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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 12/28/90 -- Vol. 9, No. 26


       MEETINGS UPCOMING:

       Unless otherwise stated, all meetings are on Wednesdays at noon.
            LZ meetings are in LZ 2R-158.  MT meetings are in the cafeteria.

         _D_A_T_E                    _T_O_P_I_C

       01/09   LZ: BRAIN WAVE by Poul Anderson (Intelligence)
       01/30   LZ: RITE OF PASSAGE by Alexei Panshin (Adolescence)
       02/20   LZ: MARTIANS, GO HOME! by Frederic Brown (Social Satire)
       03/13   LZ: TOM SWIFT by Victor Appleton II (Juvenile SF)

         _D_A_T_E                    _E_X_T_E_R_N_A_L _M_E_E_T_I_N_G_S/_C_O_N_V_E_N_T_I_O_N_S/_E_T_C.

       01/10/90        SFABC: Science Fiction Association of Bergen County: TBA
                       (phone 201-933-2724 for details) (Saturday)
       01/19/91        NJSFS: New Jersey Science Fiction Society: TBA
                       (phone 201-432-5965 for details) (Saturday)

       HO Chair:      John Jetzt     HO 1E-525   834-1563  hocpa!jetzt
       LZ Chair:      Rob Mitchell   LZ 1B-306   576-6106  mtuxo!jrrt
       MT Chair:      Mark Leeper    MT 3D-441   957-5619  mtgzy!leeper
       HO Librarian:  Tim Schroeder  HO 3B-301   949-4488  hotsc!tps
       LZ Librarian:  Lance Larsen   LZ 3L-312   576-3346  mtunq!lfl
       MT Librarian:  Evelyn Leeper  MT 1F-329   957-2070  mtgzy!ecl
       Factotum:      Evelyn Leeper  MT 1F-329   957-2070  mtgzy!ecl
       All material copyright by author unless otherwise noted.

       1. Unlike many science fiction fans, I am not  also  a  comic  book
       fan.   This,  in  itself, is a dangerous confession.  Lots of comic
       book fans are perfectly sane and normal people.  But when a film or
       a  television  show wants to portray someone whose elevator doesn't
       quite get up to the top floor, they show a big bruiser with a  two-
       day  growth of beard and he is reading a comic book.  Reading comic
       books  is  synonymous  with  being  a  dolt.   Perhaps  it  is  not
       surprising  then  that  there  is a backlash of comic book fans who
       have been rubbed raw by this sort of thing and are (shall we  say?)
       overly  sensitive.   I  remember when somebody said the _B_a_t_m_a_n film
       was in the hands of people who were  fans  of  the  comic  book  my
       response  on Usenet was that was the good news and the bad news was
       that they read the comic book while they popped  their  bubble  gum











       THE MT VOID                                           Page 2



       after finishing their paper routes.  My implication was not that it
       was _a_l_l comic book fans I was describing; it was one type of  comic
       book  fan.   Nonetheless,  I  was  flamed  to a crispy black for an
       imagined implication  that  it  was  all  comic  book  fans  I  was
       describing.  It happens to be true, but I imagine it would help not
       at all to point out that some of my best  friends  are  comic  book
       fans.

       Anyway, let me just say that comic books are a form of fantasy that
       I  do  not care for, but which I do not feel is inherently inferior
       to, say, vampire and werewolf stories  which,  in  some  cases,  do
       appeal  to  me  more.   I can make a hole in my world-view that can
       accept there is a vampire running around.  I cannot find a hole  in
       my  world-view  that supports a scene of a crusty district attorney
       talking about what moves can be made against the  Legion  of  Doom.
       The  scene  just  strikes me as silly.  Crusty old D.A.s just don't
       talk about things like a Legion of Doom.  Well, art  imitates  life
       and eventually life imitates art I guess.  Sometime in mid-November
       the Federal Government won a legal case against the Legion of Doom.
       In  this  case  the  Legion  of  Doom  is a genuine, for-real crime
       organization.  Actually they were computer hackers who  got  caught
       attacking  BellSouth.   Their  name was inspired by comic books and
       that was really what they called themselves, so that was  whom  the
       government  prosecuted.   They  have also prosecuted another hacker
       who called himself Shadowhawk.  The prosecutors  say  they  feel  a
       little  silly  doing it, but they have to tell the judges about the
       nefarious activities of the Legion of Doom.  And  the  world  is  a
       little closer to being like a comic book.


                                          Mark Leeper
                                          MT 3D-441 957-5619
                                           ...mtgzy!leeper



            Written laws are like spiders' webs, and will like
            them only entangle and hold the poor and weak, while
            the rich and powerful easily break through them.
                                          -- Anacharsis


























                                        HAVANA
                           A film review by Mark R. Leeper
                            Copyright 1990 Mark R. Leeper



                 Capsule review:  _C_u_b_a_b_l_a_n_c_a.  A victory of detailed
            setting over a much weaker political thriller plot and a
            love story of little interest.  Rating: 0 (-4 to +4).

            Gambler Jack Weil (played by Robert Redford) has a piece of advice
       for revolutionary Bobby Duran (played by Lena Olin) about how to play
       roulette.  You should not put all your money on one number.  You go for
       a more modest bet, like betting on black.  "You still lose you money,
       but you lose it more slowly."  Or another example: Hollywood should bet
       on a bankable combination like Sidney Pollack directing Robert Redford
       in films like _T_h_e _W_a_y _W_e _W_e_r_e, _T_h_r_e_e _D_a_y_s _o_f _t_h_e _C_o_n_d_o_r, _E_l_e_c_t_r_i_c
       _H_o_r_s_e_m_a_n, and _O_u_t _o_f _A_f_r_i_c_a.  Eventually you will come up double-zero on
       a $45 million spectacle, but it will take longer.  Double-zero is
       essentially what Universal has with _H_a_v_a_n_a.  One of the zeroes is a
       political thriller that pits the pre-revolutionary scummy government of
       Batista against the idealistic supporters of Fidel Castro, most of whom
       we know are destined to have a rude awakening in the years to come.  The
       other zero is a love story in which the lovers have all the chemistry of
       champagne and Miracle Whip*.

            Redford plays Jack Weil, a wise-cracking gambler who sticks to
       business, but might have more going on below the surface, much like Rick
       Blaine in _C_a_s_a_b_l_a_n_c_a.  He becomes the third side of a triangle in which
       the other two sides are a married couple of revolutionaries (Lena Olin
       and Raul Julia) living a dangerous life, much like Ilsa Lund and Victor
       Laszlo in _C_a_s_a_b_l_a_n_c_a.  Weil must decide if he will do nothing and let
       events take their course, try to steal the woman, or become committed to
       the cause, much as Rick does in _C_a_s_a_b_l_a_n_c_a.  Now it seems to me that
       some film other than _H_a_v_a_n_a has used this plot before.  It's on the tip
       of my mind, but ... oh, well.  Seriously, one reason that this film does
       not engage the audience like _C_a_s_a_b_l_a_n_c_a did is that Bogart was an actor
       who could show pain.  Redford can wince a little.

            Of the love story, the political thriller, and the setting, the
       setting wins by default.  Much of that humungous budget went into
       creating the look and feel of Havana of 1958.  Others have vouched for
       its accuracy; I can vouch only for its believability.  Not that pre-
       revolutionary Havana was that interesting a city but, filming in the
       Dominican Republic, Pollack has captured at least a believable look.
       And at nearly two and a half hours in length, the film lets you get a
       long look.  And you might as well look at the background; you are not
       missing much in the foreground.  I give this film a 0 on the -4 to +4
       scale.


       __________

         * Miracle Whip is a trademark of Kraft Foods Co.












                                       MERMAIDS
                           A film review by Mark R. Leeper
                            Copyright 1990 Mark R. Leeper



                 Capsule review:  While a comedy on the surface
            _M_e_r_m_a_i_d_s has a serious underside.  Cher plays a mother
            whose irresponsible self-indulgence is destroying the
            lives of her family.  Rating: low +2 (-4 to +4).

            Rachel Flax (played by Cher) has not handle responsibility well.
       On the surface she seems a likable kook with some odd ways of getting
       through life with minimal commitment.  When life gets too hectic for
       her, she packs up and moves on, together with her two daughters.  What
       she refuses to face is that she is hurting everyone around her and
       making both daughters incredibly neurotic.  At first the viewer chuckles
       at the odd quirks of the family, but with time the chuckling becomes
       more uneasy and we get a feel for the painful contortions the Flax
       family is being put through by their mother's willful avoidance of any
       commitment.  The movie is seen from 15-year-old daughter Charlotte's
       point of view as she desperately tries to understand her coming-of-age
       with no guidance whatsoever from her mother.  (Charlotte is played by
       the ubiquitous Winona Ryder, who is currently in _E_d_w_a_r_d _S_c_i_s_s_o_r_h_a_n_d_s and
       _W_e_l_c_o_m_e _H_o_m_e, _R_o_x_y _C_a_r_m_i_c_h_a_e_l and is rumored to have had a nervous
       breakdown that prevented her from also being cast as Michael Corleone's
       daughter in _T_h_e _G_o_d_f_a_t_h_e_r _I_I_I.  Predictably she gets everything
       confused.  One minute she wants to become a nun (though she is Jewish),
       she is fixated on Catholicism), and the next she is praying to be raped
       by the 26-year-old hunk who is the caretaker at a nearby convent.

            Mrs. Flax is having her current affair with a Lou Landsky who owns
       the local shoe store "Foot Friendly."  There are a couple of problems
       here, actually.  "Foot Friendly" at least sounds like a take-off on the
       phrase "user-friendly," but _M_e_r_m_a_i_d_s is set in 1963, before terminology
       like "X-friendly" was familiar or perhaps even invented.  The second is
       that the script apparently calls for Lou to be Jewish and from the
       Midwest and the role is something of a stretch for actor Bob Hoskins.
       His character Lou realizes that behind all the weirdness there is a lot
       of pain in the Flax family.  He wants to help but must tread a narrow
       line of helping the children and not scaring Rachel into "moving on."

            Richard Benjamin directed, though a recent PBS discussion said that
       Cher was able to maintain much of the artistic control.  The script's
       worst faults are its lulling the audience into believing the material
       would be light-weight, and a gratuitous piece of suspense toward the end
       that cheapens the effect of the film and makes it seem more manipulative
       where earlier it had been more sensitive.  Still _M_e_r_m_a_i_d_s has more to it
       than first meets the eye.  I rate it a low +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.

















                                   VINCENT AND THEO
                           A film review by Mark R. Leeper
                            Copyright 1990 Mark R. Leeper



                 Capsule review:  Robert Altman does Ken Russell
            doing a biography of Vincent Van Gogh.  The film is
            over-long and mostly very unappealing.  Rating: -1 (-4 to
            +4).

            With the world celebrating the 100th anniversary of Vincent Van
       Gogh's death, the time was ripe for a biographic film about the artist.
       Kirk Douglas had played Van Gogh in the 1956 film _L_u_s_t _f_o_r _L_i_f_e, but
       that was a sort of polished Hollywood version.  This time we have an
       international production directed by Robert Altman.  It seems from
       Altman's film about the great artist who was so misunderstood in his own
       time that, in fact, there was good reason to misunderstand Vincent Van
       Gogh.

            Tim Roth, who plays Van Gogh with an English accent, makes his
       subject not just someone you would _n_o_t want to meet, he makes him
       someone who could drive you out of a room just be entering it.  Vincent
       chooses to live in squalor not through poverty--at least initially--but
       through apathy.  His teeth are rotted and discolored through lack of
       care and his clothing is tattered.  His fascination with color is by no
       means limited to his painting.  He seems to have a passion for smearing
       himself with paint and for eating his paints--we see him licking paint
       at several points in the film.

            _V_i_n_c_e_n_t _a_n_d _T_h_e_o concentrates, not surprisingly, on the love/hate
       relationship between Vincent and his brother Theo.  A little
       ungraciously the film shows Theo's wife as having little but disgust and
       disregard for Vincent while historically it was her perseverance that
       eventually brought the art of Vincent Van Gogh to the attention of
       critics.  While that is not wholly inconsistent with what we see in the
       film, it does seem unlikely considering her constantly unfriendly
       attitude toward her brother-in-law--not surprisingly toward a man who
       seems to like to take a big mouthful of wine and then drool it out of
       his mouth.

            Kirk Douglas played Van Gogh as a man of deep passions.  Roth plays
       him as just plain weird and cold with occasional explosions of emotions.
       It is hard to judge which is the more accurate representation, though
       the earlier interpretation is by far the more watchable and dramatically
       interesting.

            There is an odd disjointed quality to the script.  Syphilis victim
       Theo in one scene tries, fails, and tells his wife, "I can't pee any
       more."  In the next scene he is back at work as if it were just an
       activity of no importance that has been dropped from his schedule.











       Vincent and Theo           December 24, 1990                      Page 2



       Though my wife did not remember it, I really thought I heard one
       character tell another to look him up in the phone book.  We both heard
       a reference to South American velvet painting, which seems a likely
       anachronism.

            The time may have been ripe for a film biography of Van Gogh, but I
       just don't feel this was the one.  I give it a -1 on the -4 to +4 scale.


























































                                   THE RUSSIA HOUSE
                           A film review by Mark R. Leeper
                            Copyright 1990 Mark R. Leeper



                 Capsule review:  Colorless spy story keeps promising
            to pay off with something happening, but plot twists are
            a long time coming.  Photography in Russia tries to make
            it look exotic and interesting, but the rather drab
            cities are not the best photographic subjects.  Rating: 0
            (-4 to +4).

            At the beginning of _T_h_e _R_u_s_s_i_a _H_o_u_s_e three notebooks purportedly
       containing Soviet military secrets have been passed to a British
       publisher and the British want to know if the notebooks are genuine.  An
       hour and forty minutes into _T_h_e _R_u_s_s_i_a _H_o_u_s_e we have seen a lot of
       Russian scenery, we know some of the characters involved a little
       better, a fourth notebook has been passed, and now the Americans as well
       as the British want to know if the notebooks are genuine.  That may well
       be how the spy business really is, but it really is not a very good
       piece of story-telling.  It would be one thing if the evidence built up
       in an interesting way the way it did in a previous LeCarre adaptation,
       _T_i_n_k_e_r, _T_a_i_l_o_r, _S_o_l_d_i_e_r, _S_p_y.  But here we are dealing with far less
       than compelling characters.  The two main characters are Sean Connery as
       British publisher Barley Blair and Michelle Pfeiffer as Soviet publisher
       Katya.  Katya passes the notebooks written by a former lover Klaus Maria
       Brandauer as the enigmatic Dante.  Barley and Blair seem to fall in love
       for reasons never very clear.  This has to be a what's-the-attraction
       love pairing to rival the one in _H_a_v_a_n_a.

            Fred Schepisi has taken a script that would move moderately well at
       thirty minutes and stretched it to a hundred and twenty-three.  One way
       that he has stretched it is to show you the scenery of Russia, mostly
       Moscow and Leningrad.  This plays off the new post-glasnost interest in
       the Soviet Union; however, it seems unlikely this film will greatly
       contribute to Soviet tourism.  While many of the buildings are of
       majestic design, the film only underscored the drabness of Russia.  That
       drabness is further emphasized by filming Russia with perpetually
       overcast skies.  The film also unsells tourism by underscoring how much
       the economy has degraded under glasnost.  As Katya complains, "Glasnost
       gives everyone the right to complain and accuse, but it doesn't make
       shoes."  Curiously, Katya manages to be able to get plenty of eye make-
       up, as Michelle Pfeiffer's characters always do.

            What is curious about the uninteresting background is that the
       screenplay is by Tom Stoppard, who made Shanghai mystical and
       fascinating in his screenplay for _E_m_p_i_r_e _o_f _t_h_e _S_u_n.  Here, however, he
       tries to show us not a physical landscape but the figurative landscape
       of the world of espionage and counter-espionage.  LeCarre can make that
       landscape interesting, but it does not come through in Stoppard's
       screenplay.  I like Stoppard and LeCarre, but I hope they realize they
       are no good for each other.  I rate their result a 0 on the -4 to +4
       scale.






































               THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT ALMOST BLANK



































Dec 27 14:07 1990  MT VOID 1990 Index Page 1


90/10/05	Advertisements (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/12/14	Advertisements (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/11/02	AGVIQ (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/10/12	Alcoholic Beverages (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/01/19	ALTERNATE HEROES (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/08/24	American Culture (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/03/02	ANGEL STATION (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/01/12	Ants (Comment BY M. R. Leeper)
90/07/27	ARACHNOPHOBIA (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/11/02	Arguments (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/09/21	AUTHOR'S CHOICE MONTHLY 8 (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/11/09	AVALON (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/05/18	AYESHA: RETURN OF "SHE" (Book review by M. R. Leeper)
90/05/18	BEAR (Book review by M. R. Leeper)
90/09/14	Bibles, Electronic (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/12/21	Bibles, Electronic (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/07/13	BLACK ALICE (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/05/25	BLACK SNOW DAYS (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/04/20	BLACK SNOW DAYS (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/01/12	BOAT OF A MILLION YEARS (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/05/18	BOAT OF A MILLION YEARS (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/04/20	Book Blurbs (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/03/09	Boskone 27 (Part 1) (Con report by E. C. Leeper)
90/03/16	Boskone 27 (Part 2) (Con report by E. C. Leeper)
90/03/23	Boskone 27 (Part 3) (Con report by E. C. Leeper)
90/04/27	BRIDE OF THE SLIME MONSTER (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/01/12	BUYING TIME (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/08/24	BY DAWN'S EARLY LIGHT (Film review by D. L. Skran)
90/03/02	Cable in March (Film reviews by M. R. Leeper)
90/02/09	CANTICLE FOR LEIBOWITZ (Comment by E. C. Leeper)
90/02/09	Charmed Life (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/05/04	CINEMA PARADISO (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/03/30	CITY, NOT LONG AFTER (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/12/07	Colorization (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/07/06	Commercials (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/07/13	Commercials (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/09/28	ConFiction (Part 1) (Con report by E. C. Leeper)
90/10/05	ConFiction (Part 2) (Con report by E. C. Leeper)
90/10/12	ConFiction (Part 3) (Con report by E. C. Leeper)
90/03/02	CONTACT AND COMMUNE (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/04/27	COOK THE THIEF HIS WIFE & HER LOVER (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/03/16	Copyrights (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/01/05	CYBERBOOKS (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/11/30	DANCES WITH WOLVES (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/05/18	DANCING AT THE END OF THE WORLD (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/09/14	DARKMAN (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/01/12	DAWN'S UNCERTAIN LIGHT (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/05/25	DEADSPEAK (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/01/12	DEMONS AT RAINBOW BRIDGE (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/07/13	DIE HARD 2 (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/01/19	Digital Tape Recorders (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/01/12	DIVIDED ALLEGIANCE (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/05/25	DREAD BRASS SHADOWS (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/05/25	DREAMS OF STEEL (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/01/26	DRIVING MISS DAISY (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/04/27	Earth Day (Comment by M. R. Leeper)







Dec 27 14:07 1990  MT VOID 1990 Index Page 2


90/12/21	EDWARD SCISSORHANDS (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/05/25	ELYSIA (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/04/20	ENDANGERED SPECIES (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/03/02	ENEMIES (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/03/30	EVERYBODY'S FAVORITE DUCK (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/05/25	EXPEDITER (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/04/27	FALL OF HYPERION (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/01/05	FAMILY BUSINESS (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/06/08	FANTASTIC WORLD WAR II (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/05/25	FAREWELL HORIZONTAL (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/11/16	FIRE'S STONE (Book review by F. R. Leisti)
90/08/24	FIVE (Film review by D. L. Skran)
90/08/17	FLATLINERS (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/08/31	Food (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/05/25	FORTRESS OF THE PEARL (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/11/02	FOUCAULT'S PENDULUM (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/01/19	FOUCAULT'S PENDULUM (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/06/01	Franklin Institute (Comment by E. C. Leeper)
90/04/20	FREEDOM BEACH (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/08/10	FRESHMAN (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/05/11	FULL SPECTRUM 2 (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/06/29	Funding (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/09/07	Future Technology (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/07/20	GHOST (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/01/19	GLORY (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/05/04	GODS MUST BE CRAZY II (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/09/28	GOODFELLAS (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/03/09	Great Attractor (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/03/09	GRUMBLES FROM THE GRAVE (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/07/06	GYPSIES (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/03/23	HANDMAID'S TALE (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/03/23	HANDMAID'S TALE (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/07/06	Harryhausen, Ray (Filmography by M. R. Leeper)
90/12/28	HAVANA (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/12/14	HEATHERN (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/03/02	Height (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/11/16	HENRY & JUNE (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/02/02	HENRY V (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/07/06	HIDDEN PLACE (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/01/19	HOLIDAYS IN HELL (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/08/03	Hot Peppers (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/03/30	Hugo Nominees (1990)
90/07/27	Hugo Nominees (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/03/09	HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/03/16	HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER (Film review by R. L. Mitchell)
90/05/25	HYPERION (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/04/27	HYPERION (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/05/25	IN ANOTHER COUNTRY (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/05/25	Insanity (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/02/16	Insomnia (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/11/09	JACOB'S LADDER (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/01/12	JASON COSMO (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/05/11	KALEIDOSCOPE (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/01/05	Kirinyaga Stories (Comment by K. Tipton)
90/01/12	Kirinyaga Stories (Comment by K. Tipton)
90/03/02	LABYRINTH (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/01/12	LAST LEGENDS OF EARTH (Book review by D. L. Skran)






Dec 27 14:07 1990  MT VOID 1990 Index Page 3


90/04/13	Lawyers (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/04/06	Lawyers (Comments by M. R. Leeper)
90/05/04	Library Acquisitions
90/04/06	Library Acquisitions (List)
90/06/15	Library Acquisitions (List)
90/06/29	Library Acquisitions (List)
90/05/11	LIGHTNING (Book review by M. R. Leeper)
90/05/04	Longbows (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/06/08	LONGTIME COMPANION (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/12/07	MADNESS SEASON (Book review by F. R. Leisti)
90/05/25	MAHABHARATA (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/05/25	MANFAC (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/07/06	MEMORY WIRE (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/11/16	MEMPHIS BELLE (1942) (Film comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/11/16	MEMPHIS BELLE (1990) (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/12/28	MERMAIDS (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/09/21	METROPOLITAN (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/02/02	MISERABLES (Book review by M. R. Leeper)
90/12/14	MISERY (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/03/16	MOUNTAINS OF THE MOON (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/01/12	MUMMY (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/01/26	MUSIC BOX (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/02/02	MY LEFT FOOT (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/05/18	NATURAL HISTORY (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/02/23	Nebula Award Nominees
90/05/04	Nebula Award Winners
90/03/02	NECROSCOPE (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/04/06	NEW DIRECTIONS (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/01/26	News (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/07/27	1990 ANNUAL WORLD'S BEST SF (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/07/20	NO ENEMY BUT TIME (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/05/25	NORTHWORLD (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/11/02	NORTHWORLD (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/04/20	NUNS ON THE RUN (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/01/12	OATH OF GOLD (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/11/23	Official (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/09/07	OXYGEN BARONS (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/10/26	PACIFIC HEIGHTS (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/06/01	PATHFINDER (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/08/10	Peanut Butter (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/03/30	PHANTOM OF THE OPERA (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/03/16	PHASES OF GRAVITY (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/12/07	POINTS OF DEPARTURE (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/09/21	POSTCARDS FROM THE EDGE (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/01/12	PRENTICE ALVIN (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/08/03	PRESUMED INNOCENT (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/07/20	Prisons (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/01/12	PROCYON'S PROMISE (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/03/23	PROMISES TO KEEP (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/05/11	PUGNACIOUS PEACEMAKER (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/04/27	PUNJAT'S RUBY (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/12/14	PURSUIT OF MIRACLES (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/05/04	Q & A (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/03/16	QUEST FOR APOLLO (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/07/27	QUICK CHANGE (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/11/02	RAMA II (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/03/23	Ratings (Comment by M. R. Leeper)






Dec 27 14:07 1990  MT VOID 1990 Index Page 4


90/11/02	REACH (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/04/20	Readercon 3 (Part 1) (Con report by E. C. Leeper)
90/04/27	Readercon 3 (Part 2) (Con report by E. C. Leeper)
90/05/04	Readercon 3 (Part 3) (Con report by E. C. Leeper)
90/07/27	REDSHIFT RENDEZVOUS (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/11/09	REVERSAL OF FORTUNE (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/11/02	RITNYM'S DAUGHTER (Book review by F. R. Leisti)
90/01/19	ROGER & ME (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/12/28	RUSSIA HOUSE (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/10/19	Seafood (Part 1) (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/10/26	Seafood (Part 2) (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/09/21	SECRET ASCENSION (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/04/27	SLAVES OF THE VOLCANO GOD (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/09/28	Societies (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/03/02	SOURCE (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/08/17	Spiders (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/05/11	Sports (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/05/18	Sports (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/06/01	Sports (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/06/08	Sports (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/03/30	Spring Break (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/08/03	STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION (TV review by D. L. Skran)
90/08/10	STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION (TV review by D. L. Skran)
90/07/06	STEAM BIRD (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/04/13	STRANGE INVASION (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/05/18	STRANGE TOYS (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/02/16	SUM VII (Book review by M. R. Leeper)
90/05/25	SUNG IN BLOOD (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/11/02	SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL WIZARD (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/08/24	SURVIVOR (Film review by D. L. Skran)
90/01/12	TEA WITH THE BLACK DRAGON (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/07/13	TERRAPLANE (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/11/02	THE SWORDBEARER (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/08/24	THIS IS NOT A TEST (Film review by D. L. Skran)
90/05/11	THOSE WHO HUNT THE NIGHT (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/12/14	TIMELEY AFFAIR (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/05/25	TOOL OF THE TRADE (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/02/02	Top Ten Films of 1989 (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/06/08	TOTAL RECALL (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/05/04	22ND INTERNATIONAL TOURNEE OF ANIMATION (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/05/11	TWILIGHT EYES (Book review by M. R. Leeper)
90/06/15	UNCONQUERED COUNTRY (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/03/02	VAMPHRYI! (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/12/28	VINCENT (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/05/25	VINTAGE SEASON (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/05/11	WATCHERS (Book review by M. R. Leeper)
90/05/11	WHEELS OF IF (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/08/24	WHEN THE WINDS BLOW (Film review by D. L. Skran)
90/05/11	WIDE AWAKE AT 3:00 AM (Book review by M. R. Leeper)
90/05/25	WILD CARDS VI: ACE IN THE HOLE (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/11/02	WILD CARDS: DEAD MAN'S HAND (Book review by D. L. Skran)
90/11/09	Winners and Losers (Comment by M. R. Leeper)
90/09/14	WITCHES (Film review by M. R. Leeper)
90/11/09	Wollheim, Donald (Obituary)
90/01/05	WORLD BEYOND THE HILL (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/01/12	WRITER'S HOME COMPANION (Book review by E. C. Leeper)
90/05/25	WRITERS OF THE FUTURE (Book review by C. Harris)