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Arthur Chenin [Nevada, USA] is the Friendly
Native GuideTM for the Reno bid committee.
Although he has worked on several smaller science fiction
and gaming conventions, in an unexplained fit of masochism,
this is the first time he has been involved in a WorldCon.
In the "real world" Arthur works as a research analyst
at the University of Nevada, Reno.
Aaron Curtis's [Oregon, USA] first calling
is gaming: he's run gaming for OryCon
many times, Westercon 56 in Seattle in 2003 and the Seattle
NASFiC in 2005. He's
been involved with GameStorm for
all 10 years of its existence, as chair (in 2002 and 2005),
event programming, treasurer, corporate outreach,
and hotel liaison numerous times. No one-trick pony,
he's also a past president
of Oregon Science Fiction Conventions, Inc. (OSFCI), and
has worked as hotel liaison for OryCon.
He is currently one of Patty's hotel minions for
Denvention 3.
Vincent Docherty [The Hague, The Netherlands] has
done nothing remarkable
aside from chairing not one, but two Worldcons (1995 and 2005,
both in Glasgow, Scotland). He's also been active in British
fandom, running Hugos at the 1987 Worldcon in Brighton, as well
as working on Eastercons (the British national convention),
being fan guest of honor at several conventions and just an
all-around great set of knees for when you can talk him
into wearing his kilt.
Don Glover [Seattle, USA] has been involved
in Seattle fandom for
over 32 years. He attended his first convention in 1976 and
spent most of the convention volunteering. He has worked on
30 of the past 31 Norwescons and contributed to a number of
other Pacific Northwest area conventions such as Dreamcon,
Beyondcon, Orycon, and the latest Seattle Westercon.
Mark Herrup [Illinois, USA] has been attending
Worldcons since 1977,
and has been working on
them for about 20 years. Having started as a gofer, he has since
worked in several different areas, including Operations/Office,
Registration, and Facilities. The last few years he's both
been active in Boskone and dealing
with the main convention hotels in Glasgow, Anaheim, and
Denver. He's been heavily involved
with Windycon and Capricon
in the Chicago area, and
also was the hotel liaison for the Smofcon in Rosemont in 2003.
Rick Lindsley [Oregon, USA] is a newer face from
the Portland area. He's
been webmaster for Orycon the last two years and attendee for
seven. In his role of webmaster, he committed the
egregious error of being reliable, opinionated, and politely
pushy. Surprisingly, these were exactly the qualities required
to create a successful website for the Reno bid.
Tammy Lindsley [Oregon, USA] has chosen event planning
as a career,
and in addition to attending 17 Orycons and working on the
concom for four of those, has helped plan sales meetings and
corporate conferences. She's been to a couple of Westercons
but longs for the perfect excuse to attend a Worldcon.
John Lorentz [Oregon, USA] had science fiction thrust
upon him as a
child and didn't have the fortitude to resist. Since then his
interest and participation has grown to a series of
notable accomplishments that benefitted Orycons, Westercons,
Smofcons and even the odd Boskone in roles ranging from
unheralded assistant to chair. This year finds him being
treasurer for Orycon, president of Oregon Science
Fiction Conventions, Inc., and a potential contestant for
the American quiz show "Jeopardy!"
Jim Mann [Pennsylvania & Massachusetts, USA] has been
seen working on Boskones, other
regionals, and Worldcons, including being a Division Head
for Worldcon four times in multiple areas. He apparently has
some masochistic tendencies
in that he seems to enjoy working on Programming much of
the time.
He edited a number of books for NESFA Press (including
Cordwainer Smith's
Norstrilia and Complete Short Fiction and William Tenn's Short
Fiction). He co-chaired the 1988 Boskone and frequently
runs Program
for Confluence and Boskone. Jim is running Program Ops for
Denvention. In his spare time, Jim collects books,
microbrews and sometimes writes interesting reviews.
Laurie Mann [Pennsylvania & Massachusetts, USA] has
been known to devote way too much of her waking
time to fannish pursuits, such as FANAC, working on Boskones,
Confluence, AwardWeb,
and Worldcons (where she's been a Division
Head twice and assistant DH once). She's run many areas,
but tends
to run Press Relations, help with Program, and staff
the Fan History exhibit.
She co-chaired the 1988
Boskone, frequently runs Program for Confluence and Boskone,
and ran two relaxacons. She edited William Tenn's Dancing
Naked, which was nominated for a Hugo for Best Related Book.
For Denvention, she's managing the Web site and the Hugo
Award Ceremony. Laurie was even
in Reno once (August, 1968) and reports that the mountains and
lake were lovely.
Cass Marshall [Colorado, USA] lives in Boulder
and has worked on MileHiCon
Operations for 25 years (or maybe more). She's another person
who works at a university - the University of Colorado at
Boulder - as an administrative assistant in the Dance and
Theater Department. Somehow, though, she manages to run into
her students in the strangest places, like restaurants in
downtown Denver.
TR "Theresa" Renner [Washington DC, USA] has
been attending and working on conventions
for decades, starting with being an attendee at the 1974
Worldcon, Discon. Since then, she's worked in various
capacities on regionals and Worldcons, from gophering
and registration staff to
art auctions, program ops and Operations. TR has been a Worldcon
division deputy for Facilities a couple of times,
division head for
Services in 1992, and then
ran the North American bid operations and
was Vice Chair for the 1995 Worldcon
in Glasgow, Scotland. In
her job for the U.S. Department of State as a Foreign Service
Officer, she has finally found a job in the real world
that closely mirrors fannish convention running. Although
there are a number of
parallels between planning for an overseas visit of the Vice
President of the United States (VPOTUS) and planning
a Worldcon, a VPOTUS visit is much easier!!
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Ruth Sachter [Oregon, USA] attended her first convention (and first
Worldcon) in 1971, where she imprinted on Worldcons and found
her niche in fandom, making it a better place for all. She went
from there to working on Lunacons (NYC) and Star Trek
conventions, diversifying her interests along the way.
Ultimately, she met and
married another fan, John Lorentz, moving to Oregon to practice
her convention skills there. She is privileged to be one of
the Emergency Holographic Texans, created at Lonestar 2
(Worldcon
1997 in San Antonio). Ruth has been on numerous bid committees
and a vice Chair for Worldcon. She has mastered arcane
skills ranging from
making egg creams (for losing NY Worldcon bids)
to cutting up pineapple in a bathroom (for the Hawaii in 93
hoax bid).
Larry Sanderson [Minnesota, USA] has been involved
in Minneapolis fandom for over 20 years. He's worked
on several Minicons of old, the last Mpls World Fantasy
Convention, Diversicon, and, more recently, Applecon and
the upcoming Gaylaxicon 2009. He has been caught lurking,
often taking pictures, at recent Worldcons this side of
the pond. Sometimes found at Boskone, but he doesn't know
anything at all about the Death of Peeps nor what happens
to them in the microwave.
Heidi Schaub [Oregon, USA] has admitted to being
a reader of fantasy and science fiction and of course,
admitting it is the first step towards curing it.
She was once described as "the only real grownup in the room" at
a con, and can remain the calm voice of reason
when everyone else is losing their minds all around her. Living
far too close to certain other Portland fans, she's been sucked
into helping with both GameStorm and Orycon, though she doesn't
seem to mind. In case additional proof is needed ... she agreed
to be on this bid committee!
Joseph Siclari [New York, USA] once chaired a Worldcon
(1992 in Orlando)
which, of course, is a big deal.
Since then he's done little else besides his subversive work
in making conventions better for everyone by
co-founding Smofcon,
along with Ben Yalow and TR Renner, and helping to
establish FANAC,
devoted to the preservation and distribution of
information about
science fiction and science fiction fandom. Oh sure, he's done
a few other things here and there over the years, including
marrying his Better Half, Edie Stern. Well, okay, maybe between
NorEascon, ConFederation, Suncon, Boskone, Galacticon, and the
other 200 or so cons he's worked on, he has kept
himself busy.
Edie Stern [New York, USA] started reading SF
at an early age and hasn't
been the same since. She's been active in fandom, publishing
zines, working on conventions (both regional and Worldcon),
filking, and collecting art. She's been a Division Head at
Worldcon and been a fan guest of honor
several times, along with her husband, Joe Siclari.
Ian Stockdale [California, USA] has been spotted
at Worldcons over the last
few years, mostly working as a Division Head in one capacity
or another. He's worked on many regionals and is well known
on the West Coast for his cool, collected manner. (We're
still trying to find out how he's known on the East Coast.)
He's currently head of Exhibits for Denvention 3. When things
are falling apart and you need the job done, he's the one to
call. He's also a guy who just can't say no ...
Geri Sullivan [Massachusetts, USA]
headed the hospitality division for ConJosé
and was publications
deputy division head for Noreascon 4. More recently, she chaired
Smofcon 25 and has been running entertaining (if a tad bizarre)
events such as the "Death to Peeps Fun Fest" at Boskone. Geri's
fannish roots are in Minneapolis -- she worked on Minicon for
20 years and is the post-supporting chair of the Minneapolis in
'73 Worldcon bid. Music parties and fanzine publishing are her
other favorite forms of fanac. She's the 1999 past president,
fwa (fan writers of america), winner of three FAAn Awards for
fan activity achievement, and shared the 2007 Best Fanzine Hugo
with Randy Byers and Lee Hoffman for Science-Fiction Five-Yearly.
Patty Wells [Oregon, USA] has done nothing
remarkable in the last
five minutes, but before that she spent many years working on
Orycons and Worldcons in many different capacities.
Her vast experience
includes a staggering 30 Orycons, 5 division level positions
on Worldcons
in 3 different divisions, additional non-division level
Worldcon positions, many Westercons
as chair or in other positions, and working on the program for
several Smofcons.
Marc "I'm no SMOF, I'm just married to one" Wells
[Oregon, USA] has been involved with convention fandom
since Orycon 0
(the one day Symposium organized by Debbie Cross), Marc has
worked as convention treasurer, on the tech crew and as
host of the popular Orycon version of "Whose Line is it,
Anyway?". Behind the scenes, Marc has been on the board
of directors of OSFCI (Oregon Science Fiction Conventions,
Inc.) the parent organization of Orycon and other Northwest
conventions and is a former president of OSFCI. He is now
delighted that he can embarrass his children at conventions
rather than the other way around.
Ben Yalow [New York, USA] is a familiar face who
has attended over
600 cons and worked over 200. Denvention will be the 38th
consecutive Worldcon he has attended. He's done pretty much
every job on a con at one time or another, having been a
Worldcon Division Head 11 times and a member of the chairman's
staff five times. He is
working with facilities for this bid to negotiate the
contracts for the hotels and convention center.
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