Schedule Grid
Sunday 8:00 a
Hynes Open for Setup Only
Sunday 9:00 a
Hynes Opens
Sunday 9:00 a Hall A:
Registration Opens
Sunday 9:00 a Hampton:
Christian/Catholic
Worship Service (Father John Baker)
Sunday 9:00 a Con Suite:
Con Suite Open
Sunday 9:00 a Republic A:
Jungle
Emperor Leo [Dubbed] [7 +]
Sunday 9:30 a :
Childcare Opens
Sunday 9:30 a H102:
Ecumenifilk
Brenda Sutton
Sunday 9:30 a H203:
Medieval Fantasy
Literature
Sean McMullen
Sunday 9:30 a H205:
Con Stress Relief
Stretching exercises to help us make
it through another day.
Elizabeth Caldwell
Sunday 9:30 a H301:
ASFA Meeting
Sunday 9:30 a Beacon A:
Moving to Music [ages
1-7]
Clap and sing to the music of Jim
Cosgrove, a Kansas City children's folk singer.
Sunday 9:30 a Beacon F:
Leaf Creatures [ages
3-6]
Leaf rubbings and some creativity will
turn some ordinary silk leaves into works of art.
Sunday 9:30 a Conference:
Filk Office Opens
Sunday 9:30 a Exeter:
Reading
Laura Resnick
Sunday 9:30 a Hall A:
Shotokan Karate Workshop
Kenn Bates, Keith G. Kato
Sunday 10:00 a :
Masquerade Registration Open
Sunday 10:00 a H100:
HeroClix
Learn how to use your favorite
superheroes to beat any enemy in this hit game from Wizkids.
Sunday 10:00 a H107:
More Than
Human
A round-table discussion of the 1953
Retro Hugo nominated novel.
Don D'Ammassa
Sunday 10:00 a H203:
The Use of Women of Power
by DeLint (NW Coastal) and Crowley (Aegypt) Fiction
Janice Bogstad
Sunday 10:00 a H204:
Futurism and Writing SF:
a Positive Feedback System
How does writing science fiction and
being a futurist blend? Some of our famous authors actively
proclaim themselves futurists; others do not. How can futurism
help the SF author?
Brenda Jean Cooper
Sunday 10:00 a H205:
How to Proof Your Own
Writing: A Mini-Workshop
Terry McGarry
Sunday 10:00 a H206:
My Love Affair With JRR
Tolkien
When (and how) did it start? Was it a
passing fling or eternal love? Who or what is sitting at home
waiting for you to come to your senses?
Daniel Grotta, Karen Haber (m), Kathy
Morrow, Michael Swanwick, Connie Willis
Sunday 10:00 a H208:
Firefly
Marathon, Episode 9-11
Sunday 10:00 a H209:
Magic User's Club
#1 [Subtitled] [13 +]
Sunday 10:00 a H210:
WSFS Business Meeting
The WSFS Business Meeting is open to
all Worldcon members. The first item of business for today's
meeting is to receive the official results of the Worldcon Site
Selection. Also at today's meeting is Question Time, where you
get a chance to put questions to future seated Worldcon
committees. If time permits, the WSFS Mark Protection Committee
may meet immediately after the Business Meeting.
Sunday 10:00 a H302:
Memorable Scenes
Some stories have scenes which are so
right they just stick in your mind. (E.g., The paleontologist
being handed a cooler containing a freshly frozen dinosaur head
in Swanwick's Bones of the Earth, or Hari Seldon
appearing in the Time Vault, "I am Hari Seldon.")
What scenes stick in your minds? What makes them so memorable?
Grant Carrington, Sharon Lee, Farah
Mendelsohn, Darrell Schweitzer
Sunday 10:00 a H303:
When Did the Future Get
So Far Away?
Remember the 1959s and 1960s, when we
thought that by the year 2000 we'd have giant orbiting space
stations, routine space travel, and human colonies all over the
solar system? Stories written today don't talk of such wonders
happening within a few decades—instead, they're a century
or more in the imagined future. What happened? Did we get more
cynical and lose our near-term dreams, or more practical and
assume the future would be harder to get to that earlier
dreamers imagined?
Judith Berman, Steve Carper, D. Douglas
Fratz, John G. Hemry, Mike Shepherd-Moscoe (m)
Sunday 10:00 a H304:
Hiking the Enchanted
Forest: Setting in Fantasy
Enchanted forests…lonely
isles…magic mountains…What is the importance of
setting and landscape in fantasy?
David B. Coe, Greer Gilman, Beth
Hilgartner, Mindy Klasky, Rebecca Moesta (m), Jeff VanderMeer
Sunday 10:00 a H305:
Archaeology of the
Present
When the dig it all up in the future,
what will future generations believe about us based on our tools
and possessions?
Susan Born, Victoria McManus, Karl
Schroeder (m), S. M. Stirling
Sunday 10:00 a H306:
Grow Old Along With Me:
Aging Your Characters
Why get stuck in adolescence? Middle
age is another quest/rite of passage, and so is old age/death.
How do you help your characters grow old (gracefully, or not)?
How do you work with those parts of the voyage through life in
your work? Or, are we being merely mercenary—to sell to an
aging market segment?(Or, because we grow old, we grow
old…?)
Lois McMaster Bujold, Nancy Kress (m),
Jean Lorrah, Steve Miller, John Scalzi, Susan Shwartz
Sunday 10:00 a H307:
Visual Research
Once you've gotten your 45 years of
National Geographic, what next? Create a good
reference library and file, and avoid copyright infringement
when using it.
Alan F. Beck, Joe Bergeron, Colleen
Doran, Thomas Kidd (m)
Sunday 10:00 a H309:
The Art of Titles
Where do titles come from? Are they
about art, or more about marketing? Who selects the
title—the author or editor/publisher? Can you tell a
book's content by its title—and should you? Are there
great books with bad titles, and vice versa? Give examples. What
are the ten best titles in SF? Why?
Kathryn Cramer (m), Thomas Harlan,
Fruma Klass, Terry Pratchett, Gordon Van Gelder
Sunday 10:00 a H310:
Too Many Ideas?
How much stuff can you stuff in one
book? Can there be too many goshwowwhatakeenthing ideas, under
any circumstances? How can the trade-offs between difficult
material and transparency be balanced? Can readers be given more
than they can handle? How can the reluctant reader be coaxed
along?
James Cambias (m), Carl Frederick, Jon
Courtenay Grimwood, Sean McMullen
Sunday 10:00 a H311:
Star Trek: A
Reflection of Cultures?
How has each series reflected its
time?
Bob Greenberger, Les Johnson,
Jacqueline Lichtenberg, Jim Mann (m)
Sunday 10:00 a H312:
The Best Books of 2004
(so far)
You know those hateful people who
somehow keep up with their reading? They're all on this panel.
They'll share which current works of science fiction, fantasy,
horror, and slipstream it's a shame you're missing.
Charles N. Brown, John Clute, Jonathan
Strahan (m)
Sunday 10:00 a Art Show:
Art Show Opens
Sunday 10:00 a Beacon A:
Children's Dance
[ages 1-8]
Bring your Teddy Bear. Bring your
favorite stuffed animal. Wiggle, jiggle, giggle; hop, bounce,
and shake. Dance for kids.
Sue Schroeder
Sunday 10:00 a Beacon D:
Sign Language from
the Planet ZOOG [ages 7–12]
Aliens might not look like us or sound
like us. How would we communicate face to face? Learn some ASL
signs that might help you out.
Note: kids should know the English
alphabet to participate in this one!
Geary Gravel
Sunday 10:00 a Beacon F:
Pencil Holder [ages
5-10]
Take a paper tubes and cardboard and
personalize it for this fun craft.
Sunday 10:00 a Dalton:
Weird Tales of Early
Aviation
Meet those magnificent men and their
flying machines in a selection of wonderfully strange and
little-know tales from the early days of flight. Meet the
World's Worst Pilot (first survivor of a mid-air collision and
four emergency parachute bailouts!), the Pilot Who Flew With A
Lion, and more. You'll learn why it once took three months to
fly coast-to-coast, and why the 1903 Wright Flyer doesn't really
exist, even if you think you've actually seen it. Enjoy these
wonderfully strange and little-known tales from the early days
of flight!
Michael Dobson
Sunday 10:00 a Exeter:
Reading
Laura Underwood
Sunday 10:00 a Gardner:
Stories in the Stars
[ages 7–12]
Every culture has put its stories into
the stars. Come explore the night sky through stories from
different cultures, the constellations and the wonders within
them.
Steven Hammond
Sunday 10:00 a Hall D:
Dealers Room Opens
Sunday 10:00 a Hampton:
Reading
Martha Wells
Sunday 10:00 a Independence:
Deryni Adventure
Join Ann Dupuis, publisher of the
upcoming Deryni Adventure Game, for a roleplaying adventure
involving Sendai the Magnificent and his troupe of travelling
performers. Katherine Kurtz is co-GM for this adventure.
Sunday 10:00 a Con Suite:
Kaffeeklatsch
Kage Baker, Barbara Chepaitis, Jo
Walton, Michael Whelan
Sunday 10:00 a Liberty C:
Transit Fans
Discussion Group
Sunday 10:30 a H203:
Hackers in Action:
Oppositional Agencies, Performance Tropes
Monica Hulsbus
Sunday 10:30 a H204:
E-Books: Neither "E" Nor
Books?
Cory Doctorow
Sunday 10:30 a H209:
Magic User's Club
#2 [Subtitled] [13 +]
Sunday 10:30 a Clarendon:
About Audio Books
Tamora Pierce
Sunday 10:30 a Dalton:
How to Get a Job in
Games
Clarinda Merripen
Sunday 10:30 a Exeter:
Reading
Steve Antczak
Sunday 10:30 a Hampton:
Reading
Rosemary Kirstein
Sunday 10:45 a Republic A:
Saint Tail
#1—3 [Dubbed]
Sunday 11:00 a Auditorium:
Masquerade Tech
Rehearsal—Section Two
Sunday 11:00 a H107:
Sword and Sorcery: Heroic
Fantasy's Punk Kid Brother
Warrior heroes and mighty magicians
strutting their stuff across a world of the author's
imagination. That can describe both Heroic Fantasy and
Sword-and-Sorcery. But why does one sound more up-market than
the other? Does it depend on the style of writing—or just
the thickness of the book?
Peter Morwood
Sunday 11:00 a H203:
Criticism or Review?
Is there really a difference? Discuss.
F. Brett Cox, Gregory Feeley (m),
Daniel Grotta, Graham Sleight, Takayuki Tatsumi
Sunday 11:00 a H204:
Writers' Tools and Desk
Fetishes!
What do writers keep on their desks?
How do these objects help their writing? Professionals
show-and-tell what their compositional touchstones are all
about, and five hints on how to find your own particular desk
fetishes
Michael A. Burstein, Daniel P. Dern,
Vera Nazarian, Amy Thomson (m), Shane Tourtellotte
Sunday 11:00 a H205:
Low-Budget Independent SF
Films
Not every SF or fantasy film has to be
an effects-laden, multiple hour epic. Three SF movies that go
the other way, helped in part by animation software, were
featured at the 04 Sundance Film Festival and one of
them—Primer— received the Grand Jury Award for best
dramatic feature. As one of the filmmakers, Marteinn Thorsson,
says, "A science- fiction film doesn't need to be $80 million
and use CGI (computer-generated imagery). Science fiction is
about human beings interacting with each other and with
technology, and technology has become part of who we are today."
Is this one shape of things to come in the SF film world?
Steve Antczak, Resa Nelson, Don Sakers
(m), Charles Stross
Sunday 11:00 a H206:
Achilles Needs a
Heel!—The Problem With Power
Would Achilles have been interesting
if he'd been truly invulnerable, or, instead or dying a tragic
here would he still have been acting like a psychopathic
adolescent thirty years after the Trojan War ended? Can power
without vulnerabilities make an interesting story? (Has anyone
succeeded?) What sorts of vulnerabilities are needed? How do you
avoid the search for the armor's chink turning a story into a
puzzle?
Alison Baird (m), Carol Berg, Diane
Duane, Sheila Finch
Sunday 11:00 a H209:
Magic User's Club
#3 [Subtitled] [13 +]
Sunday 11:00 a H301:
Mixed Marriages
One's a fan, one isn't. How do couples
handle the demands of fandom when one of the pair isn't really
interested? Panel members have received permission from their
spouses to be at this Worldcon.
Michael Benveniste (m), Bob Devney,
Daniel Kimmel, Steven H Silver
Sunday 11:00 a H302:
Personnel Problems of
Extraterrestrials in Earth Industry
From Clevention (1955) Proper hygiene
for food workers with tentacles? ("Must wash hands, tentacles,
pseudopods…")? Safety glasses for the many-eyed? Salary
compensation for hive beings? And then there's romance in the
workplace…oh, my! And how will the Americans with
Disabilities laws apply??
Tobias Buckell, Craig Gardner, Laura
Anne Gilman, Steven Popkes, Karen Traviss (m)
Sunday 11:00 a H303:
Alien Ethical Systems
What sort of ethical and moral systems
would aliens develop, with their very different histories and
biologies?
Jeffrey A. Carver, Paul Levinson,
Elizabeth Moon, Stanley Schmidt (m), Wen Spencer
Sunday 11:00 a H304:
Nanotech and Murphy's Law
Imagine nanomachines busily clearing
your arteries of plaque. Now, imagine them running on Windows
ME, or mutating, or being hacked. So, "nothing can go wrong"?
Hah! (And are these some of the reasons it's taking so long to
develop the actual science?)
M. M. Buckner, Eileen Gunn (m), Stephen
C. Lee, Karl Schroeder, W. A. Thomasson, Ann Tonsor Zeddies
Sunday 11:00 a H305:
Getting Around Without a
Car
Advantages and disadvantages of
different modes of transportation—from hiking to SCUBA,
horses to Mars rovers. Everything is fair game.
Lisa Barnett, Bob Kanefsky, Lee
Martindale (m)
Sunday 11:00 a H306:
DOA: Books that Died
Despite Everything
Well-known author, well-developed
plot, thorough marketing plan, yet the book fails to thrive.
Why? Did it show too much ambition or too little? Was it
old-fashioned, or ahead of its time? Were the stars wrong, or
the season, or were we simply coming down with the flu? Let us
count all the sad ways good books go bad…Our panel will
discuss the phenomenon from multiple viewpoints.
John Jarrold, Jane Jewell (m), Patrick
Nielsen Hayden, Janna Silverstein, Jonathan Strahan, Jacob
Weisman
Sunday 11:00 a H307:
Drawing to Order
Professional artists tell tales of the
perils of work when the call they're responding to is from an
art director and not a muse.
Ed Cox, Joseph DeVito (m), Karen Haber,
Don Maitz, Omar Rayyan
Sunday 11:00 a H309:
The Art of Janny Wurts
Slide show
Janny Wurts
Sunday 11:00 a H310:
The Age of Fighting Sail
Isn't Over: It's Moved to SF
Shiver me titanium timber if this wet
navy/space navy transposition hasn't gotten even more popular
than ever! Who are its leading practitioners—have we got
another Patrick O'Brian yet? Can this metaphor survive real
space travel?
And talking about "sailing through space," take a
quick look at how nautical fiction is related to space opera and
hard SF…look at characters and commanders, story lines,
missions, venues, dangers, and bureaucracy! Shivermetimbers, if
"Sou' by West by Port o' West and Weather the Lizard" doesn't
sound nearly as romantic in GPS-ese…
John G. Hemry, Jim Mann (m), Susan
Shwartz, Walter Jon Williams
Sunday 11:00 a H311:
Exotic Mythologies
Tired of fantasy larded with cardboard
cut-outs from Celtic mythology? Explore some of the world's
great mythologies that fantasy has yet to fully explore. A
survey of great ideas from countries and peoples around the
world.
Suzanne Alles Blom, Anne Harris,
Josepha Sherman (m), Vandana Singh
Sunday 11:00 a H312:
The Secularization of the
West
Religion as a force shaping Western
civilization appears to be declining. Is this a long-term trend
or just a temporary blip? If religion really is on the way out,
what will replace it as a source of shared values for our
culture? How will this affect the rest of the world? Will
religious fundamentalism drive the next global conflict? (Is
this happening already?)
Elizabeth Hand, Daniel Hatch, James
Macdonald (m), James Morrow
Sunday 11:00 a Art Show:
Tour of the Retro Art
Exhibit
Bob Eggleton
Sunday 11:00 a Autographing:
Autographing
Brian W. Aldiss, Kevin J. Anderson,
Walter H. Hunt, Robert I. Katz, William Tenn, Rebecca Moesta,
Uncle River, Robert J. Sawyer
Sunday 11:00 a Beacon A:
Kinderfilk [ages
1–6]
Mark Mandel
Sunday 11:00 a Beacon D:
Science and
Technology for the Kids of the Future [ages 7–12]
Did you know that many adults remember
the first color TV's and microwaves" That we lived in a world
where our parents and friends could never be reached by
cell-phone or email when we were kids? In this program, we'll
explore what technologies you might see in the future!
Brenda Jean Cooper
Sunday 11:00 a Beacon F:
Wizard/Princess Hat
[ages 2-6]
Cut out and decorate a cone shaped hat
to pretend with or to start your design of a new costume idea.
Sunday 11:00 a Clarendon:
Exomusicology
Would we truly be able to recognize
"alien" music as such…and how (when?) has the question of
alien/non-music actually come up on Earth itself?
W. Randy Hoffman, David R. Howell,
Louise Marley (m), Yves Meynard
Sunday 11:00 a Dalton:
Saving Clarion East
A brainstorming session open to alumni
and potential attendees. It will lay out the problems and try to
redesign the workshop for long-term survival.
James Patrick Kelly
Sunday 11:00 a Exeter:
Reading (1 hour)
Nick Sagan
Sunday 11:00 a Gardner:
Staying Safe on the
Net [ages 7–12]
Let's go surfing now, everybody's
learning how, follow all the links with me! The Net can be a
wild ride. Let's learn how to enjoy it while keeping private
things private.
James M. Turner
Sunday 11:00 a Hall A:
Music
Sunday 11:00 a Hampton:
Reading
Michael F. Flynn
Sunday 11:00 a Con Suite:
Kaffeeklatsch
Roger MacBride Allen, Phyllis
Eisenstein, Esther Friesner, George R. R. Martin
Sunday 11:00 a Liberty A:
Everquest Addicts
Muriel Hykes
Sunday 11:30 a H100:
HeroClix Tournament
Bring your favorite superhero
characters and test them in this Wizkids sanctioned event. [500
pts. Female characters only]
Sunday 11:30 a H209:
Magic User's Club
#4 [Subtitled] [13 +]
Sunday 11:30 a Dalton:
Intimate Adventure:
Exploring a New Genre?
Jacqueline Lichtenberg, Jean Lorrah
Sunday 11:30 a Hampton:
Reading
Jack L. Chalker
Sunday 12:00 n :
Masquerade Registration
Closes
Sunday 12:00 n H100:
Toon RPG: King of the Con
Tournament
Games featured are: Fluxx, The
Haunting House, Nuclear War, NinjaBurger Card Game, and Gimme
the Brain. You must sign up for this event. You must be in the
room by noon to play. {Experienced players]
Sunday 12:00 n H100:
Monkeys on the Moon
Six monkey tribes vie for supremacy
while you decide which ones to launch back home to Earth. These
tribes do not get along, and you must decide which ones to
befriend while enduring the scorn of the others. Will you be
anointed the Supreme Leader of these primates in this game from
Eight Foot Llama? (2–4 players per game.)
Sunday 12:00 n H102:
The Well-Sung Fan
Filking was invented (or was that
discovered?) over 50 years ago, with song cycles that go back to
the 1940s. In fact, our FGOH Jack Speer wrote the first song
sheet. What are the songs of the last 50 years that all fans
should know? (Some musical accompaniment should be attempted
here!)
Juanita Coulson, Bill Roper (m)
Sunday 12:00 n H107:
Forthcoming from Baen
The Infamous Travelling Slide Show
(with Door Prizes!)
Toni Weisskopf
Sunday 12:00 n H203:
Science in SF
Video.
Catherine Asaro
Sunday 12:00 n H204:
Promoting a First Novel
OK, you may not get the biggest push
from your publisher's marketing myrmidon. Nevertheless, are
there practical steps you can take? Suggesting possible
blurbers? Getting local reviewers? Bribing your way onto
Worldcon program?
Keith R. A. DeCandido, Laura Anne
Gilman
Sunday 12:00 n H205:
Dialogue
Barry N. Malzberg, Mike Resnick
Sunday 12:00 n H206:
Psychiatric Disorders of
the Future
Psychologists seem to be inventing new
disorders all the time to justify behavior considered in some
way "aberrant" —and defense lawyers hasten to jump on the
bandwagon to get their clients off the hook. (Remember the
"Twinkie Defense" in which a client was supposedly incapable of
rational action after devouring too much junk food?) On the flip
side, some old conditions (e.g., homosexuality) are no longer
considered psychiatric disorders. Are psychologists gaining
better insights into the human psyche, or just getting better
insight into the potential market for their services? What has
SF contributed to psychological insight? What sort of disorders
will be discovered or emerge over the next 50 years?
A. Michael Rennie, Uncle River, Isaac
Szpindel (m), Shane Tourtellotte, Trish Wilson
Sunday 12:00 n H209:
Magic User's Club
#5 [Subtitled] [13 +]
Sunday 12:00 n H301:
America's Best Comics
The line that Alan Moore begat has
spun a number of imaginative and wildly different SF and fantasy
titles, including Tom Strong,
Promethea and Top Ten. What makes
these books work so well? Is it true that
Promethea's readers are 98% male? And why aren't
there more stories featuring that scary kid genius, Jack B.
Quick?
James Bacon, Terence Chua (m), Daniel
P. Dern, Pam Fremon, Barry Short
Sunday 12:00 n H302:
The New Weird: What, Who,
and Why?
Now that SF has become more
mainstream, what has become the new fringe? Who defines what is
"weird," and who and what have been declared "weird,"—and
why?
Paul DiFilippo, Beth Meacham, Delia
Sherman, Graham Sleight (m), Jonathan Strahan, Jeff VanderMeer
Sunday 12:00 n H303:
The Legacy of Cherry
Wilder
Jim Frenkel, Katya Reimann
Sunday 12:00 n H304:
Hell is Gray: The
Banality of Evil
Back, deep in the mists of history,
there has always been a sneaking suspicion that evil is more
exciting, more fun than good: many writers (from Milton on
down!) make evil seem interesting. (Why?)But is it fun? The
(fortunately) few times most of us get near a truly bad person,
they don't seem to be very joyful or happy—they seen
terribly unhappy and frequently pretty dull. C. S. Lewis called
this the banality of evil: uncreative, repetitious, and boring.
Hell is not fiery-red, it is gray. Who has done a good job, in
fantasy or SF, showing realistic heroes combating realistic
evil?
Barbara Chepaitis, Stephen Dedman,
Paula Guran, Elizabeth Hand (m), Tanya Huff, Mary Turzillo
Sunday 12:00 n H305:
There's No Tech Like
Lo-Tech
Resist the peer pressure from
PDA-wielding, cell-phone- carrying, GPS-enabled friends and
family. Pick up a hammer, and not a power tool! Rhapsodize about
the wonders of steam engines, and things with gears. What's the
attraction of the low-tech lifestyle?
Sean McMullen, S. M. Stirling, Robert
Charles Wilson, William "Crash" Yerazunis (m)
Sunday 12:00 n H306:
Better than Light Sabers:
Really Good Merchandising Tie-ins
Hey—wouldn't you pay good money
for a real Vinge bubble? And what else are we ignoring…?
Mike Conrad, Leigh Grossman, David R.
Howell, Karen Traviss (m), Liz Williams
Sunday 12:00 n H307:
Angels and Aliens, Magic
and Marvels?
Is there an inherent disconnect
between believing in a Divine presence and being able to really
enjoy science fiction and fantasy? Or, can they complement each
other, leading to a greater appreciation of both?
Anne Harris, Beth Hilgartner, Ben
Jeapes, James Morrow (m), Brandon Sanderson
Sunday 12:00 n H309:
The Digital Art of Joe
Bergeron
Slide show and demo
Joe Bergeron
Sunday 12:00 n H310:
Present at the Creation
A First Fandom panel, looking at our
origins.
David A. Kyle, Frederik Pohl, Jack
Speer (m)
Sunday 12:00 n H311:
Silver and Gold: The Ages
of SF
What defines the "Golden" age of SF?
The "Silver"? When did they come about? How did they evolve?
What are their differences? What influences of these "ages" have
been carried into present day SF?
Brian W. Aldiss, Grant Carrington, Don
D'Ammassa, David G. Hartwell, Allen Steele (m)
Sunday 12:00 n H312:
Reading (1 hour)
Terry Pratchett
Sunday 12:00 n Art Show:
Art Show Tour
Margaret Organ-Kean
Sunday 12:00 n Art Show:
Music
Ellen James, harpist
Sunday 12:00 n Autographing:
Autographing
Jack Dann, P. C. Hodgell, Mindy Klasky,
Sharon Lee, David B. Mattingly, Steve Miller, Robert Sheckley,
Charles Stross
Sunday 12:00 n Beacon A:
Open Playtime [ages
1-6]
We'll have tunnels, balls, blocks, and
other kids to play with.
Sunday 12:00 n Beacon D:
Joke Workshop [ages
7–12]
John Zakour
Sunday 12:00 n Beacon F:
CD Ring Planet [ages
4-8]
Create a planet to hang at home out of
styrofoam balls, a CD and your creative imagination.
Sunday 12:00 n Con Suite Foyer:
Music
April Grant, fiddler
Sunday 12:00 n Dalton:
Tarot Spreads: Mapping
Destiny
Are you familiar with the meanings of
individual tarot cards, but can't seem to read them in a spread?
Is the Celtic Cross driving you nuts? Hey, there are a lot of
ways to map destiny. Come join us—we'll discuss different
spreads, how to read them, even how to create them. Bring
notebooks and a pen.
Janine Ellen Young
Sunday 12:00 n Exeter:
Reading
Jay Caselberg
Sunday 12:00 n Gardner:
The Kids Next
Door…in Space!
Building a Space Station!
Jordin T. Kare
Sunday 12:00 n Hampton:
Reading
Paul Witcover
Sunday 12:00 n Independence:
What The World
Needs Now
Cupid takes a holiday! And you're
filling in for him! You and your fellow Toons have to bring love
into the hearts of a few people this Valentine's Day;
thankfully, you're not expected to cover the world. Just the
Anytown Mall. Here's your wings, bow, and arrows—now get
out there and spread some romance! [6 players, Characters
created at game]
Sunday 12:00 n Con Suite:
Kaffeeklatsch
Simon R. Green, Charlaine Harris, David
Levine, Tamora Pierce
Sunday 12:00 n Liberty C:
FLY Ladies
Discussion Group
Eva Whitley
Sunday 12:00 n Republic A:
Last Exile
#1—4 [Dubbed] [13 +]
Sunday 12:30 p H204:
Big Planet
as Bosnia
A reinterpretation of the Vance novel.
Peter Weston
Sunday 12:30 p H209:
Magic User's Club
#6 [Subtitled] [13 +]
Sunday 12:30 p H210:
The Microphone Is Your
Friend
Sunday 12:30 p H303:
Have Spacesuit…
Get up close and personal with an
authentic Apollo 7 prototype spacesuit and meet the real-life
"Kip Russell" who owns it. (No, he didn't win it in a soap
jingle contest). Learn the secrets of spacesuit construction and
even get your picture taken with it. You can even touch it, if
you're nice and your hands are clean!
Michael Dobson
Sunday 12:30 p Exeter:
Reading
M. M. Buckner
Sunday 12:30 p Hampton:
Reading
Esther Friesner
Sunday 1:00 p H100:
Who Stole Ed's Pants
Frame your opponents for pants-theft
in this light-hearted yet strategic card game. Rally your
supporters as case facts change, evidence is planted and
witnesses alter. It's a mind-bending travesty of justice. [3-4
players per game]
Sunday 1:00 p H203:
Can SF Teach the
Scientific Method?
Can you actually teach logic and
methodology in the classroom? Should you? Can SF help? Is Spock
a good role model?
Mike Brotherton, Carl Frederick (m),
David Friedman, Charles Oberndorf, Isaac Szpindel, Mary Turzillo
Sunday 1:00 p H204:
Turning Children's Books
Into Film
Putting the Harry Potter books on film
is turning out pretty well. Besides Holes, the
latest Peter Pan, the recent TV Wrinkle in
Time (plus Peter Jackson's promised The Hobbit
) what other kids' stuff would look great on the silver
screen? Why? And perhaps most importantly, how?
Kathryn Cramer, Susan Fichtelberg,
Diana Tixier Herald, James S. Hinsey (m), Kathleen Kudlinski,
Bonnie Kunzel
Sunday 1:00 p H205:
Risky Business
Risk acceptance vs. risk aversion in
humans, and how it might affect things like evolution,
scientific investigation, and (especially) exploration/manned
space flight.
Marc Giller, Bill Higgins, Geoffrey A.
Landis, Mark L. Olson (m), H. Paul Shuch
Sunday 1:00 p H206:
The Human Cloning Wars
Success with cloning mammals makes it
look as if human cloning may be possible. The first steps toward
human cloning have been reported. The battle lines are already
drawn on how far to go. Opinions range from the Raelians who say
everybody must get cloned, to religious conservatives who want
cloning banned. But the real debate is about the perils and
promises of reproductive and therapeutic cloning. What's the
difference? How does it matter to us? What's likely to change?
Will cloning lead to human organ farms for spare parts? What are
some of the emerging ethical concerns about this biotechnology?
How can they be addressed?
Daniel Abraham (m), Bridget Coila, Herb
Kauderer, Mary H. Rosenblum, Samuel Scheiner
Sunday 1:00 p H209:
Record Of Lodoss
War #1 [Subtitled] [13 +]
Sunday 1:00 p H210:
Filk Pickup Concert
Sunday 1:00 p H301:
More About Merlin
Merlin had his own existence in legend
before his association with Arthur; he was a wilder pagan
figure. Look at the independent treatments of Merlin, and those
who followed after in his image.
Christopher Cevasco (m), Stephen Leigh,
Josepha Sherman, Sarah Zettel
Sunday 1:00 p H302:
Stories I'm Too Scared to
Write
What makes some topics too frightening
to write about? Is one person's bane another's delight?
Ginjer Buchanan (m), Joe Haldeman,
Louise Marley, Robert Charles Wilson
Sunday 1:00 p H303:
Just Because We Speak the
Same Language Doesn't Mean We Think Alike
Are we divided by a common tongue?
Which cultural factors unite the English-speaking
world—and which divide it? How can we overcome those
differences? (Should we try?) How does this appear in the real
world and in the fannish word (especially!)? Who's
"right"—who's "wrong"—and how can we cope with these
differences?
jan howard finder, Jay Caselberg, Grant
Kruger (m), Michael Rennie, Karen Traviss
Sunday 1:00 p H304:
Starship Firefighters:
Emergency Response in SF
When your dad was in the fire
department, he hooked up to a hydrant, dragged the hose into the
building, pointed it at the fire and squirted. Nowadays,(a very
few, very well- funded) Fire Departments are using GPS,
integrated helmet arrays that combine air supply monitoring and
communications, Incident Command Systems, Personal Alert Safety
Systems, thermal imaging, robots for bomb work, hazmat recon,
realtime wireless video, etc., etc., etc. Emergency response
folk battle hurricanes, forest fires with technology and science
driven systems. And now your friendly neighborhood firefighter,
paramedic and beat cop are likely to be the first to deal with
such things as Bio, Chem, Rad or Nuke attacks and they'll have
to deal with them for quite some time before the Feds gear up
their 'fast' response. This is a definite culture change driven
by technology—Is there anyone out there in SF doing
something with this? If so, who? If not, why? If it can be done,
how should it be done? And what happens when things go wrong in
space?
Robert Buettner, Chris French, John G.
Hemry, Steven L. Lopata, James Macdonald (m), Henry Spencer
Sunday 1:00 p H305:
Writers' Blocks
All about Writer's Block: writer's
block is a simple concept, that the writer is stuck. Getting
past it, though, can be less simple—there are lots of
different possible causes—stress at work or at home, a
story that the plot is getting stuck on, characters that the
writer is getting bored with, etc. The ways to address writers'
block differ, too. Some people take a long walk, some garden,
some go shopping, some go on-line, some work on a different
story, some read a favorite book. There's no one cure—but
different writers have different strategies, or sets of
strategies, and those can work for other people, too.
Working through Blockages: What techniques can
writers use when they hit problems with the plot, the setting,
and the characters? How can a writer persuade a character to
"tell" them what's bothering the character, or why the character
won't cross that river the writer thinks the character needs to
cross? What does a writer do after having gathered the armies to
have a war, and the characters are so unobliging as to refuse to
fight? How do writers write themselves out of boxes? And what
other things can a writer do when stuck, besides cat vacuuming?
K. A. Bedford, Patricia Bray (m),
Tobias Buckell, Stephen P. Kelner
Sunday 1:00 p H306:
Confronting Your
Characters
A participant will take on the role of
an author's main character, and complain to the writer how badly
the writer has treated him/her. The writer gets to
respond…
Hilari L. Bell (m), Carol Berg, Lois
McMaster Bujold, Steve Miller, Elizabeth Moon
Sunday 1:00 p H307:
Character Portraits:
Painting Someone You've Never Seen
No author ever describes a character
so specifically as an artist does in a portrait—so how
does an artist construct such a portrait with only the author's
words to go on? How do you fill in the gaps?
Rick Berry, David B. Mattingly,
Margaret Organ-Kean (m), Ruth Sanderson
Sunday 1:00 p H309:
KONG and the Art of Joe
DeVito
Slide show
Joseph DeVito
Sunday 1:00 p H310:
Experience Science
Fiction: The Museum
The new Science Fiction Museum and Hall
of Fame (SFM) opened its doors in June. This world-class
interactive museum features creators of both science fiction
literature and media, providing a wonderful overview of the
history of science fiction and its impact on society, culture,
and imagination. Is this the new Alexandria for the science
fiction community? Find out how you can get involved with the
museum and learn more about its plans for the near future.
Gregory Benford, Gay Haldeman, Leslie
Howle (m), Michael Whelan
Sunday 1:00 p H311:
Fun and Games with Time
Travel
OK, assume time travel is
possible…now, what do you do with it? What are some of
the tricks you can play, and what are some of the issues (plot
problems, paradoxes, etc.) that you might meet? Play!
Kage Baker, Ben Jeapes, S. M. Stirling,
Michael Swanwick, Connie Willis (m)
Sunday 1:00 p H312:
Beyond Sex
Writing sex scenes is easy, but
conveying the ebbs and flows of a meaningful romantic
relationship is harder to do. How do authors do this
successfully?
David B. Coe (m), George R. R. Martin,
Victoria McManus, Laura Resnick, Melinda Snodgrass
Sunday 1:00 p Art Show:
Art Show Tour
John F. Hertz
Sunday 1:00 p Autographing:
Autographing
John Clute, Neil Gaiman, David A.
Hardy, Jacqueline Lichtenberg, Jean Lorrah, Harry Turtledove,
Rick Wilber
Sunday 1:00 p Mended Drum:
Literary Beer
Michael F. Flynn, Justine Larbalestier,
G. David Nordley, Scott Westerfeld
Sunday 1:00 p Beacon A:
Playground Games [ages
4-7]
Play basic rule games in a more
organized manner than open playtime (Duck, Duck, Goose; Animal
Tag; Simon Says, etc.)
Sunday 1:00 p Beacon D:
Origami for Kids [ages
7–12]
Create shapes and animals using
Japanese folded paper techniques. Learn the basic folds and see
what you can create.
Mark R. Leeper
Sunday 1:00 p Beacon F:
Alien Catcher [ages
3-8]
Using a toilet paper tube, fun foam
and your imagination make a fun game to capture a created alien.
Sunday 1:00 p Clarendon:
Voice Workshop
Learn how to sing with good intonation
and projection. Perfect your breathing. Avoid straining your
voice. Review of introduction, everyone can improve their
technique.
Mary C. Miller
Sunday 1:00 p Dalton:
The Wizard of
Oz: a Dialog
W. Randy Hoffman, Toni L. P. Kelner
Sunday 1:00 p Exeter:
Reading
Shariann Lewitt
Sunday 1:00 p Gardner:
Improvisational Acting
[ages 7–12]
Acting out, with other future actors.
Michael McAfee
Sunday 1:00 p Hampton:
Reading (1 hour)
Mike Resnick
Sunday 1:00 p Liberty A:
Writers of the
Future
Sunday 1:00 p Con Suite:
Kaffeeklatsch
Mitchell Freedman, Nancy Kress, Sharon
Lee, Lawrence Watt-Evans
Sunday 1:30 p H100:
Icehouse Demo
Try many unique games like Martian
Chess!
Sunday 1:30 p H209:
Record Of Lodoss
War #2 [Subtitled] [13 +]
Sunday 1:30 p H210:
Filk Request/One-Shots
Concert
Sunday 1:30 p Dalton:
About Collaborations
Steven Sawicki
Sunday 1:30 p Exeter:
Reading
Ann Tonsor Zeddies
Sunday 1:30 p Con Suite:
Long Live the Legion!
The Worldcon tribute to…the
Legion of Superheroes…?
Joe Bergeron, Priscilla Olson (m), Don
Sakers, Jed Shumsky
Sunday 1:45 p Republic A:
Escaflowne,
The Movie [Subtitled]
Sunday 2:00 p H100:
Icehouse Tournament
Sunday 2:00 p H100:
Monkeys on the Moon
Six monkey tribes vie for supremacy
while you decide which ones to launch back home to Earth. These
tribes do not get along, and you must decide which ones to
befriend while enduring the scorn of the others. Will you be
anointed the Supreme Leader of these primates in this game from
Eight Foot Llama? (2—4 players per game.)
Sunday 2:00 p H107:
Bantam/Spectra
Sunday 2:00 p H203:
The Idea of Colony in
Science Fiction
Stephen Dedman
Sunday 2:00 p H204:
The Gaijin
Menace—the Foreigner in Anime/Manga
How are American, Chinese, or
Europeans seen in Japanese media? How are different ethnicities
portrayed in anime and manga?
James S. Hinsey (m), Mari Kotani, Neil
Nadelman, Wen Spencer, Bill Todd
Sunday 2:00 p H205:
TAFF/DUFF Auction
Valuable and/or fascinating books,
fanzines, toys, artwork, and "tuckerizations" (wherein your
favorite writers vow to include your name in their next works)
are sold to the highest bidder! Buy early and often to benefit
the Trans-Atlantic Fan Fund and the Down
Under Fan Fund. Auctioneers: Guy and Rosie Lillian (past
DUFF delegates) and Peter Weston (Fan Guest of Honor).
Sunday 2:00 p H206:
To Mars?
In January President Bush announced
plans to send astronauts back to the moon and on to Mars. NASA
is figuring out how to do it. Is it really the space advocate's
dream come true? Will the program sink under projected cost, or
would we better off just sending robots?
Gregory Benford, Jeff Hecht (m), Les
Johnson, Geoffrey A. Landis, Ian Randal Strock
Sunday 2:00 p H208:
Finding the Future:
A Science Fiction Conversation Introduced by Casey Moore
Sunday 2:00 p H209:
Record Of Lodoss
War #3 [Subtitled] [13 +]
Sunday 2:00 p H210:
Space Opera by the North
Cambridge Family Opera Company
Sunday 2:00 p H301:
A David Hardy Interview
Learn more about this popular British
artist, as he talks about his career and experiences in fandom.
Paul Barnett, David A. Hardy, Pamela
Scoville
Sunday 2:00 p H302:
The Writer and Moral
Responsibility
So you write a book about a
serial-killer-vampire, and find out that a disturbed 14-year-old
kid has decided to play out that fantasy…Arrgh!!!? Talk
about this, and related issues. Where does the buck stop?
Carol Berg, Chris Moriarty, Benjamin
Rosenbaum, Deborah Ross, Brandon Sanderson (m)
Sunday 2:00 p H303:
Losing the History of SF
Most contemporary readers lack a
consciousness of the history of the field. How is this abetted
by mainstream publishers?
John R. Douglas
Sunday 2:00 p H304:
The Tropes of H.P.
Lovecraft
H.P. Lovecraft pioneered a number of
now-common themes and settings for horror. Elder gods; mad old
magic books; decayed house, towns, cities, civilizations, or
characters; and of course slimy, shadowed, unspeakably
betentacled forms of an eldritch horror beyond the most lurid
imaginings of man…What other concepts just scream
Lovecraft, and why are they all such fun? How has Lovecraft
continued to influence the genre?
Christopher Cevasco, Jack L. Chalker,
Terence Chua, Darrell Schweitzer (m), Jim Young
Sunday 2:00 p H305:
The Risks of Recruitment
"Everyone says" we have to bring in
new blood to fandom. What are the dangers? How do we tie these
newbies into the existing fannish community and still keep its
identify and stability—and is that something that should
make us think again about the new blood?
Priscilla Olson (m), Andrew Porter, Tom
Schaad, Kevin Standlee
Sunday 2:00 p H306:
Art Auction
You've already bid. Now see if you've
won. (Of course, after the winning comes the paying…)
Sunday 2:00 p H307:
All Things to All Fen?
From the 1963 Worldcon… What
does it mean to be a fan? In 1963, the conclusion was that
fanzines were the single most important feature of fandom.
That's changed. But—how do the different groups making up
the community feel they fit? Is there any sense of unity? What
does fandom offer you?
Denise Gendron, Bey King, Gary D.
McGath, Kevin P. Roche, Edie Stern (m)
Sunday 2:00 p H309:
The Art of Don Maitz
Slide show
Don Maitz
Sunday 2:00 p H310:
Heinlein's Juveniles
Heinlein's juveniles are still being
read and reread by SF fans nearly a half-century after they were
first published. They have rarely (if ever) gone out of print.
Why are these "kiddie books" so popular? Join in, and discuss
your favorite Heinlein juveniles, why you love them, and why
they've stood the test of time far better than a lot of the
other SF from their era
Solomon Davidoff, Joseph T. Major, John
McDaid, Tamora Pierce
Sunday 2:00 p H311:
Mercenaries in
SF—The Eclipse of the Citizen Soldier
From the Dendari, onward, how have
they been handled in the genre? Additionally, *why* is the idea
of a vigilante superhero so prevalent in American culture,
anyway?
John G. Hemry, Sean M. Mead, Elizabeth
Moon (m), Mike Shepherd-Moscoe
Sunday 2:00 p H312:
Fantasy Noire
Fantasy doesn't have to be sweetness
and light, it can be dark without turning into gore-ridden
horror. Who is writing dark fantasy today? Are there several
traditions, or does it all derive from Lovecraft? Are there
motifs in dark fantasy as pervasive as the Quest is in high
fantasy? Has dark fantasy gotten clichéd?
Jim Butcher, Glen Cook, Faye Ringel
(m), Delia Sherman
Sunday 2:00 p Art Show:
Close of Written
Bidding in Art Show
Featuring a fanfare and exit music by
The Star Chamber
Sunday 2:00 p Art Show:
Art Show Closes for auction and sales set-up
Sunday 2:00 p Autographing:
Autographing
Hilari L. Bell, Sheila Finch, John M.
Ford, Mitchell Freedman, Harry Harrison, Ellen Kushner, Connie
Willis
Sunday 2:00 p Mended Drum:
Literary Beer
Jim Frenkel, Elizabeth Hand, Gary K.
Wolf
Sunday 2:00 p Beacon A:
Movie [ages 1-8]
Movies will be announced on the Movie
Board outside the room.
Sunday 2:00 p Beacon D:
What's in a
Name?—Writing and Art for Kids [ages 7–12]
How do names relate to the stories
being told about them? Or do the names tell the story?
Ruth Sanderson
Sunday 2:00 p Beacon F:
Origami with Mark
Leeper [ages 3-8]
Join Mark to create animals from
folded paper.
Mark Leeper
Sunday 2:00 p Clarendon:
Ukulele Workshop
Blind Lemming Chiffon
Sunday 2:00 p Dalton:
What Fans Demand of the
Writer
We're not really just talking
autographs and panel patter here. Do we press authors for
authentic characterization, unsettled originality, and true mind
expansion? Or just insist on nicely riveted research and more of
the same old same old?
Charlaine Harris
Sunday 2:00 p Exeter:
Reading
Kage Baker
Sunday 2:00 p Gardner:
Blowing Bubbles [ages
7–12]
Bob Kanefsky
Sunday 2:00 p Grand Ballroom:
PRIMER
Winner, Sundance Film Festival
Sunday 2:00 p Hall A:
Junkyard Wars
William "Crash" Yerazunis
Sunday 2:00 p Hampton:
Reading
Michael Swanwick
Sunday 2:00 p Con Suite:
Kaffeeklatsch
Charles N. Brown, Katherine Kurtz, Vera
Nazarian, Janny Wurts
Sunday 2:00 p Liberty A:
Girl Scouts
Suli Isaacs
Sunday 2:30 p H203:
SF in the Tabloids
Circulations for the SF magazines have
been dropping for years. But the tabloids sell hundreds of
thousands of copies per week—and they carry a lot of
material that can only be described as SF! Are we doing
something wrong?
Thomas A. Easton
Sunday 2:30 p H209:
Record Of Lodoss
War, #4 [Subtitled] [13 +]
Sunday 2:30 p H303:
Effects of Different
Gravity
…on atmospheres, structures,
and people… G. David Nordley
Sunday 2:30 p Dalton:
Great Illustrators of
the Past, and How to Collect Them
Jerry Weist
Sunday 2:30 p Exeter:
Reading
Beth Hilgartner
Sunday 2:30 p Hampton:
Reading
James Patrick Kelly
Sunday 3:00 p H100:
Who Stole Ed's Pants
Frame your opponents for pants theft
in this light-hearted yet strategic card game. Rally your
supporters as case facts change, evidence is planted and
witnesses alter. It's a mind-bending travesty of justice.
(3–4 players per game)
Sunday 3:00 p H203:
Twentieth-Century Utopian
SF: Huxley and Orwell and Wells and…
Charlie Petit
Sunday 3:00 p H204:
LOTR: Looking
Back at the Films
The film series is over, the dust has
settled, was it all worth it? A look back, and assessment of the
series as a whole.
MaryAnn Johanson, Laurie Mann (m),
Kathy Morrow
Sunday 3:00 p H205:
The Senile Pen?
Is it true that older authors lose
focus (or, merely that they lose their editors)? Great
ideas—but cardboard characters? Might this be a function
of age? Or fame? Or what?
John R. Douglas (m), Laura Anne Gilman,
Jim Grimsley, Shawna McCarthy
Sunday 3:00 p H206:
Fandom's Bad Ideas:
Remembering the Best of the Worst
The Cosmic Circle? Coventry? Slan
shacks? What are some of the worst ideas (besides Worldcon,
Inc.) with which fandom has dabbled? Should the Tucker Hotel
actually include a beer can tower to the moon? Panelists reveal
the secrets behind the best of the worst (after all, we're all
fen here)…
Jack L. Chalker, Joe Siclari (m), Jack
Speer
Sunday 3:00 p H209:
Record Of Lodoss
War #5 [Subtitled] [13 +]
Sunday 3:00 p H210:
Filk Concert 20
Sunday 3:00 p H301:
The Fermi Paradox: Where
is Everyone?
Enrico Fermi asked the question "Where
are they?" Everything we know about astronomy, physics,
chemistry and biology seems to say that planets with life ought
to be common in the universe. If so, where are the aliens?
Something is wrong—but what?
John G. Cramer, G. David Nordley, Mark
L. Olson (m), Stanley Schmidt
Sunday 3:00 p H302:
Creating Gods
Gods are important characters in
fantasy works from mythology to the Silmarillion to Saberhagen's
"Swords" novels to Discworld. How does one introduce superbeings
into a work without pushing the human characters into
insignificance? Gods are often gigantic projections of human
characteristics. Can they serve other functions as well?
Additionally, why are polytheistic settings so common in
fantasy? What are the sources that authors are using, and why?
And why do readers find them so compelling?
Lois McMaster Bujold (m), David B. Coe,
Glen Cook, George R. R. Martin, Tamora Pierce, Jo Walton
Sunday 3:00 p H303:
The Feng-shui of Program
Experts tell all.
How do you properly balance a convention program?
Is it all about ideas…program participants…or do
you really have to move all that furniture around? And, are
there really any completely BAD program ideas (and
why?)—and should you try risky things on Somebody Else's
Program before messing up your own convention? How can one
overthrow the bourgeois hegemony of panel discussions—and
is it really worth it to try?
Jim Mann, Priscilla Olson (m), John
Pomeranz
Sunday 3:00 p H304:
The Catharsis of Myth, The
Shock of Invention
(Readercon) In writing or reading
fiction, we place a high value on the degree to which the plot
unfolds in unexpected ways. But much of the power of myth and
fairy tales derives from the way they fulfill our expectations.
How do the best works of fantasy reconcile these seeming
opposites?
Ellen Datlow, Jon Courtenay Grimwood,
Daniel Hatch, Elizabeth Anne Hull (m)
Sunday 3:00 p H305:
Growing Artistically
Through Crisis
Your spouse left you, your dog died,
and the bank repossessed your pickup. If you're not a country
western singer, what do you do?
James S. Hinsey (m), Laurie J. Marks,
Deborah Ross, Amy Thomson
Sunday 3:00 p H306:
Art Show Auction (until 6:00 p)
Sunday 3:00 p H307:
Gaming to Book
Crossover—and Back Again
Getting information from the game or
book…or giving it to the game or book: is this a
chicken-egg issue? Find out where the game stops/starts and the
book begins. (ends?)…
Thomas Harlan
Sunday 3:00 p H309:
Lonely Planet: The
Extinction of Everybody But Us
It's estimated that the familiar
banana (a monoclonal variety known as the cavendish) will
disappear from global shelves within a decade. One SF
writer/marine biologist (Peter Watts) says he hopes his
successors like squids and jellyfish, because in 50 years
they'll be the only marine life left. Are we about to experience
big bad changes in our biosphere, or are we alarmed over
nothing? An exploration of many questions exploring the deficits
or dividends of genetic diversity (past, present, and future!)
M. M. Buckner, D. Douglas Fratz (m),
Samuel Scheiner, Pat York
Sunday 3:00 p H310:
Defending the Writing Life
or
"You're not busy, are you?"
What to say when your parent, neighbor, or the mom besides you
at playgroup asks, "So, are you still doing that writing stuff?"
Why do writers have to defend their occupation to others? Why do
our relatives and neighbors all think that because we're home we
aren't really working? What great responses can you give them?
Jack Dann, Melanie Fletcher (m), Gavin
Grant, Gay Haldeman, David Marusek
Sunday 3:00 p H311:
My Favorite Novels
Panelists will supply a list of their
favorite novels, and the audience will try to match the authors
to their lists. Then, they'll discuss their choices.
Rosemary Kirstein, Paul Levinson (m),
Robert Reed, Robert Charles Wilson
Sunday 3:00 p H312:
The Far Future: Where
Fantasy Meets SF?
As Clarke's Law says, any sufficiently
advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic. When
writing about the far future, where do we draw this distinction?
Can we? And, perhaps more importantly, should we?
Jeffrey A. Carver, Brenda Jean Cooper
(m), Karl Schroeder, Robert Silverberg
Sunday 3:00 p Art Show:
Tour of the Retro Art
Exhibit
Robert K. Wiener
Sunday 3:00 p Autographing:
Autographing
Juanita Coulson, Nancy Kress, Barry N.
Malzberg, James Morrow, Terry Pratchett, Mike Resnick, Lawrence
Schoen
Sunday 3:00 p Mended Drum:
Literary Beer
Kelly Link, S. M. Stirling, Charles
Stross
Sunday 3:00 p Mended Drum:
Concert
Blind Lemming Chiffon
Sunday 3:00 p Beacon A:
Movie [ages 1-8]
Movies will be announced on the Movie
Board outside the room.
Sunday 3:00 p Beacon D:
Pictionary [ages
7–12]
Teddy Harvia
Sunday 3:00 p Beacon F:
Write a Story [ages
4-7]
Everyone has a story running around
inside them. Here's the time to bring it out.
Sunday 3:00 p Clarendon:
Bodran Workshop
The elegant underlay of a skilled
percussionist is a welcome decoration to music. An introduction
to the bodran (Irish frame drum) with a master percussionist.
Brenda Sutton
Sunday 3:00 p Con Suite Foyer:
Music
Ellen James, harpist
Sunday 3:00 p Dalton:
Making a Poly-shrink Pin
Instant jewelry making—for
adults!
Elizabeth Janes
Sunday 3:00 p Exeter:
Reading
Michelle Sagara West
Sunday 3:00 p Gardner:
Live Action Roleplaying
Game: Harry Potter and the Lost Labyrinth [ages 7–12]
Albertus Dumbledore is ready to
welcome the new first year students into the Hogwarts School of
Magic! But he seems to be acting strangely lately. He forgets a
lot of things, today he even forgot where the great hall was!
Has something happened to his memory? In the meantime, the new
students are starting their classes: Potions with
Snape, Care of Magical Creatures with Hagrid, and there
is a new Dark Arts professor: a mysterious woman who
always wears a veil that covers her face…It is said that
a student caught a glimpse of her face and was sent to the
infirmary soon after! Finally, there is a door in Hogwarts with
warning signs on it, and the teachers aren't allowing anyone
through! Students who have sneaked a peek say that there is a
labyrinth beyond the door! A magical hedge maze with shifting
passages. What could be at its center? [20 players, 7—12
years old]
Sunday 3:00 p Hampton:
Reading
Barbara Chepaitis, Steven Sawicki
Sunday 3:00 p Independence:
Deryni Guide
An old friend sent a cryptic message.
Might he have found a fabled treatise on Deryni magic? Where is
he? And who else might be looking for the book, and the power it
represents? A Deryni adventure featuring Sendai the Magnificent
and his troupe of travelling performers.
Sunday 3:00 p Con Suite:
Kaffeeklatsch
Paula Guran, Patrick Nielsen Hayden,
Michael Swanwick, Teresa Nielsen Hayden, Harry Turtledove
Sunday 3:00 p Liberty C:
Boy Scouts
Fred Isaacs
Sunday 3:10 p Republic A:
Mad Ox 1
[Subtitled] [13 +]
Sunday 3:30 p H203:
Horror and the American
Literary Mainstream
Poe wrote it; Hawthorne wrote it;
Henry James wrote it…why do our literary heavy-hitters
keep coming back to things that go bump in the night?
Debra Doyle
Sunday 3:30 p H209:
Record Of Lodoss
War #6 [Subtitled] [13 +]
Sunday 3:30 p H210:
"Electro" Concert
Gary Ehrlich
Sunday 3:30 p H307:
Adapting Media Tie-ins to
Computer Games
Kimberly Ann Kindya
Sunday 3:30 p Exeter:
Reading
Michael A. Burstein
Sunday 3:30 p Hampton:
Reading
Catherine Asaro
Sunday 4:00 p H100:
Monkeys on the Moon
Six monkey tribes vie for supremacy
while you decide which ones to launch back home to Earth. These
tribes do not get along, and you must decide which ones to
befriend while enduring the scorn of the others. Will you be
anointed the Supreme Leader of these primates in this game from
Eight Foot Llama? (2—4 players per game.)
Sunday 4:00 p H101:
Jewish Time-Based Mitzvoth
in a Lunar Colony
Jews have found ways to adapt ancient
laws to modern and future ideas. from time travel; (across the
International Dateline, at least) to vampirism (yes, you are
permitted to swallow some blood).
So, nu? How does someone observe a time-based
commandment when "day" and "night" are artificial concepts.
Where will a naturally-flowing spring come from for a mikvah on
Mars? Our panel of mavens will engage in pilpul on halachic and
non-halachic issues.
Nomi Burstein (m), Solomon Davidoff,
Janice Gelb, Daniel Kimmel
Sunday 4:00 p H107:
What's New from Tor
A presentation of recent and
forthcoming works published by Tor Books, along with a brief
Q&A about the books. Come see the pretty pictures (i.e.,
cover art). Listen to the editors wax rhapsodic. There will be
door prizes!
David G. Hartwell, Beth Meacham, James
Minz, Patrick Nielsen Hayden
Sunday 4:00 p H203:
How to Run a Film Festival
Garen Daley, James S. Hinsey
Sunday 4:00 p H204:
This Book Sucks: How and
How Not To Write Reviews
What makes a good book review or a
good critical piece? What kinds of things should book reviewers
do? What kinds of behaviors should they avoid?
Tobias Buckell, Thomas A. Easton, Scott
Edelman, Janice M. Eisen (m), Steven Sawicki
Sunday 4:00 p H205:
Dead Fans Don't Pub Their
Ish
Who's the Walt Willis of today? What
will we do without Harry Warner Jr.? A fond remembrance of the
finest fanzine writers and publishers of the past and an
examination of The State of Fanzine Publishing in the 21st
Century? What's being published? What's good? What's bad?
James Bacon, John-Henri Holmberg, Joe
Siclari, Geri Sullivan (m)
Sunday 4:00 p H206:
Fandom Online
TMI!!! Personalzines were intimate
forms of communications among a small group of acquaintances and
friends. Compare and contrast to web pages on line, open to
umpty-billion people. Is there too much information out there?
Do we really need to know? Or are live journals the next best
thing to being there? Noreascon has nearly 100 mailing lists all
by itself. Are we drowning in data and lacking in knowledge? Or
are we moving from 6 degrees of separation to 2? How do you cope
with your electronic in-basket?
Elisabeth Carey (m), Anna Feruglio Dal
Dan, Craig Engler, Sharon Sbarsky, James M. Turner
Sunday 4:00 p H208:
Raiders of the Lost
Ark: A Fan Film
Sunday 4:00 p H209:
Record Of Lodoss
War #7 [Subtitled] [13 +]
Sunday 4:00 p H210:
Filk and Fable
Stories and the songs about them or
which inspired them. Panel, performance, and reading, with
footnotes.
Tanya Huff
Sunday 4:00 p H301:
Philosophy and SF
Why, when SF ventures into philosophy,
is it typically Plato and early philosophers (with the probably
exception of Nietzsche)? Can this be refuted? What's wrong with,
say, Hume and Locke?
Peter J. Heck, John F. Hertz, Paul
Levinson, Jim Mann (m)
Sunday 4:00 p H302:
SF: A Modern Mythology?
Why not? It's similar to ancient epic
poetry and storytelling as both celebratory and hortatory, about
good and evil and what virtue consists of. Among other
things…
Suzy McKee Charnas, Greer Gilman, Anne
Harris, Suford Lewis (m), Uncle River
Sunday 4:00 p H303:
Writing for Massively
Multiplayer Online Worlds
Good SF/F writing makes or breaks a
persistent massively multiplayer online world. Without them, a
MMORPG becomes a slayfest, or a simple "go here and do that"
list of quests. Experts from the industry talk about how to get
more involved in persistent worlds as creative forces from the
start of a project to its launch, and what good writing means to
a creation of a great game.
Jessica Mulligan, John Scalzi
Sunday 4:00 p H304:
Alternate Law
Laws that passed/failed to pass. Laws
that were interpreted differently…What kinds of
stories have been (should be? ) written using these "what if"
ideas?
Michael Benveniste (m), Mitchell
Freedman, David Friedman, Charlie Petit
Sunday 4:00 p H305:
Going to School in a SF/F
Environment
A discussion about what schools might
be like in SF settings, like a different world, starship, etc.
Also, talk about schools you've read about in other works,
—from Hogwarts to Sunnydale/Smallville High to Enders'
Battle School…What classes would you be taking? Come up
with your ideal class schedule from your favorite story!
Lee Martindale, Val Ontell (m), E. Rose
Sabin, Mary Turzillo
Sunday 4:00 p H307:
Financial Planning for the
Freelancer
How big a cushion should you have
before quitting that day job? Are there tricks and techniques
for dealing with cash flow problems? And what about retirement?
Susan Shwartz
Sunday 4:00 p H309:
Slide Show
N. Taylor Blanchard
Sunday 4:00 p H310:
Romancing the
Philosopher's Stone: Looking for the Science in Magic
Like all long-lived legends and myths,
that of the philosopher's stone that would alloy with a base
metal to yield gold, is based on a then dimly-understood
reality. Journey back in time to the mystic East to discover the
real philosopher's stone, and wonder at the science that still
today conjures plenty from the base elements!
David Stephenson
Sunday 4:00 p H311:
1984+20: Dystopia
Past/Present/Future
Where do we stand compared to the
totalitarian state portrayed in Orwell's 1984? Look
at where we are now, and 1984's ancestors and
descendants—in SF and the real world!
William Tenn, Karin Lowachee, David
McMahon, Nick Sagan, James Stevens-Arce (m)
Sunday 4:00 p H312:
The Next Plague
Science fiction writers looking for
ways to end the world have often turned to plagues. They have a
long and fearful history, and new ones are emerging to join the
old standbys. AIDS remains devastating in the less-developed
world. West Nile, Ebola, Aids, SARS, Bird Flu and other diseases
are becoming familiar to us all. The easy international travel
that makes possible events like a Worldcon also breaks down
barriers to the spread of disease. Some experts say that it is
just a matter of time before the world is hit by another major
flu epidemic, one that will sweep across the globe and kill tens
of millions, or even more. Others talk about the dreaded
super-virus, something like an airborne Ebola that could
extinguish human civilization in a matter of weeks. Antibiotic-
resistant tuberculosis is spreading. Even bacterial infections
are becoming immune to antibiotics and may pose a real threat to
humanity as well. Is this a time bomb akin to an Armageddon
asteroid? What are the odds looking like? Should I buy that
isolated log cabin in the mountains?
Zara Baxter, Herb Kauderer, Perrianne
Lurie (m), Jed Shumsky, Ronald Taylor
Sunday 4:00 p Art Show:
Art Show Pick-Up and
Pay
Sunday 4:00 p Art Show:
Print Shop re-opens
Sunday 4:00 p Autographing:
Autographing
Patricia Bray, Mike Conrad, Ellen
Datlow, Gardner Dozois, Frederik Pohl, Madeleine E. Robins,
Martha Wells
Sunday 4:00 p Mended Drum:
Literary Beer
Kevin J. Anderson, Jack Dann, Diane
Duane
Sunday 4:00 p Beacon A:
Open Playtime [ages
1-6]
We'll have tunnels, balls, blocks, and
other kids to play with.
Sunday 4:00 p Beacon D:
First Contact [ages
7–12]
Talk and role-play about what you
would do if you met aliens for the first time!
Matthew Jarpe
Sunday 4:00 p Beacon F:
Yarn Bug [ages 4-8]
Yarn, wiggle eyes and a lot of
wrapping will help build up these funny creatures.
Sunday 4:00 p Clarendon:
How To Pub a Songbook
Gary D. McGath
Sunday 4:00 p Dalton:
Using Occult Science as
SF Background
Does there have to be any significant
difference between SF and Fantasy?
Jacqueline Lichtenberg
Sunday 4:00 p Exeter:
Reading
Hilari L. Bell
Sunday 4:00 p Grand Ballroom:
Surge of
Power
Presented by the Director, Michael
Donahue
Mike Donahue
Sunday 4:00 p Hampton:
Reading (1 hour)
Cory Doctorow
Sunday 4:00 p Con Suite:
Kaffeeklatsch
David B. Coe, Harry Harrison, Mike
Shepherd-Moscoe, Larry Niven
Sunday 4:00 p Liberty A:
Hypoglycemia
Discussion Group
Benita Gagne
Sunday 4:00 p Republic A:
Bubblegum
Crisis [Subtitled] [13 +]
Sunday 4:00 p Docent Tour:
Village Tour (of
the Worldcon)—Tom Veal
Sunday 4:30 p H203:
Dark Laugher: The Satire
of William Tenn (Robert James)
Sunday 4:30 p H209:
Record Of Lodoss
War #8 [Subtitled] [13 +]
Sunday 4:30 p H307:
The Hospital of the Future
Robert I. Katz
Sunday 4:30 p Dalton:
Tricking Yourself Into
Actually Writing
Kathleen Kudlinski
Sunday 4:30 p Exeter:
Reading
David C. Kopaska-Merkel
Sunday 4:45 p Republic A:
Bubblegum
Crisis #2 [Subtitled] [13 +]
Sunday 5:00 p H100:
Who Stole Ed's Pants
Frame your opponents for pants-theft
in this light-hearted yet strategic card game. Rally your
supporters as case facts change, evidence is planted and
witnesses alter. It's a mind-bending travesty of justice. (3-4
players per game)
Sunday 5:00 p H101:
Us and Them: Are
Categories Necessary?
Humans are very good at dividing
people up into groups, but not so good at breaking down those
divisions, as demonstrated by the contested space currently
surrounding gender and race issues. How is Western society
dealing with these issues? Are alternative systems of creating
non-judgmental categories, such as Myers-Briggs, useful in this
endeavor? Are things like diversity training and workplace
tolerance standards helpful in overcoming differences?
Tobias Buckell, Nancy Kress, Suford
Lewis (m), Don Sakers
Sunday 5:00 p H203:
Moby Dick
Why is it the favorite mainstream
novel of a lot of SF types?
Debra Doyle
Sunday 5:00 p H204:
Alternate Publication
Strategies
Paula Guran
Sunday 5:00 p H205:
The Pains (and Promises)
of Rejection Slips
How can they actually be constructive?
(And why are so many of them anything *but*?)
Janna Silverstein, Charles Stross,
Teresa Nielsen Hayden (m), Jo Walton
Sunday 5:00 p H206:
The Ambassador from Rigel
Has Arrived…
…and made us an offer we can't
refuse…Or can we? The panelists from Earth debate the
merits of the plan with the ambassador…Is Earth a Third
World country is this scenario?
Billie Aul (m), Jeffrey A. Carver,
Keith R. A. DeCandido, Jim Young
Sunday 5:00 p H208:
Kaze Ghost Warrior
Sunday 5:00 p H209:
Record Of Lodoss
War #9 [Subtitled] [13 +]
Sunday 5:00 p H210:
Concert
Jordin T. Kare
Sunday 5:00 p H301:
The Fantasy Amateur Press
Association
The past and present glories,
scandals, inventions and secret hidden details of FAPA. FAPA is
the longest running discussion group in fandom. Since 1937,
they've had discussions ranging from race relations in fandom,
nuclear politics during WWII, to fannish silliness, and even
science fiction, fantasy and horror. Our Guest of Honor Jack
Speer has been part of this from the beginning. He and others
will tell you of the glories and follies of FAPA, and teach you
what blitzkrieg really meant.
John F. Hertz (m), Fred Lerner, Jack
Speer, Milton F. Stevens
Sunday 5:00 p H302:
Stargate: New
SF Franchise?
Does Stargate have the
followers and scope of vision to perpetuate itself in endless
sequel shows, a la Star Trek?
MaryAnn Johanson, Anthony R. Lewis (m),
Sandra McDonald, Ann Tonsor Zeddies
Sunday 5:00 p H303:
Steven H Silver's Trivia
Game
Steven H Silver
Sunday 5:00 p H304:
The Most Alien Alien?
What makes an alien particularly
alien? How can writers evoke a genuine sense of "otherness" in
their non-human creations?
Rosemary Kirstein, Steven Popkes, Wen
Spencer, Karen Traviss (m), Walter Jon Williams
Sunday 5:00 p H305:
Tolkien vs. Peake
Is it only a twist of fate that
Tolkien is popular and Peake is only beloved of a few? What
would a fantasy genre based on Peake be like? Would a Peake
clone be any less bad than a Tolkien clone? Why would they be in
opposition? Would they be?
jan howard finder (m), Greer Gilman,
Darrell Schweitzer
Sunday 5:00 p H307:
The Fan World of the
Future
In 1939, Sam Moskowitz gave on talk on
this very same topic…and it's interesting to note that
fandom didn't fundamentally change for decades! What aspects of
fandom are very "now" and what are still very "then"? Will the
fan world of the future be like today's, or will fandom
evaporate into a world where science fiction is a way of life?
Moshe Feder, Mike Glyer, Edie Stern
(m), Geri Sullivan, Peter Weston
Sunday 5:00 p H309:
The Art of Mike Conrad
Mike Conrad
Sunday 5:00 p H310:
Discoveries That Weren't:
Near Misses in Science
Cold fusion wasn't the first.
Scientists talk about promising results that turned out to be
dead ends. At the other extreme, what experiments might have led
to earlier advances of scientific theory if only scientists had
known what they were seeing? And then there were the great
scientific mistakes…that actually worked! Teflon,
Penicillin, post-its…and where would we be without
Silly-Putty? A semi-serious look at what science is really all
about!
John G. Cramer, Ctein, Howard Davidson
(m), Robert A. Metzger, W. A. Thomasson
Sunday 5:00 p H311:
The Effects of Litigation
on the Future
Do the courts threaten our ability to
make scientific and technical advances? (And—is this a
good or bad thing?) What is the place of litigation in today's
society—and what are the trends that might brighten or
darken our future?)
Christopher Cevasco (m), Harold Feld,
Melinda Snodgrass
Sunday 5:00 p H312:
The Great Character Swap
"…They're Detectives!" Huh?
Well, it's the punch line of any number of jokes: "He's a
Priest, She's a Lawyer. Together They're Detectives!" (or, "They
Fight Crime!") But what would happen if various SF characters
were dropped into other universe's stories? Would R. Daneel
Olivaw and Bruce Wayne get together? Would Dr. Susan Calvin make
it in the Discworld? Sherlock Holmes in Oz (Hmmm…well,
that one has probably been done…) Enjoy!
Daniel P. Dern, Tom Galloway (m), Larry
Ganem, Leigh Grossman, David Levine
Sunday 5:00 p Autographing:
Autographing
Michael Dobson, Beth Hilgartner, Laura
Resnick
Sunday 5:00 p Mended Drum:
Literary Beer
Geoffrey A. Landis, Chris Moriarty,
Janine Ellen Young
Sunday 5:00 p Beacon A:
Open Playtime [ages
1-6]
We'll have tunnels, balls, blocks, and
other kids to play with.
Sunday 5:00 p Beacon D:
Storytelling [ages
7–12]
David C. Kopaska-Merkel
Sunday 5:00 p Beacon F:
Shrinky Dinks [ages
4-12]
Wonderful plastic you can color and
then shrink in to a permanent piece of jewelry.
Sunday 5:00 p Exeter:
Reading
Scott Westerfeld
Sunday 5:00 p Fan Lounge:
Knitting
Sunday 5:00 p Hampton:
Reading
Joe Haldeman
Sunday 5:00 p Con Suite:
Kaffeeklatsch
Stephen Leigh, Deborah Ross, Steve
Saffel, Shane Tourtellotte
Sunday 5:00 p Docent Tour:
Village Tour (of
the Worldcon)
Priscilla Olson
Sunday 5:30 p H203:
Teaching SF and Fantasy in
the Public Schools
As we all know, genre literature is
trivial, worthless, and depraved—and yet, for some reason,
it isn't routinely taught in the secondary school English
classroom. There are signs that this prejudice is eroding. Our
two presenters will talk about a set of online Tolkien lesson
plans they designed for Houghton Mifflin, and about the
increasing legitimization of SF and fantasy in our public
schools.
James Morrow, Kathy Morrow
Sunday 5:30 p H204:
Australian Fiction
Zara Baxter, Jack Dann
Sunday 5:30 p H209:
Record Of Lodoss
War #10 [Subtitled] [13 +]
Sunday 5:30 p H210:
Concert
Terence Chua
Sunday 5:30 p Dalton:
New Categories for the
Hugos?
Are there really elements of science
fiction and/or fandom that are not being recognized by our
awards system? Should there be new categories added to the
already extensive list of awards that we, as a community, give?
Are there existing categories that should be
split/changed/removed?
Chris Barkley, Craig Miller, Kevin
Standlee (m), Ben Yalow
Sunday 5:30 p Exeter:
Reading
Mike Brotherton
Sunday 5:30 p Hampton:
Reading
Jacqueline Lichtenberg
Sunday 5:45 p Republic A:
Jin-Roh: The
Wolf Brigade [Subtitled] [16 +]
Sunday 6:00 p :
Masquerade Green Room Open for
Entrants
Sunday 6:00 p H100:
Monkeys on the Moon
Six monkey tribes vie for supremacy
while you decide which ones to launch back home to Earth. These
tribes do not get along, and you must decide which ones to
befriend while enduring the scorn of the others. Will you be
anointed the Supreme Leader of these primates in this game from
Eight Foot Llama? (2—4 players per game.)
Sunday 6:00 p H107:
"Revisions"
Isaac Szpindel
Sunday 6:00 p H203:
Building a Wider Audience
for Genre Criticism Through Community Video/Cable
Philip Kaveny
Sunday 6:00 p H204:
Lifestyles of the Niche
and Fannish
Alternative lifestyles are much more
common in fandom than in the general populace. Why? Is it just
that people who would be delighted to have dinner with aliens
are more accepting, or is there more to it? We've had naked
ladies and skinny dipping, line marriages and less
easy-to-explain liaisons. Do fans have the same mores as the
general population. Now? In the past? How about the future???
Bey King
Sunday 6:00 p H206:
Worldcon—the Movie?
If the Worldcon were a movie, whom
would we cast in all the roles? Note: we do insist (sez the
female fan typing this) that Neil Gaiman be played by
Himself…
Bob Devney
Sunday 6:00 p H208:
Robots Don't
Cry/Rogue Farm
Sunday 6:00 p H209:
Record Of Lodoss
War #11 [Subtitled] [13 +]
Sunday 6:00 p Mended Drum:
Literary Beer
Robert Buettner, Juanita Coulson, Karl
Schroeder
Sunday 6:00 p Clarendon:
Running a Worldcon
Filk Program
What's worked, and what's been less
than successful. You share your stories and we'll share ours.
J. Spencer Love, Priscilla Olson
Sunday 6:00 p ConCourse:
Information Closes
Sunday 6:00 p Con Suite Foyer:
Music
Sunday 6:00 p Exeter:
Reading
Terry McGarry
Sunday 6:00 p Hall D:
Dealers Room Closes
Sunday 6:00 p Hampton:
Reading
Jean Lorrah
Sunday 6:30 p H100:
Mechwarrior Single Faction
Tournament
Bring your mechanized army and test it
in this Wizkids sanctioned event [450 pts. Single Faction]
Sunday 6:30 p H203:
Heinlein and the Question
of Incest
Robert James, Bill Patterson
Sunday 6:30 p H209:
Record Of Lodoss
War #12 [Subtitled] [13 +]
Sunday 6:30 p H210:
Concert by The Lothars
The Lothars
Sunday 6:30 p Exeter:
Reading
Uncle River
Sunday 6:30 p Hampton:
Reading
Mark W. Tiedemann
Sunday 7:00 p H100:
Who Stole Ed's Pants
Frame your opponents for pants theft
in this light-hearted yet strategic card game. Rally your
supporters as case facts change, evidence is planted and
witnesses alter. It's a mind-bending travesty of justice. (3-4
players per game)
Sunday 7:00 p H209:
Record Of Lodoss
War #13 [Subtitled] [13 +]
Sunday 7:00 p Conference:
Filk Office On-Call
Sunday 7:00 p Exeter:
Reading
F. Brett Cox
Sunday 7:00 p Hampton:
Reading
Charles Oberndorf
Sunday 7:30 p Art Show:
Pick-Up & Pay closes
Sunday 7:30 p Art Show:
Print Shop closes
Sunday 7:30 p H209:
MS 080 Team
[Subtitled]
Sunday 7:30 p Beacon D:
Games and Crafts
during the Masquerade [ages 7+] (Randy Hoffman, Ailsa Ek, Steven
Chalker)
Sunday 7:30 p Exeter:
Reading
Diane Turnshek
Sunday 7:30 p Hampton:
Reading
Tanya Huff
Sunday 7:30 p Republic A:
Blue Seed
19–26 [Subtitled]
Sunday 8:00 p H100:
Monkeys on the Moon
Six monkey tribes vie for supremacy
while you decide which ones to launch back home to Earth. These
tribes do not get along, and you must decide which ones to
befriend while enduring the scorn of the others. Will you be
anointed the Supreme Leader of these primates in this game from
Eight Foot Llama? (2—4 players per game.)
Sunday 8:00 p H209:
MS 080 Team
[Subtitled]
Sunday 8:00 p Clarendon:
Open Filk
Sunday 8:00 p Dalton:
Open Filk—No
taping
Sunday 8:00 p Exeter:
Reading
Herb Kauderer
Sunday 8:00 p Gardner:
Drum Circle
Sunday 8:00 p Hall A:
Registration Closes
Sunday 8:00 p Hampton:
Reading
Jay Lake
Sunday 8:30 p H209:
MS 080 Team
[Subtitled]
Sunday 8:30 p Auditorium:
The Masquerade
Susan de Guardiola, MC
Sunday 9:00 p H100:
Blood and Cardstock
Players Choice
Open demo sessions. Learn how to play
exciting games like Showbiz and Counting ZZZs
Sunday 9:00 p H209:
MS 080 Team
[Subtitled]
Sunday 9:00 p Conference:
Filk Office Re-Opens
Sunday 9:00 p Exeter:
Filk Rendezvous
Sunday 9:00 p Gardner:
Open Filk
Sunday 9:00 p Hampton:
Open Filk
Sunday 9:30 p H209:
MS 080 Team
[Subtitled]
Sunday 10:00 p H205:
Zen Scavenger Hunt
Chris Barkley
Sunday 10:00 p H209:
MS 080 Team
[Subtitled]
Sunday 10:00 p Grand Ballroom:
Bubba
Ho-Tep
Sunday 10:30 p H209:
MS 080 Team
[Subtitled]
Sunday 11:00 p H206:
Lame Excuses I Have Given
to Keep on Reading
A confessional… Have you ever
feigned a headache when your beloved feels romantic to turn one
more page? Have you ever avoided chores by claimed your
hemorrhoids are flaring up so you can finish a book? If this
sounds familiar, this panel is for you. Help your fellow book
addict by building up their repertoire of excuses.
John Pomeranz
Sunday 11:00 p H209:
MS 080 Team
[Subtitled]
Sunday 11:00 p Mended Drum:
Concert by Pete
Grubbs
Sunday 11:00 p Conference:
Filk Office On-Call
Sunday 11:00 p Exeter:
Open Filk
Sunday 11:00 p Gardner:
Filk Rendezvous
Sunday 11:00 p Republic A:
Miyuki-chan
In Wonderland [Subtitled] [15 +]
Sunday 11:30 p H209:
MS 080 Team
[Subtitled]
Sunday 11:30 p Republic A:
Cowboy
Bebop: The Movie [Dubbed] [R]
Sunday 12:00 m :
Childcare Closes
Sunday 12:00 m H209:
MS 080 Team
[Subtitled]
Monday
Monday 0:00 a Mended Drum:
Show Tunes
Singalong
Monday 1:00 a Mended Drum:
Last Call at the
Mended Drum
Monday 1:00 a Gardner:
Open Filk
Monday 1:00 a Republic A:
Dragon Half
[Subtitled] [15 +]
Monday 1:30 a Republic A:
Sorcerer On
The Rocks [Subtitled] [17 +]
Monday 2:00 a :
Hynes Closes
Monday 2:00 a :
Pedestrian Overpass to
Marriott Closed
Monday 2:00 a Con Suite:
Con Suite Closes
Monday 2:30 a Republic A:
Vampire
Princess Miyu OVA [Subtitled]
Monday 3:00 a Conference:
Filk Office Closes
Monday 3:00 a Con Suite:
Con Suite Closes
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