Fan Tables
![Updated [June-19-2004]](../images/updated.gif)
Fan Tables are an
opportunity for your fannish group, bid, club, or convention to have a
table and space in Exhibits to display information, talk with fans, and
otherwise strut your stuff.

Lots of groups have already signed up for fan tables:
- Seated Worldcons:
- Interaction (Glasgow in 2005)
- LAConIV (Los Angeles in 2006)
- CascadiaCon, the NASFic for 2005
- Bidders for future Worldcons:
- Columbus 2007
- Nippon 2007
- Chicago 2008
- Other Conventions:
- Other Groups:
- Chain Gang (Selina Rosen Fan Group)
- Esperanto
- Hypoglycemics United to Foster Awareness
- The Science Fiction Oral History Association
- The Speculative Literature Foundation
- World Transhumanist Association
- WSFA (Washington Science Fiction Association)
You can also participate in the
First Night parade or
sponsor a booth, a game, or another attraction during First Night.
We have the details you need;
you can give us the details we
need!
Fifty Years of the Hugo Awards Exhibit
The first Hugo Awards were presented in 1953 at the 11th World
Science Fiction Convention (popularly known as Philcon II) in
Philadelphia. Last year's Worldcon, Torcon 3, hosted the 50th Hugo
Awards Ceremony since no Hugo Awards were given out at the 1954
Worldcon.
What were those Worldcon members thinking as they sat in their
caves and pecked on their primitive typewriting devices to send postal
mail to each other? What was the inspiration for the Hugo Awards? We
know that Hugo Gernsback had just been the Guest of Honor at the 10th
anniversary Worldcon in Chicago. The 25th Academy Awards Ceremony in
1953 had been the first live television broadcast of the Academy
Awards. Perhaps our fannish ancestors were just bored because Star Trek
wouldn't be on the air until 1966?
Noreascon Four will be honoring fifty years of the Hugo Awards
by putting together an exhibit. We plan to display as many of those
fifty Hugo Awards as we can beg, borrow, or
well, beg and borrow.
We'll present some of the history behind the Hugo Awards, like how Jack
McKnight missed most of Philcon II because he was stuck in his basement
learning how to weld aluminum to attach the fins on the first Hugo
rockets. (Yes, the first Hugo rocket design was based on an automobile
hood ornament.)
The Noreascon 4 Exhibits Division will be contacting past Hugo
Award winners and other people during the coming year. If you are
willing to loan us Hugo Awards or memorabilia from past Hugo Award
ceremonies, please contact Ruth Leibig at
hugo-exhibit@noreascon.org.
Space and NASA Exhibits
Did you know that Robert Goddard launched the
first
liquid-fueled rocket from Aunt Effie's farm in Auburn,
Massachusetts? Read his
diary
notes about the experience
Or check out the
Astronomy
Picture of the Day for March 21, 2001, which shows Goddard with
that original rocket.
Or that Chandra, the world's most
powerful X-ray telescope, is operated from nearby Cambridge?
Or that several important experiments onboard the
International
Space Station were created by Boston-area universities?
When most people think of NASA, they think of launches from
Florida, Mission Control in Texas, or perhaps Deep Space missions
operated from California's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. But Massachusetts
and New England have made many important contributions to our nation's
space program. We will attempt to highlight that aspect in our Space
and NASA exhibits.
Ankh-Morpork
Y'never know who (or what) may show up around a corner in
Ankh-Morpork
is that
Death? Or is it just Mort?
With Terry Pratchett as one of our Guests of Honor, we're
looking for as many Discworld characters as we can find to populate the
city (otherwise known as our ConCourse), particularly on Thursday
evening during First
Night Noreascon. If you enjoy the Discworld books and
would like to take on a particular persona, let us know by dropping a
note to ThursdayPerformers@noreascon.org.
It just wouldn't do to have too many Night Watch Captains
One of the main gathering places in Ankh-Morpork will be the
Mended Drum Pub (we have to start with the "Mended Drum" since the
Hynes takes a very dim view of explosives in the Exhibit Halls). John
Syms, a well-known beer geek, has agreed to be the Mended Drum host.
We'll have areas for conversation and traditional pub games, with
various beers and food for sale. With a little luck, the Hynes may even
be able to provide a cask-conditioned ale and a cider for sale; no
promises, but we are trying!
Help make Ankh-Morpork
in Boston a reality!
Fan Exhibits
In addition to fans on display at the fan tables, we
already know that we'll have a significantly expanded look at fans in
other ways, including the International Fandom
exhibit. We are working to collect new items, catalog them, and present
them. We have new material coming in from Australia and South Africa in
particular.
Fan History
The fanzines and photos of our past tell
stories about who we are and where we've been. And maybe even where
we're going
So we're extracting some of those stories out of the large
jumble of material available (have you seen many fannish attics?).
It'll be a new way of looking at the exhibits, which we hope will be
interesting to everyone. Randy Smith is coordinating that effort.
Laurie Mann is taking the lead for presenting some of our
traditional Fan History material, which we're hoping will also help us
tell some of the stories of how we've gotten to where we are in fandom.
To help tell those stories, we're looking for some very specific types
of materials:
- Items featuring our Guests of Honor at
various stages of their careers, particularly including
photographs;
- Photographs and other memorabilia about New England
fandom, including fanzines, buttons, T-shirts, photos from
parties, et.c.
- Memorabilia from Noreascons 1, 2 and 3;
- Fannish responses to the first moon
landing (25 years ago!);
- Godzilla memorabilia.
If you have items that you believe might contribute to this
exhibit, please send email to fanhistory-exhibit@noreascon.org
describing what you have.