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Conference noted::sf

Title:Arcana Caelestia
Notice:Directory listings are in topic 2
Moderator:NETRIX::thomas
Created:Thu Dec 08 1983
Last Modified:Thu Jun 05 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1300
Total number of notes:18728

909.0. "Chicago Worldcon for 1991" by SHARE::WILLIS () Tue Sep 11 1990 13:13

    
    Hi,
    
    Within a year, or there abouts the Worldcon will be
    held in Chicago, Illinois. In fact it will be around
    the Labor day holiday as usually is when it is within
    the continental United States. I am starting this 
    note so it can a central gathering place for notes 
    containining information on the convention itself,
    hotel information. Also maybe it can be where people
    can write and state weather or not they are going.
    Maybe we can another party going if there is enough
    people going to the convention.
    
    jw
     
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
909.1infoLEZAH::BOBBITTwater, wind, and stoneMon Sep 17 1990 10:4449
    Chicon V
    
    the 49th world science fiction convention
    
    author guest of honor - Hal Clement
    Editor guest of honor - Martin harry Greenberg
    Artist guest of honor - Richard Powers
    Fan guests of honor - Jon and Joni Stopa
    Toastmaster - Marta Randall
    
    August 29th through september 2nd, 1991
    at the Hyatt Regency Hotel, Chicago, Illinois
    
    
    Write them at 
    Chicon V registration
    PO Box 218121
    Upper Arlington, Ohio
    43221-8121
    
    Please give a full name plus a fannish name for the badge if you want,
    permanent mailing address and phone number for each membership
    
    Membership rates - full attending rates are $95 through December 31,
    1990 - supporting is $30 til 15 July 1991. - make checks payable to
    Chicon V - all checks must be drawn on US or canadian banks...
    
    Room rates for Chicon V will be $70 per night single/double
    $90 triple and $110 quad...they won't be accepting room reservations
    until early 1991
    
    Chicon V will have all the usual activities - Masquerade, dealer's
    room, art show, con suites, video-films, programming, gaming, filking
    and more.
    
    
    Contacts - 
    
    General info - Chicon V - PO Box A3120, Chicago, IL 60690-3120
    
    Dealers - Steve Francis - 5503 Matterhorn Drive, Louisville, KY
    40216-1326
    
    Art show - Elizabeth Pearse - 218 All Saints Crescent - Oakville, ON
    L6J 5M9
    
    Publications - John Ayotte, 528 Whitson Drive, Gahanna, OH 43230
    
    
909.2Regarding the Art Show contactSTARCH::JSLOVEJ. Spencer Love; 237-2751; SHR1-3/E29Mon Sep 17 1990 16:486
I'll try to find an up-to-date contact and post it here (unless someone beats
me to it), but I wouldn't try to send mail to Elizabeth Pearse.  She died
around the beginning of June (her obituary ran in Locus, and -- I think --
mentioned who was taking over).

						-- Spencer
909.3ooooo, oooo can I join, too!POBOX::ABRAHAMMon Dec 03 1990 19:0012
Worldcon Attendees,

	Since I live in the Chicago area I would love to join in/help out
with any group parties/gatherings/whatever...

	Being new to Chicago as well as DEC I'm not going to be able to provide
much information-wise but I learn quick and would be happy to be the focal point
for some gathering or other if needed.

	See you next year in the city.

Andrea
909.4The Price at the door will be......LUDWIG::WILLISMon Mar 11 1991 07:4610
    Hi
    
    There word I have received for those who procrastinate and
    buy thier memberships 'only' at the door the membership
    fee will be 
    
     $150.00 for the entire convention.
    
    jw
    
909.5Re: .1SNDCSL::W_SMITH2's complement, 3's a crowdMon May 13 1991 00:2515
>    August 29th through september 2nd, 1991
>    at the Hyatt Regency Hotel, Chicago, Illinois
    
    Which Hyatt Regency?  There are three in Chicago, and the main
    reservations number has no record of a worldcon, or Chicon... Any idea
    if there are any rooms left?
    
>    Write them at 
>    Chicon V registration
>    PO Box 218121
>    Upper Arlington, Ohio
>    43221-8121
    
    This address no longer agrees with the one in my latest IASFM, any idea
    which is right?
909.6Chicon Address and Contacts?SNDCSL::W_SMITH2's complement, 3's a crowdWed May 15 1991 00:3024
>>    Write them at 
>>    Chicon V registration
>>    PO Box 218121
>>    Upper Arlington, Ohio
>>    43221-8121
    
>    This address no longer agrees with the one in my latest IASFM, any idea
>    which is right?
    
    Oops, the address in my latest IASFM is:
    	Chicon V
    	Box A3120
    	Chicago, IL  60690
    
    Does Chicon V have a net contact, or phone number where they can be
    reached?  Mail is always so slow....
    
    Does anyone out there know if Chicon has arranged a room rate with the
    local hotels, and if so, which ones at which rates?
    
    
    Thanks,
    
    Willie
909.7Chicon has two mailing addressesTALLIS::SIGELWed May 15 1991 14:0848
Re:  past few

>>>    Write them at 
>>>    Chicon V registration
>>>    PO Box 218121
>>>    Upper Arlington, Ohio
>>>    43221-8121
>>  
>>    This address no longer agrees with the one in my latest IASFM, any idea
>>    which is right?
>    
>    Oops, the address in my latest IASFM is:
>    	Chicon V
>    	Box A3120
>    	Chicago, IL  60690

If you want to register for the convention, I believe that the address for
registration (in Ohio) is still good.  The address for other convention
functions, however, is the Chicago box, and has been since the beginning,
to the best of my knowledge.
    
>    Does Chicon V have a net contact, or phone number where they can be
>    reached?  Mail is always so slow....

They probably have something on CompuServe, and there is a topic on GEnie
where you can leave notes, though the latter is not terribly responsive.
In fact, "not terribly responsive" seems to be the watchword.  For example,
as of the middle of last week, probable Hugo nominees had not yet been
contacted by the committee to see if they wanted their works on the ballot;
rumor had it that nominees were being contacted by mail, and furthermore,
the concom was using an outdated address list.  This means that the Hugo
ballots can't have been made up yet, much less mailed, and the typical 
deadline for getting same in is July 1, less than two months away.  Sounds 
like a major snafu to me.
    
>    Does anyone out there know if Chicon has arranged a room rate with the
>    local hotels, and if so, which ones at which rates?

The main con hotel is the Chicago Hyatt Regency, on the corner of North
Michigan and East Wacker.  As I recall, the rates were surprisingly
reasonable -- for some reason the figure $79/night single/double sticks
to mind, though it looks too low for a major city convention when I type it.
There were a couple of nearby hotels that were a little cheaper, too, as I
recall.  You do have to go through the convention itself to reserve
a room at the con rates -- you can't go to the hotel directly, and especially
can't go through the 800 number, which has never heard of Chicon.
    
				Andrew
909.8More on Worldcon HotelSNDCSL::W_SMITH2's complement, 3's a crowdWed May 15 1991 19:0118
> The main con hotel is the Chicago Hyatt Regency, on the corner of North
> Michigan and East Wacker.  As I recall, the rates were surprisingly
> reasonable -- for some reason the figure $79/night single/double sticks
    
    Thanks for the info!
    
    I called the Chicago Hyatt (312-565-1234), and talked to someone in
    Reservations (they're only there 9-5 or some permutation thereof). The
    room rate is $70/night for single/double, but they are all out of
    "double-doubles"; they still have doubles with king-size beds, so my SO
    and I are all set.
    
    Is there going to be a DEC party at this year's Worldcon?
    
    Thanks,
    
    Willie
    
909.9I'm going are YOU ???????STRATA::WILLISTue Aug 20 1991 18:327
    
    Hi
    
    So Who is going? I am. So is anybody going to have a party or what?
    
    Jw
    
909.10We'll be there!SNDPIT::SMITHN1JBJ - the voice of WaldoWed Aug 21 1991 16:126
    Well, my wife Kim and I will be there (in matching flight suits if it's
    not too hot), so we're up for a party if one happens.  We're going to
    try to get over to the Battletech place and play a couple rounds of
    their virtual reality game, has anyone been there and if so how is it?
    
    Willie
909.11My wife is in the art showBPT::MANWed Aug 21 1991 16:217
My wife Chris Willrich will be in the art show.  We'll be in general 
carrying our daughter in our Gerry Pack so we should be recognizable :-)

I think I was volunteered into a panel on mobile robots thursday too...

peaceful jade,
--richard
909.12Panels are most of the reason I go...SNDPIT::SMITHN1JBJ - the voice of WaldoThu Aug 22 1991 14:008
>I think I was volunteered into a panel on mobile robots thursday too...
    
    Hey, that's one I'm definately going to!  Too bad we're flying and I
    can't bring my teleoperated vehicles...
    
    BTW:  Is there a list of panels yet or do we get that when we register?
    
    Willie
909.13I'll be there...STARCH::JSLOVEJ. Spencer Love; 237-2751; SHR1-3/E29Thu Aug 22 1991 20:399
probably at the filking, mainly, and sleeping during the days, except for a
visit to the huckster's room.

My wife will be displaying art in the art show.

Staying at the Hyatt; that's the main hotel.  Regretably, I can't offer a site
to hold a party, but will most likely attend one if I find out about it.

						-- Spencer
909.14BIS Seminar in Chicago on August 30MTWAIN::KLAESAll the Universe, or nothing!Fri Aug 23 1991 12:5052
Article        34744
From: [email protected] (Bill Higgins-- Beam Jockey)
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: BIS party in Chicago next Friday
Date: 23 Aug 91 11:22:00 GMT
Sender: [email protected]
Organization: The Internet
 
    Members of the British Interplanetary Society will present an
 
                   ADVANCED SPACE SYSTEMS SEMINAR
                        and Technical Gabfest
 
                      Friday, 30 August 1991
                               9:00 PM
               at the World Science Fiction Convention
                     Hyatt Regency Chicago Hotel
                       Chicago, Illinois, USA
                           Buckingham Room
 
                          Kickoff Speakers:
           Henry Vanderbilt-- Status of SSTO Projects
    Dr. Geoffrey Landis-- New and Improved Solar Power Satellites
 
If you attend this informal gathering, be prepared for intensive
tech-talk.  It's a chance to kick around favorite ideas about launch
vehicles, advanced propulsion, missions, support systems, SETI, the
Soviets, or whatever else is on your mind-- the kind of stuff BIS
members have been doing for almost sixty years.  And you'll also be
able to meet some folks who are working on astronautics projects and
hear what they're up to. 
 
Quite a few British Interplanetary Society members show up at
Worldcon, and it's an opportunity for North American members to
socialize together.  The BIS is one of the world's oldest spaceflight
societies (founded in 1933) as well as one of the most forward-looking
(Moonship design published 1939, Daedalus starship design 1978). We've
done this party four times now (three times under the BIS aegis), and
it's always fun. 
 
I'd appreciate hearing from you over the net if you think you might
come.  Chicago-area space folks are welcome to this affair  even if
you aren't attending the convention. 
 
     O~~*           /_) ' / /   /_/ '  ,   ,  ' ,_  _           \|/
   - ~ -~~~~~~~~~~~/_) / / /   / / / (_) (_) / / / _\~~~~~~~~~~~zap!
 /       \                          (_) (_)                    / | \
 |       |     Bill Higgins   Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
 \       /     Bitnet:     [email protected]
   -   -       Internet:  [email protected]
     ~         SPAN/Hepnet:      43011::HIGGINS

909.15Possible worldcon schedule follows this noteROULET::WILLISTue Aug 27 1991 17:277
    
    Following this note is a tentive schedule for worldcon this year
    it was taken of usenet. Moderators if you see rhat it is unexceptable
    you can delete it
    
    jw
    
909.16Thursday's Schedule of eventsROULET::WILLISTue Aug 27 1991 17:28358
Article: 1030
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From: [email protected] (Bill Higgins-- Beam Jockey)
Newsgroups: alt.fandom.cons
Subject: Status: Chicon program rolling along
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Date: 14 Aug 91 16:13:35 GMT
Sender: [email protected]
Lines: 35
 
I thought you folks would like to know how the Chicago Worldcon is
coming along.
 
The Chicon V program plan was "frozen" last week.  We now know which
people we're asking to speak on which panels.  There are Literary,
Art, Science, Academic, Fan, and Cities tracks, as well as readings,
autograph sessions, and writers' workshops.  
 
In my piece of the convention, science and technology, there are about
90 hours of programming.  
 
Letters to program participants, giving proposed schedules, were
mailed last Monday.  I'm trying to catch up on sleep a little now.
 
Please continue to spread rumors that City-Of-The-Big-Shoulderscon
Five will be "worse than Nolacon."  If I turn in even a mediocre
performance, I'll look like a hero... (-:
 
IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER: I, W. Skeffington Higgins, reserve the right to
ignore e-mail messages irrelevant to my work on the program.  This is
not rudeness, just exhaustion.  People are asking about anime
schedules and airlines and all sorts of stuff.  I'd like to help,
really I would, but I need my time to Do What Needs To Be Done.
 
   _-_    _-_
  /  -\__/-  \           Chicon V                  Bill Higgins
 /   \(..)/   \   49th World Science Fiction   |   Track Manager
|     |  |     |        Convention             |   Science & Technology   
|  \\\ \/ ///  |                               |   
\   \\\  ///   /  29 August-2 September 1991   |   
 \     ()     /   Hyatt Regency Chicago Hotel  |   [email protected]
  \    ||    /      Chicago, Illinois, USA         [email protected]
   \__{  }__/
   (        )  [apologies to Pablo Picasso...]
   ----------

Article: 969
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From: [email protected] (Bill Higgins-- Beam Jockey)
Newsgroups: alt.fandom.cons
Subject: Chicon Schedule: Thursday 08/29 Main Program
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Date: 22 Aug 91 07:40:16 GMT
Sender: [email protected]
Lines: 302
 
Chicon V, the 49th World Science Fiction Convention, will be held 29
August through 2 September at the Hyatt Regency Chicago Hotel and the
Swissotel in Chicago, Illinois, USA.  
 
Here is the schedule for Thursday's Main Programming Tracks (including
the film program) as it will appear in the Pocket Program.  It is as
accurate as we could make it, but NOT UTTERLY FINAL.  We may still
make a few changes to the schedule.  
 
If you are attending, check the Chicon daily newsletter for
information on program changes.  
 
IF YOU ARE A PROGRAM PARTICIPANT, please check the back of your
registration badge for the most up-to-date information.  The Green
Room staff will be able to assist you with any questions.  We
appreciate your willingness to participate in Chicon, and the help
you've given us in designing our program.  Please remember to visit
the Green Room at least 20 minutes prior to the event you're scheduled
for to meet fellow panelists, load slides, and so forth.  It eases our
minds considerably when we know all the panelists are present and
ready to start!
 
I have added to the "raw" schedules brief descriptions of the
science-track items.  (As the Science Guy, I had them readily to
hand.)  Please spread the word to any science panelists you know that
these blurbs are available.
 
I regret that because of our pre-con workload, we may not be
able to answer e-mail inquiries about the convention.  I also
apologize that some of the lines are rather wide and may wrap around
on your screen or fall into your printer's bit-bucket.
 
I hope you'll find this schedule useful in planning your weekend at
Hog-Butcher-For-The-Worldcon Five.  Thanks go especially to Rick Waterson
for providing the information in a timely fashion.
 
   _-_    _-_
  /  -\__/-  \           Chicon V                  Bill Higgins
 /   \(..)/   \   49th World Science Fiction   |   Track Manager
|     |  |     |        Convention             |   Science & Technology   
|  \\\ \/ ///  |                               |   
\   \\\  ///   /  29 August-2 September 1991   |   
 \     ()     /   Hyatt Regency Chicago Hotel  |   [email protected]
  \    ||    /      Chicago, Illinois, USA         [email protected]
   \__{  }__/
   (        )  [apologies to Pablo Picasso...]
   ----------
====================================
                                               MAIN PROGRAMMING TRACKS
 
Thursday
12:00 pm
 Literary -    Evolution of Comics Style - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: R. Meyers
               D. Kosinski, S. Saffel, J. Schwartz, L. Wein
 
 Film -        Zardoz (1974) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
1:00 pm
 Science -     Another Martian Odyssey: Return to the World of Stanley G. Weinbaum
               - Columbus Hall K/L
               H. Clement
 
Weinbaum's story of a lost astronaut encountering strange Martians is
an SF classic.  What was his Mars like, and how has our new knowledge
of the  planet changed the picture?
 
1:45 pm
 Film -        The Invisible Man (1933) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
2:00 pm
 Science -     Smart Robots From Dumb Parts: Applying Subsumption Architectures -
               Columbus Hall K/L
               D. Doughty
 
A new approach to robot design builds complex, fairly smart behavior
from layers of fairly dumb processors.  Don Doughty demonstrates robot
hardware using this principle and explains  practical applications.
 
3:00 pm
 Science -     Solar Power for the Lunar Night - Columbus Hall K/L
               G. Landis
 
 
Solar power is great, but where do you get electricity at night on the
Moon, where the Sun doesn't rise for 14 days?
 
 Science -     Physics Demonstrations for the Irregular Teacher - Columbus Hall
               C/D
               P. Insley
 
Peter Insley reaches into his bag of tricks to demonstrate how we
teach physics in Chicago. DO try this at home!
 
 Art -         Acrylic Painting - Water Tower
               A. Cabrera, D. Cherry
 
 Art -         Lecture: Printing Techniques - Buckingham
               I. Neilson
 -             Opening Ceremonies - Grand Ballroom F
 Film -        The Man with Two Brains (1983) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
4:00 pm
 Literary -    The Blue Collar Worker in SF - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: J.     Eisen
               G. Cook, D. Houseman, L. Mixon, R. Reed, G. Wolfe
 
 Science -     Boy, Did We Get It Wrong: Great SF Stories Overrun By Science -
               Columbus Hall C/D
               Moderator: E.     Raymond
               S. Blom
 
When you build your fiction around science, you're taking a risk.
Which classic SF tales have become obsolete as new scientific results
appeared? Why are they still worth reading?  Which of today's favorite
stories run the risk of obsolescence?
 
 Art -         Star Pictures - Gold Coast
               Moderator: A.     Cabrera
               B. Avary, R. Eggleton
 
 Art -         Go Away, Kid - Buckingham
               Moderator: P.     Breeding-Black
               D. Cherry, T. Hamilton, M. White
 
 Art -         Who Lives in Greenwich and What Are They Up To? - Water Tower
               Moderator: R.     Meyers
               R. Thompkins, D. Usher
 
 Film -        Slaughterhouse 5 (1972) - Regency Ballroom A
 
4:35 pm
 Film -        Darkman (1990) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
5:00 pm
 Literary -    The Uncut Robert A. Heinlein - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: J.     Klein
               P. Eisenstein, L. Mangan, P. Nielsen-Hayden, G. Price, V.S.
               Trestrail
 
 Science -     See You on the Net: Computer Communities Today and Tomorrow - Grand
               Ballroom B
               Moderator: E.     Leeper
               C. Dunn, M. Kube-McDowell, R. Sawyer, C. Stoll, C. Von Rospach
 
Thanks to computer networks, millions now participate in social and
professional exchanges using electronic mail.  What effect is this
having on society?  What will happen when the Net is available to
almost everybody?
 
 Science -     Zeppelins in Science Fiction - Columbus Hall K/L
               Moderator: P.J.   Farmer
               A. Steele, S.M. Stirling, P. Williams
 
Zeppelins (and other types of airship) seem to hold a special appeal
for SF people.  We examine airships of the imagination, from Verne and
Kipling  to the present.
 
 Science -     The Science in Space Opera - Columbus Hall C/D
               Moderator: L.     Mc Master Bujold
               C. Fields, J. Grimm, D. Kyle, E.b. Shahar, T. Zahn
 
You love those galaxy-spanning tales of adventure.  Here's the
science.  The geography of stars, planets, gas clouds; the physics
behind the colossal weapons of superscience; the chemistry and biology
of exotic alien landscapes.  And more.
 
 Academic -    The New York Review of SF/The Australian SF Review - Grand Ballroom
               D - North
               Moderator: D.     Hartwell
               M. Kandel, J. Webb
 
 Art -         Demonstration: Button Making - Buckingham
               M. Hanson-Roberts
 
 Art -         Slide Show: Art of the Cosmos - Gold Coast
               B. Avary
 
 Art -         Demonstration: Calligraphy - Water Tower
               Corinna Taylor
 
 Fan -         The First Fandom - Prozine Letter Hacking of the 30's, 40's, and
               50's - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: W.     Tucker
               R. Madle, F. Pohl
 
 Filk -        What Is This Filk Stuff? - Grand Ballroom E
               Moderator: J.     Coulson
               W. Roper, J. Voros
 
6:00 pm
 Art -         Convention Art Shows - Gold Coast
               Moderator: J.     Hetherington
               R. Asplund-Faith, J. Mayhew, I. Neilson
 
 Art -         The IRS and the Artist - Buckingham
               Moderator: A.     Cabrera
               T. Harvia, N. Jainschigg
 
 Film -        The Thief of Bagdad (1924) - Regency Ballroom A
 
6:15 pm
 Film -        The Witches (1990) HUGO NOMINEE - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
8:00 pm
 Film -        Star Trek I:The Motion Picture (1979) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
8:25 pm
 Film -        The Navigator (1989) - Regency Ballroom A
 
9:00 pm
 Literary -    SF Poetry Workshop - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: M.     Rich
               J. Dorr, M.J. Dyson, T. McGarry, K. Stein
 
 Literary -    Antiwar War Stories - Columbus Hall I/J
               Moderator: J.     Morrow
               M.S. Bell, R. Green, J. Rosenberg, K. Rusch, M. Van Name
 
 Science -     My Favorite Science Books:  Crosswired Scientists - Columbus Hall
               C/D
               Moderator: B.     Gehm
               J. Grimm, K. Meltsner, M. Roberts, M. Sestak
 
Greetings, scientists.  "Crosswired" means we'd like to hear you  talk
about science books-- but only books OUTSIDE your own field.  Favorite 
biology books of astronomers.  Favorite physics books of
mathematicians.   That sort of thing.  Got it?  Good.
 
 Science -     The Ambivalent Hacker - Columbus Hall K/L
               Moderator: J.     Thomas
               M. Godwin, G. Meyer, C. Stoll
 
Our fiction offers two images of the hacker: One is a benign wizard
who is hip to a mysterious world closed to ordinary people, who can
quickly get computers to give you what you need.  The other meddles,
using arcane knowledge to exploit the vulnerability of your
complicated computer-dependent systems.  Why are we fascinated by the
image of the hacker?  Why do we have deeply divided feelings about
him?  
 
 Fan -         Fandom in "Fallen Angels" - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: L.     Niven
               M. Flynn, J. Pournelle
 
 Filk -        Hey There, Filker, New In Town? - Gold Coast
               Moderator: J.     Coulson
               J. Voros
 
10:00 pm
 Literary -    Real Addiction - Columbus Hall I/J
               Moderator: K.     Logue
               G. Effinger, P. Robinson, A. Shepherd
 
 Science -     The Space Program We Should Have Had - Columbus Hall C/D
               Moderator: H.     Spencer
               R. Cesarone, V. Haldeman, K. Randle, J. Strickland, H. Vanderbilt
 
Americans spent without limit to reach the Moon in eight years; the
Soviets fell behind, tested some lunar hardware, but abandoned the
quest and turned to space stations.  Did we take a wrong turn?  When? 
Could we have had spaceflight superior to Shuttle, Soyuz, and Mir,
without spending much more?
 
 Fan -         Fan Artists vs Fan Editors (You did WHAT to my Illo?) - Columbus
               Hall E/F
               Moderator: D.     Stein
               M. Cantor, B. Foster, G. Laskowski, M. Ranson
 
 Late Night -Why it's Not Okay to Write about Black Magic - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: S.     McKee Charnas
               R.L. Byers, R. Knaak, R. McCollum, E.b. Shahar
 
10:15 pm
 Film -        Tremors (1990) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
 Film -        Futuropolis - Regency Ballroom A
 
10:30 pm
 Filk -        The Rise Up Singing Harmony Circle - Gold Coast
               Moderator: C.     Roper
               B. Reidel, J. Shoji, M. Wessels-O'Cain
 
11:00 pm
 Literary -    How to Unfairly Judge a Book by Page 117 - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: T.     Nielsen-Hayden
               E. Leeper, L. Mann, K. Massie-Ferch, R. Reed, A. Thomson, C. Von
               Rospach
 
 Late Night -Abuse Themes in F&SF - Discussion - Columbus Hall K/L
               Moderator: K.     Logue
               S. Honeck, K. Houghton, M. Kenin, R. Meyers, A. Shepherd, M. Soukup
 
 Literary -    Censorship From the Left - Columbus Hall K/L
               Moderator: M.     Flynn
               S. Green, Jack Haldeman, J. Hetherington, J. Lichtenberg, J. Norman
 
11:45 pm
 Film -        Zardoz (1974) - Regency Ballroom A
 
12:00 am
 Film -        Lair of the White Worm (1988) - Regency Ballroom C/D
909.17Friday's schedule of eventsROULET::WILLISTue Aug 27 1991 17:30785
Article: 953
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From: [email protected] (Matt Crawford)
Newsgroups: alt.fandom.cons
Subject: Chicon Schedule: Friday 08/30 Main Program
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Date: 23 Aug 91 13:59:25 GMT
Expires: Mon, 2 Sep 1991 23:59:59 GMT
Sender: [email protected] (NewsMistress)
Reply-To: [email protected] (Matt Crawford)
Organization: Up against the wall of SCIENCE
Lines: 772
 
 
	From: [email protected] (Bill Higgins-- Beam Jockey)
 
Chicon V, the 49th World Science Fiction Convention, will be held 29
August through 2 September at the Hyatt Regency Chicago Hotel and the
Swissotel in Chicago, Illinois, USA.  
 
Here is the schedule for Friday's Main Programming Tracks (including
the film program) as it will appear in the Pocket Program.  It is as
accurate as we could make it, but NOT UTTERLY FINAL.  We may still
make a few changes to the schedule.  
 
If you are attending, check the Chicon daily newsletter for
information on program changes.  
 
IF YOU ARE A PROGRAM PARTICIPANT, please check the back of your
registration badge for the most up-to-date information.  The Green
Room staff will be able to assist you with any questions.  We
appreciate your willingness to participate in Chicon, and the help
you've given us in designing our program.  Please remember to visit
the Green Room at least 20 minutes prior to the event you're scheduled
for to meet fellow panelists, load slides, and so forth.  It eases our
minds considerably when we know all the panelists are present and
ready to start!
 
I have added to the "raw" schedules brief descriptions of the
science-track items.  (As the Science Guy, I had them readily to
hand.)  Please spread the word to any science panelists you know that
these blurbs are available.
 
I regret that because of our pre-con workload, we may not be
able to answer e-mail inquiries about the convention.  I also
apologize that some of the lines are rather wide and may wrap around
on your screen or fall into your printer's bit-bucket.
 
I hope you'll find this schedule useful in planning your weekend at
Hog-Butcher-For-The-Worldcon Five.  Thanks go especially to Rick Waterson
for providing the information in a timely fashion.
 
   _-_    _-_
  /  -\__/-  \           Chicon V                  Bill Higgins
 /   \(..)/   \   49th World Science Fiction   |   Track Manager
|     |  |     |        Convention             |   Science & Technology   
|  \\\ \/ ///  |                               |   
\   \\\  ///   /  29 August-2 September 1991   |   
 \     ()     /   Hyatt Regency Chicago Hotel  |   [email protected]
  \    ||    /      Chicago, Illinois, USA         [email protected]
   \__{  }__/
   (        )  [apologies to Pablo Picasso...]
   ----------
                                               MAIN PROGRAMMING TRACKS
 
Friday
1:30 am
 Film -        End of August at the Hotel Ozone (1967) - Regency Ballroom A
 
3:00 am
 Film -        The Philadelphia Experiment (1984) - Regency Ballroom A
 
4:50 am
 Film -        Crazy Ray (1922) - Regency Ballroom A
 
6:30 am
 Film -        Phantom Empire 1-3 (1935) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
7:45 am
 Film -        The 20th International Tournee of Animation - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
9:20 am
 Film -        Phantom Empire 1-3 (1935) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
10:00 am
 Literary -    Third World Mythos vs. the Celts - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: K.     Dalkey
               M. Bartter, J. May, D. McKiernan, M. Zambreno
 
 Science -     Project Cancelled: Glorious Techie Dreams of Yesteryear - Columbus
               Hall C/D
               Moderator: A.     Andrews
               L. Mann, K. Meltsner, J.F. Moore, J. Roberts, D. Stein
 
"A man's reach should exceed his grasp, or what's a heaven for?" A
look at what might have been, from the Analytical Engine, to damming
the  Mediterranean, to the nuclear airplane.
 
 Literary -    Ian & Betty Ballantine - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: I.     Ballantine
               B. Ballantine
 
 Science -     From Cavemen to Chaos: People and Numbers through History -
               Columbus Hall K/L
               F. Aiken
 
The connections between mathematics and the "real" world as they have
developed through the ages.
 
 Academic -    Teaching Science Fiction I - Grand Ballroom D - North
               Moderator: B.     Friend
               C. Bradley, V.S. Trestrail, J. Williamson
 
 Art -         Neo-Pro I: Finding Business - Gold Coast
               Moderator: M.     Hanson-Roberts
               G. Dazzo, T. Eldred, T. Harvia, M. Miller
 
 Art -         Some Day My Prints... - Water Tower
               Moderator: A.     Austin
               P. Breeding-Black, E. McKee, L. Synk
 
 Art -         Lecture/Demonstration: Lettering - Buckingham
               S. Rosema
 
 Costuming -   Costume Supports - Columbian
               G. Anderson, G. Wolfenden-Steib
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               P. Cadigan, B. Ferguson, N. Holder, R. Lafferty
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               R. Green
 
 Reading - Picasso
               J. Patrouch
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               E. Heideman
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               M. Flynn
 
10:25 am
 Film -        Yellow Submarine (1968) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
10:30 am
 Film -        Stairway to Heaven (1946) - Regency Ballroom A
 
11:00 am
 Literary -    Style and Craft - Columbus Hall K/L
               Moderator: W.     Wu
               T. Bisson, P. McKillip, C. Oberndorf, M. Resnick, G. Wolfe
 
 Science -     Downloading from Your Brain-- How? When? - Columbus Hall K/L
               Moderator: R.     Mac Bride Allen
               K. Baty, H. Davidson, R. Mac Bride Allen, S. Miller, M. Mist, F.
               Pohl
 
Hey, here's a tired SF gimmick: pouring the contents of your brain
into a computer, and maybe back again.  Backup copies?  Robot
duplicates?   How could this really be done?  How close is science to
doing it?  Or is it  impossible nonsense?
 
 Science -     Scientific Creationism in Schools and in Society - Grand Ballroom B
               Moderator: K.     Meyer
               M. Bein, R. Lafferty, R. McCollum, K. Meyer, F. Saberhagen
 
Should scientific creationism be taught in public schools? If not,
should it be banned from public schools?  Does scientific creationism
serve a real need?  How does this issue illuminate the choices we make
about other items in the curriculum?
 
 Science -     Invasion of the Geezers: When Old People Rule the Earth - Columbus
               Hall C/D
               Moderator: Joe    Haldeman
               M. Cowan, B. Ferguson, J. Lorrah, L. Mc Master Bujold
 
Between better health care and Baby Boom demographics, we'll have a
LOT more senior citizens in a decade or two.  How will society change? 
 
 Academic -    Presentation: Locus - Grand Ballroom D - North
               Moderator: C.N.   Brown
               R. Letson
 
 Art -         Slide Show: Kelly Freas Retrospective - Gold Coast
               F. Kelly-Freas
 
 Art -         Demonstration: Alkyd - Water Tower
               R. Asplund-Faith
 
 Art -         Critique: Carl Lundgren - Wacker Hall
               C. Lundgren
 
 Art -         What's Wrong With Comics - Buckingham
               Moderator: S.     Saffel
               R. Greenberger, M. Javins, D. Kosinski, M. McLaurin, S. Moore
 -             WSFS Mark and Registration Committee - New Orleans
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               P. Eisenstein, S. Schmidt, M. Snodgrass, A. Steele, H. Turtledove
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               D. Houseman
 
 Reading - Picasso
               S. Gould
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               R. Wilber
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               D. Zindell
 
12:00 pm
 Literary -    High Fantasy as the Plantation Novel - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: D.     Hartwell
               L. Barwood, J. Brunet, K. Cramer, Josepha Sherman, K. Wherstein
 
 Literary -    Images of Birth and Motherhood in SF - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: K.     Nerat
               J. Gephardt, N. Kress, C. Oberndorf, C. Severance
 
 Science -     There's a Spaceship in the Lobby:  Politicking for Space - Columbus
               Hall C/D
               Moderator: D.     Skran
               M.J. Dyson, N. Rest, A. Sherzer
 
To make outer space a better place to live and work, you've got to
start here on the ground.  Activists will discuss the role of politics
in bringing about improved space programs.  
 
 Science -     Who's Out There? Searching for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI)
               - Columbus Hall K/L
               Moderator: T.     Van Horne
               L. Boyle, D. Brin, M. Kandel, R. Reed
 
The search for life beyond the Earth depends on pieces to a puzzle
that scientists are still putting together.  What radio searches are
now underway?  What new knowledge in astronomy, geology, or biology
has shaped the direction of this quest?
 
 Science -     Dinosaurs: The Latest Word - Grand Ballroom B
               Moderator: M.     Brett-Surman
               R. Chapman, L. Deck, R. Walters
 
Interdisciplinary experts from the Smithsonian Institution's Museum of
Natural History discuss the world of dinosaur studies, and help dispel
misconceptions about dinosaurs.  Learn about research results that
haven't  hit the press yet.
 
 Literary -    Authenticity in Military SF - Columbus Hall I/J
               Moderator: E.     Moon
               C.J. Cherryh, H. Clement, S. Miesel, K. Randle, M. Sumner
 
 Trivia -             Trivia Bowl - New Orleans
 
 Cities -      The Evolution of the High Rise I - Grand Ballroom D - North
               Moderator: F.     Pohl
               J. Clayton, D. Krause, D. Levine, G. Price
 
 Art -         Good Business Practices - Buckingham
               T. Canty, S. Honeck, J. Lee
 
 Fan -         Fanzines on the Net? (The Future of Fanzines) - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: A.     Ubelhor
               E. Leeper, R. Smith, C. Von Rospach
 
 Media -       The Murder of Beauty and the Beast - Grand Ballroom E
 
 Costuming -   To Glitz or Not to Glitz - Columbian
               R. Himmelsbach, P. Pettinger, S. Pettinger, J. Ward
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               E. Bergstrom, J. DeChancie, D. Mattingly, J.L. Nye
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               L. Mann
 
 Reading - Picasso
               L. Mixon
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               P. Wrede
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               E.b. Shahar
 
 Film -        Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure (1989) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
12:20 pm
 Film -        Defending Your Life (1991) - Regency Ballroom A
 
1:00 pm
 Literary -    Fantasy of Manners - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: S.     Brust
               J.R. Douglas, D. Keller, P. Nielsen-Hayden, T. Nielsen-Hayden
 
 Literary -    I Remember Don:  A Wollheim Memorial - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: F.     Ackerman
               J. Clayton, R. Coulson, D. Kyle, F. Pohl, E. Wollheim
 
 Literary -    The Bible as a Fantasy Novel - Columbus Hall I/J
               Moderator: J.     Gelb
               M.S. Bell, J. Brunet, P. Eisenstein, J. Lichtenberg, J. Mayhew
 
 Science -     Good Things Come In Small Packages: Nanotechnology - Columbus Hall
               K/L
               Moderator: R.     Asplund-Faith
               A. Andrews, H. Daniel, E. Raymond, J. Strickland
 
Nanotechnology has caused a stir in SF circles.  Our ability to 
manipulate matter, perhaps even individual atoms, may allow us to
build tiny machines halfway between robots and germs that reproduce
themselves and do our bidding.  Tantalizing possibilities: build
anything, make everyone rich,  attack disease, raise the dead.
 
 Science -     My Mother, My Host I: Medical Advances in Reproduction - Columbus
               Hall C/D
               Moderator: M.     Reichert
               M. Bein, A. Dormire, E. Van Dommelen, S. Willis
 
There are new ways to have children.  What advances will the future
bring in surrogate motherhood, in vitro fertilization, artificial
wombs, and other techniques?  What methods used on livestock today may
be used on humans tomorrow?
 
 Science -     Friends of the Dinosaur - Grand Ballroom B
               Moderator: M.     Brett-Surman
               R. Chapman, L. Deck, R. Walters
 
An informal, open discussion of dinosaur lore, following the
presentations of the "Dinosaurs: The Latest Word" panel.  Bring your
questions and speculations to our scientists, writers, and artists.
 
 Academic -    Lecture: Author Studies - Grand Ballroom D - North
               Moderator: J.     Webb
               P. Kaveny, N. Ruddick, W. Schuyler
 
 Art -         Lecture: Anatomy Lab - Gold Coast
               D. Maitz
 
 Art -         Basic Photography for Artists - Water Tower
               C. Jones
 
 Art -         Portfolio Review - Buckingham
               Moderator: P.     Breeding-Black
               D. Anderson
 
 Fan -         Evolution of Fanspeak - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: T.     Weisskopf
               M. Feder, L.Z. Smith, E. Whitley
 
 Filk -        How to Be a Famous Filker - Grand Ballroom E
               Moderator: D.     Elms
               B. Sutton, W. Sutton
 -             WSFS Business Meeting - Grand Ballroom F
 
 Costuming -   Foam and Fur - Creature Costuming - Columbian
               L. Hill, D. Ivey
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               M. McHugh
 
 Reading - Picasso
               A. Honigsberg
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               A. Gilliland
 
 Art -         Computer Animation at Home - TBA
 
1:45 pm
 Film -        Back to the Future III (1990) HUGO NOMINEE - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
2:00 pm
 Literary -    Fashion and Passion - Columbus Hall I/J
               Moderator: A.     Jablokow
               A. Harris, E.b. Shahar
 
 Literary -    How the News Affects What's Published - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: K.     Rusch
               B. Ferguson, R. Gleason, N. Kress, P. Robinson, S. Schmidt
 
 Literary -    The Changing Role of the Editor - Columbus Hall I/J
               Moderator: B.     Meacham
               S. Allison, D. Hartwell, R. Silverberg, D.W. Smith
 
 Literary -    Crossing Disciplines 2, History, Sociology and Science - Grand
               Ballroom A
               Moderator: M.     Sestak
               C.J. Cherryh, M. Gear, Jack Haldeman, K. Massie-Ferch, M. Sumner
 
 Science -     Automated Thought Today: Neural Networks, Artificial Intelligence,
               etc. - Columbus Hall C/D
               Moderator: M.     Miller
               G. Corrigan, M. Flynn, D. Kingsbury, J. Martino, M. Van Name
 
They're still trying to make machines think, or pretend to think. 
Where do we stand now?  What's coming tomorrow?
 
 Science -     Whatever Happened to L5? Today's Pro-Space Organizations - Columbus
               Hall K/L
               Moderator: J.     Liss
               L. Ahearn, C. Sheffield, D. Skran, L. Weigel
 
A number of private organizations are working to open the space
frontier through education, research, and political activism.  Who are
they, and what have they accomplished?
 
 Science -     Iraqi War Picture Show: What SF Learned from the Gulf War - Grand
               Ballroom B
               Moderator: D.     Hatch
               G. Cook, J. Grimm, J. Roberts
 
What did the recent Persian Gulf conflict teach us about the Middle
East, about high-tech weaponry, or about the media landscape we
inhabit?  How will it influence science fiction?
 
 Academic -    The Nazi Holocaust and Fantastic Literature - Grand Ballroom D -
               North
               Moderator: G.K.   Wolfe
               J. Gordon, Joe Haldeman, L. Stein, E. Weil
 
 Art -         Illustrators of The Future - Buckingham
               Moderator: A.J.   Budrys
               F. Kelly-Freas, L. Kelly-Freas
 
 Art -         Demonstration: Waxworking for Jewelry - Water Tower
               B. Guarino
 
 Fan -         Flavors of Regional U.S. Fandoms - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: Joni   Stopa
               P. Frierson, F. Patten
 
 Autograph -   Guest of Honor Signing - Wrigley
               H. Clement
 
 Costuming -   Presentation and Stage Etiquette - Columbian
               J. Hertz, P. Pettinger, S. Pettinger, G. Wolfenden-Steib
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               M. Kenin
 
 Reading - Picasso
               A. Shepherd
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               C. Willis
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               E. Moon
 
2:30 pm
 Film -        Wings of Desire (1987) - Regency Ballroom A
 
3:00 pm
 Literary -    Story Writing for the Comics - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: C.     Claremont
               T. Bisson, J. Cavelos, A. Harris, L. Wein
 
 Literary -    Cross-Bred Genre Writers - Columbus Hall I/J
               Moderator: R.     Shea
               N. Atherton, G. Dazzo, D. Keller, J. Roberts, L. Stewart Carl
 
 Science -     Defining Infocrime: Cracking, Security, and Enforcement - Grand
               Ballroom B
               Moderator: M.     Godwin
               S. Murphy, D. Price, A. Steele, M. Whelan
 
Computers and networks make some old crimes easier, some harder, and
also make some totally new crimes possible.  How to protect against
infocrime? How to enforce laws against it?  Policies we make today may
set precedents for generations to come.  How can we make wise
decisions?
 
 Science -     There Must Be A Better Way: Alternatives to Chemical Rockets -
               Columbus Hall K/L
               Moderator: G.     Landis
               T. Johnson, J. Kare, H. Spencer
 
It takes a mighty big chemical rocket to put a mighty small payload
into space.  Can we replace them?  What about coilguns, laser
launchers, nukes,  skyhooks, or beanstalks?  Or methods even more
exotic?
 
 Science -     The SF Writer's Science Reference Shelf - Columbus Hall C/D
               Moderator: M.     Kube-McDowell
               J. Coulson, A. Latner, E. Moon, D. Sakers
 
You don't have to be a superscientist yourself to write good science
fiction.  Our authors discuss the reference works they consult-- and
solicit suggestions for others.
 
 Cities -      The Development of Cities I - Grand Ballroom D - North
               Moderator: L.     Watt-Evans
               K. Meyer, F. Pohl, G. Rosenblum, Joel Sherman
 
 Art -         Artist's Rights - Buckingham
               Moderator: J.     Wurts
               A. Cabrera, D. Cherry, J. Lee
 
 Art -         Slide Show: A Little Left of Reality - Gold Coast
               J. Christensen
 
 Fan -         The Third Chicon (1962) - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: M.     Beck
               G. Price, R. Sims, Jon Stopa, Ed Wood
 -             Aerobics - New Orleans
               J.A. Douglas
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               M. Kandel
 
 Reading - Picasso
               E. Bergstrom
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               D. Schweitzer
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               J. Dorr
 
3:55 pm
 Film -        Beetlejuice (1988) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
4:00 pm
 Literary -    Famous Guys Comics - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: B.     Foster
               P. Foglio, G. Ketter, J.F. Moore, L. Nakashima
 
 Literary -    Near Future SF - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: J.     Stith
               R. Sawyer, D.A. Smith, A. Steele, M. Van Name
 
 Literary -    Damn the Marketing Game - Columbus Hall I/J
               Moderator: H.     Wood
               S. Allison, J.R. Douglas, R. Gleason, E. Lang
 
 Science -     Plugging Everyone In:  The Future of Telecommunications - Grand
               Ballroom B
               Moderator: D.     Skran
               B. Burch, D. Doughty, S. King, M. Miller
 
Telegraph, telephone, radio, TV, cable, satellite, VCR, fax--
innovations in communications have revised our world several times,
and they're not through with us yet.  Join our experts to peer into
their crystal balls.
 
 Science -     Tales from the Tech Shop: True Funny Science and Technology Yarns -
                Columbus Hall C/D
               Moderator: H.     Davidson
               A. Andrews, J. Kare, G. Landis, M. Reichert
 
The folklore of technology. Wayward computers. Amazing technopranks. 
Inspired problem-solving.  Dubious inventions.  Explos*BANG!*
 
 Science -     The Great Exploration: The Livermore Proposals for Inexpensive
               Space Infrastructure - Columbus Hall K/L
               A. Sherzer
 
Scientists at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory have proposed  a
series of ventures into space using "old" technologies and lightweight
materials. The Livermore approach produces a slender thread of
facilities from Low Earth Orbit (LEO) to Mars. Each step provides a
toehold for colonies bo build from and at the same time make economic
exploration of the solar system a real posibility.
 
 Art -         Comics Crossover - Buckingham
               Moderator: R.     Eggleton
               K. Erichsen, T. Hamilton, T. Harvia, M. Javins, M. McLaurin, S.
               Rosema
 
 Art -         Slide Show: The Forty Thieves - Water Tower
               D. Maitz
 
 Fan -         A Wealth of Fable? (Fan Historians Panel) - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: R.     Lynch
               F. Lerner, B. Pelz, J. Siclari, N. Tucker
 
 Academic -    Discussion Panel: H.P. Lovecraft - Grand Ballroom D - North
               Moderator: F.     Hummel
               M. Rich, D. Schweitzer
 -             SFWA Meeting - Grand Ballroom F
 
 Costuming -   From the Neck Up - Part 1 Makeup and Hair - Columbian
               R. Beech, N. Mildebrandt
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               E. Bryant, L. Carpenter, E. Kushner, J. Moffett
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               L. Hamilton
 
 Reading - Picasso
               S. Shwartz
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               B. Bova
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               L. Barwood
 
4:45 pm
 Film -        The Time Machine (1960) - Regency Ballroom A
 
5:00 pm
 Literary -    Pure vs. Mixed Horror - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: N.     Holder
               D. Dunn, S. Hartzell, F. Hummel, G.R.R Martin, R. Weinberg
 
 Literary -    Talk on Phantom of the Opera - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: J.     Zetterberg
               E. Bergstrom, H. Nachman, W. Tucker
 
 Science -     Chaos: What is it?  Why does everyone apply it to everything? -
               Columbus Hall C/D
               Moderator: A.     Harris
               M. Bein, M. Kandel, M. Sestak, C. Sheffield
 
A look at the new interdisciplinary insights arising from the study of
"chaotic systems," whose state depends upon initial conditions in a
sensitive way.
 
 Science -     Do-It-Yourself Aliens: Creature Design for Art and Fiction - Grand
               Ballroom B
               Moderator: L.     Niven
               W. Barlowe, D. Brin, R. Charrette, L. Synk, R. Walters
 
To create convincing aliens, you've got to harness a vivid imagination
to a sound knowledge of biological principles.  Find out how the pros
do it.
 
 Literary -    A Whisper of Blood - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: E.     Datlow
               P. Cadigan, M. Hall, K.W. Jeter, K. Koja, D. Schow
 
 Science -     Cyberpunk Under Siege? The Steve Jackson Games Affair and the
               Secret Service - Columbus Hall K/L
               Moderator: M.     Godwin
               S. Jackson
 
Why did the Secret Service raid the game publisher, seizing computers
and documents and severely crippling its business?  What events led up
to the raid? And  what does this portend for future relationships
between law enforcement agencies and  computer users?
 
 Academic -    Theory of Horror Fiction - Grand Ballroom D - North
               Moderator: K.     Cramer
               D. Hartwell
 
 Art -         Round Table: Professional Concerns - Gold Coast
               M. Whelan
 
 Art -         Demonstration: Scratchboard - Buckingham
               E. McKee
 
 Fan -         The Cult of the Party Goddess - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: M.     Beck
               L. Mann, D. Siegel, Joni Stopa, D. Wright
 
 Filk -        So You Want to Make a Tape - Grand Ballroom E
               Moderator: C.     Roper
               B. Childs-Helton, E. Gerds, R. Laurent
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               P. Cirone, Joe Haldeman, G. Lee, J. Morrow, T. Zahn
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               P. Robinson
 
 Reading - Picasso
               M. Snodgrass
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               W. Wu
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               L. Tilton
 
5:35 pm
 Film -        Batman (1989) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
6:45 pm
 Film -        Time After Time (1979) - Regency Ballroom A
 
7:00 pm -      Guest of Honor Speeches - Grand Ballroom
 
7:41 pm
 Film -        Vincent - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
8:00 pm
 Film -        Edward Scissorhands (1990) HUGO NOMINEE - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
8:45 pm
 Film -        The Brother From Another Planet (1984) - Regency Ballroom A
 
9:00 pm
 Late Night -Outlaw Sexuality - Columbus Hall K/L
               Moderator: R.     Wilber
               P. Cadigan, M. Krueger, M. McHugh, S. McKee Charnas, M. Swanwick
 
 Literary -    War and Healers - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: P.     Wrede
               A. Jablokow, D. Thornley, J. Wurts, T. Zahn
 
 Science -     Women, Technology, and Science Fiction - Columbus Hall C/D
               Moderator: R.     Gross
               E. Berman, C. Miller, E. Moon, S.M. Stirling, A. Thomson
 
Why are the female scientists, engineers so few?  Can SF be a pathway
to awareness of, or even a career in, technology?  Are there
"feminine" technologies?  
 
 Late Night -Horror: 1990 in Review - Columbus Hall I/J
               E. Bryant, R. Garcia, G. Laskowski, D. Schweitzer
 
 Filk -        The Black Book Band - Gold Coast
               Moderator: M.     Wessels-O'Cain
               B. Childs-Helton, S. Childs-Helton, M. Kube-McDowell, G. Zak
 
9:55 pm
 Film -        Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (1982) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
10:00 pm
 Literary -    Usefulness of the Addict as Main Character - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: S.     Gould
               P. Cadigan, G. Effinger, S. Gould, K. Koja, J.F. Moore
 
 Late Night -Erotic Horror - Columbus Hall I/J
               Moderator: E.     Bryant
               J. Cavelos, N. Holder, D. Schow, L. Tilton
 
 Science -     Only You Can Make a Tree: Biology-Building for Your Imaginary World
               - Columbus Hall C/D
               Moderator:        Ctein
               R. Kirstein, P. McAuley, S. Scheiner
 
Creating life for SF and fantasy stories.  Matters of ecology,
biochemistry, and evolution, all in the service of better imaginary
landscapes.
 
 Late Night -Is Horror Dead? - Columbus Hall K/L
               Moderator: R.     Mainhardt
               R.L. Byers, G. Laskowski, L. Watt-Evans
 
 Fan -         Fan Artists Scribble - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: A.     Gilliland
               K. Erichsen, J. Gomoll, T. Harvia, J. Mayhew, M. Ranson, D. Stein,
               P. Tortorici
 
10:45 pm
 Film -        The 20th International Tournee of Animation - Regency Ballroom A
 
11:00 pm
 Literary -    Women Who Love Heinlein - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: T.     Weisskopf
               S. Casper, M. Cowan, J. Scrivner, C. Willis
 
 Late Night -How We Started Our Writing Group - Columbus Hall K/L
               Moderator: M.     Reichert
               C. Gilman, K. Massie-Ferch, J. Rosenberg, B. Worthel
 
 Late Night -Memory Demonstration - Columbus Hall E/F
               L. Schoen
 
 Science -     Balonium and Doubletalk Generators: Faking Science Plausibly -
               Columbus Hall C/D
               Moderator: M.     Kandel
               F.A. Brejcha, M. Jackson, L. Mc Master Bujold, C. Mills
 
How to make up made-up science and technology.  What are techniques 
for making it convincing?  What authors or stories do it well?
Panelists  may also cite bad examples and show how they could have
been fixed.
 
 Late Night -Stephen King Appreciation - Columbus Hall I/J
              P. Anthony, P.J. Beese, G. Boettcher, A.L. Chancellor, B. Ferguson,
               J. Hetherington
 
11:30 pm
 Filk -        Bill & Duane - Gold Coast
               D. Elms, W. Roper
 
12:00 am
 Film -        The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975) - Regency Ballroom C/D
909.18Saturday's schedule of eventsROULET::WILLISTue Aug 27 1991 17:35740
Article: 952
Path: ryn.mro4.dec.com!nntpd.lkg.dec.com!news.crl.dec.com!deccrl!bloom-beacon!mintaka!yale!yale.edu!qt.cs.utexas.edu!cs.utexas.edu!uunet!midway!oddjob!matt
From: [email protected] (Matt Crawford)
Newsgroups: alt.fandom.cons
Subject: Chicon Schedule: Saturday 08/31 Main Program
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Date: 23 Aug 91 14:01:20 GMT
Expires: Mon, 2 Sep 1991 23:59:59 GMT
Sender: [email protected] (NewsMistress)
Reply-To: [email protected] (Matt Crawford)
Organization: Chicago Superconductivity Center - "Resistance is useless!"
Lines: 727
 
 
	From: [email protected] (Bill Higgins-- Beam Jockey)
 
Chicon V, the 49th World Science Fiction Convention, will be held 29
August through 2 September at the Hyatt Regency Chicago Hotel and the
Swissotel in Chicago, Illinois, USA.  
 
Here is the schedule for Saturday's Main Programming Tracks (including
the film program) as it will appear in the Pocket Program.  It is as
accurate as we could make it, but NOT UTTERLY FINAL.  We may still
make a few changes to the schedule.  
 
If you are attending, check the Chicon daily newsletter for
information on program changes.  
 
IF YOU ARE A PROGRAM PARTICIPANT, please check the back of your
registration badge for the most up-to-date information.  The Green
Room staff will be able to assist you with any questions.  We
appreciate your willingness to participate in Chicon, and the help
you've given us in designing our program.  Please remember to visit
the Green Room at least 20 minutes prior to the event you're scheduled
for to meet fellow panelists, load slides, and so forth.  It eases our
minds considerably when we know all the panelists are present and
ready to start!
 
I have added to the "raw" schedules brief descriptions of the
science-track items.  (As the Science Guy, I had them readily to
hand.)  Please spread the word to any science panelists you know that
these blurbs are available.
 
I regret that because of our pre-con workload, we may not be
able to answer e-mail inquiries about the convention.  I also
apologize that some of the lines are rather wide and may wrap around
on your screen or fall into your printer's bit-bucket.
 
I hope you'll find this schedule useful in planning your weekend at
Hog-Butcher-For-The-Worldcon Five.  Thanks go especially to Rick Waterson
for providing the information in a timely fashion.
 
   _-_    _-_
  /  -\__/-  \           Chicon V                  Bill Higgins
 /   \(..)/   \   49th World Science Fiction   |   Track Manager
|     |  |     |        Convention             |   Science & Technology   
|  \\\ \/ ///  |                               |   
\   \\\  ///   /  29 August-2 September 1991   |   
 \     ()     /   Hyatt Regency Chicago Hotel  |   [email protected]
  \    ||    /      Chicago, Illinois, USA         [email protected]
   \__{  }__/
   (        )  [apologies to Pablo Picasso...]
   ----------
                                               MAIN PROGRAMMING TRACKS
 
 
Saturday
12:20 am
 Film -        The Fly (1986) - Regency Ballroom A
 
2:30 am
 Film -        Liquid Sky (1983) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
4:30 am
 Film -        Seconds (1966) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
6:25 am
 Film -        The Navigator (1989) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
8:30 am
 Film -        Phantom Empire 4-6 (1935) - Regency Ballroom A
 
9:45 am
 Film -        The Wizard of Oz (1939) - Regency Ballroom A
 
10:00 am
 Literary -    Crossover Between Children's and Adult Fiction - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: C.     Eddy
               R. Chilson, T. Dashoff, C. Eddy, B. Fleisher, H. Gbala, J.L. Nye,
               L. Stuckey
 
 Literary -    Animals as Represented in SF and Fantasy - Columbus Hall I/J
               Moderator: M.     Reichert
               K. Hughes, H. Lisle, L. Synk, J. Wurts
 
 Science -     UFOria: SF and Those Lights in the Sky - Columbus Hall K/L
               Moderator: A.J.   Budrys
               P. Anthony, G. Boettcher, K. Randle, S. Sandusky
 
After decades, Unidentified Flying Objects remain an enigma.  What  is
the current understanding of the UFO?  How does SF deal with the
question?
 
 Science -     Why SF Doesn't Deal with Death Well - Grand Ballroom B
               Moderator: L.     Mangan
               P. Cirone, L. Mc Master Bujold, D. Skran
 
Every one of us is going to die.  Death is by definition an integral
part of life.  Yet much science fiction concerns running away from or
denying  death.  Meanwhile, with extraordinary medical techniques and
equipment, the world of death is becoming more science-fictional. We
explore the relationship.
 
 Science -     My Mother, My Host II: Legal, Moral, and Ethical Considerations in
               Surrogacy - Columbus Hall C/D
               Moderator: C.     FitzSimmons
               L. Freitag, M. Kenin, I. Neilson, L. Tilton
 
Is it legal for a woman to contract to carry another  woman's child?
What rights does a surrgoate mother have?  What  rights do the natural
parents have?  
 
 Literary -    China and Speculative Fiction - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: S.     Shwartz
               C.N. Brown, E. Hull, F. Pohl
 
 Academic -    Teaching Science Fiction II - Grand Ballroom D - North
               Moderator: R.     Wilber
               J. Moffett, B. Rogers
 
 Art -         Demo/Lecture: Art for the Non-Artist - Water Tower
               P. Breeding-Black
 
 Art -         My! That's Disgusting! - Gold Coast
               Moderator: R.     Eggleton
               T. Canty, M. McLaurin, S. Moore
 
 Fan -         Introduction to Furry Fandom - Columbus Hall E/F
 
 Art -         Artists and Editors - Buckingham
               Moderator: T.     Czeczko
               T. Hamilton, P. Nielsen-Hayden
 -             ASFA Meeting - New Orleans
 -             WSFS Business Meeting - Grand Ballroom F
 
 Costuming -   Media Costuming - Columbian
               K. Pauli, C. Salemi, K. Sanders, G. Wolfenden-Steib, J. Zetterberg
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               D. Kingsbury, R. Reed, P. Williams, P. Wrede
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               J.G. Betancourt
 
 Reading - Picasso
               E. Friesner
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               Joe Haldeman
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               Joel Sherman
 
11:00 am
 Literary -    Food and Fantasy - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: C.     Eddy
               J. Brunet, K. Dalkey, C. Eddy, E. Friesner, L. Stewart Carl, H.
               Wood
 
 Literary -    What's a Pulp? - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: R.     Coulson
               S. Moskowitz, R. Weinberg, J. Williamson
 
 Literary -    Getting the IRS to Believe In and Credit Your Work - Columbus Hall
               I/J
               Moderator: R.     Kirstein
               S. Blom, M. Glyer, M. Kube-McDowell, D. Sakers
 
 Science -     The Science Education Bandwagon - Columbus Hall C/D
               Moderator: M.J.   Dyson
               G. Dazzo, L. Deck, M. Roberts, L. Runkle
 
Finally, FINALLY the U.S. government is starting to notice the
threadbare state of our science education.  How can we do better?  Can
we  play a role in our own communities?  What sort of science teaching
works in  other countries?  Where do corporations, museums, media fit
in?
 
 Science -     Will Encryption Set You Free?  Nuggets from the New Cryptography -
               Columbus Hall K/L
               B. Schneier
 
Cryptography is not just for spies anymore.  Users of electronic
communications systems, from bank-teller cash robots to e-mail  to
cable TV, can make use of new developments to enhance privacy and 
reliability.  Secure voting by computer, digital cash, digital 
signatures, certified electronic mail, and more.
 
 Academic -    Canon Formation in Science Fiction: How works Become Classics -
               Grand Ballroom D - North
               Moderator: G.K.   Wolfe
               M. Greenberg, R. Letson
 
 Art -         Preparing a Portfolio - Buckingham
               Moderator: T.     Canty
               D. Anderson, D. Maitz, K. Parkinson
 
 Art -         Slide Show: Space Craft - Gold Coast
               J.A. Douglas
 
 Fan -         Keeping the "World" in Worldcons - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: L.     Penney
               R. Goudriaan, E. Hauser, Jon Stopa, P. Wells
 
 Media -       Star Trek - Silver Threads Among the Gold - Grand Ballroom E
               Moderator: H.     Clement
               J. Lorrah, M. Snodgrass
 
 Costuming -   Techniques in Fiberglass - Columbian
               E. Endres
 
 Literary -    Abuse Themes in Science Fiction and Fantasy - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: L.     Edison
               J. Moffett, K. Rusch
 
 Literary -    The Myths We Write By - Grand Ballroom B
               Moderator: J.     Morrow
               C. Barker, R. Lafferty, J. Mayhew, M. Swanwick, G. Wolfe
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               A. Gilliland, R. Mac Bride Allen, L. Watt-Evans
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               J. Clayton
 
 Reading - Picasso
               C. Severance
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               P. Hodgell
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               J. Roberson
 
11:20 am
 Film -        Phantom Empire 4-6 (1935) - Regency Ballroom A
 
12:00 pm
 Literary -    Horror Fiction as an Expression of the Masculine Experience -
               Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: T.     King
               C. Barker, E. Datlow, J. Gomoll, D. Hartwell, K. Rusch
 
 Media -       Sell To Movies - Grand Ballroom E
               Moderator: F.     Ackerman
               R. Meyers, F. Saberhagen, M. Snodgrass, D. Wixon
 
 Science -     What Will Interplanetary Culture and Economy Be Like? - Grand
               Ballroom B
               Moderator: Joe    Haldeman
               R. Green, T. Johnson, T. Jones, K. Kimbriel, M. Rosenblum
 
We've a global economy now.  What will a multi-global one be like? 
Where will people live in the solar system?  What will they trade with
each other?  What  projects will they undertake?  Asteroid mines? 
Power from Mercury's sunlight  or Jupiter's magnetism?  Terraforming? 
Starships?  Our panelists speculate.
 
 Science -     Cousin Albert's No-Nos: Are There Loopholes in Physics? - Columbus
               Hall C/D
               Moderator: J.     Cramer
               D. Beason, P. Cirone, R. Joyner, K. Kato, C. Lane
 
What about faster-than-light drives? Antigravity? Time Travel?
Teleportation?  Are these favorite SF devices doomed to remain between
lurid covers forever?  Or can loopholes in today's physics make some
of them possible?
 
 Science -     Secrets of the F-117A Stealth Fighter - Columbus Hall K/L
               J. Grimm
 
How any "Stealth" vehicle such as a plane or spaceship can hide from
radar, infrared, or other detection means-- and why it costs so much 
money.
 
 Literary -    The Alien Enemy/the Enemy Alien - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: L.     Tilton
               P. Anthony, B. Bova, D. Hatch, E. Moon, T. Zahn
 
 Trivia -             Trivia Bowl - New Orleans
 
 Cities -      The Evolution of the High Rise II - Grand Ballroom D - North
               D. Brin, J. Gibbons, W. Humphries, J. Morningstar, G. Rosenblum, R.
               Silverberg, D.A. Smith
 
 Art -         Do-It-Yourself Aliens - Buckingham
               Moderator: J.     Gurney
               W. Barlowe, T. Hamilton, K. Parkinson
 
 Art -         Making a Living - Gold Coast
               Moderator: M.     Hanson-Roberts
               T. Canty, S. Honeck, M. Javins, L. Kelly-Freas, M. McLaurin, M.
               Whelan
 
 Fan -         Economics of Egoboo (Costs & Rewards of Fanzining) - Columbus Hall
               E/F
               Moderator: N.     Lynch
               M. Cantor, E. Meskys, K. Moore
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               R. Chilson, G.R.R Martin, Joel Sherman, D. Zindell
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               A. Thomson
 
 Reading - Picasso
               K. Randle
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               F.G. MacIntyre
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               Josepha Sherman
 
 Film -        TBA - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
12:30 pm
 Film -        Sneak Peak:Batman II Hook & more - Regency Ballroom A
 
1:00 pm
 Literary -    SF and the Prophet - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: N.     Kress
               G. Effinger, D. Fratz, R. Lafferty, H. Turtledove
 
 Literary -    When the Chips are Down:  What Really Goes on at Poker Night -
               Columbus Hall I/J
               Moderator: G.     Buchanan
               J. Cavelos, E. Datlow, E. Lang, B. Mitchell
 
 Science -     Fandom Online: SF and the Computer Networks - Columbus Hall C/D
               Moderator: S.     Jaffe
               B. Delaplace, J. Lazzaro, M. Soukup, J. Stith, R. Zellich
 
Meet the fans and pros who hang out in Cyberspace. Traditional meeting
places for SF people, such as fanzines, apas, and lettercols, have
been joined by the the floating, freewheeling electronic discussions 
of the computer networks.
 
 Science -     It'll Never Work: The 'I Hate Nanotechnology' Panel - Grand
               Ballroom B
               Moderator: A.     Dormire
               H. Davidson, A. Gilliland, J. Killus
 
Is nanotechnology-- control of matter with microscopic machines-- a
realistic hope?  Are there fundamental obstacles to making it work? 
Some scientists and SF writers are tired of the nanotech hype.
 
Is nanotechnology-- control of matter with microscopic machines-- a
realistic hope?  Are there fundamental obstacles to making it work? 
Some scientists and SF writers are tired of the nanotech hype.
 
 Literary -    History, Fantasy, and War - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: S.M.   Stirling
               G. Cook, R. Glaub, G. Kay, S. Shwartz, J. Tarr
 
 Science -     Narrow Escapes in Space: The Failures That Didn't Quite Happen -
               Columbus Hall K/L
               Moderator: H.     Spencer
               R. Cesarone, D. Hardison, W. Higgins, G. Lee
 
Some of the great successes of interplanetary exploration were  almost
failures.  Engineers who built and operated Viking, Voyager, and
Galileo swap spaceport-bar stories.
 
 Academic -    Theory of Hard Science Fiction - Grand Ballroom D - North
               Moderator: G.     Benford
               D. Hartwell, P. McAuley, T. Shibano
 
 Art -         Demonstration: Airbrush - Water Tower
               A. Cabrera
 
 Art -         Slide Show: 30 years of SF and Comics - Gold Coast
               E. Vartanoff
 
 Art -         Waxworking - Buckingham
               Moderator: J.     Guthrie
               P.J. Beese, D. Coltrain, R. Eggleton, B. Guarino
 
 Fan -         Evolution of Costuming - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: D.     Sanders
               N. Mildebrandt, C. Resnick, Joni Stopa
 
 Filk -        Appropriate Orchestration - Grand Ballroom E
               Moderator: G.     Laskowski
               D. Clement, K. Mar, G. Van Dorn
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               J. Conly, J. Lorrah, J. May
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               V.S. Trestrail
 
 Reading - Picasso
               J. Flynn
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               B. Denton
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               J. Morrow
 
 Reading -     Guest of Honor Reading - New Orleans
               H. Clement
 
 Art -         Computer Animation at Home - TBA
 
1:30 pm -      Art Auction Part I - Grand Ballroom F
 
 Film -        Dick Tracy (1990) - Regency Ballroom A
 
2:00 pm
 Science -     Making a Buck in Space: The Commercial Frontier - Columbus Hall K/L
               Moderator: R.     Lovell
               B. Bova, J. Davidson, K. Kato, D. Meyer, M. Wallis
 
One sure way to get space developed is to show that it can be
profitable.  Alas, the record of success is somewhat spotty.  Why? 
Are  there promising markets and methods for space commercialization
on the horizon? What will it take to make them work?
 
 Science -     Maim 'Em Right: How to Break Bones and Otherwise Damage Your
               Characters - Columbus Hall C/D
               L. Freitag
 
The medical principles behind battlefield wounds, accidents and other
infirmities.  Learn to maim and cripple in convincing ways (ugh).
 
 Literary -    Wild Cards - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: G.R.R. Martin
               E. Bryant, S. Leigh, M. Snodgrass, W.J. Williams
 
 Literary -    High Weirdness Update - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: R.     Shea
               P.J. Farmer, T. Leary, R.A. Wilson
 
 Literary -    Robert E. Howard: His Life and Work - Columbus Hall I/J
               Moderator: L.S.   De Camp
               C. Crook De Camp
 
 Science -     Stalking the Wily Hacker and Other Midnight Adventures - Grand
               Ballroom B
               C. Stoll
 
For a year, a German hacker broke into over forty military  computers
around the world.  By silently tracking him back, Cliff Stoll learned
that he was a spy, passing information to the Soviet  KGB.  Recently
he was convicted of espionage.  What techniques did he use  to crack
into computers?  Where are the holes in our systems?  How do you 
trace someone across the worldwide computer networks?  Who was willing
to   help -- and who wasn't?
 
 Academic -    The Origins of Science Fiction - Grand Ballroom D - North
               Moderator: D.     Schweitzer
               H. Hendrix, B. Lyau, L. Stover
 
 Art -         Lecture: Composure 101 - Buckingham
               C. Lundgren
 
 Fan -         Fabulous Fandoms of the 50's - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: R.     Sims
               R. Coulson, L. Hickman, C. Korshak, E. Korshak
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               J. Ecklar, K. Kimbriel, B. Linaweaver, D. Maitz, R. Silverberg
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               R. Mac Bride Allen
 
 Reading - Picasso
               M. Rosenblum
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               D. Brin
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               K. Koja
 
 Film -        TBA - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
3:00 pm
 Literary -    The Warrior Mystique - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: L.     Mc Master Bujold
               G. Cook, R. Meluch, S.M. Stirling, G. Wolfe
 
 Literary -    Anthology Markets - Columbus Hall I/J
               Moderator: K.     Haber
               E. Datlow, M. Greenberg, D.W. Smith, G. Van Gelder
 
 Literary -    Slush Pile - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: C.     Eddy
               R. Killheffer, B. Mitchell, Josepha Sherman, B. Young
 
 Science -     Designer Illnesses: How to Build a Disease - Columbus Hall K/L
               Moderator: M.     Reichert
               S. Farber, J. Lazar, E. Moon, A. Shepherd, S. Willis
 
Lots of authors know how to design a spaceship or a planet for an SF
story, but designing a disease eludes them.  How to go about it, with
examples good and bad from SF.
 
 Cities -      The Development of Cities II - Grand Ballroom D - North
               Moderator: L.     Watt-Evans
               K. Meyer, G. Rosenblum, D. Sakers, Joel Sherman
 
 Art -         Lecture/Demonstration: Comic Book Illustrating - Buckingham
               S. Rosema
 
 Art -         Slide Show: Dinotopia - Gold Coast
               J. Gurney
 
 Fan -         The First Chicon (1940) - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: W.     Tucker
               F. Ackerman, E. Korshak, D. Kyle, R. Madle, V.S. Trestrail
 -             Aerobics - New Orleans
               J.A. Douglas
 -             Aerobics - New Orleans
               J.A. Douglas
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               D. Beason, R. Green, T. Pratchett, R. Sawyer, C. Sheffield
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               T. McGarry
 
 Reading - Picasso
               J.R. Douglas
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               S. McKee Charnas
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               N. Holder
 
3:20 pm
 Film -        Brazil (1985) - Regency Ballroom A
 
4:00 pm
 Literary -    Rock 'n' Roll 'n' SF - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: S.     Brust
               E. Bryant, K. Houghton, K. Logue
 
 Literary -    Fantasy Worldbuilding - Columbus Hall I/J
               Moderator: P.     Wrede
               P. Hodgell, K. Hughes, K. Kimbriel, P. McKillip
 
 Literary -    Self-Publishing, Electronic Publishing and All That Scary Stuff -
               Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: C.     Jones
               M. Bentley, B. Foster, A. O'Connell, A. Porter, B. Ross, M. Ward
 
 Science -     'Mamas, Don't Let Your Babies Grow up to Be Scientists' - Columbus
               Hall C/D
               Moderator: H.     Parker
               B. Gehm, K. Kato, K. Meltsner, R. Nakkula, S. Scheiner
 
The hours are long.  The education takes forever. The pay may be low.
And it's not as glamorous as you think.  Many scientists don't even
have a hunchbacked assistant, let alone a haunted castle.  Our
scientists will set you straight.
 
 Science -     Green Engineering: Healing the Environment in the 21st Century -
               Grand Ballroom B
               Moderator: F.     Pohl
               J. Killus, L. Mixon, A. Thomson
 
A look at technological solutions to environmental problems.  Is
better engineering the only way out of our difficulties?  Or is this
just more of the techno-fix thinking that got us into a mess in the
first place?  What approaches might be fruitful in trying to save our
air, water, climate, and ecologies?
 
 Science -     So Where's the OTHER 90% of the Universe? Shedding Light on the
               Dark Matter - Columbus Hall K/L
               C. Lane
 
Most of the mass in the universe seems to be stuff we can't  see, and
possibly not even normal matter.  Dr. Chuck Lane of Drexel  University
looks at the evidence for dark matter, and discusses some of  the
experiments that try to find it.
 
 Academic -    Intimate Technology - Grand Ballroom D - North
               D. Brin, Joe Haldeman, T. Leary, J. Pransky
 
 Art -         Demonstration: Model Making and Kit Bashing - Water Tower
               M. Runyon
 
 Art -         Slide Show: Don & Janny's Dog & Pony Show - Gold Coast
               D. Maitz, J. Wurts
 
 Art -         Portfolio Review - Buckingham
               F. Kelly-Freas
 
 Fan -         The Year in Fanzines (A 1990 Fanthology) - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: M.     Glyer
               M. Cantor, A. Hooper, T. Nielsen-Hayden, P. Wells
 
 Reading -     FALLEN ANGELS Signing - Wrigley
               M. Flynn, L. Niven, J. Pournelle
 -             Powers Retrospective - Grand Ballroom F
               R. Powers
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               K. Cramer, G. Effinger, M. Sargent, L. Stewart Carl, J. Tarr
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               J. Stith
 
 Reading - Picasso
               M. Van Name
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               H. Turtledove
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               J. Ecklar
 
5:00 pm
 Literary -    Can We Revive the Pulps?  Should We? - Columbus Hall I/J
               Moderator: T.     Weisskopf
               J.G. Betancourt, A.J. Budrys, J. DeChancie, R. Lafferty
 
 Science -     Terraforming: Why? How? When? - Columbus Hall K/L
               Moderator: B.     Schneier
               C.J. Cherryh, D. Houseman, S. Scheiner, J. Williamson
 
Jack Williamson coined the term; it means "rendering an uninhabitable
planet habitable." Someday we may find ways to terraform Mars, Venus,
Europa, or worlds unknown.  But would we do it?  And is it ethical?
 
 Science -     Dinosaurs Are People, Too: Man, Lizard, and Intelligence - Columbus
               Hall C/D
               Moderator: R.     Sawyer
               R. Charrette, P. Dunn, R. Walters
 
Why did intelligence appear in evolution? Could dinosaurs have 
developed intelligence?  If so, would it have been radically different
from  ours?  Could intelligence develop in other types of animals?
 
 Cities -      How Transportation Shaped & Will Shape City Functionality - Grand
               Ballroom D - North
               Moderator: T.     Van Horne
               D. Krause, G. Price
 
 Literary -    That's Not Funny - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: E.     Friesner
               S. Casper, T. Pratchett, C. Willis
 
 Literary -    Our Angry Earth - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: F.     Pohl
               I. Ballantine
 
 Art -         Round Table: Our Place in the Fine Art World - Gold Coast
               J. Wurts
 
 Art -         Demonstration: Hand-Pulled Paper - Buckingham
               E. Vartanoff
 
 Fan -         Bow Ties Allowed Here (SMOF Panel) - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: B.     Yalow
               S. Dennis, C. Miller, R. Pavlac
 
 Literary -    Jim Baen and Baen Books - New Orleans
               J. Baen
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               M.S. Bell, C. Crook De Camp, L.S. De Camp, Josepha Sherman
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               L. Mc Master Bujold
 
 Reading - Picasso
               J.F. Moore
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               S. Brust
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               T. Bisson
 
5:45 pm
 Film -        Robocop (1987) - Regency Ballroom A
 
6:30 pm -      ASFA Reception - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: L.     Smith
               D. Anderson, H. Clement, M. Greenberg, R. Powers, M. Randall, Jon
               Stopa, Joni Stopa
 
7:00 pm
 Film -        Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1984) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
7:30 pm -      Chesley Awards Ceremonies - Columbus Hall A/B
 
7:45 pm
 Film -        Metropolis (1926) - Regency Ballroom A
 
8:30 pm -      Masquerade - Grand Ballroom
 
9:00 pm
 Late Night -Discussion: Schlocky Movies - New Orleans
               T. Hamilton, P. Kotula, G. Krause, J. Scrivner, J. Varley
 
 Filk -        2/3 of Tech Dif & Joey - Gold Coast
               Moderator: L.     Melnick
               J. Shoji, S. Willis
 
 Film -        Ghost (1990) HUGO NOMINEE - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
9:30 pm
 Film -        Blade Runner (1982) - Regency Ballroom A
 
10:00 pm
 Late Night -Ghost Stories - New Orleans
               R.L. Byers, K. Dalkey, R. Garcia, A. Honigsberg, B. Rogers, C.
               Springs, L. Stuckey
 
10:30 pm
 Filk -        Decadent Dave & Friends - Gold Coast
               Moderator: D.     Clement
               N. Bucklin, D. Elms, G. Leathers, J. McKenty
 
11:00 pm
 Late Night -Psychological vs. Splatter Horror - New Orleans
               Moderator: N.     Holder
               E. Bergstrom, J. Dorr, R. Garcia, S. Honeck, D. Schow
 
11:15 pm
 Film -        The Computer Animation Show - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
12:00 am
 Film -        Destroy All Monsters (1968) - Regency Ballroom A
909.19Sunday schedule of eventsROULET::WILLISTue Aug 27 1991 17:37730
Article: 954
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From: [email protected] (Matt Crawford)
Newsgroups: alt.fandom.cons
Subject: Chicon Schedule: Sunday 09/01 Main Program
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Date: 23 Aug 91 14:03:48 GMT
Expires: Mon, 2 Sep 1991 23:59:59 GMT
Sender: [email protected] (NewsMistress)
Reply-To: [email protected] (Matt Crawford)
Organization: Bill & Ted University, Medieval England, Iowa.
Lines: 717
 
 
	From: [email protected] (Bill Higgins-- Beam Jockey)
 
Chicon V, the 49th World Science Fiction Convention, will be held 29
August through 2 September at the Hyatt Regency Chicago Hotel and the
Swissotel in Chicago, Illinois, USA.  
 
Here is the schedule for Sunday's Main Programming Tracks (including
the film program) as it will appear in the Pocket Program.  It is as
accurate as we could make it, but NOT UTTERLY FINAL.  We may still
make a few changes to the schedule.  
 
If you are attending, check the Chicon daily newsletter for
information on program changes.  
 
IF YOU ARE A PROGRAM PARTICIPANT, please check the back of your
registration badge for the most up-to-date information.  The Green
Room staff will be able to assist you with any questions.  We
appreciate your willingness to participate in Chicon, and the help
you've given us in designing our program.  Please remember to visit
the Green Room at least 20 minutes prior to the event you're scheduled
for to meet fellow panelists, load slides, and so forth.  It eases our
minds considerably when we know all the panelists are present and
ready to start!
 
I have added to the "raw" schedules brief descriptions of the
science-track items.  (As the Science Guy, I had them readily to
hand.)  Please spread the word to any science panelists you know that
these blurbs are available.
 
I regret that because of our pre-con workload, we may not be
able to answer e-mail inquiries about the convention.  I also
apologize that some of the lines are rather wide and may wrap around
on your screen or fall into your printer's bit-bucket.
 
I hope you'll find this schedule useful in planning your weekend at
Hog-Butcher-For-The-Worldcon Five.  Thanks go especially to Rick Waterson
for providing the information in a timely fashion.
 
   _-_    _-_
  /  -\__/-  \           Chicon V                  Bill Higgins
 /   \(..)/   \   49th World Science Fiction   |   Track Manager
|     |  |     |        Convention             |   Science & Technology   
|  \\\ \/ ///  |                               |   
\   \\\  ///   /  29 August-2 September 1991   |   
 \     ()     /   Hyatt Regency Chicago Hotel  |   [email protected]
  \    ||    /      Chicago, Illinois, USA         [email protected]
   \__{  }__/
   (        )  [apologies to Pablo Picasso...]
   ----------
                                               MAIN PROGRAMMING TRACKS
 
Sunday
12:50 am
 Film -        Animation/Shorts Galore - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
1:35 am
 Film -        Godzilla vs. the Sea Monster (1965) - Regency Ballroom A
 
3:05 am
 Film -        Ghidrah--the 3-Headed Monster (1966) - Regency Ballroom A
 
4:40 am
 Film -        Fiend Without a Face (1958) - Regency Ballroom A
 
6:30 am
 Film -        Phantom Empire 7-9 (1935) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
7:45 am
 Film -        Little Shop of Horrors (1986) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
9:25 am
 Film -        Phantom Empire 7-9 (1935) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
10:00 am
 Media -       Books-Movies-Books - Grand Ballroom E
               Moderator: C.     Hitchcock
               B. Froman, T. Gunnarsson, M. Leeper, G.R.R Martin, C. Miller, M.
               Snodgrass
 
 Literary -    Focus on Death - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: J.     Morrow
               B. Denton, J. Kelly, T. Pratchett, M. Soukup, D. Zindell
 
 Literary -    Moving Publishing Out of New York - Columbus Hall I/J
               Moderator: P.     Nielsen-Hayden
               B. Meacham, C. Ryan, D.W. Smith
 
 Literary -    Electronic Rights - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: C.     Von Rospach
               G. Costikyan, W. Daniels, R. Zellich
 
 Science -     Predictions and Extrapolations: Patterns in History and Science -
               Columbus Hall K/L
               Moderator: J.     Martino
               K. Dalkey, M. Kenin, Joel Sherman, H. Turtledove
 
How can historians and futurists (and, of course, SF writers) get a
handle on the future?  Does Change have patterns we can use to divine
the course of events?  What are the methods of extrapolation?
 
 Science -     Weapons of Tomorrow: The War Toys of SF - Columbus Hall C/D
               Moderator: B.     Bova
               D. Elms, R. Green, S. Shwartz, M. Yudkowski
 
What new military technologies are around the corner?  Which old ones
will be made obsolete?  
 
 Academic -    Teaching Science Fiction III - Grand Ballroom D - North
               Moderator: J.     Patrouch
               P. Eisenstein, R. Mac Bride Allen, C. Sheffield
 
 Art -         Demonstration: Matting - Buckingham
               T. Hamilton
 
 Art -         Demonstration: Watercolor - Water Tower
               P. Breeding-Black
 
 Art -         Slide Show: The Art of Baen books - Gold Coast
               T. Weisskopf
 
 Fan -         Fat-Feminina in Fandom - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: L.     Edison
               H. Squires
 -             WSFS Business Meeting - Grand Ballroom F
 
 Costuming -   From the Neck Up - Part 2 Hats and Dresses - Columbian
               G. Anderson, K. Pauli, P. Pettinger, J. Ward
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               J.G. Betancourt, J. Gurney, N. Jainschigg, J. Lichtenberg
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               J. Lorrah
 
 Reading - Picasso
               J. Tarr
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               P. Williams
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               S. Leigh
 
10:30 am
 Film -        The Black Pirate (1926) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
 Film -        Bride of Frankenstein (1935) - Regency Ballroom A
 
11:00 am
 Literary -    Where is the Cutting Edge--Stories or Novels? - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: J.     Kelly
               E. Bryant, G. Dozois, D. Hartwell, S. Schmidt, C. Sheffield, M.
               Swanwick
 
 Literary -    How Corporate Acquisitions Affect Publishing and You - Columbus
               Hall I/J
               Moderator: L.     Aronica
               T. Doherty, J.R. Douglas, J. Frankel, J. Higgins
 
 Science -     History of Space Flight in Editorial Cartoons - Columbus Hall K/L
               L. Boyle
 
Larry Boyle follows the triumphs and flops of the  Space Age through
the eyes of cartoonists.
 
 Science -     Bygone Monsters:  Dinosaurs and Other Extinct Critters in Fiction -
                Columbus Hall C/D
               Moderator: J.     Gurney
               R. Charrette, R. Reed, R. Sawyer
 
The fossil world provides us with a panoply of alien  creatures richer
than any imagined in novels.  How have authors  harnessed the worlds
of the past in the service of SF?  What is  the special appeal of
prehistoric creatures?
 
 Academic -    Discussion Panel: Rudyard Kipling - Grand Ballroom D - North
               Moderator: S.     Shwartz
               L. Gold, J. Pournelle, H. Wood
 
 Art -         Lecture: Repro Man - Gold Coast
               D. Maitz
 
 Art -         Lecture/Demonstration: Colored Pencil - Buckingham
               S. Rosema
 
 Fan -         Evolution of Fanzines and Fan Editors - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: T.     Sadler
               R. Coulson, L. Hickman, T. Lane, A. Ubelhor
 
 Media -       Dances With Dragons - Grand Ballroom E
               J.L. Nye, R. Wood
 -             Field of Dreams - New Orleans
               G. Effinger, R. Mainhardt, K. Parkinson, D.A. Smith, R. Wilber
 
 Literary -    Homoerotica and Homophagia: Gay Vampires - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: F.     Hummel
               L. Edison, N. Holder, C. Severance, A. Shepherd
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               J. Dorr, W. Howlett, F. Pohl, K. Rusch, J. Williamson
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               J. Gunn
 
 Reading - Picasso
               M. Sargent
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               D. Kingsbury
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               P. Cadigan
 
12:00 pm
 Literary -    Aliens and the Anthropomorphic Fallacy (Phallacy?) - Columbus Hall
               A/B
               Moderator: F.A.   Brejcha
               D. Drisgill, E. Friesner, L. Mixon, P. Park
 
 Literary -    Small Press Issues - Columbus Hall I/J
               Moderator: G.     Ketter
               C. Edwards, R. Garcia, A. Kyle, A. Porter, J. Simner, M. Ziesing
 
 Science -     What's Wrong with NASA, and How to Fix It - Grand Ballroom B
               Moderator: A.     Steele
               P. Jennings, H. Spencer, C. Stoll
 
At least some of NASA's flaws are now apparent to everyone.  Can the
outfit that sent people to the Moon and Voyager to Neptune be revived
from its post-Challenger, post-Hubble slump?
 
 Science -     How to Fix Your Broken Spaceship: A Short Course for the Prepared
               Traveler - Columbus Hall K/L
               K. Meltsner
 
How to talk to local blacksmiths and artisans so you can get your ship
back into space.  Recommended for trips to those backwater planets    
unserved by the Galactic AAA.                                         
 
 Science -     The Feminine Experience in High-Tech - Columbus Hall C/D
               Moderator: A.     Karash
               M.J. Dyson, K. Massie-Ferch, R. Nakkula, H. Parker
 
Scientists and engineers discuss the experience of women in the
predominantly-male world of the laboratory and the industrial plant. 
 
 Trivia -             Trivia Bowl - New Orleans
 
 Cities -      Big City Support Systems - Grand Ballroom D - North
               Moderator: F.     Pohl
               S. Blom, W. Humphries, G. Price, Joel Sherman
 
 Art -         Demonstration: It's all Black and White - Water Tower
               R. Walters
 
 Art -         Slide Show/Lecture: Do's and Don'ts - Gold Coast
               J. Wurts
 
 Art -         Portfolio Review - Buckingham
               T. Hamilton, D. Maitz
 
 Fan -         Familiar Faces; Alternate Fandoms - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: D.     Sanders
               J. Kare, T. Lay, P.A. Lucyshyn
 -             Art Auction Part II - Grand Ballroom F
 
 Costuming -   How Do I Start - Novice Costumers - Columbian
               R. Himmelsbach, S. Pettinger, C. Salemi, V. Warren, J.
               Wilson-Anderson
 
 Literary -    Japanese Science Fiction Today - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: M.     Osako
               T. Shibano, K. Yamaoka
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               T. Bisson, B. Bova, D. Cherry, J. Varley
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               C. Mills
 
 Reading - Picasso
               L. Stewart Carl
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               M. Resnick
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               L. Carpenter
 
 Film -        Ron Shusett on the upcoming "Freejack" - Regency Ballroom A
 
12:15 pm
 Film -        The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
1:00 pm
 Literary -    Japanese Culture/SF -- Cross Fertilizations - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: T.     Shibano
               Y. Kobayashi, M. Osako, S. Takeuchi
 
 Science -     Technofen and Tinkerers: Problem-Solving in Your Basement -
               Columbus Hall C/D
               Moderator: T.R.   Johnson
               G. Anderson, A. Duester, C. Jones, J. Kare, D. Levine
 
What are they up to in those workshops?  Among us are the techies--
people who delight in putting odd things together in odd ways, people
who walk through a con blinking and beeping, people who have assembled
amazing gadgets and marvelous toys.  
 
 Science -     Do Dolphins Speak English? Will They? How about Gorillas? - Grand
               Ballroom B
               Moderator: M.     Bein
               D. Brin, J. Moffett, P. Robinson, C. Sheffield
 
Where does science stand in the quest to communicate with animals? 
And will they ever read SF and fantasy?  Will they ever write it?
 
 Literary -    Plotted While U Wait - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: S.     Shwartz
               S.M. Stirling, J. Tarr, H. Turtledove
 
 Academic -    Discussion Panel: Hal Clement - Grand Ballroom D - North
               Moderator: S.     Miesel
               A. Eisenstein, E. Hull
 
 Art -         Lecture: Self Dissection - Buckingham
               J. Lee
 
 Art -         Slide Show: Hal Clement Show - Gold Coast
               H. Clement
 
 Art -         Slide Show: David Mattingly Retrospective - Gold Coast
               D. Mattingly
 
 Art -         Demonstration: Stone in Acrylic - Water Tower
               L. Lake
 
 Fan -         Ghood Causes -- Worldcon Funded Fan Projects - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: C.     Miller
               P. Frierson, J. Hertz, S. Jeude
 
 Filk -        Filking the Mundanes - Grand Ballroom E
               Moderator: S.     Childs-Helton
               D. Clement, L. Fish, R. Nakkula
 
 Costuming -   Historical - Oriental - Columbian
               R. Himmelsbach, T. Seabrook-McLaurine, V. Warren
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               J. Coulson, R. Coulson, F. Kelly-Freas, S. Leigh, L. Tilton
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               D. Sakers
 
 Reading - Picasso
               P. Anthony
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               D. Beason
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               J. Rosenberg
 
 Art -         Computer Animation at Home - TBA
 
 Film -        Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988) - Regency Ballroom A
 
2:00 pm
 Literary -    What's the Difference Between Magical Realism and Fantasy? -
               Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: E.     Van
               M. Kandel, P. McKillip, M. Rosenblum, M. Zambreno
 
 Literary -    Neopro 2: Contacts & Self Promotion - Columbus Hall I/J
               Moderator: P.     Heck
               C. Eddy, W. Fawcett, P. Nielsen-Hayden, T. Weisskopf, B. Yalow
 
 Science -     What's Right with NASA - Grand Ballroom B
               Moderator: M.J.   Dyson
               R. Cage, D. Hardison, P. Richards
 
Warts and all, NASA is an astoundingly capable spacefaring
organization.  What can it do that nobody else can do?  What will its
future be like?  Will NASA survive in its present form?
 
 Science -     Screwdriver Dreams:  Hard SF and Mysticism - Columbus Hall C/D
               Moderator: G.     Benford
               H. Hendrix, S. McKee Charnas, D. Zindell
 
Writers of hard science fiction are not all Cold Equations.  Some
exhibit a broad streak of mysticism in their work.  Who? Why?
 
 Literary -    Influence of Dorothy Dunnett - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: D.     Keller
               M. Gettings, J. Hertz, G. Kay, T. Nielsen-Hayden, J. Stevenson
 
 Science -     The Secret Sex Life of Candy - Columbus Hall K/L
               S. Scheiner
 
Have you ever wondered where M&M's come from?  What really  goes on in
that factory in Hershey, Pennsylvania?  Come hear about life   and
love in a sugar-coated world.  Rated "VF" (Very Fattening). Fen under
12 not admitted.                                    
 
 Art -         Networking - Buckingham
               Moderator: M.     Miller
               R. Eggleton, D. Maitz, S. Saffel, L. Synk
 
 Fan -         Where Have All the Young Fans Gone? - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: E.     Whitley
               L. Bushyager, S. Francis, R. Smith, Jon Stopa
 
 Media -       Yes Mr. Waverly - Those Men From Uncle - Grand Ballroom E
               Moderator: T.E.   DeWeese
               R. Coulson
 -             Greenberg Roast - Grand Ballroom F
               G. Boettcher, M. Randall, M. Reichert, M. Resnick, R. Silverberg,
               R. Weinberg
 -             Greenberg Roast - Grand Ballroom F
               F. Ackerman, E. Bryant, A.J. Budrys, P. Cadigan, R. Green, M.
               Greenberg
 -             WSFS Mark and Registration Committee - New Orleans
 
 Costuming -   All Hail Queen G - Columbian
               N. Mildebrandt, P. Pettinger, S. Pettinger, G. Wolfenden-Steib
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               L. Barwood, G. Dickson, S. Miesel, D. Schweitzer
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               P. McAuley
 
 Reading - Picasso
               D. Thornley
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               M. Soukup
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               R. Kirstein
 
 Film -        The Princess Bride (1987) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
3:00 pm
 Literary -    The Rise of Androgyny - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: A.     Thomson
               K. Babich, D. Keller, S. Miller, B. Rogers, K.D. Wentworth
 
 Literary -    F&SF in the Eighties - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: D.     Hartwell
               E. Datlow, G. Dozois, D. Grant, J. Klein, B. Mitchell
 
 Media -       Sigourney Weaver - Grand Ballroom E
               J. Ecklar, E. Heideman, S. Mayer, R. Meyers
 
 Literary -    Neopro 1: In and Out of the Slush Pile, Contracts and Agents -
               Columbus Hall I/J
               Moderator: T.     King
               J. Bilmes, S. Gilbert, S. Schmidt, D.W. Smith, G. Van Gelder
 
 Science -     The Abuse of Biology in SF - Grand Ballroom B
               Moderator: E.     Moon
               B. Gehm, S. Scheiner, E. Van Dommelen, S. Willis
 
How does SF stack up when it deals with the biological sciences?
Grievous errors, and how writers might avoid them.  Bad examples and
good examples.  
 
 Science -     Adaptive Technology:  An Equalizing Force for the Disabled -
               Columbus Hall K/L
               F.A. Brejcha, J. Lazzaro
 
Disabled computer users are discovering that in the online world,
everybody looks the same.  You may type your  electronic mail at 100
words per minute or tap it out with  a pencil in your mouth; your
correspondents and readers don't care.  Users of the BIX conferences
discuss the potential of technology  for opening new doors.
 
 Cities -      Cities in Space - Grand Ballroom D - North
               Moderator: Joel   Sherman
               A. Gilliland, J. Strickland, H. Vanderbilt
 
 Art -         Lecture: Conservation Techniques - Buckingham
               E. Vartanoff
 
 Fan -         It Doesn't SEEM Like 50 Years! (Fandom of the 30's and 40's) -
               Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: D.     Kyle
               F. Ackerman, R. Madle, F. Pohl, W. Tucker
 
 Science -     Crunching Better Science: Are Faster Computers the Answer? -
               Columbus Hall C/D
               Moderator: D.     Levine
               A. Anda, D. Beason, D. Elms, K. Meltsner
 
As raw computer power becomes available to scientists, some hard 
problems can be licked; other problems run away too fast.  Ill-behaved
problems may fall to trial and error.  Very complex simulations become
possible.  Can fundamental discoveries be made inside very big, very
fast machines?  And where will faster performance come from?
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               G. Cook, K. Koja, K. Rusch, W.J. Williams
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               B. McKenna
 
 Reading - Picasso
               D. Drisgill
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               J. Chalker
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               G. Kay
 
 Film -        A look at Disney's "Beauty and the Beast" - Regency Ballroom A
 
3:30 pm -      Art Auction Part III - Grand Ballroom F
 
4:00 pm
 Literary -    Setting-Driven Plot vs. Plot-Driven Setting - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: P.     McKillip
               V.E. Mitchell, M. Rosenblum, J. Stith, J. Williamson, C. Willis
 
 Literary -    Starting a New Magazine - Columbus Hall I/J
               Moderator: C.     Ryan
               J.G. Betancourt, C. Edwards, E. Heideman, A. Porter, D.W. Smith
 
 Science -     Dreamworlds and Cyberspace:  Building Virtual Realities - Grand
               Ballroom B
               Moderator: C.     Morningstar
               C.J. Cherryh, J. Cramer, L. Niven, T. O'Brien, D. Skran, J. Weisman
 
The hottest, most-discussed topic in computerdom these days is
"virtual reality:" you join other people in a simulated environment
your computer provides.  Learn about early systems that have already
been developed,  and about the thousand-and-one applications for
future VR systems.
 
 Science -     Frontiers of Electronics - Columbus Hall C/D
               Moderator: H.     Davidson
               J. Grimm, D. Houseman, D. Levine, A. Peed, R. Zellich
 
No technical art has changed our globe in as many ways as electronics.
What's the latest on faster chips?  Smaller ones?  Optical computing?
Dense storage media?  Ask our experts.
 
 Literary -    British Commonwealth Speculative Fiction - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: P.     McAuley
               C. Burnham, G. Collins, P. Gurnwell, P. Nicholls, T. Pratchett, N.
               Ruddick
 
 Science -     Charting America's Path to Space: The Synthesis Group - Columbus
               Hall K/L
               D. Beason
 
The U.S. badly needs a road map for its next decades in space. Dr.
Doug Beason is a member of the "Synthesis Group," commissioned by the
White House to investigate and recommend alternatives for returning to
the Moon, exploring Mars, and exploiting the resources of the Solar
System.  He discusses their recommendations.
 
 Art -         Round Table: Printing and Distribution - Gold Coast
               A. Price
 
 Art -         3-D Art in a 2-D World - Buckingham
               Moderator: R.     Charrette
               M.D. Farley, B. Guarino, J. Guthrie, S. Mayer
 
 Art -         Demonstration: Oil Painting - Water Tower
               J. Gurney
 
 Fan -         Did You Hear the One About... (Fan Humorists Panel) - Columbus Hall
               E/F
               Moderator: M.     Glyer
               S. Farber, T. Harvia, A. Hlavaty, E. Weinstein
 
 Media -       It's Dead, Jim - Is Trek VI the End of Classic Trek? - Grand
               Ballroom E
               Moderator: J.     Lichtenberg
               B. Ferguson, J. Ford, R. Greenberger
 
 Costuming -   From LEDs to LASERs - Columbian
               G. Anderson, G. Boettcher, M. VandeBunt
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               J. Norman, J. Roberson, L. Synk, W. Wu
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               A. Harris
 
 Reading - Picasso
               R. Meyers
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               E. Bryant
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               S.M. Stirling
 
 Film -        Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
 Film -        Solaris (1972) - Regency Ballroom A
 
5:00 pm
 Literary -    Sex and Violence, Love and Death - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: J.     May
               P. Jennings, S. Leigh, S. McKee Charnas, J. Roberson, N. Smith, M.
               Soukup
 
 Literary -    Family of pros - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: M.     Haldeman
               S. Deer, L. Haldeman, S. Miesel, L. Resnick, S. Tilton, V.S.
               Trestrail, L. Turtledove
 
 Literary -    The Power of the Bookstore Employee - Columbus Hall I/J
               Moderator: S.     Allison
               A. Bentley, L. Hamilton, G. Ketter, E. Lang, B. McKenna
 
 Science -     The Scrambled Democracy: Computers, Government, Privacy, and Civil
               Liberties - Grand Ballroom B
               Moderator: M.     Godwin
               M. Crawford, S. Jackson, A. Peed, B. Schneier, C. Von Rospach
 
How do we protect individual rights on the emerging electronic
frontier, where legal precedents are few and innovation outraces both
citizens and government?  How can we guarantee freedoms while
providing for the  legitimate needs of law enforcement?  Can
cryptography provide citizens with tools to do this?
 
 Science -     Read My Lips, Hal: Speech Recognition by Machines - Columbus Hall
               K/L
               G. Corrigan
 
It's hard to get people to listen to you.  It's even harder to get a
machine to listen.  Engineer Gerald Corrigan explains how speech
recognition works and what tomorrow's computers will be able to do
with it.
 
 Science -     Space Travel:  Your Ticket to Orbit Has Been Confiscated - Columbus
               Hall C/D
               J. Davidson, D. Meyer
 
At the end of 1990, Glavkosmos contract in hand, three young tall 
Texans set out to give you a chance to fly to Mir, the Soviet space
station.   Unfortunately, the Harris County district attorney's office
was short on enthusiasm for spaceflight. Entrepreneurs Jim Davidson
and David Meyer explain how the DA brought the program to an end-- and
why it's not dead yet.
 
 Academic -    Panel: Postmodernism and Science Fiction - Grand Ballroom D - North
               Moderator: P.     McAuley
               H. Hendrix, W. Schuyler, S.M. Stirling
 
 Art -         Cartooning - Buckingham
               Moderator: J.     Mayhew
               K. Erichsen, A. Gilliland, R. Gleason, T. Harvia, M. White
 
 Fan -         Are the Hugos an Endangered Species? - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: B.     Pelz
               R. Katze, R. Pavlac
 
 Filk -        Filk as Poetry - Grand Ballroom E
               Moderator: R.     Coulson
               G. Dickson, C. Flynt, B. Sutton, W. Sutton
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               S. Brust, K. Dalkey, L. Mc Master Bujold, J. Roberts
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               C. Sheffield
 
 Reading - Picasso
               T. Gunnarsson
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               G. Effinger
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               R. Sawyer
 
6:30 pm -      N3F Meeting - Columbus Hall K/L
 
 Film -        Total Recall (1990) HUGO NOMINEE - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
7:00 pm
 Film -        Attack of the Killer Tomatoes (1978) - Regency Ballroom A
 
8:30 pm
 Film -        Fantasia (1940) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
8:45 pm
 Film -        Aelita Queen of Mars (1924) - Regency Ballroom A
 
9:00 pm
 Late Night -Fan Readings - New Orleans
               D. Levine, N. Smith, C. Springs, P. Wells
 
 Filk -        Pagan Circle - Gold Coast
               Moderator: B.     Sutton
               W. Sutton, G. Zak
 -             Hugo Awards Ceremonies - Grand Ballroom
 
10:30 pm
 Filk -        Barry & Sally Jam - Gold Coast
               Moderator: B.     Childs-Helton
               S. Childs-Helton
 
10:45 pm
 Film -        The Second Animation Celebration: The Movie - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
 Film -        Sneak Peak II: More on upcoming movies - Regency Ballroom A
 
12:00 am
 Film -        Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai (1984) - Regency Ballroom A
909.20ROULET::WILLISTue Aug 27 1991 17:43407

Article: 964
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From: [email protected] (Bill Higgins-- Beam Jockey)
Newsgroups: alt.fandom.cons
Subject: Chicon Schedule: Monday 09/02 Main Program
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Date: 22 Aug 91 07:39:28 GMT
Sender: [email protected]
Lines: 396
 
Chicon V, the 49th World Science Fiction Convention, will be held 29
August through 2 September at the Hyatt Regency Chicago Hotel and the
Swissotel in Chicago, Illinois, USA.  
 
Here is the schedule for Monday's Main Programming Tracks (including
the film program) as it will appear in the Pocket Program.  It is as
accurate as we could make it, but NOT UTTERLY FINAL.  We may still
make a few changes to the schedule.  
 
If you are attending, check the Chicon daily newsletter for
information on program changes.  
 
IF YOU ARE A PROGRAM PARTICIPANT, please check the back of your
registration badge for the most up-to-date information.  The Green
Room staff will be able to assist you with any questions.  We
appreciate your willingness to participate in Chicon, and the help
you've given us in designing our program.  Please remember to visit
the Green Room at least 20 minutes prior to the event you're scheduled
for to meet fellow panelists, load slides, and so forth.  It eases our
minds considerably when we know all the panelists are present and
ready to start!
 
I have added to the "raw" schedules brief descriptions of the
science-track items.  (As the Science Guy, I had them readily to
hand.)  Please spread the word to any science panelists you know that
these blurbs are available.
 
I regret that because of our pre-con workload, we may not be
able to answer e-mail inquiries about the convention.  I also
apologize that some of the lines are rather wide and may wrap around
on your screen or fall into your printer's bit-bucket.
 
I hope you'll find this schedule useful in planning your weekend at
Hog-Butcher-For-The-Worldcon Five.  Thanks go especially to Rick Waterson
for providing the information in a timely fashion.
 
   _-_    _-_
  /  -\__/-  \           Chicon V                  Bill Higgins
 /   \(..)/   \   49th World Science Fiction   |   Track Manager
|     |  |     |        Convention             |   Science & Technology   
|  \\\ \/ ///  |                               |   
\   \\\  ///   /  29 August-2 September 1991   |   
 \     ()     /   Hyatt Regency Chicago Hotel  |   [email protected]
  \    ||    /      Chicago, Illinois, USA         [email protected]
   \__{  }__/
   (        )  [apologies to Pablo Picasso...]
   ----------
====================================
                                               MAIN PROGRAMMING TRACKS
 
Monday
12:35 am
 Film -        Animation/Shorts Galore II - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
2:00 am
 Film -        Repeats of most requested films - Regency Ballroom A
 
6:30 am
 Film -        Phantom Empire 10-12 (1935) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
7:45 am
 Film -        TBA - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
9:30 am
 Film -        Phantom Empire 10-12 (1935) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
10:00 am
 Literary -    Post-Glasnost SF - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: L.     Carpenter
               R. Glaub, F. Saberhagen, H. Wood
 
 Literary -    Computer BBS and the Law - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: G.     Costikyan
               R. Chilson, S. Jackson, C. Von Rospach, M. Ward
 
 Science -     Skeptics and Pseudoscience: Tilting at Windmills? - Columbus Hall
               C/D
               Moderator: M.     Flynn
               B. Delaplace, J. Lazar, R. Mac Bride Allen, T. O'Brien, H.
               Scrimgeour
 
Standing opposed to the armies of astrologers, crystal healers,
psychics, and other purveyors of pseudoscience are but a few
"skeptics." What do they stand for?  Can they bring about
enlightenment in a world filled with nonsense?  Or are they just
knee-jerk debunkers with closed minds?
 
 Science -     Bring Your Own Doomsday: Speculating on Environmental Catastrophe -
                Grand Ballroom B
               Moderator: H.     Hendrix
               J. Killus, L. Mixon, H. Parker, M. Sestak
 
There are a lot of ways to end the world, end humanity, or end
civilization.  Bring your favorite to this panel.  A multidisciplinary
team will tackle a grim, but enjoyable, subject.
 
 Science -     Solar Power Satellites and the Environment - Columbus Hall K/L
               J. Strickland
 
Collecting solar energy in space, and beaming it to Earth for
conversion to electricity, may pay off.  Worries about global warming,
pollution, and nuclear waste have triggered a new look at the solar
power satellite.
 
 Academic -    Feminism in Science Fiction - Grand Ballroom D - North
               Moderator: B.     Friend
               M. Bartter, J. Bogstad, P. Eisenstein, E. Hull
 
 Art -         Computer Aided Art - Gold Coast
               Moderator: T.     Canty
               A. Cabrera, T. Harvia, M. Miller
 
 Art -         The Pulps: Covers and Interiors - Water Tower
               Moderator: R.     Eggleton
               T. Hamilton, N. Jainschigg, R. Walters
 
 Art -         Collaborations - Buckingham
               Moderator: A.     Austin
               P.J. Beese, L. Kelly-Freas, D. Maitz, M. White
 
 Media -       Love Those Aliens - Grand Ballroom E
 -             WSFS Business Meeting - Grand Ballroom F
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               P. McKillip, K. Parkinson, C. Stoll, C. Willis
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               D. Kyle
 
 Reading - Picasso
               K. Cramer
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               T. Pratchett
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               E. Kushner
 
10:35 am
 Film -        Plan 9 From Outer Space (1956) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
11:00 am
 Literary -    Modern Concepts of Aliens vs. Aliens of the Past - Columbus Hall
               I/J
               Moderator: K.     Nerat
               P. Anthony, M. Gear, Jack Haldeman, J. Jewell, R. Killheffer
 
 Literary -    Perceptions of Authority in High Fantasy - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: D.     Millitello
               L. Hamilton, R. Knaak, D. McKiernan, S. Meier, J. Tarr, H. Wood
 
 Science -     Economic Skulduggery and Terrorism in the Information Age - Grand
               Ballroom B
               Moderator: N.     Rest
               W. Humphries, F. Pohl, M. Rosenblum, L.Z. Smith, D. Taylor
 
The complexity of the (almost) 21st-century world allows for a myriad 
of wonderful products and services.  But it is vulnerable.  Crime.
"Soft" warfare.  Outlaw political activism.  "Low-intensity conflict." 
Ecosabotage.  What new shape will these take in a heavily networked
world?  
 
 Science -     Stuck in a Technorut: How Contemporary Technology Influences SF -
               Columbus Hall C/D
               Moderator: A.     Andrews
               D. Elms, W. Mullen, J. Roberts
 
Existing technology and its effect on the imagination of the SF
writer. Writers of the 20's were excited by trains, planes, and
automobiles; the influence lingers on today's writers. Perhaps the
original fire from these machines set the course of our current
fictional technologies.  Are we stuck in technoruts  that began as
train-grooves, car-grooves, plane-grooves?  (Mainframe-grooves?
Rocket-grooves?)
 
 Science -     Genetic Engineering: Where We're Going - Columbus Hall K/L
               Moderator: P.     McAuley
               T. Harvia, J. Lazar, J. Thompson, E. Van Dommelen
 
Tinkering with genes is beginning to be a routine matter.  These
techniques open up exciting, and perhaps frightening, new vistas for
the modification of living creatures.  How does genetic engineering
work?  What's  possible?  What's impossible?  And how will we deal
with the legal, ethical,  and economic problems that arise?
 
 Art -         Portfolio Review - Buckingham
               D. Cherry, C. Lundgren
 
 Art -         Bitch Session - Gold Coast
                Open Discussion
 
 Media -       Seven Across the Ocean - Blake's Seven - Grand Ballroom E
 
 Autograph -   Guest of Honor Signing - Wrigley
               H. Clement
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               W. Barlowe, T. Gunnarsson, M. Reichert, H. Turtledove
 
 Reading - Picasso
               J. Wurts
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               J. Coulson
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               P. Cirone
 
12:00 pm
 Literary -    SF and Fantasy on the Live Theatre Stage - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: A.L.   Chancellor
               G. Carrington, C. Severance, R. Shea, G. Van Dorn
 
 Science -     World-Building Panel? Hell, Why Not Build A Whole Solar System? -
               Columbus Hall K/L
               Moderator: R.     Sawyer
               R. Cage, D. Hatch, R. Mac Bride Allen, J. Martino, M. Sumner
 
You can't have a Worldcon without having a world-building panel.
Designing planets is part of the work that earns an SF writer's bread
and butter.  How is it done? From the parent star down, or from the
alien critters up?  What about a family of planets in a solar system? 
World-builders share their secrets.
 
 Science -     The Two Cultures in F&SF: Science Confronts the Humanities - Grand
               Ballroom B
               Moderator:        Ctein
               H. Hendrix, M. Rich
 
Decades ago, C.P. Snow defined the "Two Cultures" of technical
intellectuals and literary intellectuals.  The split is still with us. 
How does it influence our fantasy and science fiction?  What works,
what authors manage to bridge the gap?  What works or authors make it
deeper?
 
 Science -     Crossing Disciplines: Can I Get A Job As a 'Synthesist?' - Columbus
               Hall C/D
               Moderator: A.     O'Connell
               A. Andrews, H. Davidson, A. Dormire, M. Ward
 
Most jobs are specialized, but a few people must bring together 
knowledge across a wide range of disciplines.  Where is this kind of
work required?  What talents does it take?  What kind of training?  
 
 Cities -      Colonial Cities After the Initial Settlement - Grand Ballroom D -
               North
               Moderator: A.     Gilliland
               H. Vanderbilt
 
 Fan -         Trans-Atlantic View of Fandom - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: J.     Gomoll
               L. Huntzinger, P. Wells
 
 Media -       Wizards and Warriors - Grand Ballroom E
 
 Literary -    Gay Speculative Fiction - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: R.     Gonder
               C. Cipra, R. Himmelsbach, T. McDaniel, L. Selkee, M. Soukup
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               D. Hartwell, F. Saberhagen
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               R. Knaak
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               F. Pohl
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               M.S. Bell
 
 Film -        Star Wars (1977) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
1:00 pm
 Science -     Lots of Little Brothers Are Watching: Privacy in Computerland -
               Grand Ballroom B
               Moderator: L.Z.   Smith
               A. Anda, D. Ihnat, C. Springs, C. Stoll
 
Our privacy may be at risk from monolithic government surveillance,
but it's under far more frequent assault from a multitude of private
and commercial snoopers-- credit bureaus, insurance companies,
junkmailers, employers, and others.  How has this come about?  Does
the Information Age provide us new weapons for fighting back?
 
 Science -     Can We Reach Vinge's Singularity? The Meaning of Exponential
               Progress - Columbus Hall K/L
               Moderator: D.     Skran
               J. Baen, W. Higgins, C. Morningstar, S. Schmidt, T. Van Horne
 
Vernor Vinge suggested that the increase of knowledge and innovation
will go ever faster until civilization suddenly breaks through into an
unguessable new state.  Is this inevitable?  Are there forces that
will slow progress down?  Or will new pressures always arise to
increase the pace of change?
 
 Science -     Herbs, Animal Lore, Weather, & Land: Natural Science in Fantasy
               Novels - Columbus Hall C/D
               Moderator: E.     Berman
               L. Barwood, J. Coulson, M. Kenin, C. Mills
 
What role does scientific knowledge play in telling a good fantasy
story?  How do fantasy writers use science?  (Our Science Guy wanted
desperately to have a science panel dealing with straight fantasy...)
 
 Academic -    Discussion Panel: Philip K. Dick - Grand Ballroom D - North
               Moderator: E.     Van
               P. Kaveny
 
 Fan -         Neo-Fandom Through the Ages - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: T.     Weisskopf
               L. Eisenberg, K. Moore, L. Penney, W. Tucker
 
 Literary -    How I Made My First Sale - Columbus Hall I/J
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               J. Clayton, P. Foglio, M. Kube-McDowell, R. Meluch
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               F. Ackerman
 
 Reading - Picasso
               B. Rogers
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               K. Rusch
 
 Reading - Basel/Lausanne
               J. Roberts
 
2:00 pm
 Literary -    Poet as Hero - Columbus Hall A/B
               Moderator: C.     Sheffield
               L. Barwood, L. Gold, H. Lisle, M. Rich, K. Stein, J. Stevenson
 
 Science -     So What If The Science Is Wrong? Putting The S In Your SF - Grand
               Ballroom B
 
 Fan -         The Second Chicon (1952) - Columbus Hall E/F
               Moderator: D.     Kyle
               C. Korshak, E. Korshak, Ed Wood
 
 Literary -    Classic Worldbuilding Techniques - Grand Ballroom A
               Moderator: D.A.   Smith
               H. Clement, L. Niven, F. Pohl, J. Pournelle
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               E.b. Shahar, D.W. Smith, R. Wilber
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               K. Jensen
 
 Reading - Picasso
               H. Hendrix
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               N. Kress
 
2:10 pm
 Film -        Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (1989) - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
3:00 pm -      Closing Ceremonies - Grand Ballroom F
 
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               D. Brin, P. Hodgell, R. Knaak, W. Tucker
 
 Reading - Haymarket
               D. Millitello
 
 Reading - Picasso
               M. Hanson-Roberts
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               R. Shea
 
4:00 pm
 Autograph - Grand Ballroom C - South
               K. Jensen, D. Kyle, R. Weinberg
 
 Reading - Picasso
               M. Rich
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               A.J. Budrys
 
 Film -        Hugo Award Winner - Regency Ballroom C/D
 
5:00 pm
 Reading - Haymarket
               C. Johnson
 
 Reading - Picasso
               M. Zambreno
 
 Reading - Geneve/Bern
               L.S. De Camp
909.21Video RetrospectiveROULET::WILLISTue Aug 27 1991 17:44530
Article: 956
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From: [email protected] (Matt Crawford)
Newsgroups: alt.fandom.cons
Subject: Chicon Schedule: Video Retrospective
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Date: 23 Aug 91 14:09:53 GMT
Expires: Mon, 2 Sep 1991 23:59:59 GMT
Sender: [email protected] (NewsMistress)
Reply-To: [email protected] (Matt Crawford)
Organization: Network 23
Lines: 517
 
 
	From: [email protected] (Bill Higgins-- Beam Jockey)
 
Chicon V, the 49th World Science Fiction Convention, will be held 29
August through 2 September at the Hyatt Regency Chicago Hotel and the
Swissotel in Chicago, Illinois, USA.  
 
George Fergus, Chicago video maven, has lined up a "Science Fiction 
on TV Retrospective"  which will attempt to show episodes of every SF
television show ever appearing on U.S. television (with a good deal of
Canadian and British material thrown in.)
 
Here is the schedule for the SF on TV Retrospective as it will appear
in the Pocket Program.  It is as accurate as we could make it, but NOT
UTTERLY FINAL.  We may still make a few changes to the schedule.  
 
I regret that because of our pre-con workload, we may not be
able to answer e-mail inquiries about the convention.  I also
apologize that some of the lines are rather wide and may wrap around
on your screen or fall into your printer's bit-bucket.
 
I hope you'll find this schedule useful in planning your weekend at
Hog-Butcher-For-The-Worldcon Five.  Thanks go especially to Rick Waterson
for providing the information in a timely fashion.
 
   _-_    _-_
  /  -\__/-  \           Chicon V                  Bill Higgins
 /   \(..)/   \   49th World Science Fiction   |   Track Manager
|     |  |     |        Convention             |   Science & Technology   
|  \\\ \/ ///  |                               |   
\   \\\  ///   /  29 August-2 September 1991   |   
 \     ()     /   Hyatt Regency Chicago Hotel  |   [email protected]
  \    ||    /      Chicago, Illinois, USA         [email protected]
   \__{  }__/
   (        )  [apologies to Pablo Picasso...]
   ----------
 
                          SF ON TV RETROSPECTIVE (William Tell Theatre)
 
Thursday
 
10:00 am - Lights Out (1949:NBC)
 
10:00 am - Max Headroom (1987:ABC)
 
10:25 am - Captain Video (1949:DUM) [serial]
 
10:50 am - Space Patrol (1950:ABC) [serial]
 
11:15 am - Tom Corbett (1950:CBS/ABC/DUM/NBC)
 
11:40 am - Tales of Tomorrow (1951:ABC)
 
12:05 pm - Superman (1952:syn)
 
12:30 pm - Space Command (1953:CBC) *POOR*
 
1:00 pm - Johnny Jupiter (1953:DUM/syn)
 
1:25 pm - Quatermass (1953:BBC) [serial]
 
1:55 pm - Rocky Jones (1953:syn) [serial]
 
2:20 pm - Flash Gordon (1954:syn)
 
2:45 pm - Science Fiction Theater (1955:syn)
 
3:10 pm - Commando Cody (1955:NBC)
 
3:35 pm - Captain Z-RO (1955:syn)
 
4:00 pm - The Invisible Man (1958:ITV)
 
4:25 pm - One Step Beyond (1959:ABC)
 
4:50 pm - The Twilight Zone (1959:CBS)
 
5:15 pm - Men into Space (1959:CBS)
 
5:40 pm - World of Giants (1959:syn)
 
6:05 pm - Way Out (1961:CBS)
 
6:30 pm - Supercar (1961:ITV) [puppets]
 
7:00 pm - Fireball XL-5 (1962:ITV) [puppets]
 
7:25 pm - Fireball XL-5 (1962:ITV) [puppets]
 
7:50 pm - Planet Patrol (1963:ITV) [puppets]
 
8:15 pm - My Favorite Martian (1963:CBS)
 
8:40 pm - The Outer Limits (1963:ABC)
 
9:05 pm - The Outer Limits (1963:ABC)
 
9:30 pm - Doctor Who #1 (1963:BBC) [serial]
 
10:00 pm - The Avengers (1963:ITV)
 
10:25 pm - The Avengers (1963:ITV)
 
10:50 pm - Voyage to the Bottom o/t Sea (1964:ABC)
 
11:15 pm - Voyage to the Bottom o/t Sea (1964:ABC)
 
11:40 pm - Stingray (1964:ITV) [puppets]
Friday
 
12:05 am - My Living Doll (1964:CBS)
 
12:30 am - REPEAT of the day's most popular program 
 
1:00 am - Out of the Unknown (1965:BBC)
 
1:25 am - Out of the Unknown (1965:BBC)
 
1:50 am - The Wild Wild West (1965:CBS)
 
2:15 am - The Wild Wild West (1965:CBS)
 
2:40 am - Lost in Space (1965:CBS)
 
3:05 am - Lost in Space (1965:CBS)
 
3:30 am - Doctor Who #2 (1966:BBC) [serial]
 
4:00 am - Thunderbirds (1965:ITV) [puppets]
 
4:25 am - Thunderbirds (1965:ITV) [puppets]
 
4:50 am - The Time Tunnel (1966:ABC)
 
5:15 am - The Time Tunnel (1966:ABC)
 
5:40 am - Star Trek (1966:NBC)
 
6:05 am - Star Trek (1966:NBC)
 
6:30 am - It's About Time (1966:CBS)
 
7:00 am - Dark Shadows (1966:ABC) [serial]
 
7:25 am - Adam Adamant Lives! (1966:BBC)
 
7:50 am - Adam Adamant Lives! (1966:BBC)
 
8:15 am - Captain Nice (1967:NBC)
 
8:40 am - The Invaders (1967:ABC)
 
9:05 am - The Invaders (1967:ABC)
 
10:00 am - Captain Scarlet (1967:ITV) [puppets]
 
10:25 am - The Prisoner (1967:ITV)
 
10:50 am - The Prisoner (1967:ITV)
 
11:15 am - The Champions (1968:ITV)
 
11:40 am - The Champions (1968:ITV)
 
12:05 pm - Land of the Giants (1968:ABC)
 
12:30 pm - Land of the Giants (1968:ABC)
 
1:00 pm - Joe 90 (1968:ITV) [puppets]
 
1:25 pm - Night Gallery (1969:NBC)
 
1:50 pm - Phoenix 5 (1969:Aust) *POOR*
 
2:15 pm - Secret Service (1969:ITV) [pupp] *POOR*
 
2:40 pm - My Partner the Ghost (1969:ITV)
 
3:05 pm - My Partner the Ghost (1969:ITV)
 
3:30 pm - Strange Paradise (1969:syn) [serial]
 
4:00 pm - Advs. of Don Quick (1970:ITV) *POOR*
 
4:25 pm - Advs. of Don Quick (1970:ITV) *POOR*
 
4:50 pm - The Immortal (1970:ABC)
 
5:15 pm - The Immortal (1970:ABC)
 
5:40 pm - UFO (1970:ITV)
 
6:05 pm - UFO (1970:ITV)
 
6:30 pm - Timeslip (1970:ITV) [serial]
 
7:00 pm - Catweazle (1970:ITV)
 
7:25 pm - Ace of Wands (1970:ITV) [serial]
 
7:50 pm - Doctor Who #3 (1970:BBC) [serial]
 
8:15 pm - Doomwatch (1970:BBC)
 
8:40 pm - Doomwatch (1970:BBC)
 
9:05 pm - The Sixth Sense (1972:ABC)
 
9:30 pm - The Tomorrow People (1973:ITV) [serial]
 
10:00 pm - The Starlost (1973:syn)
 
10:25 pm - The Starlost (1973:syn)
 
10:50 pm - The 6 Million Dollar Man (1973:ABC)
 
11:15 pm - The 6 Million Dollar Man (1973:ABC)
 
11:40 pm - The Goodies (1973:BBC)
Saturday
 
12:05 am - REPEAT of the day's most popular program 
 
12:30 am - REPEAT of the day's most popular program 
 
1:00 am - The Evil Touch (1973:Aust)
 
1:25 am - Kolchak: The Night Stalker (1974:ABC)
 
1:50 am - Kolchak: The Night Stalker (1974:ABC)
 
2:15 am - Planet of the Apes (1974:CBS)
 
2:40 am - Planet of the Apes (1974:CBS)
 
3:05 am - Land of the Lost (1974:NBC)
 
3:30 am - Shazam! (1974:CBS)
 
4:00 am - Doctor Who #4 (1974:BBC) [serial]
 
4:15 am - The Man from Atlantis (1977:NBC)
 
4:25 am - Space: 1999 (1975:ITV)
 
4:50 am - Space: 1999 (1975:ITV)
 
5:15 am - Shadows (1975:ITV)
 
5:40 am - Far Out Space Nuts (1975:CBS)
 
6:05 am - The Ghost Busters (1975:CBS)
 
6:30 am - Secrets of Isis (1975:CBS)
 
7:00 am - Survivors (1975:BBC)
 
7:25 am - Survivors (1975:BBC)
 
7:50 am - The Invisible Man (1975:NBC)
 
8:15 am - The Invisible Man (1975:NBC)
 
8:40 am - The Gemini Man (1976:NBC)
 
9:05 am - The Gemini Man (1976:NBC)
 
10:00 am - Wonder Woman (1976:ABC/CBS)
 
10:25 am - Wonder Woman (1976:ABC/CBS)
 
10:50 am - The Bionic Woman (1976:ABC/NBC)
 
11:15 am - The Bionic Woman (1976:ABC/NBC)
 
11:40 am - Star Maidens (1976:syn) [serial]
 
12:05 pm - Tales of the Unexpected (1977:NBC) *POOR*
 
12:30 pm - Tales of the Unexpected (1977:NBC)
 
1:00 pm - Logan's Run (1977:CBS)
 
1:25 pm - Logan's Run (1977:CBS)
 
1:50 pm - The Man from Atlantis (1977:NBC)
 
2:40 pm - Bigfoot and Wildboy (1977:ABC)
 
3:05 pm - Space Academy (1977:CBS) *POOR*
 
3:30 pm - Quark (1977:NBC)
 
4:00 pm - Come Back Mrs. Noah (1977:BBC)
 
4:25 pm - Fantastic Journey (1977:NBC)
 
4:50 pm - Fantastic Journey (1977:NBC)
 
5:15 pm - The Amazing Spiderman (1977:CBS)
 
5:40 pm - The Amazing Spiderman (1977:CBS)
 
6:05 pm - The Incredible Hulk (1978:CBS)
 
6:30 pm - The Incredible Hulk (1978:CBS)
 
7:00 pm - Battlestar Galactica (1978:ABC)
 
7:25 pm - Battlestar Galactica (1978:ABC)
 
7:50 pm - Project UFO (1978:NBC)
 
8:15 pm - Project UFO (1978:NBC)
 
8:40 pm - Mork and Mindy (1978:ABC)
 
9:05 pm - Jason of Star Command (1978:CBS) *POOR*
 
9:30 pm - Rocket Boy (197?:Canada) *POOR*
 
10:00 pm - Blake's Seven (1978:BBC)
 
10:25 pm - Blake's Seven (1978:BBC)
 
10:50 pm - Cliffhangers (1979:NBC) [serial]
 
11:15 pm - Cliffhangers (1979:NBC) [serial]
 
11:40 pm - Sapphire and Steel (1979:ITV) [serial]
Sunday
 
12:05 am - REPEAT of the day's most popular program 
 
12:30 am - REPEAT of the day's most popular program 
 
1:00 am - The Omega Factor (1979:BBC)
 
1:25 am - The Omega Factor (1979:BBC)
 
1:50 am - Salvage 1 (1979:ABC)
 
2:15 am - Salvage 1 (1979:ABC)
 
2:40 am - Buck Rogers (1979:NBC)
 
3:05 am - Buck Rogers (1979:NBC)
 
3:30 am - Struck by Lightning (1979:CBS)
 
4:00 am - Worzel Gummidge (1979:ITV)
 
4:25 am - Metal Mickey (1980:ITV)
 
4:50 am - Beyond Westworld (1980:CBS)
 
5:15 am - Beyond Westworld (1980:CBS)
 
5:40 am - Galactica 1980 (1980:ABC)
 
6:05 am - Galactica 1980 (1980:ABC)
 
6:30 am - Star Fleet (1980:Brit-Jap) [pupp-serial]
 
7:00 am - The Dark Room (1981:ABC)
 
7:25 am - The Greatest American Hero (1981:ABC)
 
7:50 am - The Greatest American Hero (1981:ABC)
 
8:15 am - Into the Labyrinth (1981:ITV)
 
8:40 am - Kinvig (1981:ITV)
 
9:05 am - Hitchhiker's Guide (1981:BBC) [serial]
 
9:30 am - [break for cleanup]
 
10:00 am - Seeing Things (1981:CBC)
 
10:25 am - Seeing Things (1981:CBC)
 
10:50 am - Q.E.D. (1982:CBS)
 
11:15 am - Q.E.D. (1982:CBS)
 
11:40 am - Voyagers (1982:NBC)
 
12:05 pm - Voyagers (1982:NBC)
 
12:30 pm - Doctor Who #5 (1982:BBC) [serial]
 
1:00 pm - Powers of Matthew Star (1982:NBC)
 
1:25 pm - Powers of Matthew Star (1982:NBC)
 
1:50 pm - The Phoenix (1982:ABC)
 
2:15 pm - The Phoenix (1982:ABC)
 
2:40 pm - Small & Frye (1983:CBS) *POOR AUDIO*
 
5:15 pm - Wizards & Warriors (1983:CBS)
 
5:40 pm - Wizards & Warriors (1983:CBS)
 
6:05 pm - V (1983:NBC)
 
6:30 pm - V (1983:NBC)
 
7:00 pm - Manimal (1983:NBC)
 
7:25 pm - Manimal (1983:NBC)
 
7:50 pm - Automan (1983:ABC)
 
8:15 pm - Automan (1983:ABC)
 
8:40 pm - Terrahawks (1983:ITV) [puppets]
 
9:05 pm - Doctor Who #6 (1984:BBC) [serial]
 
9:30 pm - The Tripods (1984:BBC) [serial]
 
10:00 pm - Ray Bradbury Theater (1984:HBO/USA)
 
10:25 pm - Twilight Zone (1985:CBS)
 
10:50 pm - Amazing Stories (1985:NBC)
 
11:15 pm - Shadow Chasers (1985:ABC)
 
11:40 pm - Shadow Chasers (1985:ABC)
Monday
12:05 am - REPEAT of the day's most popular program 
 
12:30 am - REPEAT of the day's most popular program 
 
1:00 am - Misfits of Science (1985:NBC)
 
1:25 am - Misfits of Science (1985:NBC)
 
1:50 am - Otherworld (1985:CBS)
 
2:15 am - Otherworld (1985:CBS)
 
2:40 am - Tales from the Dark Side (1985:syn)
 
3:05 am - Galloping Galaxies! (1985:BBC)
 
3:30 am - Really Weird Tales (1986:HBO)
 
4:00 am - Starman (1986:ABC)
 
4:25 am - Starman (1986:ABC)
 
4:50 am - Friday the 13th: The Series (1987:Can)
 
5:15 am - Friday the 13th: The Series (1987:Can)
 
5:40 am - Star Trek:The Next Generation (1987:syn)
 
6:05 am - Star Trek:The Next Generation (1987:syn)
 
6:30 am - Werewolf (1987:FOX)
 
7:00 am - Beauty and the Beast (1987:CBS)
 
7:25 am - Beauty and the Beast (1987:CBS)
 
7:50 am - Once a Hero (1987:ABC)
 
8:15 am - Once a Hero (1987:ABC)
 
8:40 am - Captain Power (1987:Can)
 
9:05 am - Dr. Science (1987:syn)
 
10:25 am - Max Headroom (1987:ABC)
 
10:50 am - Star Cops (1987:BBC)
 
11:15 am - Star Cops (1987:BBC)
 
11:40 am - Doctor Who #7 (1987:BBC) [serial]
 
12:05 pm - My Secret Identity (1987:Can)
 
12:30 pm - Time Exposures (1988:Can)
 
1:00 pm - The Highwayman (1987:NBC)
 
1:25 pm - The Highwayman (1987:NBC)
 
1:50 pm - Probe (1988:ABC)
 
2:15 pm - Probe (1988:ABC)
 
2:40 pm - Red Dwarf (1988:BBC)
 
3:05 pm - Erasmus Microman (1988:ITV)
 
3:30 pm - Monsters (1988:syn)
 
4:00 pm - Something Is Out There (1988:NBC)
 
4:25 pm - Something Is Out There (1988:NBC)
 
4:50 pm - Hard Time on Planet Earth (1988:CBS)
 
5:15 pm - Hard Time on Planet Earth (1988:CBS)
 
5:40 pm - War of the Worlds (1988:Can)
 
6:05 pm - War of the Worlds (1988:Can)
 
6:30 pm - Superboy (1988:syn)
909.22Workshops and Discustion groupsROULET::WILLISTue Aug 27 1991 17:45154
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From: [email protected] (Matt Crawford)
Newsgroups: alt.fandom.cons
Subject: Chicon Schedule: Workshops and Discussion Groups
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Date: 23 Aug 91 14:19:30 GMT
Expires: Mon, 2 Sep 1991 23:59:59 GMT
Sender: [email protected] (NewsMistress)
Reply-To: [email protected] (Matt Crawford)
Organization: Just Things `n' Stuff, Et Cetera, Ltd.
Lines: 141
 
 
	From: [email protected] (Bill Higgins-- Beam Jockey)
 
Chicon V, the 49th World Science Fiction Convention, will be held 29
August through 2 September at the Hyatt Regency Chicago Hotel and the
Swissotel in Chicago, Illinois, USA.  
 
Here is the schedule for  Writers' Workshops and Discussion Groups
meeting with authors as it will appear in the Pocket Program.  It is
as accurate as we could make it, but NOT UTTERLY FINAL.  We may still
make a few changes to the schedule.  
 
If you are attending, check the Chicon daily newsletter for
information on program changes.  
 
IF YOU ARE A PROFESSIONAL SCHEDULED FOR A DISCUSSION GROUP,  please
check the back of your registration badge for the most up-to-date
information.  The Green Room staff will be able to assist you with any
questions.  We appreciate your willingness to participate in Chicon,
and the help you've given us in designing our program.  Please
remember to visit the Green Room at least 20 minutes prior to the
event you're scheduled for. It eases our minds considerably when we
know all the authors are present and ready to start!
 
I regret that because of our pre-con workload, we may not be
able to answer e-mail inquiries about the convention.  I also
apologize that some of the lines are rather wide and may wrap around
on your screen or fall into your printer's bit-bucket.
 
I hope you'll find this schedule useful in planning your weekend at
Hog-Butcher-For-The-Worldcon Five.  Thanks go especially to Rick Waterson
for providing the information in a timely fashion.
 
   _-_    _-_
  /  -\__/-  \           Chicon V                  Bill Higgins
 /   \(..)/   \   49th World Science Fiction   |   Track Manager
|     |  |     |        Convention             |   Science & Technology   
|  \\\ \/ ///  |                               |   
\   \\\  ///   /  29 August-2 September 1991   |   
 \     ()     /   Hyatt Regency Chicago Hotel  |   [email protected]
  \    ||    /      Chicago, Illinois, USA         [email protected]
   \__{  }__/
   (        )  [apologies to Pablo Picasso...]
   ----------
 
                                       WRITER'S WORKSHOPS
 
Friday
 
1:00 pm
 Workshop:  Screenwriting - Horner
               J. Egolf, D. Hartlage, K. Huddleston, S. Munsch
 
4:00 pm
 Workshop:  Novel - Horner
 R. Chwedyk, D. Drisgill, W. Halsey, K. Jensen, C. Klees-Starks, J. Whalen
 
Saturday
 
10:00 am
 Workshop:  General Short Story - Horner
 H. Lesesne, L. Mann, J. Patrouch, R. Russell, L. White
 
1:00 pm
 Workshop:  Advanced Fantasy Short Story - Horner
 G.R. Hall, N. Holder, L. Schuster, J. Whalen,
 
4:00 pm
 Bull Session for Writers of All Levels - Horner
 K. Huddleston
 
Sunday
 
10:00 am
 Workshop:  Advanced Science Fiction Short Story - Horner
 R. Allen, C. Brown, E.J. Schumak, J. Ulowetz, B. Worthel
 
4:00 pm
 Workshop:  Neo Pro - Horner
 C. Abartis, C. Engler, R. Mac Bride Allen, J. Patrouch, G.K. Sprinkle
 
Monday
 
10:00 am
 Workshop:  Beginner Short Story - Horner
 B. Arnold, R. Chwedyk, M. Dunston, M. Jones, T. Lichtenstein Bogolub
                                        DISCUSSION GROUPS
 
Thursday
 
2:30 pm -      Field - Joe Haldeman
               McCormick - R. Reed, G. Wolfe
               Burnham - F. Ackerman, D.W. Smith
 
Friday
 
10:30 am -     Field - H. Clement, J. Tarr
               McCormick - J. Moffett
               Burnham - D. Kyle, C. Ryan
 
12:30 pm -     Field - M. Kube-McDowell, K. Parkinson
               McCormick - E. Friesner, T. Pratchett
               Burnham - D. McKiernan, J. Morrow
 
2:30 pm -      Field - M. Flynn, H. Turtledove
               McCormick - T. Weisskopf, W. Wu
               Burnham - G. Effinger, J. Kelly
 
Saturday
 
10:30 am -     Field - T. Bisson, J.R. Douglas
               McCormick - S. Jackson, T. Zahn
               Burnham - E. Bergstrom, R. Shea,
 
12:30 pm -     Field - T. Canty, S. McKee Charnas
               McCormick - R. Mac Bride Allen, C. Sheffield
               Burnham - F. Pohl, J. Williamson
 
2:30 pm -      Field - L. Synk, M. Whelan
               McCormick - R. Mainhardt, M. Soukup
               Burnham - S. Brust, J. Roberson
 
Sunday
 
10:30 am -     Field - A. Andrews, J. Clayton
               McCormick - C. Barker, M. Reichert
               Burnham - E. Bryant, M. Resnick
 
12:30 pm -     Field - P. Cadigan, J. Chalker
               McCormick - J. Ecklar, T. Gunnarsson
               Burnham - A.J. Budrys, R. Green
 
2:30 pm -      Field - J.L. Nye, J. Wurts
               McCormick - P.J. Beese, T. Hamilton, P. Hodgell
               Burnham - M. Hanson-Roberts, L. Watt-Evans
 
Monday
 
10:30 am -     Field - B. Bova, J. Lichtenberg
               McCormick - G. Benford, S.M. Stirling
               Burnham - G. Cook, D. Kingsbury
909.23Gaming ProgramROULET::WILLISTue Aug 27 1991 17:53264
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From: [email protected] (Matt Crawford)
Newsgroups: alt.fandom.cons
Subject: Chicon Schedule: Gaming Program
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Date: 23 Aug 91 14:15:41 GMT
Expires: Mon, 2 Sep 1991 23:59:59 GMT
Sender: [email protected] (NewsMistress)
Reply-To: [email protected] (Matt Crawford)
Organization: Department of Entropy
Lines: 251
 
 
	From: [email protected] (Bill Higgins-- Beam Jockey)
 
Chicon V, the 49th World Science Fiction Convention, will be held 29
August through 2 September at the Hyatt Regency Chicago Hotel and the
Swissotel in Chicago, Illinois, USA.  
 
Here is the schedule for the Gaming Program as it will appear in
the Pocket Program.  It is as accurate as we could make it, but NOT
UTTERLY FINAL.  We may still make a few changes to the schedule.  
 
If you are attending, check the Chicon daily newsletter for
information on program changes.  
 
I regret that because of our pre-con workload, we may not be
able to answer e-mail inquiries about the convention.  I also
apologize that some of the lines are rather wide and may wrap around
on your screen or fall into your printer's bit-bucket.
 
I hope you'll find this schedule useful in planning your weekend at
Hog-Butcher-For-The-Worldcon Five.  Thanks go especially to Rick Waterson
for providing the information in a timely fashion.
 
   _-_    _-_
  /  -\__/-  \           Chicon V                  Bill Higgins
 /   \(..)/   \   49th World Science Fiction   |   Track Manager
|     |  |     |        Convention             |   Science & Technology   
|  \\\ \/ ///  |                               |   
\   \\\  ///   /  29 August-2 September 1991   |   
 \     ()     /   Hyatt Regency Chicago Hotel  |   [email protected]
  \    ||    /      Chicago, Illinois, USA         [email protected]
   \__{  }__/
   (        )  [apologies to Pablo Picasso...]
   ----------
 
                                         GAMING PROGRAM
 
Thursday
 
6:00 pm
 
 Pick Up Games - Geneve/Bern
 
 Pick Up Games - Basel/Lausanne
 
9:00 pm
 
 It came from the Late, Late, Late, LATE Show - Engelberg Suite
 W. Mytczynsky
 
Friday
 
9:00 am
 
 This is a SF/F Con...Why Game? - New Orleans
 Moderator: D.     McLaurine
 L.L. Cerny, T. Dowd, G. Johnson, Paul Kidd, V. Siegling, R. Tucholka
 
 How To WIN a Role Playing Game - TBA
 E. Wujick
 
10:00 am
 
 NanoTech - Appenzell Suite
 E. Wujick
 
11:00 am
 
 SUPREMACY Tournament, Section 1 - Verbier Suite
 D. McLaurine
 
 Space Marine - Engelberg Suite
 M. Bricker
 
12:00 pm
 
 Myth Fortunes - Fribourg Suite
 
 Silent Death - Pontresina Suite
 
1:00 pm
 
 MEGA-Battletech - Vevey Suite
 T. Doner, D. McLaurine
 
2:00 pm
 
 Cybertech and Virtual Reality, The New Game Wave? - New Orleans
 Moderator: D.     McLaurine
 T. Bartold, W. Guttring, Paul Kidd, M. Stackpole, J. Weisman
 
4:00 pm
 
 Bureau 13: Stalking the Steel city - Appenzell Suite
 R. Tucholka
 
 Zanth, The BoardGame - Fribourg Suite
 
 Organized Crime - Pontresina Suite
 
 Cosmic Encounter - Verbier Suite
 
6:00 pm
 
 Space 1889 Miniatures (15mm) - Engelberg Suite
 H. Schouten
 
 Computer Gaming Open - Klosters Suite
 
 Pick Up Games - Geneve/Bern
 
 Pick Up Games - Basel/Lausanne
 
9:00 pm
 
 NightLife, The Game of Urban Horror - Vevey Suite
  Stellar Games
 
Saturday
 
9:00 am
 
 NeoGamers, We Want You -or- Ok, NOW WHAT? - New Orleans
 Moderator: D.     McLaurine
 T. Doner, W. Mytczynsky, V. Siegling
 
 Amber-The Role Playing Game - TBA
 E. Wujick
 
10:00 am
 
 Space Hulk - Fribourg Suite
 M. Bricker
 
11:00 am
 
 TMNT: Mars - Engelberg Suite
 E. Wujick
 
1:00 pm
 
 Multi-Player Games Network Product Demo - TBA
 J. Hettinger
 
 AD&D Tournament (2nd Ed. rules) - Appenzell Suite
 
 AD&D Tournament (2nd Ed. rules) - Pontresina Suite
 
 AD&D Tournament (2nd Ed. rules) - Verbier Suite
 
2:00 pm
 
 The SMOGS -or- The Gaming Grey-beards - New Orleans
 Moderator: D.     McLaurine
 D. Arneson, R. Banner, V. Siegling, R. Tucholka
 
3:00 pm
 
 Harpoon-The Captain's Edition - Fribourg Suite
 
4:00 pm
 
 ShadowRun: Into CyberSpace - Vevey Suite
 D. McLaurine
 
 ShadowRun/DMZ Demo - Engelberg Suite
 
6:00 pm
 
 Computer Gaming Open - Klosters Suite
 
 Pick Up Games - Geneve/Bern
 
 Pick Up Games - Basel/Lausanne
 
Sunday
 
9:00 am
 
 So You Want To Design Games - New Orleans
 Moderator: D.     McLaurine
 L.L. Cerny, T. Dowd, Paul Kidd, V. Siegling, M. Stackpole, R. Tucholka, J.
 Wallis
 
 No Dice, Zen and the Art of Role Play - TBA
 E. Wujick
 
10:00 am
 
 Star Fleet Battles Starship Combat Base - Vevey Suite
 
11:00 am
 
 SUPREMACY Tournament, Section 2 - Engelberg Suite
 D. McLaurine
 
12:00 pm
 
 The BattleTech Simulation Tournament - North Pier/BattleTech Ctr
 D. McLaurine
 
1:00 pm
 LucasFilm Games Product Demo - TBA
 A. Carerra
 
 AD&D 2nd Ed. - Oriental Adventures - Appenzell Suite
 
 AD&D 2nd Ed. - Oriental Adventures - Fribourg Suite
 
 AD&D 2nd Ed. - Oriental Adventures - Pontresina Suite
 
 WarHammer Fantasy Battle - Verbier Suite
 T. Doner
 
4:00 pm
 
 Morality & Gaming -or- Why Johnny Can't Play Our Game - New Orleans
 Moderator: D.     McLaurine
 L.L. Cerny, S. Jackson, G. Johnson, R. Tucholka, J. Wallis
 
 BattleTech Demo: The Solaris Games - Vevey Suite
 
6:00 pm
 
 Lace & Steel Product Demo - Appenzell Suite
 Paul Kidd
 
 Vampire, By White Wolf - Pontresina Suite
 
 Computer Gaming Open - Klosters Suite
 
 Pick Up Games - Geneve/Bern
 
 Pick Up Games - Basel/Lausanne
 
Monday
 
9:00 am
 
 Hidden Pleasures & Forgotten Treasures - New Orleans
 Moderator: D.     McLaurine
 T. Dowd, G. Johnson, Paul Kidd, W. Mytczynsky, V. Siegling, R. Tucholka, J.
 Wallis, T. Doner
 
10:00 am
 
 Amber-The RPG - Vevey Suite
 E. Wujick
 
 EHQ Special: Johnny Reb - TBA
 T. Doner, G. Johnson
909.24Children's programing.;ROULET::WILLISTue Aug 27 1991 17:54246
Article: 963
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From: [email protected] (Bill Higgins-- Beam Jockey)
Newsgroups: alt.fandom.cons
Subject: Chicon Schedule: Children's Program
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Date: 22 Aug 91 07:38:28 GMT
Sender: [email protected]
Lines: 236
 
Chicon V, the 49th World Science Fiction Convention, will be held 29
August through 2 September at the Hyatt Regency Chicago Hotel and the
Swissotel in Chicago, Illinois, USA.  
 
Here is the schedule for the Children's Program as it will appear in
the Pocket Program.  It is as accurate as we could make it, but NOT
UTTERLY FINAL.  We may still make a few changes to the schedule.  
 
If you are attending, check the Chicon daily newsletter for
information on program changes.  
 
I regret that because of our pre-con workload, we may not be
able to answer e-mail inquiries about the convention.  I also
apologize that some of the lines are rather wide and may wrap around
on your screen or fall into your printer's bit-bucket.
 
I hope you'll find this schedule useful in planning your weekend at
Hog-Butcher-For-The-Worldcon Five.  Thanks go especially to Rick Waterson
for providing the information in a timely fashion.
 
   _-_    _-_
  /  -\__/-  \           Chicon V                  Bill Higgins
 /   \(..)/   \   49th World Science Fiction   |   Track Manager
|     |  |     |        Convention             |   Science & Technology   
|  \\\ \/ ///  |                               |   
\   \\\  ///   /  29 August-2 September 1991   |   
 \     ()     /   Hyatt Regency Chicago Hotel  |   [email protected]
  \    ||    /      Chicago, Illinois, USA         [email protected]
   \__{  }__/
   (        )  [apologies to Pablo Picasso...]
   ----------
====================================
 
                                       CHILDREN'S PROGRAM
 
Thursday
 
12:00 pm
 Kidart Deco - Davos Suite
 
 Space Scenery - Davos Suite
 
1:30 pm
 
 Movie: JETSONS, THE MOVIE - Villars Suite
 
 Board Games: Checkers, Stop Thief, Chess, Candyland - Interlaken Suite
 
3:00 pm
 
 Storytime for Schoolaged Children - Zug Suite
 
 Maskmaking with Mike Mansfield - Davos Suite
 M. Mansfield
 
3:30 pm
 
 Storytime for Preschoolers - Zug Suite
 
4:00 pm
 
 Rocketbuilding - Davos Suite
 
 How to Play Math and Science Games - Zug Suite
 
5:00 pm
 
 Children's Choice Free Play - Crans-Montana Suite
 
Friday
 
10:00 am
 
 Medieval Scenery - Davos Suite
 
 Squires, Don Thy Armor - Interlaken Suite
 
10:30 am
 
 Hot & Cold Running Demos - Crans-Montana Suite
 
11:00 am
 
 Children's Choice Free Play - Crans-Montana Suite
 
 Science Demos - Crans-Montana Suite
 M. Mansfield, L. Runkle
 
1:00 pm
 
 Quiet Time - Wengen suite
 
 Movie: SWORD IN THE STONE - Villars Suite
 
 Mask Making - Davos Suite
 
3:00 pm
 
 Snack Time - Crans-Montana Suite
 
 Button Button, Who Made That Button? - Davos Suite
 M. Hanson-Roberts, M. Skirvin Johnson
 
3:30 pm
 
 Exercise - Neuchatel Suite
 
 Puppets - Davos Suite
 
 Ballooning Around - Neuchatel Suite
 S. Munsch
 
5:00 pm
 
 Children's Choice Free Play - Crans-Montana Suite
 
 Battletech Boot Camp - Zug Suite
 
7:00 pm
 
 Evening Movie: FLIGHT OF DRAGONS & Cartoons - Villars Suite
 
Saturday
 
10:00 am
 
 Dragon Masks - Davos Suite
 
 Children's Choice Free Play - Crans-Montana Suite
 
10:30 am
 
 Thin Film Physics (AKA Bubbles) - Crans-Montana Suite
 
11:00 am
 
 Stuffed Fandom - Interlaken Suite
 G. Balter, H. Schouten
 
11:30 am
 
 Children's Choice Free Play - Crans-Montana Suite
 
1:00 pm
 
 Quiet Time - Wengen suite
 
 Movie: PETE'S DRAGON - Villars Suite
 
3:00 pm
 
 Snack Time - Crans-Montana Suite
 
4:30 pm
 Storytime & Exercise: THE RELUCTANT DRAGON and THE PAPERBAG PRINCESS -
 Neuchatel Suite
 
5:00 pm
 
 Children's Choice Free Play - Crans-Montana Suite
 
7:00 pm
 
 Cookie Painting - Davos Suite
 
8:00 pm
 
 Milk, Cookies, and a Story - Davos Suite
 
Sunday
 
10:00 am
 
 Children's Choice Free Play - Crans-Montana Suite
 
10:30 am
 
 Dinosaur Mural - Davos Suite
 
 Hands on Science with Color and Light - Crans-Montana Suite
 
11:30 am
 
 Children's Choice Free Play - Crans-Montana Suite
 
1:00 pm
 
 Quiet Time - Wengen suite
 
1:30 pm
 
 Movie: FLINTSTONES - Villars Suite
 
3:00 pm
 
 It's Mr. Science! - William Tell Theatre
 H. Clement
 
 Snack Time - Crans-Montana Suite
 
 Kidfilk - Crans-Montana Suite
 C. Clapper
 
5:00 pm
 
 Storytime & Exercise: DINOSAURS IN HOLLYWOOD and WE'RE BACK - Neuchatel Suite
 
7:00 pm
 
 Evening Movie: LAND BEFORE TIME - Villars Suite
 
Monday
 
10:00 am
 
 Children's Choice Free Play & Snacks - Crans-Montana Suite
 
10:30 am
 
 MAKE WAY FOR DUCKLINGS Story and Parade - Davos Suite
 
11:30 am
 
 Children's Choice Free Play - Crans-Montana Suite
 
1:00 pm
 
 Quiet Time - Wengen suite
 
3:00 pm
 
 Snack time - Crans-Montana Suite
 
3:30 pm
 
 Children's Choice Free Play - Crans-Montana Suite