  (Anne Heche) and between them they
       discover that the real problem is volcanic  flames  that  creep  up
       through  the  cracks  in  the  floor of the tunnel, then sneak away
       before they can be seen or leave a scorch-mark.  Amy discovers this
       secret,  but  before  she can tell anyone, the flames attack with a
       genuine volcanic eruption geysering out of the La  Brea  Tar  Pits.
       This  micro-mini-eruption  sends  flaming  rocks into the air which
       come down like cannonballs for blocks around and ash starts falling
       like snow.  But then the real threat appears, streams of hot liquid
       lava come out  of  the  volcano.   They  flood  Wilshire  Boulevard
       setting fires and burning cars (but for some reason never exploding
       the gas tanks).  With  angry  lava  in  the  streets  the  question
       becomes,  can  it be stopped before it reaches actual homes?  Also,
       can a coalition of Los Angeles residents  put  aside  their  ethnic
       differences   and   work   together  to  save  the  city  from  the
       uncontrolled lava stream?

       Director Mike Jackson has done  some  intelligent  films  including
       THREADS,  THE  RACE FOR THE DOUBLE HELIX, A VERY BRITISH COUP, L.A.
       STORY, and INDICTMENT.  Each of those is a modest film that reaches
       for  the  mind  rather than getting a gut reaction.  Unfortunately,
       that was not how he made VOLCANO.  This was a script that he should
       have  turned down from the start, but perhaps he wanted to see what
       he could do with a bigger budget.  The story and screenplay are  by
       first-timer   Jerome   Armstrong,   though  Billy  Ray  shares  the
       authorship of the script.  Tommy Lee Jones is okay,  but  needs  to
       get  a  little  more  variety  into the roles he plays.  He has one
       interesting character, but he has played that character too  often.
       More  interesting  is  the  seismologist played by Anne Heche.  She
       currently is also playing  Johnny  Depp's  long-suffering  wife  in
       DONNIE BRASCO.

       Armstrong throws frequent jokes into the script, though most of  us
       will  have  to have many of the jokes explained.  Apparently Dennis
       Woodruff's car, seen prominently in a pool of lava, is  a  familiar
       Los  Angeles sight.  Also familiar is a billboard with a particular
       actress.  Just whether a certain restaurant chain we  see  multiple
       times  is  an in-joke or a product placement, I am not sure.  There
       are some scenes probably were  not  very  well  thought-out.   Mike
       seems to be abusing his power asking for special attention from the
       fire department for his daughter.  This probably did not  sit  well
       with  the  audience.   In  one  scene  Amy  apparently  measures  a
       temperature of the ground and gets a reading of  600  degrees  just
       below  her  feet.  That would have burned away her feet.  While the
       special effects are generally fairly good, the digitized lava flows
       are   not  always  convincing.   Neither  are  some  of  the  matte
       paintings.

       If you want to see an action adventure see VOLCANO, if you want  to
       have a feel for what it really would be like to be caught too close
       to an erupting volcano, see DANTE'S PEAK.  VOLCANO rates a 0 on the
       -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

                                          Mark Leeper
                                          MT 3E-433 908-957-5619
                                          mleeper@lucent.com

            The nature of men and women--their essential
            nature--is so vile and despicable that if you
            were to portray a person as he really is,
            no one would believe you.
                                          -- W. Somerset Maugham